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                  <text>Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 19, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Malone blasts his opponent

t

day after volunteers worked through the Dtght to sbore
up the saturated earthen dam. (AP Laserpboto) .

Mark Malone, the Lawrence Coun-\
ty commissioner who wants to unseat longtime Incumbent Oakley
Collins In the state senate, said one
of the major problems facing Ohio
and this legislative district is that
not enough is being done to solve its
problems.
The 33-year-old South Point
Democrat announced his candidacy
for the June 8 primary at meetings
held in Gallipolis and Pomeroy on
Thursday.
Malone identified the economy as
the biggest, Issue facing the 17th
district - recenUy redistricted to inelude Gallia, Meigs, Lawrence, Vinton, Jackson, Athens, Plckaway and
Roes counties - and wasn't shy
about placing blame for it on Collins,
the Ironton Republican who served
m 1955-59 and continuously S\nce
1963.
" My opponent has been (in the
senate )long enough to do something

tt;

about but all we've gotten are emj;,iypromlses,"thecandidatesaid.
"One of the priority Issues is
unemployment," Malone continued.
"There is not enough being done to
entice Industry into Ohio and into the
17th district, where unemployment
is probably higher than the nstional
average. There is little or nothing
being done to create jobs."
Malone said education and
legislative action to cut state funding to the schools is another
problem needing correction. He felt
taking money away from the schools
\,§approaching the problem from the
wrong end, and urged the setting of
priorties in what Ohio does and
doesn 'tcut.
"Funding for the schools is
defini~ly an Issue, and it seems my
opponent, despite what he says
about being In favor of education, is
voting along with the majority of the
senate to cut funding, which is no

nearly a week of flooding, and of.
ficials worried that some might not
hold until the rivers return to their
banks.
Also, the weather service predicted thunderstonns during the night.
Mayor Winfield Moses Jr. said
that if an inch of rain fell as predicted, "Things are going to get even
more difficult.
"I'm told by the weather service
that for every half-inch of rain that
falls, the rivers go up six inches.
"It's like rebuildin'g the
pyramids," said Moses. "But if we
lose the dike and do not have a
secondary line of defense, a wall of
water will sweep through the area,
causing the destruction of hundreds
of houses. We would have a flash

flood the likes of which this city has
never seen."
Early Thursday, volunteers
struggling to save their city reinforced a soggy lf&gt;.foot-high dike that
had leaked during the night, chasing
hundreds more people from their
homes.
Work began on a secondary dike
along a critical area of the.Lakeside
subdivision, pari of the eight-mile
system of dikes pro\ecting this river
city of 170,000 people.
Moses said the old dike, built after
the flood of 1913, was as soft as toothpaste from tM flooding which began
last weekend.
He estimated the water would be
about 15 feet above street level if the
dike went.

was also a member of the 82nd Air·
home Division at Fort Bragg, N.C.
Employed as an agent with
Motorists Mutual Insurance, Malone
was first elected to the Lawrence
County commission in 1976 and Wlln
reelection four years later.

On radio Sunday

Meigs County happenings
Funds received
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported the tenth
advance distribution of state motor
vehicle registration fees totaling
$1,999,989 to Ohio counties, cities,
townships and villages. Meigs County's share was $2,231.56.

Emergency runs
Seven calls were answered Thursday by local emergency units, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
At 6:54 a.m., the Pomeroy Unit
took William O'Donnell from Anne
St., to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 6:55a.m. took James
Fisher from Imperial Electric to
Veterans Memorial; Rutla~d at
12:00 p.m. took Fred Smith to
Veterans Memorial Hospital from
Meigs Mine 1; Pomeroy at 2:37p.m.,
took John David from Hiland Road

to Veterans Memorial; Middleport
at 6:22 p.m. took Nellie Price from
North Second Ave., to Veterans
Memorial and at 10:07 p.m. took
Clarence . Warner from Riverside
Drive to VeteranS Memorial.
Pomeroy at 11 :09 p.m. took James
Grady from the intersection of
Route 7 and Nye Ave., to Veterans
Memorial.

'Brown wins endorsement
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - U.S.
Rep. Clarence J . Brown, R-Urbana,
has won the endorsement of the
Franklin County Republican Party,

besting hometown favorite Robert
Teater on the second-round ballot.
Brown won the endorsement Thursday night by a vote of 51-41 in a
head-to-head battle with state
natural resources director, after for.mer Cuyahoga County ComBATAVIA, Ohio (AP) - A missioner Seth Taft and state Sen.
Tickets for the Southern High
School versus Ross Southeastern junkyard dealer has asked the Cler- Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland,
regional tournament game to be mont Conunon Pleas Court to acquit threw their support to Teater.
The central committee also enheld at Ohio University in Athens at him or grant a new trial on two
7:30 p.m. Saturday went on sale felonious assault convictions for dorsed state Rep. Charles R. Saxbe,
wounding two youth's on his proper- R-Mechanicsburg, for attorney
today.
general; Franklin County Treasurer
The tickets will be available until ty last summer.
John E. Coyne, who was acquitted Dana G. Rinehart for treasurer; and
noon Saturday at the New York
Clothing House, Ohio Valley Heating of murder last month in the 1961 Cuyahoga County Commissioner
and Plumbing, Middlepori Book shooting of one youth at his Vince,Campanella for auditor.
State Rep. Larry E. Hughes, RStore and the Carroll Norris Dodge junkyard, Is supposed to be sen·
Columbus,
was endorsed for the 28th
tenced
after
a
pre-sentence
in·
in Gallipolls. The office of the high
House
District
race by a vote of 48-45
vestigation
is
completed.
school in Racine will be open from 11 .
over
challenger
Karl Schneider, 23,
Andrew
Dennison,
Coyne's
ata.m. to 12 noon Saturday for the sale
a
vice
president
of William Saxbe
torney,
said
he
expects
the
hearing
of tickets also.
on the motions will occur before Enterprises.
Assistant Franklin County
Coyne's sentencing.
Prosecutor
David R. Brown won the
Dennison said Coyne seeks acquit1&gt;11rty's
support
for the 15th Senate
Don R. Hill, Route 2, Racine, filed tal from the two charges because the
District
race.
He
outpolled WTVN- .
his petition as a candidate for the evidence showed Coyne was defen1V
account
executive
Patricia
Republican nomination to run for ding himself and property and the
and
Columbus
City
CounCramer
Meigs County Corruniasion with the prosecution failed to show Coyne
cilman
David
Cain.
Meigs Board of Elections on Thurs- "knowingly" committed.a crime.

Tickets go on sale

Seeks acquittal

Admitted-James Fisher, Middleport; William O'Donnell,
Pomeroy; Connie Mash, Middleport; Shirley Ables, Racine;
Elizabeth Yost, Middleport; Willard
Lucas, Pomeroy; Nellie Price, Middleport; Della Stahl, Pomeroy;
Clarence Swauger, Middleport.
Discharged--Floyd Reynolds,
Phyllis Davis, Glen Hudson, Ira
Roach.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MARCH 18
Elmer Belue, Mrs. George Carson
and daughter, Leslie Coon Jr., Jane
Creedon, Melissa Cremeans, Doris
Dixon, Roger Ewing, Ethel Fostor,
Jerry French, Loma Gill, Alice
Gllllngwater, Terry Johnson, Audra
Keller, Lowell Lambert, Paul
McGee, Emilia Midkiff, Timothy
-Miller, Amy Moore, James Oliver,
James Patton, Emma Paugh,
Gladys Ragland, Phillip Reed Jr.,
Delbert Ross, Willie Smith, Gladys
Sowers, Michelle Stahl, Jean
Thlenel, Darling Thornton, Karen
Tucker, Minnie Walker, Pauline
Wayne, Usa Woods.
BffiTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cumings, son,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Jonathon
LOuden, daughter, Thurman.

day.
Hill will
the nomination
at
the June
8 seek
primary.
Two other

~:::::~~i:~vealsofiledforJune

To end marriage
Charging gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty, Judy Mae Finney,
Dexter, has filed suit for divorce
against Terrance R. Finney,
Gallipolis, In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Dismissed in the court were the
suits of Mary Ann Riley against
Douglas F. Riley and Ronald L.
Dailey against Debbie Susan Dailey.
Walter D. Roush and. Ullian L..
Roush were granted a dissolution of
their marriage.

Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigating a breaking and entering of the County Road 10 home of
Kenny Hadler, near the Mt. Union
Church. Hadler notified the sheriff
that he had been In Florida for two
weeits and returning found his home
had been entered and Items stolen.

-

•

tmes
'

Vol. 16 No.6
Copyrighted 1982

'

Today's T-S

Senate's No.2 Republican suggests tax cut delay
'

But he said some changes were
He said he doubted Congress
"It would not be reneging on the
Reagan has Insisted repeatedly
By DAVID E9PO
likely
In cost of living increases In
concept of having a 10 percent tax thathedoesn'twantanychangesln would change cost-of·living In·
AMoolated Prellll Writer
other
benefit program~. such as
cut that began In this fiscal year," • the three-year tax cut plan that creases for Social Security this
WASHINGTON (AP)- TheSecivilian and mUita ry pensions.
year.
Stevens said on the Cable News Congress passed last year.
nate's No. 2 RepubUcan Is SllgiCSI·
Network
program
"Newsmaker
In
addition,
administration
offl·
.
lng a three-montll delay In · the
Saturday."
clals are counting on the tax cut In
personal b!eome tax cut scheduled
Stevens, the Senate's Republlcan July to help give the economy a jolt
to take ettect this summer as a way
whip, conceded he has received no out of recession.
to pick up Democratic votes for a
Indication that Presid.ent Reagan
But Stevens said a three-month
compromise budget.
would accept such a change.
delay In the tax cut schedulEd for
"There Is some consideration beBut the Alaska Republican said, this year would reduce the budget
Ing given 'to slipping the 10 percent
"1 think he'd agree ... It It was part deficit, enable the framework o! a
(cut) that would start' in July to
POMEROY- Robert Price U. Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Is a paof a package" to pass a budget lhat three-year tax cut to remain In
start In October," Sen. Ted Stevens,
tient at Veterans Memorial Hospital where he wa s taken a t 10: 29
would reduce 'deficits.
pl~ce and pick up support from DeR-Alaska, said Friday.
p.m. Friday by the Pomeroy Emergency Squad after being hit by a
mocrats who are demanding some
. car on Butternut Ave.
sort of change In the president's tax
Pomeroy Pollee said thatthechDd came from behind a parked car
program.
Into the path of a northbound cal' driven by LesUe R. Gibbs, Pome"Basically It's to get the support
roy. Price, 5, received a possible concussion and abrasions of the
of Democrats," he said, noting that
forehead and thigh. The driver was absolved of blame In the
Reagan agreed to change his tax
a~ldent.
·
bill a year ago to pick up Democratic support.
Other officials said the change
Stevens ouWned would reduce the
COLUMBUS (AP) -Blue Cross of Central Ohio wUI be permitted
budget deficit for 1983 by abQut $8
to get 8.'i percent of the rate Increase It wanted from 52,00) central
billlon.
Ohio residents who pay !or their own hospitalization insur~nce.
Reagan says the deficit wlli be
Blue Cross had asked the Ohio Department o! Insurance !or.per$96.4 billlon, but the Congressional
lpllllon to raise rates an avera11e of 44 percent tor non-group custoBudget Office, pegs the ttgure at
mer. In 29 counties. The apP!'OVl!d rate averages about 37 percent,
about $121 billion.
officials said.
•
Stevens conceded that a deter!&lt;&gt;'
The department conducted public hearings In February and the
rating economy has made It likely
hearing officer, W.Lee Shield, recommended 70 percent of the rethat the deficit will be higher than
quested Increase be granted. State Insurance Director Robert
Reagan forecast.
Ratchford Jr. decided Friday to grant 85 percent o( the hike. the
"The president's general objecdepartment said.
tive of a budget deficit that did not
ex.ceed $91.5 bjjllon Is going to be
difficult to -ac111eve," he said.
To close the deficit, Stevens also
conflnned thaI Republicans are
COLUMBUS (AP) - High Interest rates and the decision by
considering proposals for higher
Columbia
Gas Transmission Corp. to cut purcha ses of Ohiogasoline taxes and a fee on lm·
produced
natural
gas could cause Ohio drUlers to curtail efforts, a
ported on.
official
says.
state
As chairman of the defense subTllere is more thaD oile way to look at federal deflclta. The obvious
"I don't thJn!tdrllllng isgolnglntoa plunge, bu t I think we are In for
coi!IITIIttee of the Appropriations
ooe IIID rellllloa to total bucllet espeadltures, llboWa by per&lt;!entagell topslight
decrease," said Theodore DeBrosse, assistant dIrector o! the
Committee, Stevens also said he
ping sbadtd ban Indicating companllve abel oiiDDWII deflclta. That
state
division
o! oU and gas.
thought $.'i billion or S6 billion could
~ bow much the goverameat bas gooe Into debt. But impact on
He
said
!here
was a 37 percent Increase In well completions during
be cut from Reagan's i.983 defense
the 11111ioaal eeoaomy II meuured by the deficit's relation to gross
1981.
buDd up "for starters"
aatiooal product, shown by percentages Ia black sectloDB ol bars.

Blue Cross granted increase

1985.

"Without these ~lauses, the transition to new-gas decontrol under the
NGPA could very possibly be accomplished with minimum . consumer impact, particularly the way
the price of oil is dropping today.
These classes should be defused by
Congress if consumers are to be
protected from a large gas price.Increase in 1985."
White urged producers to
cooperate with gas distributors in
dealing with problema that have
resulted from increased gas prices
to consumers.

-G
' irl's Tourney'

Page C1

· Take-One

Ohio drillers may curtail efforts

ELBERFELD$

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NEW

SEAMLESS BEAUTIFUL ONES
SLEEK NEW BRAS FROM PLAYTEX CROSS YOUR HEART

Officials near flood damage tally
By 'lbe A.,...t•!ed PreM

Disaster evaluation oftlcillls say they are near a
t1na1 tally on damages caused by fioodlng In northw·

Insert
Market In Brief

NYS E. Issues
· Consolidated 'Trading
, Friday, March 19
Volume Shares

53,642,550
Issues Traded

1,854

.

Up

estern Ohio that Gov. James A. Rhodes can use In his
plea for federal disaster ald.
Meanwhile, cleanup operations from the tloodlng
this week that has caused estimated damages of at
least $1l mWJon continued Friday.
In Defiance, SherUf Doug Vtegler said cleanup efforts were "going full ateam.." ·
And In Grand .Rapids, volunteer firefighter Jim
Carter said, ·'All the buainel8ell and houses that were
fiooded are now getting baCk to normal. People are
moving back lp and doing a lot of cleanll)g up."
· Federal and state disaster otflclals said they were
near a tinai tally of destrucllon trOm the two days o!

fioodlng this week.
They have said It caused at least $11 mllllon In
damage In northwestern Ohio.
Davida Matthews, a pubUc Information officer In
the state Disaster Services Agency In Worthington,
said a fll)al tally of the damage would be forwarded to
Rhodes when complete.
"They're wrapping ' things up" Ms. Matthews said
Friday.
Rhodes has asked President Reagan to declare
fiooded counties disaster areas to make them eligible
for federal reUel funds. The counties Include ~
fiance, Lucas, Wood, Henry and Paulding.
u.s. Rep. Delbert Latta , R-Ohlo, from Bowling
Green, has asked th~t Fulton and Williams counties
be added to the list.

848

NEW MOBILE HOME

Boster announces candidacy· for
new 94th District of Ohio House

Down
573

j

•N .Y.S.E. lndeM

(!'

+
110.61 +·
•Dow Jones Ind.
AP
805.65 +
Business
E-Section
' 63.62

.16

•S .&amp;P Comp .

Sell the New Approach to Housing at a price you can af·
ford. 14 Foot Wide Homes for $11,950.00. If you hurry, we
will do it alii Now thru April 15th the price of any new
home SOLD will include Delivery and Setup . Plus the
best quality vinyl skir1ing and tie-downs installed .

•FASHIONABLE SEAMLESS TRICOT CUPS
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Kingsbury Homes Sales, Inc.'

LIGHTLY
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POMEROY, OHIO

3S Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

FEDERAL ~EFICITS

should remain on old gas. It has been
found and it's being produced."
He also opposed price escalator
clauses in gas sales contracts by
producers under which the agreed·
on price would rise automatically in

WHO SAYS YOU HAVE TO SffiLE FOR
THE SAME OLD TIRED INTERIOR
IN YOUR

992-7034

10 Sections, 76 pages

Sunday, Mar. 21, 1982

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

8AROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SlW
ALL SEATS JUST J f. 50
ADMISSION EVE,., TlJESQji,Y I UIO

r;~~~~;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

1100 E. MAIN ST.

for
10 a.m.
ESTposed
Uttott Monday
andathe
weather
no problem. The crew was fiylng from
Houston, with Lousma In NASA

over the ocean Into Edwards,"
said FuUerton. "We got a good
tour o! the Southwest. "
On launch pad 39A at Kennedy
Space Center here, the count·
down slipped three hours behind
schedule with a troublesome
computer and fu el line regula·
tor, but was back on track by
Friday evening.
Workers cleaned the shuttle's
windows, tested its computers
and removed several work
platforms.
In case of trouble In the first
(Continued on A-4)

Child struck by car, hospitalized

FEATURING:

Probe break-in

'-----------..----------......;;.;:;.J

heading for Kennedy Space Center, ready to take the shuttle Columbia on Its third and busiest
trip Into space.
Everything was on schedule

minute longer In space and a
landing approach that ta~
them south of Los Angeles and
north of Phoenix, Instead o!
. along the rugged coast south of
Bakersfield.
The astronauts spent six hours
Friday In shuttle simulators In
Houston and practi~ fiylng
barrel rolls In their T38 jets to
acclimate their bodies to space
flight.
.
" It was quite a contrast today
as we practiced landings at Northrup Strip and Kennedy Space
Center Instead of the approach

News briefs...

IHospital news I.Files for post
Veterans Memorial

training jet 917 and Fullerton In
924.
"We are ready to go," Fuller·
ton said Friday. "Jack and I look
forward to flying this entry Into
White Sands."
The last-minute shift In landIng sites - from Edwards Air
Force Base In California to the
Northrup Strip or the White
Sands Missile Ra!1ge In southern
New Mexico - provoked a big
movement of technicians and
machinery, but was no bother to
the astronauts.
For them It means about a

By HARRY F. ~JtNTIIAL
,l.aclaled F.- Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) - As their new landtng
site took shape In New Mextco
today, astronauts Jack Lousma
and C. Gordon Fullerton were

"Moments of Inspiration" sponsored by the Rutland Bible
Methodist Church with Amos Tllils
as pastor wiU be aired at 7:30p.m.
Sunday over WMPO.

Columbia in agreement
RIVER RESCUE - LYDD Tremelling of Racine, Wis., along with
rescuen, struggled against the raging Root River after he and a eompanlon overturned In their rubber life raft. (AP Laierpboto).

New Ia~ding site takes shape

531 ..JACJ{$(111 PIKE ·Rt.35 WEST
Phone 448-~.

COLUMBUS - Columbia Gas Oil and Gas Association winter
fully agrees with its customers in op- meeting, White said Columbia does
posing any speedup In lifting of price · not believe customers will accept accontrols on newly developed natural celerated decontrol " nor does it apgas, and believes ceiling prices pear producers need it at this time."
should remain on "old gas," Marvin The National Gas Policy Act
(NGPA) set 1985 as the date for
E. White said today.
removing
controls on gas developed
White, chairman and chief
since
the
spring
of 1977. Some groups
executive officer of Columbia Gas
are
calling
for
speeding
up decontrol
Distribulion Companies, told Ohio
and
also
removing
controls
on gas
gas producers that consumers are
extremely concerned about in- developed before 1977.
" We believe the NGPA is
creases in the price' Jf gas.
In remarks prepared for the Ohio working," White said. "Controls

Countdown moves smoothly

~~§,1;~

Swollen rivers fa IIi ng
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) Three swollen rivers that have
driven thousands from their homes
in Fort Wayne crested and began
dropping Thursday, but more rain
was forecast and dikes have been
weakened by prolonged soaking.
The National Weather Service
said the city's three rivers - the
Maumee, St. Mary's and St. Joseph
- crested early Thursday after
reaching a level of 25.93 feet, just 0.2
foot below the record 1913 flood level
that killed 700 people in Indiana an&lt;t
neighboring states.
,
At 6 p.m. Thursday, the river level
stood at 25.33 feet, according to city
officials.
While the water level was dropping slowly, the city's network of ·
dikes was weakened seriously by

way to eliminate the problem," he
said.
Asked if he would favor raising
taxes to bail the state out of Its
money doldrums, he replied,
"definitely not at this time."
As a county official, Malone said
he'd work with the counties he
represents, if elected.
" lfeel there are many laws on the
books that have disastrous effects on
county officials," he said. "I believe
more emphasis should be put on updating laws that tie the hands of
county officials."
Malone admits he lias a visibility
problem outside of Lawrence County, but said he'd "do everything in
my power" to make himself known
to the voters In the next few months.
A Lawrence native, Malone is a
graduate of Dawson-Bryant High
School at Coal Grove and attended
Ashland (Ky. ) Business College. He
served with the 173rd Airborne

FllghtPathottheSpaceShuttle:-----.

SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE

'8.99
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Area deatbs • • . • • . • • • A-5
Aloug &amp;be river .•..• &amp;1-8
BuliDell •••• ~ ••••••• E-1
Clalllfleda ' • . . • . . . D+7
~torial ... ·. . . . . . . A·W
Farm .............. E-W
IM8I ..•....•...•. A+l
State-NatloDal .•••• l).l..Z
8pJrtl •••••••••••• 0.1·1
~

, ••••••• llllerl

Boster states that she is runGALLIPOLIS - Jolynn
ning for state representative In
"Lynn" Boster, Route 4,
order to bring responsible and
· Gallipolis, announced Saturday
resp01111ive representation to the
she t. a Democratic Party canthree-county area. She statea that
didate for state 1epresent.tive
she II specifically concemed with
for the newly-apportioned Nth
certain major problems InOhio Houae Of Reprellelltatives
cluding the dlltrlct's high unemDistrict comprlled of Gallla,
ployment level, the need to bring
Melp, and Athet11 Counties.
economic growth to the area, and
Bolter Ia an attorney and for·
the problems on a local and
mer •uletant Cey Solicitor for
statewicje
level of providing
~City of Galllpolt., and II now a
adequate
educational
fWtding.
partner In the t.w finn of Cowles
.. Bolter Co., LP.A. ofG.nipolil.
Mrs. Bolter Uvea wit!~ her
She obtained her bachelor ·of
·
husband,
Allan. on the ao.ter
adeMe degree frGm Ohio State
famlly
farm
In Gallia County.
Unlvenll)' ill 'lt73 and graduated
Allan
ja
a
practicing
veterinarian
CJIIII Illude frml the Ohio. Slate
In
addition
to
running
their 7JIO
UDiwnlt)' c,u.ge of.Law In June
acre
cattle
farm.
Mrs.
s.ter'•
of lrll. Sbe -Unltted to prac!athei',
a
retired
u.s.
Air
Force
Ucle befGn the Oblo Bar .......
olficer,
·and
moibet,
Jack
and
the u.s. J'edenl Dlllrid COurt
Jidde
Barry,
are
resident.
sf
for lbl Wk n Diltrid of Obto
oa,ton.Ohlo.
IDNou .,. ofll'll.

Employees reject unionization
BELLEFONTAINE (AP) - For the 12th time In 3S years,
workers for Bellefontaine's biggest employer, DAB Industries Inc.,
have rejected representation by an lntematlonal union.
National Labor Relations Board officials said Friday that two
unions - the International Molders and Allied Workers o! Cincinnati
and the Allied Industrial Workers of America of Milwaukee, Wis.were rejected In a labor election.
The vote was 353 tor the company, 51 for the molders and 36!or the
AIW. officials said.

Judges getting tougher
COLUMBUS (AP) - According to a new report, Franklin County
Common Pleas Court judges are getting tougher In sentencing.
Administrative Judge Craig Wright says more than !50 percent of
people ronvlcted of felonies In the county during 1981 are doing
prison time. That Is an Increase !rom 42 percent In 1900, he said.

•

United Way funds missing
COLUMBUS (AP) - A six-year employee of the Unlted Way of
Franklin County was fired after $3,800 In 1981 carQpalgn fund s were
found•missing , the agency says.
United Way spokeswoman-Patti Mahoney said the March 12!1rtng
followed an Investigation by the agency and pollee.
iunday

WEATHER FOIU!'.(:ABT- SDOW II espe&lt;!ted In the forecast period,

a...-..,. •llll!lmdlyiiiCII'IIIq, for tile Great Lakeo region and parts of
JOLYNN 'LYNN' llUfi'ER

'

lite Mldwell llllowen are due for the Eut Coasl, ellendlng In a band
tr.s .,litera Flarldlt to New EJIIIand. (AP Laserphoto).

�..
•

.

'

Mar. 21 , 1982

Commentary and persp,e ctive
·junbaJI ~imts· itntintl
ADivision of

825 Third Ave., GalllpoUs, Ohio

· 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-Z156

(614) 44'-2342

ROBERT L. WINGE'rT
Publisher
HOBART Wll.SON JR.
· Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER Ill Tbt Anoclak:d Pm111, lalaod DaOy Pm11 A11odatloa aDd the Americu
NtWJpiPf Publ~hen Anocilltloe..
LE'ITERS (JF OPINION are welcomed. Tbey shuuld be lew thu 301 word• loq. All
knen ll'e subject t. Nltl•l aad mu•l be •i&amp;Ded wllh aanw, addre~~5 aad lt'lepb~
IIUDber. No111111lped letterv will bepublhlhed. Letten lllould be ln&amp;ood tilde, addrnlllll&amp;
. linn:, DOt penoa~Utln .
'

Failing with success
The soft life Is over, the years when it was mostly a matter of deciding

liow much to raise prices and sitting back to watch the money roU in from the

'

ea,Ptive customers.
· Now comes the tough part, accepting production cutbacks to tighten suppUes and apportioning the consequent income loss among the members of
the team. It Is not going to be easy, but if OPEC Is going to function Uke a
real cartel - and thus keep a finn grip on the economic power it seized
almost a decade ago- it will have to be done.
The oU exporters are In trouble, as you probably already know. And even
if you don't, you've probably had pleasant experience with the consequences
in the declining prices on the pwnps at your local slatiOIIB.
The reason Is a world oU surplus that has several causes - a decline In
conswnption in large part the result of energy conservation measures In the
importing countries, Increased production in non-OPEC countries and the
deliberate flooding of the market for the past year or more by the No. I ex·
porter.
That, of course, is Saudi Arabia and its overproduction has been
anything but a wasteful extravagance. It has been a deliberate campaign to
demonstrate beyond all doubt to OPEC colleagues the Saudis' control of the
oil market and to compel those colleagues to aecept Saudi views on produc·
lion and marketing. Those are that production should be matched and
marketing. Those are that production should be matched carefully to
.~elililtlng demand and that the impulse to raise prices to what the traffic of the
;moment will bear, and sometimes beyond, should be relitrained in order to
·avOid either destabilizing the industrial economies or causing them to swear
df too-expensive oil as a primary energy source.
: The Saudis certainly succeeded In the first respect. But there is some
·question as to whether they may not have overdone it In the second. The bet·
t ing at the moment is that after a period of breast-feeding in the ca11ses of
.national independence and Islamic honor, OPEC price-setters will go along
With the Saudis.
·
. But It could be too late. Conservation and conversion to alternative
~rgy sources i.S already well advanced in the Industrial countries. Some
.~rts believe it is too far advanced to be reversed. Insulation is not going
l~ be ripped out of homes. Fuel~fflclent new equipment Is not going to be
·scrapped. Detroit is not going to stop a retooling in which It has already sunk
billions. Western Europe, over strenuous American opposition on political
grounds, is going ahead with the .multi-biliioi'Kiollar piping in of Soviet
natural gas for the very purpose of easing dependence upon OPEC oil.
Also, OPEC no longer has the exporting business largely to itself. Since
the first oil shock in 1973-74 that quadrupled prices, new heavywelgqts have
cwne on line: While they have not been undercutting OPEC, neither have
lhey been playing its game. The leaders In recent price cuts have been
Britain and Mexico, not for the manipulative purposes of the Saudis but for
:~ businesslike reason of adjus,ting the supply to the demand.
• Nevertheless, il'may be too early to count OPEC out- or even down. If
really pressed, the Saudis with their enormous production could almost
clear up with the glut themselves. They have already announced a production drop lot March of a million barrels a day and.say they could go lower
without financial distress. Much lower If they wanted to put up with a little
distress, possibly canceling an AWACS order or two.
It could happen. But if it did, the return to a tight market and OPECdetermined prices \\'Ould only conlinn the importers in the wisdom of their
coPServation and conversion policies.
· The Saudis very Ukely will be able to get the troops back into some sort
of line. But it is very unlikely to be as formidable a force again.
And for that, OPEC's own overachievement will be primarily responsl)lle.

·:·Berry's World

.Pag-A· 2
Mar. 21,

19~2

Uncaring conserva~ive~s;;;;;;;;===,==Ja=m=es=J=.K=il=pa=tr=ic=k
WASHINGTON - John Stuart threw cold water on the Keonedy·
Mill once had an especially unkind Hatfield resolution. Their proposed
thing to say about conservativ~. It freeze was "impractical. " ·
The analogy may seem frivolous
is the "law of ·their existence," he
In
this context, but it is woefully
snifled, that makes them " the
familiar.
Wllile ·conservatives dribstupidest party.''
ble
along,
the liberals have a way of ·
That was 120 years ago, but recent
stealing
the
baU. Kennedy and Hat.- .
events at home and abroad prompt a
field
and
their
.100 liberal c~
melancholy reflection that Mill had
sponsors
have
seized
upon an issue
a point. Throughout Europe and in
of
life-or-death
meaning
to the whole
parts of the Far East, demonplanet,
and
there
is
not
a
sentence in
strations against nuclear anns are
Increasing. Here at home, the their resolution that thoughtful conburghers of Vennont are passing servatives could not support.
"The greatest challenge facing the
resolutiOfl.!l. A week or so ago,
Senators . Edward Kennedy of earth is to prevent the occurrences
Massachusetts and Mark Hatfield of of nuclear war by accident or
Oregon won national attention for design." What is wrong with that?
their resolution urging a bilateral " The nuclear .ar~ns race is
dangerously increasing the risk of a
freeze on rtuclear weapons.
Wbere are my brother con- holocaust that would be humanity's
servatives? What are they doing
about the most awesomely important political issue in the world? .
1\las, the answer is, not much. In
politics, perception is everything.
The perception grows that Senators
Kennedy and Hatfield and their
liberal colleagues are deeply concerned about the perils posed lo
manking by nuclear war. A·
coroUary perception grows that conservatives don't give a damn.
Such perceptions, I would argue,
are wholly unwarranted. In his Nov.
19 speech to the National Press Club,
President Reagan clearly expressed
his determination to seek an ·
agreement with the Soviet Union on
nuclear weapons. He spoke
movingly of the hopes and dreams of
all people to escape from the shadow ~~!1:
of a mushroom cloud. He set in
motion Project START, an acronym
for Strategic Anns Reduction Talks.
But the clarity of Mr. Reagan'•
message was diminished by his use
of charts and grapll'l and statistics.
His speech was a one-day story.
Three montll'l have passed and talk
of START has just about stopped.
Last week the State Department

An excuse to
WASHINGTON- There has been
a tragic side effect of President
Reagan's hard line with the Soviet
Union. The Kremlin apparently has
decided there Is nothiJii! to be gained
by continuing the all-too-brief
relaxation of its grip on Jewish
citizens.
The plight of Soviet Jews has
deteriorated drastically. The .
emigration of Soviet Jews, for eJUiiil.
pie, has come to a virtual halt. This
closing of the escape hatch Is bad
enough, but it has also coincided
with a disturbing increase in of·
ficially blessed anti-Semitism.
If ever Soviet Jews needed to get
out, it is now. But the government
has made it almost impossible to
meet the official requirements for
emigrant visas. From an average of
30,000 a year duriilg the Carter administration, the nwnber of Jews
allowed to leave the Soviet Union
has dropped to a trickle. Last month,
for example, only 283 Soviet Jews
were permitted to emigrate.
My reporters Lucette Lagnado
and Jeff Nesbit have compiled
disturbing evidence of the Kremiin's

can

final war."
anyone deriy this? delivery syJjeins."
The element of a "freeze" Is a new
"A freeze foUowed by reductions in
element,
though the device of a truce
nuclear - warheads, misalles . and
is
as
old
as warfare itself. Otherother delivery systems Is needed, to
wise,
unless
words have lost their
halt the nuclear anns f'!ICe and to
meaning,
the
Keonedy;!Jatfleld
reduce the risk of nuclear war."
liberals
are
proposing
exactly what
Isn't this · an idea worthy of ex·
Mr.
Reagan's
START
proposed In
ploration? ·.
·
November.
Why
can't
conservatives
Of course such • a moratorium ·
merits diacussion - and .that Is aU get behind an increasingly popular
the resolution asks. The resolution cause?
For make no mistake, the prevenurges that the United States and the
tion
of nuclear warfare Is on Its way
Soviet Union jointly "pursue" a
to
becoming
the most popular cause
complete halt to the anns race; that
in
the
world.
In nations large and
the two nations "decide" how such a
West, people clearly
small,
East
and
mutual and verifiable freeze could
comprehend
'the
fearful destruction
be arranged; and that proceeding
power
of
today's
atomic weapons.
from such a freeze, the two nations
They
accurately
perceive the
"should pursue major, mutual and
danger
to
the
continuatim
of
verifiable reductiOIIB In nuclear
warheads, missiles and other civilized life, and they want that
dant~er removed.

frequently 'carries vicioWJ cartoon

caricatures of Jews with large
hooked noses and unshaven jowlsa practice reminls~ent of Nazi Germany.
- The Soviet state publishing
house has produced a virulently an'
ti-8emitic book titled, "Invasion
without Arms," by an otherwise
unknown author, Vladimir, Begun.
It describes the Old Testament as an
" unsurpassed textbook (of)
hypocrisy, · perfidy and moral

degeneracy."
- There are repeated derogatory
references in the Soviet press to per·
sons with identifiably Jewish names.
One article claimed that American
capitalism is "led by the Lehmans,
Lazards, Blaunstelns, Stlllmans,
w,rburgs, Kuhns, Guggenheims,
Loebs, Kahns, Rosenwalds and
Schiffs."
- ,.The Soviet press routinely
refers to Jews as "criminals and
gangsters," and even fantasizes a

w. va.

The old men make the wars; the
young men fight and die in them.
That has been the history of past
wars but that is changing. Now the
old men may die with the.young, the
women and the children. That will
be the pattern of the next war when
nuclear weapons will be used.
The old men now leading the
procession toward nuclear holocaust
are President Ronald Reagan,
Secretary of State Alexander haig
and Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger. It is up to ,qU who don't

want to uselessly die to stop them
before it Is too late. The people of the
United st-ates are now being fed the
greatest propaganda fare in years,
desil!!l"&lt;i to whip the J)Ubllc into a
patriotic frenzy. But, a~rding to a
recent Gallup poll, 72 percent of
Americana are not biting. They are
convinced the nuclear anns race between the United States and Russia
has careened out of control and Is
leading to the mutual destruction of
both countries.
The

and the pablic more leery than every
about their propaganda.
The Washington Pnst article of
March 10 was never officlaUy confinned nor denied by the White
House and State Department. It
slated that $19 million had been
authorired by President Reagan to
pay for the services of 500 mercenaries from Latin America countries on covert activities in
Nicaragua under direction of the
CIA. They, with CIA associates,
would plug what the State Department has alleged to be a pipeline for
smuggled Soviet anns from Cuba to
El Salvador via Nicaragua. In addition, the mercenaries would be
used to sabotage Nicaraguan dams,
power stations and other economic
targets.
The plan has been stymied by Rep.
Michael Barnes, Chainnan of the
House Foreign Affairs Conunlttee,
who introduced a bill to prohibit the
CIA and other
U. S. agencies
from
assisting
any covert
paramilitary
action In or against Nicaragua.
Two days later the State Depart·
menf suffered another blow to their

orcbeslrated the past year bY the
combined resources of the State
D.!parlrnent and the CIA, ground to
a halt last week when two sprags
were thrown into the cop. The first
was a leak to the Washington Post of
a CIA planned and U. S. financed invasion .of Nicaragua. The other was
a much publicized confession by a
Nicaraguan soldier that Cuba had
been supplying anna to El Salvador
rebels tllrOUgh Nicaragua. Both
IIIOries left the CIA and the State
Department with egg on their faces.

to El Salvador guerriUas. The
"evidence" was a 19;year old
Nicaraguan who had been captured
in El Salvador by goverrunent troops
15 months before. He had told the El
Salvador . pollee and State Department representatives a cock and
bull story about Cuban connections,
etc. They bought his story lock,
stock and barrel and, after careful
coaching.- brought him to the State
Department in Washington as a
prize exhibit at a press conlerence.
To their horror and to the
amusement of the press, the boy

))ennocracy~
. _a_t_w_o_r_k____Ro_b_er_t_W&lt;_az_te_n

'~£"ZE!'

"Jewish.Sicilian mafia." ·
- Anti-Semitic material has been
distributed to Red Anny recruits
and published in official military
journals. •
- The teaching of . Hebrew . is
outlawed, and in recent months
more than 80 clandestine teachers of
the language in Moscow alone have
been threatened with prosecution
and banishment if they continue
their activities. Homes have been
raised to seize incriminating instructional material.
-No calwnny is too farfetched for
the Soviet stable of anti-Semitic
hacks. Incr!!dibly, a number of articles in the press ace~ P1e Jews
of collaborating with Adolf Hitler to
.destroy the Soviet Union. Jews have
been accused of "stimulating anti·
Semltism and ·setUng , fire to
synagogues in order to . settle in
Israel."
In this frightening atmosphere,
it's no wonder Soviet Jews are
desperate to leave their homeland.
Experts estimate that more than
360,000 have taken at least the first
step In the agonizingly slow process

.of obtaining emigration permits.
But from being merely. cumbersome and bureaucratically complex, the emigration process has
now become virtuaUy Impossible.
For example, to apply for ari exit
visa, a Soviet citizen must first
produce an affidavit from a close
relative in another country stating a
'
ted.
desire to .bave *
But Soviet pos($1 .
es' have
simply stopped delJVi
many of
these affidavits wben IIIey arrive.
And to rilake Slire nQ one smuggles
the precious docwnents into the
country, emigration officials are
now requiring visa applicanta to submit stamped envelopes along_ !'lth
the affidavits.
•
Furthennore, ''refuseniks,' ' a·
those
request emigration
an,
.called,who
'
run a seriOU!.fisk of lOSing
their jobs when ~ a(lply, They
must receive pe~
the\t' ·
parents, their boss @il!l. II!IY other
"superior" - even IJJIIII:,~. If
the request falls at any•ii!Ne, i)le ap- ·
plicant is invariably
81!11 the
whole family is ostradled In the
·
community.

The Sunday Ti mes-Se ntinel

Pag-

A-3

Old men and wa.r.______ _ _ ___________L_ow_e_ll _W_in.::..:.eg:..:_:_U

already frazzled nervous system.
For weeks Secretary Haig had been
assuring Congresa the Sta~ Depart·
ment had "Irrefutable evidence" of
Nicaragua's role in supplying anns

EP==:::U;;;;;;n~is~h~======J=ac=k=A=nd=er=so=n

latest crackdowli on Its unhappy
Jewish population. Here are some of
the uglier manifestations:
- The state-controlled press

Pomeroy- Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

WASHINGTON (NEA) - At first
glance, the corporate headquarters
of Consumers United Group in a
downtown office building here appears to be no different from any
other thriving, big-city conuneccial
enterprise.
Some workers scurry about the of·
.lice while others concentrate on
Iaska at their desks. Telephones ring
constantly. A malnlrame computer
quietly digests, analyzes and spews
.out data needed to serve the finn's
clients.
The sale of health and life in·
surance, an important component of
CUG's business last year produced
$80 million worth of premiums.

During the past decade, the company's customers have included
some of the country's largest banks,
department store chains and
military fraternal organizations.
Behind that buainess·as-usuai
facade, however, CUG is unlike any
other corporation In thia country.
At a time when those who formulate public policy are becoming
increasingly intrigued by "work
place democracy" as a means of ex·
panding the productivity of the
nation's work force, CUG is a model
of that concept in action.
"All of us who work here have an
equal voice in the management of
the company," says James Gibson,

CUG's 50-year-&lt;&gt;ld founder, who is
clearly disturbed by the fact that "I
stiU have too much Influence here."
Although Gibson is the closest
thing in the CUG hierarchy to a chief
executive officer, he doesn't even
have the power to make major
decisions •, for feU ow employees.
Twice In recent years, for example,
he wanted to move the corporate of.
!ices to a new location In this city and twice he was overruled by a vote
of the finn's approximately 300
workers.
CUG's employees decided collectively that no worker should be paid
less than the amount established by
federal standards aa the minimwn
necessary to adequately support a
family of four - a figure that
currently stands at $15,400.
AI many other companies, senior
officials earn as much as 100 tim'/§
more than the I~ •p&amp;id
. ployees ; the average ratio between
the top and the botl11n of the
payscale is 17 to I. At CUG,
However, nobody can be paid more
than five times what another employee earns.
The company has enjoyed
phenomenal growth since it was
founded in 1964, but it specifically
limits its annual profits to five per·
cent.

:;m.-

tram

have acted Uke bully-boys with chips
on their shoulders.
Casper Weinberger has the job (or
pleasure ) of administering the
largest budget for war in our peace
time history and still wants more for
next year. There Is no way possible
tliat the huge amount allocated to
defense (war) can be spent efficiently. I doubt if he knows how
much goes where. If, as he claims,
all fat has been trimmed from the
budget, how does he know? He has
spent so much time abroad as the
world's most successful arms sale...
man he has had little time to do his
job at home. Does he realize the
touted ML tanks are considered

worldwide as $2 billion worth of,
while elephants? Does he know the
B-1 bomber was classified as obsolete three years ago? Does he
know the MX missile is redundant ?
Has he found the $30 biUion Stock·
man said could be shaved from the ·
defense budget• Has he looked' .
These are only a few of the questions
to which I expect no answer.
These three old men, Reaga n,
Haig and Weinberger, have brought :
us closer to war and to possible :
oblivion than at any time in the ·
history of the world. There is some :
small comlort in the Uwught that ·
their chances for ultlmate survivai
are no better than our own.

Letter to the editor
A Democrat responds
I read last Sunday in the Times·
Sentinel that a man t'n Rutland
thinks the newspaper should just
publish the Republican's point of
view.
I am glad we have a paper that
presents hoth sides of an issue.
That man didn't have a good word
th
·
for any of e Democratic presidents
we have had In the u.s..
He mentioned President
Roosevelt. If Mr. Roosevelt hadn't
been elected half of the people In this
COWitry would have starved to
death . When :Mr. Hoover, a
Republican, was president he gave
us a sack of fl011r, and that came
through the Red Cross-but, what
can you do with flour, without
grease.
I remember working in the coal
mines at $3.28 a day-and the days
were 12 and 14 hours long. I also
remember doing road work, away
from home, paying $1.25 a day for

hour. All this happened during
Repu bl'tcan admims
· trat'IOns.
Then, when the Democrats got ln
power they put In the wage Ia~.
whic~ started us truck driverrs at 85
cents an hour-then, in the second
year, $1 an hour. And, so you see
why so many of us working peop,le
ed
turn Democrat. I started to vote
Democrat so I could eat like th~
Republicans.
In regards Mr. Wingetts last
column : Mr. Reagan wants us tp
starve to death while he is having' a
good time on taxpayer's moneyrunning Air Force One all around
the country.
This man from Rutland didn 't
mention Nixon, or Ford, who (iardoned Nixon, or·any of the otl\er dir.·
ty bunch who went to prison.
You are reading a letter from
man 711-years old, who worked every
day since he was 10 years old. . · ,
Ben Baty

a

======:.

changed his story. He knew nothing _boar;;;rd=w;;;h:il:e:ma=k:in:g=35=ce:::nts:::a:n::::M:i:ddl=epo=rt:,:0:
.
about arms shipments to El I1
Salvador. He had used his story as a
SlORI HOURS:
means of excaping the tortures of an
Mon.-Thu11. 9 am til 9:30 p~
El Salvador jail and would be killed
if returned there. He was turned
fri.-Sat. 9 am Iii 10 pm
over to the Nicaraguan embassy and .
sent back home to a hero's welcome
~~=~uant ties CLOSED SUNDAYS
- the only boy In history. who had
ever snookered the State Department. Simultaneously, French
President Francois Mltterrand,
visiting Pesident Reagan in
WashingtOn, expressed strong opposition to the admlnlab'ation's
policy In CentraL America. AU In all,
the White House faces lncreaalng
difficulties ln making a case for iu
Conununlst paranoia in Central
America. The result so far has been
a declaration of emergency by
Nicaragua.
Y.ou -have riO doubt read more
detailed accounts . of these two
stories in your newspaper but I have
summarized them here to emphasize the lengths the hawks in our
government wiU go to stir up dissension or to create propaganda. Sooner
or later, a serious incident will occur '
and then aU hell will break loose.
This time we will not have the
questionable satisfaction of
claiming we are in the right. For the
last fifteen months the three old men

ARTCARVED SILAOIUM 8

ftt\!d

CLASS RING

Art Boohwald

Ask no~=======================

. u

...

i

President Reagan is asking the
private sector to pick up the slack In
all the government social programs
he's axed. He wants companies to
fill the void by supporting charities,

~

universities, medical research, and

.i

.

i
•
¥
0
"i submit that we should all go down to the
Caribbean Basin and check things out whlla the
W68th61' Is still crummy around hera. "

Today in history
) I'oday ts Su'nday, March 21, the 80th day of 1982. There are 285 days left in
~year.

;Today's hlghliglit in history:
21, 1979, the lsraeU Cabtnet approved the U.S.·sponsored
~ace treaty with Egypt, clearing the way lor a slgnlng ceremony in
washingtOn.
· On this date:
.
: ·In·l790, Thomas Jefferson became the first U.S. Secretary of State.
: In 1829, an earthquake in Spain klUed 6,000 people .
.· In 1918, Gennan guns bombarded Parts !rom 75 miles away during
World War I.
·
,
·
In 1975, the mUitary government in Ethiopia aboUshed the royal position
ol emperor.
. Ten years ago: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states may not set
ofle·year residence as a requirement for·voting.
Five years ago: Indian Prime MlniSter Irldlra Gandhi resigned after
lOlling her seal in parliamentary elections.
One year 1!80: Poland's Solidarity labor movement and Communist
government agreed to hold emergency talks, amid a crisis atmosphere
created, by police attacks on union members.
· Thought for today: Opposition !llways Inflames the enthuslut, neyer
ctmverts him. -Johann Friedrich Schfller, Gennan writer (1759-18111).

:·On March

the arts.
He couldn't have asked business to
step in at a worse time.
I went to see the president of the
Sludge Automobile Company to
make a personal appeal for my alma
mater.
His showroom was januned with
people, from directors of day care
. centers, to sOciety women ready to
plead for their symphony orchestras.
After a four-hour wait, I finally got
In to see him.
"Hi, Jake," I said.
''The answer is. no," he said.
"I haven't even ~Y pitch,:,: I
protested. "My school Is having a
$10 mUIIon drive to make up for
federal acholarshlp funds we've lost
and President Reagan and I thought

"

"Don't mention that man's name
to me. If he thinks he can throw his
social problems in my lap, he's
crazier than his budget."
"Jake, I thought you were a big
Reagan man.''
"You saw my show•oom.
Everyone is out there wanting a handout. My phone hasn't stopped
ringing since Reagan said business
has to take up the bu'nien caused by
his budget cuts. Hasn't he heard of
the receasion? Our profits are down
by 80 percent. We may ha've to close
several dealerships in the first quar·
ter. And you want me to give money
to your alma mater?"
.
"But, Jake, we can't get it from ·
the government, so we have to appeal to the private sector. What bel·
ter place to start than the auto cOmpanies?"
"Jiike cried, "I bav~'t sold a car
in a month; You want blood? Go to
the Red Cross?"

r.---=-=~

"But if the bwiiness community
doesn't take over the areas where
the government can't help any
more, wherecanwegoformoney?"
"The same place I'm going. The
the bankruptcy court Look, I run a
business. When things are good, I
give. When things are lousy, I can't
give. The reaSon the governm~nt
can't give any more Is things. are
lousy. If it was gOOd for them, they
wouldn't teU you· to come to me.
What makes them think things are
gOOd for the private 'sector, if it's
lousy for them?"
"CorpOrate America can't ignore
its social responsibilities, just
becauSe you're not making any·
money," I said. "If Reaganomics
ever has a prayer of working, you
people have to suffer paint. What is
more painful than giving· money to
PQ?ofuams that the government can
no onger iiffQnl?"- ·
"Trying to make your payroll for
one," 1 Jake said 'Going out of

business for another."
"I guess Reagan has more faith in
private enterprise than you do. He
would have never cut out the funds
to my alma mater if he didn't
believe you were ready to take up
the torch."
"Well, he can have the torch back.
I'm not the keeper of the flame. Why
don't you go to the oil companies?"
"I did, but now that there is Oil glut
they have no guilt money to hand out

2% MILK

any more ~"

· Jake was almost in tears. "My
wife's on the hoard of a hospital, my
daughter works fo~ a senior citizens '
lunch. program, the only guy who
bought a car from me this year
made me buy a table for the Kidney
Foundation dinner. How the hell can
I give to you, when I've already been
wi)llld 'out by gi vin~t to them? "
"I can 'only give you one answer,
Jlike."
~~ What's that?"
" Your President wants you·to."

DOONESBURY

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�'

Poineroy-Middleport__:_Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Page-A -4- The Sundav Times-Sentinel

w. Va .

Mar. 21, 1982

Mar. 21, 1982

Ohio grew slowly in '70s, census sh~ws :;

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The was 3.9 percent from 1930 to 1940
by 46 percent In Warren County.
latest census shOws an Increase In when the population Increased
The rural population rose by 31 perOhlo's population, but the growth from 6.6 nilllion to 6.9 rnllJion. The
cent In Columbiana County while It
rate reflected In the federal report fastest rate of growth so far In the
declined by 31 percent In Greene
Is the least In 00 years.
20th century was 22.1 percent reCounty.
The final 199J federal census re- corded In 1960 over 1950 and 20.8
Twenty-three of Ohio's 88 coonport distributed Friday says percent In 1920 over 1910.
ties reported more than 100,001 peo10,797,630 people claimed to be
The new report reflects an Inpie. Cuyahoga C9unty continues to
Ohioans that year.
crease In the state head count of
be the most populous, but Its
The report shows that to be an 140,~ persons over the decade.
1,498,400 residents represented a
Increase of 1.3 percent over the 1970 The jlopulatlon In rural Ohio Indecline of 12.9 percent over the 1970
population of 10,a57,42S, and lndlc- creased by 9.6 percent during the
census report which showed
tates the omallest growth rate In decade while the urban population • 1,720,835 residents.
the 00 years the federal govern- dropped by 1.3 percent.
HamUton County continues as
ment has counted, or guessed at,
The rate of growth arnoog urban
the . second most populous with
the state's population.
ranged from 83 percent In
873,224 residents, down 5. 7 percent
The largest rate of growth oc- Clark County to a 39 percent drop In
from the 925,944 oWlted there In
19'10.
curred In the first decade of state- Brown County. The largest rate of
Franklin County Is
third targhood, from lBOO - three years · Increase In rural populatlonalsoocest with 869,132
ents, up 4.3
before statehood - to 1810, when curred In Brown County, up 35.9
the population was recorded as percent over the decade. ·
percent fromrilll~l'l,249 of a decade
The urban population Increased
ago.
230,760, a ~ rate of l!l!
by 52 percent In Med1na County and
MontgomeQ' County's 571,697
percent.
The previous low rate of growth
populaUOn Is down 6 percent from

...

areas

;

•

.. .

lines untU at least 1987 and possibly

1993.
II also would double allowable
levels of automobUe pollution, exempt Cincinnati and other cities
from monltortng automoblle emissions, end ·regulations that make
new Industries In polluted areas
control poUtltanls and relax rules

E~onomy

remains
in ,state of retreat

•

,•
'
'
COLUMBIA AWAITS LAUNCH - The Space Shuttle Columbia is
covered by the ..,rvice tower as it silo on Pad 39A at the Kennedy Space
Ce11ter Friday. Liftoff of the Columbia Is scheduled for Monday. (AP
Laserphoto).

Countdown•.•
...' ...•'
..-,...
~

~

'

'

'

.

. .

--- -'
-

....
-

&lt;·

(Conllnued from A-1)
minutes of fllght, the crew would
twn the shuttle around and head
for a 15,®foot paved runway a
iew mUes from the Florida
launch site. I! they were only
able to get barely Into orbit, mtsslon rules ~all for a landing at
Northrup.
The site resembles an Antarctic base. Its gypsum sand Is
talcum-powder fine and so brUliantly white that actor Clint
Eastwood recently considered
making an arctic movie there.
The two 6-mUe runways form
an "X" on the floor of the Tula-

rosa Basin. On the west side are
the reddish Organ Mountains,
which get their name from their
pipe shape. Far to the east, and
darker In color, are the Sacra ..
menlo Mountains.
The norrnally desolate basin
was being turned Into an Instant
spaceport.
A 23-car train from Edwards,
with priority clearance for all
tracks, was due to arrive tonight
with critical equipment needed
to purge the ship of Its volatUe
fuels and gases, to cool It and to
blow away poisonous vapors
upon landing.

20 believed dead in
military plane crash
WONDER LAKE, lll. (AP) Authorities searched a swampy
lleld In northern Illinois early today
hoping to fllid survivors of a blazing
mUitary-alrplane crash believed to
have killed at least 20 people.
The Illinois National Guard .KC135 aircraft went down Frtday
night In an unincorporated area
• _ about 50 miles northwest of Chicago, scattering wreckage over a
2-square-mlle area, Air Force Lt.
Col. Duane Swimwel said.
Capt. Robert Crabtree of the
McHenry County shertff's office
•
said nine or 10 bodies had been
• • : found by early today.
McHenry County Coroner Alvin
Queerhammer said he knew of no
survivors.
Swlmwel said he was not sure
how many people were aboard the
filght. Pollee lnltlaUy reported a
• crew of seven and 13 passengers
were aboard, but Swimmel said
.. , only that the plane normally car,
, • rles a crew offour and can carry up
• . to 40 passengers.
•I! the plane had gone a hall-mile
·farther, It would have hit a residential area, said Sgt. James Connelly
of the McHenry County sherUf's
department
"!!he (thepllot) wastrytngtoput
It down, he couldn't have put It
down In a better place," said she. , • • riff's deputy Robert L. Joosten.
·~. :
The plane was a military equlval/ • ent of a Boelrig 707 and was on rna.• : • neuvers en route from K.I. SaWyer

.

'

Air Force Base In northern Michlgao to O'Hare International Airport In Chicago, according to
mUitary and Federal Aviation Administration officials.
Master Sgt. Jerry Bllke, an Air
Force spokesman at O'Hare, said
the craft was !rom the 126th Air
Refueling Wing stationed atthe Air
Reserve Forces FacUlty _a t O'Hare.
The cause of the crash, which occurred at 9: 11 p.m., was not lmmedlately known and Identities of the
dead were not available.
Light rain mixed occasional sleet
was !sUing when the plane crashed
and the ground was partlally covered with snow.
A temporary morgue was set up
at the sheriff's police garage In
nearby Woodstock, Crabtree said.
Three of the bodies were found In
a car-sized piece of cockpit that apparently struck a tree and landed
about 50 yards from two houses.
The plane's fuselage was more
than a hall-mUe away, he said.
"It was one massive ball olflre,"
Connelly said. "I could have read a
newspaper on my front porch. My
house Is about an eighth of a mile
from the crash site. I thought the
house across the street blew up."
Area residents said a thunderstorm lnlllally made them mistake
the sound ot the crash for thunder.
"The plane broke up In flight,"
said Swlmwell. "That's all we
know." The weather might have
been a factor, he said.

By STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
AP BwJiness Writer
NEW YORK (AP) _The econor:ny Is stiU In retreat and key elements for a recovery remain
e 1usIve, government reports of the
past week' Indlcate.
Personal Income ·IB growing, but
not fast enough to revive the econamy. Corporate profits remain
weak. Industrial production and
factory use are up from January
lows, but the number of business
!allures also grew. Interest rates
remained at lofty levels.
Murray Weldenbaum, chairman
or the president's Councll of Economic Advisers, told an Interviewer: "The major barrier to
recovery Is those hlgher Interest
rates."
In Washington, feuding con-

re.

FrancesLB9
GAU.!Pous -Frances Louise

Bilms, 70, a restdentofthe!mbJock
of ThW Avenue, Ga!Jtpolls, dled 81
2 a.m. Saturday In Holzer Medical

Center.

Born July 23, 1911, In ~Us,
she was the daughter of the late
OmeUa Lewis.
Surviving are three daughters
Judy Payne of GaJltpolls, and BettY
Reid and Ida Briggs,·both of Dayton; and six grandchUdren.
· Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday In MWer's Home for
Funerals, with the Rev. Grover
TUrner officiating. Burial wm·be 1n
Pine Street Cemetery. Friends
may c.all at the funeral home from
6-9 p.m. Monday.
Pallbearers wtU be JeSSie SaWiders, GeorgeGUmore, Melvin Valentine, Richard Mitchell, Glendon
Vinson and WWJam Armstrong.

cent from the corresponding week
In 1981. Thecredit-rattngagencyreported 4,398 business !allures 1n the
. f th
50
fl rs t 10 weeks
0
e year, up percent from the same 19sl period .
. erce [)eno"'~ent reThe Comm
...,.
w..
~_.
Americans'
perso
'
nal Inpo'""'
me
rose
0.5
percent
1n
Februa"",
CO
·'
whUe personal consumption spendlng cUmbed 0.8 percent. Personal
savings fell slightly.
Economists said personal Income must show stronger growth.
Otherwise there wfU not be enough
money for a rebound In consumer
buying to stimulate .businesS or
enough funds to litcrease savings to
provide cash for investment In buslness expansion and modernization.
The Conference Board, . a
business-sponsored research organtzatlon, released Its February

any

Con:
;;;;;j

SOUTHERN
REVUE

WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY
SATURDAY

fREN' CH
QUARTER

.------------l .~=========~
i1111h~ 'timn· imtintl

Reduce
current taxes
while setting
aside
retireme nt
money ...

BANKRUPTCY/CHAPTER 13
(Wage Earner Plan)
I

No fee for lnformatlom
1-221-5379

-~ant

aiNHit _ , _

Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N _Maggjed
· Attorneys-At-Law
_88 E. Broad Sf.
Columbus, OH. 43215

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

OHIO VALLEY BANK

.-

II

~.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Write for Free Brochures Showing
Memorials In Full Color With Sizes and
Prices Listed.
·
·

Office Hours by Appointment Only

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
POMEROY, OHIO

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

VINTON, OHIO

Pomeroy-M110n Brldre

W. M1l1 St.
388-8603

992·2511

OPEN DAILY 10·9
SUNOAY 1-6
'&gt;

(NI lrt") &lt;fllllf!IJDn ,. In
~1ed ~ ....

oo

n11~11 I!Vfl1o .MI•IJI
l)l&lt;t Ylltl . .~ II oil

fll•'

•••'\(11\

111111 '""'''• q...,nlo!r l ta~f.IU' C tl~""rl"t 1 ~

: :
MASON - Carrie M. Judson, 89,
; -: ·: of Lakemore, Ohio, formerly of
; · : ; Hartford, died Thursday In Akron
• : · ; · City Hospital.
: • • -:
Bon\ Jan. 12, 1893, she was the
:: : ; •· da!iihler of the late Joseph and
1~ ,
Mary Fry Judson, and was also
• ' : ·: - pn!Ceded In death by her husband,
; •~ · ~ Charles.
; • _•
Surviving are a son, Charles of
: : : :, Elyria; a daughter, Gladys
•' • McManes of Lakemore; a brother,

H llOmll~

oa-cs

:··

Our Reg. 3.97 (300)

'-1: •,. ----------------~--~------------~
l '

•

'.

'•

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

3 Days Only

87

2.97

30 Plaatlc Traah/Leat Bags
36-gal. capacity. 33x40". 1.5 mil.

Malta~

sse

(301)
Our Reg . 1.03

Ml_lk Balla

(302)

3•pack CJood News• Razors

. ChOcolate coated malted mil~
candy _ 13 oz .

Gillette•; twin-blade disposables.

Look whatS cookfu'at

f

' '

·'...
.l •

&lt;I

I

.-

4

...
.'

~

.•

I

..

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- .
~. -- .

.

,_-

.

,-I

Our 5.97-6.pr. Pkg.

4.97

(303)

Men's Tube Socks
18", white cotton/
nylon . Fit slzes10-13.

Mls. .a' lllp-ona

Eosy-core polyester
l n new fashion colors.

OurReg. 2.4

176Match• Yarn
•
Kolar

1.57:.

(309)

.

Cleanee
Scouring Pads
. Package of 9
pads. Teflon safe.

Bicycle Tires (305)
20x2.125 MX
.Gumwall Tires .
Our Reg. 7.66 ..... .

PRICE

With
Coupon

Orion• ac rylic/ Dac·. ron• polyester. 8 oz."

Our Reg . 1.87

SUIIIICIIIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier orMoter lblute
One week ...................... 11.00
One Month ..................... $4.40
one year . . ... , , ... .. ......... . f$2.80

13x13" ~~~

LlmH12 _
•Nelwt .

MichiKan, 4M75.

A2h"x3"x3A''

Our Reg. 1.4 7 C304 l

Our Reg. 2.97

$1

2.27
2

Bdl.
KHchen T•rrles
2 towels or 3 dishcloths. Cotton terry.

sse

(311)

Massengll..
2•pack Douche
Disposable
douche. 2. 6oz , paCks .

Our Reg . 1.11

OurReg.l.97

to carriers.

MAILSUBSCRIPIIONS
s-loyOIIIy
One year .... .. ... ,, ......... • . $i0.80
Si1months ......•.•• .. .....•.• •10.40

Security· Chain
and Lock (307)
OurReg.5.97- .. - __ .S3

Dependable

Propane
Cyttnder
For use with
propane gos
torch. Save.

DollJ...rs-r .

()fdoudW.,tVIrpall

16" Bike Tire

One year ...................... . ..00
SbuTJOnih ............ .. ....... PI.IO
11oree moniho . .. . .. . . ...... .. . . llllll

r

Pump (308)
Our Reg. 3.97 __ .. __ 2.97

RolloO.IIi&lt;lel*o

udWeotVirpllo
One yeor ........ ........ .... .. llf,ll ·
Sb.-ho ................... . $lUI

328 Viand Sl

Pt. Plead, WVa.

99~(310)
Liquid Drano &lt;II&gt;
Helps to
clear clogged
droins . 32-oz."

Flashlights /lotteries
2 flashlights with 4 D
batteries. Save nbw.

3 Days Only

Child Carrier (306)
Our Reg. 15.87 .... 12.88

11oree"""""" " " " " " " " " . ··~.10

o&lt;l 11(1(~

AIIVIMIUil llltft'l II IIIli hloll.hle 11)1
(~ U• &lt;Jul I() l n t l'flh.)t llf~l!fl " " """
K mat1 ... ~.~~ lll ..• C ~Mio; &lt;!"' ' IKl""'"
rr~~ !1111 me•rna'IOMe Hlf!41 •t•m 01

'

No IUblcrlptiOill by lTllll permitted lr1
lervt~ Ia
available.

,,

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

TOTALLY .
NEW DESIGN
IN
MEMORIALS

.".... ' Carrie M. Judson

towns where home carrier

---=- '6

ment will be available to talk with
guests, and representatives of the
Buckeye llills vocational clubs will
serve as open house tour guides.
Refreshments will be prepared a nd
served by the Food Service students.
The Buckeye Hills Career Center
Open House is held each year so tha t
the public may visit the vocational
school. This Open House also , :Is
prospective students in selecting the
vocational programs they would
most like to take.
Buckeye Hills is located o~ County
Road 57-B. near Rio Grande.

'

»Cenll

......,. ..r a *"'·*-' ,.......

BHCC sets annual open house

~ ·:: ·

Representative, Branham, 17117 West
Nine Mile Rpad, Sulle 204, ll&lt;ilr&lt;&gt;il.

A-"Y

Ohio; and Boone, Cabell, Kanawha,
Lincoln, Logan, Mason, Mingo, Putnam and ' Wayne counties in West
Virginia.
Requests for bidding documents
should be requested in writing from
the Contracting Officer (134C), VA
Medical Center, 1540 Spring Valley
Drive, Huntington, W. Va . 25704 .
Bids for contracts will close Aprlll6.

Counties in the Huntington VA
Colorado and Rhode Isl.and for
Medlcai Center.~rvlce area deterprivate sector readjustment counmined to have significant need for
seling services identified earlier as
extended readjustment . counseling
needed for those areas.
services are Boyd, Elliott, Floyd,
As implementation proceeds In
Greenup, Joh'!son, Ll!wrence,
this effort Vietnani Era veterans
Lewis, Magoffin, Martin, and Pike
and their families throughout the
counties In Kentucky ; Athens,
United States, Puerto RICO and the
Gallia,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Virgin Islands will be assisted with
Pike,
Scioto,
and Vinton counties in
these additional services. A total
lludget of $11.2 nilllion has been earmarked lor this contracting service.
VA's "Operation Outreach" now
ruo GRMffiE - The public Is inhas 107 Vet Centers operating
vited to attend the annual Buckeye
nationwide with another 29
Hills Career Center Open House Sunscheduled to open this year. Vet Cen~Y. March 28, from 2-4 p.m. at the
ter staff have counseled almost
95,000 Vietnam Era veterans In over Career Center In Rio Grande.
VIsitors will have the opportunity
300,000 visits, and another 611,000
to tour the Buckeye Hills facilities.
family members have also been
Students from each of the 18
helped in this unprecedented effort.
vocational programs will offer
The program was establlahed Undemonst~attons of actual techniques
der Public Law 96-22 In 19'19. The
centers Bl'l! designed to offer a low- - used in vocational training. Each
vocational Instructor will be on hand
key personalized approach to VIetnam Era veterans who have ex- to supervise the demonstrations and
perienced prolonged difficulty in ad·
answer questions. The academic injusting to civilian life after military structors and members Of the
Buckeye Hills Guidance Depart·
service.

··~·~t &gt;lll'l lf111'&lt;•

AdvertlsinJl

SINGLE COPY

Page-A -S

lou II OC&gt;mi"''~QUo'll•lllm 11

Member: The A.uoclated Preu, lnlarld
Dally Press Assoc!atloo and the
American Newspaper Publishers
National

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

. ... l)f'oCII ...,. , ,• • , hlltllbllo !)I od l 0~11

l::ntered a.s setond clu• malllng matter

AuOdlilltiOn,

w. va .

Arden Queen

'nle Sundoy Ttmeo-Sentlnel wW not be
re1p0111ible ror 1dvance Plymentl m~de

j ...
·.·.
.~o;=
..' - ·

HUN11NGTON - 'l1le Veterans
Administration has begun a major
effort to contract with private
organizations to provide readjustment counseling services to
Vietnam veterans In areas which
cannot be adequately or conveniently served by existing
outreach Vet Centers. ·
Charles T. Hagel, Deputy Administrator of V eteraris Affairs, who
heads the Vietnam Readjustment
Counseling Steering Conunittee, has
directed VA field facilities to identify geographic areas containing a
significant Vietnam Era veieran
population and which have unmet
needs for readjustment counseling.
"At the same time we are furnishing
information packets to our facilities
to help them expedite contracts as
requirements are identified," said
Hagel. "The packets inClude a contract formal with a detailed
statement of work which should help
us achieve our objectives rapidly but
efficiently."
Seven contracts are expected to be
signed by March I in Arkansas,

atPomeroy,Ohlo, PCMI Offlre.

lndlvtdullletl-t

And we are willing to pay you a 15% profit on
your pennies. For a limited time the Ohio
Valley Bank will pay you $1.15 for every $1.00
worth of pennies you bring into any of our
four offices. Hur_ry in while this offer lasts.

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

.

I

A Multimedia Ncw5paper
PubliMhed each Suntlay, m Third
Avenue, by the Ohio Valley PubUshing
Corrtpafl)l· Multimedia , Inc. Second dass
pQJtiHe f*d at GaUJpolls, Ohio, ~1.

I Jllian M. Oldacre

GAU.IPOUS - Sarah L. John- ·
· GAWPOUS - Arden Queen,
son, f!T, Of Rt 2, GalUpolls, dled at
64, of Rt. 1, Northup, died· at 9:20
- 8: 25 a.m. Saturday In Holzer Media.m. Friday In the Veterans Adcal Cenier, having been In taUtng
ministration Hospital In ChiWbealth for the past year.
cothe, having been In falling health
Born July 19, 1913, In Galllpolls,
tor the last several years .
daughter of the late John and Ada
Born Dec. 31, 1917, In Hamlin,
· Chandler Harrison, she was a reW.Va., sOn of the late James and
tired HMC employee and attended
Nannle Duty Queen, he was a rethe First Church of the Nazarene. tired
mliier and World War II veteShe married Harley 'E. Johnson
ran, having served In the U.S.
on AprU 18, 1931, In GaWpolls, and
ArmY. He attended Calvary Penhe also preceded ber In death on
tecostal Ch\11'Ch.
22, 1959•
He married the former Eva Moo••:' July
Surviving are three sons, Harley
ney,
who survives, on AprU 14, 1960,
. ' Jr. and John, both of GaWpolls, and
'
Harry of Harrisburg, Pa.; and 12
Continued on Page A-7
- grandch!Jdren and four great- . grandchUdren.
Funeral services wfU be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday In the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Everett Delaney otnctatlng. Burial
wfU be In Mound Hill t:emetery.
Friends may ,call at the funeral
· home from 5-9 p.m. Monday.

.;

USPS5Zia

Fred ofGreensqurg, Ohio; a sister,
Vlctorta Huestng of Fort Mitchell,
Ky.; four grandchlldren; stx greatgrandchildren and tour great-great
grandchildren.
·
Funeral services wfU be held at 1
p.m. Monday In the Foglesong Fune~ HQme, Masoq, Wtth the Rev.
Clyde Fields o!flclattng. Burial will
be In Fry Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from &amp;-9
p.m. today.

today.

Sarah L. Johnson

Middleport

•
Vietnam veterans will get additional sertvces

GALLIPOLIS - Lillian M. Oldacre, 68, of 1910 Chatham Ave., dled
at f:' a.m. Saturday In Holzer
Medical Center, having been In fallIng health lor the past year.
Born May, 23, 1!113, In Gallla
. County. daughter of the tale George
and Naomi WUlls Morrow, she retlri!d from GaWpolls .State Institute, where she worked for 25
years, on Jan. 1, 1972. She also attended the First Church of the
Dencil Ray Hudson
Nazarene.
She married Clyde Oldacre on
MASON - DencU Ray Hudson,
Oct.
13, 1931, In Pomeroy, and he
50, Mason, died last Wednesday 1n
also preceded her In death ori June
~r Medical Center.
Born May 29, 1931, at Hartford, 9, 1981.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
he was the son of the late VlrgU and
Gerald
(Gamet) Smeltzer or GaUlMyla Howell Hudson.
a
son, Jolm of Baker, Fla.;
polls;
SUrviving are three sons, RIeight
grandchUdren;
two sisters,
chard, VIrgil and Dencll; three
Mrs.
Paul
(Oakley)
Thlevener
of
daughters, Nancy, Becky and JenColumbus
and
Mrs.
Dutch
(VIols)
nie; and three brothers, Eugene of
Rutherford of Gallipolis! and a
Pa~. Pa., Glenn of Mason and
brother, George of St. Charles, Mo.
Ralpb of Bremen.
Funeral services wfU be held at 3
Memortal services wtu be held at
p.m.
Monday In the Waugh-Halley11 a.m. Tuesday In the Foglesong
Wood
Funeral Home, with the Rev .
F'llneral Home, ,Mason, with the
Everett
Delaney o!flclatlng. Burial
. . Rev. Bennie Stevens o!!lclatln~.
w1ll
be
In Ohio Valley Memory
Burial will be In Baden PresbyterGardens.
Ertends may call at the
tan Cemetery.
funeral
home
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
There wfU be no calling hours.

on sulfur dioxide emissions from
Impact on the economy than
new Industrial coal-burning bollers. other federal law," said James R.
Environmentalists say It falls to Sheets ot the Washington omce Oi!
address problems of acid rain and
the AFL-CIO Bulldlng and
pollutants that cause -cancer.
struction Trades Department. . .
The Greater Cincinnati Bulldtng · "It has Imposed unusual and un,
and Construction Trades Councu necessary restraints on new Indusand Ohio political representatives trial development with difficult
of the United Mine Workers and the complex regulations. Deadlines
International Union of Electrical are time-wasting compliance exer~
Radio and Machine Workers clses. These regulations eontrt~
teamed up Frtday ~o support uted nothing toward air quality,;'
Luken.
he said.
The labor representatives said
WWJam Farley, a District 7 dtperrillts, pollution controls and regrector tor the International Union
ulatlons have cost the city hundreds
of ·Electrical Radio and Machine
of jobs and have done nothing to
Workers, said the nation was near.
clean the air.
lng a depression and called for lhQ
They claimed new Industrial
removal of any environmental reji
plants In Ohio and Northern Kentrtctlon that might Umitautomoblll!
lucky as well as sewers and highproduction.
1
Charles Grimm of the UMW said
"
ways have not been bullt because of
amendments In 1977 to the Clean 90 percent of the rank-and-tue mine
~
Air Act.
workers have voted to support the
"1
r--"Th_e_Cl_e_a_n_Air_Ac
___t_h_as_h_a_d_m_o_re
__L_u_k_e_n_a_m_en_d_m_en_t_.--~_:_·-

tinued over how to deal with huge
survey of consumer confidence,
federal budget deficits, straining saying consumers are· uneasy ~
the relationship between President
about current economic conditions
Reagan and the business communand ·have turned less opttrntsttc
about the future. But more planned
tty tliat was once solidly in his
comer.
to buy cars, homes and major
Even the most optimistic ecoappliances.
nomic report of the week was lukeThe Commerce Department said
warm. "Recent economic data
factory orders for new durable
Indicate that the recession has
goods rose 1.5 percent In February,
ended," aid Bernard Schoenfeld,
the llrst gain since November and
vice president and economist at
only the second sinCe last July. But ·
New York's Irving Trust Co., the
major categories, Including housenation's 16th-largest bank. But he
hold goods and non-defense capital
added: "The recovery Is expected
goods, showed orders declining
to he relatively subdued ... "
,:l~ro:::m::.:_:::J:an::.:u=a=·---------1
While Schoenfeld was talking
about an end to the second recesstan · of the decade, government
THIS WEEK
economists estimated that the nalion's economy Is declining at the
same pace as It contracted In the
final three months of 1981.
The preUmlnary estimates for
.
the yet-to-be-completed llrst quarter project the lnflatlon-adjusted
gross national product slnklng at an
&amp;
annual rate ol4.5 percent, equal to
the economy's slide In the final
quarter of last year.
Dun &amp; Bradstreet Corp. said
there were 454 business !allures ·In
the week ended March 11. rtslng
Lounge &amp; Carryout
!rom a five-week low of 420 !allures 1~~~~~~~~~~~~
the previous week and up 42 per- 1-

can with S~te Farm'•

WE NEED PENNIES!

1970 and Summit County's52U72tS
down 5.2 percent. Lucas Coonty
ported a population of471,741,down
2.4 percent over the decade.
The state has seven Cl~ wi1h
more than 100,001 residents, led by
Cleveland's 573,822 and Colum~
564,826. The others are Clnctnna'1
with 385,457; Toledo, 354,635; Ak·
ron, 237,1TT; Dayton, 199,321; ~
Youngstown, 115,4Z7.
•
The census also shows Ohio with
at least eight ln.c orporated areas 01!
less than 100 population.
They range from the 58 residents
of JacksoBburg In Butler County to
the 99 living at Yankee Lake In
Trumbull County. 1n between are
Brice and New Rome In FrankUn
County, Rendvtlle l1i Perry County,
Octa In Fayette County, Elgin In
Van Wert County, and Stafford tft
Monroe County.

Unions claim clean air llCt costs jobs
CINCINNATI (AP) - Unions
say they back Democratic u.s.
Rep. Thomas A. Luken's proposal
to revise the Clean Air Act because
environmental restrictions cost unIon workers' jobs.
The Luken amendment would allow the Environmental Protection
Agency to extend clean air dead-

Area deaths

I

I

Pomeroy

.

1.48

Our Re". 2.7B

1.67Ea.
Our K mQr!"

Air Flltero

For many U.S..

· foreign , cors.

�Page-A -6-The Sunday Times-sentinel

l·t.'' '

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

Mar. 21, 1982;.......;..

Mar.

Pleasant, W. v'a .

7

Juveniles receive on year sentence
GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallla removing tiles from the wall, eranear Kanauga.
County juveniles have been sent- wllng through and glilnlng entry
Moulton said the new law makes
enced to the pennanent care and Into Sheriff James Protfltt's rest- It mandatory for the Ohio Depart.
custody of the Ohio Department of dence: They are alleged to have
ment or Youth Services to confer
Youth Services tor a rnJnlmum taken some money from . a bank
with the committing court on the
term of one year.
and two sheepksln vests, one of
placement of the chlld and hls or
J;&gt;robl()e-Juvenlle Court Judge which was later recovered outsldi!
her release.
Thomas Moulton said Rnger Bush the jall.
The lawdoesn'tchangetheprovl·
and Denver Johnson, both 16, were
Bush was earlier Involved In the slon that once committed to the perfound guilty of aggravated pur- theft or a pickup truck from his fa· manent care and custody of the
glary ot an elderly person's home In tiler's Kelton Road residence late OYC, a youth can Pe held until he's
Gallipolis, and escape, theft and Saturday night, the Gallla County 21, Moulton continued. That provlvandallsm during their detention In Sheriffs Department reported. slon covers Instances In which the
the Meigs County jaU.
The truck waslawr recovered after treatment program for the youtji_
Moulton sald these were the first 1t was. wrecked on McCully Road Isn't working.
two juveniles toPe sentenced under ,---~---'-------------------'~
the new law covering juveniles.
Previously, the Judge explained,
the maximum sentence a juvenile
could Pe given was permanent
commltment to the Ohio Youth
Commission. With the passage of
H. B. 440 by the General Assembly,
the committing court now has ihe
right to Impose a minimum sent·
ence of slx months for third and ·
fourth degree felonies and one year
for first and second degree felonies.
,,.,,
Bush and Johnson had first
pleaded not gullty. Atterconferrlng
SUPER
with their attorneys, Moulton said,
SPECIAL/
they changed their pleas.
The pair were Pelng held In the
J"'olgs jaU last Monday morning
when they reportedly escaped by

Intelligent Television

MEIGS FATALITY - A Jeffel'IIOn County man
died In a head-on coDislon on Ohio 7 near Chesler late
Friday altel'IIIIOII. Nicholas Karanzas, 28, Yorkville,
was pi'OIIOIIJIIled dead at the scene. Dr. Hankin
Pleke118, Melp County coroner, said he died of a
broken neck and lntemal hemorraghlng. Karanzas
was northbound at 4: 45 p.m. when he attempted to

pa88 another vehicle ahead of him and ooWded wllh a
southbound truck driven by llobert D. Lemley, 37,
Syracwoe. Lemley Wl1811't Injured In lhe accident, l!ul
It c•uoed severe damage to both vehlclee. Tile GaiUaMelp PIMii of the state hilftway patrol said Karanzas' body was temnporarlly removed to lhe Ewing
Funeral Home In P ..me roy.

PVH has monitoring equipment
POINT PLEASANT ·_ Pleasant
Valley Hospital has the capability of
monitoring additional heart patients
ou~lde the Intensive Care/Coronary
Care Unit due to the purchase of
more telemetry equipment.
The new equipment, as well as
that already in use, is made by
• Spacelabs, the company that
pioneered the design of biomedical
telemetry systems for NASA.
Spacelabs' systems monitored the
astronauts' vital signs during the
moon landings without a single
failure, and th~y are stlll used by
NASA in maMed space JOUJ11eys.
During the past 15 years,
Spacelabs has developed their
equipment through the use of
microelectronics to the point that it
is more acciarate, more dependable,
more compact, and less expensive to
the hospital and the patient.
With the purchase Of a new display

'

Reaches agreement
CENTERVILLE - The Centerville Volunteer Fire Department
has entered into an agreement with
the Ohio Forestry Division to fight
forest and grass fires in the surroundJng areas. The department will be
issuing burning permits during the
spring ftre season. These permits
can be obtained Monday through
Friday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the
fire station in Centerville.

•,

LIST PRICE '329.95

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

highest quality care possible. The
new equipment was. installed at
Pleasant Valley Hospital last month.
Upper Rt. 7
Gallipolis, Oh.
Robert M. Carper, executive
Across
From
the
Silver
Bridge
Plaza
director, commenting in the , new
Spacelab Telemetry equipment
said, "The installation of this new, r~--------=~--'--~~~~~~~~~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~
modem monitoring system is just
one more method Pleasant Valley
Hospital uses to provide health care .
economy to our patients without
sacrificing quality."

terminal capable Of handling four
modules and two new receiver
modules, Pleasant Valley Hospital
can now monitor five patients inside
the Intensive Care/Coronary Care
Unit and five patients outside the
unit.
By increasing the number of
patient monitors outside the Intensive Care/Coronary Care Unit
patients can be "stepped down" to
less critical care sooner, saving
them money while maintaining the

Student remains

,,

OUR PRICE

caliber bullet Into .his stomach. Pollee said they did not know why the
youth shot himself.
·
Hls famuy are devout Baptists
and Sylvester had ~ Bible with him
that day.
Pollee Capt. Mlchael Kocak said
the shoollng appeared to have been
planned.

SIORE HOURS:

Man.-s.t. 8 1111·10 pm
Sundly 10 1111·10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH MARCH 27, 1982

DONR.HILL

Hill files
for Meigs
• •
commiSSIOD
pOMEROY- Don R. Hill, lifelong
resident of Meigs County with the
exception of two years spent in the
u. S. Anny, 188 filed for the
Republican nOmination to run for
Meigs County COJnmissioner.
Hill, who has been a Letart fanner
all of his life; is·a son of Inez Hill and
the late Jullan mn. He is married to
the fanner Mary Euler and the
couple has three children, Heath,
Carissa and Corey.
A Letart Township trustee for the
past 12 years, Hill is also a member
of Racine American Legicm P09I
602; Racine Masonic Lodge 461;
Free and Accepted Scottish Rite,
Valley of Columbus; Aladdin Temple,. Colwnbus, and the Twin City
Shrine Club, Racine.

,,

NEW LOW-LUSTER SATIN
One coat house paint with our
exclusive 3 year mildewresistant warranty in 35 colors. mixed while you wait.

POMEROY- Representatives of
the Meigs County Board of Elections
wlll visit the three ltfeigs County
high schools to register seniors as
~rsthissprlng.
.
On Tuesday,.Marcb 23, representatives will be at Melf18 High School,
and they will be at ~m High on
March 26, beginning at 9 a.m. each
day. 'fl1e date for Southern High will
be announced later.
Voters must be 18 before Nov. 3 in1
order to register for the June 8 election&amp;. Cutoff date for all registrants
iBMay10.

Down is up
' '
'II:

17.99 Gal.

Now's the time to get rid of
crabgrass and other grassy
weeds in your lawn . Just spread
Turf Builder Plus Halts• from

Scotts e·. It'!I stop them from
sprouting and provide a good

feeding lor your lawn .

Only

$}799
Scotts Sugg.
$24.95

5,000 sq.

'

Easy application
and cleanup in 23
color-fast colors.

FLAT or
CEILING
Reg. 515.99

. SEMI-GLOSS

Reg. 144.95
SALE RUNS MAR. 21 THRU MAR. 31 - NO RAIN CHECKS

FASHION LATEX

~~!LA~
~~00 fF'A[Q)~ A~AW~

Spring(v;~Y

sg!!LLON

$}0~!LLON

-... For one-coat results, all Se!Jrs one-coat paints must be applied as directed.
; Need. a special colO!'? Corne see our E11y Living Custom Color dlsplly and select ,Jrom a lull sp
· trum of,._520
custom
mhr:ed colors.
ec·
_____
. '

..

__....,_.__.....,
-, --~~;_:::SatlsfliCtlon Gu.rontoed pr Your Money Ia

529 JACKSON PIKE 4·~~·;;~~¢

HOURS: MON.-$AT. 9 AM TO 8 PM

. Aat or Ceiling White

FASHION
SEMI-GLOSS

Reg.S13.i9
Reg. 514 .19
Easy Application and
Cleanup in 23 colorfast colors

and grass grow greener

PHONI 446-455C

..
W1eners....•............

SUPERIO-R FRANKIE

A
8

GRADE AWHOLE

Chickens......-...... ~

0

...

'

.,

'.

.. '~

..

••

·USQACHOICE BONE~ESS . .

Chuck.................L~

$} 79

'.
..
'·..

.

.••

$239

.

Phone
446-2770 .

Let us do your painting.
Call446-2770 For
Free Estimates
&lt;·

/SearS/ •

~-

-

SILVER BRIDGE PWA

lEAl!$. IIOnUCM ANO CO.

.

,.

..

ro

GRIMMS LANDING - Velvia '
Oldlker Tucker, ~. GrUnml! Landin&amp; died ~turday morning at her
home alter a long lllneaa.
Born Nov. 2$, 19U, In MIIQII
Colmty, lhe ... the daughter vt the
late Lewlland Mary Craig Oldaker.
Sfae ... abo the wife ttl the late
Jolm W. Tuclfer, who died In
Jeuuyllll.
Sbe wu a member ttl the Oma
a,.pet OIUrdl at Grlmml LIDdblg.

'·

Cube Steaks ........~•.

5
Tomatoes ........... ~s. ·
. PARKA~
2
$}
.Marganne..........~. I
LARGE

l

. • _

llblrllf
tbre6 daUIIim.

Sarvl'llnl are a

TueMr, Bulfalo;

1011,

Mn. Rebe Kine. !ln. Jl11 Tlmtao,
boll ttl Grlmma lMKinl md Mn.
Lolida Jelfen, 11Gb111Bburl: •
· 'fOIIt.er 1011, 001n Scott, G~
l.adlnl; twa alltan, lin. FriDI:el
Jelhn, l(anlllllviDe, Olllo Mrs. GriH ~ Allatie;
twv bi ...... ltriWidee qldallar,
Grlmma Landlnc · and Bomer

Oldaker, Point Pl-ut; nlrle
aranclchildren and two ireat.. __..-ddldren.
r-rll .me. wiD be an-ced later br tile Ra111ei
HDe In Balfa1o.

,._11

..

$ 69

DAR I FRESH.
HEINZ

a UP

440Z. JUG

···········~·········

.

$4.99

MAXWELLHOUSE

1!~~..

Instant Coffee....

BANQUE! · ·

TV D1nners .......!

10
• :.

·····couPON·······

. • • tJ . •

FLAVORITE

SUGAR
:5 LB. BAG

$} 39

•

• ••••••

JELLO INSTANT 3.75 OZ. :

• ..PUDDING · •

3/.$}00:

:oR REGIJUR
} OZ. GELAnN·

•. ~

•

12 OZ. PKG.

'

Vilvia 0. Tueker

$3695

~~

· . 12 OZ. PKG.

MonaGWofSaltRock, w.va.,Mrs.
Mae Lear of ctrclevllle and Mrs.
Edith Jenkins of Newark; tour
brothers, Perry of Northup, Albert
of Salt Rock, Frank ~ Gallipolis
and Jack of Crown City.
He was also preceded in death by
slx brothers and four slsten.
Funeral services wiD Pe held at 1
p.m. Monday In Dickey Chapel'
Church, near Mercerville, with the
Rev. David White and the Rev. Jun·
lor Btrchfteld of!lclatlng. Bw1a1
wiD be In Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at
Waugb-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

ONE COAT LATEX
- PAINT

Have we got an
offer for you! ·
Sale Price

Sliced Bacon ...........

In Columbus.
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Pamela WOlford and Ramona
Queen, both of Northup, and Mrs.
Arda1yn Spark of Dayton; five
grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs.

EASY LIVING INTER.IOR

SAVE 20%0N ...
Super Turf Builder
Super Turf Builder Plus 2
Turf Builder
Turf Builder Plus 2
and other Scotts products

haunt your lawn

$}19

Continued from Page A-6

This spring, you can get your lawn Into mint condition
and save up to $6, too. Here's all you have to do: make a
5.000 sq. ft . purchase of Super Turf Builder. ferti lizer, or
Super Turf Builder Plus 2. fertilizer and weed cpntrol. ln
return, you'll receive a coupon from Scans. (al leasl $Tin
value) good for a fulure purchase. The coupon value
1ncreases by $1 for each addilional5,000 sq. ft . purchase.
(Lim1t: one $6 coupon per household for 30,000 sq. ft .)

Don't let crabgrass

. .

Area deaths

519.99

to your lawn and
your packet

· LB.

terwear are reporting e~llent
sales, despite the recession and record world prices for feathers and
down.'

. EXTERIOR GLOSS .... ..... 112.99

some
"Easy Graan"

Thanks to the bitterwlnterweather
here and In the United States, Canadian manufacturers of down wtil-

39
$}

Po·rk Lo1n
• ·............

SUPERIOR

BUCKET

~EG,ManltoOO(AP)­
C&gt;

You can add

17~'4

be

EXTERIOR PAINT SALE

Regular

I

·Seniors will
registered

in serious state

LORAIN, Ohio (AP) - A 17·
year-old high school junior who
shot himself In the slnmach In the
school cafeteria remained hospital·
!zed In serious condition on Friday.
Michael Sylves.ter underwent
surgery at St. Joseph Hospital on
Wednesday after ·he llred a .25-

.

'•

· .

:
Limit One Per Customer
•
Good Qnly at Powell's
• Offer Expires March 27, 1M2

:

:
•
•

•••••••••••••• •••••••

HYLAND CHUNK

DOG FOOD.
tJLB,

$329

Limit one Per customer
Good Onlv at Powell's
Offer Expires March 27, 1982

D.,-ERGENT

S40Z.

$289

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
March 27, 1982

�Mar. 21, 1982

Page-A-8-The Sundav Times-Sentinel

••

Brown's ·d ecision provides
· Republieans·with uneasiness

'.·'

r

L
LAWRENCE COUNTY LIONS REGISTER- Ed
WUgua, second from rlgbt, and Terry England, rlgbl,

~~=~e C~~of~:the~

~

rlle Lio

Welco~~~

;

Proclorvnle-Rome I.JoDI . Club,

Ll
were two of 351 Distrkt U-J U01111to
re!::~for the
twiHiay convention beblg held tbl8
iv
Ill GaUia County. Ga811M1Us II tbe bolt club.

.

· .

J~oha

Forty-aloe club&amp; make up dlatrict 1J.J ID eenlnl and
Southern Oblo. Regllterblg guesll on left are Jim
Wllltam8, far left, president of tbe GalliP'Ills Club, aod
Claude Daulell. Tlmes-SentiDel pboto waa taken
around 1:30 p.m. Saturday ID the lobby of tbe HoBday

IIIII, Kaaaqa.

COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) -Some
Ot Ohio's top RepubUcans are .walkIng on eggshells as a result ot 75year-old Ted W. Brown's decision
to 1'1111 for secretary ot state this
year.
Brown, who held the otflce tor 28
years but lost lt .to a Democrat four
years ago, has scared ott some RepubUcans, who are lamenting that
be Is unbeatable In the June primary but unelectable ln November.
To compUcate matters, BroWn Is
a genuinely likeable guy who has
done many favors for a lot ot his
GOP colleagues over the years.
They teel.grateful but say privately
tlllit be Isn't up to a rigorous, sevenmonth campalgn and that no one
wants to say so and possibly hurl
his feeling$.
Democrat Anthony J. Celebre2Ze
Jr. edged Brown out of office In 19'78
by 9,740 votes among 2. 7 rnUUon
cast, sending him to his ceramics
hobby shop In suburban Upper Arllngton, where be says he has been
restless ever since.
"I don't enjoy retirement," be
said on a vtslt last week to the Statehouse cOffee shop, an old haunt ot
the former secretary and some of
his former key staff members. ·

Conviction may help
·400 similar cases
DENVER (AP) - Procter &amp;
Gamble Co.'s conviction for negUgence In senlng Rely tampons
sbould help,, more than :100 slmUar
cases pendinll against thj! company, even· though the Jury
awarded no damages, says an aitomey trying the next toxic shock
c-ase.
"In my opinion that case Is a se- '
rlous setback for P&amp;G," Tom RJley
of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, said late
Friday. "AllthatP&amp;Ggalnedwasa
single monetary advantage on that
case whlle lOSing the war over toxic
sbock syndrome In general.''
The U.S. District CoUrt Jury
found P&amp;G guilty Friday of negUgence and seUing a defective pro- .
duct, but It rejected 18-year-old
Deletha Dawn Lampshlre's clabn
. that P&amp;G had committed a breach
ot warranty.
It refused to levy against P&amp;G
therequested$5mllllonlncompensatory and $20 mUUon In punitive

•

•

stoner VIrgil Brown, who formerly
served as director of his county's
board of eleCtions, and George Rogers, who ran unsuccessfully for
state treQ.surer In l9'78, say they wnl

Brown said he has been urged to
run by many RepubUcans and that
no OJ1e Ill tbe party, lnclucllng State
Cbatrrnjin Michael F .' CoUey, has
dlscoux'Sf!ed )lim. But he said If requested bY party leaders not to run,
he would think about their request.

Rely tampons Induced a near-fatal

But some party leaders. say
Brown's name has been on so many
statewide ballots that be would
walk away with the primary. The
only way that could. be turned
around, they say, Is with an exten·
slve, heavUy bankrolled campaign.
But In the past, secretary of state
candidates of both parties haven't
been able to raise large amounts of
money In a year wJten the governor's otflce also was at stake.
On Friday, State Rep. Waldo ,
Bennett Rose, R-Lbna, sald he
wants to run for seCretary of state
but won't unless Brown decides to
withdraw.

.

.

''

.

(::ALLIPOLIS - A GallipoUs
wmnan was Injured In a n accident
late Friday afternoon still under lnv~tlgatlon by the GaDla-Meigs
Pdst of the state highway patrol.
Suzanne S. Hall, 29, . was later
tnlated and released from . the
er6ergency room at Holzer Medical
Cflnter.
'lbe patrol said tbe car, reglsteied to Steven R. Layne, GaUlpowas eastbound on Ohio 233 In
Ja):kson County when It went off the
right side of the roa and struck an
erjlbankment. causing moderate
d!lmage .
'llle driver, who remained unkliown Saturday morning, fled on
foot from the scene. HaD was taken
to;H:MC by the Gallla EMS.
patrol cited aRt. 1, Galllpolls
tor DWI following a one-car

ns;

crash on Bulavnle-Porter Road Saturday morning.
According to the report, Jerry L.
Burcham, 30, was northbound at
12: 10 a.m. when he lost control of
his vehicle, went o!:! the left side ot'
the road and drove through a fence.
His vehicle was sHghtly damaged
and the driver wasn't Injured In the
Incident.
The patrol sald Cora K. Haskins,
62, Bidwell, stopped on Ohio 160 at
the Intersection with Ohio 554 at
11: 20 a .m. Friday to make a left
turn when a northbound vehicle
drtven by Kenneth S. Armstrong,
20, Scarbro, W.Va., tried to go
around Haskins' auto and struck It
on the left side.
There was slight damage to Armstrong's car and moderate to the
Haskins auto. and Armstrong was

MEN
WOMEN
, AND

-,'

CHILDREN
NEW

..
M~~~~V

JUST

ARRIVED!

Evening til8

p.m .

or

state."

be In band - to do all they want," the
director said.
"There are at least 25 band members
Involved In spring sports," Tolliver continued. " It tokes a lot of work and lt's a
difficult job at times to schedule rehearsals, but we usually get things worked
out.
·
"We've never found ourselves In a pos·
tlon where It's band or nothing," he
added.
'
A 1ltuatton which Tolllver said some·
times occurs at larger ·schools Is where
students tend to specialize In music or
sports.
"It's goOd to be exposed to a little bit of
everything," he said·.
Tolliver played French hom from fifth
grade through high school, In the North·
mont School District near Dayton, and
said, "I decided to be a band director
when I was In about the seventh grade,"
After graduating from Ohio Stale University with a degree In music nine years
ago, Tolliver became the director here .
His assistant Is Brian Oglesbee, a graduate of the ·Cincinnati Conservatory of
Music. He directs the school's .concert
band and helps with private lessons. The
concert band received an rating (excellent) at dlstrl~t contest this year.
Since Tolllver 11keme director, the
school went to a two band system- both
which perform at contests and unite durIng marching season - forming a brass
choir, woodwind choir and percussion
choir.
Graduates of the music program gon to
major In music or performing In music
grD\Ip9 at vartqus ~hools, Including Ohio
University: Ohio State, Marshall Unlver·
slty and the University of Dayton.
Uke Tolliver, most students Involved ln
mllslc at the school begin In the fifth
grade. "We sta'rt about half ot the fifth
grade class here In band.
"It's bnportant for kids to become Involved ln a gtoup, share common goats
and.as a group reach tot a higher staod·
ard of exceUence.
. "Music Is an outlet for artistic and emu. tional expression - that's enough."

.

..

•

Gallia Academy
High School's Symphonic Band plays
through one of its
three selections
Thursday afternoon
(left) in preparation
for the OHIO Music
Education Auociadon 's Dutrict Contest, held .at GAllS
this weekend, "" di-rector, Rod Tolliver,
right front, li.ttens.
The band received a
rating of I (superior)
Friday night, increming its .tiring of superior ratings al dulricl .
contest to eight. A rating of I entitles the
band to perform al
the OMEA State Conteat in Columbus thL.
May. Director of the
band for nine years,
Tolliver .w id, ~Music
is an outlet for artistic and emotional ex. ... " Th al
preuwn
seem.! lo be true for
both those playing
music and directing
(above photos) .
About 2,000 musi-ciam, comprising 20
bandA and six choirs,
were in Gallipolis for
the two-day district
conteat which aiM&gt;
took place at GAHS
laat year.

1981 V .W. ·RABBIT

•'

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While with white landau top and
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7th Prize NO. 472 : Faye Holmes ·
8th Prize No. 377 Helen Joins
9th Prize No. 395 Jan· Sayre
lOth Prize No. 360 Kaylene

· 1980 GMC SIERRA

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Beige with carmel tan interior,

WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK ALL OF OUR
ERS FOR THE TERRIFIC RESPONSE ·TO OUR
QUITTING BUSINESS SALE. SPECIAL . THANKS TO
. ALL w•to PARTICIPATED IN THE FUN PROGRAM;
WINNERS ARE:

$649500

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POINT~· W. Y.

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"'1640 Eastern Aw.;

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Bill Gene Johnson
'TtriJ lllmilkln

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Diver fmds gold chain
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) - A
diver exploring a 17th Century
Spanish treasure ship has recovered a mUUon-dollar gold ~
set With diamonds, rubles, emeri~lds and pearls.
The chain was found by diver
John Brandon In waters 40 'feet
deep at the site ot the ship Nuestra
Senora de Atoeha 1n the Marquesas
Keys. about 40 mUes west ot Key
West, Andy Newman, spokesman
for Tressure Salvors Inc., said
Friday.
The chain Is 2 feet long and each
of Its 15 llnklls set with a precious
stone, Newman said.

.'

...•-

cited for passing In a hazardous
zone.

REGAL 2 DR

Robert Matthews
Prize No. 380 J. G.· t;oodman
Prize No. 233 Becky Williamson
Pdze No. 387 Jeannie Fields
Prize No. 130 Debbie Woodruff

GALLIPOLIS - Rod Tolliver, director
of GalUpoUs School Bands said to
members of Gallla Academy's Symphonic Band Thursday afternoon - the
day before they were to perform for district contest - "I'll never get Into the
business of second guessing judges.
"It's reillly bnportant that,everyone remain calm, and there never has been
such a thing as a perfect performance.
"We quautied for the state contest the
last seven years In a row. If we make It
this year, It wnl be eight."
They made it.
After hours of practice as a group, as a
.section and as Individuals, the 90memher band perfprmed a program of
three selections chosen from a Ust of
music approved for the Ohio Music Education Association for participation In district and state contest before three judges .
and
audience ot fellow classmates,
friends, family and other area school musicians ai:ld directors Frtday night.
The result was a I rating (superior),
which entitles a group to perform at
OMEA State Contest In Columbus May 1.
The district contest for this area ot the
state Is being hosted by GalllpoHs this
.year, as It was last year.
There are 20 bands and six choirs about 2,«m students - on hand for the
two-day event at Gallla Academy High
School.
Although the band also participates In
. solo and ensemble contest, and performs
at football games and contests as a
marching 1J111t, "the bigKet~t thing ~ do
au year long Is district and state contest,"
Tolllver $81d.
He said there Is more pressure at,
before, district contest "because you
have to get through districts to go. to
Music education, or participation In a
music group at the school, Is bnportant to
many students just as sports Is to many
students.
"We try to have a program'here where
!)le kids can sing ln choir, play sports and

Presents the Cream of Pre-Owned
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1978 BUICK

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By DEB FOX
1'ln--sentlnel S&amp;alf

. . FOR

Frenchtown Car Co.

.Woman injured .in SR' 233 accident

Symphonic .Band

an·

Ute

~.
Lampshlres'~clalmed$4,0001nmedto ~m~ the ..~----------~--------~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~;;~~~~:!

GO OVER PROGRAM - BW Sboodel, left, p81t president of tbe
pa!U~M~Us 1..10111 Club, aod eum~~t Diltr¥1 U-J governor, cues over Satursemlnar prograDJ wltb Geae Jamea, rlgbt, !XI!IIdent of tbe Waverly
Club. G11U""" II lloiiiDg the 1li8Z district convention. Saturday's
iemlnar was beld at tbe HoBday lim, Kaaaaga.

Gallia

HAS

P&amp;G attorneys argued that she suttered from the nu compUcated by
e!:!ects Ot medication.
·Miss Lampshlre's mother, Dateen said he · satisfied with
v~/ was
'
"P&amp;G always said we were In It
tor a fast buck," she said. "The verdiet Is the way we wanted it. We
didn't have ·dollar signs In our
eyes.''
A P&amp;G spoklisman In Cincinnati
said the company was pleased with
the Jury's decision not to award any
moneytoMI$sLampshlre,whohad
contended the IUness left her psychologlcaBy duabled.
But P&amp;G's chle! attomey tor the
case, Tom Calder, said an appeal
was being considered because
"we're dlsappolilted In anything
that doeSn't completely vindicate
Rely.'' The company took the tam- .
pon o!:! the market In 191ll.

lcal expenses.
"We got what we wanted,'' Miss
Lampshlre sald. "The money
doeSn't matter at an. We just
W8Jited to show Uiat Procter &amp;
Gamble had done wrong."
Miss Lampshlre Claimed that

1

Ua IN!=DfriO AVUIUI / .... W..OU.. OHIO

attack ot toxic shock syndrome, liut

Mar. 21, f982

'

run.

Celebrezze, an upcomer In stale
Democratic poUtlcs,ls vacating the
secretary of state's Office this year
as acaodldatefor his party's nomination tor attomey general.
Republicans would like to reclaim the secretary's post, especlaUy since they hold no other state
Office except governor, and that offlee ts at stake this year with the
retirement ot 72-year-old Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
Whether Brown runs or not, at
least two other Republicans have
said they wW f1le petitions tor the
office prior to the Marth 25 deadline. Cuyahoga County Commls-

Section~

r1

"We .Apprecl.te
Y-r 11us1n-"

.,
'.

·.

�Ohi-Polnt Plusant, W.Va.

va.

Pomeroy-M

Gallia represented at
brl-d~....,.iect_"_
· the-da-.-.----..J~ ·cured cancer ·meeting

'--- - - L o - - - T h e.8autefS.- ng · Charles Hamilton, New Ha..._ W.

Sauters, tong
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. E.

Lfon Sauters of Route 3, Pomeroy,

PoMEROY - Beverly Zenn Hub~ and Perry R. Hall exchanged
'JVe1lding vows In a double-ring
:ceremony at the Midway Com,mUnity Church at Langsville on Dec.

Mr. and Mrs. Bailey

12. :

Rev. Arthur A. Hughes perfonned
-tiMi 7 p.m. ceremony. The bride Is
tiM! daughter of Devillo Hubbard and
Leota Hubbard, Mason, W.Va., and
lhli·groom Is the son of Ilene Hall of
1&gt;f16dleport, and Truman Hall,
•Pomeroy.
Judy Riley waa pianist for the
weikllng and her songs included
:"If." "1'ou Colour My World," and
:0'YouJ,Ight Up My Life."
Given In marriage by her father,
the bride wore a formal gown of chlf·
ron over bridal satin fashioned with
Jo~ sheer sleeves and high neckline
·wilh accent trbn of alencon lace and
:~ pearls. The A-line skirt Dowed
:into a chapel train. The bride's veil
:or ~lluslon was trlnuned with lace
·and fell from a cap of lace and satin
·with seed pearl trim. She carried a
bOUquet of pink carnaUons with
baby's breath. She wore a pearl

..
'

necklace, earrings, and ring.
Trudy Roush, sister of the groom,
served as maid of honor and for the
occasion wore a long gown in wine
and had a white carnation tipped in
pink.
BOb Hysell of 20 Anne St.,
Pomeroy, was best man. For her
daughter's wedding, Mrs. Hubbard
wore a gown of brown and orange
with a white carnation corsage tipped In orange. Mrs. Hall wu In a
beige gown and had a carnation tipped in blue.
,
A reception was held Immediately
following the wedding at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush. The
couple reside at 12 Anne St.,
Pomeroy. Tbe bride attended
Wahama High School and Is a member of the VFW Post992G Auxiliary.
Mr. Hall attended Meigs High
School.
Out4-town guests at the w_eddlng
were Mr. and Mrs. Davi&lt;tfJeffers
and Steven, New Haven, W. Va.;
Valerie McDaniel, Tina NeutzUng,
andEdwinaStanley,Mason, W. Va.

.

•

She wore a heart-sliaped opal
necklace and earrings, glfta of the
groom.
Darlene Gilliam was the matron of
honor for the bride. Brldesrnalda
were Cathl Regan and Leah Barnhart, cousins of the bride. They
wore matching Door·length gowns~
peach with sheer capes, and carried ·
votlce candles enCircled with peach
silk Dowers with rust streamers.
They also wore peach flowers In
their hair.
Lee'a Johnson waa Dower girl and
she wore a Door-length peach priJI.
ted dresa with Dowers in her hair.
She carried a basket of peach rose
petals.

... .

... -.

..
~

.

••

~ ~:

11iJk pink roses. The groom's

mother was In a plum street-length
dresa with a corsage of Iliac sweet-

heart roses,

I ;

Rita Ball, abler of the groom,
registered the guests for the wedding. A reception was held 1mmediately follOWing the ceremny In
the church social room.
The bride's table featured a threetiered peach cake with a fountain
topped with silk Dowers and a,11ilver
CI'IIIB. Also decorating the table was
a white late tablecloth and crystal
candle holden with peach candles.
l:'nstesses for the reception were
members of the Phliathea class of
the cllurch.
A 1lm graduate of Meigs High
School, the bride Is employed as a
secretary at the Rutland Elementary Sc.hool. The groom Is a 1976
graduate of Meigs High School and
Is employed at the Gavin Power
Plant In Cheshire.
Following a honeymoon trip to the
Pocono Mountains In Pennsylvania,
thenewMr. andMrs. Baileyrealde
at32434 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy.

""-- -

Mr. and Mrs. Neal

GAWPOUS - Ronnie Neal and Danny Barry, Mrs. Ellen Stewart,
Judy Ann Newhart were married Sandy Hunter.
Those sending glfta lnc)ude Mr.
March 1 by the groom's uncle. Rev.
Jerry Neal.
and Mrs. Johnny Shaver, Mr. · and
The groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Dewitt, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. Jack Neal of Evergreen and Hartsook, Mrs. Ollle Belle Barnette
the bride is the daughter of Shirley and John and Pam Zlnns.
Tbevenlr of Bidwell and Richard
Games were played and refresh.
Newhart of Tampa, Fla. .
menta served.
They were married on the ~room's ,-_;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
parenta' 25th wedding anniversary.
• • • • • • ,. 6 • • • • • • • •
A shower and reception was held -. . '~'HI$
March 16 by Mrs. Jack Neal and •
I'
•
Ella Stewart at the Neal residence.
•
•
Those attending incll!de Mr. and •
•
Mrs. -James Preston, Shirley •
•
Thevenir and Queenie, Mr. and Mrs. •
RC
•
Walter Voreh, Mr. and Mrs. Larry :
DIET RITE :
Folden, and Heather and Johnny,
Mr. andMrs.GaryFolden,andTim- :
RC-100 :
my, John Zlnns, Teresa Neal, Mr. ,
•
and Mrs. Chuck Dalton, Mr. and c.
•
Mrs. James Plants, Mr. and Mrs. •
r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~l!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l"l 8-16 oz.
•
: ·
Btls.
PIUS :
-•
Deposit •

WIIK •s

•

139 •

•

••

••

•

e Sl'fCIAL 7 oz. 79~
e DANDEE Bg.
•
: CHIPS
Reg. S1.09 :

••

ICE COLD BEER,
WINE &amp;POP

:

•Beige
•Red

•
:

•Navy

e

·•
•
:

HOURS
•
Monday tllru Saturday :
8A.M. fUll P.M.
e

: Gallipolis Ice Co.

300 Second Ave.

..

boutonniere matching the bride's
bouquet.
Kenneth Barnhart wu best man
for the groom. Gtoomsmen were
David Cole and Ronald Regan and
they wore brown tuxedos with peach
boutonnieres.

-' '•

•...
•w

of

Mr. and Mrs. Place

t PoMEROY - Teresa M. Mc; Miirray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
::H~rman Joe McMurray of
~hobee, Fla., former Meigs
: eolmty residents, and Wayne A.
~Ulce, son of George Place,
!f&gt;~hkeepsie, N.Y., and Raymond
,:11tM!· Mary Kllphouse, Okeechobee,
~.; were married at 2 p.m. on Jan.
·16, at Ridgeland, S.C.
Thelma C. Jenness performed the
ceremony. For her wedding the
bride wore a long pale blue gown accented with tiers of lace. She carried
jl white leather Bible covered with
white lace and pale blue rosebuds
and baby's breath.
A reception was held Saturday,
Feb. 20, at 7:30 p.m. at the First
United MethOdist Church in
OkeechQbee. The mother of the
groom made the three tiered heartshaped cake which was decorated
with pink roses. Ice cream, coffee
and punch were served with the
cake.
Guests at the reception were
parents of the couple, their grand·
parents, Mr. and Ml'll. Bert Mul~er,
aunts of the bride, Miss Ella Bnght
and Mrs. Catherine Althouse,
brothers of the bride and their
wives. Mr. 'and Mrs, Lanj J. McMurray and children and Albert L.
McMurray.
Others attending were Ebner
Althouse and daughters, Mrs. Ray
Deskins and daughters, Rosemary
Althouse, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Nickelson and children, John
Dowler, Ralph Haning, Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Whai1 and son, Sebring, Fla.;
Mr. and Mts. Gene Reno, Brian
Higgins. Robbie Welsh, Mr. and
Mrl. samuel Lewis, Anita Lawls,

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Welsh,
Harrisonville.
The groom Is employed at the McMurray SheD Service Station at
Okeechobee.
The couple resides in their new
home at Four Seasons Estate, Route
f&gt;, 951 N. E. 64 Court, Okeechobee,
Fla. 33472.

A doubl~rlng candelabra with
votlce cups and boUqueta of peaCh
and rust silk ftowers decorated the
altar. Family pewa were marked
with peach forget-me-nota and
greenery with white bows.
The bride's mother wore a burgundy street-length dress with a corsage

•

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NEW OWNERS PAUL·DAILEY &amp;YVONNE SCALLY
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ACCOUNTING 1- MONDAY, 6:00pm-9:30pm
WORD PROCESSING- SATURDAY, 9:00 am-12:30 pm
TYPING 1- THURSDAY, 6:00 pm;9:30 pm

fiRST QUARTER

MON.-HAM STEAK
TUES.-SPAGHETTI
WED.-ROAST BEEF
THURS.-CHICKEN &amp; DRESSING
FRI.-MACARONI &amp; CHEESE
Wrth BAKED FISH
SAl- PORK CHOPS
ALSO FEATURING PEEL &amp; EAT SHRIMP, SOUP OF THE DAY,
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PH. 992-9917
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AND PRIVAl£ PARtY FACiunES

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LIVE fNHI1!AINMIN1 IN !Iff

.MON. &amp;WED.
LONE WOLF BAND .
Featuring Van Johnson

8:3G-12:30

ll'IJ~J(.I

THUR., FRI. &amp; SAT.

Rlcardin Artist ·

DAVE·ouiKL£
...

(Summer Quarter

Schedule To Be

Aimounced Later)

:

I

.

.

Nibert-Jury

GAWPOLIS - Gallla County
U!'iloftheAmerlcanCancerSociety .
will be represented at the 22nd
CUred Caneer Assembly a{ld the 1882
Crusade KldtOff Meeting to be held
in Columbul at Ohio State Umverslty Union, starting at noon tOday,
by Kay ~right of Gallipolis.
Allbrigllt '!"ill participate u Gallla
County's representative til this
assembly . of men, women alld
children who have had cancer and .
been free of its s)'illptoms and
. evidence for at leasUtveyears. .
Each county unit, hopefully, IB
able to send at least one person who '
has been cured of cancer to this
meeting to be introduced as
representing .the more than two
nuUlon Amencans who have been
successfully treated for the disease.
Also attending today's meeting
will be Allbright's mother, Maxine

Allbright, Homer Pellegrinon, Dene
Wainer, president OfGallla County
Unit, and Pal Boyer, executive
directOr 0( Gallla county Unit.
The lundleon meeting begins at
noon and will last untll3 p.m. Cured
Cancer representatives will be
seated 1n front Of the head table and
will be Introduced individually
during the pn~gram.
Accordlac to the local unit such a
meetingprwldestheinsplraUonand
enthusiasm needed by Ohio
Q11UC1era to carry out an aU.()ul, all
sa«:ee!Jful door-tiHioor fund-raising
~lgn during the month of April.
The outlook on life exhibited by
cured cancer patients generates enthusiasm for the total program of
the cancer society which includes
research education and service to
cancer ~tients.

•

'

Hamilton

By CHAiu.ENE HOEFUCH
Racine. Mr. Foster has been con' Times-Sentinel StaH
fined to the Pleasant Valley Hospital
, If you've never enjoyed the luxury and will be needing a quantity of
of a cruise, there will be plenty of , blood u the weeks go by. The family
,Meigs County couples ready to tell asks help in replacing the blood.
you about it when
Donors cim designate credit when
Sat
r
they visit the AprU 21 Red Cross
they return u ·day.
Bloodmobile.
Members of
eharles F. SCOtt of Middleport has
·Gerald Powell's
an energy related Invention and
d8nce club set
right now has a patentablllty search
sailed
from
gOing on In Washington, D. C. While
Miami yesterday
the search takes sometimes months
·aboard
the
and even years, scott Is excited
"Southward'' for
a week iD the Caribbean. On the about his inveptlon and anxiously
'same cruise are several couples awaits some word about CFST-001,
the nwnber assigned to the project.
from the Athens Club.
Things are moving right along
The government surplus cheese is with the Rutland Civic Center where
coming, or so we're told by the Rev. there Bee!IIB to be plenty of action,
Robert Robinson, who is coorThere's skating every Sunday,
dinating the distribution plan I~ dances about every week, auctions
on Saturday night, and a variety of
Meigs County.
· The plan is for the cheese to be club·and organizational meetings at
taken to seven locations In the coun- theCe~
.
ty and distributed to reSidents who
Fridayandaenrice
, is abo
un May
the
qualify for the free cheese In each being plallllf!d,
Rutland
Alwnni
Association
will
area.
And the locations - Heath United have Its annual banquet and dance
Methodist Church in Middleport; St. there.
Everything takes money and right
Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy;
First United Pesbyterian Church in now the Board of Directors Is busy
Syracuse;
Wesleyan . United trying to get money together for
Methodist Church In Racine; Apple chairs. A hundred have already been
Grove United Methodist Church in ordered but donations are needed to
Apple Grove; Rutland United purchase more. Checks made out to
Methodist Church, and St. Paul's the Rutland Civil Center should be
sent to either Janet Bolin or Joan
Church in Tuppers Plains.
SteWart, Rutland.
The directors are Robert Eada,
Fifteen units of replacement blood
; are needed for William Foster of Jerry Black, Dick Fetty, Uly Ken-

A~

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our best settnt carpets of this yur's best prices.
one low prlie lncl1udes bOth a thick foam pad and
custom installation.
·
.
(Minimum llsq. yds.-Sale ends March 21)

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

ONLY&amp;
DAYSL£FT

s.c-111 ..... 81111.111 , ttl D3JZ

nedy and Janet Bolin. Recently
named to the working committee
were Joan Stewart, Judy snowden
and Judy Hart. The committee is ex·
peeled to be expanded and the directors are anxious that not only chur·
ches, . organizations and clubs in
Rutland be represented, but that

Quarter$Juanita
by

43 state Street

Gallipolis, Ohio

PARADE OF EASTER SPECIALS
NOW THROUGH.EASTER

Nibert, Jury
. -

GALlJPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Arthur (Pete) Nibert announce the
engagement and forthcomin g
marriage of their daughter, Tina
Michelle, to Blake L. Jury, son ~
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Jury of
Harrisburg, Pa.
. Nibert Is a 1971 graduate of Gallla
Academy High Schopl and atterida
Eastern Kentucky University
majoring In nursing.
Jury Is a 1977 graduate ~ Central
Daulphln High School, Harttsburg,
Pa. He graduated In December 1981
from Eastern Kentucky University
with a bachelor of science degree in
pollee administration. He plans to
attend law school at the University
of Maryland In September. ·
An open church wedding iS planned at Grace United Methodist Church on May 29 at 7:30 p.m. with
Pastot James Frazier Jr. officiating.

Community Corner

LEE'S
CARPET SALE

Classes listed above are but a few of the many 'career oriented
classes offered every quarter at Gallipolis Business College. The
courses listed are accredited 4-Quartel' Hour classes·and may le
used towards an Associate Degree In Business.

The hair place

·HamiltonHawley .

1982 SPRING

~

\

POMEROY - Janice L. Young,
Pomeory, and Walid Mah'd Zahran
of N:ew York City were married on
Saturday, Dec. 26, at 2:30 p.m. at
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Victor C. Young, Jr., East
Main St. , Pomeroy, and the groom is
the ' son of Mah'd M. Zahran and
Sarnira M. Zahran, Jerusalem,
Israel and New York.
Rev. Robert E. Kuhn performed
the double ring ceremny. Music was
'provided by Mrs. Bea · Kuhn,
organist, and the selections included
"You Light Up My Life," "We've
Only Just Begun," and the
·traditional wedding marches.
· Red poinsettias decorated the
·altar with a red satin cover being
used on the communion "table with
:the gold cross and candelabra and
red tapers. There was·also a lighted
'Christmas tree at the church front.
Given in marriage by her parents,
the bride wore a Door·length gown of
polyester in silver With red and
white stripes and a matching long
·sleeved silver jacket. She carried a
bOuquet of red and white carnations
with red, silver and white
streamers. Her jewelry Included a
rhinestone necklace, something
borrowed from a special friend,
sterling silver cross earrings, a gift
of the groom, ·and the watcb given to
her by her parents, for something
.old.
Kimberly K. Deein, niece of the
bride, was the maid of honor, and
wore a street-length dres in a floral
design and had a corsage of white

To;u .

.GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
.
·446-43.67
~

COlliNG SOOII: EVEIING DINING HOURS

ADVANCED BASIC PROGAAMMINGSOFIWEAR OPERATIONS.
PAYROLL ACCOUNTING-

·tALL.NOW

•

are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Vicki L., to Jeffrey M.
Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon J .
Long, Wllllamsport.
· The bride-elect will graduate from
Meigs High School in May. Her fian~hran
ce
graduated from Westfall High
silk roses with red ribljon.
, School .at WiUiamsport In 1980 and
Brad Young of Pomeroy, brother
from the Northwestern Business
of the bride, was best man. The
groom wore a cream and navy blue College in 1961. .He is employed at
sports suit and had a 'l'hite and red Swisher Implement Co., Galllpolis.
The open church wedding will take
carnation boutonniere.
place at5 p.m. on June 19 at the Mid·
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Young wore a light blue suit with dleport Pentecostal· Chlirch with a
back patent accessories and had a reception following in the church
social room. The Rev. Clark Baker
corsage of white silk roses and red
will officia\e at the wedding.
ribbon.
A reception was held inunedlately
following the ceremny at the home
of the bride, 19 East Locust St.,
Pomeroy.
A Christmas theme was carried
out in the decorations. T)le t)V()o
tiered wedding cake was topped with
the traditional miniature bride and
groom, the same one used on the
cake at the wedlllng of her brother,
Victor III. The bride's grandmother,
Audrey Young, and an aunt, Sharon
. Justis, along with the mother of the
bride, and Angie Baker presided at
the table.
.
Angie Baker also registered the
guests and handed out rice packeta
wrapped in red netting with white
ribbon.
The couple reside at 19 Eut
Locust St., Pomeroy. A 1976
graduate of Meigs High School, the
bride llelongs to the Pomeroy Baptist Church. The groom graduated
from Jordan High School in 1973 and
is employed at Young's Carpenter
POMEROY - Ahnouncement Is
Services. Among the out-of-county
being
made. of the engag~nt and
gueslli at the wedding were Mr. and
approaching
marriage of Sandra Jo
Mrs. Dale Justis and chlldren, Wendy and Greg Justis, Sharpsville, Ind. Hamilton, Minersville, and Thomas
Hliwley, Pomeroy. •

Va., and Faye Hamilton, Miner&amp;ville. Her fiance Is the son of I&gt;ianne
Hawley, Pomeroy.
Jdias Hamilton graduated from
Meigs· High School In 117t and
received her associate clecne In accounting from the Hocking
Technical School .t Nelsonrilk She
Is employed • at the Central
Operating Co., PhillpSpom Plant.
Hawley Is also a gradllllte of
Meigs, class of 111'78,·and til!! Hocking
Technical College, 1981, receiving an
associate degree in business
management. He Is the grocery
department manager at Powell's
Super Valu, Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will be
an event of May 2 at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church, Minersville.

'Mr. and Mrs.

The LafayeUe Mail •• DRIVE
THRU
•
CARRYOUT
Shoe ·Cafe Gallipolis, 0. · : 709 First Ave. :e
The groom was attired In a white ll;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;·;;·;·;·;;·;·;·;;·;·;·;;·;·;·;;·;·~·
tuxedo with a peach sweetheart rose r

.- ..
...
.. ,

'

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport
Church of Cbrlsl was the setting for
the Dec. 5 wedding of Rodney K.
Bailey and Cheryl D. Barnhart.
The bride Is the daughter of Ruth
E. Barnhart and the late Ernest D.
Barnhart, Middleport. The groom Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. William
Bailey, Middleport.
Officiating at the 3:30p.m. doublering ceremony was Robert Melton,
pastor of the church. Kathy Johnson,
organist, provided the music.
E8corted to the altar by her uncle,
Ronald Barnhart, the bride W&amp;!i
given In marriage by her mother.
She wore a white formal gown of
sheer organza'fealurlng a victorian
neckline, biBIIop sleeves, empire
walsUine, and see-througll yoke. The
gown was trimmed In Venlae lace
throughout the hodiC!! and akirt.
A chapel train ftowed from the
bride's waistline and was accented
with soft organza ruffles. Her headpiece wu a camelot cap of Venlse
lace with an attached circular
fingertip veil also trimmed with
lace, and she earned a bouquet of
silk peach sweetheart roses, white
carnations and angel lace with
peach lace streamers tied In lovers'
knots.

B·l

Engagements

Weddings

Mr. and Mrs. Hall

The

L-R : Joy Hudson, Chris Reynolds, Mary Edwards, .
Merri Amsbuy, Juanit!l Saunders, Charlene Benthall, ·
Tina Silber, Karen Johnson, Rita (Edwards) Meaige &amp; •,
Ron Sowers.

'5.00 OFF . ' "
LUMINIZE ,. ..

10% OFF
ONALPERMS

.

othel'!l outside the Rutland comml!nity take an Interest in helping
develop the center which hopllfully
will receive county·wide '*'·once
the renovation and remodeling are
completed. '
Have a nice week!

.

REASON 114: lf.Biock mak.. an ••or,
•'II
the panalty. And the Interest

pa'

We want you to walk out our.door with total confidence.

If our error eauses you to owe additional tax, thafs all
pay. We'll pay any Interest and penalty. At H&amp;R Block,
stand behind our work. And we stalld behind you.

618 E. Main st.
lnd &amp; Brown St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769'111!!~11111!!!1!!!111'!!!!!!1111.!~:-::M:;ason, W.Va •
992-37t5

·sTOP IN!
Daily 9 a .m.-1 p.m. Sat. 9 to S

MEN

Mon ., Weds. &amp; Fri .

' &amp;

To shotpe up your hilir
your body.
Trudy Roush·Stylltt

H&amp;R BLOC~r®

Houn:
ft
9-6·Mon.· Fri.
sat. 9.5
TtE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
27 Syumore St., Gallipolis, Oh .
PH . 4-46-0303- Appointments Available
OPENtT06WIEkDAYS, 9toSSAT

Master Card &amp; 'II Isa Accepted

,

Also tn

Golden Buck,Pve Card Honored

773·912,

Ho11rs
9-6 Tues.
'sat. _
95

s
1 ears 1

Dt~rl~t

r~:r:r
noun

Sil,ver Bridge Plaza ·
Mon .-Fri.·Sat. Only •

-

17 reasons. One smart decisiOn.

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P~H~.9~9~2~·6~7~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•

..
· Thru April 11, 1982

Shrimp &amp; Fish
•2.99
Special
.
It's 11 treat that's worth the trip!
Four big Gulf shrimp, our crispy
fish fillet, plus fryes, slaw &amp;
hushpuppies! Shrimply delicious!

Silver Bridge Plaza

State Route 7

·.

·,

I '

' .

�.. . ...,..

·...::
.:.. .....,.

•

p

Mar ~

GALUPOUS - Nellie Mae and
Shelby Franklin Jtoberts, 7ZI Fil'llt
Ave., Gallipolis, wiU celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary March 'Zl ·
with an open bouse reception at
home of their son, Richard, 622 Jay
Dr,, Gallipolis, from 1 to 4 p.m.
The couple was married March 26,

1932.

They also have a daughter, Mary
Margaret Jenkins of Ccilumljus,
four grandchildren· and two greatgrandchildren. .
.
Mr. Roberts is retired from bemg
a self-&lt;!mployed plumber. Mrs.
Roberts is a member of Grace
United Methodist ChW"ch and Grace
Guild.

Former first lady
receives award

Anniversaries

.

.......
'

.

191U . •

WASIDNGTON (AP) -Former
first lady Betty Ford, bonored tor
spurring women to look tor early
signs of breast cancer, &amp;aYf! It's Dat'!erlni to ti1IDic that "somewhere
along tile road, you have been an
ln"Piratlon to somebody."
.lfrs. Ford accepted the Hubert
H. Humphrey Inspiration Award
on Friday from the American
Cancer $0Ciety In feC08llltlon of ber
penooal cancer battle, wblch Inspired Amel1can wOmen to pr&amp;c·
tlce selt-examlnatlon as a means of
detecting bre&amp;!lt cancer.
''The decillion of Mrs. Ford to
make her personal Wness lmQwn to
the pubUc altected the entire nation,'' saJd Dr. Robert V. Hutter,
president of the SOCiety.
Hutter said the publicity surrounding Mrs. Ford's experienCe
with breast cancer and a. slmUar
Incident Involving Margaretta
"Happy" Rocketeller, wife of the
late VIce President Nelson A. Rock·
efeUer, led to "a national surge In
the detection of early breast
cancer!'

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

BELIEF- BAPTISM
•
By William B. Kugho

Mr. and Mrs. Abels, 30th
RACINE - fl(r. and Mrs. Jack
Abela Qf Route 2, Racine, will ob-

serve their 30th wedding annlvel'38ry on March 23.
They are the parents of foW'
'

'

children, Victoria , Lawrence,
Ronald and Paul, - and have two
grandchildren. A family celebration
is being planned.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Roberts, 50th

.-

~;~~;---2-691

II ENlARGEMENT

EACH

Made from your Ia verite

II

1

.

.--- '
-

Kodaeolor negative
· · 1s I'd
ongma
I e.

or

Gi11ltipotts, oh.

I

.

Coupon must accompany order.

~-------------~
5 X 7 COLOR TWO }79 I

II ENLARGEMENT
I
II

FOR

BeaUtiful enlargements made
fr"om
your
standard
site
Kodaco lor negatives or Slides .

Coupon must accompany order. ,

h wney studios
424 Second Ave,
Gallipolis, on.

;I
1I
I

..
12¢ il

~·-------------

..

Mr. and Mrs. Woomer, 50th

, IDDWELL - Gaylord and Frances Woomer, Route 1, Bidwell,
celebrated tjlelr 50th wedding anniversary F'l!b. 8 at Buck Ridge
Ape.ttmenl.'! Club House with a party

.

"

--,.

TawneyStudiO$
424 sec ond Av•.

I
:iii
I

Belief Is Essential : ,
One is not saved the moment he be lieves and there is not one
passage of scripture that teaches this. Belief is.essenfjal to s~ lvation .
It directs us to Christ in whom is salvation (I I T1m . 2: 10·) 1 and 1s a step
"unto righteousness' ' (Rom . 10 : 10) . It enables us to receive Him ~o
that we can become the sons of God (Jno. 1: 12) . When we r eceive the
one ta ith by hearing t he word cRom. 10 : 17), this faith will move us .to
"repent, confess, be baptlzed, worship and work for _t.he Lord,
remaining fa ithful to the end.
.
Baptism Does Not Nullify Christ' s Blood
A person does not come lnto cOntact with the s~vlng blood Of _J es~s
the moment he be lieves. The saving blood of Chnst was shed .n H1s
death (Jno. 19 :33) . It is by baptism we are buried with Christ into His
death (Rom . 6 :.4). Why should we be baptized into Hi s death? It was in
His death He shed the atoning blood by whi ch we are justified CRm . .
5:9), redeemed (Eph . 1:9, I Pel. 1: 18, 19), sanctified (Heb .-13, 12) and
cleansed from a-n sin ( I Jno. 1: 7) . In His death, we contact the saving
blood. The moment one ' believes with the heart, this is a step unto
righteousness :"Rm. 10: 10). Likewise, whe n one confessed Christ with
the mouth, th is is a step unto salvation CRm . 10 : 10) . Righteousness
and salvation are in Christt Therefore, it is by baptism w e get into
Christ (Gal . 3:27), and allhe same time. contact the· blood of Christ. It ·
is not by faith or confession . To teach that we contact the blood of ,
Christ by being baptized into His death; w e do no.t teach nor insinuate '
that we are talking about the blood of the sihner, as accused. Baptism . '
magnifies the blood of Christ . The sinner can no more provide the .
saving blood. than he can pro\lide for grace, but he must definitely
make contact with the blood of Christ that God has orovided in the
death of Jesus, being obedient to baptism . To reject baptism is to
·reject the blood of Christ. Before your dirty clothes or body can be.
made clean, they must come in contact with the detergent or soap, the
cleansing element . To just believe that the detergent or soap has the •
cleansing power W'.i ll not suffice. Cof!ta(t must be made by the clothes·~
lOr ·body w lth the deter_gent.or soa.P tn the water I For the soul of a sin~
ner to be saved by the power of Christ' s blOOd, his soul must make con: ..'
tact with tt:l'e blood : Once again I say, "This is done in bap1ism ac·
cording to the scriptures!"

given by their children, Mike
Woomer and Mary Louise Moore.
The couple repeated their vows
with Rev. William 'Kughn of.
ficiating.

~~~~~Dp:~T~F

I
I Sizes 135, I 10, or 126.
I1

EACH

Cw41 process. Reg . 35 or 3R prin·
ts.

AT TIME OF FILM
DEVELOPING

CThis coupon not val 1d
With any other coupon specia Is.)

Hwnev studloi

·1
I

____________,
4H

'el.aft~l

.#ill ~luucla

Morn inq
B ib le St udy 9: JII

~ und i\V

won h ip 10: JO

second Ave.

S und ;~y

_Redford, who bas an apartment

tor Paul Newman.
He was charged with going 73
rriph In a 56 mph zone. The tine for
such an offense ts $30, said Polly
carpenter, secretary to the judge.
Redford need not atteud theAprU
28 hear!Dg, wblch was scheduled
Friday after the town JusUce re- ·
fused to dismisS, the charge. Redford's lawyer, Lawrence Mattei,
apPeared for h1m Feb. 24 to aak that
the charge be dropped.

~11/Uot

f vcn.nq

W(ldncsd.ilv
E llen.ng
1: 00

Wonhi p • :oo

Rad io
" M eni'l(lt' from
lhu Blbl(!"
O.:.l l y •WJEH
li : SSAM

Coupon must accompany order.

TAWNEY STUDIOS

·-

•

A

in·New York City, was ticketed last
Nov. 7 while driving to a horsetann
m:North Salem, N.Y., owned by ac-

Bulaville Road • P.o .
Joe
GALLI POLIS, Ot&lt;IO 45631

Galtlpoli 5, on.

. '

·BEDFORD, N.Y. (AP) -

hearing on Robert Redford's speed'
log tli::ket was set tor Apl11 28 after
Town Jllltlce Kenneth Lange refuSed to ao-alollg with the actor's
wt5bes and dlsmlas the case.

a·ox

·•

•

&lt;f'

Congressman fueds
for damages

EnJoy the warm,rlch beauty·of·

-·

-

..

USDAOtOICE

RIB STEAK

March 22, 1982
Take advantage of any opportwlities this coming year to further your
education or- to add to your knowllldge. ·As you grow in wis;dom yOW'
poeslbllities for success 11rilllncreaae proportionately.
AJJIES (March !I·AprlllJ) Matters requiring the support of others
should be taken care of as early as possible today. Your chances for
~lnlng allies leaaens as time ll)llrchea on.
TAURUS (April a-May ZO) Persons not in llarrnOI!y with your goala
and PIJI'P(IIIetl today could have a disruptive infiuence If they butt into
your business. Keep them alarm's length.
.
GEMINI (May Z1..Juae !e) In acllvlties today requiring a coUectlve
effort, be a team player Instead of trying to be a standout. On yOW' own,
you may not perform weU.
CANCER (Juile Z1-Jaly 22) Things wtll go more S'!loothly today If you
aUow adequate Ume for what you have to do. Mistakes 11re Ultely If you
begin to rUsh to beat the clock.
'
LEO (July ZS.Aq. 22) If you are negotiating somethins today Involving money, take care that the other par(y doesn't Introduce some
last-minute ODHided changes.
VIRGO lAIII· 23-Bept. ZZ) Give priority today to matters affecting
your work and finances, Subdue tendencies to go off on a tangent which
coUld cause.you to lose monetary advantages.
LIBRA (Sept zs.oet. 21) In order to make !hings easier for yourself
today, there's a chance you may d~legate something of importaoc;e to
IIOI1leOIIe who Isn't qualified to handle II.
.
SOORPIO lOci. U.Nov. ZZ) You shOUld be quite good today In handling moslsituatione. However, your skills may not be up to par In areas
where money is Involved.
.
_
SAGmARIUS (Nov. ZS.Dee'. Z1) If you are too impatient or Impulsive today, there's a possibility you could derail something beneficial
you have going for you. Slow down your pace.
.
.
CAPRICORN IDee. zz.Jan. It) YOW' posslbiUties for personal
acquisition look encoul-aging today. If you're fortunate and get what you
want with the help of others, be sure to share.
AQUARIUS (J811. ZO.Feb. 19) Be careful today that you don't snatch
defeat from the jaws of victory. There's a chance you could have
something in yOW' grasp, then make the wrong moves and 1~ II.
PISCES (Feb. ZO.Marcb 20) Joint ventures could be very kdvsntageoue today, provided you play your assigned role. Don't try to upstage your associates.

SUPIRIOR

-· . .
., -

$}99
lB.

99

.

CHUNK BOLOGNALB.

c

IXTRAUAN

.
GROUND CHUCK LB. '149
'

OttiOPACK
FAMILY BRAND

2-LB. PKG.

$}99

WIENERS
SMOi&lt;ID

LB.

PORK·CHOPS

LB.

'219

USDACHOIC.

BEEF SHORT RIBS LB ..'1 39

GOLD KIST MIXID

LB.99C

49C

10-LB.

ICEBERG

HEAD,
LffiUCE

'MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Rep. Claude Pepper, 81, is feuding
with a '72-year-old man over mIn
damages from an· auto co1llslon
thitt happened while Pepper was on
hli "'llY to a dinner party here.
1'epper, D-Fia., and Edward
G!lldfeln both say they were not 10 .
blame for the Feb. 'l7 accident
~ ·1 think he should be a gentle111jln, own 11~ that he was at !ault
and pay up," saldGoldfeln, whO collided with Pepper's aold Lincoln
COntinental when the F'JQrlda reAZrEC, N.M. (AP) - 11 you've pUot announced over the Intercom
he was in an embarrassing sltuapr:esentatlve was on his way to a seen one runway, you've seen 'em
tund-ralalng dinner for the menaU - or so It seemed to pilot of a
tlon because be didn't laiow where
tally retarded.
Frontier Airlines plane that accldhe had landed, said puaenaer
Both parties agree that Pepper entaDy landed 14 miles from. his
Larry Schmelta of Faniungton.
WJlS In a hurry to get to the dinner scheduled clest!naUon, forcing pasJim McElhaney, Frontier's air,
'*rty, so pollee weren't called.
sengers to take a bus for the last leg port station agent In Fannlngton,
:Goldfeln, who has no colllilon In·
of their Journey.
saki the wind waa blowing steadilY
siirance, said It cost $416 to fix h1s
Atter the plane touched down In at 28 mph, gusting to 34 inph, and
c~!f.
Aztec Instead of Farmington, the dust was bibwtng through the air
·"1 don't know why it should be so r--------~----w~hen~~the!J~~la~nded~C!~~~
much," Pepper saki.
;GOidfetn clalmed P1Peppe..,...,., prom~ he wou1d pay all the cost.'!.,
Pepper said he promised no such
tldng. In any case, Pepper aald, h1s
biSurance company Will only pay
~since he wu only half at !aull
•"I was trying to be courteous to
tlie man butl'mliotgolngtopaythe
IIKmey out of my pocket." Peppel
Bilk! In an Interview published

~e.

~

Beef

Redford's speeding
ticket

F or Fr c C' B1biC' Corre sponclcncc Course W ntC' . ..

BANQUET
FRIED
CHICKEN

BAG

59¢

$}89

HEAD

50-La.ss"
BAG

Plane .landing astray

-:_. · :

. and Mrs. Thomas; 65th

-~IDWELL -~ -- Mr.

and Mrs. Donald Browning a~d their children,
l\fjlurlce '1bfiN8 of Bidwell will _Michelle and Ryan, Mr. and Mrs.
celebtate lhelr 85th wedding an- Eugene Hertenstein and their
nlverlarY MGI*y.
daughter, Jeannie, Mr. and Mrs.
'nle Thomues 1lrill mark the event Maurice Toler and their children,
withdlnneronSunday.
Matt and Tricia, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
~ted to attend wiU be Mr. and
Toler and their children, Chris and
Mrl. Andrew TOler, Mr. .and Mrs. Amy, and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gee.

Sl
·'•

.

SPRING SAVINGS
.

".
.~

'

' PitCf!

:Madiii1M
.• J•UIUIII-In ........ lnclud-

$99800

ing olllllcllllllllftlrld zig·
• zeg • Built-i'l batlonholer •
·~-arm
· "

·sAVE'-•4o

.

'

Model247 ·
Buill-In zig-zag stnch •
Three needle positions •
Front drop-ln bobbin

NOW ONLY

4

'109.99
•:..,_-Mccalll'l-simplicity.:..Stiy 2 and tet One FREE offer.
,'

~

Se~ca.lll Brands of Machines

-· ·

THE FABRIC 'SHOP
115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, OH.
Serving Meigs &amp; Gall Ia Co.
As Your Singer
Dealer

•

:'GAlLIPOLIS-Elizabeth Chapel
Qiurch, six miles 9011th of Gautppo~ ott Route 218 at Raccoon Creek
~. w!U hold a revival March
:iJ.'l'l at 7 p.m. with Dr. CUrtis
Slleets, pastor of Pleasant View
~ptlst Olurch, Grove City.
- 'I'ben! w!U be lllnllinll each night,
licludlna The Swartz Family, of
.fJcklon, simday at 7 p.m. ·
• m-t1 bold a D.D. from Belhel
Bible CdleiP and has done p-adu~ work at Moody Bible lllltltute.
w.. hal been an evangelllt, Bible
~ 8(leaker and aulbor.
~ Pastor Al1red Holley Invites ~

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�qe-8·8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

SUNDAY

COUNTY-WIDE
Prayer
Meeting, Spnday, 2 p.m. at the
Chester Nazarene-Church. Glen
Bissell, class iead~r.
FAMILY SKATING PARTY,
Chester PTO fund raiser, 5 to 7:30
p.m. Sunday at the .Skste-A-Way
Rink. Cost S2 without skates and
$1.50 with skstes per person.
MIDDLEPORT YOUTH
LEAGUE, coaches and parents
meeting, Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Middleport City Hall.
POMEROY- Tbe Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet ·
at 2 p.m. today (Sunday) at the
Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. All interested persons
are welcome.

LECTA - Okey Chapel will
host Rev. David Sanders and the
Sanders Trio Sunday at 7 p.m. All
are welcome to attend.
GALI.JPOI.JS - Ambassadors
Trio will sing at Bell Chapel Sunday at 7 p.m. and Rev. Wayne
Harrison will be speaker. Rev.
Everett Delaney invites the
public.
DEER CREEK Church will
host Spiritual Sounds Sunday at
7:30 p.m. Rev. Don Price invites
the public.
GALLIPOLIS - Pastor John
D. King and members of Triedstone Baptist Church, Galliolis,

Calendar
will observe the church's 30th anniversary Sunday. Services will
begin with Sunday school at 9:15
a.m., with Rose Marie Stoney as
school superintendent. The church youth wiU be in charge of services, as they are each third Sunday of each month. Rev. Gilbert
Craig Jr. wiU be guest speaker at
the 10:45 a.m. services and
guests at 3 p.m. will be Rev . Earl
L. Strother of First Baptist Chur·
ch, RenviUe, Ohio, and his choir.
All are welcome to attend.
GALI.JA County Historical
Society . will meet Sunday at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church. The
board will meet all p.m. and tbe
'general meeting will start at 2:30
p.m. The prognJn will be given
by Helen Foster, executive
secretary of Pt. Pleasant Chamber of Conunerce. She will speak
on "Cornstalk Curse - Fact or
Fiction." She has researched the
historical accounts about Cornstalk and the curse along with
the reasons it was given.
Everyone is welcome to attend.

MONDAY

GALLIPOLIS

observe the 63rd anniversary of
the founding of the legion with a
dinner at the legion hall 6:30p.m.
Monday. All_Iegion and auxiliary
members are invited to attend
and should take a ccrvered di&amp;h
and table service.

GJ\LLIPOI.JS - GFW Riverside Study Club will meet
Tuesday at 1 p.m. with Mrs.
Wyman Bradbury. ,
GALLIPOLIS - Right to Life
Society will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Building, 990
Second Ave.
POMEROY - The Harrison-

TUESDAY

ville Golden Age Club will meet

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Chamber of Commerce
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
LaSalle Hotel.
POMEROY - The American
Legion AuxlUary, Drew Webster
P!lSt 39, Pomeroy, both junior
and senior units, will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
POMEROY - The Meigs Area
Holiness Association, will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene. The Rev. Herbie Grate

Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the tow_nhall ..
Each family is to take a covered
dish and their crwn table service.
Beverages will be provided.
POMEROY
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at 2
p.m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Rhonda Dailey, R.N. ,
will give an in-service talk on
isolati9n patients. Each' member
is asked to take a toyfor.an older
child. Hostesses will be· Carrie
Kennedy, Ethel Hatfield, and
KatieMees.

POMEROY - The Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association will
meet Saturday at the Meigs Inn for a
luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Reservations
should be made no later than Wednesday, March 24, by telephoning
992-3887.

GALUA-Jackson-Meigs Mental Health Board will meet Monday for a meeting rescheduled
from March 15.

A revival will begin Monday at the
St. Paul United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains and will continue
through Saturday, March 'll, with
services at 7: 3!1 each evening.
for the week Include :

Thursday, April 15, 6:30 p.m. Dance classes resume. Call Judi
Sheets, 446-7865, for registration.
Wednesday, May 12, 1 and 2:15
p.m. - Ohio State Dance Company
at Washington School. Co;sponsored
by ~AC and Washington School

CONDUCTING SEMINARS
ABOUT
mTHE LAYPERSON AS AMINISTER"

CHRIST UNITED MUHODIST CHURCH (Gallipolis)
SATURDAY, MARCH 27th at 9 AM &amp; again at 7 PM
Mel Deiter is a Professor of Church History at Asbury TheolOgical
semina"ry . His special areas of interest include History of Revivals,

Cults, and Contemporary Renewal Movements. He speaks re.g ularly

in Sible Studies, summer camps, and church engaements across the

March 22, Rev. Walter Frost, retired
United Methodist minister of
Belpre ; March 23, Rev. RObert Ssn·
ders, pastor of the.Mt. Hermon U.B.
Church; March 24, Rev. Seldon
Johnson, pastor at Joppa and Torch;
March 25, Rev. Carl Hicks, Racine,
retired pastor; March 26, Rev.
Jacob Lehman, pastor of the Faith
United Methodist Church, Marietts;
March 'll, Frau Gertrud Wenzel of
Gennany.
The public is invited.

country.
Mel hails originally from Cherryville, Pennsylvania. He Is
married and has one daughter, who is also marr.ied.
If vou h~ve ever wondered what your
might be in God's
Plan, - Come to these Seminars! -

:.1·
DIVING TRY - CiDciDDatl R"lldlDc guard Sllelly 108re, rf&amp;bt,
. reaches In to try to steal !be ball !rem Wanaw River VIew pard Tere~~~
Perldus as River View forward Deu Alberllcia m-la to help, left, Ill

EVERYONE IS WELCOME
TO·COME TO ANY,
OR ALL OF THE SEMINARS
- FREE OF COST Christ United Methodist-Church is located s mile\ south of Gallipolis

.

LAIIDMARK ®

SERVING MEIGS-GALLIA...;._MASON CO~
YOUR DISCOUNT CENTER-ON HOTPoiNT
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11

We Will Nc»t Be Undersold''

die flnt baU ol. lbe twa AA Stale Hlgb School Glrla' Tourney cham. pioublp pme Ill Columbus Saturday. River View won, 51-4t. lAP Laserphoto).

Vail has
home run
in .4-2 win
TAMPA, F1a. (PJ') -Mike Vall
slammed a solo home run to Ignite
a.4-run rally, and Charlie Leibrandt
scattered four hits over five inningS
Saturday to give the Cincinnati
·Reds a 4-2 exhibition baseball vtc·
tory over the Kansas City Royals.
' Vall hit his first home run of the
~prlng season )Vlth one out In tbe
second Inning otr Kansas City star·
ter Jim Wright, 0-1. The Reds
added~ more runs In the Inning
on Leibrandt's RBI single and Ron
&lt;lester's 2-run double.
I,.elbrandt, 2.(), struck out six In
his five Innings of ~ark and )Valked
three. Kansas City got a run In the
third Inning oft Lelbrandt when
U.L. Washington walked, took second on a ground out, and scor'ed on
Lee May's single to left. ·
Kansas City gotits !Ina! run In the
fifth when Frank White doubled
and scored mi John Wathan'ssingle
to center field.
The Royals managed five hits oft
three Cincinnati pitchers while
committing !our errors.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Spolill Writer_
COLUMBUS, Ohio (PJ') - Carollne Mast scored 26 points to lead
Warsaw River View to a 51-46 vic·
tory over Cincinnati Reading on
Saturday In the Class AA high
school gtrls championship.
Mast, the 5-foot-U senior daugh·
ter of River VIew Coach Dave
Mast, hit 54 Points In two state tour. nsment games to lead the Black
Bears to their second champion·
ship In the past six years. River
VIew won the 1917 crown.
A special defense designed to halt
Reading's two-time all.Ohioan
Jenny Gilligan also pla,yed a major
role In the Black Bears' 27th tri·
umph In 27 games this season.
Denise Albertson and Tracy
Merce~ combined to hold Gilllgan
to only slx shots tor more than three
quarters. She settled for 10 points.
While Albertson or Mercer were
chasing Gllllgan, the rest of the
River VIew players were in a ~ne
defense. It helped hand the Blue
Devils their first defeat In 27 games
this winter.
River . View, from Coshocton
County, scored six straight points to
take a 1Q.4lead tn the first five min·
utes. nte Black Bears led by ' t
least four points the rest of the
buUdlng a 27-17 halftime lead.
Despite some personal-foul trou·
ble late In the second quarter that

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1!1- Caunllil

cANTON, Ohio (AP) - Larry
Mullenax scored the first five
points for Windham In overtime as
the Bombers defeated New Wa·
shlngton Buckeye Central 60-57 Sat·
urday afternoon In a Class A boys
regional high school basketball
ct;uunplonship game.

sent her to the bench, Mast scored
15 pointS In the first half. Reading
was never a factor thereafter.
Shelly Klare, a 5-8 funlor guard,
paced Reading wtth 24 points. Gill!·
gan was the only other doub:efigure scorer for the Blue Devlls.
GUDgan could get only t1ve shots
In the first half and sank only one of
them. She h!t three straight baskets
late In the fourth quarter but had
only nine shots for the game .
Mas&amp; Named MVP
Mast was named the Most Valuable Player In the AA girls basket·
ball tournament.
The 5-foot·ll senior fmward had
54 points in two state tournament
games.
A panel of sports writers also
named Shelly Klare and Jenny Gilligan of Reading, Joelyn Shoup of
Upper Sandusky, and Jane Thend
of Chagrin Falls to the alltournament team.
Box. score:
RIVER VIEW (51) - Finnell 1 ().{)
2, Mast 10 6-7 26, Barrick 3 0.2 6,
Perkins 1 0.1 2, Mercer 0 ().{) 0, Denfse Albertson 5 5-9 15. Totals 20 1119 51.
READING ( t6) · Davis 0 ().{) 0,
Irwin 11-53, Vlmba 41-29,GUUgan
5 0.110, Klare 10 4-5 24, George 0 ().{)
0, Burdine 0 Q.O 0. Tolal8 20 6-1!146.
Team fouls - River View 13,
Reading 17 . A-4,412

•
IS

Northland
AAA champ
back by outscoring Shaw 9-2,111 the
next three minutes to go ahead 45AP Spo.U Writer
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (.\P) - Co- 44.
Lilly's free throw pulled ·the Car:
lumbus Nonhland, led by tdWering
4545 tie wtth 4:05 1eft.
dlnals.lnto·a
Georgeann Wells, rallled In the fiSubstitute
Suzanne
Helfant sank
nal quarter Saturday to beat East
two
free
throws
and
Dana Jones
Cleveland Shaw 5146 tor the Class
to
give
the
VIkings a
added
a
basket
AAA state high school girls basket·
49-451ead
with
1:05
remaining.
ball championhlp.
Lllly's free throw cut the margin
Northland overturned a six-point
to
49-46 wtth 49 seconds left. Wells
Shaw lead In tbeflnal7~ minutes to
.
clinched
the victory with a short
cUnch Its first state crown wtth a
shot
with 11 seconds to play.
jump
25-1 record . It waa a bitter defeat
Shawn
Steward,
a 5-3 senior
for Shaw, reaching the state finals
guard,
ran
Northland's
attack and
for the !W!rond straight year and the
contributed
11
points.
state tournament for the third year
Lilly was the only player for
1n a row without winning a title.
Shaw
to reach double figures.
The fl.foot-6 Wells, an all-state seBox
score:
nior center, scored 20 points, with
NORTHLAND
(~I) · Dlggtns30-1
seven of them coming In the final
Jones
4
().{).
8,
Wells
8 4-9 20, Ste·
6,
quarter.
ward
4
3-511,
DICesare
0 ().0 0, Pow·
· Orethta Lllly, the cardinals' all·
ers 0 0.0 0, Helfant 2 2·2 6. Totals 21
state forward, pumped In a game·hlgh 26 points, butltdidnotkeepthe &amp;-17 51.
8JIAW (46) -WUUamsUH, LUiy
Cardinals trom suffering their first
106-1126, HobsonJ0-{)6, Per&amp;2().{)
loss In 27 games this winter.
Shaw, the 19Hl state runnerup to 4, Glaspy 2 (). 4, Taylor 1 0-3 2,
Turner 0 0.0 0. Totals 19 IH7 46. ·
Toledo Libbey, appeared headed
Fouled out-Diggins, Hobson.
for Its first state title went It boUt a
42-36 lead early In the fourth quar· Team fouls-Northland 14, Shaw
14. A-3,778.
ter. However, Northland batUed
By GEORGE irmoDE

Windham gains
state tourney

W£WILL
NOl BE .
UNDERSOLD

S

Warsaw
captures
cage title

ER

LANDMARK IN · poM. EROY

.

'l'imtt ._ ientind

S)llldaY. May 16, :H p.m.- Nature
Art in the Park. C~sponsored by
FAC and 0. 0 . Mcintyre Park
District.
Exhibit for the month &lt;If April - ·
"Nature Interpreted." Sponsored by:
the Cinciiuiati Museum of Natural:
History,in cooperation with the Ohicr
Foundation on the Arts Statewide
Arts Services Program. Students (II,
vited.

.

Gallia County senior
.
.
'
ctttzens calendar

s orts

PTA.

DR. MELVIN

Announcements

EAST ' MEIGS - The annual
Eastern High School basketball
banquet wiD be held at 6:30p.m.
Monday at the school. Tickets at
$5 each are available at the office
of the superintendent.

Activities for the week of March Hour, 7p.m.
22-26 at the Senior Citizens located at
The Senior Nutrition Program will
220 Jackson Pk. are as follows':
serve the following menus:
· Monday, March 22 - Vinton Site
Monday
Hamburger
Exercises, 11 :30 a.m.; Chorus, 1-3 steak/gravy, lima · beans, tossed
p.m.
salad/dressing·, mb&lt;ed fruit, bread,
·tuesday, March 23 - Tax-Aide; butter, milk.
9:30 a.m.-3:30p.m.; S.T.O.P. Class,
Tuesday - Scalloped potatoes and
10:30 a.m. ; Physical Fitness, ll : lii · ham, buttered broccoli, fruit gelatin,
a.m.
rice or bread pudding, bran muffin,
Wednesday, march 24 - VInton butter, milk.
Nutrition Education, II :30 a.m.;
Wednesday - Baked pork chop,
Vinton Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card sweet potatoes, buttered spinach,
Games, 1-3 p.m. ; American fresh fruit, bread, buller, milk.
I.Jterature Class, 1 p.m.; Blood
Thursday - ,Chicken and noddle
Pressure Check, 1:1H :4S p.m.;
casserole, stewed tomatoes, green
Garden Club,l-3 p.m.
beans, lemon or butterscotch pudThursday, March 25 • - Vinton ding, bread, buller, milk.
Blood Pressure Check; Vinton Site
Friday - Pimento cheese sanCrafts, I p.m.; Bible Study,l-2 p.m.
dwich, buttered peas, cole slaw, ice
Friday, March 26 - Staff Meeting, cream, bread, butter, milk.
B:ls-1:45 a.m.; Tax-Aide, 9:30a.m.·
Choice of beverage served with
3:30p.m.; Yoga Class, 10 a.m.; Art each meal.
Cl!iss, 1-3 p.m. ; Craft Mini-Course,
"Services rendered on a non1-3 p.m.; Woodworking Class, 1-3 discriminatory basis."
p.m.; Vinton Birthday Party; S&lt;fial

Exhibit for the month of March 49 pieces of art by Marjorie
Rinehart, Gallipolis. Watercolor,
pastel, coUage, conte' crayon and
charcoal.
Gallery Hours - Tuesday ·and
Thursday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Saturday
.andSunday, 1 p.m. ~ p.m.
Tuesday, March 23, 7 p.m. Merpbership drive meeting. ,'\II
team workers must be present.
Tuesday, March 23, a p.m. Trustees Meeting.
Sunday, March 28, 2-4 p.m. Reception for new and old members.
Thursday, April 15, 6:30 p.m. T
Creative writing classes begin. Call
Jerry Skaggs, 446-3834, for
registration.

Lafayette

Post 27, American Legion, and
American Legion Auxillary will

Mar. 21, U82

Riverby ·Calendar

will be the sponsor. A special iJ1,
vilation is extended by the Rev.
james Broome, presidenl

'

MEETING Sunday, 6:30 p.m.
at Middleport ViUage Hall for
coaches and parents of Middleport Youth League; election of
officers.

w. va.

TEARS W1TII BIB DAUGHTER- Wahn River HJib Sebool Glrla' Toamey champl-blp pme lD
VIew "-1 -n -Drfe Malt llllp hll da.,...ler, for- Colamhlll S.lllrday. carollDe collected 11 poiDII to
nrd c.niiDe Malt, 011 die court ar. River View . lead aU .Corers u River VIew took tbe title Ill Dave
defeated ClaeiaMtl Rea'"•• to wla die Clua AA Stale Mut'tsecoady"!!ru bead e011cb. (AP Laoerphoto) .

Louisville· Ca_.dinals eliminate Blazers,
Georgetown·slams Oregon Stat~, .69-45
By JOHN NEIBON
NCAA tournament appearance tor
AP Spol18 Writer
· Alabama-Binningham and Coach
BIRMINGHAM, Ala . (AP)
Gene Bartow, who was attempting
Charles Jones and Lancaster Gor· 'to become the first coach to take
don each hit a pair of clutch free three dlffereJ!t teams to the Final
. throWS that'llelped break the back Four.
of an AJabama-B!nnlngham rally
In the ttnal analysts, It was a fa·
and give 20th-ranked Loulsvtlle a Ugulng Loulsvil1e press and a deep
75-68 victory Saturday over the belleh that boo8ted the Cardinals,
Blazers 1n the NCAA Mideast Re- the ~ national champions, over
gtonal championship game.
the never-say-die Bla2iers, who fin·
· In the NCAA West Regional !shed the aeuon with a~ record.
champlorulhip game at · Provo~
Trailing ~ at the halt,
Utah, later In the day, Georgetown Alabama·Bfi'nllnlllaJII outscored
smashed Oregon State, 69-45.
Loulsvil1e 14-41n the first 7: 56 after
Jones, a reserve center, hit two tntermlsstontopulllntoaf6-44Ieacl.
free throws wtth 2: 31lett to give the Anchrum had six points Ill that run,
Cardlnala a ~ lead, and after and Chris GlleiiCOred four.
Lou1svil1e stole an lniJoUJ1ds ~by
But when Gllel toul4!d out eteht
Alabama-Birmingham, Gordon mtnulellater, with 4:0l to play, It
was fou14!d by the Blazers' Nonnan spelled an encl to the Blazen'
Anchrum. Gordon sank both foul IJopes. Gllel, a 6-!oot-8 power for·
· shota, glvtna' Louisville a sll!-polnt ward, hacl enabled Alabama·
lead with 2: 28 left and a trip to the · Blrmlnaham to stay with the .
Final Four In New Orleans next Carltblall IIJicler the buket. Wltb·
.weekend.
out him, the llla2ll!rl were fonled to
Jones added five more free foul in CJr4er to plD,PDII .Lv! of
throws down the stretch, and · · the llau, and Loullvl1le hit 10
wound up;wtth 19 points tor ~ 'llralibt free t1uws In a oneville, 23-9.
· m11a1te lln!ll:b that elldecl 011 a pair
'lbe loll martced tbe ead ol a 011- by Jons with 1: ~ left that put the
del'el1a story!or the Bluerl, wbole· Cardlllallup '1U4. .
balkelball prt:Cram 11 caly four ye.
Loullviiie ran elf a 1.().2 streak
ars ole!. It was the aecond ltralgbt that ended 011 a 15-loot ~ _b y

Gordon wtth 4: 34 remaining and
Louisville leading 82-56. .
.
Luellen Foster got the Blazers
back into the game with a pair of
baSkets Inside, cutting

Loulsville's

lead to 62-60 with 3: IIi to play.

But Jones and GordQn came
back with their free throws, soundUig the death knell tor Alabama·
Blnnlngham's chanCeS.
Derek Smith added 16 points tor
LouiJville, despite an Injury to his

jaw that he sustatned early· in the
second halt. Smith lay on the court
for nearly two minutes whUe team
doctors administered to him, but he
was able to play most of the rest of
the game.
· Jerry Eaves had 13 points and
Gordon wound up wtth 111or Louis·
ville. · Oliver RobinsOn topped
Alabama·Blrmingham with 20,
Foster had 13 and GUes added 12
before touUng out.

Bacon advances to state meet
that could have won the game for ·
DAYToN, Ohio (PJ') - Bruce
Moeller.
Knolle's buelin!! jumper with 12 seMoeller's Byron Larkin, who had
condl to play Saturday atternoon
been avera(ling 27 points a eame
gave Cincinnati Roeer Bacon a 54'since belnli.moved from the re53 Clall AJ\A slate'hlgh IChool boys
feaionaJ championship basketball setve team seven game ago, was
' held to9, largelybecauseotthedef·
victory IM!I' Cincinnati Moeller.
Knolle hac! 14 ol. hiS 16 points Ill enstve e!fort of Bacon's Greg
Schlldmeyer, who had 13 pointS.
the second halt .. the Spartanl
overcame a 27·23 halttlme deficit.
BacoD boosted Its recant t.. ..2-4,
Moeller's Bob Hill pit the Crusad.
wblle
Moeller, also a member of the
ers abead 53-52 with 34 teeonds to
Greater
Clnclnnati League, ends
play when Bacon waa called for
the
~ampalgD
at 14-12. Steve Apke
ba11ret Jnterferellce on HIB'I layup
had
19
points
and
Greg Frttz 16 for
attempt, Atter Knolle's bllket put
Moeller ahead, ·Gree Fl1tz o1. the the Cnlladers, who played wllh9ut
CrusaderS milled a Jump shot at · their starting center, &amp;-7 senior Tim
Jolley.
the buzzler tram the rlgbt ol. the Jrey

IN PAlliNG - LOIIIIvDie enter RodDey McCray 12%) bumps Into
ADCbnlll !II) ol. tile Ualvenlty of Alabama~. lllllarday Ia flnt period ol. lllelr NCAA Mideast basketball
t
11wet . . . . .
ill BJrmiDpm, Ala. The ball went out Q(
tew!e • tile pily. Loa11vDJe WOD, 7HI. (AP L8luphoto).

c:n1er Ia N -

,._..lp

•
)

•

�Women's track coach
at Rio 'optimistic'

Portsmouth West ace signs with Rio
RIO GRANDE - Rio Gr~;~nde
College head basketball coach John
Lawhorn is beginning to reap the
benefits of a sensational 2&amp;-win
season. Toda y the veteran mentor
announced the signing of his first
recruit for the i98Ua season, 6-4 allstate forward Ron Fumier of West
Portsmouth High School.
·More than 100 schools had been
seeking Fumier's abilities;
"We're elated at. landing a
student-athletic of the caliber of Ron .
Fumier," J.awoom said. "Ron has
all the tools to become an outstanding college player. I can't say
enrugh about him both as a student
and as a basketball player.''
Fumie,r's play was nothing short
of herculean this season·as his team
compiled an 11-9 record - its best
reeerd in seven y~rs. He finished
witli an average of 27.1 points and
15.6;rebounds per game, including a
career high of 42 points against Minfo((i. · ·
F'umier has scored in double
fi!iures in 53 of his last S4 games and
hail scored 20 or more points in his
ia4t24 games.
Ali a junior, Fumier scored 505
poi~ts while averaging 24.2 points
ani!- ,13.2 rebounds per game. In his
sophomore year, he connected for
l~t7 points and hauled down 10
rebounds per 'clash.
.
ln three years of varsity competition, Fumier has averaged 22.8
ppil)ts and 13.2 rebounds per game
wW!e shooting 50 percent from the
fl~ and 68 percent at the free throw
llhe: He finished with a total of I ,348
j,pl.,ts and m rebounds in 59 'varsity
' .
cotttests.
' F'umier is also recognized as one
of tJ)e premier sprinters in the state.
He~ a 4.5 40-yard dash.
:"There were several things that
.nide me decide on Rio Grande,"

.

....
'

. RIO GRANDE - With II thincladll
back In fold from last year's team
that finished sixth in the state, Rio
Grande College women's track and
field coach Monlca Mlze says· she's
optlmiatlc about the upcoming

I

season.
The Redwomen are coming off a

)

stellar season iD 1981, a campaign
that saw them defeat 110 of the 96
tearris they battled and finish sixth
'In a ;12-tea,n league.
".We lost five of t!Je.top track and
field women in the history of the
school through graduation," Mlze
said. "But we have more people in
numbers and l think we have a wider
range of people that bave. talents in
several areas. We didn't have much
depth last year, but this year we do.
"We have mor., high jumpers and
long jumpers.and some people doing
.the distance • events. These were
are&amp;s that really hurt us last year." . ·
Gone from last year's team are
three standouts that claimed All-

I

'

I

'

I

I

\

'·
PORTSMOUTH WEST ACE SIGi,S WITH RIO
GRANDE - Porttmouth West High School basketball
standout Ron Fumier slgus a letter-of-llltenllo atteod
Rio Grande College. Fumier averaged 27.I polllls 8lld
Fumier said. "! wanted to play on a
winner, I wanted to sign with 'a
school that I could play at right
away, and l wanted to stay
relatively close to home. Rio Grande
fits all these well.
Fumier's high school coach S~ve

15.8 rebounds per game last seuon. On band for the
signillg are his pareots, Jim aud Anne, and high school
Coach Steve Rapp.

Rapp had nothing but good things to
say about his cage ace.
"Ron is a class student, athlete
and person. He is a very hard
worker and should be an.asset to any
college program; His enthusiasm
and wlllingpess to learn has made

.-

him an easy player to coach. I just
can't say enough about him."

Fumier, a National Honor Society
student with a cwnulative grade
point average of 3.3 is expected to
major in computer at Rio Grande.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Steve
Lyle hit a foul shot with 12 seconds
left to play and Byron Taylor added
another with one second remaining
to give Youngstown Rayen a ~1-39 .
vlc!Dry over Aki'on St. ·vincent-St.
Mary in a high school boys aass
AA regional finals basketball game
Frlday night.
Rayen, 19-6, was led in scoring by
Mark McClendon, with 14 points.
Kevin Spivey added iJ..
St. Vlncent-St: Mary was led by
Curtis WUson, with 15 points, and

' ..

'

.

JERRY MOWERY

Pasiore
deterrnined
..
'•

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - Nob(Kiy has to remind Cincinnati Reds
pitcher Frank Pastore of the differen~ that a year can make.
· 10 191ll, the right-hander marked
hlinself as one of the Reds' most
p$nfsing young starters with a 137:· record and 3.26 earned run
a\l¢age.
Last year, Pastore struggled
thtQugh spring training camp and
felllo just ~-9 with a 4.02 ERA In the
rei!IJiar season.
l'he 24-year-old ~;&gt;ltcher Is deter·
rrttned It won't happen ·again.
J'J'm coming off of a very frustra~. disappointing season in
198i I realize what the problems
w.eie and I've resolved them,'' Pasto~ said Friday night, after pitch·
tng four scoreless innings in the
RA:ds' Hloss to the Detroit Tigers.
''I've chaUenged myself not torepeG.! the mental approach that
caUsed rrte such grief last year."
. Jfastore's 13-7 record in 1980 led
RA!ds' coaches to think that he was
CB1!9ble ot winning 20 games in
1981. But Pastore said he came to
Jrl!!nlng camp last year slowed by

.

.·

Americans advimce

Mowery amed MOC "Rookie-of-Year'
RIO GRANDE - Point guard Westfall High School where he
Jerry Mowery of Rio Grande College averaged 2;!.1 points and five assists
has been named "Rookie of the per game and was runner-up for conYear" in the Mid-Ohio Conference in ference player of the year. His team
balloting by the league's coaches. went 19-4 his senior year.
Curry, a 8-7 forward from Derby,
Mowery and teammate Dan Curry
also head the MOC All-Freshman Ohio, averaged 11.4 points. and ' 6.2
team aMounced Saturday. JOining rebounds per game despite missing
the Redman aces on the star squad nine games with a broken foot. He
are Jim Zeigler and Charlie Perdue, shot 45 percent from the floor and 78
both of Malone, and David Grove !i percent from the foul line.
Before injuring his foot in early
Cedarville.
Mowery, a 5-8 guard from December, Curry was averaging I 7
Williamsport, Ohio, directed Rio points and 12 rebounds per game ..
Grande's explosive Offense. He - Curry. was a tearrtmate of
averaged 10.2 points and live assists Mowery's at Westfall High School
per game while shooting 52 percent averaging 17 points and'12 rebounds
from the floor and 83 percent from per game.
Rio Grande finished with a stellar
the foul line.
His assist total led the Mid-Ohio 2&amp;-7 record in 1981-&amp; - the most
wins in the state by a college team
Conference.
and
the sixth highest regular-season
Mowery came to Rio Grande from

injury, and he never got untracked.
"I had a knee problem (soreness)
in the winter of 1980-81 and I
couldn'i run. I showe&lt;) up for spring
training a lltUe overweight and I
hadn't run enough," Pastore said.
Being careful not to hurt himself,
Pastore struggled !D get in shape.
He !ell ready once the season began, but said he fell into a rut
mentally .
"I was trying !D do things that I
couldn't do, putting much too much
pressure on myself, and not accept·
ing theJact that you can't change
some things," he said, referring to
bad breaks he got in a few games. ·
Instead of being aggressive on
the mound, Pas!Dre said he ended
up pitching not !D make a mistake.
He's tried !D forget about1981 and
carry a different attitude through
tralnlllg camp this year.
1t's a 19).degree turnaround/'
Pastore said.
In bls first appearance of the
spring, Pastore gave up two hits
and two unearned runs In three
innings.

Area
standings
Team

ALL GAMES

W L

• ·Wheelersburg
Portsmouth
Athens
Ga ll ipolis
Pt. Pleasant
Chillicothe
Jackson
Waverly
Ironton
Wellston
South Point
Washington CH
Logan
Mei gs

P

x·Still in tourn.ament.
Friday's results :

total in the nation.
Tbe Redmen claimed two tournament titles and pulled off one of
small college basketball's biggest
upsets when they knocked off the No.
1 ranked team in the country.
Zeigler, a 6-4 forward, averaged 18
points pe~: game for the Pioneers
while Perdue, a 6-5 forward, connected at a 16.5 rate and Yellow
Jacket David Greve 15.2.

NEW YORK (AP) - Long-time
tennis star and coach BW Talbert
likes the soclallzlng quality of
tenniS.
"It's everythlilg;' ' he said. It's
11

the people you play with. Tbe cold
beer you bave after a match. The
nice teeUng that comes from a good
workout. I don't look for .QmpeUUon any more on a tennis court. I
get enough ol that tn my everyday

1403
1473
1268
1102
11110
970

1469
1191
1215
1353
1308
1093
134d
1468

By KEN RAPPOPORT
i\P Sports Writer
The NCAA basketball tournamentis starting to lookllkethe "Big
East lnvltatlonat," thanks !D VWanov a , Bosto n College a nd
Georgetown.
F ollowing Georgetown's lead the
night before, VUlanova and Boston .
College both won their respective
regional playot! games Friday
night and lent a distlnct easternaccent to this year's competition.
VWanova defeated Mempbls
~tate 70-66 In a tingling overtime
· ga me to earn a place in the East
Regional finals in Raleigh, N.C., today against top-ranked North Caronna, a 74-69 winner over
Alabama.

Boston College tripped Kansas
State ~in the Midwest Regional
in St. Louis and moved Into today's
regional championslilp game
against Houston, which shocked
Missouri 79-'18.

phis State, the Metro Conference
champion. Plnone, a burly 228pounder, had forced the extra perlod with a layup that tied it at 62
with 28 seconds lett in regulation.
Ptnone led an scorers with 19
points and freshman phenom Keith
Lee, Memphis State'ssecond·team
AII·Amerlcan, had 14 to lead the
Tigers, despite foullng out with just
under five minutes reniainlng ·in
regulation.

Saturday, sixth-ranked Georgetown hoped to upbold the honor of
the Big East in the West title game
against No. 4 Oregon State tn
Provo, Utah. No. :!&gt; Louisville met
1 7 th · ranked A I a bam a B!rmtngbam In the Mld!!ast Hegional finals at Birmingham, Ala.
John Plnone broke a tle with 26
· seconds remaining in overtime by
sinking two tree throws and Stewart Granger added two more to
clinch it 16 seconds later as un·
ranked Villanova upset No.9 Mem-

preserve a two-point lead.
Garris, a 6-toot.Sjunlorwho aver·
aged tewer than eight points during
the season, scored 16in the first hall
to keep Kansas State trom assum'ing an overwhelming lead. He fin.
ished with 18.
The Eagles won despite a sub-par
performance by high scorer John
Bagley, who finished with only 10
points. Randy Reed and Tyrone
Adiii'Jl.S each scored 16 for Kansas
State.
Jam.es Worthy and Sam Perkins
combined for all the points tn a 10.2
spurt midway through the second
half that put North Carolina in controt over No. 13 Alabama. The vic·
tory was· the 13th tn a row tor the
Tar Heels, the longest streak In the

Michael Adams and John Garris
combined tor 38 points and belped
Boston College erase a five-point
ba1rtime de!lcit as the Eagles beat
Kansas State. Adams scored 11
points in the second half and executed a darlngstealin the final minute to help the upstart Eagles

country.

Once the Tar Heels establlsbed
an eight·potnt lead late tn the game,
they went to a tour-corner o!tense
that broke several players loose for
layups and sent others to the treethrow line down the stretch.
Matt Doherty and Worthy each
scored 16 points for the Tar Heels,
wblle Perkins bad 15.
Alabama Coach Wimp Sander·
son said his defense was designed
to help slow Worthy and Perkins,
but something bad to give and It
was the perimeter that opened the
way tor the Tar Heels.
"We tried to do the best we could
with Perkins and Worthy Inside,"
he said. "You do that and you 're
going to give up something."
Doherty said he knew the Crim·
son Tide would be worded about

Rodney Chatman, with 14.
The Akron school jumped to a 5'0 ..
lead and stayed in trent unlll the •
final 2'h minutes of !he second
quarter, when Rayen went ahead
22-19.
St. Vincent-St. Mary, 21·5, regained theleadandwasahead23-22
at balttlme.
The lead went back and forth tn
the second balf. At the 3: 33 mark,
St. Vincent jumped to a 37·34 lead
but Spivey tied it 37-37 on a foul shot
with 1: 36 remaining.
·Youngstown will lace Wheelersburg in Thursday's Class AA state
tournament opener at St. John Arena in Columbus. Tlpo!t Ume Is 6
p.m.

STRASBOURG, France (AP)Top-~ Ivan .Lend! ot CzJechos·
lovaltia and Americans Sandy
Mayer, Tim Mayotte and Te!T)I
Moor advanced to •the semltlnals ot
the $nl,IXXJ wcr Strasbourg tennis
tournament.
· Lend! crushed Poland's Wojtek
Fibak 6-0, 6:4;c the fo\lrth-Seeded
Mayer outlasted Switzerland's
Heinz Gunthardt 4-6, 6-3, 6-3;
· Mayotte upset tl!th·seeded Balazs
Taroczy ot Hungary 6-3, 6-4 and
Moor whipped John Fitzgerald of
Australia 6-3, 6-4.
·

.Southeastern Ohio .
• Polled Hereford Assn. • '
s-ale, March 26, 1982
At7 : 00 P.M.
At . the Rock Springs
Fairgrou.nds, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Contact for information : Judith Miller,
Rt. 2. Box ~72, ·McArthur, ,
Oltio
45651
or
1-6'14-596-5564 .

..

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 81-302-El·EFC (subfile A) lo review the fuel
procurement practices.and
policies of Ohio Power
Company . the operation
of its EleWic Fuel Component Clause. and related
matters . This hearing Is
scheduled to begin at ·t :00
p.m. on Monday , Marrh
22, 1982, at the City Council Chambers, 218 Cleveland Ave .. S.W., Canton.
Ohio 44702 .
'
All interested partles ,wili
· be given an opportunity
lobe heard. Further information may be obtaiped
b'{ contacting the Com·
mission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COM MISSION OF OH 10
By: David M. Polk.
Secretary

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Worthy and Perkins, and took advantage of it.
"I was in the righ1 spot at the
right time and I hit the jump shot,"
Doherty said of bls ~for-9 perfor, .
mance. "Teams come out and shuL
them (Worthy and Perkins) ott and ,
that just leaves me and Jimmy
pen."
.
Lynden Rose led six Houston
players In double figures and the
Cougars dominated Missou ri
Inside.
Missouri, trailing by as many as .
12 points in the second half, staged!l .
last-ditch raUy that fell short. With
six seconds left, Ricky Frazier hit 1!.
toUow shot io make it 79·76, then the
Tigers intercepted a Cougar pass
and Frazier scored the final basket
at the buzzer.

'

RUR·

.

.

The Sunday Times-Sentine l- Pa ge-C: l _

Eastern teams continue to surprise experts in.NCA~ play

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Mar. 21, 1982

OP

Thursday's game :
Wheelersburg vs. Youngstown
Rayen, 6 p.m.. OSU .

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT

i

In addition to going undefeated in
the 800-meter and · 1,500-meter
distances during the regular-season,
Martin set Rio Grande records in the
80&lt;Hneter (2 :16) and 1,500-meter
(4:43) last spring.
•
Two other All-Americans are also
gone 'including Margaret Hammond
and Margaret Hackett.
" As far a!i returning members, we
have some quality people back in the
sprints, hurdles, javelin and the
discus. The increase in IJiembers
will benefit us in overall depth and
give us more strengtli in the relays."

11

SEE MR. GOODWRENCH FOR A

e, Main St.

in Califomia.

Social player

Life."

25 1 1863
20 4 1709
17 6 1502
15 7 1210
13 8 1216
12 10 1007
12 10 1520
10 12 .1238
10 12 1210
9 12 1342
8 13 1232
7 12 1018
s 16 1184
0 21 1123

American laurels, including conference thinclad of the year Perri
Martin. Martin, i'ecipient of the
Newt Oliver Trophy as the school's .
best athlete last year, earned 12 varsity letters during her four years at
Rio Grande and set nearly every
school middle distance record wbile
finishing sixth in the nation in the
8110-meter run lit the AlAWnationals

Youngstown wins in
'final seconds, 41-39

.

'

'

Mar. 21, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. 1/a.

Page-C-2- The S11nday Times-Sentinel

,,

I.

�\
Pomeroy~Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasan·t,

: Page---C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Seattle at Phoenlx
HoultOn at Lol Anpil!l

NBAresults

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WF.BIERN CONFERENCE

--

GREEN BAY PACKERS-~ Larry
PfoRl and Guy Andenon, IJU&amp;n:h; V1raU
Uwr1, back; aad Jamet DaVIdlon,

N_ _ . _ . .

2Z

.478
.o6m

...a

roum.uL
._F
..... ._..

NHL results

Gl

51

N.,. .-.,
Mllwa~

PIS.

s..n Dleco 96

&amp;I

17 14 389 281

102

IJ

m

._,........

a&lt;llnched flnt 'place In dlVIlon.

m;
Seattlr 100, Kania! City 100
MUwat.ikEoe 119, Cleveland 97
Detra1t lll . Houltc.rl lin
Lol Aqelet 112, IJBllal

Calpry J, Edmonton 3, tie

NEW ORLEANS SA!NTS-Siped Robtort P&amp;rtlam. f1.11lback. and John Stamm,
t1Q:hl end.

N_!lo&lt;..,.._.,
IIOC&amp;EY

PHILADELPHIA

Montreal at Buffalo
at P!dladelphll.
New Yon lalanden at Wuhlngton
St.Loull at New York Ranpn

-·-

Denvrr 130, 0\kaao ~

HartfOrd

Bostol) at PhlLaclelphla
New York. at WuhlnjJton

De1rdt at WlMipea
PlttJbW'ih at Colorado
•
MoodqaGUMI
Quebec at Bolton

New Jerlt'Y at MUwaukee
San 1Jieio a! Kartsas City

Utah at Colden State
Detl"'tt at Atlanta
Chicaco at Clcvelanc1

J..os Anaelel at

FLYERS-Fi red

POl

Qulnn. head coach. ancl relieved Bobby
BoucDer, au~~~a.u
COIChel, of thdr dudes. Named Bob
McCa:mmofl Dead coactl ror the rematnlll!r of the seuoa and t!pled hl.m to a

aartte aoo aoo

muld-year contract u auatant general
ll\lJ'IIlltt'. Named John Paddock lnltrlm
head coach ot Maine of Ule Amer1can
Hockey

Leap.

COI..LII:GE
CAL-mVINE-ExteOOed' tb! cmtract of
Bill

MUill8an.

throu&amp;h the

heed

bUkeCblll coach,

1~ aeuGQ.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sporta Writer ,.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Edith
Spivey, East Cleveland Shaw's
coach, believed the Cardlnais' tournament experience was ready to
produce the school's first Class
AAA girls prep state basketball

Hoine or road?
FAYETI'Evn.LE, Ark. (AP)Most college football coaches
would rather play at home, but Lou.
Holtz of Arkansas Is not so sure.
"Playtng at home Is orily an ad·.
vantage !!you wtn," he said. "HYOI!
lose, you're betteroffplayingonthe
road because you have a better
chance of getting out Qf the stadium"
alive."

crown.

"Poise, that's the dtfference in
this team," said Spivey Friday af.
ter Shaw walloped Hubbard ss.as
Friday to set up Saturday's title

Willard
• state
:·: m
tourney
at 26-0
•.

Sports briefs

By 'lbe AMOel•ted Pre8s

WWard has retained Its status as

I!IWNG
KRANJSKA GORA, Yuplavla. (APJ -

Phll Matlte cot1tlnued llll domination at the
World Cup ddlna ctrcutt with a K~ant llalom
VlctA:Iry, ed&amp;tnK Hanns Enn at Au1trla by :36
hwmedthl or a llf!OOOO.
Mahre, already tbe Wb'lneT ot the overall
AI~ title, had a mmbl~ tiJne oi 2 minutes, ZUI!I IIE!COnds fOr the two runa.

l...wu!t'nboufi'• Marc Glnmlelll wa!l lh1ro

MJliJIHOta

Cb1clli0 at Toronto.

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis, Qhi~t-Point Pleasant,

w. va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page-C · S

Poise difference iri outcome • Spivey

ILL IN 0 IS STATE-Named Da·
ole!
Gllormley !3ltee1or Oflntercollea1&amp;1* ath·
letlco.
MIOOGAN-Named Stew Fbher assistant basketball Cll&amp;Ch.

!Mid&amp;J'• Gatne~

Portland ln. Utah 129, OT

The Reds got one in the sixth
AP Sporla Writer
when German Barranca .ltJt a leaLAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - £le. 1lo1f triple and scored on Larry
troll second baseman Lou WhiBlltner'SISingle Off ijruce Robbins.
taker hit a grand slam homer to
Wayne Krenchlckl worked Larry
Rothschild for a leadoff walk in the
lead the Tigers to a 7-4 exhibition
victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Reds' seventh, went to second on
Whitaker's blast Friday night
Eddie Milner's single, took third on
over the Iight field wall off Cincina passed ball and scored on Ron
Oester's grounder.
nati right-hander Brian Ryder
came tn the fUth tnntng with Al
Gary Redus annd Krenchicld
Cowens, llW Fahey and Tom scored in the Cincinnati ntnth on
Brookens on board.
hits by ~rand Oester.
In the Detroit seventh, Fahey
Robbtns, -1he second Detroit
pitcher to work, picked up the vic·
tagged Reds Iight-hander Joe
Edelen for a leadoff triple and
tory for the T!gers, 5-7 in Grapefruit
scored on Greg Wilson's two-out
single. Mark DeJohn tripled Wilson
home.
The Tigers got their ftnal run in
the eighth when Fahey doubled and ·
scored on a grquncler by Jell Cox.

~·~~far'~~

' No pmel tcheciWed

Mar. 21, 1982

League play. Ryder took the defeat
for the Reds, 6-4.

By BARRY ATKINS

Transactions

o.u.u at P&lt;rtl&amp;n4

Mar. 21, 19821

Detroit 'slams' Reds, 7-4

Scoreboard.•.

·-

w. Va.·

lll 2::K.Cl.

meeting with Columbus Northland.
after one quarter. The Eagles fin.
.
Shaw, unbeaten tn 26 games this !shed at 22-4.
wtnter, has reached the state !lnals
The Cllrdlnals scored the first
for the second straight year and
rilne points of the game, leading
played in the final four for the third
Hubbard Coach Bert Gallagher to
season In a row.
say: "We were tight. Nothtng
Northland, 24-1 after ousting Ctnworked. We lost our synch. They're
ctnnati Oak HWs 69-48, was playing
not the quickest team we've
in the championship game for the
played, but they're the quickest
good one.''
first time in St.John Arena.
Northland's victory over Oak
In the first of the championship
contests Saturday, Cincinnati
HWs was a classic match of a bal·
anced team against a briWant tndi·
Reading (~) took on 1977 titlevidual. Despite foul trouble that
holder Warsaw RiverVIew (26-1) In
Class AA. Zanesville Rosecrans
cost her almost seven mtnutes of
(21·2) and New Washtngton Buck- the second quarter, June Duerrlng
eye Central (2'1·0) settled the Class - scored 28 points. Dana Jones hit 11
A crown last night.
ol12 shots for 22 points, Georgeann
In the Class A semifinals Friday
Wells added 18 and Shawn Steward
14 for the VIkings.
night, Rosecrans foiled Anna's bid
" You can't beat a team wtt)l one
for a second straight crown 73-55
player," said Elaine Boltz, North·
and lluckeye Central ellminated
land's coach. "And you can't beat a
Archbold 49-43.
team shooting from the outside."
"This Is the best team I've had of
the three," Spivey said. "Thehench
Oak HWs bowed at 21·5 and
Coach Dick Ballard said It would
Is much stronger. I can go down to
ntne players and not hurt us."
have been a different story !!he had
had Duerrlng for the whole game.
Orethta LWy paced Shaw with 19
"It's llke Ralph Sampson sitting on
points against Hubbard, down 17 .a

the hench," he said, "but she's
more Important than Sampson because she also brings the ball up the
floor.''
Rosecrans' 34 lleld goals established a Class A single-game tour·
nament record and the· Bishops
came within one point of another
record, Rocky River Lutheran
West's 74 points.
Buckeye Central Coach Vainard
Spies watched Rosecrans and said,
" I hope that was the orily time they
play llke that. U there's another
performance like that tomorrow
rilght, we wW be 27-1. AU of their
players can shoot.,;
Stacey Pfeifer had 26 points, Su·
san Nash 20 and Mary Kohler 18for
Rosecrans, ending Anna's traU at
20-4. Robin Michael led the Rockets
.
with 16 points.
ArchhoUt had slx more baskets,
but Quckeye Central sank 21 of 28
free throws, including 10 of 14 in the
fourth quarter to come from behind . Archbold, out at 19-7, hit just 3
of 5 foul shots .. Kim Bosco's 29
potnts paced the Blue Streaks.

IN PURSUIT- East Clevelaod Shaw guard DOlores Perez (11)
chases doWD lbe ball after !mocking it away from Hubbard forward
Colleeo Coonolly, rl&amp;ht, In the first half of a Cla1111 AAA State High School
Toomey game In Col!IDlbut Friday. ( AP Laserpboto).

Ohio's only unbeaten boys high~----------------,.---------'-------------------------------­
school basketball team by edging
Swanton 54-51 in a Class AA regional title game.
WWard got a bonus in the process
Friday night - a berth in this
week's state tournament.
Willard wW face Dayton Roth,
the defeudtng Class AAA Cham·
pion, Thursday at 9: 30 p.m. tn the
' '.
state semlftnals at Ohio State Uri!·
verslty's St. John Arena. Roth
• •
dropped to Class AA because of
•• •
dectintng enrollment.
Youngstown Hayen rilpped Ak·
•••
1'011 St. VIncent-St. Mary 41-39 Frl·
day night to gatn a spot tn the state
serriltlnals against Wheelersburg.
Hayen plays Wheelersburg at 6
SIZE
PRICE
•••'
p.m. Thlll'9day.
600x 15 . . .... . '33
••
G78x 15 .
. .. '38
Roth downed Urbana 83-76 and
H78x 15 .
'40
Wheelersburg defeated· Martins
L78x 15 .". . .... '43
'
Ferry 71-69 Friday night.
Saturday, Class AAA and Class A
'•
teams got their .turns to determine
'•
theit semifinal casts.
'•
Senior guard Mike LWo poured in
A7Qx13
10W40
&lt;·
EV~RYDAY LOW PRICE!
:W points, 23 In the second half, to
'
pace Willard, 26·0, against
Kelly Springfield
10W30
Swanton.
'.'
Super Chargers
WWsrd led 26-23 at halftime and
Valvollne
built a 52-45 advantage with 2: 10 to
Exceeds new car specs.
50, 60, 70 Series
Limit 12
play, ·but the Bulldogs scOred six
• OQuble poly cord s for strenglh
·'
·
unanswered points to pull withtn
~~~fiJ
and stabllil»' wltwo flberglan
''.
•' .
!C
belta
one at 52-51 with 1:17 remaining.
• Outlined white ~ter e
~ '
Brian carr made one of two free
SIZE
PRICE
SIZE
PRICE
throw attempts with 24 seconds to
':•
Natlonwlse 011 Filter
B60 x13 .... '42
F70x 14
. ' 44
'
play to make lt53-51.
Limit 2
E60 x14 .
'47 G70x 14 ... '48
'•
Swanton called two ttmeouts, but
""'•"' G60&lt;14
. '51
G70 x 15 .. '48
•'
159
L60
x
14
•
....
'850
•
13
.
'47
missed the potential game-tying
G60x
1
5
.
.
'52
•
M50x
14
.
•ee
... '
basket and was forced to foul agatn.
L60&lt; 15 . . '60
• N50&lt; 15 . . '10
'·
LWo hit one free throw with four
NaiiOilwlse Air Filter
E70x 14 .
'43
Llmlt2
FEll
/
9401
seconds left to cloae out ihe scoring.
'4 p ly p OI V CO ld tii Cl&gt;
.;
Jeff Thames led Swanton with 14
points.
•••
• ••
Steve Lyle hit a foul shot With 12
seconds left to play and Byron Tay9844oz .
•!r'.
Reg . 1.59
lor added another with one second
Reg. 1.75
Reg. 5.95
Reg . 2.49
Dorey
Aeg. 2.49
rematnlng to give Youngstown
Armor All
Blue Poly
NJpponden10
Blue Poly
..
Fram
Protectant .
Rayeli Its victory.
l,totorcycle
S.lant
·
Poly
Wash
!;
Wiper
8oz...... . 1.81
~en was led tn scortng by
'
8 oz. liquid
IJIIIrk Pluga
~PW75
Reo. us
•••
Blades
or paete .
Mark McClendon, with 14 points.
••
~IJilitiM 11 oz. .. . .. 3.88
S.M
ower
•11
Reg. 6.71
'.
St. Vincent-St. Mary was led by
or
Refills
'3 off
. . . . . . . 1131
\
save ovor 1/3t
CUrtis Wilson, with 15 points .
'
Reg.
3.59
Blades - each
Blue Poly
Roth's Steve Smith scored 19
18oz.
Refill&amp; . pair
Marine
Blue
Poly
Poly
· potnts to pilce his team llialnst UrReg. 2.09
••
Poly
8.88
NPM40
bana, which jumped to a 17-4 lead .
Armor All
Reg. 12 .~
and was ahead 24-12 at the end of
laonrple:
CINner
.... o...-•.4 1
Chrome
MPC44
tMCOOl .•. t.t8
....... 25%1
the first quarter. Urbana bullt as
Aeg . 12.16
much as a 15-potnt lead tn the se'•
cond quarter and led 47·36 at
0
•
haltime.
·'
Roth came back In the third quar·
'
ter by scoring 12 unanswered points
to take a 48-47 lead . Roth led
•
•
throughout the fourth quarter.
Urbana was led by Ric Skelley
and Mark Frantz. with 20 points
E.-ydoy Low Price
each.
Electronic
Joe DeCamp made the front end
Ignition
of a one-and-one foul shooting situaEKamplee:
tion with eight seconds to play,
Tune Up Kill
cllnchlng Wheelersburg's victory
Reg. 9.49 .. . 7.12
e cyl. Chrya t•r
over Martins Ferry.
- - V l Dlltrlbutor CIPI
DeCamp's free throw made the
1
Aeg. 4.50 .. .. 3.31 Atmenutectured
score 71-67. He missed the second
• cyl. Ford
Carburetors
lmm Wire 8111
shot and the Pirates allowed Mar·
Orlglnll Equipment Repllcement
10.95 . . 1.21 39.95 1 BBL.
ttns Ferry's Chuck Allen to score an
Ve;. 108708&lt;4
For most domestic cars and llgh11rucka
52.95
2
BBL.
uncontested layup at the buzzer for
H 1nyt11lng wrong with thll muffler, N1tlonw111 will exchongo It
72.95 ·4 BBL.
the tinall'li8J'iln.
FRI!!I •• k)ng 11 you own your cert
·
Eloc. IGnlllon
All w/rebu lldable ••change
. Paul Newman, a &amp;-foot-8 senior
Control Module
from .
. 23.t5
center, scored 42 points, including
&amp;Tailpipes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . from 3.95
J ~:: Fuel Pumps
9.9 5 ) Exhaust
For most domestic cars and l ight trucks
'•
'25 In the first half, and added 14
rebounds tor Wheelersburg. Allen
.. ·,,.
had 25 and Dennis Swearingen 19
'
for Martins Ferry.
••

....

The company that gave you incredibly low cost
~inancing in 1981 has gone a good deal one better.
Our better deal gives you all the advantages of leasing,
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$

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1.52

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hay blnes, square balers all your hay
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to p&lt;od- I belt•
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-•nl!luodellgn
llllnlrntzn mllnteno-

CINCINNATI (AP) - Offensive
tackle Karl Yli·Renko of the Uri!·
verslty of Cincinnati Is a native of
Sudbury, Ontario, where his par·
ents emigrated from England. He
Is Duent tn English, French and
Finnish and his grades averaged

~ NOTICE!

To all Recine, Ohio area residents weare only 13 miles south on Rt. 2, 1
mlleeas1 on St. Rf. 87 below the new Ravenswood, W. Va. Bridge.

St. Rt. 87

Brains and brawn

.':I:·..
....
·'
,..
., .

w/r.bulldltlle ••cnanga

Both lor moat domestic cars
except lniegrol &amp; Motorola

For moat Qo~N~stlc 4·6 cyl. cars
and all Chevy small block VB

llt"7 H igh torqUII •t•rt•r w/r!H)ulldllb!•
-£1 •• ohQ. for fnOtll Chtyal•r .,d tomt

1989-71

Ford ca~a

M5
Attemttore wlrebi.lllo.ble · ~c:hg. for
lnltgrll I Motorola e11eepl high
~

11mp HD units

•••

ule sol (2 w.heels)

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oxle 111 (2 wheels)
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w/rebulldable exchg.
lor moe! 8 cyl. domestic and

moll 4·8 cylinder Imports

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~:

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....
.,...
•, 1

...•...•
.....
' ...'
..

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pu~t

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)
Dave Lorlni, the punter for Drake,
• was back to kick In the game
· agaiDat Southern lllliiOll 8lld a doe
ran out 011 the lleld. LoriDa toolt a
:
IWipe at the doe 111111 coonected.
' • • · The dog ran off the field.

""""U·

..

' .'
•••

·

HOURS:
10.5
Sun.
8:30.
7
M·F
8:30.8
Set.

209 Upper River Rd.

446-·3807

'
:,·
• ••
...
..
....
•••

•••

:::

••

•

�Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OhiCt-Poinl Pleasant,

Page-C-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

WEST LAFAYETrE, Ind. (AP)

for a .500 season.
New teams added to a very competitive schedule are Parltersburg's
Big Reds, Belpre, Ravenswood, and
Parkersburg Catholic.
Wigal, who Is assisted by assistant
George Colllna and reserve coach
Don Eichinger.
Eastern's schedule and roster:
EAGLE ROSTER
PLAYER-PO$
Chris Allen, p-1b-of

YR
12

x-John Beaver , of

12

x·Mike Bissell, of
Lee Gainer, of
x-RogerGaul, inf·of
JeffJones,p
x· Nicky Leonard, c
x-Charles Ritch ie, p· inf
x· Rob Smith, p· lnf
Roger Bissell , inf·c
Todd Cundiff, inf·Of
x·Mark Holter, p·of
DeronJewetf, inf-of
Leonard Koenig, inf-ot
Brian Well, p-inf
Clinton Bailey , lnf·of
Roger Balser. p
Rick Barton, of
Mike Collins, p · inf
Larry Cowdery. c-ol
Tom Everett, inf-of
Troy Guthrie, c
Jerry Larkins. p
Jim Newell, p-inf
T im PrObert, inf
Jay Carpenter. inf

12
12
12
12
12
12
12
11
11

Jim Weber, c·of
..x - Denotes lettermen.

Marcl\3. 1982
Tam
Zide's SporUi Shop

JlaglesCiub

52
44
42
Smith's Body Shop
34l
1'1&gt;nr.'11Carry Out
34 '
ghseries - Clyd~Sayrl'!OCI9 , Pat CMrson544 ;

~~lson Mutor:!l

;H

~rry0u~an577,

9

RESERVE !!CHEDULE

42

37

Betl)l Smlth 502.

Phalton ... InJury prevention Clay and
night 1or the 1880'1 n.mner•

Eerl)' Wedlletiday Mixed
Feb. 24. 1882

I f~RJ:E 42" mounted Ford rotary

PI&gt;.

&amp;awl•• Club

·

"'

Jlde'1SportShop

I m1ower villh any new Ford

SO
&lt;2
40
30

llOnKS~ota

S$ilh-Nelaon Motors
Sshith's Body Shop
~onr,'s Clarry Out

The Boilermakers buUt a 16-po~.
lead In the first balf, saw the rna~
gtn cut to 42-34 at halftime and wf.
dened the gap steadUy to as many
as 22 points In the final period. · _
"They'.re a good baD club:';c
Texas A&amp;M Coach Shelby Metcalf'
said of Purdue. "Itwa s agoodexpe';~
rtence for us, They played thelt~
game. We just didn't get off to :a'~
good start."
•· •

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Joe ~
Camp made the front end of a oneand-me foul sbootlng situation with
eight lf!CO!Id• to play, cUnching
Wheelenburg's 71.QI victory over
Mart1JiB Ferry In a boys Class AA

hfgb scholl basketball regional
champiOIIIIllp game Friday night.

DeCamP's

•

2.8

Garden.'fractorl
A S534 Value!

~••wnand

ACT SOON! OFFER ENDS 6-30-a2

• H ~:h aeries - Tom Smith 552, Marlene Wilson
aa&amp;; 8111 Port~r 11nd Bob Couch 540, Debi Hellllley
til3.
• Hlgh game - Bill Porter 213, Marlene Wilson
:m· Bob Couch 202 , h.abellc Couch 199.
* T~am serles - E11 gles Oub 2132.
: Team ~a me - I..On!! Shot.s 788.

Mt"'s &amp; I.Jdits'

The
Shoe Cafe

Tuesday Triplicate

Marcb9, ltSZ
S&amp;andlntiM

:100 Second ;he.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR
Pomerciy, Ohio

992-2668

free throw made

ae

the

the final margin.
.46-38 midway In the third quarter,
Paul Newman, a 6-foot-8 senloi- but the Purple Riders scored 10 un·
center, scored 42 poillts, IJicludlng answered points to take their last
25 ill the llrst half, and added 14 lead of the game at 4846.
Coach John Eaton's Pirates, now
rebounds for Wheelersburg. Allen
2iH
on the year, will battle Younghad 25 and Dennis Sweatlngen 19
Rayen In Ohio State Univer·
stown
·for MartinS Ferry, :ln-5.
sity's
St.
John Arena on Thursday,
The Pirates trailed by nine points
with 1: 37 to play In the first half, but MarCh 25. Tipoff time is 6 p.m.
Box score:
scored 1l points In a row before
MariD Ferry (88) - Allen ll 3-5
halftime, IJicludlng five by NeW25, Woods 4 1-3 9, Davts 2 ().() 4, Voyman, to go ahead 36-34.
Wheelersburg boosted Its lead to tecek 0 2·2 2, Scartpln 1 ().() 2, Swearingen 8 3419, ~jdln 24-7 8. Totals

* * * * FREE * * * *

score 71-67.
mlsaed the second
shot and the Ptra~ allowed MartinS Ferry's Chuck Allen to score an
uncontested layup at the buzzer for

* * * * FREE * * * *

LYNE CENTER SCHM:DULE
DATE- GYMNASIUM Week of March 21,1912
POOL
March 21 Closed
. Closed
March 22 6·8 p .m./101 Class
8·10 p.m./College Rec:
8· 10 p.m./College Swim
March 23 7-10 p.m./1 ntramurals
Closed
March 24 8· 10 p.m./College Rec.
8·10 p.m./College Swim
March 25 8-10 p.m./College Rec .
8· 10 p.m./College Swim
March 26 2·4 p.m./Open Rec.
7· 10 p.m./Open Swim
March 27 2·4 p.m./Open Rec.
N p.m./Open Swim
March 281·4 p.m./Open Rec.
1·4 p .m./Open Slflim
8-10 p.m./College Rec .
8-10 p.m./College Rec .

PICK UP AND DELIVERY WITHIN 25
MILES OF DEALERSHIP WITH ONE OF
THE FOLLOWING JOBS:
BRAKES, HYDRAULIC,
GENERAL SPRING CHECKUP

OIL AND ANTI FREEZE AND PICKUP AND
DELIVERY WITH EIII&lt;;;INE OVERHAUL

* * * ·* FREE * * * *

28~Z188.
Wheelersburg ('ll) - Newman 19

U42, Walke 5 2-512, DeCamp12-4
4, Stalqlr 2 3-5 7, Fisher o ().{) o,
Brown 1 ().{)2, Perry 2().{) 4. Totals 3e
11-20 'll.
Score by q~rs:
MF
17 17_16 1~
W'burg
16 20 16 19-71
Fouled out-Newman, Swearin·
gen. Team fouls-Martins Ferry
19, Wheelersburg 16. A-3,238.

.

FORD CAP WITH $40.00 PARTS ORDER

''

·For the record

'

Boys scores

·'"

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR

'I

' Tra t
'

..

tu~

·'•'

992-6441
251 W. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

DR. GEORGE W. DAVIS'
-----OPTOMETRIST----

"
.,""
'•'

'

CONTACI'LENS
OR GLASSFS
you've been wearing
glasses, should you . change to
contact lenses? A lot depends on
your personal preference. Both
glasses and contact leJllleB do
the Job they're supposed to do:
help you see better.
Contact lenses are most
popular with young people who
are nearsighted and older·people
who have had cataract' surgery',
although new developments in
lenses make them desirable for
most vision patients. Over 15
million Americans have been fitted with contact lenses. And
another nilllion-and-a-half put
them on for the first time each
yesr.

Girls results

If

-·-

NIT results

N.-...&amp;....._Tw:~

.,...

PI.lrt!w 11\, 1ftU AAM Ill
!Ia
h

_
__a
o\INewY_.

Bradley (HolD) VI, Oklahoma (7.1-ID)
G«qla CD-U) VI. Texu ~· PI.Irdue

.........

Contacts don't steam or fog .
when the temperature suddenly
changes. They tend to increase
the peripheral vision, giving the
wearer a wider view pf what's
around him. And it's almost 1mpossible for another to tell when
you're wearing them.
But they do require more
eare. More attention has to be
paid to keeping them clean and
- germ-free. A Jot depends· on
your needs. your optometrist
can help you decide what's best
to you.

lr8es,
Shrubs,
Flowers
and
Vegetables!
All-Purpose
FERTILIZER

CITAnON ECONOMY FEAnUZER

**...****

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458 Second Ave., GaiUpolis
Phone 44&amp;-2236

,_,..,.....

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For 011 ..001 lltpt, rlttllling Willi, bOfdtrl, WII~WIYI , Dltn..l and

Stit Mallng, CII.J .._. ttrt 1111&lt;1. 20 ytsr pro·rlttd wtnlntr. Cholu of colora.

Houlton 1»-71

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mora. Won't rot " Oeuy. Ct111n and ttty to handlt. Brut

war IIDliONAL

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Want a good, low-cost fertilizer for all around lawn and garden use? Ask us for
Citation, the analysis is 10.6-4 and a big 50-pound bag costs only $5.69.

-·:

Dbt.ol' Colwnbla 71. Bak«*ld St.

Sears 48 Battery with
415 cold cranking amps.

0
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with pUI'Chlla ol 11ock garage

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PAINT

II!
"

.,

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Drive a little and save a lot-Free delivery within 75 miles
Yes, we service at your local Hotpoint Dealer
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill Closed at s:·oo P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallla and Mason counties

2

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Hwrrv. tlmlttd Qulrltllln 11 tnltlow price.

:eh

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ISears I

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•••

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Features two steel belts, plus steel .
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(J8.l2)

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Aolow Ao
LarQt ntactlon of.etrl•• and colors.
Bptclll PurChllt! AI llrll QUIIIIYII'Ihlll
ouppllu lull

~

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NCAA......_mruw-=-

DIM! d6orl . 11.1,.,101' CtnWIIC1iOr'l lnclud ..
hll'-wood fremt. mor1IU•IIId•ltnon jolnll.
1111 ctOilncJ hlnen.

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PANELING

'4 5"
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TltiMIUiy ot dMIIC lltflt Olk with tilled

Double Bowl Stainless Steel

Sears batt.e ry I

......,-.o.
awa / 2\

• Dbt.of CoNmi:U (:K-&amp;) vs. Flor1dl
: b.!Rra(2H)

::Division Ill

Take this Coupon to the LANDMARK Dealer
listed below, for $2 off on your first 50 lb. bag
of Plant Pep. Limit, one coupon-i&gt;ne bagper person . Offer expires May 31, 1982.

_.,..

Largest ~vlngs ever on a

n

Florida SCJutMnl !0, KJ.WNieyan IB,

/

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1139

SIDING

'$20

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.,

KITCHEN
CAllNETS

ln1totk.

1

Ealt fteatonal wJmer vs. Mldwelt Rl!lliOOal WIMer.
M1dalt Rtdonll winner. vs. West ft.e.
Jlmal winner.

a

All Stock Saxony

llnllh 11/mlntttt H l nl!~~g .
Complfll 11111 DIICCtUOflll

..

NC.U.-..

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Warranted. Mtinttnl"" lrtt

White Vinyl

Qreeorl Sl:. i:z5.41 w . Georp!tow'rl. D.C.
128-6)

c

(

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grty. ,

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•

,,

llrnlrll wtttr damqt to wttkt,
dti'IIWIYI Of ~!lot. UN 101

downspoyt, rur.-ortl cr dreln low

l.ouJJvllle
1\labama·Btrmlrleham
81. Vlt'Jln18 66

f'Otldl,m St.

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22l!roll

1

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rn the inleresl o l better vis ion
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PRE-GUT STUDS H--;~i"'"it~....;;..;.;;..~--iTc--1

USE THIS PLANT PEP INTRODUCTORY COUPON!

DANDY DEALRIGHT SAYS ....
"SEE YOUR DEALER ON THE RIVER .•."

-- --PIPE- ·--

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.
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DRAIN

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.•

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NCAA results

•Use Plant Pep for everything around the lawn and garden that needs fertilizing!
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contairs the vital trace elements Calcium, Magnesium, Sulfur, Boron, Iron, Zinc
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Equ1pment

Nlition&amp;l Championship

1981 OLDS. CUTLASS

Frldly 10 peel u - .ttnella,

FRIENDS AT

lint beseiiWl
Texas, reacbel

'

'•

PEPS UP
your

.J

C&amp;S Pennzoll
30
High Ind. Hame - June lambert 181 ; Carolyn
8achnerl00; June l...ambert176.
Hl~h aerieS - Carolyn Bachner 523 ; June
Lambert fm ; Pat Carsont!IO.
Team higtlgame- C6S PennzGil Sll.
Team high Series - C&amp;S Pennzoll1397 .

, Hill~ ~•me - RIW Carson 193. Betty Smith
lit; Rly Roach 191 , PatC.rson 100.
, Team seri es - Smith's Boby Shop 1964.
. Team game - Zlde'sSpGrt Shop 106.

ieam

- Purdue's basketball team was
struggling "for survival ... tlghtlng
for our lives," says Coach Gene
Keady, whose Boilermakers' twomonth turnaround has carried It to
the Final Four of the National Invitation Tournament for the third no doubt. ''
The Bollermakers won the NIT In
time In four years.
".This was our best game of the 1974, finished second In 1979 and
year," Keady saidofFrldaynlght's third last year. They also flnlshed
8&amp;1i8 victory over Texas A&amp;M In the third In the NCAA tournament In
~. mailing them the only school
NIT quarterfinals.
In
the country to reach the Final
Purdue lost seven of Its first 10
Four
of either one of the.two major
games and finished the regular sea·
post·season
tournaments each of
son at 14-L'l, the worst record
the
past
four
years.
among the original 32 NIT particiFriday
night's
victory was keyed
pants. Playing their first three NIT
by
6-foot-10
center
Russell Cross,
games In their home Mackey Arwho
scored
26
points
and had a
ena, the BoUermakers turned back
season-high
13
rebounds,
and 6-5
Western Kentucky 72-&amp;'5, Rutgers
guard
Keith
Edmonson,
who
added
!JS.65 and then Texas A&amp;M.
22
pbints.
Edmonson
ts
averaging
Purdue meets Geofllla and Bradley takes on Oklahoma In the NIT nearly Tl points In NIT. play thts
semifinals Monday night at New year.
"OUr No.1 key was to go Inside to
YORK'S Madison Square Garden.
The latter three qualfled with victo- Russell," Keady said. "I wanted
ries Thursday night. The winners him to have 45polntslfhecould. We
play Wednesday night for the wanted to go Inside and get (Aggtes
6-ll center Rudy) Woods In foul
championship.
"We had such a tough schedule
early In the season," Keady said. Kite goes up
"We had a couple close games.
LoutsvUte beat us on a last-second
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) freak shot, and Houston beat us by Talk about a raise In pay: pro
one point In the Sugar Bowl. We golfer Tom Kite may have broken
never could get any games where all records In 1!&amp;.
Kite led the tour In money·
winnings
with $375,699. In ~ he
Golfing TV
had won $152,490 which put him In
20th place. The Increase from one
NEW YORK (AP) - Produceryear to the next was $233,209, or a
directDr Frank Chirktnlan and diwhopping 146 percent.
rector Bob DaUy of CBS won the
1981 Emmy Awards for best television coverage of'a Uve sports series.
In thts case, golf. They captured
Tom Watson's playoff victory over
Tommy Valentine tn the Atlanta
classic, and BID Rogers' blrdle putt
to win the World Series of Golf.
One of their top shots was unique.
It was Jerry Pate's memorable
dive Into a lake alongside the 18th
green after winning the Danny
Thomas-Memphis Classic.

trouble, and It worked. We got him
ill foul trouble, and they got to
standing 3.\'0IIIId and got lelltatlve
on defe~~se. "
Woods, who fouled out early In
the second half, did not score a
point. Texas A&amp;M, a third-round
loser tn Its only other NIT \lppear·
ance, 1979, was led by forward
Claude Riley with 22·polnts.
points.

•-a•AiiRJJi

SLarSupply Co.

:if!

11
11
11
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
9

we gained some confidence, and we
started to be sel{-doubters.
"Then we. started winning and
galntng some confidence, and we
got stronger and stronger and everybody started playing great. So we
belong (In the Final Four), there's

Wheelersburg advance~ to
Class AA sta~e tournament

March 30, Meigs, Away; March 31 ,
Home.
April 1. women. Away : April 5,
Be Ipre, Away ; Apr II 8, Federa I lfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii;;;;;;;;;;;j~
Hock ing, Away ; April 13, Warren,
Away; April 14. Meigs. Home; April
1UfAl/'1
15, Federal Hocking, Home; April
·
19, Federal Hocking, Away ; April
,_,. •
20, Meigs, Away; April 21, Belpre,
lET A
Home; April 27, Warren, Homei
April28, Federal Hocking, Home.

Jlm'sGuU

P\11.

11

EAGLE SCHEDULE
March 26, Park~rsburg Big Reds,
Away; March 29, Hannan Trace,
Home; March 30, Ale&gt;eander . Home ;
March 31, Kyger Creek, Away .
April 1, Belpre, Home ; April 3,
Federal Hocking, Home; 'April 5,
Southwestern, Home; Aprit6, South·
western, Home ; April 7, Southern,
Away ; April 10, Vinton County,
Away; April 12, North Ga)lla,
Home ; Aprll13, Miller, Home; April
14, Hannan Trace, Away ; April 15,
Waterford. Away ; April17, Parkersburg Catholic, Home; April 19,
Kyger Creek, Home; April 20,
Ravenswood, Home; April21, southwestern, Away; April 22. Federal
Hocking, Away ; April 24. Miller,
Away ; April 26, Southern, Home;
April 27, Ale•ander, Away: April 28.
North Gallia, Away ; April 29,
Belpre, Away.
May 1, VInton County, Home; May
3, Ravenswood, AVf~..:.-.­

••m''"~~~~ bo'!!~~~

Early Wednesday Mixed

21, 1912

Purdue advances to NIT semifinal plaf

Eastern starts '82
baseball play Friday
EAST MEIGS - The defending
district champion Eastern Eagle
baseball team of Coach Ralph
Wigal, which posted a 1!1-5 record
last season, is looking for a brigh!.
future as it prepares for the upcoming baseball season.
Eastern opens Its season Friday
against the Parkersburg Big Reds at
Parkersburg.
Last season, the hard-hitting
Eagles ripped through the regular
season before sweeping the sectional
title at Syracuse, then clinched the
district crown. The Eastern
diamond men earned a berth In the
regina!, where after a hard-fouglt
battle, Eastern dropped a close
decision.
Graduating from last season's
championship club ws all-district
pitcher-shortstop Greg Wigal, catcher Gary Griggs, first-baseman
Greg Cole, Kenny Newell, Ray
Werry, and James Welsh. Wigal,
Griggs, and Cole were starters and a
major part of Eastern's attack,
however, a strong nucleus returns
for this year's club.
·
Returning starters from last
season's club are center fielder John
Beaver, left fielder Mike Bissell,
second baseman Roger Gaul, and
designated hitter Nicki Leonard.
Other returning starters are pitchershortstop hitter Nicki Leonard
Other returning starters are pitchershortstop CharUe Ritchie, third
baseman Rob Smith, and right
fielder Mark Holter.
Eastern has been working out
several weeks now in preparat1o11
for another successful season. Most
of the "spring training" has been
Umited to indoors, due to wet
weather cnditions.
· Despite wet grounds, however, the
Eagles have had a few vigorous outdoor practices and hope to get a gO&lt;Hj
start as it opens this Friday against
Powerhouse Parkersburg Big Reds.
: Twenty-seven candidates are
wing for starting positions this
ijeaBOn, including nine seniors, six
juniors, 10 sophomore•. and two
freshmen.
· Coach Wigal says he is looking forward to the upcoming season and
names pitching as Eastern's main
Strong points. Coach Wigal is looking

Mar. 21, 198h

w. va.

WI ,_,. Ill l1tM II llall 1

IMIII.

�I
Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plusant,

w. Va .

Mar. 21, 1982

iOnal

State/

"imes-

(

,

~e•diutl Section D
·

·

Sunda ···Mar. 21, 1912

GM-UAW talks recess
By ANN JOB WOOLLEY
mestic sales slump lnce the Dep
/
A--'aM P....., Writer
)leg . March 12. GM,
The newest round
DETROIT: (AP) -Contract talks aimed at cutting
whlch earned $333
1 , presented a propGeneral Motors Corp.'s labor costs recessed early
osal to the union that closely resembles the contract
Saturday after 17 straight hoUrs, and the president of
the UAW signed March 1atFord Motor Co. GMseeks
the United Auto Workers union said negotiators had
concessions to become more competitive.
"
disagreed on a profit-sharing plan.
GM's propos;li asks Its :IW,!ro U.S. autoworllers to
Talks between the union and the nation's biggest · accept a wage freeze, give up cost-of-living Increases
automaker were to resume today and UAW Presi- for nine months, and forfeit nine paid personal ·
dent Douglas A. Fraser, asked If he was stlll optimisholidays.
tic an agreement could be reached, .said, "Yeah, I
In return, GM offers a two-year moratorium on
guess·."
plant closings related to subcontracting work 10 nonBut he added, "Some snags have developed In cer-.' union or overseas facWttes. It also offers Improved
taln areas, such as the Profit-sharing area."
benefits .for laid-off workers and profit-sharing.
Both sides had said during the week they hoped the
GM's proposal wo~ run through Sept. 14, 1984.
• talks could be wrapped up "by the weekend."
The current three-year contract at GM expires Sept.
On Thursday, bargainers had begun drawing up 14 this year.
final langllllge on some Issues, such as the sharing of
Earlier Friday Mary Dresser, a spokeswoman for
sacrifices between blue-and white-collar employees
the Intel'll!ltional Union of Electrical Workers, which
and an employee stock program.
also Is bargalnjng with GM, had Indicated the UAW
But Owen Bieber, UAW vice president 1n charge of talks were prqgresslng enough that GM bargainers
the GM department, said Thursday the union was
had put lhe WE talks on hold .
dlssattsfled with GM's profit-sharing plan and also
"We're waiting to see what the UAW getssowewW
had wark to do on the Issue of plant clOSings.
have something to,slnk our teeth into," she said.
GM and the union began talks )n January, but the
The IUE, representing about 32,!ro autoworkers 1n
negotiations collapsed Jan. 28 without a settlement. · eight domestic GM p~nts, traditionally bargains
Since then, GM has announced seven plant closings,
with GM at the same time th~ UAW does and gener• to what the UAW
and Bieber said the UAW wanted to talk to GM about ally negotiates a contract s!Jnnar
reopening those plants. Some l!iO,!ro GM auto- gets.
. workers are O_!llndetlnlte layoff amid the worst do-

TIEMPO
POWER STREAK or
POWER STREAK H

•

•All Season Radial
.•2 Steel Belts· Whitewall
SIZE
P155/80R13
P18S/80R 13
P185/75R 14
P195/7SR14

~~~~~~~=~:

P225/75R14
P205/75R15
P215/75R15
P225/75R15

REPLACES
155x13
CR7Bx13
CR7Bx14
ER7BX14
FR7Bx14
GR7Bx14
HR7Bx14
FR78x15
GR78x15
HR78x15

../·

SALE
PRICE
$39.00
49.00
58.00
60.00
63.00
65.00
67.00
64.00
67.00
69.00

,•Our Newest Diagonal· ply Tire.
•4 Ply Polyester-Biackwan
•Shoulder-gripping edges for extra bite Into
curves.
SIZE

SALE PRICE

600x12 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• uer.IJ!I'l"l
A78X11 •• , ·••••••.••• ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

·

B78x13 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 31.00
C78x14 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••••• 33.00
D78x14 ••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••• 35.00
E78x14 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,37 .00

AUTO TALKS ltECESS - UDlted Auto Worker&amp;
President Qouclaa A. Frater talb with reporten early
Salllrday at Geael'lll Moton
headquarters.
Bargainers for lbe uoloa aad lbe aulomaker receased

Corp.

F7.x14,, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; •••• 38.00
G78x14 ••••••••••••••• , ••••• , •••••••••
40.00
H71X14., ·~·· •••••• ••••• ••••• •• •••• •• ••••••• 42.00
F78x15 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •• 41.00
G78x15 •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••• 41.00
H78x IS ••••••
43.00
L78x 15·••••••
4S.oo·

Plus Federal Excise Tax of $1.52 to $2.73.

I I

••••

lallll for lbe Dlgbl after worklag 17 boun straight oo a

coocessloaa contncllo 1111ve the No. 1 u.s, aulomaker
$%.5bUIIoo. (AP Laserpbolo) .

Junta fears invasion

I • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , , • • • • •

I • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • , • • • • , , • • • • • • • • •

Plus Federal Ex1=ise Tax ol$1.43 to $2.79.

WIDETRACK SUPER 70 .

WIDETRACK SUPER 60.

•Polyester-Fiberglass Belted
•Raised Open Letters

SALE
SIZE
PRICE
A70xl3 ....... ... .........•..•.......• :••• '38.00
E70. 14.•.••.•.••.•.••...............•...•• 44.00
F70-14 ···~····~··························· 45.00 1.1;}~
G70-14 .....•....•.....•.•..••••.•....•..•. 48.00
G70. J5. .....••. ·•···············•···••·· ...48.00

H7Q. J5..••.•••••.••..•• ·•••·••••• ••••••••• 51.00
Plus Federal Excise Tax of $1.79 to $2.87

•Polyester-Fiberglass Belted
•Raised Open Letters

SALE
SIZE
PRICE
160. }3 ........... ··················~···· $39.00
G~l4 .•.....••..................•....... 49.00

L&amp;0-14 ••••• 1.1···························· 57.00
G&amp;0-15 ..................................... 51.00
l60-15 .•.••••••...•.•.•.••...• •.••...•....•. 59.00
Plus Federal Excise Tax of $2.05 to $3.58.

STEEL IMPORT RADIAL
ARRIVA

TURISIMO GT ·

•All Season ·Radial
•2 Steel Belts · Blackwall

•Two Durable Steel
Belts
•Black
European
Design
SALE
SIZE
PRICE
155R12 ............. $35.00.
155R13, ............ . 36.00

.
SALE
SIZE
PRICE
P155R12 ............ S42.00
P1S5R13 .......... ; .. 44.00
Pl6SRll .....
so.oo
P175/70R 13 ......... 56.00
P185/70R 13 ......... 59.00
P175/75R14, ........ 59.00
P185/70R 14 ......... 63.00
l .......

Plus Federal Excise Tax of
S1.39to s 1.85.
'

WIDETRACK RADIAL
•2 Fiberglas~ Belts over Plyester
•Raised Open Letters

SALE
PRICE

SIZE

8R70·13,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,S49.00
8~60·1.3 ••••••••••••••••••• 55\00
ER70·14, .................. 56.00
FR70.14, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 59.00
GR70· 14', ,., ,, , • , •••• , • , • , .61.00
GR6G-14 ................... 66.00
GR70·15,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .... , 63 .00
GR60·15 .. ,,,,, ••••••••• ,,,68.00
HR70· t5 .. , ...... ; •• , ..... 65.00

LR7o-ts, .................. 7o.oo
L.R60-t5,,,, ............... 75.oo
Plus Federal Excise Tax ot 11. 14

AmeriCa."'

to 53.40.

' I "'

I

I'

•2
Fiberglass
Belts Whitewalls
•Fits most domestic cars
Sale
Size
Replaces Price
P155/80R13
155R13 $36.
Pl65/80R13
165R13
38.
P175/80R13 AR78x13
40.
Pl85180R13 CR78x13
42.
P~95175R14
ER78x14
45.
P205175R14 FR78x14
48. ·
51.
P21517SR14 GR78x14
P205175R 15 FR7b15
49.
P215175R 15 GR78x15
52.
P225175R15 HR78x15,
55.

165R13 ............... 39.00
175R14 .............. . 44.00
175/70R1............. 43.00
185/70R 14 ........... 46.00
195/70R14. ........... 4S.OO ±~
Plus Federal E111cise Ta)5 of

•2 Fiber Glass Belts ov'er

Polyester

. •30,000 Mile Limited Warranty
•All Seasoi)·Whitewall

Import or
domeatlc cara.
Additional parte
and aervlcta
extra If nteeltd. •

WARRANTED 90 DAYS .... OR
3,000, WHICHEVER COMES Fl RST ·
•Inspect all four tires; correct air
pressure • Set front wheel caster,
camber, and toe to proper align ment • Inspect suspension and
steering systen:ts.
Most U . S. cars and imports with
adjustable suspension. Includes
front wheel drive. Chevettes, light
trwcks and cars requiring Mac Pherson Strut correction extra.
Parts and additional service extra
if needed .

OPEC limits production

Sille
. Size
Replaces Price
P175/80R13 AR78x13 $44.
P185/80R 13 CR78x13
46.
P185/75R14 CR78x14
47 .
P195175R14 ER78x14
49.
P20517SR 14 FR78xJ.4
52.
P215175R14 FR78x15
55.
P205/t75R15 FR78x15
53.
P215175R15 GR78x15
56.
P225175R15 HR78xl5
59.

By ROBERT BURNS
AP oUsaneM Writer
VlENNA, Austria (AP) -OPEC ministers ended
their two-day emergency session today with officlal
agreement to limit on production to 18 mWlon barrels
a day and retain the benchmark price of $34 a barrel,
the cartel said.
"The organization has been able to take a decision," said Mana Saeed Otelba, president of the Organizl!tlon of Petroleum Exporting Countries and oU
minister of the United Arab Emirates.
The announcement climaxed a crisis In the cartel,
which has been threatened by a worldwide on oversupply, !aWng sales and declining prices on spot
markets, where ollls sold to the highest bidder.
The agreement cuts the 13-member cartel's dally
output by about 1 million barrels a day. Otelba did not
specify how producUon cuts wW be divided among
the members, but he told reporters further cuts are
possible If needed to stab!Uze oU prices.
"We are ready to go further down to a lower Ogure
than 18," million barrels dally In the future, he sai~­
Saudl Arabia, whose current production ceWng Is
7.5 million batTels a day, will not reduce Its production, Otelba said. The Saudis just cut their production

Excise Tax of

S1.44 to n.H.

$19

DISC OR
DRUM!

$88.

lnclud11: Install new front grease
seale, pack front wheel bearings, In·
epect• hydraulic system, add fluid,
road test.
.

from 8.5 mWion barrels a day to 7.5 mUUon.
The new ceWng wW lake effect Aprlll and wW be
reviewed at the group's next scheduled meeting on
May 20 In Quito, Ecuador, Otelba said.
Algeria, Nigeria and Libya will lower the price of
their top grades of crude oU, according to the terms of
the agreement outlined by Otelba. Those countrieS
now charge as much as $3 a barrel above the OPEC
benchmark for their higher quali!Y oil. Otelba said
the differential would be cut by about 50 percent.
The ministers, meeting In emergency session
under heavy security at a Vienna hotel, were trying to
sa tls!y confilctlng Interests among aU OPEC
members, whose revenues are sharply declining.
Advance word of the agreement came Friday from
Skelk Ahmed Zakl Yamanl of Saudi Arabia, tlle
world's largest oil exporter. The oil ministers of Indonesia, Iraq and Kuwait had confirmed Yamanl's
statement.
But there were strong Indications some Important
detaUs remained unresolved Friday night after Venezuelan 011 Minister Humtirto Calderon Berti told
reporters a final ag'reement had not been worked oot.
~ did not elaborate.

I,

, OPEC MEETING- lndoaeslan Mlalsler of Mines
and Energy Dr. Sttbrolo arrives as the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) opeDBIIs con-

4·WhHI Drum:
Install new
Install new brake
front brake padi, OR lining and resurreaurface front
face all four
rotors, Inspect•
drume.
calipers.
.
'Callptr overhaul $19 each If nteeled. 'Wheel
cyllndera $14.2~ each If nttdld 'Hydraulic
eervlee Ia olten needed and when·required will
be recommended_for safe vthlcla 01!4f!ltlon.

DIIC:

'

sultatlve meetlag of the oU mlnlslen Ia Vle111111 on
Friday. (AP Luerpbolo).

Thar she blows

2•Whltl Front

..

..

,,

By BOBBA.UM
AMMllated Press Writer

.

'I.

or 12,000 miles

•

j ,

ble and without foundation.
Because U.S. Ambassador Jeane J . Kirkpatrick Is
president of 1!. Security Council for the month of
March, Nicaraguan Ambassador Javier Chamorro
Mora chose the circuitous route of delivering the note
to the secretary-general for forwarding to the councU
president.
Chamorro said he hoped council consultations on
the requested debate could bi!gln by Monday.
Chamorro was asked If Ortega would use a VISit to
the United Nations as a means of o&lt;pen!ng talks with
the United States, and repUed, "We have said on a
number of occasions .. . that we are well disposed to
carry out any talks that can lead to the finding of a
political solution of the Central American crisis."
He said "the doors of Nicaragua are open" to receive a U.N: !act-finding mission If one whoukl be
created by the Security Council.
·
Ortega accused the United States of allowing Nicaraguan dissidents to train on American soli for an
Invasion of Nicaragua, of financing subversive acttvi·
ties Inside Nicaragua and of violating Nicaraguan air
space to make aerial photographs of rnllltarylnstallattons.

FIESTA ALL SEASON RADIAL

.Plus Federal Excise Tax of

ALIGNMENT

In Managua, the capital of Nicaragua, U.S. Charge
d' Atfalres Roger Gamble Issued a denial of Ortega's
assertion, saying, "There wW be no invasion of Nlca1'!'-gua." He called the claims "offensive," unaccepta-

·de Cuellar ealllq for an uraent Dl~!llq
CouncU and 1111ylng IIIII lbere waa an locrea•IDI
dallger of U.S. miUtary Intervention In Celllral
America. '( AP Laserpbolo).

SEEKS U.N. MEETING - Nlcat:aJ111811 Amba81ador Javier Gbamorro Moro talkJ lo newsmen
Friday after deUverlag a letter from lbe Nicaraguan
bead of government to U.N. Secretary General Perez

DOMESTIC RADIAL

$1.41 toS2.17.

PROLONG
TIRE LIFE,
BOOST
MPG

By O.C. DOEUING
"-''ated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -The leader of Nicaragua's lett-wing junta Friday called for an urgent
meeting of the U.N. Security Councu, saying he beUeves a U.S. invasion of his country "Is Imminent."
Daniel Ortega Saavedra, "coordinator" of the Sandlnlsta junta, saldlnanoteto U.N. Secretary-General
Javier Perez de Cuetlar that he personally would
present to the councU hls argument that there Is "ln. creaslitgdanger" of U.S. mWtary Intervention In Central America.
"The International community has an obllga tlon to
act to prevent a new aggression against the Central
American peoples and to preserve peace," Ortega
~ld .
.
.
He added he was sure the 15-nation councu "will
adopt ·wha(eVer measures are necessary to contain
the coritlagratlon which becomes Imminent today as
a result of this (U.S.) decision lo Intervene In Central

-

..
, I

ERUP'nON RECORDED - Ceater llimbler el
•llmtiJ'IIIII•t u.s. Geoloclal Sarvey afffee fa v..
coaver silowl exfenllve lfOUIId movemeut wltl1

'·

· :datteaed unlllled area after eruption of MIIIIDI St.
Helelll Friday Digiti. (AP LAUrpbolo).

••

VAN~OUVER, Wash. (AP) - Breaking a long
sUence, the Mount St. Helens volcano threw ash and
steam J6,!ro feet above Its peak with an eruption that
sent hot water running down Its s now-covered flanks,
raising a danger of Ooods.
Flash Oood warnings were In effect Saturday and
,t he off·llmlts zone around Mount St. Helens was extended alter the volcano erupted Friday evening.
It was two years ago today that the volcano showed
Its first signs of life since the mld-1850s, and ahcut 18
mont!ts since an explosive eruption has Issued from
the mountain.
'Ille snow-melting eruption at 7:28p.m. Friday sent
· a surge 91 bet wa~r down rivers near the volcano,
and let ott a plume that dropped light ash as far awa)'
as Hermiston, Ore., 1!iO miles to the southeast.
The plume quickly dissipated.
.
Flash Oood warnings rema!iled 1n effect for the
Toutle River drainage as the eruption melted snow ori
the mountain, and Interstate 5, th~ main north-south
freeway, was cloSed to traffic for about an hour, beglnnlng at midnight, as a precaution.
Gov. John Spellman signed an order creating a
"blue zone" of m,!m acres around the "red zone"
that Is about one-sixth that siZe. The red zone had
been cloled early Friday, as sclelitlsts predicted
Mount St. Helens was up to something seismically.
The mountain was quiet alter .the eruption, with
. only a few rock,!alls ret:orded In the crater by
I

'

selsmqgrpahs.
The 600-foot-htgh lava dome on the floor of the
crater survived the blast virtually Intact and a new
lobe of molten rock was growing on Its south side,
Kathy Cashman of the u.s..·Geologlcal Survey, said
at a news conference.
Scien lists on a USGS plane over the mountaIn reported Incandescent rockfalls In the crater.
"We are monitoring lt' closely to see what comes
next," said Linda Nosonof the University of Washington geophysics center 1n Seattle. Ms. Noson did not
' rule out the posslblbtlty of subSequent eruptions or
further dome growth.
There were no reports of Injuries.
.
"It the water stays the same, we shouldn't have any
problems at aU," Bob Covington of the Cowlitz
County sherl!rs oHice said of the 8-!oot crest that
swept down the river at ~ mph .
Covington said the higher water was not expected
10 have much effect on the Cowlitz River, Into which
the Toutle Oows at Castle Rock .
A National Weather Service fiood buUetln waroed,
however, that addiUonal rises In the North F ork of the
Toutle were stlll possible and wa rned people to stay
back from the banks.
.
1About 40 people were evacuated from along the
upper Toutle while another 25 were evacuated on the
SO)Jtheast side of the mountain near Swift Reservoir.
Emergency housing was provided at a 'Longview

!IChool.

�Page-0·2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

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

Mar. 21, 1982
Mar. 21, 1982

&lt;

Pomei'oy-Middleport-Gallipnlis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Newoom··colt is family member·

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

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - .Joseph
and Roberta Semansky are a bit
concerned about weaning the baby
of the house from Infant formula
and television.
The baby Is a colt who has taken
to prancing through the house and
watching the tube.
His name Is Bit Bronze, a colt
born on the cold, rainy night of
March 5. "He was really weak and
wouldn't nurse at all," said Ms. Semansky. "The vet said we would
have to milk the mare and feed the
foal by hand."
So they did, about every two
hours the first night, said Joseph
Semansky. The tiny colt didn't lm·
prove. He got worse.
· ·ue came down with SCOUrs, the
equestrian version of di81Thea. The
veterinarian told Ms. Semansky.
the colt was using up all its etlfl'gy
shivering. ·She would 'have to bring
It Inside to get warm If she wanted It
to live.
"Of course we wanted him to
Uve," she said. "Ever since then,
we've acquired a new famDy

or

some television.
~ colt Isn't exactly housebroken, sbe said. "But It's kind of
Uke a dog. You just know when they
have to," sbe said.
She encourages . the colt to tear
through the house.
"Normal foals would be out In the
fields kicking up their heels, so I run
~und ,the house and . he Chases

me,"

~said.

uHe's even bucking
riow. When I saw that first buck, I
knew he W&lt;\5 going to be all right."
She expects to keep the colt In the

house another. two weeks.
Bit of BroDZe Is the offspring of
Bae Rae LUni and Morning Star
Falcon Bronze, two residents of
Manchester Stables, which the Semanskys lim In nearby Franklin

MASON, W. Va. - Applications

DEMOUTION DERBY - illgbway 51 near Cot..
tage Grove, Wla. looked Ul&lt;e a demoUtlon derby Friday
ni&amp;JR • some ZO earl skidded Into each other due to

:O SU research team discovers
.
~annmal remains in Antarctica
By WARREN E. LEARY
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON (API- A team
head&lt;:d by an Ohio State University
:s ctentist has diScovered a treasure
trove of animal fossils In Antarc'tica, Including the first bones of a
land mammal ever found on the
'frozen continent.
: 'fhe National Science Founda·
:tion, which sponsored the research,
said Saturday that finding the
, m4mmallan fossils "ranks as one
of the mostslgnlilcant scientific dis: coverles In recent years." Also
:found in the same area were fossils

of a rare land lizard, skeletons of
giant sea rep tOes called plesiosaurs
and the bones of many large, mansized penqulns.
An American research team
made the discoveries earlier this
month on Seymour Island, located
off the northeastern tip of the Antarctic peninsula. The team was
headed by Dr. WDllam J. Zinsmeister of Ohio State University.
''The confirmed presence of land
mammals In Antarctica clearly
shows that Antarctica and South
America were attached during the
late Cretaceous and early Tertiary

Applications may be requested at
any of the post offices listed above.
Applicants will be notified w?en the
written examination will be g1ven.
Previous experience and training
are not required. All applicants who
quality will receive consideration
for employment without regard to
race, religion, color, national origin,
· sex, political affiliation or any other
• non-meritfactor.

freezing rains thai caused hazardous drlvlllg co~&gt;o
diUous throughout southern WucOil&amp;ln. ( AP Laserphoto).

Ohio appeals busing liabilties
CLEVELAND (AP) -The State
Controlllng Board has deelded to
appeal a federal court order that
the state must pay $4.2 mUUon ior
buses for Cleveland school
desegregation.

Periods, about 65 mllllon years
ago," Zlnsmellltet said.
Scientists have thought that
mammallan fossils existed In An·
tarctlca because the continent Is believed to have once been connected
to Austraua on one side and to
South America on another, Zlns·
melster said In a telephone

On Tuesday, the board met and
announeed no Immediate action.
But a notice of appeal was flied Friday In U.S. District Court lil
Cleveland.
The bQard Is taking Its case to the
6th Circuit U.S. Court of'Appeals in
Cincinnati, despite advice !rom
Ohio Attorney General WDllam J.
Brown, who said such an appeal
would · be fruitless. 'Iile lawyer for

Interview.
"Antarctica most Ukely was connected to South America by a land
bridge," he said. Seymour Island Is
located about 1m mlles from the tip
of South America, he added.
In the period· 70 mllllon to 40 mllUon years ago, Antarctica was a
warm continent covered with
forests and surrounded by tropical
· waters, he noted.

the Ohio Oepariment of Education
also recommended against appeal.
On Feb. 17, U.S. District Judge
Frank J. Battisti ordered that the
$4.2 mllllon be paid because It Is
half the amount the schools have
spent on buses for desegregation of
the 7'7,®pupU system. He earlier
found the state board guilty of allowing Cleveland to operate a ~
gregated school system.
In Its brief, the state contended It
should not have to pay more than 50
percent of the actual costs of desegregation and should receive credit
for state dollars which have been
used to meet the cost of desegregation to date.

Attorneys for the state, the Cleveland Board of Education and other
parties to the original Cleveland
desegregation suit !Ded In 1973 met
In Januacy ,and February to work
out a cost-sharing plan. Battisti
said at the Umeofhls ruling that he
believed both the state and Cleveland boards had reached an equitable agreement.
Stlll at Issue, however, Is Battisti's finding that the state Is liable for
operating costs of ~atlon,
which wQuld amount to more than
$30 million. The state has appealed
that ruling to the U.S. Supreme
Court.

The mammalian fossils found at
the base of a large mesa consist of
the jawbones and teeth of a small,
rodent-like marsupial, an animal
that carries Its YOUIIj: In a pouch.
The researchers found three jaw·
bones, each sllghtly more than an
Inch long and containing two or
three teeth.

6-Lost and Found
7· Y.ard Sa le (pa id in advancE:')
8-Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanted to Buv

o

0-

o

'

oO I

Classified pages cover the

-

~ - Misc .

56-Pets for Sale .
57-Musciallnstruments
58 -Fruits &amp; Vegetabl es

31 ·HomestorSale ·
32-Mobile Homes for Sale

ser Ices
82· Plumbiflg &amp; Heating

l l ·Help Want ed
12·Situation Want ed
13-lnsurance

14-Business Train ing
15-Schools lnstructiop
16·Radio, T V &amp;C~ Repair

17-Miscellaneous
"18-Wanted To do

Public Notice

NOTIC'E TO
CDNTRACTDIU.
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORT A·
TION
Columbus, Ohio
March 12, 1912

Public Notice
Ser. No. N L29D9B2-48~93
The Central Trust Co. ,
NA of Middleport, Ohio
reserves the right to bid at
this sale.

'(3) 18, 19. 21, 3tc

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

Contract Sales Legal
_. , , , . , . , • . , , .. ,..,, .... , , r
Copy No. 82·213
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
Card of Thanks
received at the office of tne
Director of the Ohio Depar·
The familY of Charles
tment of Transportali011 Siders wishes to thank all
Columbus, Ohio, untlllO :OO of our friends end neigh- ·
A.M., Ohio Standard Time, bors who donated flowers
Tuesday, April 6, 1982, for and food . The EMS, Rev.
improvements In :
p
&amp; R
Gallla and Meigs CO&lt;Jn· · Andrew arsons
ev.
ties, Ohio, on GAL·S.R. 325· George Kelly, Millers Fur·.
(6.82·7.29) (18.21/ - State nerol Home, ' friends whO•
Route325 in Gallo Countv; were
pall bears,
and
GAL·S.R. 325·(13.97) everyone who helped In
State Route 325. tn the anyway · to make his
Village of Vinton ; and
s'ng a little easier
MEG·S. R. 325·(0.00·5.221- pas '
.
State Route 325, in Meigs
County, by resurfacing 2
In Memoriam
wi~ha~~~:~,con~FJ~h _ · 1n loving memory of my
varies.
Mother, Ruth ~Ieete, who
Project and Work Length passed away 5 years ago
-72.864feet Or13.80 miles. tOday, March 21. Sadly
"The date set for com· missed, but never forgot·
Daughter
Becky
Pletlon of this work shall be 1
as set forth in the bidding
en .
•
proposal."
Broderlc;k .
Each bidder shall be ------~-­
required to file with his bid 1 wish to thank the staff at
a certified check or · veterans
Memorial
cashier's check for an . Hospital, or. L.entz and the
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but lh no Tuppers Plains emergency
everlt more than llliV- squad for the excellent
rnousano uunars. or a oonO care and service I received
for ten per cent. of his bid, while 1 was hospital Ited. A
payable to th~ Director.
special thanks to my
Bidders must apply, on relatives and friends for
the proper forms, for the Prayers, cards,
quallflcafion at least ten flowers, _ gifts and visits
days prior to the date set
for opening bids in ac· which made my stay more
cord a nee wrth Chapter 5525 pleasant. GOd bless you all.
Ohio·Revised COde.
Moe McPeek.
• Plans and specifications
- - - -- - - -are on file In the Depart·
This
we do In remem·
mentof Transp()rtatlonand
the office of the District brance of Denzil Hudson .
Deputy Direclor.
His Syracuse: Neighbors.'
The Director reserves
the rlg~t to reject any and
all bids .
DAVIDL.WEIR
DIRECTOR
IN MEMORIAM
Rev . 8·17·73
In memory ot my husband, Thurman J.
March 21.28
"Ponv" Borden, who
passed away March 23,
Public Notice
1971.
LEGAL NOTICE
Time cannot steal the
TO BIDDERS
treasures,
Notice Is hereby given
That we c•rry In our
that sealed bids will be
hearts.
received by the Clly
Nor even dim the shinManager of the City Of
lilt thOughts,
Gallipolis. Ohio at his office
our chtrlshtd post lm·
in the Municipal Building,
parts,
·
tor one 1982 1 Ton (one ton)
4·wheel drive plck ·up
And memories of the
truck.
.
onis welov.ct,
Bldf will be rece1ved at
Sllll cut their gentle
the above"namea Office unglow,
·
til 12:00 Noon, on Thur·
To
grace
our
d•ys, and
sday, April 1, 1982 and·
light our p.~ths,
publicly opened and read at
Wher•ver we ma v go.
thaf hour and place. Bid
forms may be obtained in
Sadly mfsstd by wife,
the Office of the City
Bernice P. Borden,
Manager
518 Second
Bidwell, Ohlo.
Avenue, City of Gallipolis,
Ohio.

63-Livestock

6.4-Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed&amp; Fertil i zer

offer any other th1ng for
sale may place an ad in this
column. The.re will be no
charge to the ad't'ertiser .

' give away. 3
Pupple&gt; to
months old. 992-6513.

Fishing License on sale.
come and see our new ShiP:
menl of W82 Flslng ROds,
Reels, &amp; Lures. Spring
Valley Trodlng Co .• Spring
Volley Plora, ol«i-8025.

4 baby gerbils to give
away, also a 1 year old
Irish Setter. 992·3472.

Turkey Hunters We have
mouth cflls,• slate box ,!.__=.Lo~s~t~o!!nd'!..!:F~ou~n~
.d
calls, cary.-o oear &amp; decoys FOUND \ large , young
in stock . Spring Valley female dog. All black with
Trading' Co., Spring Valley small amount of white on
Plaz:':', 446·8025.
chest . Garfield Ave. area .
Collol46· 42~9.

Easter Candy Prices, $1.60
lb. $1.50 lb. for full case.
Dl's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza. Call446·2134.

Lost : earring. 3 loops of
gold with small pearl In ·
serted . Lost between
library . and
Teaford
Gun Repair &amp; Hot Bluing. Realty. Reward . Call 992·
We stock modern rifles, 5124.
shotguns, &amp; hand guns. All
mun.le loading guns &amp;. ac- Lost : brown i!lnd wh ite
cessories. Best prices in Chihuahua. Answers to
the area . Riverside Gun name Qf Hasbro. Lost in
Shop, Rt. 7, Athalia, Oh ., Be~ch Grove and 124 area .
614·886·5194 .
992·2713 or 742· 2~16 .
ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG Opening APRIL 2 in
Gallipolis. Specl'alizlng in
aluminum cans, aluminum
siding, sheets &amp; cast alum .,
copper wire, brass,
radiators·, auto batteries &amp;
1BM cords. Watch this
paper for location.
Dl'• Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·2134.
FREE
Easter candy
makinQ class, 7:00 Thurs.
March 18 &amp; 25 . No
registration necessary .

ChocoloteS1.60 lb.
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun . st~rting
at 1 p.m. Factory choke
ounsonly .

·

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun ShclOt, Sot . nights
6:30p.m .• Bashan. Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun. ·

Southeastern Ohio Polled
Hereford Assn. Sate, Mar·
en 26, 1982 at 7 p.m. at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Contact tor
Information: Judith Miller
Rt. 2 Bo• 372 McArthur
Ohio or 1·614·596·5564.

·

LOST : Doberman Pincer,
male, black and rust, un·
clipped ears, scar on rear
leg. Lost in or near Rutland
~ ~e a . Responds to name of
G. Reward for return or in·

formation . 742·231a. Week·
days after 8.
FOUND· IO week old beagle
pup, brown collar, found
North Point School, mostly
while.femote. 304·675· 1-480.
LOST· Black &amp; white kitten ,
black spot · on chin, half
grown, area of K &amp; K,
childs pet, 304·675·20-48.

Other slgn111cant findings in·
eluded numerous skeletons of plesl·
osaurs, large marine reptiles that

7
Yard Sale .
YARD sate, inside, starting
March 22, at 212 Walnut
Street, Henderson, across
from Church of Christ. New
&amp; used merchandise, also

bedspreeds &amp;

drapes,

blankets .
TREASURE CHEST open
air flea market. 6 Acre
field on Rt. 62 in /{lidway
between Buffalo llo Etenor.

wv. Space for rent, call
304·586·3095 or 586·4419 for
reservations. Opening day
April 17th.

meat-eaters prope~ tllemaelves
through the wale!' with paddle-like
fUppen and ldlled prey with their
long,
teeth.

•bar&amp;. VL Frtda)' ll!Pt. Aatllorltlet laid at lead twa .
peaple, ladadln1·a flnlllbter, were killed. (AP Luer-

DOWNTOWN FIRE- FfreiiPCen IJallle a blue
tal dellluyed llll'lle ...!Jdl... Ia dOWillowD Peter-

shar!i

pbolo),

'

{

,

- ~~-.---

623~ .

UPTO lS Worcs .. .Oneday

Moth/Science
Background? We C•n
Mike You an Englneet.
" ,. """'
blc·
calntUll
..,.. ""'
lilt Air• flret·
oitl fN1 ,.. lj II $17,100 I
Jill MD. 1111 1ullloo .,, ftts
,., "" 1o ll -tl•s " """"
....., to c••ltt1 . ill

..;-1•1
......
- . -·
irll""' 10 .......
.._
llfftrloa lilt 1to1 of joll -•ill'
lloll ..., "" ,.., """" .,.

pomroi!J. o,n;op •• N-. II
at Ill'. call Collect:

614-44... 500
Tall&lt; to Johri McGuire .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
L..E . Neal Auctioneer Ser ·
vice
Estll!te · Farm·-

Household·Misc. We sell it!
Licensed &amp; bOnded Ohio &amp;

wva. 367·7101.
Auction every Fri. night Itt
the Horlford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise e\lery week 1
Cons!gments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome.
R lc har ·d
Reynolds Auctioneer. 275·
3069,

Rick

Pearson,

Ex -

Glveaw1y

perienced AUCTIONEER .

BOTTLEb gas floor furnace, blowers&amp;. pipes. Por ·
ch glider. 304-675·5453.

household. Licensed. Ohio·
wv . Buying antiques. 304·
173·5785, 773·9185.

Estates. antiques, farm .

HILPWANTID

,:fXPERIENCED BOOY SHOP TECHNICIAN
WITH AVE YEARS EXPERIENCE; MUST
HAVE OWN TOOLS. SEE THE BODY SHOP
. FOREMAN AT:

SIMMONS
OLDS..CAD.-CHIYY, INC.

742-3104

· ' 301 E. lliii St., P..u,

.

No Telepholii Applications Accepled.

Frank Herald Jr., Owner &amp; Operator
I t

1~

.576- Apple Grow•
773-Mason

182- New Haven
ItS- letart
fl7- Buffalo

ln5oerttan ..
... S3.0o
insertion .... .... ...... $~ . 00
lnserlion .... ...
.. .$7.00

Up IO 15 Word,$.. .SiX day

9

wanted to Buy

9

WANT TO BUY Old fur·

niture And Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth swain.

446·3159 ana 256·1967 In the
evenings.
CASH PAID for clean, late
mOdel used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, Golllpolls,
Ohio. Call446·2282. 1
Buying Gold.
Sliver,
Platinum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes a'llailable. • Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale . , Spring Valley
Trading, Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 0&lt; 446·8026.

Wanltd lo Buy

11

OLD FUBNITURE , ~s.
iron. brass. or wood. 1&lt; It·
chen ~ubbords of all types.
Tables. rOund or 5quare .
WOOd Ice boxes . Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
complete household. Gold,
silver, old money, ,,Cket
.wJtches, chaIns. rtngL and
ole. Ind ian Artifacts of all
types . Also buying basoboll
cords. Osby Marlin 992 ·
6370.
RAt LROAD
3!14-895·3455.

ties.

USED power mower, 55.00
delivery, 304·675·2931 .

--- .

we pay cash tor tate mOdel
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.

""'

....

. . . . . . . . . . . 10. 1 ••

ser lees

Bill Gene Johnson,

446·0069.
11
Help wanted
Antique furniture, old cup· Need a paid vacation from
boards, stone iArs with blue housework? Earn good ISS
wriling, &amp; old egg baskets. oftd meet nice people. Call
Call 367-0138 .
-3358.

ROSENBERG RECYC LI·
NG Opening APRIL 2 in
Gallipolis. Specializing in
aluminum Cilnr., aluminum
siding, sheets &amp; c&amp;st alum ..
c opper wire, brass,
radiators, c1uro bl"eries &amp;
1BM cards. Watch this
paper for locat ion.

Babysitter neeqed iq my
hOme 5 days per week. Call
~- 2'159 after 5.

GET VALUABLE training
•s a young business perso.r
and earn good monev plus
11111!\e greal gifts as a Sen·
Nnel route carrier . ,hone
us right away and get on
1
Wanted timber . We cUt, 1M eligibility list, at 992·
paying good prices . Call 2156or992 ·2157 .
446·0706.
BEPS· IRDN, BRASS, old
furniture. gold, silver
dollar.s, wood .Ice box!s,
stone jclrs. antiques, etc.,
Complete
households.
Write : M.D. Miller. Rt . ~ .
Pomeroy , Oh, Or 992· 7760.

Adult to clean downtown
Pomeroy office. Minimum

wage, maximum five hOUrs

weekly . Write Bo• 729·D,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

someone to play plano or
guitar for Gospel Singers .
sterling, Coll675·5123 .

silver,
jewelry. rings, Old coins &amp;

Gold ,

Help Wonted

DRIVERS wanted, light
ber Shop, Middleport. 992· pickup and delivery, call
3476 .
Gene, 30.ufs· 7491 .

SitUations Wanted

12

·

Female to share com·
fortoble 2 bdr . house, good
location. Call 245-5639 after
7PM .

EVENING telephone •ales,
colt Gene, 304-675-7491 .

Security guards and Bar·
maids,
~xperience Will do babysitting in ·vour
necessery . Apply in person -home .. Pomeroy·Middlepo·
at the candlelight tnn . IH rl area. 992·3379.

Mon . tnru Sat .
Tree
trimming
and
re-moval. Free estimates.

OLIN Mt LLS has sever••
immediate

openings

949·2129 or 7~2 · 2513.

for

tel•phone appo i ntment
clerks. No eKperience
phone necessary . Avon, Tupperware and Sarah Covtn·

Room and boa rd,
meals. 9'il-5422 .

plus

try ft)(per ience helpful but
not necessary . We train,

may work 9 a .m. to 1 p.m.
or J p.m. lo 9 ~ . m . Apply at
Scottish Inn,

Room

- --------Insurance

13

163,

Joan Thomas, I p.m . to 2
p.m . or 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursday , Friday. &amp; Mon·
day ONLY . Equal .Op·
portunlty Employer.

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for' fire Insurance
cov~rage In Gallla County

tor

almost

a

century.

Farm , home and personal
propert~ , coverages
are

ELDERLY man needed,
mechanically in c lined,
Wrlle· Box C.19 , Point
Pleasant Register. Pt .
Pleasant, wv .

available

to

meet

In·

divldual needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agent. Phone
3"·3318.

-----~

S"ATIS'~Y

YOUR NEEDS"

PEClAL PUBLIC AUCTION SALE
SUNDAY 1 PM
HOLIDAY INN
Morch21 , 1'82
So. Point, Ohio
We are back again with a large lot of unusual
items of all kindsll Thert will be Item• foiDEALERS, COLLECTORS and OECORATORS EVERYONE WELCOMEIII Ju~t con~lgn&lt;!f26 pc,
Meakin Tea Leilf.
Sl011 lolalcl ori•bl llqllt!

tl~oot;

•;
•
. ·

., ..

••

~
~

7 teol 1111 6 pant! ,_..., • ·

, _ tclftft; soft rltl Chi- 4 pllltl lolald t&lt;r1111; ..tiiiUI IIIH ·
-llltl ClllriiM - · lrolllt; lollid Cfllo111 book; -11 •
Cl)lnN pr6en 111b:
t1lllltb; fluutlful
prdon
1111; wllrlul .uiH rKk; 30 l'i«ts ol Caoo 61 MDIIII flll1*ro piocot;
"' lrllll!tltlllitar llblo: JOid lui
ar4fw llblo; "'•
filii *-' Ill; Colfocllon If Clloict IIIIIIJ -kn; IIIIIIJ lloalllll OuMo·
fitlo Jttlt cmitlp; cul, coloroi 11M lol6ool cryslll; -~~ p1tca t1 . - ; bluo Milk ciM1 1114 ,.,pit lflc IOimlis; lflrlt tclleof lioorll ·
dock; llrp VkiOrilll 111~ IIIII ctoct: or- kltclllo clock: Ill a1 1 to
&amp;ttm111 chin•; ctrilcl's round fronl chi.. u•lMtj flo bfttt pttc~ttrs;
and br"' lltm~ calttclion of ct• lrllls; plus huodrttlt If ·•
afllorllerns olloltrlltlll
'

"''till"

•-dot

-•dol

TE.RMS: c:;ash, c:;heck, Mastercard, Visa

George F . Alchardi, Auctioneer
Plan Now to bring a friend and spend an en·

joy•ble afternoon.

AUCTION
Virginia Gibson, ·· widow of the
late James (Jigler) Gibson of
Harrisonville, will offer her farm
equipment and teols at auction
April 10, 1982. Watch for full
listing in Sunday, April4 papers.
owner: Virginia Gibson 742-3182 '
Auctioneer:
Lawrence A. Donahue 742·3048

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
SATUIDAY, APRIL 1,1982

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., MAR. 27, 1982-10:30 A.M
~rom

S.R. S5ol go out tho !""'VInton Rd. 2 miles,
fhtn 1 milo on Co. Rd. 19 (Up Creek Rd .) to tho Htr·
bert lonco Property, watch for sola slgno .
"ANTIQUE 0111 COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Library table, baby bed, milk cans, 10 got. Slone
jars, lantern, misc. glassware, iron bed and table.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Solid maple table; solid mople bullet, uprtgnt plano,
laundry 5IOY8, utility table, T.V ., odd choirs, beds,
Hoover sweeper, and other misc.
"MISC."
CA. A.C. troctor, dump hav rake, .mower, cut-off
, ww, slip scraper, lewn mowers, wheelbarrow, ·
heaters, water pump, bicycles, Mac 15 chain sew,
wire. saber 5aw, drills, misc . bolts &amp; nuts, ss gal.
drums, tires, and miiC. other Items.
•
OWNER r- JOHN \lANCE
',1
Cuh
PHitfvei.D.
Lunch ':t
AUCTIONEERS
.t
01n Smlttl

10:HA.M.

To Consign See Daft Smith 949·2033
or J lm Cunahan 949-2708
Watch lor partial listing next week.

HN03J

Jim C•rn•h'a n ..•

Apprantlct-Jim llrown

""

949-27Dt ·•
,

"Not responalble for •ccld•nts or loss of property" ••J
J

ALSO

FARM AUCTION AT
OSCAR WEBEI, APRIL 10

:~rEPUBLIC AUTION 21

AUCTION ·
SATURDAY, MARCH 27 AT 10:00 A.M.
u.s. Highway 35 In Henderson, WV
(304) 615-7421
TRACTORS AND DOZERS
A·C 5040 ; 8N Ford; Ford JOOO gas; Ford Dextra
diesel; Oliver 60; Lono 310; 4/ 65 Long ; IH 250
diesel ; IH Cub; case 450 Dozer wilh 6 way blade,
Roll Bar; TD91H Dozer . .
TRUCKS
1969 Ford F-700 with 16' flat lltd; GMC Tandem wltn
16' flat bed; 1972 Ford 750 road tractor; 40' flat
trailer; 1964 IH truck with 1'' flat bed; 3 axle tag·
along trailer .
FARM EQUII'MEN:r
J .D. 1250 6 row planter; J .D. 4 row planter; IH 4 row
cult.; Case • row cult.; I riiW cultivator; 2 M·F 12
hay balers; Ferguson 3 pl. hitch hay rake; 2 Ford
501 mowing machines: 2 24' hay elevators; three
hay wagons; 4graln wagons, New Holland frail tyJe
manure spreader Mke flWII · fH pto spreader ,• 11'
Bush Hog harrlgator ; 6' !lush Hog cutter t 306 : 2 IH
mounted 2 row pickers; 2 A·C 5x16 plows; A·C 4x16
plow ; 5x16 Oliver plow; 1ar111 ~tection of 2 ana 3
bottom plows, sever all bottem plows, Bush 1-iog 11'
disc like new ; lmco 11' disc; 6'h' disc, 14'
cultlpacker; set of 15.5x38 dlHIIs, set of 400 gal.
die tanks wllh pUmp; severe! new fert. IIPreaden,
plows, pig potea, discs, potaftl plows, draw barstop links.

w•

savor•t hunclrH mort f t - npocttd lly ulo day.
Lii11U-ltc1 to cllange d-.• prtar sal" and 41e•rar
' COIISigRmtntl.
Torms: Cash ar clla&lt;k wfllt,...tlvo I D.
Afty- un fllrl or sell.
ED WINTER I AUCTIONEER
, Butch Slcltrll Soft Mafllter UMl 675-7~21

• •

•t::' ;

REAL ESTATE
TO BE SOLD ON PREMISES
SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1982 12:30 P.M.

1

BARBARA WELSH

thrived 70 mWion years ago, These

up to

86 ·M. H. Repa ir

curren cy . Ed Burkett Bar·

Beginners Karate classes
at the Middleport Elemen·
lrY School Tuesday .the GA-RAGE - s•le:-16 - ~e~r
23rd. at 6p.m . 992-5421 or collection, 868 Rafferty Dr,
992·5896.
Tara Estates, Addison
Ohio. Sunday only 9 to 5. SO
Easter candy · tearn to pair [eans, antiques,
March 21 , 28
make
your own hollow or trunks, ISO dolls. nlc·nacs.
3
Announcements
solid chocolate Bunny~. hall tree, desk, cobblers
Public Notice
Special rates on Wedding
Filled ~aster ~ggs and bench.
cakes, cahrader cake!,
PUBLIC NOTICE
muth more. Fr~ candv
NOTICE OF
brlthday and anntverslty
making demonstrations. YARD Stile, 11!2 miles out
PUBLIC SALE
cakes. For estimates call
Carousel Confectionery, Greer Rd ., look for sign,
Notice Is hereby given
Middleport Celt tor date new 12" B &amp; W TV, hospltol
I hat on Wednesday, March 675-5527 .
•ndttme. 992·6342 .
31. 1982 at 10 :00 A.M. a
bed. CB, mens &amp; womens
public sole Will be held at
clothes, etc . Thur5day ,
For
bulk
delivery
of
lhe offices of The Central
Decorated
cakes for Friday &amp; Saturday, 304·675·
Trust Co. NA of Mid· gasoline, heating oil lind ' chlldrens birthdays and '-152.
dteport, Ohio to sell for : dle~l fuel, call Landmark. other occasions . For more
cash the following 992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .
tnformatton call 992·5239.
collateral to w it :
YARD sate. Clothes ·all .
1 1979 DOdge AsPen 2 Dr.
sires. di she s, glass
PERMANENT
fireplace screen, small
HAIR REMOVAL
oven, all kinds of n ice
Professional Electrolysis things, 2308 Chandler Dr.
Center. A.M.A. approved, Dote, Monday. 22nd. 9 till
Doctor referols, by op· 2:00.
polntment only . 304·675·

742-2160
or
I

Words. ...Three day

85·General Hauling
8l ·Uphol5tery

4
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away e~nd
does not offer or a"~mpt to

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick ' up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges ·creek Rd. Call
446·0294 ..

4

''4

(Avera ge 4 wc.rds per line)

Announcements

3

8J·ExcavaJing
8-4 -Eiecrical &amp; Retr i ~rAtion

61 -Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to buy

41 ·Housesfor Rent
.C2·Mobile Homes for Rent
-43· Farmsfor Rent
.44-Apartment for Rent
.tiS-Furnished RoOm s
-46-Space for rent
.-47 -Wanted to Rent
.48-Equipment for Rent
49· For Lease

Mason Co., wv
Area Code 304
1175- Pt. Plea""'
4SI- leon

Meigs county
Ar-t&gt;a Code

992- Middleport
4411-Galtlpolls
Pomeroy
»67-Cheshire
9S5-Chesler
J-VInton
343-Portland
245-Rio Grande
H7- letart Foils
2S6-Guvon Dis I.
U3- Arabi• Dist. · 949-Racine
142-Rutloncl
J19- Walnut
667- Coolvllle

81 · Home Improvements

8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

School of Mines and Sanlcar Chat·
terjee of Texas Tech University.

Gi'llia County
Arer1 Code614

59-For Sa le or Trade

J3·Farms for Sale
l.C·Business Bu ildings
35· Lots 8. Ac reage
36 Real Estate Wanted

CALL
BETH FARLEY

The team Included Dr. Michael
P. Woodburne of the UnlvendiY of
California at Riverside, wtto found
the mammal fossils, and Drs. Rosemary A. Askin of the Colorado

following telephone exchanges . ..

73-Vans&amp;.•WD
7•-Motor"tyctes
75· Boats &amp; Motors
76·Auto Parts &amp; Accessori es
77 ·Auto Repair78-Campino Equi pll'lt'f't

Merchandise

55· Building Suppl ies

._._

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

could represent a larger, dog-sized
mammal, he added.

71 -Autos fpr Sate
7'2· Trucks for Sale

53-Ant iques

-· .... ......
._ . .
,
........

Locally Owned and Operated

Zinsmeister said the team found
tooth fragments that also may be
mammaUan. H proven so, they

'

22-Monev to Loan

5·Happy Ads

~

51-Household Goods
52·CB. TV &amp; Rad io Equipment

23-Professional Serv ices

35857 WELLS RD.
MfDDLEPORT, OHIO
742-2160

"There Is no doubt what It Is," he
continued. "This group of animals
only lasted about 10 mllllon· years
and then became extinct."

SHooTING VICTIMS-A popdar tead1eratLas Ve18J1' Valle1Hllb
~ebool, Cl8reD£e PfUoH '(upper ldt) wu lllol aad kJIIed Friday by a
: . lllHieat Identified by ICbool olflclallaa PiiiiJiolte, (upper rtaht), Allo
; 6otla die melee were J01e Garda, (lower lett), aad Mattia Jame~ou.
• Tbe youllu, aD 17, are reported In stable condiiiOib (AP Laaerpboto).

21 -Busi ness Opportunit-y

o

HERALD OIL AND GAS CO.

The j awhones, which represent
at least two Individuals, are from a
berry-eating animal called polydolopus. Slmllar fossils of the animal.
which was about the size of a large
rat, has been found In South AmerIca, Zinsmeister said.

•

I Car d of Thanks (paid in advance)
2-Cardot Thanks (paid in advance)
3-Announcements
·
4·Giveaway

Will accept applications

will be accepted from March ~
throUgh March 31 to establish a
clerk and carrier register from
which future employees will be
member."
selected for the follOWing post of.
The colt's playpen - a bed or fices: Arnoldsburg, Clifton, Cotstraw surrounded by bales - Is Ill tageville; Evans, HarUord, Kenna,
· the kitchen. Ms. Semansky lets It In Letart, Reedy, Sandyville and Spenthe Uvtng room when It needs to. cer, W. Va.
stretch Its legs. He's also watching

CONVENTION CENTER - More tban 350 Uons . Kaaanga. ·Tbe twCMiay coaventlo.i wiD ead tbll eveaiJic
from 49 clubs In Dlatrlctl~J lwblch Includes central
with lbe animal district dinner (5 p.m.) at Rio Grande
a ad southem Oble I .had registered lor the 1982 district College's Lyue Center.
convention by 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Holiday Inn,

Township.
The colt Is only 00 Inches tall - a
slow start for a colt that's supposed
to grow Into a three-quarters \rablan horse.
Ms. Semanksy hopes the special
attention wW make up for the size.
Since Bae Rae's milk dried up In
three days, Ms. Semansky feeds
the colt a powdered formula . It
costs $45 tor a 25-pound bag, "But
what else can you do?" she asked.
She taught the colt to drink frQm
a bucket Instead of· a bottle, which
makes her job easier. She had to
bribe him with maple syn~p.
" He likes Mrs. Butterworth's,"
Ms. Semansky said. "I just put a
Utile on my fingers and stuck his
nose In the bucket."

The Sunday Times·Sentinei- Page-0·3

Loullon: From Genlpolls, Ohio fake Stole Rout1 '
141 to Stolt Routt 77J, turn loft, go opproxlmatoly :
••12 miles to H•nnan Tritt Rd., turn right go 1 mile. ~
House and building 011 ~ rlgllt.
Farm consists of 211 acres : tObacco bo~ 1847 poun· ;
ds, .43 acres ti liable, 165 acres pasture, WOOded area ...
'10 acres. Well fenc:ed , 2 acre pond, free running :
creek. ThiS could be 1 real beef prOducer. land Is In •
good production . Farm most recently used for hog j

....

.•

production.

1

Buildings : Jarrowtng and finishing houses, lbiOO
equipment shed, weaning hOuse, barns 70x1 10 &amp; ·
20x70, several outbuildings and storage sheds.
.:
Farm House : 9 rooms, 1 bath, .. bedrooms, ~
flrepl ilc;e, public water, Gallla County schools, ••
Southwestern High School (near Rio Grande) .
•
To see this fine farm cont•ct the Auctioneer

rtol estate broker llslecl below.
watch for equipment salut • later date.

anct ..
:

TERMS : 15,000 certified check ' doy of sole, to bt •
a. 1982. Taxes ta be
"or•ted to ••Y of CIMing. To be sold wllh the con·
flrm•tlon of the seller,
closed on or before M1y

Solo conducted bv :

ow-,

Lenur-d and Jleneice

421 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohlo 45611
Phono 16141416·0552

Newberry

·

Myron L. " Bud" MeG he~

REAL ESTATE aROKER - AUCTIONEER

..•

�•

The

Ohio- Point P
31

Karate~th e

ultimate '"self

defence all private f~Hsons,
Men, women, &amp; children.
1nstr'uction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
unifo rms pu ching and
k icktno bags, and protec·

t•ve equipment . Jerry
lowery &amp; Associates
Karate Studio, 143
' Burlington Rd , Jeckson,
Oh Call286·3074.
MIKKI Casto's " Studio
211" , 6th St., Pt. Pleasant,
wv 30H75·666&lt;1, 675-4539
Classes tor chi ldren, teens
&amp; adults. Ballet, Tap, Jazz.

Modern

danc e,

Cheer lead ing,

Baton ,

Karate, Dancerclse, Dan·
ceaerObics &amp; Ballroom
It

Wanted to Do

oav

care In my home by
the hour, day or week .1
Meal pr ovided , EX ·
PER I ENCED 99'2·2772.
• Housecleaning:
0421.

Call

367

LAWN mowers rejaalr ed,
phone 304·675·2931 .

21

Business

C 1garette
V e nding
Business. Call 304-773·5651 .

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
vour home. 30 year fhc:ed
ra te WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. Stale St.,
Athens, Oh . 592·3051.
23

Professional

Services

P1ano

Tun i ng

a,

Repalr.Call Bill Ward for
a ppointm e nt,
Ward 's
Keyboard, 446·4372
C &amp; L Bookkeeping. In

come tax returns for In·
dividuals&amp; businesses.
Carol Neal4.46·3862
ST ARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser-

vice, all types trimming &amp;
re moval , insured, 304·576·
2010 '
and

and receivables purchased.
6U -446-4113.

leal estate
31

Homes tor Sale

1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446·7015 alter
5:30p.m.
Beautiful brick &amp; frame, 3
bedroom home w/sc:en1c
view,
wood - burning
t1reptace, formal dining,
central a~r w/heat pump,
Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
w / fenced In beck yard,
545,900 . 11% llnancing ,
small down payment. Call
446·3766.
For sale by owner In Rod·

l2x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home . Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water , close to town, finan
clng avatlable. Phone 446·
1294.
1979 Winoor l4x70, 3 bdr.,
m1crowave, stero, wood
floor In kitchen, full bay
window, furniture, $14,995
Caii446·35A7.
79 Liberty 2 bdr . mobile
home. l4x56, underpinning
&amp; porch, 57,800. Call 4.46·
4544 alter 3.

1979 LIB E RTY mob i le
nome, l4x60, 304·675·7337.
1972 l2x65 SHULTZ, 3
bedroom, gas heat, partially furnished. Ca ll 304·
675·2'/07.
1981 I NOEPE NDANCE by
Detroit, 14x70. SomeOne to
take over payments and
12,000. down . Pay off
$10,000. 304·458·1825

NOTICE
lowest

terest credit subsidy mav

From

6 rm . house attached
garaglj, good condition. 345
East Broadway, (Rt 35),
Jackson
Pri ce only
s12,000. 286·6305
House for sale in GalliPOlis

ne ar Holzer, ci ty schools, 3
bdr, all bri ck, 10%
assumabl e Interest on
$53,000. Call446·7080 or 675·
2990 .

3 bedroom brick r ll!nch,
deluxe· features , 10112 per
cent interest, priced In mid
60's. 45141 Baum Addition
Road in Chester, Oh io 614·
687·6429 or 992 ·2571 .

Russell D. Wood, Realtor..lve.Jh. 446-4618
Kin Morgan; Realtor, Eve. r~: 446-097i '
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408
1970 mobile home- ETcOna
w ith expando. Large lot in
Mercervi lle. Call 446·0827
after 5.

l2 X60 tra iler, excellent
cond1t1on. Call 446·1552.
Furnished, air conditioned,
underp inning, set up on lot
in Middleport .

One hundred acres with
frontage on SR35 west of
J acksan .
Beaut if ully
wooded and adjacent to
fully
developed
recreational facilities (i.e.
swimming, ca noeing,
hiking,
much
more l.
Several exciting financ 1ng
plans available to meet in·
dividuai needs. A rare op·
partunlty. Call us today. at
992·6696 or 61086·2177:
Evenings call614-286·4058.

2 bedroom lO x SO trailer
Brown's Trailer Park 992·
3324
1975 Memory Mobile home.
Unfurn i shed ,
un ·
derp1nn 1ng, 2 porches. 7-42·
2156
'
USEO MOBILE
576·2711

HOME

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
L1censed &amp; insured . Call
304 576·2711

Farms for Sale

Farm. 27 acres, 3 bedroom
house, tot al electn c, heat
pump, central air , all car·
peted, new 12 x36 metal out
butlding, pond, all new fen ·
ces, ali m1nerat rtghts. City
water and spring water .
Wood, good hunting . Close
to new Megis mines
opentng up . Bea utiful
locat1 on for family . Asking
35,500. Must sell, Will
negotiate Immediate oc·
cupancy . 614 949 2793

ESTATES, INC.
With 2 Locations
Rt. 93 North
J~ckson , Ohio
216·3752
or
Corner 2nd &amp; V1~nd
Pt. Pleasant, w. va.
675-4424

Re•l Eetate - Oenerel

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY
446-7013

REALTY

Georet s . HobtteHer Jr
Broker
OFFICE 74HOOl

I

NEW LISTING
riverfront
In
dleport .
I nvont1mentl
property with
menrs. One 2 bectroom
furnished ,
bedroom
.
Has separate utilities.
Call tor more details.
Ask ing $35,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Lovely
riverfront
property with two
parches. 4 borlro.•ni;._ ,l
dining room, one
laundry. Needs a
work,
Owner will
negotiate on this one!
Asking $26,500.00.
FARM - 48 acres with 5
vr. old, 4 bedroom
home, 2 baths, extrll!
nice
kitchen
All
mineral rights. 3 tractor
equipment shed and
large 2 story barn Sells
for 168,000 .00.
OWNER FINANCED In Pomeroy . La rge
brick
home with
spaciOus
rooms .
3
bedrooms, 1'h baths,
formal dining room, kit·
chen and family room
combo. EXCELl-ENT
lertm. Only $5,000.00
down and 109&lt;. Interest
on balance! Call 'tor
more details. · S.illng
price is $22,500.00.
Cheryl Lemley, Auoc,
Phone 742-3111
Vetm1 Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 74H092

'

PRICE REDUCED - Nice 3 bedroom ranch, full
basement, large fenced lot, In city
*Only SZMOO
HAPPINESS FOR SALE - Lovely 5 year ranch, 3
bedrooms, nice carpet, living room with fireplace.
l'h city car garage, metal building, large lot. 1 14"
NEW LISTING - Lovely 3 bedroom ranch, formal
dining, wife approved kitchen, full basement, 16x32
lnground swimming pool . Nei ghborhood Rd .
1556

*

NO LAYOFFS HERE - Family run grocery &amp;
gasoline business. Property has a stocked grocery
store and 3 bedroom mObile home on 2.89 acres Ad·
ded bonus for the business person with a green
thumb 11124x40 greenhouse .
1 004Q
I

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots wllh 4
rental mObile home pads, all are rented, each pad
has c=oncrete runners and patio, located in Rodney .
12155
NICE LOTS 14,500.

Corner lot. 7th and John 51
Syracuse, Oh10. Call 304·
675-6269 after 4 p.m .
18 ACRES, price $8,000.,
see Charles Tony Jordan,
Crab Creek Rd.

41

14' WIDE, 3 bedroom
mobile home, $8995. All
State Modular Homes, 304·
576·2711 .

.539 acre for S4,oob .. 675 acre for

RT . 5111 - •12 acre lot, only SJ,OOO,
4 ACRES -

*1003

Nice rolling land on Floyd Clark Rd
Beautiful building s(te. Price reduced.
1~012

Evenings Call
Patlicla Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
8Cib France, Assoc. 446-1162
. ' .
. Jolin Fuller, Realtor, 441-4327

LOVELY 3 BR bnck home, has wC&gt;C;)d burning '

ltvtng

well

,;~]~~~~~:~~n One floo
room 11h bath,
constructed
r plan Ask1ng $35,000.

SAY!ISELL - We have reduced thiS home
from $17,000 to S12 ,900. Owner will work terms. 2 or
3 B. R. home, kitchen w 1th breakfast bar, stove &amp;
refrigerator,Jaund rv room.off kitchen large living
room has fir eplace . New fu r nace and cellar .
UNUSUAL HOME - Call &amp; gel details on thiS
lovely 3 81&lt;. 2v2 bath, A·frame, on 6 pl us acres.
Large work garage, root ce! !ar , !ocated close to
Forked Run State Park Asking$73,000 .
NEW LISTING """" 2 BR trailer on very n1ce lot an
quiet street. K •tchen has stove, refrsgera tor. dinette
set, corner dtsh · display .cabmet &amp; easy vi ew 1n to
spacious L R. Thrs place coul d be very nice liv ing
for you or just as in... estm ent pro perty . Now rents
for $175. Ask ing $12,000.
JUST LISTED - New doll type 3 BR home, cozy IS
the key word here . Kitchen comes com plete with 1
year old setf c leaning oven , refrigerator &amp; 6 c ha1 r
wooden d 1nette set. Th is home 1S about 1.5 m1 les out
1of Middleport on 2 p ius acres . It has outbu 1ldt ngs for
storage. Rental 1ncome from a tr ailer $175 All this
tor only $35,000.

42

Houses tor Rent

5 room house. 2 bdr., 1200
One child acceptable.
Redecorated, range &amp;
refrigerator turn . -146·4416
afler7PM .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Centenary, 2bdr .• private
lot, ref. &amp; dep., 1160 mo ,
adults Call614-643·26«.
2 mObile homes for rent . 2
bdr. each, fully furn ,
ad~ltsonly . Ca ll «6·4110
All electric mobile home, 2
bdf., adults only, no pets
·call367 ·7438.
Fo'r sale or rent 3 tra 1ler s·
1 w/family rm &amp; fireplace
House on REt. 7 above
Eureka on River . Call 388
8683 for informa t ion .

CALL US T·O BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jasper~ - Associate
PH. 843·2075

2 bedroom on Kerr· Bethe!
Rd. No pets. Call4.46·337l.
2 bdr. trailer furnished ,
adults only, Brown T rai!er
Park, 992 3324.

For sale eight acre building
site, rural water 5 mile
from tow~ . Phone 446· 1158.

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tre1lers, turn 1shed , with
a~r . Ca i1304 773·5651.
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 .

Al-MOST new, 3 bedroom
nouS!·. Fully carpeted, air
concflttoned, family room
with fireplace, one and one·
half baths. Refer~nces
required. call 304-675·2497
alltor5 :00 p.m.

CALL FOR INFORMATION
ON RENTALS ·

Lots I Acreage

35

6

D&amp;W

Farm
house. barn, work shop,
small chicken house. 1 m ile
west of Langsville on Sr.
124. 742·2860 after 4 p.m .

1980 Winsor 14x70 deluxe
kitchen, large bath, hidden
utility room . Call 379·2310
alter 5: PM.

6 rm house with ba th, tob
barn &amp; 1200 lb fob . base, on
40 acres on St. Rl. 218, Only
7 1/2 miles from town,
$47,000. Call 245·9222 after

$9,995.00

2 bedroom cottage on Blue

Lake south of GalliPOlis
tust off of Raccoon Creek,
$175 par mo , $175 deposit
Ca ll 286-A346

'

33

kitchen &amp; LR, 3 bdr, 1 car
garage, assumable loan 8
1/ 4%
Farmers Hom e
Financing available, In r educe payments. Call 256·
l254after5 ·00.

.WQO,D REALTY1 INC.
446-106&amp;
-

1973 2 bedroom mobile
home on 2 acres, Jerry' s
Run
Rd , 2 stora ge
bul ld,ngs, 304 576 2637 .

Prices
Ever
On

l

Reol Eoteto - Gonerol

for S~le

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOL IS, RT
35 PHONE 4.46·3868.

NTRAL REALTY

House containing two ap~r­
tments. Cheap price. Wil l
sell land contract. Main St,
Vl ntop, Oh. Ca ll245;5818.

THREE bedroom home, 5
acres, 9 miles from town .
Phone after 6:00pm . 304·
675-7198.
Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Reol Eotote - Gone•ol

3 bdr. hovse deluxe, 2
fi replace, central air,
garage, carpal. Ret . &amp; dep.
Ca fi67S·Sl04 or 675·5386.

HOUSE! , Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon, 3 bedroom, fam il y
room with fr ieplace, cen- 1
tral a~r, basement, 304-675·
1542

New 14'Wide
MOBILE
HOMES

ney It , new carpet, large

0644.

2 bedroom house for r ent.
completely furntshed, with
air cond., all util1t1es paid
1350. month plus deposit in
Racine. 949·2801

T WO bedroom tr at ler ,
Ashton-Upland Road, $150.
plus deposit &amp; utilities
PhOne 304·675-4088

SPRING IS HERE and you will definitely want to
look at this modern home, 3 bedrooms (or 4) full
basement, fireplace, recreation room, and the' be!lt
of all - an 18'x32' swimming pool . Close to Holzer
Hospital.
INTERESTED 1 1N A 2a~tmJml building 1n,
~&gt;alii polls (down,own l or uS'e ·ror~ office space.
Owner willing to sell now for 137,000.00.

' '

TWO bedroom , un
furni!lhed. One bedroom ef·
foc1encv . 304·675·2122
THREE bedroom mob1l e
home, adults only , no pets,
reference required, Camp
conley, 304·675·2133 .
·

RENOVATED 2-STORY. HOME, With extra lot
situated along Upper River Rd Owner has
renovated considerably and has 11 ready tor sale.
Property could be used for either reS idential or
commercial. Call for more info !

TWO bedroom, furn ished,
12x65, all electric, Glen·
wood, WV S200 monthly
plus electnc. 304·576·9073
or 576·2,4-41.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED within the village of
Vinton . Nice 3-bedroom home ready for occupancy .
OWner has in excellentconditon and you must see to
appreciate. Buv...now for 553,000.00
INTERESTED IN INVESTMENT PROPERTY??
We have two properties located within the Gallipolis
City Limas which may make you a good tax shel1er
in ... estment 5 rentals 1n ail , 3 at one locatio!'\, 2 at
another . Call for more Information.

TWO or 3 bedroom, fur ·
nished and unturn1shed.
Also, 1 bedroom apart
ment. 304·675-1371 and 675·
3812

WE HAVE SOME RENTAL HOUSES &amp; APART·
MENTS LEFT.

Apartment
tor Rent

44

APArtm ent for rent. Call
446·0390

44

2 bdr .• First Ave., histone
home, just redorated Call
446 2570 .

S rm . house in Gallipolis.
Col1446·3945 offer 5PM .

CANADAY
REALTY

51"'&lt;• for Reoot·

bedroom unfurnished
apartment in .Crown City.
Cai1256·6520.

2

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perk, Route 33, N01111 of
Pomeroy. Lorge lo~. Coil
992·7479 .

APARTMENTS :
1
bedroom, ren t . starts at
$152 per mo. a; 2 bedroom
starts at $188 per. mo
Spec1al rates for Senior
Gitizen.s. Call446 2745.
2 bdr apt . HUD excepted,
k1 tchen turn, uftlities par
lially pd . , excellent
location . Call 675·5104 or
675 7284.

Professional couple ...Ires
to lease or rent 3·4
bedroom, 2 bath home In
Gallipol is city or tower Rt.
7 area. Pll . 446-8348 after 5.

Furnished upsta~rs apr t , 4
rms. &amp; bath C!e~n . no pets,
adu lts, dep. &amp; rei req Call
446·1519.
Good !ocation, 3 rms &amp;
bath ,
carpeted,
Sl9S ,
utilitieS pai d. Dep. &amp; ref
req . CaJI 446·7482 mor·
nings

3 bedroom unfur nished
apartment. 992 5434 or 992
5914 or 304·882 ·2566.
1 bedroom furnished apt.
992·5434 . 992·5914 or 304·882·
2566.

Unfur ni shed 5 room Apt
985 3350 or 985 3351.
Apartments. 675·5548 .
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses.
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolts.
614-446·8221 or614-2•5·9484.
2 bedroom furni shed apt.,
eff1c 1ency apt. Caii67S 3000
l0·5PM, after 5446·0682.
TWO apartments,
niShed, 304-675-4378.

fu r ·

'

( l I l)

Misc. Merchandice

S4

1978 Jeep Renegade, good
cond. 1980 Harley Dav ison
SL T, fully dres5ed. ex..
cond Cai i675·65A5.

j
III

--

EPPIR

!MKIN8

For Lease

A &amp;OOC'

Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land Contract in town, or
country
Cali
Strout
Really , 446 0008

M~GKEE
'R.rn'*-*

Professional office &amp; c:om merclal $J)t'Ce available at
362 Jackson Pike . call -146·
0149 or 446· 1819.

10

Atttn_.~~~n~:(

. ...' ..........
.....
... ....
~

51

y__,

Household Goods

I I I J(Dt I I l

Ill• wl.. mn. ''""'· 446-J1ft

992·2259
NEW LISTING
NEAR CHESTER
82 S Acre farm with 30
acres tillable, 27 5
pasture, mostly fenced.
Several Sl1eds and bar·
ns. Nicely remodeled 1
three bedroom home
Even an old mill. ·
$89,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Remodeled
three
bedroom home on a
level lot. Cute as a but·
ton and a bargain at
$17,800.00.
NEW LISTING - ON
THE RIVER - 75 Acres
with a one story home.
15·20 acres tillable,
some acreage cleared
on the river for camp
sites. Gas and oil rights.
I$62,000.00.
.
NEAR MINE I 1 - Two
bedroom home which
was
recently
remodeled . has 1.8
acres which part are
fenced , a cellar w ith
building over , and a
gariloe .
Redu ce d
$24,1100.00.
FOUR BEDROOMS In Langsville with a
Iaroe kitchen, fam ily
room , living room,
garage, and over an
acre of level yard and
oare_~n.
Reduced ,
Sl9,ouu.OO.
ASSUMABLE LOAN 11-iome Is on a nice street
In Middleport. Has six
rooms and Is a l'h story
frame with a nice porch,
storage building over
garage. Has lots of
closet space. $29,900.00
NEW LISTING
REEDSVILLE
12'x60' Mobile home
with 12'x38' matching
addition. Mostly furgood connished dillon. 170'x180' lot.
$19,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cltla..-, Jr.
GRI
"2-6191
Jea~ Trunell
" '·ZHG
Dottle TurMr , "2·5692
Office
"2-2259,

m
.. , .. 11011

EXPENSIVE BUTWi'in..
ranch hbme surrounded· by twelve
acres.
2112 baths, formal dilng, family room with fireplace.
Equipped kitchen designed by Chandler's. 2 car
garage. Horse barn. Roger Hornsby stainless steel
pool , Shown by appointment only :

1

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

: TRULY IACI&lt;IY ANIWEA BESTOW
ArtNr. How thOM artlllerym~ ware golng"&lt;IIIEAT GUNS"

VISUALLY EXCITING - A fireplace opening into
the living and dining rooms guarantees a cozy at·
mosphere. Familv room with woodburner that
could make vou look forward to w inter. • bedrooms,
2 full baths . Basement with reams of storage. 2 car
altached garage . $92;000 . Assumable mortgage.
GOOD TIMES - Country kitchen with adlolnlng
family room Is perfect for Informal entertaining,
famllv fun. Four large bedrooms including a master
suite with a walk -in closet and private beth. Family
bath Formal dining. 2 car altached garaoe. ll'/2
acres. Vffi'Y private location near Rio Grande.
$79,500. ~&gt;;ssumable mortgage.

Sofas ~nd c hoirs priced
from $285 to $795. Tables,
SJB and up to Slot. Hlcte·a·
beds,~ .• queen size, S380.
Recliners, $175. to S295.,
Lamps from SIS. to 165. 5
pc. dinettes from 179., to
$385 7 pc , Sl89. and up.
Wood table w ith 4 chairs,
$219 up to 1495. Desk S110
Hutches, SJOO and 1375.,
mapl e or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · BaaseH
Cherry, 1795.
Bunt. bed
complete with ma"resses,
$250. and up to 1350. Captain1S beds, $275 complete.
Baby beds, S99. Mattresses
or box springs, full or twin ,
$58. , lirm , 168. and $78 .
Queen sets, 1195. 5 dr .
chests, 149. , 4 dr. chests, ·
$42. Bed frames, S20.and
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
SJSO , dinette chai" 120.
and S25. Gas or eiecfr1c
ranges, $295. Orthopedic
, nlatre,,.'.i,,r_m, $95, baby
"
$25 &amp; $35, bed
f!'ame's $2·0,$25, &amp; $30. Used
Furniture- bookcase, 5 pc.
dinett set, Living room
suite Used· ranges and
T.V's. 3 m j les out Bulaville
Rd . Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
thru Fn., 9am to5pm, Sat
-146·0322

PHONE 446-3643

l!,!l_...!'
H!!ou~Hh
~~o!!ld'!.!"Q~ooct~s.__

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive 51,
Gallipolis. Recliners sao,
bunk beds $100, qunkie
G . E . washer large mattresses S-40, maple
capacity. G . E . dryer 3 !em·
rockers 149, maple dinet1
perature's, clean, n ice, sets trcim Sl25 to Slls,
guaran~ee&lt;~ . SlOO each. Call
bedroom suites S150, 3 pc.
256·1207.
llvino room suites S199, 2
pc, living room suites $140,
love seats, S70, owl lamps
!:lectric stove, wl"llte, ex
cond. Call -146 3945 after S2S, r inger washers $75,
dryers ,
se veral
5PM.
refr lge n !l tor s,
ut ili ty
cabinets, m ec han 1c's tools,
Eery American couch &amp; beds, silver stone, TV,s,
chair. Call before 2:30, 446
woodburners, ste r o's and
U72 .
.lots more. Open \()am to
,Spm , -146-3159 .

kELVINATOR relrlgeral·
.,., good condition, $35 .00.
Calll04-576·2757 .

FLEA MARKET
EACH SUNDAY
Liwrence Co.
Fairground

7A.M.·4 P.M.
250400Dealars
Stt-up S5.00 per space.
Rt. 7, 1 milo
abOYt Proctorville.

ST
UMPTON - 5
yr. old, 3 bedroom home with over 1500
sq . ft . of living. Fully equipped kitchen,
family room, 2 baths, cent . air, plus 10
acres oil and &lt;all clean . 16x36 barn and
large rd fronta ge 112 mile off Rl. 160.
$39,000.

'

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCE S
washers,
dryers,
refr 1gerators,
r~nges
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
be!l lde Stone Crest Motel.
4.46 7398.

1
3 ACRES - RANCH HOME - $39,000.
Owner will finance with SS,OOO down
pyml. 3 bed room home with dining
room , full basement &amp; eat-In ·kitchen .
Land rav s well and has pond. Frontage
on Rt 160, south of Porter

Coffee table &amp; end tables.
Must see to appreciate,
reasonalbe. Call4.46 3937
Two matching m edium size
overstuffed cha irs. exc
cond , r easonable. Ca ll 446
4487.

Furnished Rooms

Broker-Auctioneer

INS~~AENCE

2

ca~ :4:~o~~~dt.~:ime

BRI
RANCH - RT , 141 - Very ol·
tract1ve J bedroom ranch 1ust minutes
from town . H as family room, wood ·
burner, equipped k1 tchen, 2 baths, heat
pump, overs tzed 2 car garge pi us 1 32
ac. w1tn mobile home hookup 60's

FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $2p0
PER MONTH.

•

OWNER WILL f'INANCE - Great
family home with 3
2 baths, 15x27
LR with oas fireplace, large mOdern
kitchen wltn rang~, Mlf·cleanlng oven,
OW and disp:, laundry with washer an
dryer, part basement and over 6 acres
of land at tile edge of town . Call Ranny
Blackburn, 446·00041.

Owner will
financ ing.
on large flat lot. Vinyl siding &amp; natural gas
Carport with storage area . Call for details!
BMR 412- NEW LISTING - Older home located in
'Thurman. Contains 7 rooms and bath. 2 fireplaces,
profesSionally installed wood burner, forced air fuel
furnace . Outside fe atures a garage and a screened,
summer k1tchen with buiit·in grill Ca!l for i!!p·
polntment

a

e.

.

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE! - Lovel y.
overlooking the river . 3 bedrooms, living
modern ~ 1 tc he n, full basement N •ce family
~ lt h wb f1reptace In-ground sw 1mming pool all
t•ng on an acre of grO\Jnd!

~R 399 - GREAT LOCATION! home presently being used as a duplex, could.
MSily converted to single family . Choice locatoon
near Washington School. Ca ll for details I

4H -

IMR 1
OWNER FINANCING - This split
foyer home includes 3 bedrooms; 2 full baths, large
den with fireplace , near pump. See this lully car·
peted home now. Located in Crown City!
IMR 391 - REDUCED! - Owner wants it sold
now! Mobile home located on river front lot.
' IIMR 319 - This fine horne has 4 bedrooms and Is
lOCated close to town You will have a large lot w ith
~ country atmosphere and have all the city con·
wnlences. Call now l
' '

FARM-U4,900 - Six miles from R loG~ande. Nice
3 BR frame nome has vlnyl "sldlng, 2 baths, full
basement, 2 car garage. «1 acres, mostly timber,
2,0251b. !Obei:co base. Greet family home.

LOAN
- Only $2,500 down 9% inl
rate. Modern 3 bedroom brick nome, slate entry :
llv.lng room with w .b. fireplace. Scluded in 3 acres of
prtvacv .
•

VANZANT RO. -S4G,OOO- Elo•ty·slx acres, S BR
tram eand i sto'Si{p£11lD\MGother oulbldg. All
mineral rights
,~, •• ~rm and there have
been several su&lt;~...ful wells drlllod In this area,

POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT - 6 acres, more or
!ess, w~uld make a good home site. good well and
1some t1mber on the property Approx. BOO lb. tobac·
co base.
1910 BAY VIEW 14x70 with 7x24 fl.

extensi~

~rooms, 1112 baths, built· In kitchen, built-in !lte;~

=~~e. patio, Sliding doors, Loan assumption

LOVELY IRICk I I'IIAME RAN ·
CHER plus 78 ACRES o1 lind in ,
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
Cheshire Township offers' lots of good
acre pasture farm, moolly rolling &amp; hi I·
living tor your growing family. Home Is
ly grassland with approx. 10 A. wooded ,
lust like with 1A38 Ill· ft. Cf liVIng
lots of springs, l'h story home has 4
area plus an etteched gorege. 2
rms.
1 bath, large barn, tObacco base,
spacious BR ' s, 2 Mlha, 1&gt;&lt;27 Lll, 10&gt;&lt;24
lronts on 3 roads in Walnut Townsh ip .
kitchen with retrlg., dllf)., ow, dllubie
oven &amp; range, waSher dryer stays In
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE laundry . Lond Is mostly rolling paature
RemOdeled home illcludes 5 rms . and
land with approx. 25 acr" · Call
batrh, carport, stove, refrlg. , dish ·
tor appo1ntmenr.
washer, mObile home pad, almost 6
(!Creson 581, 2 mi. from town . $30,000 .
BUILDING OR MDIILE HOME SITE
1
- Approx . 5 12 -.:res louted on the
NEAR CADMUS - Forty acres, ap
prox. 112 tillable and 112 woods, old 2
Graham School Rd., co. w•r. cnr 300
fl. rd . frontage , Green Grade Sthool 1
story farm home In need of repairs,
Gall Ia Academy High School. 110,900.
bem, sheds, fronts on W Owner llnan·
clng available at l&lt;M.

'
IMR
3tl - GET READY FOR SUMMER I Owner
transferred and must sell th is 3 BR ranch. Close to
- n Includes deluxe 18x36 inground pool. Call_tof
4n appolntmenttodayl
iMR 487F - Comp·slle Potential I 32 acres mil with
fi'Dntage on Raccoon Cr. as well as frontage on
lllacktop highway .

.

IMR 410 - A-,lrome situated on a beautiful wooded
letting, you will love the atmosphere. Owner flnon ·
~ng tor qualified buyers. Low 30's.
tMR :111- REDUCED - Quiet country home on '12
ecre lot Includes 20x20 born with loft, and partial
beoement. Call for details!

RIO GRANDE AREA -' Rio Center·
point Rd. (Cherry Ridge), epprox. 75
acru wOOdland, fNntl on 2 ,.._, county
water available. OwMr may help
finance. Priced to Mil at.,. ,...IICre.
NISAR EWING TON- UI-H feWI &amp;
rolling land, loll of tront. . . lll RIICcoon
creek, some. mature 11"""' ,.rtltd,
6,000 voung black welnut '""' IPPf'OX.
6 yrs.qld. Asking $63,000 partial linen·
•l ng available.
Hl,fNTINGTON TDWNIKIP'
176
acres m / 1 vacant land, frenll on Rae·
coon Creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd. Approx.
311111able &amp; the balance Mad8d. Under
1400 per acre.
RODNEY CORA ROAO - Approx. 24
acres woodland, locatltd 3 mi. from
Rodney, county water avtllellfe.
$,12,000.

lEST BUY IN TOWN Stylish 2 story
homo was built In 189~ ond must be seen
to appreciate. L81'91 open toyer and
stairway. LR, dining rm., parlor, completely equipped modern kitchen, 4
BRs, 2'h beths, new siding, garage,
neer schools, shopping, etc.
HOMESTEAD HER I or use as a hunting lodge, vacation homo, etc. Rustle
log home IS buill from hend hewn
beams and hes a sloeplng loft, modern
bath, large stone fireplace and approx .
27 acre of woods In the Wayne National
Forest. Extra land avollable. Eosy Ter·
ms
A LOT FOR YOUR MONEY - That' s
what you get with this llko new brick
rancher. 3 BR's, l'h beths, 16&gt;&lt;27 family
rm. with heateletor fireplace. 14x20 LR
With WB stove, equipped kitchen,
double garage with auto opener, cent .
air, cent. vacuum, largo flat lol &amp; much
mora. Located In ROdney. Call Ranny
ll~kburn tor a periONiiappolntmenr.

OHIO RIVER VIEW - Af $ DIC. IIICres
wooded lend, nlcelltlllefltlltlll. c•ntv GUY AN TowNSHIP' - 108 acres m/1 ,
water, lOCated on ftoutlt 7 . . , _, Jml. . IOCIMII- of Mercerville. Approx. 20
A. llllablt,
woods, lOb. base.
lOUth of town ......
Owners will

.I

I•

S4,000 DOWN - owner s must sell. W1il
f1nance at low 1nterest ra te. .4 bedroom
home off Lower Rt. 7. Has f1replace,
full basement &amp; garage $34,900

CROUSE IECK ROAD - Restricted
building lot: 1.22 acre, ni ce WOOded set •
ling, city schools. 15,900.
ROOM TO ROAM - This lovely bnck
ranch offert·lots of good living lor your
grow ing family 3 Bll's, 2'h baths, large
kitchen &amp; LR, formal dining rm , 2
fireplaces, wood burning stove, cent.
air, garage, full basement with family
rm , bar &amp; laundry . Located on approx
2 Kres on St ae Route 554 between
t&gt;orter &amp; Eno. Priced to sell at $59,500 .

1N TOWN Pr i vate location on this
older well kept 3 bedroom , 2 story
hom e Ha s equ 1ppcd kitchen , 2
f~r e pla ces, t amtly room,
1112 bath,
beauty shop, nat gas heat. 2 car
garage, 16x32 1n·ground pool, e ll
si tu ated on approx . 1 ac. 60' s

DNLY $31,900 -' 115,000 DOWN
PAYMENT - VA acquired property .
Anyon e can buy . 3 bedroom home wit h
family room , nat gas heat. Large yard • 18 WOODED ACRES - ATTRAC t iVE ·
City schools Wash E lem
2 STORY HOME Remodeled 4
JUST Li STE D - Brick &amp; lr ame ranch bedroom home off L ower Rt 7 Th !s
on Rt . 141 JUSt 2 mdes west of town. 3 spacious home has faml!y r oom , 2
woodburn ers, f•r ep lace. 2 baths,
bedrooms, f irep lace, eat in k itchen ,"" ful!
base ment, r ec:. r oom, fam• tv room , r emode-led ki tchen, 2 car garage.
garage, deck &amp; fenced back yard on Sever al fru1t trees &amp; nrce large lawn.
$61,900
nearly &amp; acre Good loc ation
LOW 30s - r.t:yt. G - Older
SU 2ND AVE . - Very attr!itc1ive and
r emodeled 2 stoo!'lb '
ted 700' off
spacious 2•17 story 4 or 5 bedroom home
Rl. 7 Soulhof 'fo ,
m l -prlvote
in town. Has 2 flreptaces, famtiY room,
locat•on 3 bedroomar fi replac e. wood
den, formal dmi ng, •h batt1s,fu!t
1
basement, nat. gas, cent air, etc E• · burner. 2 ca r ga rage J rld more. 17 ac.
yard .
I
·
Cell ent · construction and care. Cold
'
easily be adaptab!e to protesstonl1! of ·
' - Owner s
IMMEDIATE POSSESS1pf1
ti ces. Call for info rmation .
·
1
m oved to anot her state, must sell fas t.
8J ACRES - Very pr etty locat ion just 2 Attrac ti ve tud or ran.ch locejted tn Rod
miles north of R10 Grande Lots of ney In a ver v goqpj neighbor hood 3
p ines, some t1mber r eported E;xce ilent bedroom · 2 bath • family room, wood·
for horses, some crop &amp; pasture la nd
burner, large m ~ster suite, garage l l'h
G,ood bulld1 ng lots S42,500. C1ty schoo ls
ac. vard . Low SO 1,)
I

B"-·

MILLION SS$ VIEW - Off Slate Route 35 - Close to
Holler Medical Center. Doctor moved out Of the
area need~ to sell th 1s lovely new rust ic l..~ped
ranch. Th1s very plu sh home f eatvre!
"i arge
b~.drooms ,_ formal entry and l lvtng r oom Bu 11t-in
kitchen, 2 full baths, full basement. 3 car garage,
Sitting on 3.2 acres Be one of the Best Addre5sed
People in Town! Priced in the 80's! •

NEAR RIO GRANDE - $32,'10Q home, eat-In kitchen, forced air furnace. Hardwood
floors. Carpeted living room , k i tchen and both. City
, schools. Rio Grancte elementary .

.,

,.

STROUT. REALTV Inc.

SLE E PING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt .•
Park Central Hotel

BMR 4114- LOW 30's - City st:hools, newly car
paled and painted ThiS 3 BR home is a great buy on
t8day' s market.

•
Nice 3 bedroom

WE ' RE LOOKING FOR A BARGA!"
HUNTER - A real horse trader wtll
love to see the deal the owners are of ·
fer lng on th 1s 1/ery attractive L shaped
ranch . Over 1700 sq. II. of 11 v 1ng w/ 3
bedrooms, 2 baths , large fam !iy room,
cozv f irep lace, very n•ce kitchen, 2 car
garage &amp; 117 acre (9% as!i umpiton &amp;
owner will help f 1nance on balance ) .
$61 .900

NEWLY decorated, 2
bedroom apartment, close
to t-tospital, deposit and
reference required , 304-6751962.

BMR 402F - CHECK ON THIS ONE - 3l' acres
with 14011b. t6bacco base, 30x30 barn. Call tooay'

A FRIENDLY AIR - Clean simple lines, hlp roof,
shuttered windows, sheltered entr y all combine to
make this home ' more than iust ·a 3 bedroom
ranch. Spacious combination family room, kitchen.
DoUble windows In living room . Ceramic tiled
baths. All the woodwork Is stained and varnished ..
Near city . Low Interest loan assumption . $49,500.'

B J Hllrllttn. AUOC: I . . . . 4240 EVJ
Chde WRiker, Auoc 2U n1• EY•

'

o,.. ~~~i~~~@i~~=r~=~~~~~~fE=1

sota,
toman, chair,
3 tables,rocker,
$500. Sofa,
c ha~r and loveseat, $275.

IMR 139- OWNER FINANCING I Two story home
on Second A1e , 3 or 4 bedrooms REDUCED ' Bet·
. ter see this one

BEAUTIFUL LINES! And inside some genuine
delights. Lrke a l4'X24' living room with traditional
fireplace. Enormous master suite . For easy living
an efficient kitchen with lots of counter space, built:
tn oven, stainless steel counter top range and dishwasher. 3 baths. Cen. air. 2 car attached garage
plus 24'x26' storage building . Shown by appomtment
only . $96,000.00.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

(-~
,

Rool Eltlto - Glftorol

POMEROY,O.

E~

Jim CKhrU. Anoclltt , ""' ''" Eu

Large lot near Ractne 992·
5858 .

E . M~ii1W

~---

Grand Pr ix stero system, For s~ t e seautifu ! floor
record player, AM ·FM 8· model console stero. AM·
FM 8 track &amp; re cord
track. Call367 ·7793
p layer. $300.00 Call 379
2314 .
Plastic Septic Tanks Slate
and county approved . 1,000
gal tank, price SJAO Other Suba ta nk Olmypic -400
sizes In stock, haul In your reQulator. complete suba
pic kup truck Call 614·286· out gear and 18 ft . Ga tor
5930, Jackson. Oh . RON boat trailer. Call 446·1642 ,
EVANS E NT E RPRI SES
e•t 332or367-7292 .

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

""'
,lottoro
.. ""'I·
- " "'
- " """"*
"'" _
..-111' ... - -.

5 room house with bath.

CHAMPAGNE TASTE? You ' ll bubble with ex·
c1tement when you Sip in the features thts luxury
hom e offers Large formal liv.ng room with W B
fireplace. Formal d1n1ng room w1th huge built·in
chma cabinet. 3 modern bedrooms, 2 baths, bUIIt·m
kitchen with bre akfast bar . Fa m ily room wtth
sl1ding patio doors leading to a 18x36 pool and patio
gas grill 2 car garage Beautiful decor ate d home'
Gas heat and central a1r . P.rofess1onal landscaped
grounds. Shown

Misc. Me;chii'Odice

WISEMAN

t:'e!HE'"" WA5.

-;=:::::;:::;:==:.....::===:::;:::;11 HOMES
~u,d'

S4-

Merthandlce

....

Real Estate - Ganerel

TIP TOP SHAPE I
Just a ! ttfle pre1t1er than so many . Modern 3-4
bedroom brick home. Formalliv1ng &amp; di'ntng room
Large kitchen. F ull basement. Large 2 car garage:
Workshop &amp; barn Sitting on 58 ac res, more or less,
of landscaped grounds Spnng w i ll be breathless
here! Owner W i ll help f1nance ; 10% lnt Rate

Mls~ .

WHAT·eH&amp; eMID
4t

2 .apartments on Main st ..
V1nton , Oh 2 bdr., c lean,
large vard &amp; garden spot,
sec. dep. Call245 5818
Furnished apt. 2 bdr ., $230
Utilities pd ., one child ac·
cep table. Coll4.46·4416 after
7PM ·

Frigadaire dryer avocado,
$90. Kenmore washer 2
spd., avocado, $90. Both
guaranteed Call256·1207.

!1M2

Wanted to Ron!

47

54

Household Goods .

51

lbs. tObacco base. Call
._..·1519 or 446·0987.

3 room unfurn ished apart
m~r:t' · adults ontv, no pets,
ut1ilt1es pa id. Call-4-46-3437 .

4S
2nd. fl oor eff1ency apt
Adults only, no pets. Brad
bury Apartments, 446·0957

S room house, porch,
basement, 1150 mo. Call
675·5104 .

46

Apartment
for Rent

Times-

The

Va.

Houses for Rent

41

tor rent In
Gall i polis .
Available immediately,
S30fl. Call 446·7265 o r 4.46·

ONE owner houae, 1211
Main St. 6 rooms, 2 story
brick, custom buill. 304-6752381.

second

morgages, land contrBcts,

r. 21, 1982

bv Larry WriJJht
Large house
Ir.;_;.....;,;.~::.;.;;;;;;._~==:::=::~~-.:..-..:1ll downtown

PRICE reduced, sale by
owner. 2 Story house, 13
rooms. Ideal for large
fami l y or rental proper ly ,
Needs some repairs. 1n the
20's as Is. Phone 30H75·
7353 after 5 p.m.

1972 Schultz trailer, l4x68, 3
bedroom . Call675·3868

FIRST

I

NEW INCOME LIMITS. If
you earn between $9000 to
115,000 il year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house &lt;not a mObile home I
for as little as $135 a month.
No l!&lt;iwn payment, Call 992·
7034.

32

Mar. 21

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

T RI -STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Galllpalls. Prj ce
r educed , used mobile
homes. CALL -146·7572.

Opportunity

22

HomestorSIIe

va.

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS Ex·
cel!enf construction - Immaculate 4
bedr oom home on L•ttle Kvger Rd . Has
fireplace, equ ipped k! fchen, family
room, l 1h bath, full basement, na t gas
heat, and2 ac r es A must to see S53 ,500
ELEM.·
home located
In -cityCOZY
school1
ii~:~~~~IGh~~~~:EI
fireplace In living room, farge

ac . yard

91h% assumption.

CITY SCHOOLS - RT . 218 - Modern 3
bedroom ranch situated on over 1.3
acres . Has large living room , kitchen,
b ath, basement, woodburning furna ce,
carper! &amp; mobile hom e hookup. .priced
at $32,0011. Assumablo 11% mgt '
REDUCED TO $69,000 - OWners must
se ll now . Pnced ongt nally at $83,000
thtS lovely 4 bedroom tn ·leve l offe r s 3
full baths, deluxe kitchen, form al
di ni ng, fa mily room w/s ton e f 1r epla ce,
rec . room. woodburner , ex tr a m·
sulat•on, 2 car garage plus 4 5 ac res of
: ~~~~dp r ~ rd Thi s is a r ea ! b a r g ~tn fBil
DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME IN
TOWN? - Then th is one Is perfect.
cozy and modern 2 bedroom, 1 floor
"plan . Hs brand new kitchen, dln1ng
room. living room, detached gar'age
and niceo· f lat yard . Make us an offer.

30's.
RT. s&amp;l - SECLUOED BI ·LEVEL Nestled In over l acre of trees this dutch
style home has 3 bedrooms, 2'12 baths,
1 tamiiy r oom, 2 large unfinished rooms
in tower level, Iaroe wrap around deck
and 2 car garage. outstand ing location .
$67,500.

I

93;,. % ASSUMPI TON ~· One of t he pret·
ti es t &amp; privatE! IQ~;ollon s In the orea.
L oca ted m Northup--,rhis cttarmino
home has vinyl siding, fireplace, full
basement , new ca,rpef, detached 2 ca r
garage plus 2 acres With lot s of tr ees
$43,500

PRICE REDUCED TO SJI,SOO _
Owners anxious to sell th 1s 3 bedroom
ran ch on Rt. 1-Cl. Has fa m ily room eat
on ki tchen, n~t . gos hea r {138 budget)
p lus 3 acre f~ nq~ y ard
'

'

'

Avs ,j -

S12 4TH
112 block from
Newly r ed one
Washington, ,~le m
throughout. t3 llfdrooms, equipped kit ·
chen , flrfP.:Ip ~e~ nat gas heat, garage
Lot goe! ·,1c) football lleld A I story
home Prl"'ed In 40 's
3.85 ACRES - Modernized ol d time 2
storv home loca ted A miles from t own
In Green School Dis! . Hou se has 3
bedrooms, fireplace, dining room,
glass enclosed porch &amp; ba th. Very
scen ic location w ith lots of , shode
trees . 1 mile off Rt 7 Low 40's.

I
I
I
I
I
1I

201 ACRE - HOG FARM - Good hog
operation for $erlous farmer . Approx .
50-60 acres crop, 100 ac. p~tur e, balan ce In woods. M odern feeder pig btdgs. &amp;
1900 lb tobacco base Modern 3
bedroom home w1th 2 car garage . •
Assumable mig

II
I

llJ ZND AVE . - Large redecorated 4 or
5 bedroom home In quality neigh ·
borhood Has 2 fireplaces, family rm .,
dining rm., arc.hed doorway s. bay w in·
dows, 10 "
Insu l ati on, Jlh b ath • •
basement, nat . gas heat plus much
more. 60' !1 .

I
II
1

3.85 ACRES - NEW LISTING Modernized 1 old time 2 $tory t•ome
located .c miles from town rn Gre en
School Olsf. House has 3 bedrooms,
fireplace, dir)ing room, glass enclosed
porch &amp; bath . Very scenic 1ocat1on with
lots of shade trees. l m11e off Rt . 1. Low
40's.
NEAR ·THORMAN - 5 year old 3
bedroom, 2 bath home situated or\ J;-4
acre 16x22 living room, woodburner,
l4xl6 master bedrooln, equ,pped ki t·
chen, elect. hear, plus • storage bldgs .
Only $32 ,000 .

OAK DRIVE - Owners tr ansferred
Attractive 4 bedroom home in a quality
neighborhood . Has 211&gt; baths, family
room, f irep lace, equi pped kitchen,
dining room , 2 car garage &amp; corner lot

OWNER WILL FINANCE - With less
than 209&lt;. down payment and 11% in·
tertst . 161 acre farm off Rt. 554. AP·
prox. 20·25 at. crOP balonce In pasture
·,nd woods. Lots of pine (red &amp; while) ,
bern,
modernized 3 bedroom

Ill STATE ST. - Excellent In-t own
location, i block from hlgn school. 3
bedroom home with basement, enclosed porch, nal gas heat, 2 c~r
garage and 43x174 yard

503 OAK DRIVE - Very attr active
b'r l ck I frame ranch 1n a great location
ott Rt. 35 . 3 bedroom•, 1fh bar~ : l am:·
rm. wlflreplace, equi pped kitchen, tull
:
basement {has built In stereo sys tem), ~ ­
nat . gas heat, plus l 6x32 In-grou nd pool .
$69,500

60's.

1·
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...........1.1-······--······----··

�..
•

~~~~M~is~c.~M~~~t~hn~:~i~ce~~~s~6~~:~~~-~e;~:.~ ~;_~ ~ :~i:~ ~ ~ :__~~
:= 6~1==~F=ar=m~E~q=u~i:~m~o~::~~~r~o~y~~~~ld~d~le~p~o~r~t~G~~~-~a~l~~~li~p~;~~~s~,~~~O~~~i~o--~~P~o~in~t~P~Ie~a~s~a~n~t~:V~,~."~V~a~.~A~u~ro~s~to~r~S~a~le~::=r~~~~~~~~~~~~::~====~::1;98:2: ···
FENCE WIRE
10·47-20 ROD ROLLS
1/Yl)ODBUIINING
STOVES
30" WIDE

DRAGONWYND
CAT TERY
KENNEL : AKC
Chow puppies. , CFA
Himalayan. Persian and
Siamese kittens . Cal l 4463844after 4 p.m .

1-12' John Deere wheel
disc , 1-set of John Deere 4
bottom 16' semi mount
plows, l ·Hillsboro tri ·axle
goose-neck 28' tra iler . Call
614-256-6534.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor fac il ities.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Call 446 -7795.

10 FT. PI CO DISC , with 18
in. discs, nofched in front,
s m ooth in rear. S600 .
F IRM.
Call 388·9996

n".oe

JIM'Sf'ARM
' ' EQUIP. CENTER
•
Rt . _ ~w.
- - Gallit!OiiSrOH .
·. Ph. 4"'·3592-446-9777

Boarding and
;========~-~ BRIARPATCH

AKC
Gordon
English Cocke r

FOR SALE
1M1 : Cab · Now
SfYIV. JSO Cw-lns. 13
spoed, 1020 tiN, 11,000
lft iles, PS, •lr, 5th
- •· load.,.. Same a•
new . have 10 Htf. Will
, la~e trN&amp;-111 S41i,tOO.
· PH . 44H5n-44H777
1~2 II. ONP Deck
'trailers, 1981 . 1- J.OOO
' mi .;, 1- 10,001 "'' ·

Good clea n horses tor S&lt;.lle.
Call388-8623 .
1 yr . old Cocker Spaniel,
spaded &amp; also tov poodles.
Ca ll 446-6310.
Fish
aquarium
fully
equiped with every thin g
e ven fish, $20 .00. Ca ll 2561322 after SPM .
For sa le ACK Alakan
Malamute pupp ies also 5
year old fem a l e &amp;. 9 year
old male. Ca ll 446-9319 .

For slae Homelite chain saw,
business
cas h

reolster, antique rocke r,

gOW: used piiOIIO. Ca ll 24591,.

German Shepard puppies.
$25. 992-998 1.

R""'"'gerator : like new,
stvi'O&amp;AM-FM-' radio, air
· conditioners . 10.000 BTU
c...,ent, slicttng window.
C..I.M6-0990.

CG .• 636 E .
Ohio .

~omeroy ,

Main St.,
9!2~5 .

· Martin 12, 5trift,g acoustic
gultltt'·S375.
tour

Di,..,lle wilh

chairs

(yellow) ·SJO.

Cwch 13 sections! with
re\fer'Sib le

cushtons-SSO .

stereo speakers-$20 . 614949·2741 or 614-94,·2457.
For oete : Gat dryer. like
new.'·· 173 Chevy Caprice
bOdY in good shape. 72 Hor·
net for parts. Must sel l,
need space. 949·2488 .

All wh ite male German
Shepard Ph yrs. old . Exce llent watch dog. $75. 742·
2753.
AKC reg istered Alaskan
Malamute puppies, 614-446·
9319 .

F INCHE S $10.99 ea ch,
pa rak ee t s $15 .99 each,
cockatails $50. Fi sh Tank
Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave . 304-675-2063.

WEIGHTS and t.nch with
let ••tension, pnone 304·
675--1634 .
FOLEY saw filling equipment' for sale . . Phone 304·

57•·2293.
BED, .Co lema&lt;1 he ate r ,
clock. 4 radl41 tires, 2

radios, water fiJ1er housing

and . e'ement. and water
tan~; phone ~J.7S· 5375 .
"
.
Buildlnt iuppties

Building materl;als block.

brick. sewer : pipes, windOWS, llntels, .. etrc. Claude
Winters. Rio, .8fande, .0 .

,.

ca\1245·5121 . -'
LUMBER
1"~8"x6'

·

l''x6"

and

John Deere 4010 A -1 con·
di ti on. 985-3537 or 985-4131
after,6.
Sale Massey Ferguson
To35 . Fr ont end Loader ,
Back end w inc h. Call

7678 . '

•

m-

JOH N Deere, 13 hoe grain
drill , model FB · B and a
Kools 5.4" forage blower .
304-67 5-4308 '
63

Livestock

Goats, kidsr 3 yearlings. 3·3
mos. old &amp; 2· baby kids. Call
614-682-7048.
22 month old Reg istered
P o ll ed He r e ford bu ll. SSOO.
Call446-4635.

7 months old Hereford bull.
Can be registered. 614·9492179 .

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hav for sal e. Ca ll379·2424.

For Sa le Bundy clarinet,
good condition . Call 446·
1797.

Mi xed hay for sale. Square
bales. 992-3553 .

1 arm

Sappiles
1 title_stoel&lt;

61

HA Y tor sa le, first cutting
orchard grass, call 304-675·
4308 .

Uti l ity trailer 8x5, sturdy,
only one year old . Also 1978
Gravely tra ct or . Ca ll 446·
9627 .
New &amp; u sed Troy bui
ti llers. Bu lk garden seed.
Swisher lmpt ement, Inc .,
Ga llipoli s. Caii446·0.47S.

thro ...16' Popla r

•n

.B

7.

I.

humorous article in "Inter-

1!1Queezes East out of a

national Popular Bridge."
South bu sold his soul to the
devil in return for cpod luck
at bridge.
Ht Is not much of a player
so after getting to seven
sp Ide. and recelylnl a

diamond. A heart,back to bll
band ~queeZI!I Weot out of a
diamond. He must retain a
club. So dummy's three dillmondl take the last three
trlcu.

Autos tor Sale

74 Bui ck Century , 4 dr .,
good s ha pe, $650. Ca ll 4462439 .

iHEWIPAPERJ:N'I1:IIPRfii:AIIN,.l

71

Auto for Sale

'77 Dodge Charger spec ial
ed ition, Ec . New ra dials,
muffler &amp; pa int. PS, AT ,
AC, AM·FM stero, crui se,
one owner, low miles,
$2,895. 446· 1325. Selling to
buy station wagon f or
growing family!

Autos for Sale

19?7 Trans Am , auto, PS.
PB, air, l ow miles. 1979
vw . 4-spd, air cond . Call
446-2599.
HARTS Used Cars, New
Ha\len West Virg inia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock.

1974 Mercury Comet 302, V8, auto. tra ns, rough . Call
446-3044.

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
C ARS
AND
TRUCKS
many s old
through local sales, under
$300 .00. Call 1-714·Se&lt;1·0241
for yl;)ur directory on how
to purchase . Open 24 hours .

1982 Plymouth Re liant .
A. T..
AM · FM s tereo,
digital cl ock, 35 mpg , under
warranty . $7000 fi rm . 992 5628.
1977 Ford Thunderbird,
wh ite with blue infer ior ,
AC . PB . PS, AM-FM 8
tra ck stereo. Excellent
condition . $3500. 992 · 7735 .

Nova , 350, 4 barrell, 4'
speed.
oversize ca m, 1975 Ford Torino, runs
cutlass whee ls, great tires, good. good s ha pe. $500. 992 new paint, litt,le putty , l ot of 6316 .
new parts, perfect cond itiOn . 1969,$1495. 742 -3063 .
1960 Chevy . 3 speed . 6 c vlin·
der . 50,000 original miles.
197? Ford Thund erbird,
A-1. $1000. 992-3798 alter 5.
$1.650.00 . Phone 446-7322 .

shealhing, air dried . Mill
Wood Inc. Yard near in·
ter~Ccllon US 2:1 and WV 2.
3Q.l27l·a522. · M-F 8· 4: 30,
SIIUrday 8· 1.
~

71

1976 Ford Granada 6 c yl. ,
auto. tra ns. PS, PB , very
good mec hanica ly . Call
446·3044.

79 FORO Fair(Tiont, 4 door
stationwagon, fully loaded .
$4200 . Call286-4346.

Farm Equipment

Gravely Tractors, pur ·
chase a new Gravely in
Marc h and get a special
early Spring discount, In
addition to a FREE r ota ry
plow or t il ler. Outdoor
EQuipment Sales, Jet . Rt. 7
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph . 4463670. Open weekd ays 9 to 5,
Saturdays 9 to 1.

•

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Musical
Instruments

57

queen of clut. lead, be
makH the band by flndln1
Eut wtth specifically the K·
NOIITH
~Q-J-4-S of bearll .
• QJIO
Tbe play he .... Is ID lead
.. 10711
a heart from dummy at
+AKI
trick two. Eut plays bll
.AKI
jack. Now SOuth takes hla
EAST
ace, plays two rounds of
trumps and the ace-klnl of
II
.. ltQHS
diamonds ID gel to diiCard
+JIIU
+Q IOII
liis nine of bearll. Tben tlHI
QJIOVI
10 of beartl from dummy
SOUTH
givea him a chance ID ruff
.Aitllll
Eut's queen.
.. H
Back to dummy with the
+T
last hlch club to lead the
•a12
seven and pick up Eut's
kin&amp;. Now he lela to dllcard
his 1oslnl club on the five of
heartS.
Eul
Soolll
The band doesn't require
any of this luck. After the
aNT P.. ~
club lead there Ia 1 perfect
double ~queeze available.
"
p. . ~
p. . p . .
Actually, lt bU been set up
for him In simple form. All
he must do Ia run off bllsev·
en trumps and dllcard three
Oponinllead: 4oQ
heartS and the four of clut.
from dummy. Eoch oppoo
nent Is down to three dla·
By Oswald Jacoby
mondl w!Uie Wesi must bold
ud Alan Sontac
two clulio and Eut two
beartl.
Today's band Is from a
Now a club- to dummy

305 Henderson
Henderson, WV.

72

Truck's for Sale

DABBLE SHOP

1980 Ford' PU . 6 cy l. ,
stand ., $4250.00. P hone 446·
7322.
1969 Ford, 1972 GMC, 1969
InternationaL 1968 In·
1967
In t ernat iona l ,
ternational. Call367·7533 .

69 Ford pickup t ruck, flat•
bed, $500 or best offer. Call
256-1528.
69 Chevy 'h ton P. U. Flat
bed , 307 Sta nda rd tran smission, good cond, $500.
992· 3682.
197 4 GMC '12 ton tru ck,
good tires, 6 ply, runs goOd,
real good bed &amp; body . J .A .
Hatfi eld, Ga llipolis Ferry,
WV .

73

Vans &amp; 4 W. O.

Jee p CJ5, 6 cy L, 3 spd ..
lock -in hubs, high back
buc ket sea ts, AM· FM 8·
track, roll bar, 12x15 tires
with white spoke rims, runs
good &amp; easy on gas. Looks
Sharp, priced to sell . Call
367-7671 or367· 7560 .
1978 Jeep CJ ·5, hardtop,
PS, AT, 25,000 easy m i., 4
extra tires, $4,300. Call 367 ·
0449 after 5PM .
Blue &amp; Silver 1975 Dodge
van, good cond. Call 379'2701 evenin·gs .

1976 Dodge Sportsman
Van, bucket seats in f r ont,
2 big seats in back. Call379·
76 PI NTO station wftg on 2712.
Squire. 25 mpg, radial
t ir es, no rust, AM·FM, 8· 1978 CHEVROL E T, 11• ton,
tra ck, excellent condition, 4-wheel-drive, 23,000 mi les,
304-675-6662.
A-1 shape, phon e 304-6753625 .
1975 PONT IAC , Bonneville,
good condition, 304-675- 74
Motorcycles
5455.
All used bikes reduced at
Befz Honda, check with us
1969 VALIANT . 74 In- before you pay to much.
ternational travel, 4·wheel· Call 446-2240 .
drive. 1979 Dodge lruc k, 6
cyl , standard, LWB . 1968
Pontiac, 400 cu . in . engine 2-1981 Honda motorcycles .
&amp; automatic transmision . Wa:~NO CB c ustom. Call
304-675 -6628 .

Gener11

LOVE AT
FIRST SIGHT
BEAT INFLATION
8'14'!" ASSUMPTION
Charm and quality will
be yours in 1hls all brick
3 bedroom home. L.arge
li\ling room and formal
dining r9om with large
picture
w i ndow.s
overlooking the Oh10
River . 3 baths, tamiiY
room 2 car gara9e with
door ' apeher, attic, 2
fireplaces, central air,
large basement, and
over
1
a c re
of
beautilully landscaped
grounds. Close to the
city. For more details
call today .
1523

WILL TRADE
FOR FARM
6 rooms, 2 story home..
Natural gas. F .A. turnace. All the city couvenience. 1 car gara·ge
or storage bldg. If
have a farm and
i
'town, come in and lers.
talk trade.
,
N
GOOD TASTE
AND GOOD BUY
Crouse-Beck Area
Beautifu l 3
to 4
bedrooms, two and one·
ha If bath s, 2- car garage, ••
ex tra large k itchen
lea ding to a sun deck,
family ro o m with
f ireplace, extra lot, plus
more. Superb condition ·
and in ci ty sc hoO ls ~
Listed in the mid se ven·
ties.
N514

PICTURE BOOK SETTING
_ '.
Unique three or four bedroom brick h?":~P m mt nt
condition . Large living room and dtn.ng room,
both with fireplaces . 21f2 baths . Front _po_r ch an~ .
back patio. Kitchen is equipped .with bUilt tn stove,
r efrigerator, freezer, dishwa&amp;her and fooc;t cent~r .
Master bedroom ha.s a private dressing room _w1th
sliding dOors leading to patio and pool. Beaut1fully
decorated . Call today for mare delai _ls .
NS21
AHOMEFORYOU
'
' $49,000
Lovely brick and frarne ranch home located on state '
,ighwav . Large country sty'le kitc·hen with lots of .
. built·in cat)inets, bar, rangej and refrigerator\ ,
T hr ee bedrooms, 2 baths, f orma t dining room , and
l arge living r oom 'with fir ep lace. Cal l for your apoointment now.
N378
LAND CONTRACT
$39,500
Owner will hel p you finance this extra neat home,
l oca ted on state highway . Three bedroom s and
bath. Kitchen with range ~nd refri gerator . would
make a good investmenttor a home or r ental. 11493
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST
84 Acres More or Less
(Free Nat. Gas I
·
Step into one of the cleanest farms in an idea i ·IOcfion . Three good sized·bedrooms, large living room,
sunny eat-in kitchen and bath . Tobacc o base. gas
lease and free gBs a,ll go with it. Large barn , cellar
house and chiof(en house. Call today for many more
"
N' 4~3
ex rras .
LIKE NEW BRICK HOME-KINEON DR .
PRICED REDUCED · - OWNER WIL L HELP
FINANCE . 6 room. 3 bedroom, garage, immediate
possession , natural gas furna ce, centrai air . All
c losets ar e ced ar lined. This is one well built brick
h ome. You ca n see the quality in this home. Ca ll for
j
an appointment.
IN CROWN CITY
N 1 cc 4 room fr c1ml' house with a bath : ~at · in kitc he~.
with metal cabinets and double smk. F\Jel otl
heating stove . Located on nice c ity lot near church.
N511
BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES $47,000 - 3
bedrooms, 1112 bath home with lots of e)(tra nice
features, bullt· ln cabinets, ·self·cleanlnQ. ran~·e,_
dishwasher, garba·g e disposal and large dln~no
, room, Kyger Creek Schools.
I SOl-

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c

. • !·(614)·992-3325

NEW LISTI·- Level

natural gas heat, new

.addl"on
wll~
full
. basement btlnt · built
end 1'1• acrel. LeadIng

OWNER Fl NANCING - 4000 sq . fl . executive
home with 4 bedrooms, 3'12 baths, HUGE
living room &amp; family room with 2 WBFP . For mal dining with deluxe kitchen, basement, 2
car garage. All on 2 acres of beautifu l trees .
Plus a 20x42 lnground pool.
N976

creek water . .
REAL NICI! ·- 1 room
remodeled carpeted
· nome. Modern bath, ·
nice kitchen wtth range,
dining, Iaroe · carport
and levello166•1S0. L.C .
water . Only l:le,OOO.
11 A&lt;:IIES- 111. 7 near
E"tem . Hoaold 7·room
t.se, extra nice 2
lledroom Scllvttzlrailer,
Ud2, garden and
MVel'al bUidli\fl. Just

.Qt,OOO.

. ~NER

COUNTRY
This lovely modular home has all the conveniences
needed .
Kitchen
com ·
plete and a big formal dining area. Large
living room, 3 bedrooms. 1'12 baths, utility
area and 1 acre of lllwn. Beautiful wooded
background.
•
I 961

. ¥Ou can
afford . Small down
PIYment and move ln .
·H.. . nveral bedroom!,
·!W bath. basement,

and

.-

'

W5 'NEO OIHI HOME
?0-III.L.-f, NO SALE,
-110 CHAReL TRY US
.... II!IT •asuLTS ..

,fft-117' NOW. ' ,
htllorSI

• eerdon,

IMIIII, Vlrll!f• lw Mllrplty:

""

'

Hnu .. "I

Ht:.ulil"·, fl.'t .&gt;

MOVE IN
clothes. Beautlfu114x75
Added family room
woodburner.
l'nocm.• l dining area with bUilt-In china
cal) Inets and baY window . Storage tildg . and 1
lawn.
1951

a

'WOrkshop on ·o large lot.
Onl\1 132.500.
A&lt;:RES - . Cattle
'""" · and hoy lond. 10
room form nome with 2
' baths. Large family .
ream. modern kitchen,
IIIII Of good carpeting,
f - ,as furn..:e heal.
baMment, and large
wra~around porch. Will
soli for leso then the ap·
pralsat . l'ry me.
MIDDLEPORT - 20 yr .
old · A bedroom hOme.
~trge
fam ily room ,
Iaroe patio, garage and
, _ lot obave a II
flOOds . Nolural gas furnace, 2 full baths and
bMUIIfUI VIew. Asking
•_.,7,000.
· Qffer
\\081c-ed:

-

J9 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tillc"'h l ~ pastur eland, so me timber , plen ty of sp ring
wettt-&gt;r, 1,, m ile fronta ge on Prospec1 Church Road .
Phnnl' for full details .
11 497
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME
L oc at~d in city of Gall ipolis., close to s up ermar k ~ t s.
~ nd business sectio(l . 10 rooms, 3 or .4 bedrooms.
modern kitchen w ith lots of~bioets , dishwasher,
qarbaqP d isposal , electr ic 1~ I ~;,l'fl range . Formal
d inl nq room , familv, recrea
.rtom . Ju st Jots of
room . Centra I l!l r , natura I g'· ~· ~~ f4 furncKt! , centra I
P.A. sys tem, firepl8,ce, pial'\ r n 1home . Younn ap·, ..
pie end peach tr et.·s·, ffow e.rs a.f)d shrubs and a tot ·
•
. MUSTSEETHISCIJT,VtiQfyiE.
Nl91 ·

,.

i

-.

1

WOODED SURROUNDINGS - · A good FHA APPROVED
location for children to grow. 2 story frame bath In GallipOlis. Gas furnace, some ap·
home &amp; 3112 aces. Home has living room, pliance!i stay . ~ acre lend. Listing price is
family room, din ing room, kitchen, 1 bath, 4 $28,900. Financing $24,000 al 11,. A.P .R.,
bedrooms and cellar house. Terms can be S261.00 monthly pa'(,ments.
N'49negotiated in selling this prOPerty .
N885 . $CERAMIC BUSINESS$ - Be your own boss.
MODULAR HOME _ LIKE NEW _ 3 meet new friends &amp; earn a profit, too! GOing
at below market costs. Owner financing
bedr90m , modern In every way . 'h basement. available. &lt;!all for more details.
I 955
Utility room. spring fed reservoir on 1.96
acres. You must see loappreclate.
N959 30 ACRES VACANT LAND- Sec. 8 Raccoon
Twp. lS acres woods, 15 acres pasture. Finan·
INTEREST RATES HIGH I - look al this. 2 clng available. Listing price Is 515,500 . S7,7SO
prime acres set up ior mobile home . $10,000 . down. OWner will carry the rest qf l:l'lb A. P . R .
OWner will finance with ss.ooo down, 1m ,
t54
A. P .R. for 10 years. $71.74 per month.
II 904
.
BLUE LAKE DRIVE - 197512x70 Penthouse Refinance In thre~ years.
' .
COMMERCIAL - Approx. 7 acres Green and
mobile home and '" acre lot. Home has 2 ·
bedrooms. 1 bath. utilitY area, living room BUILDING LOTS - 11 lots totai100'XI20' left . SprlnQfield Twp. ~ocated between Rl. 35 and
and l&lt;llchen . Possibility ot a land contra.ct. N side of road, 120'x100' right side oi road. Nice Old 35 at Rodney . Rural water. large tap paid,
1 9&gt;45 natural gas. F lat lot, one of the best. · I 91t
t
7
a flal lots. Modular homes welcome.

CHARMING TR I· L EVE L
180050. FT. PLUS REDUCED
L.arge l iv ing room w i th f ir cplact•, d ii1i ng room wi t I,
sliding doors to concrefe pat io, modern eilhn kit .. ·
chen. large r ecreatlon room Or' f irst level. Utilitv
room , 3 bedrooms with pltonfy of closet sp!?'lce, 21'1
baths, air con ditioned, storm doors and w i nd o w~ . 2
ca r finished garage, leve l 1n1 IOO'&gt;c JOO', lnts more :
Call for In to.
"~ 6S
KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRI CT
Moder n 3 BR ~anch horne appr ow . 4117 yr s.o.ld Th1•r
mopane wi ndows. storm door~ . FA furna ce, W1fh
centra l air, ki tche~ has bu ill-in C:ilhi nds, sta inlt•c; s
steel dbl . sink and di nlnq ;ara . Full basem en t ..,,,, rh
patio doors. Rural water sysft.•m . uar il&lt;IL'. Ca 11 now .

.

H79
'

B"Y THIS HOME
. FROM OWNER WITH 'S2,SOO DOWN
And low interest rate on balance w ith owner. '2
bedroom cottage within 5 minutes of Silver Rc;""'" · •
Shopping Plaza.·
' ' ZONE BUSINESS GALLIPOLIS .
Can be a Beautlful' Home or -Home and/ or
Business Offices, Apartments. Lots of uses . L0\5'
of off street parking. 12' room s plus 4 rooms In
basement. Nitt. gas F .A . furna ce. central air. Close
to business section. 3 car garage . Must see !his one.•
#522
6 ACRES, 1 ROOM HOME-BARN
or 4 bedrooms, tobacco base. electric range, built·~
woodburner, tuel oil F.A. furance, tots of fruit
gi-ape harbor, strawberry patch, 3 acres
tillable, assumable toan. Phono tor more details.
NEW AD bA l LY

I SOl

Vinyl &amp; ' ·'
Aluminum Siding
elnsutation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• New Ropfing
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
,
1·1[&gt;.1 mo.;

MILLER
ELECTR IC
SERVICE

. ~all Ken Young

For Fast service
•
985-3561

'For all your Wiring ,

needs;

~_. PARTS AND SE AVICE

.::

•W•sMn
•Dryen

·~""•··

'

• Oispe1o111

C a 117 42· 3195
3·7·1fc

• Dhhw•shtrl

eHet Wo~ttrT •· ntu

furnaces

repair service and
installation.
Rest.dentt·al
&amp; Commercial

ALLMAKES

9Htc

"We've lillie tr.. 'How WM
,... dl1. door?' 10 'Willt'a ...

,...

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sizes start from l0x24"

u.s. Rt. SO East

Utility Buildings

Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog ·!
Farm EQuipment
\
Deater

Sizes from 4 .to ' and •II
wood buildings 24•36.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Farm EquijlmenT ·
Parts &amp; Service l ·j -tfc

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph: 614·843-2591
•
6· 15-lfc .

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"Le•rn How Free"
One Simple Class
•Summer Coatings
•A~omp&amp;lete ilne of
OldS Candy
Supplies
•WiltonCake
Decorating Supplies

J&amp;
CONTRACTING
*backhoe
• exc;vating
Ueptlcsystems
•wat~r, -sewer
&amp; gas tines

*dump !ruck
•limestone
- ·Uc.el!$111_l Btoded·
PH. 99Z·1201
2-14-l

Sdmething Spec:ial
IOJ Washington st.
Ravenswood, W.Va.
PH . 304·27H148
3_19 _1 mo .

mo.

78

Camping
Equipment

1967 u It Yellowstone .
Sleeps 6, good condition .
$800. 1917 Yamaha. 6,000
miles. Phone 992-6510.

35 court st.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Call446-3896
4 46-3010
ttc

r-------------------_,r--------------------4-------------------AERIAL BUCKET
TRU&lt;:K SERVICE
47 fl. Working Height
PASQUALE .
ELECTRIC
152 Third Ave.
614-446·2716
tfc

=

SKATE-A-WAY
Chester, Oh.

··INCOME

Play Milliiln
Dollar Skating ,
Game
Stop In For Card
Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
7:30 to 10:00
Sun. 2:00to4:30
Available tor
Pri.v ate Parties
PH. 985·3929 or
985·9996
3· 12· 1 mo.

TAX

··sERVICE
PHONE .
992·2490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
, 2·25-1 mo. .,J.

&amp; Heating

)9

13

Motor Home
&amp; Ca.mpers

1964 Avlon 24 fl. travel
traiier with window air
dif ion . Price $3,000.00.
Call
conditioner,
ery gOOd con·
446-4357 afterv5PM.

lnsultafed tru ck topper .
Will fit short bed Ford pick
up t ruck, $75. Call before
2:30,446-9472.

8,

Home
Improvements

cei lings com ·
PLASTERING
and
residential,
estimates . Citll 256·

74
Motorcycles
1980 Honda 750 custom, 1.182.
gOOd w/ex tras, need to sale
$1,800. Call Aol6·8655 alter PAINTING · inferior and
Mon., March.l
5:30PM .
exterior , plumbing,
thru
roofin g, some remodeling .
Wed ., March 31 __
Reg. S20
Now $17.50
1980 A TC 70 Honda, 3 20 yrs. exp. Call 388-9652.
!leg. $25
Now $22 .50
whee ls, like new. Call 446Reg. S30
Now S27 .SO
4292 .
Mar c um
Roofing
&amp;
S35 Wave Lenth
Spouting. 30 years ex·
For Longer Hair
Now S29.SO
1981 l'.,wasaki CSR 250. penenc e. specializing in
Kay's Beauty Salon
Str..,t ·b." e- 1200' actual built up roof. Cal1388-9857.
169 N. 2nd
miles, electric starter. ex'ddle-'
cellent condition . Bought
MI
I""'
August 1981. Sell for $1100.
t.lll992-2725
Helme t included . 614-949J..._ _ _ _.....;3:.:·3:..·;..1:;;,;:..ll 2820.
'

Gall ipolis Oivtrsified const . Co . Custom dozer &amp;
ba ckhoe work. Special
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates . 4A6·«AO .
Electrical
&amp; Refr igeration

REESE~·:·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

:·TRENCHING
. SERVICE·

~--i•c

==:.a::rltr """

--

'

Water-Sewer-E lecfric
~ Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
~ • Septic Tanks
• • County Certified
•'"'
Roush Lane
'
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367· 7560
1-7-llfc

_,..,. ... , .. d

dfrw£slilllllnl

V.'t. YOUNG Ul

s

992· 621 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, OhiO
9-30.1fc

.'

MA1(4 STREET
GARAGE

French City
Painting
resident ial &amp; commercial,
interior, exterior , peper
hanging ,
&amp;
te xtured
ceilings. Call 367·7784 or
367-7160.

79 HONDA Custom 500 C)(,
excellent condition, full
far ing j new · tire s, S2 , 100. ,
30A·458· 1763.
Bell Contract ing General
plumb ing service, home
re m odelirig &amp; repairs. Free
1T
Auto Parts
estimates . Call.u6·4002.
&amp; Accessories

(Formerly Bare Metal)
278 W. Main, Pomeroy

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
Owners

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Glass . Insurance Special March and April
claims welcome, free only . .Gene's Deep Steam
mobile service avail~ble . Cleaning . Scotch Gaurd .
Free es t imate. 992·6309 .
Call446·1011 .

BRAKES· TUNE·UP,S
OVERHAULS·
DIESEL· EliHAUST
Open Mon .-Sal. 9· 5
3-5-1 mo. ·

RON'S Television Serv ice .
_;.,;.-___.:..:.,________~----------------~---------------ll977 Fora Pickup, 4-wheel Specializing in ~ Zenith and
drive
for
parts.
Call
367Motorola , Quazar , and
7533,
nou se ca lls . Phone 576-2398
or 446-2A54 .
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
TRUCK lopper tor short
wide bed, Insulated &amp; F &amp; K Tr ee Trimm ing,
SIDING
wired. $100. Phone 30A ·882- stump removaL 675·1331.
3256 even ings &amp; weekends.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BI.SSEL1
: .SIDING CO.

New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
ecustom Pole Bldgs.
• Roofing work
14 Years Experience •
Greg Roush
Ph·. 992·7583
or 992·2282
. _ mo .
3 17 1

;1 Beautiful, Custom
• Built Garages"
Call far tree siding
estimates, 949·2801 or
949'·2160.
No Sunday Calls

1------------.J

3·11 ·tf c

H~

L WRITESEL ·
ROOFING

All . types ot roof work,
new or repair guller and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949· 2263
949-2160
IJU....___,;....____2_·_24_-t_fc....lll

--.--------

I

77
Auto Repair
CUS.,.OM AUTO BODY
WORK &amp; PAINTING Free
estimates.
low
rates ,
guaranteed work, also
small engine &amp; lawnmower
repair . &lt;IA6·91S9, Guaran·
te~d Automotive. Behind
ArcadeonCourtSt . lnoldG
&amp; J alley, Gallipolis .

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perlenced mason. roofer.
carpenter,
electr i ci an ,
genera l r e pair s and
remodel ing . Phone 304-675·
2088 or 615-4560 .
Wftfer wells. Commerciaj
and Domesti c. Test hol es.
Pumps. Sales and Service .
304-895-3802.

PULLINS EXCAVATING

Scissors. Fabri c
Pomeroy . 99'2·2274.

A

: . SpocloltY"

;;liM LUCAS

Ge~oral

85

~: f':H. 742·2753

8HIO
VALlEY
•
: ROOfiNG

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

•

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bilthrooms.'· remodeling,
plumbing, electric, •lid
healing.

A net Home Maintenance
-.Roofing of aii!YPI!S
eSiding
ellem.ocleling
• ftree estimates
• 20 y rs. experience

Insure only nondrinkers. Check the extra
benefits we offer on all
your insurance needs.
'

I

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

TOM HOSKINS
Pi\. f49·21H or t4f·2322
7-S·tfc

'

8·20·tfc

FowlER CONSTRUCTION
. 1

CA-N HELP YOU
'BUilD YOUR DREAMS! ·
New Construction

· and RemodeliniFROM COICRETE TO ROOFING .' .··
AND EVERYTHING IIIBllWEEN. ., ..
PM. tft4Jaor ......

INSURANCE
.COMPANY ·

.Wesl Des Moines, Iowa

LEAD IN.GHAM AGENCY
2ND AVE.
PHOIIE446-7&amp;99

•

I

lo, " ••

1

I•

CLI=IS.SIFIED 1=1DS.

Shop,

SOLUTION

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367-JA/1 or
367-0591.
JIM S Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304-675-7397 .
Camp Conley .

{7

_l;l]&gt;ll."lstery __._

TRISTATE
UPHOL STE RY SHOP
1163 ' Sec. Ave ., Gallipolis .
446-7833 or 446· 1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Bo• 124. Pl. Pl~o sa nt , 30467H154.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1ooln

7COiect
12 11

noer

17 Atilt21 UINI22Poel Altghfoot

23 Ur-..y
24"'25Md: LII.
211111111'*21 Equlll

30 c.-'1
,_
32 T r o - ·
35 IWOIC

·
37 l.lngtrl
31Tidy
40 Zing
41 King ol

nom city

7771 tio mint.
7tW-

at

Actor
Wlllech

u Nu611 noe
13 N Alnl'a
_,
85 Pope ,
17 P.-1 ol PTA
Hllumpllml
OOMIItc:l&gt;ed.oa
.-.
12-11
114 Mlddoy
t5 Cllm

IMIIrfHatoa
17 Wrltlonln

33AiprMBnt

...,..

99

~lon

ol

1011 lltorlea
Elgie"'
~

101 Aloma
t02 -hlng

...,.
103 nbetan
.......
1111i Sploo
107 ol allot

52 -Qlolurblnce

part
I 10 Praludloe

548colla
!WI
57Cimblng
511111111yII Poi!OIIncl

IIIB&lt;Iol
113 Gralultlea
114Femlloti5Abbr. ona
' lhlp
116 "I -

41 Mldrkl

p-·..-

dlnoo..."

dllly

cymbiiO

12181-

678cnp
e
e-

t22NirCOtiC

IIIIIIromlo•
.-

t23T.124 Y - ol
01111

71

12t -

ee Hindu

t

IOD Foollll&lt;e

111 ,_,"' •
pqrtrlil
Ill c 120 Froncll

WIIGI1I ol
72 au...t
...

74 . . _ 78 Sauer

attlde
-

ucavatton•

128 LongteggeCI Dlrd
130 Vljll·

~~~~~~

132 YOIIfl
134 'Manlfest
135 Spare
138 Map abbr.
137 Sl"ohed
139 Bound
1&lt;41 Prln1er's

-

mouure

142 One, no

manlf

143 Hit.
145 Trop
147 Jog
1498olpot18f
152 ScM note
153L~

8Mhan
43 8111 ~*'0
45 Encounlon
~7 MD.'* lid
41 Obal..-

·DRINKING

We

, '

Hauling

t12 T . 113 Maturo~
114 TtuiOnlc

AKES GOOD
SENSE

l

JACK S REFRI GERATION Air cond i tion servi ce,
commerc ia l. industrial .
Phone 882-2079.

DDklng

eDoters
·e Backhoes
• Du"'p Trucks
eLo-Boy
eTrencher
eWater
esewer
eGas Lines
• Septic System•
Largo or Sm•ll Jobs
PH. 992·2478
3-11-1 mo.-pd.

I

SEWING Ma chine r epairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen

-~--

1978 Kawasaki 650. New
chains and fires, good con·
dition. 1978 RM 400, good
cond ition . 992-7l82.

Nu·Prlme rtplocemenl
WindOW I
Storm windows &amp; doors
AIUtt~lnum &amp; vinyl
sldlnt
How mot Patio &lt;:ovan
Howmet scrHn rooms
Mobllt home ownlngs
Aluminum utility
bulldlntl
' " Millar Drlvt
446-2642
Fret Elllmlles

Excavating

84

1977 Starcraft fold out cam ·
per, sleeps 6, ex. cond,
$1,400. Ca i1A46·3040 .

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
446-3915
No Answ er 446·2062 ·
MOdern steam cleaning
for carpet &amp; upholstery
(Insurance work) .
• Scotchguard ·3M
• Walls, floors ,
windows
• Water &amp; ' make
damage
Industrial
Commercial
Residential
Dependable, 8 years ex ·
perience. Wedocarel
'
lc

Plumbing

82

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone A46·3888 or 446·4477

textured

·Gerald Reuter

CARPENTRY ,
hom e
building &amp; remodllng ,
plumbing , electrical,
tnasonary , 304·675 -2440.

CAMPER,
sleeps 3,
refrigerator . ,stove &amp; mise .,
$600. phone 304-675-4373.

==================~==================~==================:j~~~~;;~~~~~~-~ST~U;~C~C;O

'

DRIVE A LITTE , SAVE A LOT
3 BR . full basement,.white alum inum si ding, fu el oil
F .A. fu r nace. 30'x40' barn , sh~~fcd roof, lots of
young peach and apple' tr ees. Al l this reduced to on,
ly $14.900 .
1 452

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

~:;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;=~t=========iit==========;i;:========:;:::~
.F

3 BEDROOMS- 3 ACRES M. OR L.
Mobile home 14'X70' 1976 Freedom, 1'1• baths.
derpinning, lots of builf·ln cabinets, rao1o.,.:
refrigerllfor, dinette set. Air cond itioner and
furntture . Rural water, n ice land for garden . All
for only $22.500.
N

FIN~NCING

roof

1505

t

-'Hen Is -

n.ew

FREE A•' $2.00 detail brush,
wilh the purchase of a
paint kit.
3· 5-1 mo. pd.

n•

. · ·

..
Plline

POME.ROY ;
OHIO
PH .
992 - 2063
STOP and look at our
finf. selection of piaster
and ceramics .
-unks
-planters ·'
-s)aluH
-paint
- mirrors
-spray
-plaques
-brushes ·

I

VIRQILB. S'II, " " ' '
116 E . 2nd 51,

n ~~~!,~';j
level with
f&lt;
dining,
room, bright
kitchen and full baths on upper level. Lower
leve l not finished With 1 car garage. 1 acre of
nice lawn .
1977

Dozer &amp; backhoe ser··
waterj sewer,
ponds,
foundations ,
re~I:J mation.

vice,

RUSS ANDMA)(
E.LLIOTT
Lennox Heatint &amp; Air
Conditioning . All Types
Insulation . Electrical
Wiring.
Call 44HSIS or 446-0445
after 4:30p.m.
tfc

Dodge truck, 1973 2-ton, 5·
speed forward , rear au ;als,, 1
80 gallon gas capacity,
12x8x7 bed. Good condi tion ,
$1,800. Ph. 614-992-7104.

TEAFOR

TIME sty le house, . overlooking beautiful
valley. Has almost everything . DR , FR. 2
baths, 2 showers, 2 car garage, 23 acres.
pump, centra l air. R·S rating insul ation.
see to appreciate.

AfiD

CONSTRUCTION

1977 Ford pickup, good
co nd . 6 cyl. Ca ll446-ol554 .

BEAUTIFUL WATER~RONT
ALL BRICKHDME -'- &lt;:tTY SCHOOLS
Ideal for boating, fishing and picnicking at our
back door . Enjoy this spacious cheerful house w ith 3
~drooms. 1'12 baths, large living room, oat-In kitchen, , 2 fireplaces, full basem~nt, 2 porches, chain
link fence, plus much more. Coil today to make an
appolntmenl to see this lovely ye~r around home. 1

S~RING

.Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

EXCAVATING

•Vinvi .S idino
•Carports I Patio
Covers
•Concrete Work
•Room Additions

Sl .,

.11•1 htiW - Oonoral
'

totln Middlopar1, 50X9~ .
GOOd for .frailer or
house . want.,ly $5,000.
NiW LISTin- Small
country homo IIIIth bath, '

The

Services
Offered
.
C&amp;M

•Roofing &amp; GuHer
76 MUSTAN G, runs good,

1964 FORD. 2 door, 4 sped,
$300 ., phone 304·675-4399.

R111 Est.te -

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION

1980 TOYOTA Cellca, excellent condition, asking
$6500. Cali after 5. 304-6757438 .
$600.

w. va.

Business Senices

1975 MUSTANG II, 39,000
m ites. Want someot.o to
assume payments. 614'· 446·
8617.

.·The perfect squeeze

Polled He rtords for sale.
Yearling bulls, bred cows .
4H and FFA hei fe rs. Call
61 4·247 -2704 or see Coun I ry
Road Farm at the Meigs 1
County
Fairgrounds, 1•
~~~g~~~~~~e~arch 26 ' 71

L.arge round ba les. Phone
614 ·985 -3887 or contact
Albert Parker after 6 p.m .

16' ft. stock trltller $2,200,
100-egg incubator $35 . Call
61-f-7.12-2738 or 742·2178.

55

sette rs,
Span iels.

Cal l388-9790 .

RedWOOd picnic table, $40 .
·Call oiAI&gt;-4544 after 3.

.
Excelsior Oil

KE
NNELS
groomin9.

evenings and weekends.

Ohio--Point Pleasant,

155 Chol'anMd
157 Add"lonal
US8 GrM'k tetter
teo Comfort
162 Elrn
184 Chris of
tennis

1641 Simplest .
1818kil1 feature
16t SweJIIng

170 Plrllinlng
totne
kidneys

17t CUbic
met era

ducka
18 Car or chair
17 OeNert

trut
18 Shadaof
green, ror
Short

19 Stolety
20 SI!P by
27 Prevaricator
29 VOl'( loUd
31 USMA grsd .
34 Morvel
38 fastener
38Guldae
40 BuCket
42 Area and

Mer•

44 Clvlllnlurv
48 Chlir
48 Llleleu

49 Long cut

I Sharp
2 Prlpolltlon
3 Uquld

......

40oddeuof
hMIIng

5 AJgonqut1n

8Retllna
7 Plld notlet
8 Atlupage
9 Agllo

10 Iron or
heat
II Mini or
World

,._

t2Hebrow

loll•
13 Cofded
cloth

country
IS Downy

r~~~nM

ldOWI

102 Sharp

--'

IOUild

10&gt;4 Vut throng

tOll Lubrlc:Oto
107 Blunder

108 Animal
t10 Ring
encounter
11 1 8corchetl
112 Instrument

11A Rely on
I 18 Singing bird
I 17 Capuchin
monkeya
119 Conoplrocy
121 Affection

53 Frog's

122 Heavy ct~rt
123·Sun god
125 Make a

relative
55 CaiCUIII
co4na: Abbr .
56 Dlopolched

121 -, too, two
128 Aal~e~the
aplrU

58 Refunded

128 FrMMldly

80 Tow1rd
ahetter

130 Decllred
13 I Tidier
133 Microbe
138 Slithery mud
138 Want bif ,.,.

~Ardent

51 Scale note

62 Arrow
85 MilO Sheep

DOWN

8381:M,Pw.U

95197Aellaelllte
mop
98 Cryllka

88Cho-t
89 Troln bed
70 P•W•cx
Delle
72 Painful
spoil

73 Boring

75 High
mountain

78 Flag
71 Fry qu ickly
79 More
unusual

80 Chlliengel
82 Toltera
1138-ngl
a• S1oroge
atructurn
IMISpock
88 Brown kiwi
BVN~

90 Supt)Ofla
91 Holperl

IIWelllllf

1-40 Delll-

143 - what!
144-'1
ta1t•er

148 Smooth
1_.8 Allowance
for waate
150 ChurCh arM
151 Smell
amount a
153 Permn

t 54 Edge
158 HIIIOflln'l
concom
158 Betore
181YBI,In

llerceiona

t ll3 ay.

185 Thllllum
aymbOI
167 TeutOnic
dttfly

,

�Page-0·8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hot pursuit · follows Gallia.ih¢ft ·incident

Hoeflich's Beat of the Bend

Bob talks back••
By BOB HOEFUCH
. For several weeks now you've
been asked to talk back to me.
That's all well and good.
know me - I
_..,.
think it's a twoway street. So
why don't I talk
back to you?
To Carol and
Chri'S
Layh :
Thanks for the
tour of your new
BOB
community school facility in
Syracuse. It's going to be a great
asset II! the community and I love
your attitude that it just Isn't going
to be a school - but a center for all
sorts of happenings.
Incidentally, I'm perlectly willing
to take the blame for the misspelling
of Meigs on the sign. In news"papertng you learn early that you're
to blame for many remote thjngs.
And now - about that paint on my
suit and tie, a result of the tour. Do I
file the suit against you as administrators, the contractor or the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation. Please adviSe as I've
always wanted to take my case to

court.
To Phyllis and Roger Spencer: 1
hear you are now holding down the
meat department of Mark V in Mid·
dlepert. !iow that's good news and
with your know-how, I'm sure that
you will have 'em standing in the
aisles.
However, how are the race horses
going to react to your return to work
after having had your undivided at- '
tention since your retirement? Watch them back feet.
To Allegra Will: Well, it's high
that you shutned out of
Veterans Memorial Hospital. TI!ei-e
are too many of. us who need your
words of encouragement for you to
be hung up out there for so long.
Seriously, glad you're better arid do
keep In touch.
time

nesses? Hliving worked in the
media, I am sure you know what I
mean by a "low week." Thanks,
Janet.
To Mrs. Archie Rose : Near
deadline Friday, I became involved
in a story on the damaging of a
radiation gauge at Meigs Mine ! and
as a result overlooked your announcement that the Eastern
basketball banquet Is •at 6:30 p.m.
Monday at the high school. I meant
to advise everyone that tickets are
$5 and are available at the superintendent's office. I'm sorry 'bout
that!
And Jennings Beegle,
I understand that you are the in-

dividual who came up with the idea
of paving the area around the
Southern Junior High and kindergarten building and the parking
lot at the junior high.
Now that's a major project but I'm
told it's coming quite well. I am also
told that the paving will provide
volleyball and basketball courts. So
far, contributors include Ohio Valley
Plumbing, Southern Kindergarten,
Southern Junior High Athletic
Boosters, Shirley Johnson, Ray
Oliver, Jim Adams, Paula Cochran,
Ben Petrel, Mrs. Addie Petrel
Racine Home-National Bank Bob
Ord, Bill Porter, Lee Lee, Victor
Wolfe, Southern Junior High, Waid
Cross Sons, Suzanne Wolfe, Karen
Johnson and Jean Alkire.
, I know you're anxious to get the
show on the road so you won't mind
my mentioning that large and small
donations are greatly appreciated
and can be sent to the Southern
Junior High Paving Project, Box 75,
Southern Junior High School,
Racine.

TI!ere - I've_talked back to you
and I'm glad. Would it help you to
know that I wore Illy green suit and
tie the dsy after St. Patrick's Day as
a symbol of my life - you know - a
day late and a dollar short? Would
To Sherri Myers: I did receive you keep smiling if you knew that 1
word that Eastern Hjgh School spent all of my spare time during the
faculty members will be going past week trying to get the day and
against Eastern students ln a date on my watch correct? All I got
donkey basketball game at 7:30p.m. · from the big effort was a very sore
Friday night with the F .H.A. spOn- index finger and thumb. Or can 1
soring the event.
just take it for granted that you're
If any of the faculty tries to renege gonna keep smiling ...
on taking part leU them to quit aclike mules. Or, perhap_s, I . .
showd say, let the mule kick 'em.
I

tin~

Mar. 21, 1982

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

Maynard told deputies he was drlvtng northbound on 7. He spottetl
In February.
.GALLIPOLIS - A tower Ohlo 7
Galllpolls City PoUce are also In·
resident gave chase to thieves who . awakened around 2: 26 a.m. when the CadUiac going soUthbound,
removed two tailgates and a sUdlng he heard a car go around his house turned around and began chasing. vestlgatlng a late Friday night
break-In at the G &amp; J Auto Paris
to the Shop. He went to the shop and · them . .
rear pickup truck window from his
hid himself, where he reportedly
outlet at 1704 Eastern Ave.
The subjects then .turned Into
body shop early Saturday morning,
,Officers satd they went to the ·
Horse Creek Road, approximately
according to the GalUa COOnty She- saw two subjects load the taUgates,
.
a
hill!-mtle
from
Maynard's
shop,
scene
at U: 43 p.m. when the alarm
from
two
pickup
trucks
taken
riff's Department.
When they arrived, they
sounded.
at
a
high
rate
of
speed.
This
forced
parked
at
the
shop,
and
the
window,
Willis (Shorty) Maynard, Rt. 2,
found
the
bulldlng
had been entered
Into
the
trunk
of
a
CadUlac.
to
fall
from
the
trunk,
the
tailgates
Crown City, recovered the taUon
the
east
side
when
thieves appar·
and
one
was
damaged
when
Maygates, and the sherltf' s department
After
the
subjects
left,
Maynard
nard
couldn't
stop
In
time
and
ently
tossed·
a
brtck
through a
Is con!lnulng Its probe for the
In
his
own
vehicle,
went
after
them
drove
over
it.
·
window.
.
window.
Woody
Plants
reStore
man!lger
The CadUlac then travelled from
porletl
two
HomeUght
chain
saws
Horse Creek to Swan Creek Road,
and then on Bladen-MerceiVIlle mounted on a display were taken.
Additionally, two cars l'ecen!\Y
Road back onto 7, with Maynard In
pursuit. He lost them at that point, . repossessed by Central Trust C(&gt;.
GALLIPOLI$ Twenty-one Thurman; $48; Terry G. Ward, 25, went back to Horse Creek and were found to have their tires
slashed on Frtday, according to the
picket! up the tallgates.
cases were terminated Friday In Galllpolls, $20.
Deputies are also looking Into the report.
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Cited by pollee Friday for speedWarren R. Holley, 23, Rt. 2, Galli·
Five cases were terminated theft of a dinette set from a VIctory
polls, charged with permitting a Thursday In Galllpolls Municipal Road mobile home owned by Judy Ing were Stanley A. Conley, 20, OU
Springs, Ky.; Henry P. Cook, 42,
Wright, Rt. 1, Crown City.
minor to operate a motor vehicle, COurt.
Rt. 2, Gallipolis; and Rebecca L.
Wright
told
the
department
the
fined $50.
Mabel M. Phllllpa, Rt. 2, Crown
home was entel'e!l sometime be- English, 31, Middleport.
Charged with squealing tires and City, charged with petty theft, fined
tween last Sunday and Fr14ay after
fined $15 was Lewis R. Milstead, 19,
~. six months jail sentence sus·
Galllpolts.
W\ndow was broken out. A wina
pended and placed on six months
dow screen w;~s also damaged In Veterans Memorial
Thomas M. Flle, 21, Eureka Star probation.
Route, charged with defective exCharged with unSI\fe vehicle and the Incident.
Admltted,-Bertha Diehl, PomeDeputies are also looking Into the
haust, fined $15.
forfeiting $30 bond was Ralph E.
theft of fertUlzer and teed from the roy; Carl Ralrden, Hartford, W.
Charged with following too Wicker, 37, Oak Hlll.
Va.; Robert Prtce II, Pomeroy.
closely and forfeiting $40 bond was
Keltli W. Jackson, 22, Rt. 3, Galli- old Richard Moimts farm on Floyd
Discharged--Norman, Hawley,
Clark
Road
reported
Friday.
The
George R. Spurlock, 47, Rt. 1, polis, 'charged with failure to dis·
Roger
Bradford, Hubert Wolfe, MUtheft
Is
believed
to
have
taken
pll;lce
Glenwood.
play valid registration, forfelted$35
lle
Prtce.
Mary M. Rossiter, 46, Clinton, bond.
charged with failure to obey a trafForfeiting bond for speeding
fic control device, forfeited $40
were Elmer R. Parson, 24. Galllpo- 11
bond.
·
lis, $38, and Sheila M. Spencer, 32,
Charged with left of center and
Rt. 2,VInton, $10.
forfeltlng $40 bond was W. Jason
Proctor, 20, Rt. 4, Galllpolls.
Gallipolis, Oh.
417 Second Ave.
Luella M. Henry, 51, Bidwell,
charged with failure to yield, forfeIted $40 bond.
Charged with expired registra· Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to 7:00
tion and forfeiting $35 bond was
IUO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Watson R. Davis, 81, Rt. 1,
Sat. 1:00 to 5:00
College is currently seeking apGalllpolls.
plicants for a food service
Forfeiting bond for speeding
paraprofesSional training program.
were:
Mon.-Fri. 7:00p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
The training program is to be
Lee L. Hout, 45, Gallipolis, $38;
CETA VII funded by the state of
James B. Layne, 22, Huntington,
SPECIAL
Ohio,
according to CETA program
W.Va., $38; Dean A. Slayton, 31,
New Haven, $.18; Ronald W. Dear- specialist Linda Ragland.
Ragland said that applicants must
Ing J~ .. 21, Rlo Grande, $39.
Reg .
be
economically disadvantaged and
COrnell!'s G. Deskins, 27, HunNOW
$30
have
been
unemployed
for
at
least
tington, $39; Walter R. Messer, 41,
Johnstown, $39; Richard L. San· seven days to meet CETA title VII
Offer ends March 31st
eligibility. ·
·•
ford, 58, Cross Lanes, W.Va., $39;
Interested persoos should. contact
James V. Glbson, l8, Rt.l, Proctor446~4108
their local Ohio Bureau of Emville, $40.
ployment Services or their local
Ella J. McDaniel, 41, Middleport,
Community Action Agency for fur$40; Edward R. Kincade, 35, Rt. 2,
ther details.
Bidwell, $41; Mark E. Banks, 21,

WOMEN'S HOURS

Seeks applicants

MEN'S HOURS

MEMBERSHIP

'20

Phone
FITNESS CENTER HEALTH SPA

To Carl Wolle: When !'signed on
with The Sentinel some 15 years ago,
I did so with. the comment, "when
you think of spOrts, don't think of

me." •

However, I'm not so immune that
I can't be impressed with the
miracle work you do at Southern
High School by producing consistently winning basketball teams
year -after year. Tile side effects of
your successful work are really a
shot in the arm lor the community.
Right on, Carl!

'ELBERFELD$

HAl\JES

20~

OFF
SALE

0.
T.I'.TQ

sp-a
A&amp;:.lt11

INSPECT THE VALUE

100% Cotton Comfort
Lasting Quality
Super Savings

THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS- WE'VE BEEN
VIClNG QUALITY CARS FOR 28 YEARS. BUY
NEXT NE.W OR USED CAR FROM THE DEALER YOU
DEPEND ON-

s750 REBA

new course
in industrial engineering
-

Designed especially for persons in
industry, the course Imparts the
basic understanding of the huinanmacblne system concept to the par·
ticipants.
It will also emphasize the im·
portance of understanding human
capabllitles and limitations with
regard - to displays, ' controls,
deciaion making ·and working en-

vironments. The concept of systems
design for human use is also
stressed and . the participants will .
work on a design project.
Scott Howard, direc~or of the local
campus' admissions and
registration, said Dr. Helmut T.
Zwahlen, professor of Industrial and
systems engineering at OU's Athena
campus, will be class instructor.
Zwahlen has been teaching industrial and systems engi,neering
courses and human factors
engineering and design courses for
OU· since 1971. He has conducted a
·numbei' Of spensored researth
in !he' area of trans- .

GALUPOUS - Recently, Gallia
Academy High School seniors
enrolled In general studies benefited
from a' motivational talk given by
Geoff Overly, instructor from
Southel'!l Ohio College.
The speech, "Ufe After High
School," began with calculatlng the
cost of independence by considering
the cost of living, the necessities of
life, priorities, and career options,
such as service, college, or vocation .
As a group students then did an expense analysis and budget.
"Students draw .their own rather
bleak conclusion about today's job
market. Available jobs are lowpaying and many people must. work
two to maintain a conservatlve life

portatlon saf_ety, driver performance and driver eye scanning
behavior. He current works as a consultant to industry and government.
Tile course offers three credit
hours ·(i.'E 448 or ISE 548) and will
meet 6:33-9 :30 p.m. each Tuesday
beginning Aprll 13 through the
remainder of the sprl~g quarter.
Further information on
registration is available at southern
cainpus office at Irontoo Hlgh
School, or· may be obtain~!~~ by
calling one of q.e following ' nllln'
bers: 532-9021, &amp;67-3777, ~or
363-2078.
\

.

'

(

'".A N

Inspect tlje value during Hanes • Spring Bale :_
20% off suggellted retall for men •s and boys'
lightweight underwear, boxer shorts and Pooket-Ts.

"Factory OHiclals' Cars"

'250000DISCOUNT

100% cotton comfort a.nd lasting qua.Uty ma.ke
Hanes underwear a super value. The extra
llllvlngs offered by Hanes 20% Off Spring Ba.le
ls well worth your Inspection. Taite advantage
of tlliS speolalllmlted offer today I

I

EJ
-

.

Cruise, landau top, am·im,
port wheels,
100%
rranty.

LeMANS
V -6 engine, cruise,
locks, R. wrndow del .,
executive's car, 100%
~arran1tv

79 CHEV.·

$6995

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

engine, air, burgundy,
custom • interior.. 17,000
miles, 100% warranty.

' Air, burgundy with custo-m~
' interior, 14,000 miles.
pect the best . 1
Warranty .

V ·6

$7495

'

Was S749S
NOW

eatures V -6
SPORT PICKUP
tic , air, power
Extra clean mini -pickup,
automatic, bucket seats, lstee•rlrlg &amp; brakes, . local
sport wheels, low miles.
Anniversary Special
Local one owner.
Was S6495
Was $3295
NOW ' ·
NOW

•'

80 CHEV.

0

MORE81 :
MODELS I'NSTOCK
All carr:y ·our
100% warranty.

Famous

with a specific reason why Bob
Evans' brings you back is the
promotion of a complimentary cup
of coffee to take along "fbrtheroad"
after breakfast st Boll Evans. The
offer Is good everyday at every Bob
Evans IOCa\iOn.
Free coffee refills have always
been available at Bob Evans, and
according to Roger D. Williams,
vice president and director of
marketing for the restaurants, the
"cup-to'go" is an extension of that
service.

In-store suppOrt of the new campaign Incorporates posters,
placemats, waitress buttona and
balloons. Creation and pfoductlon of
the "Bob Evarts Brings You Back"
campaign was handled by the Mar·
schalk Co. The televiaion commercial was fllmed at · the
Bolingbrook, Ill., Bob Evani
Restaurant near Chicago.
Nearly 80 BOb Evans .Famil
Restaurants are operating In Ohio;
Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, .pen:nsylvania,, West' Virginia and Keiltucky.

William Diles
on advisory
board

MALIBU CLASSIC

1980 DODGE 050

BEAUVILLE W.INDOW
VAN C20
Air, cruise, automatit, one
local owner . . Low miles.
Sharp. 100% Warranty .

SALE ENDS APRIL 1l

. ~1

Was S7995
NOW

RED LABEL·&amp; BLUE LABEL

Quality That Lasts

. 81 MONTE CARLO

tenn value?
3. Cost·tlme factors - Is more
spent on training than reswts In lncome1
4. Income - an Important consideration, but not the most ~ " '
portant.
,I:.aatly, Overly diBcussed job apPfO&amp;ch attitude and what employei'B
lOO!t Jor. 'He stressed the impOrtance
bf ,the educational recorct, whether
!tan high sc!lool or college u
perhaps the only proof of employability. He also told the studentl!
that skill was crucial as the more
knowledge \hey had, the more cOnfidence they projected in an Interview.

Courie content will cover a wide
RIO GRANDE - Tile Galliavariety
of areas . . Elllimples are :
Jackson-Vjnton JVSD department of
heating,
ventilating, alr conadult education is offering a wide
SOMERSET, N. J. - Jerry Johnvariety of courses for an individual ditioning, welding, business and office,
health
occupations,
and
a
son,
president, Oticon COrp., Somerwho wishes to upgrade or develop
variety
of
personal
development
.
set,
N. J., ·announces the •P.his/her knowledge in a trade, Incourses.
polntment
of William Diles, Diles
dustrial, business, or office ocClasses
will
be
conducted
at
a
Hearing
Aid
Center, Athena, to 11erve
cupation, also in the area of personal
minimum
fee
to
participants.
a
three-year
tenn on Oticon'a
enrtclunent.
Registration
'has
llegun
and
further
Dispensers'
Advisory
Board.
The classes will be conducted at
Information
and
registration
may
be
Diles
jOins
seven
other
prestigi0118
both Buckeye Hills Career Center,
made
by
calling~ between the
hearing
aid
dispensers
~elected
Rio Grande, and Buckeye Valley
·hours
of
2
and
9
p.m.
or
5116.Q2:i2
benationwide
to
advlse
Otlcon
Corp.
on
Career Center, Allensvllle, begintween
the
hours
of
8
a.m.
and
4
p.m.
their
business
prosrarna.
ning Aprll5.

Bri.ng This Ad ·In For AFree Gift!
81 OLDS
CUTLASS CPE.

COLUMBUS - Nell Bob Evans
Farm Restaurant advertising
breaks Monday, March 22 through
the company's seven•state
restaurant . marketing area , according to Robert S. Wood,
executive vice president and chief
operating officer of the Bob Evans
Fanns Inc., restaurant division.
" Bob Evans Brings You Back" Is
the new theme being kicked off with
a 3G-second television spot and 0second radio commercial.
Highlighting the new campaign

JVSD offers adult courses

Two to choose from, 4 dr . ·s edan, 2 dr .
hardtop. Loaded with factory options,
low mileage . Balance of factory
waranty.

Rebates End March 31
ONLY 7 CARS LEFT

style," said Overly.
He emphasized that goi~g on to
school would not guarantee better
wages. According to Ovey, "the real
difference is in attitude, If aptitude
Is equal. The people who best perfonn get the highest J)ay, whether
they are right out of high school or
college graduates. Apply yourself at
whatever you do."
·
Students then explored the issue of
career investlgation and looking for
a career Intelligently. According tc
Overly, factorstoconalder, ln terms
ofpriorlty are:
I. Interest - Happiness Is more
Important than dollars.
2. Job security - What is the lon~:

Bob Evans starts new ad campaign .

PARK AVENUES

Buick Skylarks
Buick Skyhawks
Pontiac Ph·o enlx
Pontiac J2000

. POMEROY-Past Matrons of
Pomeroy Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will meet at 7: .'ll p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Thelma Dill, Syracuse. .:

'

·ou.offers
IRONTON - An Industrial and
systems engineering course ·in
human-machine systems will begin
April13 at Ohio University southern
campus With three hours of graduate
or undergraduate credit. offered.

" In short, we expect to be as Important a factor in financial services
as we are in consumer sales."
On world trade, Telling said:
"As we Americans begin the
rebuilding of o"" economy, we can
no longer ignore our shortcomings In
world trade. We can no longer
manufacture and sell e~clusively for
our own consumption. We can no
longer lose competitive ground on a
world scale. And we can no longer
fail to recognize that the largest
trading companies exporting 'goods
from America are all foreign based
and owned.
"Too many companies have
followed the historical pattern of
Sears," he said. "We import hundreds of millions of dollars of goods
each year and export almost nothing . .
by comparison. Sears hopeS to help
change that pattern. We have the
economic strength and the resolve to ·
make the ,sears family of companies
a truly significant trading company.
"This wiU be one more step in our
evolutionary plan to build on Seal'S'
existing strengths,. while carefully
seeking new and bolder opportunities."

Students briefed
on
career scene
.
.

'82 BUICK ELECTRA

ON

Meets Tuesday

VINTON - Anyone with Information on antiques !lllsalng from
the Dorothy Smith re!ldence are
urged to wrtte to Smith at Box 126,
Rt. 2, Vinton 45686.

.

open hou8e contelt at Bet&amp; Honda Salel on Ohio 7 near
Jll•n•nca. 'l1Mi open boWie wu allo a display of new
Honda model motorcycles.

281H Jlnniversar!l

Squads kept busy

Information sought

OPEN HOUSE WINNimS- FIOIIIIe Ne18oo (left) .
Pomeroy and Jolm Kall of Chellhlre were announced as winners of Honda Passports In the~
of

SMITH ·BUICK- PONTIAC

• To Janet Korn: Your mental
telepathy must be goin' good. How
else could you have known that under the surlace, it was a rather low
'week for us·and we needed that shot
in the ann provided by your kind-

POMEROY --Local units answered tlve calls Friday and on Saturday monilng, the Melgs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
Saturday at 9:59a.m. , the Raclne
Unit •took· Martha Clonch from
Morning Star to Veterans MemorIal Hospital with a possible fractured hlp.
On Frtday, the Tuppers Plains
Unit and the Chester Fire Department at4: 56 p.m. answered a can to
Route 7 about a mtJe north of Chester for a serious auto accident; at
~:51 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit went
to Pomeroy Cliff Apartments for
Bertha Diehl who was taken to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Mid·
dleport at 8:12p.m. went to.the junIor hlgh school for Brlan Dlehl who
was taken to Veterans Memortal
Hospital With a left Injury and
Pomeroy at 10: 29 p.m. took Robert
Prtce ll from Butternut Ave., to
Veterans Memortal.

place Is changing - !!long with the
CHlc;AGO - Sears, Roebuck and
world
economy."
co. is planning more consumer
Sears
is "detennined to . be a
financial services and Intends to enprimary
provider of financial serter world trade as · a " truly
vices," he saicJ, pOinting out that the
significant trading company."
Edward R. TelUng, chainnan and Sears family of companies now
chief executive officer of. the newly provides "what already may be the
diversified comP!InY, said recently • country's largest financial service
that Sears is changing "because our organization.
"Much more is on our planning
marketplace is changing, along with
list." Telling said.
the world economy."
He .also called for federal and
state action to stimulate saving and
"We, like others, will p~ovide opmake the nation's Financial Ser- . portunities for our customers to
vice System fair to aU Americans. borrow money oh their home equity.
Reform of the financial regulatory We will be in the fore(J'ont of those
system, he sa\d, would help the na- who will provide electronic fund
tion's eamomy, consumers, banks transfers throughout the United
and other financial institutions.
States. Eventually all outlets In the
Sears familY of companies can have
In hi.s first public address slnce the
the capacity to accept and disburse
company moved strongly into finanfunds.
cial services at the end of 1981,
"We will be among the first to
Telling said:
· make a truly national financial Cjlrd
"No doubt you have been hearing
capable of handling practically all
and reading that Sears is becoming
household financial transactions.
a new and better investment finn ...
We will pioneer in two-way comor a new and better bank ... or some
munications with the home, through
combination of the two: a kind of
t'Omputers and telephones, for flnanfinancial supermarket. Well, we are
cial · transactions and consumer
changing - because our market·
products as well.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ij;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
FITNESS CENTER HEALTH SPA.'

Section....___.

Sears swings into gear
as worldwide trading firm

Tenninate 21 cases

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;T------------L----:__:_------~--:---:._------

To Jane and Russ Brown: come
on I You've got to be kidding! How
could you have been married 46
yean when you both look so yolillg?
Robert. may not have been impreaed with the 25th and the 40th,
but I have a feeling he'll cross over
the bridgefbrthebigfive-o.

1rimt•· jmtineJ

Air, V -6 engine, 5 door
Hatchback. low ,miles .
Local executive's trade .
Anniversary
Special Pricet
was55995

DiicwON-iPiJii PBat'OGRAPIIY- Walter A.

F8lloa, chalnnaD of Kodak. deli........, lbe new
dl8c camera and mm t1!e company IDiroduced re-

camera e

NN 10 tUe pldun!a
1M&amp; u &amp;be)' can pre~~lbe ~ reJeue, ....... called "olecloLrn-lree phoiOp'aphy .,..
tern." (AP Luerphoto).

cieally. 'l1le
prv&amp;a!Jy

u

Ba~k : One .an~ounc_~s change .

in management of branches
POMEROY - .The board of directors of Bank One of Akron, N.A., has
eleCted Bruce S. Bailey president of
that bank effective April1.
WUllam J. O'Neill, who became a
member of the board of directors of
Bane One COrp. on March 1, has
been elected cllalnnan of Bank One
:of Akron.
In additiOn, the bQard Of directOrB
of Bank One of Ravenna has elected
R. Hal Nichola president of !hat
~- He wlll818U11Ml the prealdency
ooAprlll.
.
Belley, 45, has been president of
tbe Ravenna bank since 1977. He Is a
IJI'IdUfe of !)elllsm Unlvenity, the
8tGnler School of liankin8 aJ Rutgei'B

Before Ravenna, he had been vice
president of branch administration
at Bank one of Columbus, N.A.
Previously he had lleen president of
Bank one of Mansfield. He currently
serves on the board of ~ors of
Akron Area Regional: Development
arid the Akron Great Trail Council of
Boy Scouts.

Nicholu, 39, has been prestder)t of
Bank One of Medina County since
11l'/9. Prtor to that, he served as Ohio

superintendent of banks, vice
old. Phpenix NatiOnal
Bank, and a nirtlllllll bank examiner
with the office of tbe comptroller of
the ClllTfiiiCY. lie Ia a former director of tbe CCIIIfeiew:e of llate bank
1upervlaon
ud eliairman of
IIIII bai* manapnent lllloola at ·
Dlatrtct
n
of
that
c:mterence.
..lllrvlrd IIIII Columbia wdnnltiel.
.president of

Bane One COrp. has bank affiliates
headquartered in COlumbus, Akron,
Ashland, Athens, Cambridge,
Coshocton, Dover, Fairborn,
Fremont, Kenton, Mansfield,
Marton, Middletown, Milford, Mount
Sterling,Paine8vllle, Pomeroy, Por.tsmouth, Ravenna, Sidney,
Wapakoneta, Wooster and
YOQil&amp;ltoWil •.
Currently pe~ share_holder
and regulatory approval are m additional affiliations. They include:
'l1le Flnt national Bank of Sar!llnlli,
The Chardon Savings Bank Co. The
Citizens State Bank In Somereet, the
Herttage Bank In Toronto, 'l1le Twin
Valley Bank In Welt Alaandrta,
and the Flnt National Bank In

CIIMterhiU.

OOMPLit'l'ES DurrBIBVTIO;N - Tile Cei*lll
Tnilt Co. reoa41)' MJ41rte' d!llrD: lila o1..:ar
claM ~bookl ri411?-d, "011 Oar Owa In GaPIPa
CouatJ," 10 NP ldlaal • ...,... Ill tile CNIIIIMiw
..,....... _ , .

-~

1

If

,......._If tile

Oz'PI( dla

CIIJ ..... OdPa Couli&amp;7 1oc8l IChool ...... 'l1le
ellacallont? ,.....,., a

..,.

~ CealrtP

Tmat, ....

Mtempt 10 iHOtlde ·peillaeul;, lndeP"'•en&amp; IIYtDr·
llldJia data ,tor cndu•tee. Seated '(left 10 rfab*) ...
.Jim WUIIaml. Central Tnilt pi llknlt; David Dint,
So.Aw
m HIP School repr e1ea alfole; ud Ent,IIT l..aJDe, 1epa II I Galla .\cademJ H11118cll0ol.,
8tan11 1 Ia o-p Woodward Jr., CfJitral Tmat'"'
olfllle aad marllellnl ~.
1

._,..,,loaD

1

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�Page-E-2-The

Pom

Mar. 21, 1982

w. va • .

Ohio-Point

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

County agent's corner

Merchants'Hotel catered to German immigrants

What caused financial crisis?
Agriculture

POMEROY - PesUclde Training
Meeting - Monday, March 22. Two
meetlnga will be held. One will bil
from I to 4 p.m. and the other from 7
to 10 p.m. Examinations will be
given following · each session. You
need attend only one session. The
IDI!etil1p will be at the Ea1enslon Of.
flee, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
Reaervations are needed.
·
The financial crisis that
. agriculture IS In- what caused It?
Soole, and perhaps all of you have
heard. Here tbey are - Inflation,
land prices, prices received, prices
paid, Interest rates, debt capital,
and ·nel caah Income. Let's look at
theae one at a time. ·
.
· Inflation was ln.slghiflcant from
. 1950 to 1965. Inflation was not over
: slJ: percent for any one year until
:· 19'14. Since 1979 we have had double• digit Inflation.
~ Land Prices - these have gone up
: faster than Inflation. Using 1967 as a
: bue, II takes $2.78 to buy what a
dollar would buy In 1967. For every
· dollar spent on land In 1967 It now
takes f4.47 to buy that land. For Ohio
· It II even higher - $5.21. We keep
BBying people with money (not far• . iners) are buying tbe land and we
can't afford to buy it. This is not

be awahlle overcoming thla. 1982
mlalld purchaied Ia by farmers ex- generally does not look good.
panding their present operation. 1'hi!
Here are some thlnga that could
Ame!ican farmer has the ability to help us get through In 1982 and
produce like NO other Industry. The perhaps 1983. SOme IIU&amp;I!eationa are
fanner Ia continually producing only for tbe short run and some are
more with leas manpower. He suggestions we need to consider as
receives less for his producl and just good sound management prac·
pays more for his Inputs. Even with tices.
tbe Increased cll8t In food the houseFeeding - feeding, In most caaea,
wife Ia still paying less percentage- ill one of our greatest costs. Short on
wile for her food than ever before.
bay? Consider substituting grain fill'
The farmer receives only 30 cents of some of your bay. Ration
every '1 spent on food. The rest'goes evaluations can help you from over·
for processing, transportation, feeding, and feeding a correct ration
(better feed efficiency).
·
packaging, etc.
Farm Debt - The fann debt has
Rotate pastures ~ It will produce
been lncreaslng faster than In- . more feed. Be sure cows are bred.
Oation. ·Since 19'10 farm credit has You cannot afford to feed an open
grown faster than any other cow.
segment. Fanners have substituted
Sorry to say It but a cow-calf herd
machinery for labor. Because of ill not a very proflteble ,nterprtse.
good yields, good profits, and good You may want to sell the herd and
prices, we !lave borrowed more and rent your pastures.
paid more for land. Until recently,
Delay purchasing capital itema
becauae of low Interest rates and such as machinery. Watch your
high Inflation, borrOwing has been living expen!leS. Not generally
tbe proper thing to do. '[n early 1981, recoinmended, but for one year or
low real after..tu Interest rates en- two (If phosphorus and potash levels
couraged borrowing. That now bas are high), cut back on these two ferbeen completely changed. The key tilizer ingredients. Use family labor
fqr succeBB In tbe 19'108 ill now tbe as much aa possible. Do a good job
key for failure In the 19808. Our on your crops. Get crop planted on
capital assets and capital galn.s have time, use a good hybrid, and control
grown by leaps and bounds but this the weeds. Good managers have
does not service our debt or help to good recorda. Use the commercial
pay the btu unless you sell it. We will farm account book.

....-...w

~griculture

AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Local of-

: flclals would have more freedom to

: · !leteJ'1111ne how much food tD serve
• · ch)ldren In school cafeterias If a
: new Agriculture Department prop- osalla adopted.
: ' The proposal, announced last
week, also lays tD rest a controver: ilal plan considered last year that
: ),vould reduce minimum food serv:.1J18S and allow substitutes such as
·: ketchup tor vegetables In school
• lunch menus.
: . ·Aulstsnt Secretary Mary C. Jar·
: ratt, who oversees'food stamp and
. ~hlld nutrition programs, said the
:·. :SO.Cal\ed "otter vs. serve" menu

and our comrp.unity

.

weather patterns. Some of the planting season. So now Is the time
benefits of early planting include:
to get the corn planter checked over,
I) 'lbe crop acqulrea more GDD ~. ·andreadytogo.
&lt;G~ ~ DaYs.l, , _ .,.
,. . .
....._:..
··~·~
GALLIPOUS- Early planting is thus-Is more Ukely to mature iielore
· '
tbe key strategy in an energy- frost.
.
It's time to apply pre-emera~t
efficient corn production operation.
2) Vegetative growth Ia complete- herbicides for crabgraBB cop~!
Data from states aCI"OI!S tbe Midwest and pollination Initiated prior to !hi~' ,;here In southern Oblo.
conslatently show thllt earlier p~ period of greatest moisture stress 111' · . ·, Chemicals recommended ln91ude:
ling leads to higher yields and lower July.
·
;- t B8lan; BetaBBn, pacthal, ~ G
moisture at harvest.
3) Grain filling occurs during the ,.~• .Tapersan. There ,are some
In general, one can say that at leas period when solar radiation Ia high, ~~01)5 on some of 0 . so l'el!d
half of tbe corn crop should be plan- so there is greater.accwnulation of the label and package lnformatiQIJ.
ted near Wooster, OQ (one of tbe dry matter In tbe grain.
. Now lttbe time to:
·
coplest regions In the alate) by May
Tbete lieDerit. perlaln strictly to . I) F'~ pruillng woody plan\-'!
7. As.one moyes farther south (and tbe corn plant Itself. Two additional Ute, . lliiicte and fruit trees,
to some extent weal) within Ohio, benefits are derived from earlier ~·nes; J'Oi!le bushes, blackberry
soils become warmer earlier 1n tbe p~ting which Involve tbe total far- .
-~rry plants and blueberey
spring, allOwing tbe crop to begin nung operation. Earlier ·planting
!0't#.
.
growth sooner. A general rule of leads to an earlier harvest In the fall, .
: ~ stf!lwberry plantings
thumb is that corn may be ptaftted · allowing time for fall plowing. and ' pe~odj~y to detecl new growth or
one day earlier for every 10 mlles application of lime and fertilize~. ; poteqtial.dlsease problema. Remove
south of Wooster. This means that Such practices (where applicable)' some;of,tbe mulch to allow healthy
the optimum planting date for corn will save time the foUowing sprlnil.
plant ~ and developrilent. Ti1e
on well-drained SOils Is In mid to late Earlier com planting alao allows for mulcJl:an be replaced as n\leded fqr
April for much of the com producing earller SOybean planting. There Ia a
bl!l~Sil/n protection againlt frost.
3) Apply lawn · fertlllzers as
areas of Ohio. Across the State, definite yield advantage to early .
growers who have their seed In the . planted beans, and planting the com weather pennlts. New lawns can 1!e
ground by May 1 usually report bet- on time will help the producer get
seeded as soon as the son can lie
ter yields and lower grain molature tbe moat out of his soybeans as well properly prepared. ·
'
than those who plan~ In late May as bla' corn.
4) Plant cool season vegetables
or early June.
Aproducer can do many things to likll asparagus, rhubarb, spinac!J,
Early planting Is beneficial increase· hla chance of planting on
green onions, leaf lettuce, radishes,
because It helps synchronize tbe time. He should have all materials
potatoea and Swiss chard as the
growth of the crop with prevailing and "9uipment ready before t'!e
weather and ao\1 r.ondltlons pennlt:
EzteillloaAiftl,
Agriculture 6 CNRD

Ms. Jarratt told a meeting of the
American School Food Service Association that ·t he proposed regulations would modify that rule.

"School food authorities would
still allow senior high school students tD decllne aa many as two
Items," she said. "But In grades
below the senior hlglt leVel, school
food authorities would be pennltted
to deterrnb!e whether students may
decline up to two Items or only one
Item.''
Further, she said, If a student declines"a full portion of a food item,
schools at all grade 'levels then
could offer a smaller portion.

NIGHT LIFE AT
BUCKEYE HILLS CAREER
CENTER
r---------------------------·
- ____ ... ___ . ,.__. ., ______..
.

What is adult education?
. -Adult education is a program of courses for . individuals to
upgrade themselves or prepare for new jobs.

I
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Where?

•
Cours~s may be held whever adequate facilities exist. Generally,
courses Will be held at Buckeye Hills Celreer Center or Buckeye
Valley Career Center .

I

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For Further Information Call 245-5334
·

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·

GALLIA-JACKSON-VINTON JVSD

·"

I

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I

.

Buckeye
Hills Career
Center
•
.

1

When are classes held?
Courses in adult education may be offered anytime sufficient
community interest is evident. Standard courses wi II be offered
periodically throughout the year as per class schedules.

ADULT EDUCATION

ADULT
EDUCATION DIVISION .
•

1
I

REGISTRATION FORM
N~me (print) .................................... r

•••••••••••••

Address •. • .•.........•.•...........•.. • .•..........•.•.••••.

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Telephone..................................................... .
COURSE: First Choice •••••••••••...•...••••... • •••••.•••••••.
Second Choice •. •• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MAIL TO:
CHECKS PAYABLE TO:
Adult Education
Gallia·Jackson-vinton JVSD
Gallia·Jackson-Vinton JVSD

L---~-------------~-----.!"~0.;.!.0!.!.4!.~~~!~~~~::.~~~-J.,1

LEARN lNG IS LIFE LONG

SPRING SESS_ION SCHEDULE
HOURS
COURSE
Open
Adult Basic Education
Ml
Air Conditioning/Heating
60
Auto Body Repair .
Auto Mechanics I ·
40
Basic Household Repali-s II Improvements
40
24
Basic Microwave Cooking
Body Dynamics: lstSession
12
2nd Session
12
Bualness and Office Package:
Typing
24
32
, Accounting Principles
16
Bualneas Machines
~
Cake Decorating
60
Drafting
'Houekeeping
30
270
* Intenalfled Office Training
30
Medical Recorda
~uters (Survey COurse)
15
120
* *Nurse Aide/Orderly
20
Public Speaking

TIME

DAYS
M-W-TH
T-TH
T-TH
T-TH
T-TH

(P.M.)

11-9

&amp;-10
&amp;-10
&amp;-10
&amp;-10

w

T-TH
T-TH

Free
04-0&amp;-82 to o&amp;-11-82 $80.00
04-0&amp;-82 10'06-25-&amp; . 80.00
~ to06-06-82

04-0&amp;-82 to 06-06-82

. 4:30-6:30
5:30-6:30

Q4-q7-82 to Q4-q7-82
1144-82 to 06-13-82
1144-82 to 06-13-82

&amp;-10
11-10
&amp;-10
7-8:30
11-10

1144-82 to 04-22-32
04-2'7-82 to 06-2&amp;-«1
06-25-&amp; to OB-OS-&amp;2
Q4-q7-82 to 08-0N2
1144-82 to 06-»e

8-9

T-TH
T-TH

T-TH

w

T·TH

M-W

'
FEES

DATml

8-9

M-T-W·11t . .

&amp;-10

T·TH

w

T·TH
T ~ .. l"f

40.00
40.00
35.00
20.00
20.00
24.00
32.00
18.00
30.00

IIO.QO

CK-46-112 to 05-0&amp;-82 . 30.00

8-9

1144-82 to06-06-82

7-8
&amp;-10

~to05-0&amp;-82

04-0H2 to07-1H2

1-eM ... AWH2tc.....,.
'

30.00
20.00
lXI.OO

-· JO.oo

-

.

.

'

.

Homemaker's cirde

Sewing machines
By BEluE CLARK

EzteulonAgent
Home Economics
GALLIPOLIS - Cars have
speedometers to let you know how
much they've been used, and when
·to bave.them tuned. But what about
your sewing machine? Do you know
how to keep it running smoothly, ,and
hoW often to give it a tune-up?
Here are some tips to help you get
"better mileage" from your sewing
machine.
Clean your machine regularly.
'Thread and bits of fabric collect In
your sewing machine as you.sew. If
you don't dust away this lint, your
machine will become clogged, ahd
will not perform well. To prevent
this buildup, brush around the feeddog, needie plate and sbutlle area after evP,!Y two garments or more
frequently when using pile fabrics.
Cover your machine when you're
not using it. Dust will settle on and
inside yowc machine if you leave it
unprotected. You can sew a cover
with your favorite fabric· and experiment with sewing techniques.
Avoid using a plastic c~er since it
holds moisture.
~ · Change , rieedles frequently,
~ needles dull easily, especially with
today's synthetic fibers and finishes.
~, ?rewashing fabrics will remove

~bus==ioo==~~h=e~re~.M==yers~c=o=ntl:n:u=ed~h=e~re~~th=e~p=la=n~to=n~~==co=n~d~A~ve=n=ue~,~il~w~_a:s___:In~l~~=th~e~I~:_T~h:ird~r~oo=m~w=a:s~~~~~~~~~~~

r

finishes and reduce the dulling of a .
needle, as well as taking care of any
danger of shrinking. But you still .
need to replace a needle every two
gannents, or when you notice skipped stitches or snags. Also avoid
sewing over pins, as they may dull
or even break a needie.
Check the presser foot and feedbog. Are they scratched or ·burred?
If tbey are, the fabric may feed
unevenly or snag. To prevent
wearing of these parts, avoid sewing
off ·the edge of the fabric. This
causes the feed-dog and presser foct
to grind against each other..
OU your machine properly. If a
sewing machine is not sufficiently
iubricated tbe moving parts will
bind. If you have a machine that '
needs to be oiled, oil it after each
eight-12 hours.of actual sewing. Consuit your owoor's manual or see a
local dealer for specific oiling in:strucllons. If your machine is per· ·
manently lubricated, don't oil your
machine.
Taking just a few minutes to care
for your sewing machine will keep it
running well for many years. You
should also visit your sewing
machine dealer each year for a
"tune-up." lt's often free of c.IJarge
and will help. prevent major
operating problema.

SAVE MINIMUM
I

'

COURSE
Small Bua!nea Management
CasliFlow
Profit and Loss
Inventory Co!ltrol
StsUonary Engineering Program:
Low Preaure Boll Operators
· High Pr sn-re
BlaUonary steam Engineering
Upholstery
Welding:
Arc and Oxyacetylene
Arc,Oiyacetyleae6MigWeldlng
Woodworklng

... .,-

......

-

HOURs .

DAYS

12
12
12

M-W
M·W
M-W

311

M-W
• M-W
M-W
M-W

24
38
30

98
96
30

T-TH
M-W
111

TIME
(P.M.)

'12.00
12.00
12.00 •

Ot-GW2 to 06-03-82
C5-Gii-l2 to 06-24-82

06-21-12 to Of.a-G
1»-19-12 to0&amp;-21-82

38.00
24.00
38.00
40.00

f-10 ~to0f.ZU2
8-10 Ot-GW2 toOf.a-G
6-9 CN-4N2 to 0&amp;-111-82

130.00
160.00
30.00

8-8

BUCKEYE BUILDING
•. CENTRAL TRUST
AND \ LOAN

TO·

/

.6 7%

; · · WASHINGTON (AP) - The levels for two consecutive months,
: Agriculture Department says the Indicating a possible surge In total
; number of cattle being f~ for tnven!Dry and marketings further
• slaughter In seven major beef down the road.
~ states as of March 1 totaled 6.87 mil- ,....:;;....;.;~;__~------------1
'! · llon head, down 4 percent from a
Don't hit the
• year ago arid 8 percent fewer than
; . two years ago.
panic button over
': Only Nebraska among the seven
life insurance • ••I
! states showed an Increase from
·• : year-earUer levels. In fact, NebrasCall me.
; : ka's March 1 cattle lnven!Dry
=· matched that o1 Texas, tradition; : ally the leading producer of fed
~: cattle.
:
Jim Kreber of the department's
:: Statistical -Reporting servtce said
• last week It bas been several years,
'•( at least, since Nebraska has been
~ No. lin feedlot cattle numbers.
~;
The report said farmers and
~ feedlot operamrs placed 1.32 mil·
"::- lion head In fattening pens during
.::.. February, an 11 pereent Increase
" · from a year ago and 8percent more
• than In Feb. 1!81.
;',; Marketings of "ted" cattle last
Ph.
He&gt;me Ph. 3H·9691
.
·::: month totaled 1.32 million head,
MODERN WOODMEN
::; down 2 percentfro.m a year ago and
' ' 11 percent fewer than In Feb. 1!81,
OF AMERICA
·~ the report said.
Fral,rul Lilt l,s,nt,(t
;:: . Cattle feedlot placements now
Home Office - Jock l•lond, lll lnol•
: have Increased from year-earner

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED! DUE TO THE BAD WEATHER AND THE ECONOMY
WE HAVE 1143,000 OF INVENTORY 1WE MUST MOVE NOW.
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. YOUR GAIN ... OUR LOSS.

'127,
'77.

NEW 182"

FEES

DATES

8-8 · ~tb04-14-82
8-8 04-1N2to04-28-&amp;l
8-8 ~to06-12-82

f-10
&amp;-10
f-10

25%

. •IOCKIR

'

)

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

,GALLIPOLIS :SAVINGS .COMMERCIAL
AND
.
AND .LOAN
SAVINGS.)BANK

POOLS

'REGISTRATION DATES
MONDA-Y, MARCH 15-THROUGH
. FRIDAY,. APRIL 2, 1982

*Intensified Office Training held af Buckeye Valley only.
•
hild at Buckeye Hills
04·20~82 thru 06-17·12; Buckeye v ·ane\i04-04-12 thru·07-tS..82
•'

SWIM

~. Cattle slaughter down four percent

'

.

WHOLESALE •

1liiS two-story stmeture on Tblrd Ave., betweea Grape ud VIDe
Streets Ia Galllpolts, was built as a boteliD the 1800&amp;•

By BRYSON R. CARTER

•
to accept full portions In only three.

plan would help prevent waste by
allowing schools to serve chlldren
only what they intend tD eat.
Some 23 million chlld; en eat federally subsidized lunches each day.
The program Is expected to cost the
government about $2.5 billion In the
tlscal year which began last Oct. 1.
The menu plan has been approved for senior high schools since
1976 and for junior high and middle
schools since 1978. Congress last
year authorized that It be extended
to the lower grades.
C_urrently, under the plan,
schools are required to after full
servings of five Items - meat,
mllk, bread and two fruitS and-or
vegetables. But a chDd Is required

By DON KENDAU

sc.r

Early planting key strategy .

.

,.

Joe Fa.lef,l'aal DaDeu, ud Alld7 Steele. F..W wu
clloleD u tlle ·:ua !rlhslleniSedl..t
Fumer. Paa1 neeivell b1s Slate FFA degree, ud A1ll7 eatered Ids treuarer'n baak lD tile evablallla. Tim
Malle Ia GAHS FFA adv!Jor.

TAD PART IN DJSTRJOf EVDn'- M s:pkn
o1 tile (lelllpolll FFA w11o r~
111
dlltrld evalaatiGB are, mat ..... left to rtalrt. ....,.
Hanld, wllo esdend ber leeretuy's beak ad KeYbl
JolmloD, wllo ealere!lldl reporter's ""' lladl nnr,

;:Decision
would
he
left
up
to
local
..
.
j)fficials
under department proposal
..

•
By JAMES sANDs
for some years unUl moving·to tbelr · stored in one of six 500 gaUon used by L E. Saunders Plumbing,
Special Coneapoodent
new building at 219 Third In the late ripening tanks, kept at 50 degrees but by the late 1950s. the room bad
GALLIPOLIS - The brick 1920s, where they continued for overnight. The next day the creani been taken over by Boster Radio and
building at 1._150 Third Avenue was several more years.
·
was churned and placed in 60 pound TV, which continued here down to
built by Henry
Also during the 1920s part of the wooden tubs and then shipped to Plt- the present period.
Lautenschlaeger
buil&lt;!i"g was used first b~ the tsbUrgh where tbe butter was
You caa write to llle aulllor,
about 1879 as a
Gallipolis Poultry _Company and ~uCj!d to one pound prints with tbe James Sands, at P. 0. Box 92,
combination busilater by the Sunlight Creamery . blue ribbon imprint on it. Harmony Clarlaiburg, Oblo, 43115.
ness house and
Company whOBe main office was in aecepted cream that was between 31
hotel. LautenWashington C.H., Ohio.
percent and 42 percent butterfat and Love story
schlaeger came to
It may be hard to imagine but so tbere was great Incentive among
LINDENHURST, N.Y. (AP) Gallipollil in the
during the early 1910s Gallia County Gallia farmers to raise high but- Marie Baker, 21, martled Mike
18705 '
and
wassecondamongallthecountlesin terfatpowsllkeJerseys.
Mazzapelle, 27, on Valentine's Day
operated what
SANDS
Ohio in milk production. Twenty
Harmony's plant was built In 1913 this year.
was called then "a queer notion" · years later Galli&amp; was 68th. To take and the Hannony Company kept
The morning of the wedding, the
store, something akin today to a gift advantage of,all the rrulk m the coun- their operation In Gallipolis until
bride
sent the groom a bouquet of 26
or novelty shop. ijenry ran bill ty several dairies and creameries 1!125. The plant then passed into the
heart-shaped
balloons. Each said
neivelty shop in part of the hotel were established in..Gallia County in bands of the Foster (amlly and
"
Be
My
Valentine"
or "Be Mine."
building mOB! of tbe years that he the early 20th century, three of would later be known for a quarter
A
note
with
the
red
and sUver bal·
lived .In town, which was not too whi~hwereinGalllpolls.
ofacenturyastheSpringHUIDairy.
loons
said,
"See,
I
didn't
forget Val·
many years.
BESIDES SUNLIGHT Creamery,
IN 11%9 and a few years after that,
enUne's
Day."
Lautenschlaeger called bill hotel there was the Gallipolis Dairy Com- the Evans Grocery Compan)' bad a
ther.fercbants' Hotel.Henrycatered pany (makersofBlueValleybutter) store at 148-150 Third. During that rr.==~=~;;;=~~,
to tbe many German inunlgrants at 641 Third and the Harmony same period Evans bad three other
who were coming to Gallipolis and Creamery Company at 216 Second grocery stores in Gallipolis. In the
one could buy here a good ·otd Ger- Avenue. Harmony Creamery built a depression period the Lautenman meal of Wiener Schnitzel and large plant In what would now be the schlaeger block was used as a
MIN~
Hassenfeffer.
car_lot of the Galllpolls Motor Com- wholesale house and as a poultry ofQ
SOMETIME AROUND the tum of pany. Financed by the Otto fam!ly of fice.
the century the building at 148-150 Pittsburgh, Harmony employed
Shortly after World War II SteinThird came into the bands of the some 28 people and made annually • beck Cleaners and RBy's Shoe
PORTABLE SPAS FITS
Belcher family who ran here for over one million pounds of butter. Repair shared the building. Stein·
·
some years what they called the Harmony establ,lshed ~8 milk beck's continued at 150 Third Into
MOST ANY ROOM
Belcher Hotel. ..This building's ser- stations aroUnd southern Ohio where the 1960s. In the decade of the 1970s
For your Winter Need
vice as a hotel ended about World farmers could take theircteam. .
Kuhn and Saunders Heating was
Call 304·429·4788
War I when Myers Produce llegan
When the cream was brought to located here.

true. Over 110 percent of the far-

By JOHN RICE
Extension Agent

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page E·-J

VWRABBIT
Cars &amp; Truc:ks
Gas or Diesel

VW DIVIDEND
'350
'350 RIVERSIDE DIVIDEND
-'700 TOTAL DIVIDEND
.Off.• Good Till Apill lOih

tome IR JIM for G6od $election

'

.

.

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE

OHIO VALLEY
.·BANK

•

220 5TH STREET

882-2462

NEW HAVEN, W. VA. :

Store Hours: Mon., Tue., Wed., Thur., Sat. 10-5:30 .p.m. - Fri. 10·8 p.m.

'
(

•

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\J

••

�nt Pleasant, w. Va.

1982

nt

.. ------- - ----,---------

How much are IRA
accounts worth today? ·

-~

By A.ooiated ..._
How much Is an Individual Ret i rement Account REALLY
worth?
Figures complied for Tbe Asso-

assumptions:
-Theaccountstartedwithanan·

elated Press show that If ymi had
. been able to OP.en an mA :ll years
ago, you could be coilectlng more
than $11,001 a year today.
Youcouidn'thaveopenedaniRA
In 1952, of course. Tbey didn't exist
until the mid 1970s and workers who

OW KYGER SCHOOL- Tom DarneD, High Point, North CaroUua,
lbrough bill mother, Mary DarneD, ftbesblre, bas submlued IIlla reslored
pboto of the Old Kyger School cl!ass of 1105. Tbe school building Is loeated
oathe late Stephen H. Jacobi farm on the northwest comer borderiDg SR
554 and Is owned by Vera ThomaN. The original building waN moved to the
Tbomas properly. Shown In Ibis photo are, first row, left to right, Gay

.

Carrier, Neva Brown, Eulalia Grover, IBBbel Brown, Mary BradbUry
Sisson, (Uvfng), and Dee Roush. Secc· ~ I'OJO, left 1o right, Ivan Grover,
Bloo Bradbury, Em,mett Blackburn, Clarence Gilmore, Ethel Grover
Gail Blackburn, Ina Rife and' Edna Rife. Third row, Floyd JellkiDB,
Grovers, Denver Brown, Earnest Roush, John Grover (Uving), Cbarlle
Thomas, Wesley Roush, Jason Thomas, Frejlab Jacobs and Faye
Thomas .

Aoh

\_ Hospital admits wrong blood
'
death as threefold. The first cause
listed Is heart failure, the second Is
• · given the wrong blood at the Medi· "transfusion reaction" and the
• cal Conege of Ohio Hospital died third, cancerous blockage of the
nine hours later from a reaction to colon, Richard said.
"The circumstances of the death
the mismatch, a spokesman has
were reported to the coroner, but he
.confirmed.
The patient, Harold R. Smith of elected not to conduct an autopsy,' '
. Notwalk, Ohio, had been a,dm!tted Richard said.
"'Die death certificate notes that
· · to the hospital for exploratory
the man went through a reaction to
~ : surgery for advanced cancer, said
the traftstuslon (of a blood mis·
MCO spokesman Jim Richard .
Richard said the man was given match) for eight hours before his
. : the wrong blood at 10: :ll a .m. on death, " Richard said. He satd the
,:last SatUrday by a nurse who man was given drugs for the reacpicked up the wrong Identification tion but
said he did not know whether
card for th'e patient.
the patient had a cwnplete blood
The pint of blood was admlnlsalter the wrong type was
exchange
: · tered to the man by the nurse and
administered.
she was about to give him a second
" We have evaluated our proce· pint of blood' In the hospital's surgl·
cal Intensive care unit when the dures very carefully, and we believe they are sound ones," Richard
.,. mistake was discovered .
"She has a good record . has been said. "They're .appropriate If
with us tor six years and Is an excel- they're followed correctly."
Richard said the mistake appar·
lent nurse - · she's also a human
being," Richard said. The nurse, ently took place when .the nurse
who he woul!l not Identify, has been , picked up the wrong Identification
suspended for 15 days until an. in- card. Richard said cards belonging
to Smith and to a second patient had
vestigation Is completed.
Richard said the man's death the same first names and identificertificate Identifies the cause or cation numbers that were "similar,
close."
He said Lt was the first time to his

.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -A termi·
• . . nally Ill cancer patient who was

&gt;.

.

'

·'

"

··

",

knowledge that such an error had
taken place.
Rlcrulrd said the patient was ex·
peeled to die "within a matter of
days" and said that Smith's daugh·
ter, Mrs. Toni Fair of Norwalk, had

been told of her father's Impending
death.
He said that the symptoms of the
wrong blood transfusion were an
"erratic heart beat," but added,
''He had displayed the same symptom for 24 hours previously, and
that symptom was not Immediately ilnked to the blood transfu·
slon. The patient had a history of
heart failure ailp hypertension, and
once the problem \¥lth the blood
was detected, treatment was begun ·
Immediately."
Richard said the man's reaction
to the transfusion was complicated
by his poor physical condition. "If Lt
had been someone with more
strength, in better health, the patient probably would have responded " more quickly to
treatment, Richard said.
The coroner who made the decl·
slon not to conduct the a11topsy
could no be reached for comment.
Richard said the hospital was not
told why an autopsy was not con·
dueled but added, "It was an elec·

· MOBILE . Ala. (AP) -An electronic stool pigeon Is helping pollee
here fight crime:
The pollee have been using a Honeywell computer system to store
and retrieve Information. The com·
puler Is used to analyze types of
crime by geographic location and
the lnform ~tion Indicates to Pollee
Commissioner Robert B. Doyle Jr.
where to add officers to patrols or
where to use fewer •cars and still
provide effective protection.
The computer also helps officers
in the field to obtain fast access to
crucial Information. If .a n officer
stops a vehicle whose description
matches that of a stolen car report,

.

for example, the pollceman c~n use

r-----------------------------.;._.,-___

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.S~ve onfnew qevoe Spotter-

Banking . lacility with .
Lobby B•nkina that is
open Downtown until
4P.M.

·· L~s WONOE~tTO.· NE~"' Latex
Flpt W II Pa1ht. Tile beduti-

-;int

&lt;;~tter tests ~gainst

1
_ ~ n~ ! ~~ d Qte~ wall,
paints and~ dowr. Ge~

Oche co~t coverage. wash-

a bilrty
· ,'1iind \tate~
clean
'
I
,
up in tt-je bar.gain ~ Ove r,
1000 ctl.~ors ttl choose frbm .
i

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WASHINGTON (AP) -~Accord·
lng to the American Council of Life
Insurance, 78 percent of surveyed
Americans 65 and older say they
are confident that with their health
Insurance and other resources,
they could meet the cost of a major
illness in the family.

WASIDNGTON (AP) The
:.
government has announced a
.;
renewed recall of a toy ladder on
,.
which a CaWomia child was killed
'.' ·· last
month, and one official
•'
crltlcl2ed the toy's maker for a
' · "very inadequate" r~ll effort the .
;
first time around.
'
': · : 1be Conswner Product Safety
• Commlsslon, ln. announcing It was
cooperating in the recall at the
' Creative Playthings Indoor Gym I
Howre ladder, said as many aa J
JSII,OOO of the toys may still be In coo- . ·

-.~ .-J1ll1111Bf8' hands:

·or:d~cor~or thbt

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~ MltfDER-TONES'..
j lat~x ~191 wpn P~int.

CBrS Bank~
·The Commercial &amp; Saving:; Bank

25 Court Street

service
euress

:White. •••••••'960
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· Colors •••••• 0- 60

Devoe®Wonder-Shield'"
Exterior Acrylic Latex
Flat House Paint
• ResistS Peeling.
• 'Mildew and fl\de resistant. ·
• One coat when applied
as di reeled.

••

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·•colori •••••••

! ..1 195

•

Division of Grow Group, Inc.

dng, traveler's
checks, bat . by mall, safe
deposit boxes, free checlclngt
Drive-In

CAROL·l NA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLy- CO.
312, Sidh Street

675·1160

·

Poiat Pleasant, W.Va.

· Store Hours: Mon. · Fri. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m. to 12 noon

. ' II

. . . ~~&lt;It~, Aiflt pr~Ct

CARPETING .
COLOR TVs
AND
MAJOR
APPLIANCES

a

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· At Hatfield &amp; McCoy we're continuing;
the "Spring Feud" against Inflation and
high prices during our a11nual Spring
Savings Spectacular on carpeting, color
TVa, and major appllancea .. The neweat
Spring merchandise, the beat In name
brands 11nd selection, the ioweatprlces- ..
that's what · value meana. That's what
Hatfield and McCoy stands for.

RCn

25" DIAGONAL XL 1 00
TRANSITIONAL COLOR
C:q~~~~!_--

. " We ten kids there ts dignity 1n
work. You have to start some;.yhere," she said. " Invest In
yourself."
• Although JDG does not guaran·
1ee job placement, Its results hljve
'been promising.
.
'
, In June 191l0, JDG'sflrstgraduat·
)ng class had 611 students of which
517 were placed In Jobs ...:. an 85per·
cent placement rate. The program
· hlso Includes a nine-month follow:
)IP of students, and In March 1981,
'74 percent of those placed were stlil
working.
~ In June 1981, with 935 graduates,
:1300 of the students were working by
September 1981. Retention figures
tor the 1!111 graduates Will not be
,available untillaler thl$ month.
In the 1981-82 school year, 1,034
seniors are taking part In the program. JDG began In eight Dela·
ware high schools and now·
'Operates in 24 of the state's 25 high
schools.
Students fall to win a placement
(or a variety of reasons, Ms Coker
&lt;explained. Some go back to school,
others move.from the area or get
.~rrled and decide not to work. •
Some students have been fired
trom jobs, she said, but many em. ;players come back toJDG for more
•referrals. • "We're going to have kids that
'goof off,'' Ms. Coker said.
One student who worked as a me,chanic for a major automobile
,dealer had a bad habit of taking
"Joy rides" In the new cars, she
ilald. The youth was !Ired, but the
•employer turned to JDG for a
· "replacement.
The JDG concept actuallY makes
emPloyer's job easier, accord·
1
ilJig to Michael A. Suber, a Burger
~ manager who hired MisB
IMumtord.
'
~ "I llke the concept of lt.It's more
:like preventive medicine,'' Suber .
aald. "Tbey're helping the kids be~ore !hey become a statistic."
He said JDG studeniB he baa In·
&gt;tervlewed seem to be more 1ft'
and not as nervous u otbel'
new'graduates.
• ''Thele lddll are fi!IIPD"''bbe. l
!:I'hey have a job and· they want to
. I'Jceep It,'' be aald, adri!DI tbat be
~vee money on bill operatlaD bebe does not have

.

u-·"""

job . . . . . . .
I 1J11e biiVIng our OWII prllllll! i
ICTI!ening Pi~-:· Suber added. .

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With your busy schedule, it's nice to
know that you can handle · all your
money ma11ers under ·one roof! Our
"one-stop financial shop" includes
all the important servic;es that you
want and need. So come se.e us for ...

ball 1

DOVER, Del. (AP) -All Sherry
Mumford wanted when she gradu·
atedfromhlgh school last year was
a job - and ~a use of a state program that focuses on students most
lillely to be unemployed once tlley
leave school, she has one.
Miss Mumford Is one of the first
success stories of Jobs for DeJa.
ware Graduates,
program that
targets high school seniors pursu·
lng general education-diplomas.
She graduated from Dover High
Sc;bool in June 1981 and lmJne.
dlately began work at a newly
opened fast·food restaurant. She
started as a casbler and, In less
than a year, h;~,s had two prom&lt;).
lions and a wage Increase.
,The 1!1-year-old Miss Mumford
says she owes her job to JDG,
"They teach you about Inter·
views, how to fUJ out applications
and write resumes," Miss Mumford said. "I probably wouldn't
have gotten this job and the ad·
vartcement If I hadn't gane through
JDG."
1n the past, Miss Mumford has
had summer jobs, but It never oc·
curred to her to take a resume
when appllylng !or a job.
If It wasn 't for JDG, "I wouldn't
have known how to go l!bout asldng
an employer questions to let htm
know I was Interested in the job,''
she said.
JDG - a statewide non-profit
corporation - Is the bralnchhlld of
GOv. Pierre S. du Pont IV, whose
wanted to provide high school stu·
dents with jobs In an attempt to
keep the leen·agers off the slate's
unemployment rolls. The program
is funded by the U.S. Department of
Labor, private foundations and
state funds.
"I think it's an attempt not to add
to the problem If you can't solve the
problem," ·said Bebe Ross Coker,
JDG's director of administration.
'"These are the kids who fall
through the cracks."
The program attempts to teach
students basic employment skllls
- such as how to act durlilg an In·
terview, the,Importance ot arriving
on time for work, how to dress, writ·
ing resumes, vocabulary and
handwriting, among others,
The program Is volunteer on the
student's J)art and does not take
away from f!!gUlar class time.
JDG looks 'tor entry·level jobs at
busiHesses ranging from laundries
to fast·food restaurants to department stores. Ms. Coker said most of
the students start at minimum
wage , but added that salaries for
JDG graduates range trom $6,001
to $16,001 per year.

~.

'

his radio to relay the 11cense-plate
number, serial number or other Information to a dispatcher at police
headquarters who then enters tile
data Into the computer.
The system determines whether
the car in question Is a stolen vehi·
cle. It can even determine If the
driver Is a suspect In any other
case.

:' ·. Announces recall

'

live matter."
Mrs. Fair, contacted by teJe.
phone in Notwalk, said she had no
comment. She said she was refer·
ring all calls from reporters to a
Norwalk law firm .

.,..The Interest rate was tied to the
interest rate on tlJree.to-flve-year
U.S. government notes. It started
at 2.5 percent and rose gradually to
14.2 percent in 1981. Interest was
compounded annually.
-The accountholder began with·
drawals In 1982 at age65. While contrlbutlng, ·he or she was in a 30
percent fTlBI'glnal tax bracket.
The league economists said con·
·
tributlons to the account over :llyears were $27,225. Interest was
$41,10!i. The total: ~.334.
The law requires withdrawals to
be made at a fast enough !&gt;ace so
that the money In the account will
·:, be exhausted by the time the holder
has reached his or her Ufe expectancy.- ln the case of the holder of
the hypothetical account, the
league economists said withdrawals would have to be made over
an 11-year periOd.
At a 30percent marginal tax rate,
the after-tax value of $11,500 would
,be $8,006 a year. If the account
holder moves Into a lower bracket
- by retiring for example - the
after-tax gain 1s greater. In the 25
percent bracket, the after·tax an·
nual payout would be $8,632.

Iars will be worth in :ll or 35 yean;.
To test the growth of an IRA in
terms of spending power, the AP
asked theleagueofsavlngsassocla·
lions to draw up a hypothetical ac·
count opened In 1952 by someone
who was then 35 years old.
Economists for the League found
contributions and Interest to that
hypotbetlca) account would total
nearly $70,001 today. The. account
\vouid provide an annual payout,
before taxes, of $11,500- about half
the median family Income and
more than double the average Soclal Security benefit. ,

THE ONLY

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

l..
,.•'

gtven

were covered by company pension
plans couldn't open an IRA until
this year.
But the AP asked the U.S.
League of Savings Assol;latlons to
look at what might have happened
• 1n the past 1n an effort to put future
IRAs Into perspective.
The ads for the tax-deferred reilrement accounts have been critic·
lzed for painting a false picture.
Those ads say, for example, that
.
$2 ,000 a year Invested at 12 percent
Interest compounded annually will
yield more than half a milifon dol·
lars In :ll years and about a mllllon
1n 35 years. •
But the ads don't ten you _ and
no one knows _ what a milifon dol·

level last year. The law governing .
IRAs sets the maximum conlribu·
tlon today at a flat $2,001 and does
not provide for Increases, but many
people have suggested that the in·
vestment level will be raised In the
future to reflect Inflation.

Crime fighting

Elderly

'i

e

Program
provides
success

The economlsts made several

nual contribution of $584. That's the
equivalent of $2,001 today.
-Contributrons rose gradually,
with tnfiatlon, reaching the $2,001

W.Va.

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�Page-E-8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mar. 21 , 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohicr-Point Pleasant, W.Va •.

Mar. 21, 1982

Baseball
revenue
station.
sales
loss
forces
'tunCINCINNATI (AP) - Last
mer's baseball strike cost Mariner
Communicationa so much lost
revenue at radio stations In Cincinnati aJKj ~n that the company
was forced to sell three radio
stations to pay off debt, says
Mariner president Barry Dickstein.

"The loss of a third of the baseball Ten-Eighty Corp., an affiliate of the
season and the revenue8 It wQUJd Hartford, Conn., real ~!$fate inhave brought us created a aevere -vestment firm of Chase Enterprises.
Ten-Eighty operates stations WTIC
financial Cttl!l!l," Dicbtein said.
Mariner lllliiOIIIICed the sale Wed- AM-FM in Hartford.
nesday of WI,.W-AM in Cincinnati,
WLW is one of the nation's oldest
WSKS-FM In Hamilton and KBEQ- and most powerful radio stations.
FM .in Kansas City. The buyer is the It's 50,000-watt signal can be heard
in most of the eastern United States
at night - when most Cincinnati
Reds games are broadcast.
The 'statloll originates the games
for the Reds Radio Network, one of
the 1argesi 1,n baseball
more
than IIOstationsinsevenstates.
Mariner also. owns WITS-AM in

Ohman's image
very ·different

wit!\

~n;

the flagship station for the
Boston Red Sox, meaning that
Mariner suffered a double whammy
from the baseball strike.
Dickstein said the three stations
were sold for $21.5 million cash and
other considerations,
Msriner had paid $22.1 million for
the three stations - $5.1 million for
the Kansa.s City station in 1977 and
$17 .million for the two Cincinnatiarea stations 2t yean ago, But the
sale Includes "sqbstantial funding"
to allow Marliier to keep the Boston
station, Dickstein sajd.
Since broadcasting laws require

owners to hold radio stations at least
three years, the sale of the Mariner
stations will not be completed until
November.
WLW, which is observing its 60th
year of broadcasting, had only two
owners until 19'16, but has been sold
twice since then. Dickstein said
despite the depressed economy.
there is stUl a strong demand for a
good broadcast property.
"WLW, with its 50,00o watts of
power, is a speciacular property,
and there are always buyers for
spectacular properties," Dickstein
said. "Once the three-year rule Is up

Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis, Ohicr-Point Pleasant,

CLEVELAND (AP) - Si. Herman's House of Hospitality, which
has opened Its doors to the poor and
hungry for four years, Is caUibt In a
struggle between God and ~-

Father Gregory Reynolds ll!ld
two monks, whb Uve In the Eastern
OrthOdox rt101181ltery, give shelter
each night for up to 50 men who are
destjtute or temporartly homeless.
During this winter's coldest spell,
as many as 70 men lived at St.
Hennan:s. •
The brothers also feed a long line
of hungry people every day. They
get no sal8ry or government money
and rely solely on donations and
g!tts to continue their work.

.again."

"We're not socta1 workers. We're
catholic workers," said Brother
John Heory. one of ~ Ukrainian
Ortllodox monks. "They're our
!amtly. We live with them. We love
them. We're here becauoe we want
to be God's Instrument. We hope to
lead the men to higher pound."

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doesn't the city run a shelter for the
poor? He described Butt's group as
~ "real estate Interests" that want m
· "gentrUy" Ohio City - renovate
old houses, divide them Into expensive apartments and drive out ihe
poor. He says they want the poor
ou! of sight.
Father Gregory was born nearly
70 years ago In Rochester, N.Y., of
PATRO~ SAINT- An Icon of St Kennan of Alaalla, tbe patron salal
Irish Catholic and Angltcan paro1 Cleveland~• St. Herman's monlaoiery, re~~ll on a maatel lD lhe
ents. He became an Orthodox
mooutery's cbapel. ( AP Luerphoto).
monk and later a priest. He is co.n-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio would apply to temporary holding
townships and munic!pallttes soon faciUtles where persons are Incarmay be granted a reprieve from cerated ff)r 72 hours or less.
what they said was costly com''Today there are very tew ctttes
pliance with mtnlmwn state standthat can comply with these standards for local jaUs.
ards," Suhadolnik said. "This btJJ ts
The Senate Thuruday agreed 24-8 saying we're going to review all
with Houoe changes In a bill that these standards and dlscl\rd those
would suspend current rules until · that are most onerous."
new ones can be written.
The btJJ now goes to Gov. James
Sen. Gary C. SuhadolnJk, R- A. Rhodes.
Heights, said the measure

Panna

as

Chase you out of the. residential

neighborhood Into some commercial district -just one more victory
In the battle to make the poor lnvls!·
ble," the Rev. RJchard Sertngofthe
Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry
Association wrote to Father
Gregory.
Father Gregory says he would be
wtlllng 10 move the shelter. but only
It space could be provided without
rent.
"We are not funded," he says, ad-

ding that he won't accept gifts Uthe
donor illtends to deduct It tram his
Income \8X return.
One gift that sym~ St.Herman's Is a western-style statue of
the Vlrgtn Mary that loo~ out-ofplace among the eastern Icons.
Father Gregory said the statue
was brought to St.Herman's after
Its head and hands had been cut oft
and he had a sculptor repair it.
"It was In such bad shape, I decided I had to give It a home," he
said. Its presence In the chapel
would sh_ock the Orthodox bishops,
he added.

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a

Townships may get reprieve

John said. "I don't know what alternative the city Is going to provide."
Rather than close their doors to.·
anyone, he said the brothers are
telling those refeiTing people to St.
Herman's to try other shelters,
such as the City Mission or Salvation Army.
"We ~-~ven't Umlted lt. We let
God do tt, · Brother John said.
"How we're · going to keep the
number down is beyond me. But
we're attempting to."
The problem arose alter a group
of neighbors, Including State Sen.
Charles Butts, seht a petition to City
Hall complaining that St. Herman's was being run as an Illegal
boardtDg houoe. The city Inspected
and Issued the vlolatlon order: .
Butts says the city code Is .designed to prevent tragedies and he
would like to see St.Herman's
moved to a commercial area.
"Why ' do we have to have a
tragedy to pay attention to trying to
solve a problem?" he asked .
But Father Gregory says It there

j

I ' II

Brother John says St.Herrnan's
follows the centurles-old phtloSophy
of the monastlc order, which Is
never to turn away a suanger.
But the city government says
building codes allow only 22 people
to live In the monastery, a 1.26-yearold house In Ohio City, one of Cleveland's oldest residential
neighborhoods. It also has ordered
St.Herman's to cQn-ect 39 code
vfolatlons.
Many of the "destitute and efnotlonally unstable' •who go to St. Herman's are referred bY other social
agencies In the city. Father Gregory has agreed to try to llmlt the
number of men he takes In, but the
brothers wonder whO will take the

servatlve In theology, but his social large ftre door In the basement and
views appear liberal. And lie Is out- the food 111 the ldtchen.
spoken In defending his work.
~ drop In during the day
" A ltceD!M! from Cae5!U' to feed
with large boxeS of canned goods,
the hungry and clothe the Jlll)&lt;ed?" · cakes, bananas, and other g!tts. On
he recentiy thundered from the pul- Sundays, alter residents attend
pit of St.Hennan's Byzantine mass In the chapel, lay volunteers
chapel, a front room in the howoe. "I cook breakfast for the ~eral
don't need a license to do God's hundred who come tn to eat.
work."
,
Despite the Byzantine Icons and
Father Gregory and Brothers vestments of SLHerman's, the
John and Patrick live In small
monks say their work Is far from
rooms on the second noor, which ts
.
other-wordly.
of!-Umlts to the temporary resi"We're looking desperately for
dents. A 97-year-okl nun named
candidates tor the brotherhood,"
Mother Mary lived in the house unsaid Brother John. "Many think It's
til she died Jan. 00.
just a matter of saying the O!flce
On the tlrst ftoor, the men can slt and fioatlng about on Incense. But
around aa large table In the pantry
when they find they have to clean
or watch television In the Sttttng
fecal matter trom people, then It's
room. Some work In the kitchen
something else."
and others rest In the "hospital
Other neighborhood groups. such
room," which Is reserved for the
Ohio City Neighbors In Action,
sick.
and other clergy support St.HerIn the basement are a laundry
man's .. A group called Frlends of
room and rows of bunk beds and
St.Herman's formed to help the
lockers.
brothers.
Everything at St.Herrnan's Is do''It would be a shame Uone small
nated - the lvasher and dryer, a
group of people would be able to

others.
"It's a great problem," Brother

,'. •

WH-ilE QUANTITIES
LASTI ·

IWI!IIt.

1.09

DISIDNG IT OUT- Brother Patrick, an orthodox monk, dishes up a
bowl of hot soup In lhe St. Hei'Dili!I'S moDBJiery Jdteben during lhe
eveDIDg meal recently. St. Herman's )11"8vlc!es food and 1helter for many
of Cleveland's desUiute and homeless. (AP Laserphoto).

....

Reg. 1.44

22 Oz. Fantasiik Cleaner

The sunday Times-sentinel-Page E -9

Struggle develops between God, Caesar

with a property, people are always
beating down the doors to buy ll" ,
Perry Ury, pri:Sident of TenEighty and general manager of the
two Hartford stations, said the ~
pany plans to show a conuniQnent to
WLW by pumping enough money into it to upgrade facilities.
"What WLW needs is an Influx of
dollar&amp; and the guidance and the
wherewithal to do the job right,"
Ury said. "We want everyone down
there to know they're going to have
that wherewithal to be one of the
best radio stations in the Midwest

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Jack
Ohman, a soft-spoken college dropout of 21, looks at President Reagan's $91 biWon federal budget
de!!cit and sees things no one else

But one of his cartoons was reprinted In Newsweek, and Ohman
was on his way.
"I was 19 at the time and It was
Impossible." He sold some cardOes.
toons to the Waahtngton Post. "It
He sees a flabbY Ronald Reagan was the same stuff I was doing for
&gt;ylth a wooden box stapped around my college paper. This was really
his neck and a coin changer dan- unheard o!."
gling from his belt. He sees Reagan
Ohman hooked up with the Tribshu1fllng through baseball stadium une syndicate. His cartnons began
bleachers, hawking beer . .It's De- showing up In a few lloiwn papers.
ficit Beer, and Reagan crtes, "Get
Late In 191ll, Columbus (Ohlo)
yer warm·stale beer here."
Dispatch editor Luke Feck Invited
What Ohman, a last-rising star Ohman to visit. "I think he wanted
among newspaper cartoonists, to see 11 I was a brash young punk.''
sees Is a conservative Republican The Dispatch oftered him a job. OhwhO retreated from his balanced man quit college and hasn't looked
budget promise to the old business- back. He will join the Detroit Free
as-usual politics.
Press next mOnth.
And what Ohman sees first, milOhman's self-taught, highly delions see later on the edltortal pages tailed, heavily Inked drawing style
of their newspapers.
and his political philosophy - "I'm
At 20, Ohman became the na- a moderate with some conservation's youngest syndicated cartoo- tive leanings" - set him apart
nillt. At 20, .he got the call last year . from his many liberal colleagues.
when the Chlcacgo Tribune-New
York News Syndicate needed tore"There technically are more conplace two-time Pul)tzer Prize servative cartoonists than liberal
winner Jeff MacNelly. Still 20, Oh- cartoonists. But I think most of the
man's ellen! Ust swelled to 350 conservatives aren't very good,"
newspapers.
Ohman said, noting their tendenNow 21, Ohman Is the subject ot cies tO use a blunt style that leans
newsmagazine articles and the fea- heavily on labeling of characters.
•'They're not only politically contured g\lest on national television
shows. Time and Newsweek edi- servative - they're coDBerVatlve In
tors call him, asking for cartoons to their style, their humor," he said,
bemoaning their sameness.
reprint.
"I think he's very, very good,"
"I think most cartoonists aren't
said Don Michel, vice president and so much liberal as unpredictable.
editor of the Tribune syndicate, ad- You become too predictable, you
ding that there may be only a halt lose your audience."
doZen cartoonists nationwide who
Five mornings a week, Ohman
goes to work In a tiny, cluttered yeloell to more than :n&gt; newspapers.
"You have to measure Jack In a low cubicle where two · signs are
number of ways - according to his taped to the door. "Otftcial Preppy
years, he's Incredible. It somebody Store," says one. "Question Authortold you he was 40, you'd believe it. ity," says the other.
He has the talent, that kind of maThe slender Ohman, whose warturity, the Insight," Michel said.
drobe
Is serlously preppy, quesIt's heady stuff, telling oft the
tions
authority
as he reads eight
P.fl!~ldent or Congress and knowing
dally
newspapers,
keeps close
your optnlons will land In many of
watch
on
the
news
wire
and studies
the nation's most Influential
the
top
national
political
newspapers.
columnists.
A New5week article lionized him
"Jll.eally have to work to keep on
as a "boy wonder" with a six-figure
top
of the news ..I'm always listensalary and headlined him as "carIng
to the news on radio, watching
tooning's newest star."
the
Cable
News Network or reading
When the article was mentioned,
a
newspaper,"
he said. "Cartoothe star yawned.
nists
can't
follow
public optnlon;
"I guess I'm glad It happened
lead."
they
early. 'Later' sometimes never
The worst days, the absolute
comes," Ohman said. "Besides, I
worst,
are days when the newspapalmost took a job In a bank once."
ers'
are
full of natural disasters.
The pale blue stlipes of his
"You
can't
take a stand on a flood In
button-down, oxford shirt aligned
Kentuclcy
or a tornado In
precisely with the muted gray pinstripes or his dark blue suit. Only Nebraska."
But most days, the hot air and
the twists of his conversation
spo1J!lll the straightness of ht.s line. muddy waters of PQIItlcs provide
"You have to have a Utile bit of a plenty of places for Ohman to take
twisted mind," he was saying of po- his stand.
As&lt;he verbally listed possible prelitics In 1982. "Notjust to lnterpretlt
sidential
candidates, the youthful
. - but to accept It! "
The twists -of humor, of wit, ot brashness began to fiow. He profate- are drawn through Ohman's fessed great disappointment with
ute Uke the carefully sketched lines the choices. "Tbere are so few qualIty people. There are some PoJJtiof his work.
ctans
you can still respect, but ... "
Raised In St. Paul, Minn., his first
Could
he name three? Ohman
Interest was politics. At 15, he
hemmed
and hawed. "Go ahead,
worked In a state legislative camwrite
It
down,"
he said. "Ohman
paign. At 17, he worked for the state
hemmed
and
hawed."
Democratic Party. Still 17, he
Finally, he named Sen. John
worked In a congressional camGlenn,
D-Ohio, the former astropaign. He quit then, but still says he
naut
who
occasionally walks
might run tor Congress one day.
through
an
Ohman
cartoon wearHaving been accepted for a bank
Ing
black
suit,
black
tie, black
teller's job, he learned the Univershoes
and
a
glls4entng
white
space
sity of Minnesota student newshelmet.
paper needed a cartoonist. Having
"You've got to respect Glenn Just
laken no art courses - and he still
because
be was an' astronaut. But
hasn't - Ohman applied.
look
at
the
rest," he said, rapping
"They probably gave me the job
Democrats
and Republicans alike.
because I had some knowledge o!
On
Rep.
Jack
F. Kemp, R-N.Y.:
politics:· he said. "Plus. the others
"Physically,
you've
got the quarweren't as flaky as 1 am."
terback
metaphor,
that's
great for
He was so pleased with his carcartoonists. He's got the looils. He's
tooning, he quickly tried to syndigot the hair. He's just salivating for
cate himself. "I got very cocky. I
the presidency. But he's too oboent stuff to 120 newspapers. I think
viously a (John F.) Kennedy clone,
I heard from three."
right doll!n to the tnttials J.F.K."
"I learned to draw by copying
On Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J.: ''It
pbotographs. I never took an art we're going to have a basketbau
course," he admitted. " Maybe I player In politics, why not Kareem
should have. It took me 2 ~ years Abdul Jabbar, somebody who can
just to Jearn to draw hands."
shoot !rom the outside?

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TMO¥ CORPORATION

�w. v•.

Several causes behind ~ow vasture production
POMEROY - Unproductive
vegetative species, lack oi adequate
fert!Uzer, and ov~ are cootributin8 to low level production
from 1J1811Y Meigs County permanent putures.
The ~ge system of planting
productive forages eliJniRates the
Blandard Wlage operationS and
reduces the potential lOll of soU and .
water. Thla system \'llQulres the use
of herbicides and the proper seeding
equipment.
A·MOOre Unl-drtllls avaUable for
rent at a mlnlmwn charr.e of PI
pl111 ~ per acre for all over five
acres. The drill Is a narrow row
spacing direct drill of robust construction, with an output of up to five
a~ per hour, and Ia rented by the
Meigs SoU and Water Conservation
District at 221 West Second Street.
The uaer BBSumes responsibility for
the drill from the Ume he obtains It
from the previous uaer untO the next
. renter claims it.
For an appointment to use the drill
stop
In the Dlatrict office or call 9!l2o
MUCRO MULCH - Columbus garden store emplayee Mark Dilley
6847.
1taeb bags Ill mulch as the store readied liB stock of .,000 bags •• 11111'The foUowing Ia a 10 step
lel'lell 111111 garden 1tores bracked for tile nub of greea-tllwvben. Spring
procedures
for successful n~tillage
arrived Saturday afternoon. (AP Laserphoto ).
pasture renovation ..
(1) Select a well drained field on
silt loam soU. Thla teehnlque Is
usually less effective on clay soils.
(2) Detennlne soU nutrient levels
of the field by soil testing. Soil for
analysis may be ~bmltted to Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -" Cor·
The bill also faDed to generate State Testing Laboratory, through
the Meigs Cooperative Extension
porate ownership of Ohio fannland support from the 65,000-member
Service
Office.
Is causing concern for the Ohio farm bureau federation.
(3)
Apply
lime and fert!J.izer acFarmers Union, and that In tum
"Weseenoneed,andwequestlon
appears to be of interest .to other the advlsabillty of passing leglsla·
farm groups.
Uon unles!l there'ssomeevldenceof
Tile Farmers Union has pushed need," Dean W. Slmeral, the bu·
for legislation that would prohibit reau's vice president for public af·
corporations from buying Ohio fairs, said. "The corporate
farm land.
involvement In agriculture Is no dlf·
A bill that wo!J)d Impose such a ferent than It was 80 years ago."
ban has passed the Ohio House of
"History has showli there Is no
Representatives and ls pending In threa t," he s3Jd. "We had some cor·
the Senate. Backers of the bill fear porale Involvement In farming
that large corporations wl!llnflate back at the tum of the century."
land values as they invest in tax·
Simeral said the natlon.may be in
sheltered farmland.
a period when the only Investment
"They are only looking for a safe. capital readily avaUable may be
place to put the assets of their cor· from corporations.
poratlons so they can be protected
If enacted, the bill would prohibit
against Inflation," said John Welt· ownership or agrtcultural land by
stein, legislative director for the corporations, partnerships and
farmers union.
trusts that have more than 10 unreDennls R. Henderson, an exten· lated shareholders or In which 40
slon economist with the Ohio Coop- percent or more o1 the profits come
erative Extension Service, said the from non·farm activities.
i53 public corporations that appear
It would also require corporato be actively engaged In tanning tlons or partnerships, except cer·
In the stale control58,393 acres. The lain famUy farm partnerships,
state has an estimated 16.3 mllllon engaged in farming or proposing to ·
areas of farmland.
farm In Ohio, to fOe a report with
"They have three-tenths ofl per· ·r ..::th::e..::sec=re:.:tary::.::...:.of:.:s;;;ta;;;te:.:.- - - - - i
cent o1 all the acreage," Henderson
said. "My guess Is that they proba·
bly have three percent or more of
· the total farm output, but that's a
gue5s based on national data, not
Ohio data, because we simply don't
have it."
Despite the acreage, Wettstein
said production Is ot concern.
"Even while you have a very
small number of corporate farms,
once they get started ... tbey can In
Capture the excitement of
time account lor a very large per·
an Amtrak ride to our Na·
cent of farm production,:· he said.
tion's Capitol. See the
"There's no way a family Iarmer
Cherry Blossoms and the
can compete with large amounts ot
Spectacular Monuments
outside co1pltal.;,
&amp;~useums .
John H. Meneely of Dayton, in·
Host: Craig Colley
vestment manager lor the Pruden·
tlal Insurance Co.. testified against
the bill In the House Agriculture
CAll •
TODAY
and Natural Resources Commit·
tee. He said that at the end of 1980
TRAVEL AGENCIES
his company had $2 billion out in
agricultural mortgage loans.
GALLIPOLIS 446.0699
"In Ohio. (Prudential) had over
OTA 0134
700 such loans outstandln~ to farm
famWes totaling over $58 mUllon,"
he said.

Corporate ownership
causes some concern

to recommendations determined from the soU test.

cording

(4) Graze the field close

to ualst

in suppressing the existing
vegetative growth.
, (5 J Apply 2, 4-D to kill existing
vegetation . , The no-tillage
renovation B)'llem.IB lllQBt effective
In areas oi Kentucky and Canada
bluegrass, broclil ~e. pover;ty
grass and other unaggressive an• nusl and perennial weed species.
The procedure will not eradicate
such troublesome weeds as quackgrBBS, nutsedge, taU irOnweed,
thlsUe and woody species.
.
(6) Apply pliraquat 10 day
following the 2, 4-D application. A
light rain is needed between the 2, ·fDandparaquatappllcatlons.

(7) A spring aeedlng

can be made

conservation
poster cpntest sponsored by the
Meigs SoU and Water Conservation
District (SWCD) will end Mopday,
March 22. Only fourth grade students are eligible to enter one poster in
competition with their own
classmates.
A first place, winning a blue ribbon and three dollars; a second
place, winning a red ribbon and two
dollars; and a third place, winning a
white ribbon pnd one d11llar wiD be
selected from each school. AU 'PST·
tlcipants will receive a conservation
pencil.
A

will remain in a pennanent pasture

wlless gruing manaJemenlla prac-

when the soU Ia In condlti011 to crumI
ble and allow for closyre 'or tillage U~
(10) Ferllllze annually. Produc- .
fUITOWII. Uae standard seeding rates
and seed graad8 or legumes. Shallow live forages must be fertillred to ·
seed placement with the heavy n~ nlaintain the 'lland and to obtain
tillage drill with preas wheels Is their production potential.
required.
....---------(8) During the establislunent
year, 'either lnfrequenUy graze and
or mow to reduce the competition to
the seeding. Practice light rotation
grazing. Do not grace unW forage .
seedlings are at least three Inches
tall. Mow weedS when necessary to
prevent competition. It takes one
year to establtah a vigorous n~
tillage pasture seeding.
(9) Rotational. graze after
establishment. No forage species

LOCUST and PEARL STREET·

retinal

'

SUPER MARKETS

Washington D.C.
APRIL 16-19th

from your car,

Two overall county champions
will selected from first plllce winners from ~ schools, and wiU each
receive a trophy from the district.
SWCD Ladles Ailzillary,
Catherine Shenefield, Mary Lew
Johnaon, Maurita M11Ier, Sally
Gloeckner, and Cathy First will
judge the posters, which must convey a message about soil arid/or conservation, plants, how they improve
the environment. An environmental
film "Our Land Needs Your Help"
was shown In all elementary schools
in the county In preparation for the
contest.

oe

••

home, and
health agent.

'
QUANTITY RIGHTS IU$l.VEO ·

INOT REIPONIIIU FO.jl TYPOGRAPHICAl URORSI

RICK PERDUE
·1; . $firing Valley Pial~
'
Phone 446·4396

Uke a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.
STATE FARM

lnou_. Componles
- Home Olllcos:

BlOomington, IINnols

........

,

GRANDPA'S HOMEMADE
PURE PORK

t •nu•ANCI
0

POUID

ASSORTED

'

What Happens To It If You

·CHANGE CAREER$1
·SWITCH EMPLOYERSl
··QUIT WORK EARLY1

Spring has Sprung
WITH ATRUCKLOAD OF
PINK AND RED

DOGWOODS
MAGNOLIAS

Don't pay taxes you can avoid! As~ how an Ohio
Valley Bank "Rollover" Account can help you
save. Phone .446-2631 NOW and a~k for Richard
Scott. You'll get .a no·obligatioh explanation in
simple, non-technical lanquage that will make
your retirement years as rewardinq as you had
hoped ..

A II These and More

At

Smeltzers

I

Garden Center &amp; Flower Shop ·
'

Gallipolis, ·OHi

Just past the hospital on Rt 35
I

. Does Unc'e Sam get more than
his fair share of your hardearned benefits?

I

·Now is the time to plant Trees

453 Jackso11 Pike

•

He could ... unless you have a plan to shield some
or all of your retirement benefits' from premature
and unnecessary taxation.

Jackson • Perkins
Rose-Bushes

.

..

·WE HAVE THE ANSwERS!

.WE FEATURI U.S.D.A~ CHOICE BEEF •·1=000 STAMPS WELCOME

insurance

If You Have An Employer-sponsored

TO

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.
·Wkette ~kip AKd Stwi~~g~ Gtt HoJUL ~ Htuui ·
.

LIFE

Poster deadline approaches
POMEROY -

SUPPLENEIIT TO THE SUIDAY TINES SEIIniiEL

.

Ohio
Valley·
'

.

.'

s
MR. FRinER
VEAL, BEEF, CHIClE" OR
CHU,CKWA&amp;OI

PAniES
1

'
j

•

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