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Ponlei'OY-Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily SentiMI

Republicans ready to rewrite budget
WASHINGTON (AP) - FrustratEd by President Reagan's Intransigence on budget
compromise, Republican leaders
In Congress are teWng hlJil they're
about ready to rewrite his red-Ink
budget with or without him.
Reagan, speaking to reporters
Thursday night at a state dinner tor
ItaUan President Sandra Pertlnl,
sald he "lust can't retreat on the
fundamentals" of his proposed

budget. .

But, he said, "I think we wUI find

there's some talking room." Asked
whether he meant a compromise,
the president replied: "Not In the
sense of abandontng the fundamentals of our programs."
Baker said. the Senate Budget
Committee p.robably wW begin
work on a 1983 spending ouWne
next week unless there are lndlcatlons of compromise from Reagan.
A Senate GOP source who asked
not to be quoted by name said Baker's remarks were "a signal to the
White House that we're running out

Meigs County happenings..
Seeks cooperation
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
!lllid Friday there is to be no parking
on North Second Ave. or Mill Street
on Sunday, March 28, after 7 a .m .
The volunteer fire department will
be washing down the streets and
there may be some discoloration of
water in the area due to the use of
the fire hydrants. The mayor requests cooperation from the public
during this period .

Deadline reminder
Final

registratfon

for the
Syr~cuse-Minersville
baseball
program will be held Saturday from
10 a.m. to I p.m. at the Syracuse
MunlciJial building. All youth of the
designated area are encouraged to
register. Several teams have not
been filled at this lime . No further
registration is planned.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Gladys Thomas, Long
Bottom; Anna ]&gt;1artin, Middleport.
Discharged -- Arthur Barr,
Evelyn j\iaynard.

Break-in cleared
Meigs County shertft's deputies
say a breaking and entering at the
Lyle Swain cabin on Bigley Ridge
has been cleared up.
According to the report, the cabin
was entered by prying open a rear
window.

·

The stolen items, a box of dishes
and a hunting knUe, have been returned to the owner. Three subjects
arrested for the breaking and enterIngot the Ryan cabin, the Tom Hayman garage and the Portland
Elementary School alBa entered
the Swain cabin, .t he shertft said.

Wreck damage light
Light damages were Incurred to
two vehicles In an accident on the
upper parking lot In Pomeroy at
3: 55 p.m. Wednesday.
Pomeroy Pollee said that accident occurred as a truck driven by
Troy T . Manuel, Racine, pulled
onto the parking lot as a·car driven
by James Wamsley, Pomeroy, was
backing from a parking space, hitting the truck In the side.

Sting operations
mately one pound of a green vegetative substance, believed to be
marijuana, was confiscated from a
rear bedroom of the mobile home In
Cheshire. A .38-callber revolver
was alBa removed from the
premises.
·
When Mustard, Rife and Stewart
Two large grocery bags and four
returned to Gallla County, a team large garbilge bags, allegedli conof deputies led by Shert!t James M. taining dried marijuana, as well as
Montgomery moved In on the mo- several medicine bottles containing
bile holll!! In Cheshire.
Sfeds were seized from the PomeWith the authority of a search roy garage . .
warrant obtained through Gallla
Rife and Stewart were being deCounty Common Pleas Court prtor tained, awattinl
arraignment,
to the raid, department personnel Thursday afternoon In' the Gauta
searched the mobUe home and an County lail.
auto, registered in Rlfe's name, ·
Phelps and Seth were scheduled
parked at the dwelling. A similar to appear In Meigs County Court
warrant had been Issued through today O!l the trafficking charges.
the Meigs Common Pleas Court for Stewart and Rite were similarly
search conductEd In that scheduled to appear In Gallipolis
county.
Muncipal Court for a preliminary
· A plastic bag containing approxt- hearing.

(Continued from page I)
a Mec!lanic Street garage In Pome. roy where the purchase was allegedly made, arrestEd Phelps and
Seth and conducted a search of the
buDding.

the

of time."
Mlcl!el, meanwhile, said he has
found In talks with House Speaker
Thomas P . O'Nem Jr., D-Mass.,
and other Democrats, that "the
hard positions on the Democratic
side have been somewhat softened" regarding cuts In politically
sensitive government benefit programs and other Issues.
Michel said he hopes Reagan
now wUI demonstrate a ftexlbWty
of his own by the time Congress
begins an Easter recess next week.
"You've got to cross the Rubicon
sometime,'' Michel said,
Majortty Republicans In the Senate had hoped to deiB.y work on
drafting a budget ouUlne'unUI Reagan agreed to an alternative budget
worked out In advance with Republlcans and Democrats. But, so far,
Reagan has made no specific
concessions.
A Senate source said chairmen of
the Senate's budget and tax-writing
committees ''can't hold their committees ott much longer."
Members of both political parties
have virtually agreed that reducing
deficits wUI require a mix
Involving:
-Changes In the tax reduction
package Congress passed last
year, Including the possibility of tax
Increases.
-A modification or reduction In
the president's recommended milItary buUdup.
-Steps to restrain the growth of
cost-of-living Increases In Social Security and other government be- .'
neflt programs.
Reagan, however, has opposed
proposals In all three categories.

Area
Death
Myrna Ramsdell
Myrna Ramsdell, 79, formerly of
Meigs County, dted Thursday
morning at Lee's Summit, Mo. , following a short Illness.
Born In Portland, Ohio, she was
the daughter of the late Wylie and
Annie Henderson. She was a retired school teacher having taught
last at the Portland Elementary
School.
Besides her parents, she was preceded In death by her husband,
Frank Ramsdell.
Surviving are a son and
daughter-In-law, Robert and Avis
Ramsdell and granddaughters,
Kimberly and Heather of St. Joseph, Mo., and several cousins.
Services wUI be at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the 'Frohley Funeral
Home In Hamburg, N.Y.

Tornadoes defeated
Middletown Fenwick beats Southern
in title game, page C-1

•

·t nttS
Middleport-

Today's T-S

February

re~il

cerning releasing Rural Abandoned
Mine Program (RAMP ) funds so
reclamation projects can be done .
It ·was reported that the bid
opening for Snowville Site 1 will be
on March 30 in Colwnbus.
Cooperator agreements were
signed for Roy, Alan and Ed Holter,
Chester Township, and Stephen
Baldwin, Sutton Township. Obsolete
cooperator agreements were cancelled for Roy and Ada Hoi ter,
Chc&gt;ster Township, and David C.
Flagg, Sutton Township.
A change in Soil Conservatwn Service and Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District office hours was
noted. The new office hours are 8
a.m . until 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Those attending the meeting were
Roy Miller, Rex Shenefield, David
Gloeckner, Thereon Johnson , Tom
Theiss, Maurita Miller, Catherine
Shenefield, Mary Lew Johnson,
Cathy First, Robert First, Reid
Young and Opal Dyer.

collections down

Retail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for February were down .
almost 25 percent compared to
February of 1981, but sales tax
receipts for that month were up over
50 percent, according to the monthly
report of Gertrude Donahey, state
treasurer.
Retail sales tax receipts for

~'e bruary ,

1982, amounted to
$95,079.74 compared to receipts of
$124,440.93 for February, 1981, a
decrease of $29,361.19, 23.59 percent.
Vehicle sales tax receipts for
February, 1982 amounted to
$39,437 .71 compared to collections of
$25,213.32 for February, 1981, an increase of $14,224.39 or 56.41 percent.

ELBERFELD$

•

WEEKEND SPECIALS
Special Prices this weekend on many items all
over the store - Stop in and look around Visit every department. Shop every Floor -It
pays to take advantage of the Sales at
Elberfelda.
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•.

10 Section,, 11 Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newsp.1per

Sunday, Mar. 28, 1982

State mandated budget cutbacks
force layoffs at retardation centers
'

business dlstrld. Police reported one dead aud two
wounded In the Incident aud said they had a suspect in
custody. (APLaserpholol -

WORKING ON THE WOUNDED - Cleveland
par&amp;I,Jiedics work on one of three victims of a Thursday'
afternoon shooting on Prospect Ave. in the downtown

'

.

Suspect held in Cleveland shootings
CLEVELAND (AP) - Qeveland pollee said they are trying to
determine the motive which led to
the gunshot slaying of one man and
the wounding of iwo others on a city
street.
All three shooting viCtims are associated with a Lebanon political

Emergency runs
Five emergency calls were answe red Thursday and on Friday
1nornlng bY 1oca1 units • the Me 1gs
Coun ty E mergency MedleaI Se rvlce reports ·
The Middleport Unit a t 1: 15 a.m.
Thursday wen! to Brownell Ave., to
treat Brandon Johnson and atl:25
P.m. took Anna Martin from StoneApartme ts to v te
wood
n
e rans
Memoria 1Hosp!tal a nd a t 7: 55 p.m.
took Ba r b Smith fro. m P ark St. to
Veterans Memorial.
The Tuppers Plains Unit at 1:24
p.m., took Sally Pooler from her
home on Route 7 to Holzer Medical
Center. Frtday morning at 7:14
a .m., the Rutland Unit took Allegra
Will from her home to Veterans
Memortal.

•
·-Poster judging highlights Meigs SWCD session
Conservation poster judging
highlighted the recent meeting of the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District.
Overall co-champion winners for
the contest were Don Harris,
Chester Elementary School, and
Rachel Robinson, Rutland Elementary School. These two students will
receive trophies from the Meigs
SWCD along with cash awards and
ribbons .
The Ladies Auxiliary also elected
officers for the coming year. Officel'll elected were Maurita Miller,
president; Sally Gloeckner, vice
president; and Cathy First,
secretary.
The auxiliary will be distributing
bookmarkers to the fourth graders
of Meigs County during Soil Stewardship Week which is May 11!-23.
In other regular board business,
Thereon Johnson was' appointed to
serve on the (RC&amp;D) Committee
representing the board.
Supervisors were asked to write to
senators and congressmen con-

Point

movement, according to pollee.
Pollee were holding a 41!-year-old
man. Thursday night In connection
with the shootings earlier In the
day. PoUce Detective Bob Bolton
said that the man was In custody,
pending charges. He did not release
the man's name.
Bolton said the shooting occurred
on Prospect Avenue at 3:20p.m.

Minor d amages
Light damages were reported to
two vehicles In an accident on E .
Main St., Thursday afternoon.
Pomeroy Pollee said a truck
driven by James Webster, Pomeroy, had stopped behind a car
driven by James Hubbard, Chester. Hubbard was stopped at the
tratflc light at Sycamore and Main.
The truck rolled Into the rear of the
Hubhard vehicle, pollee said.

"Right now it's being Investigated,'' Bolton said Thlll'liday
night. "We really don't know (the
motive for the shootings} at this

time."
Sallrn T. Abllmouna, 27, of Fairview Park, was shot and died after
arriving at St. Vincent Charlty
Hospital.
Bassam Khawam, 23, of Cleveland, was reported In serious canditlon at Metropolitan General
HQSpltal wlthgunshotwoundstohls
back and left shoulder_
Khawam's 27-year-old brother,
Jamll, wasreported'lnstablecondllion at Lutheran Medical Center
with gwishot wounds to his chest.

Action dismissed

.

A court action filed by Judy Constance Neace against Freddie Joe
Neace has ,___n .dismissed In the
"""
Meigs County Common· Pleas

us.car prevlew
Take-One insert

,--------------=Ceo.:..·.:..rl.:.,-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ORDINANCE
NO . 1117-82

An

Ordinance

Minimum Size

line

of

Fixing
Water

t\ e it ordained by th e
Counc il of the Village of
Middlepor t as fo!l oWs :
Sec. I. That From and af·
ter th is date of this Ordinance all
i nstallation
wh e th er
origin a l
i n·
stallat ion or r eplacemen t

installment of water lines

extendin g from the villag e

wa ter meter to the proper ·

ty of users of water sha 11
mee t
the
followin g
specifications , to wit :
A . The size of all such
l ines shall not be less than
3/ 4" inside diameter.
B. The material used in
such l ines shall be copper
or plilStic .
C. All such lines shall be
of a mini mum tes t of 130
poun ds.
Sec . I I . Whenever any
property owners sl'1all in·

Space shuttle
overview

stall a new water line from
the village meter to the
point of use or replaces any
part- of an existing water
line between th e meter of
the VillaQe and point of usc
they shall install in said
water system at some roin t
between the meter o the
first point in the building of
use where water is tak en
from the l if)e, a shut-off ·
va lve capable of stoppi ng
the flow of all water to the
plumbing in the builc;ting .
Sec . Ill. Th is Ordinance
shall take effect and be in
· for ce from and after the
earliest d.lte permiUed by
law .
Passed th e 8th day of

March 1982

Attest :
Jon P . Bu ck
Cl erk

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Senate Republicans could get some
Democratic help on their new btU
designed to balance the state
budget by cutting spending and
raising taxes.
House Speaker Vernal G. Rl1fe
Jr., D-New Boston, said Friday the
House will give the measure serious consideration If It passes the
Senate, where hearings already
are under way.
The hearings resume Tuesday on
the omnibus btU which calls for a 6
percent spending cut In the next tis- ·
cal year, combined with a tempor- ,
ary Increase In the state Income
tax.
_ Provisions deanDg with the
spending cuts and some other aUsterity moves wUI be examined by
the Senate . Finance Committee,
while the tax Increase will be re-

13126. 1412. 2tc

POSTER WINNER- Sally Gloeckner, Catherine Shenefield, Cathy
First, and Maurita MUier, all members of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Ladles Auxiliary, are shown with the· two ~hampion
posters from the 1982 Co011ervation Poster Contesl Also a member and a
·
judge but not pictured was Mary Lew Johnson.

BAKSHY A. CHHIBBER. M.D.
(Internal Medicine and Pediatrics)

.,
announce the merger of their practices to
''

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES

with offiCes in

Point
. Pleasant and Man

No. 7 South Second Street
Mason, W. v~
Phone 773·5531 or 773-5532
The Profeulonal Building

2513 Jacllson Ave.
Point Pleasant, W. V.
Phone 675·5511 or 675...143
Offices ~~~ by appointment

.

·--

-

-- -· -· .

AVE '77' V.W. SUPER BUG $A
CHEVROLET MALIBU
LANDAU COUPLE .
V-8, A.T ., P.S. Tilt vinyl top,
wheels, triple blackl

'5195,

BJ ROBERT E. MJIID
A..oclllted p,_ Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Money-strapped Ohio, u.its a projectEd budget deflcltofJl btlllon but

12) In stock. Both have low miles
and all the extras!

'6695

two recent lederai developmenta
have llfted Ita total Indebtedness to
more !hall $2'b1Ulon,

I .

Wltllluc~ moet of the II!COnd $1

'79' FORD FAIRMONT
. WAGON
A.T., P.S., A-C, rear wiper,
•JIM-FM. square pkg .

~ will ~ spread DVI!I' the next

'76' CHEVROLET VEGA
12 Dr ., Sta. Wg . 4 cyl.

A.T ., P .S.,

· Roof Rack.

12 Month
Nationwide Used Car Warranty!

Area deatlis .' ..... : .. A·7

Aloug the River • ; ~. B-1·9
Business .•~ . ( •• . , •••• D-3

'5195.
Or u,ooo
·

funding !rom the state as the Gallla

facWty did.
"We won't be hurl that badly In
operations beca~ we've been In It
lor two years and didn't get In on
state relmb\lfsement;" he said .

viewed by the Senate Ways and
Means Cornn1lttee.
Senate President Paul E. GUlmor, R-Port atnton, said every effort wW be made to get "the State of
Ohio" bills passed and sent to the
House by the end of next week.
Rifle declined to give details of
the btu, but said majority House
Democrats will consider any proposal that might solve the state's fiscal crtsls and oflset a projected $1
bllllon buclret deficit.
He said If the need lor a tax Increase Is adequately demonstratEd, he prefers a boost In the
Income tax Instead of the sates tax.
Gov. James A. Rhodes says he
wants
o~t lncrellse In the
sales tax but has refUsed to say he
would veto a boost In the ~me

a

tax.
'!be pending bUI would Impose

cJasslfled' ....• , ••• IH-7
Farm- • . . • . • • • . • • • • • 'D-2

IMal .. ~ .•. ·. . . . . • • A-4-8

State-Natloual ......• D-1

'Spo1111 . . • • • • • • • . • • • C-1-8
Tilke-One
.. • • • • IDsert

several yean altllpuih there Ia a
legal question even about that.
"It ~ee~~~~ute It aets wone every
day," saya llolwe Speaker Vernal
G. Rl1fe Jr., D-New BoRon, a.ddtna
that the state'• !IDaDcta1 ~ "Ia
the ~ 1'111! aeen Iii tile 2&amp; yean
been bere." ·
rurre•a reacdon 11 typical of most
ofllclall In !be
wbere
INiiiiVe IP""''DI cull are In
the worD aJoar wliJi I IDcreulni

rve

Sti....,•
poeelb!Ut;y of a._.., llaiii!Wid8 tu
lncreue
wttbln four montha.

.

"Subsidy-wise, we serve a smaller
population, but It wUI hurt us,
obviously.
"Our programs are !Wed to the
maximum, and the cut wUI curtail
any . growth In our ptograms,"

STAFF TO BE REDUCED -

adJnlnlt*ralloll

bulldiDr ac GAl_.. Developmemal Cetlter lUnda

llllenlly IIIII weekend alter employee8 were lnlonned
Fl1day lhe six percent apelldlnJ cut ordered by lhe

.

.

for one tear, starting July 1, a 0.1
percent Increase In the Income tax
for low-bracket wage earners.
It would be graduatEd up to 0. 7
percent for top-bracket taxpayers.
The 10-year-old tax now ranges
from 0.5 percent to 3.5 percent.
The 6 percent spending cut proposed by the Senate leaders, unlike
earlier cuts ordered by GOP Gov.
James A. Rhodes, would apply to
all state agencies, Including those
which admlnlster social programs.
'!bat would mean welfare recipIents would get lower payments,
and the operating bu4gets of prtsons and mental hospital$ would
feel the budget ax for the first time
since the fiscal crunch began late
last year.
Rifle said Democrats oppose reductions In social p!'OI!Tamtundlng,
but he dldn't rule out the possibility.

Senate hearings are on tap thts Icy, the states will have to pay Interest ~ about 10 percent starting
week, starting Tuesday, on a
Aprll1.
RepubliCan-backed proposal reThe bureau of employment serviquiring lurther spending cuta In the
ces
already has borrowed about $1
fllcal year starting July 1 and rats- ·
biWDo,
and will have to borrow that
lng the state Income tax for the flnt
much
more
In the next few years,
time since It was enactEd on Jan. 1,
based
on
current
proJections.
1972.
·
Up
to
now,
the
aovernment has
HopeluJJy, If approved, It will
made
the
loaollnlefl!St
free.
erue a $1 billion general fund deRllod'!ll and leglalatlve leaders
ficit projectEd for July 1, 1883.
Gov. James A. Rhodel' latest ex- don't plan to heed the attorney renecutive order lor a 2&amp; percent eral's opinion, at least for now, and
they have a plan to pay $7 mllllon In
spendinc cut In the next three
lnterell In the federal fllcal year
montha takes effect Thunday, and
starting Oct. 1, hoping to put the
most atate aaenclell claim If will all
problem otflnto the future.
but put them Out of bullneta.
But Rhodel c;onceded 1a1t week
The lalelt bla blow came when
offlclall teamed that the state has
"it'aiOIIII!lblni that is t10ln8 to have
to be lettJed In the courts." .
to pay lnterell on money botrowed
He also held out hope that confrom thelederal JOIII!I'IIIII!Il to pay
ire~~ wW repeal the lntel'l!lt reunemploymellt compeaatlon.
Ohio's ernpiayerl repay the quirement on the unemployment
loaol, but under a ~ lederal ~loanl.

will reauli 1n 111e dlacharllnr of 11111 cllent.e ac·
GDC - aad the ellrnloailon of approxlmalely aoo
Jobl. 'lbla amount ~·t Include 1.10 llllllclpaced Job
abollllunenl.l calllled by earlier cUen&amp; rete- proJec-

llorul.

News briefs•..
Hearings set in drug arrests .
GALLIPOLIS - Preliminary hearings were set Frtday In Gallipolis Municipal Co4rt for two Cheshire men arrested on tratflcldngln
drugs charges.
Judge James A. Bennett said James B. Rife, 23, wUI appear In
court at 9: ll a.m . Aprll14 on the trafficking charge. Rile signed a
$5,000 recognizance bond and was released.
A pretrial hearing on a menacing charge against Rite has been set
tor 4 p.m . Aprlll21n court . The defendant alBa posted $500 recognizance !Janel tor the charge and was released .
Michael R. Stewart, 25, will be In court at 1 p.m. Thursday for
trafficking. He was released alter signing a $5,000 recognizance
bond.
Both men were taken Into custody last Thursday morning In Cheshire by the Galtla County Shertft's Department, concluding a threemonth undercover o(leration In cooperation with the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.
Earl Phelps, 30, Middleport, and Brinley Seth, 2&amp;, Pomeroy, were
both arrestEd In Pomeroy Thursday morning by Meigs deputies In
connection with trafficking charges there.

Fire de~troys mobile home
RACINE - A mobile home on Bashan Road near here was destroyed by fire tate Friday afternoon.
No Injuries were reported In the Incident, and the Racine Fire
Department said the owners, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shain, wert! both
enroute to Columbus for the state basketball tournament when the
blaze occurred.
Cause of the fire hasn't been determined, although a neighbor told
firemen an explosion was heard, followed by the tire.

Rlwdes identifies disaster areas
COLUMBUS, Ohio' - Five counties In northwestern Ohio have
been declared federal dtauter areas because ot fJoocl damage from
the Maumee and Blanchard rtven over a four-day period this
month, Gov. James A. Rhodes says.
The retidenta of Dellance, Henry, Lucas, Paulding and Wood
counties will be eligible for Individual assistance through the Federal Emergency Management Agency, a White House spokesman
e&lt;mllrmed Friday.
'!be federal government sent In teams to evaluate the damage
before l'lllkln&amp;' the dtsalter declaration. Residents can aeek atd
lllrouch aeveral federal agenctea, Including loans from the Small
BuaiJieu Administration.

. .,

.• l

Layh continued. "By September, If
our revenue doesn't come In, we'll
have to make some drastic cuts."
The cuts would be In staff, maintenance and tranSportation, he
(Continued on A~)

.·

Ohio's debt j~JDPS to $2 bil~ion

'80' PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX
Your Choice

gal advice.
''This cut slmply means services
wUI be aurtalled, and will be comIng sooner than we expected,''
Phelps said. "We've .checked with
Mrs. (Dorothy) Candee (GalJta
County audlior) to certify when our
money Is going to run out."
The poulbWty of closlni the
school may become real ln"June
when the fl,seal year endS. The
board has since placed a one-mill
operating levy on the June 8 ballot
to provide additional tunds for the
school, which 'serves more than 30
students, and the Gallco Sheltered
Workshop, which has more thart40
employees.
En.~ 11 the levy passes - It's
been tw'ned down by Galtla 's voters thl;ee times In ~ last 1'h years
.- the money won't be collected until early 1983, Phelps said.
· "We still have to worry about
that period of time," the superintendent said . •"We've got ~ertous
p!'Oblenls faclni us In JUM, but the
board Is trying to deal with them."
In. Meigs CQunty, a new school
and workshop for Its retarded cttl. zens stands vacant In Syracuse because there aren't-funds to start Its
programs. The school Is still locatEd In the old Pomeroy junior
high .school bulldlrig and has lii!en
operating for the last two years of
the county general fUnd.
Chris Layh, school admlnlstrator, said the cut wUJ have a definite
tm~ on its programs, but per·
haJl$1\0t as severely as those In Gallla County. Layh said that when
Meigs stopped Sending retarded
students to Guiding Hand two years
ago and started its own school, It
didn't receive the same level of

Hearings set on .omnibus bill

Carl R . Horky
President of
Council

Page D-1

P. JAMES NAVALKOWSKY. M.D.
(Internal Medicine)

By KEVIN KELLY
Times Sentinel S&amp;alf
GALLIPOLIS - A six percent
cut In si,lenlllng ordered last week·
by Gov. Jaines A. Rhodes Is wreak. lng not•a little havoc with the Ohio
Department of Mental
Retardation.
Becaute of the state's continuing ·
tlnaoctal crisis, service reductions
at local facWtles for the mentally
retan)ed will be cut back further
and job abollshments wUI continue
at state developr!\ental centers.
The grtm assessment was Issued
by Dr. Rudy Magnone, ODMR dl·
rector, at a press ·cont~ In Columbus Frtday morntng In whl.c h
he Identified Gallta and Meigs counties as two of the areas to be hardest
hit.
To meet the directive to trim
from his budget,.Magnone said subsidles to the two counties' boards of
mental retardation wUI be lowered
and aome. 1,1111 employees .across
the state iald ott - appi'oxitnaiel~
one-third of thoEe lay oils will be
enacted at the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Both counties received 23 percent
cuts In their funding levels durjng
the last quarter of the fiscal year.
Loren Phelps, supertntenderit of
the Guiding Hand School In Cheshire, said reductions In staff and
services have left the school at minImum operating standards, and If
ihe school Is forced to go below
those standards, It wW be taken to
court by the state.
In order to tight thts, a special
pi'05eCIItor, WorthingtOn attorney
John Shady, has been appointed to
provide the school and the Gallta
mental retardation board with le-

•.

�•

Commentary and perspective

Page-A·2

825 ThlrdAve., Gallipolis, Oblo

lll Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo

( 6lt) 146-2342

( 814) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-controller

A MEMBERoiTtw AIIIIOCLiltCIPraJ,IalaDCI D1Uy PnltAueclldcmaad the A.merl~•

Newtpll~

Ptlblllllwn AheldatkiL

0

LE'ITERS OF OPINION •re wrkomrd. They a-.ld bE ln.. lhall . . word&amp; '-1· .4.11
\etten 1ft IUbjett to edldq lid IDIIII be tlptd with ume, addrnl lad telep.\MI!
nwnber. N~••lped lettmlwUI be publilkd. ~..etten Pou&amp;d be 1a &amp;fCMI ... t.e, addfttliq
lliiiUct, DOl penouiJUq,
.

Despite inflation curb
'i nterest remains high
I

SCRABBLE, Va. -This has been
a long cold winter ;J, the Blue Ridge
mountains. We've had more snow
and ice than anyone truly had any
use for, and lately we've had a
problem with mud. As a consequence, my wife, who generally is
the.soul of sunny good humor, was a
bit testy when she finally got Mr.
Springmaker on .the phone.
" Well," she said, putting a little
topspin on the word, "It's about time
you got back to Rappahannock
County."
Mr. Springmaker, you should understand, comes to our country store
about this time every year. He could
be anywhere from 40 to 60 years old
- it's hard fo tell - a tall, cool
fellow with a twinkle in his eye.
We've been ordering from him since
1966, and I'll say this for him: He
delivers first-class merchandise.
Alter a few minutell of palaver,
Southern style, in which he asked
about the grandchildren and she
inquired about his rec~nt sales trip
through the Carolinas, they got down
to business.
" I'd like five consecutive 60- ·
degree days," she said, reading
from a list she'd made out, "but I'll
take four 65s if you have them."
"If you'll wait a couple of weeks,"
said Mr. Springmaker, "I can give
you half a dozen."
" Now, " ~he said, 1 want them
now. Right now! We're tired of
waiting."
Mr. Springmaker, you could tell,
was writing all thi• down. "How
would you like the wind?" he asked.
"I have some eight;mile April
bree-Les, top of the line."

can
4

. Even as you read this ' the much
publicized election is being held in
EI Salvador for those citizens of that
unhappy country who have survived
the campaign and are brave enough
to vote. No matter who wins the
propaganda war will still go on. '
' For the last year we have been
subjected to the most intensive
propaganda . effort since Vietnam.
The object seems to he to get us em-

deliveJ1:.~==~==="'=am=es=J.=K=ilpa=
' t=ric::;:=;k

all the rain that White Walnut Run
tolerate just now. "Let'• hold it
to four soft showers and one good
thunderstorm," she said, "but space
them two days apart and stop them
by six in the morning."
'Ri8hl

on ,"

said

Mr .

Springmaker.
"I want the forsythia to burst into
bloom," said my wife. "I want fountains of forsythia, great looping
garlands of for!iythia, all golden
yellow-"
"That's the only color it comes
in," said Mr. Springmaker.
~~Don't

interrupt,-'' she said.

44

1

want redbud in the same soft rose
we've had before. I want a hundred
dsffodils, half white, half gold, but
don't send me a marching band.
Scatter them over the hillside that

Pomeroy~Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va.

runs down to the brook. I want pan- the srnell of warm earth when I turn
sies and poppies. I want bloodroot over the vegetable plots. Send me
and snowdrops and wood violets and tne smell of April gfllliS. Send me
your usual soWlds - piccolo peepers
Virginia bluebells."
.
and
two frogs on the bass viols. Send
"You're going too fast for me,"
me
the flutter of ne~&gt;1ing birds,
said Mr. Springmaker.
robins
on the lawn, phoebes in the
"As soon as you ship the bluebells,
bam,
bluebirds
along the fence row.
I want trillium, 8Jld then I want
Send
me
one
hawk,
hang-gliding off
hyacinths with hats like the guard$
Red
Oak
Mountain."
at Buckingham Palace, Beefeater
"You've got him," !laid · Mr.
tulips and aconites in green berets. I
want the pear and peach and apple Springmaker.
"One more thing,." she said. "Let
trees in bloosom -"
me
have a couple of rabbits to fuss
" Hold.on," said Mr. Sprlngmaker.
"You know you ~an't have apple about, one groundhog for the same
blossoms until late April. or .reason, and no more than four chipdogwood either. I'll send them when mwlks."
"OK on the groUndhog," said Mr.
I send the azaleas - the ones that
look like pink and white butterllies Springmaker, "and OK on the chips,
but lady, there's no such thing as two
on the hillside. Anything else?"
"Smells," said the wife. "Send me rabbits."

High Interest rates persist, despite the brightest outlook lor moderation
lillnllatlon slilce the 1960s.
·. 'The Labor Department reported this past week that retail pJices rose at
an annual rate o! 3 percent In February, the smallest mont!IJy InCrease
since July 19M, at the end of the previous recession.
· ln the past three months, lnllat!on, as measured by the Consumer Price
¥!dex, ~"*'at an annual rate o! 3.7 percent, the lowest pace In r.early six
years. For the
. 12 months ended In February, prices rose 7.7 percent, down
from 8.9 percent In all o!l981, 12.4 percent In 1980, 13.3 percent In 1979 and 9
J)ercent In 1978.
·
: Yet lenders continue to demand Interest premiums well above the Inflation. rate lor the use o~lr funds.
: Banks are paying 14.5 'Percent Interest to attract 90-day deposits or
~OO,IXXl or more and are charging 16.5 percent Interest on short-term loans
10 their most creditworthy corporate customers.
: Long-term Interest rates are prohibitive lor many borrowers. This past
Wi!ek, Philadelphia Electric Co. sold $100 million In bonds at a price to
provlde lenders with 18.18 percent annual interest over the next :ll years.
"I'll lake 'em," said my wife.
· President Reagan has called high Interest rates "the greatest single
"But Douglas wants to fly a kite afthreat today to a healthy, lasting (economlc) recovery."
; Following the Labor Depa~nt's report on the Consumer Price lndex,
ter
school,
so let me along
have awith
couple
of _
1f&gt;.knot
afternoons
four
,.,...
Reagan's deputy press secretary, Larry Speakes, complained that Invesdeep-blue ·skies and a dozen cumulus
'·
•. 'IW&lt;'!
tOrs are not paying attention' to declines In lnllatlon.
cloudsthatlooklikesailingships."
f2l';j,:;--·
_,.· ~
: "The president cut lnllat!on, cut the budget, made good on his promises
'IJid the money market st!ll won't listen," Speakes sald.
My wife paused. We've had about ~
· . . - - ------~-------------~~~
-·"""'"""'
~
· Although the ravages ollntlatton and.restrlctlve monetary policies of the
Federal Reserve Board have had a lot to do with holding down prices,
~omlsts say there Is reason lor optimism that Inflation w1U continue to
unwind when ecoromlc recovery comes.
: They cite ample harvestsholdlngdownlncreases In load prices, modera-Even if a truly neutral inspector
"The United States has placed
WASHIJ'iGTON - The IsraeliS' the Senate Foreign Relations Comtion In labor's wage demands and the world oil glut, which Is not expected
is
allowed onto an IAEA team, there
pre-empti~e strike against Iraq's
mittee last year, common sense led great trust in the international
!b disappear as a result or the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Counis
still little Cha!'Ce that illegal acn11clear facility at O!lirak last June to a plausible asswnption that the safeguards system to sound the
tries' decision last weekend to reduce oil production.
raised a st~rm of controversy cen- Iraqis were indeed building a alann if nuclear material is diver- tivity will be discovered. "IAEA in: Sandra Shaber, a senior economist at. Chase Econometrics Associates,
tered on the rights and wrongs of nuclear weapon. Iraq has too much ted," the report notes. " Moreover, it . spectors do not have unlimited ac$8-ys that whlle the prospect lor curbing lntlat!on appears brighter now
Prime Minister Menachem Begin's oil to feel a need for nuclear power has, over the years, helped to per- cess on their inspections," the GAO
tjlan following receBslons In 1970 and 1974-75, Interest rates adjusted lor
decision to bomb Iraq. The Ragan plants, and the Iraqis' claim that the suade other nations that they too explained. "IAEA has no authority
Inflation are at their highest level since the end o! World Warn.
administration y{ii.S particularly in- O!lirak facility was simply intended should rely on the IAEA system for to implement physical protection
·.. Mrs. Sliaber said uncertainty about the nation's spending and monetary censed that Israe\rlia'dn•t notified its for 'research'' was ludicrous.
assurances thllt others were not measures, such as armed guards or
policies IS a major factor keeping Interest rates hlgh1 quip~: "One . ally ahead of time.
So why. didn't Israel simply voice diverti1,1g nuclear material from fences, in their safeguards ac~ght to call a psychologist as a better source ol art explanation than all
tivitiell, or to pursue and recover
But the bigger issue, almost, lost its suspicions and ask the IAEA to peaceful uses."
economist."
The GAO auditors then go on to diverted nuclear material." They
sight ol in the general uproar, is determine whether there was
. : ;Part o! that uncertainty is connected With administration projections o!
what impelled Israel to undertake weapons-grade material or spell out some of the fatal aren't even allowed to search for
bwdget deficits through 1987.
weaknesses in the international in- "undeclared · or clandestine
the raid in the first plaee. Iraq is a capability at O!lirak• The answer:
: :Lawrence Kudlow, chief economist at the O!flce of Management and
signatory to the multi nation Nuclear Israel presumably realized how inef- spection system. Here are some of facilities," the report adds.
lJpdget, estimated total federal borrowing w1U absorb 40 percent or the
In other words, the nation being irr.
them:
Non-Proliferation Treaty; if it was fectual the IAEA is.
capital raised In the United States this year and next.
spected
for possible covert nuclear
A
riwnber
of
secret
studies
have
Politically
motivated
in fact building a nuclear weapon at
: :"During recoveries, this credit demand will keep Interest rates higher, O!lirak, such a violation should have been made of the nuclear watchdog 1 "safeguards" allow any signatory weapons activity has virtually total
than they ought to be, and during recessions this credit demand will
been discovered and reported by the agency. One of the most telling was nation to reject individual inspectors control over what the international
prevent Interest rates from dropPing to low levels," Kudtow said.
treaty's watchdog, the International a confidential report by the General arbitrarily. Unfortunately, this inspectors are allowed to see.
·At this stage or a " typical" recession, short-term Interest rates have
"Because the existing equipment
Atomic Energy Agency.
Accounting Office's international provision has · evolved into · a
usually declined by 35 percent to 40 percent, whlle long-term rates are off 5
cannot
precisely determine the'
The sad truth, though, Is that the division. My associate Lucette wholesale rejection of inspectors on
~rcent, Kudlow said. But seven months Into the current recession, longamount
of
material on hand, there
IAEA ·is,a toothless watchdog. It suf- Lagnado has seen a copy of the still· grounds of politics or nationality.
term rates are up 5 percent and shQrt-term rates are just 9 percent to 10
can
be
no
assurance
that every loss
fers from political, financial and unreleased GAO report. ·
The effect has been to limit the
percent lower, he said.
will
be
detected,"
the
GAO report
technical constraints. And the treaty
The GAO was sharply critical of makeup of IAEA inspection teams to
: In addition to concern over federal borrowing and the Fed's tight-money
states.
"This
decreases
the
ability to
itself is so full of holes the signatory the IAEA, and warned that the individuals from "friendly" coun!lance, Interest rates are also being kept high by heavy short-term borrowdetect
potential
diversion
when
nations routinely thumb their noses United States should not count on it tries. Iraq, for example, had allowed
Ing by businesses struggling to survive the recession.
large
amounts
of
nuclear
material
at the enforcement agency.
to uncover clandestine nuclear only inspectors from the Soviet bloc
· 'Housing and automobile manufacturers continue to suffer.
are handled."
As a former IAEA inspector told weapons activity.
to cheCk its O!lirak facility.
: The nation's automakers reported this past week that mid-March sales
were 43.6 percent oolow year-ago levels. Sales lor the year so far are down
~-4 percent from last year's pace.
•
: The National Association or Realtors said sales ol existing homes rose
2.2 percent In February alter plunging 4.1 percent the previous month, but
~re still 26.6 percent below last year's level.
his college loan, and put it into a 20
"Mr. Reagan, Mr. Regan. Wake
" It's the media that have done it. before you go?"
"Business hasn't been any help percent money fund?"
up, your honeymoon is over.''
They've made me into a Scrooge. I
"That was one of your best ones.''
"So soon?"
am a compaSBionate, kind, generous either. They're all to skeptical and
"Or the guy who took his food
" You've had a longer one thai person and t)le softest touch they've downbeat, they don 'I believe
most presidents, sir. If you weren't had in a ion~ lime. But all they talk anything I told them. If anyone stamps and bought vodka with
such a lovable guy we would have about is budget deficits, and unem- ruined my honeymoon it was the them."
"You told that one to everybody."
asked you to leave the honeymoon ployment and high interest rates. gloom and doom boys on Wall Street.
I gave them everything they wanted,
"They say I never g~t my facts
suite three months ago."
Why do they do that?"
" Because the press is in show and they still turned against me right.''
"Gosh, I was having such a good
"They'll say anything, Mr.
time. I wish it could have gone on bw;iness, Mr. President. they're when I needed them."
"Bw;lnessmen are terribly fickle. Reagan, when the honeymoon is
always playing up the bad news in
forever.''
"Don't we all? But no honeymoon South Succotash and they never talk They'll applaud you in the East over."
"Maybe my problem is everyone
can last fdrever - or it wouldn't bt! about the good news. Now will you Room and as soon as you leave for
called a honeymoon.•Now you have please get out of bed so the maid can the Oval Office, they'll sell you thinks I'm just a nice guy. As long as .
short. I'll start packing your clothes they ruined my l]oneymoon, I can ·
to go and find out what it's really like clean up the room?"
"You know who really ruined my while you're shaving."
now be myself, and :mow them I'm ·
to be married to the American
"I'll tell you who really ruined my . as tough and mean as they are.''
people. Don't forget when you took honeymoon? "
.. No, sir."
honeymoon. It was all those govern"It's wof'\h a try, Mr. Reagan. ·
your presidential vows it was for
better or for worse."
"Congress. They're out to get me ment bureaucrats who kept Well, I guess it's. time to leave the
"How does a President know when becaw;e they hate to see anyone hap- screaming about what I was doing to suite. We've enjoyed having you, sir. ·
py."
his honeymoon is over?"
the old and the poor. I ws willing to Here , I'll carry those bags for you." ·
" His Idea of being up on current events is
''I'm going to miss this place, I ·
"I couldn't agree with you more. take car.e of the old and poor, but r
"When the population starts to
knowing that some pro golfers have started
question all those beautiful things Congress always promises · a wasn't going to let people who could had some wonderlul times here. Can
using red balls. "
you whispered in their ears. They've president a honeymoon, and then work get a free ride any more. Did I I say goodbye to the help?"
"I don't think that wouJd be wise, .
heard them before, but when they're when he turns out the lights, they ever tell you about that lady in
in love, they want to believe them. start dropping shoes on his head. Chicago who was getting t,en welfare sir. The TV reporters will just start
Then one day they say, 'He promised Here, Mr. Reagan, is your bathrobe. checks at the same time?
interviewing the people I •had lo lay
off. "
me a rooe garden, and all he gave Would you like to take a shower
"MllnY times, Mr. Reagan."
"How about the student who took
me was cheddar cheese."
: Today Is Sunday, March 28, the 87th day ofl982. There are 278 days left In

broiled in a senseless politicaL
economic and social struggle in
which bombs and bullets will
provide no answers. During the election campaign it is estimated that
32,~ El Salvadoran lives have been
lost and as many as a half million
have fled the country, 200,~ to the
United States. The Reagan administration, with Secretary of State
Alexander Haig as its chief spokes-

man, has made a year-long effort to
sell the American people on a policy
of Intervention but so far with little
success. The latest poll, conducted
by CBS and .the New York Times,
showed the public two to one against
any military intervention in Central
America.
'
The El Salvador r.evolution, as in
most revolutions which were in·
volved Central and Southern

American countries, is caused by
the vast gulf that separates the rich
and the poor. There is no .middle
class as in the United States
economy. They are either very rich
or very poor. The very rich have
owned the land and have over the
years lived like feudsllords, keeping
all the advantages ol wealth
education and power for themselves:
The very poor have been forced to
work for wages set by their employer. In El Salvador the per
capital yearly income is $750 according to the 1982 Readers Digellt
Year Book. Compare this with the
per capita income of the United
States; $11,594.
The majority of the people of El
Sal vador are farm laborers,
working for the wealthy land
owners. More than half cannot read
or write. It is to these people the
election poses a real threat. The
guerrillas opposing the military jun·
ta which rules the country are
boycotting the election. They
threaten death to anyone who votes.
The junta troops in turn threaten
reprisals against anyone that
doesn't vote. Since the El sBlvador
troops have shown themselves even
more savage than the guerrillas, the
voter turnout is uncertain. I wonder
how we in this country would react
to such intrusion of our voting rights.
Yet we put up with the same sort of
coercion in many states for 100 years
before we finally passed the Civil
Rights legislation.
There are presently three factions
~e: in El Salvador, all equally bad. AI

Gi:'

!Sl•ltt_ _ _ .,..,•• ~~--

41

·~======~=======~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~

Toothless watchdog

Jack Anderson

4

Wake up, Mr. Reaga=an=======Ar=tB=uc=h~wa=ld

•
ID

Fighting comp
__e_t_it_i_o_n____. .:. . ,.___Ro_b_er_t~_a_lt_ers
WASIDNGTON (NEAl - AI a / fered by bigger federal bailouts, new
time when the country is over- government agencies and inwhelmingly committed to the twin creasingly elaborate regulations on
concepts of reduced government their operations.
bureaucracy and less federal
Regulation Q, a supposedly temregulation, the "t!P'Ift industry".per- porarly measure promulgated by
sists in marching to a different the Federal Reserve Board in 1966,
drummer. ·
placed a 5.5 percent ceiling on
Terrified by competition in the passbook account interest payments
open market, the nation's 4,700 made by thrift institutions while
saVIngs and loan association and its commercial banks were limited to
460 mutual savings bank continue to 0.24 percent less (5.2!i percent) on
, seek the presumed protection of- their passbook accounts.

-B usiness.failures
stable, sales rise
The number of business laUures stabilized In lntd-March but st!U stood 54
percent higher than a year ago, ·whlle an Increase In sales of existing
homes last month laDed to offset January's slide, according to reports
Thursday !rom private organizations.
Dun &amp; Bradstreet Corp. reported 448 business !allures In the week ende:d
March 18, virtually unchanged trom the 4541aUures the previous week, but
up sharply from the 2911n the comparable week last year.
The private credit-rating agency said 4,846 businesses faDed In the !lrst
11 weeks of the year, a 50 percent Increase lrom the same pertod last year.
'The National Association of Realtors said resales of homes rose 2.2
percent In February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.9 mllllon
units alter falling a revised 4.1 percent the previous month. An ea rlier
report by the real estate trade gi;'OUp said sales of existing homes plummeted 6.2 percent In January.
The report said the February sales rate was off 26.6 percent from the
same 1981 month.
Bills before Congress clllllor federal subsidies to reduce the Interest rate
on mortgage loans and stimulate new construction, creating jobs In the
depressed Industry.
. But Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker said In a letter to
Sen. William Proxmlre, O-Wls., that gains from such a program would be
at the expense or other sectors of the economy and would set back efforts to
reduce lnfia t!on.
·
ln other economic development$ Thursday:
-House Majority Leader Jim Wrtght, 0-Texas, said repeal of the tax
cuts approved last year "might be our only effective route to a balanced
budget'' unless President Reagan Is wiiUng to compromise on his spending
plans. Senate Republicans said Reagan must agree to concessions soon or
Congress will ·make the changes for him.
-The lnvestment Company Institute, a mutual fund trade group, said
assets tn)the natlon's.182 money-market mutual funds rose $2.42 billion In
the weeki ended Wednesday to a record total o! $192.1 billion. The Institute
also reported that more than 300,~ new lndlvldual Retirement Accounts
were Invested In mutual funds tn the first two months of 1982, with assets in
those funds rtslng 21 percent to $3.1 billion.
-The General Motors Corp. council of the United Auto Workers union
overwhelmingly reCommended ratification of a contract calling for wage
and benefit concessions In an attempt to save jobs and make the No. 1
automaker more CO{Ilpet!t!ve.

11

3!iCenll!

No subsl'r iptions by HVJil permitted In
teres! rate ceilings on passbook actownt where home carrier servlct l.!l
counts, beginning with a modest inuvullabh:.
crease from 5.5 percent to 6 percent.
The Sunday Thnc!h.~ntinel w111 not be
Approximately 300 thrift industry
rcspoiUI\ble for advant.'e payments mYde
t o ~s rri c1-s .
executives flew to Washington for a
lobbying blitz and convinced 57
MAILStJRSCRIPTIONS
SundaayOIIy
members of Cong ress to co-sponsor
Ontl year .. . ,. , ................ . Z0.80
legislation summarily abolishing the
Six monOt." ................... , SIO..w
D11lly amd Suau!My
DIDC. The DIDC got the message
amount.
Obit~ and Wed Vlr~tlulal
and
scuttled
its
pl
ans
to
lift
the
In 1970, as interest rates began to
One yca 1
.. . .... ... ... $39.00
Six mor1th . ... ................ . J'l0.80
climb, Treasury bills yielded a lhen- unrealistic 5.5 percent ceiling.
Thret~ mnnlh.~ .... , .. ... . ... , ... 112.35
In the late 1970s, small savers
unprec.r.l•nted eight percent. When
Ra1lt!11 Ou\11\dr Oh\u
.11111d Wl'!d \'lrt~lnlll
discovered money market funds,
~mall savers oogan using their
One yt~llr , .. . . , ............ ... . 144.241
whose
assets
grew
from
less
than
$5
passbook deposits bo buy those
Six m011Uts ........ , , ........ , . f11 .40
Three monlh.~ ................ tll.OO
securities, the thrift industry con- billion in 1977 to almost $200 billion
vinced the federal government to in- today. The principal reasons for
crease the require minimum in- their success : They pay two to three fr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
vestmeni from $1,000 to increase the limes as inuch interest as passbook
·
required minimum investment from accounts.
The
thrift
Industry's
response
was
$1,000 to $10,000, thus effectively
not to meet that challenge but to at·
elirnina~ing thato ption for small
tempt
to place new government
savers.
restrictions
on money market funds,
In 1973, the industry decided lo exincluding
unprecedented
federal
periment cautiously with "wild
reg
ulations
~nd
reserve
card " certifi cates · of deposit,
requiring a minimwn deposit of requirements that would artificially
$1,000 for four years but with no in- reduce money market fund interest
rates from three percent to five per
terest rate ceiling.
cent.
When depositors shifted billions of
Savings and loan association
dollars from passbook accounts to
depositors
last year withdrew $25.5
SUPER
the new inslrwnents, then paying 7.5
blllion
more
than they put into their
percent, the thrift industry con- ·
$PECIALI
vinced federal officials to abandon acounts - by far•the largest such
the program after only four months outflow in history - butlhe industry
Complete seleeti; of Soccer,
still believes its salvaton lies in
Horst Alr:inc, Word fun ,
- because i' was too successful.
regulation
rather
than
competition.
CftKkers,
Badpmmon, Tennis,
In 1980, Congress approved
S,.Ce Billie, SkliRI. Colt , hiplr
In
early
March,
it
proposed
a
legislation creating the Depository
Action, ~to R1cina. Snafu,
AshOSIIIIIh, Baoktlboll, Space Ar·
Institutions Deregulation Com- scheme requiring govemrnent •submadl, BowlinJ.
sidizalion
of
it:;
mortga~e loans , a
mittee, a six-memoor panel chaired
by· Treasury Secretary Don,ld T. federal bailout that would cost $10
Regan that . was supposed to billion annually and creation of a
deregulate all interesl ·rales within new government entity - the ComLIST PRICE 1329.95
munity Depository Conservation
six years.
The DIDC established a gradual' Corp.
The DIDC, which meets again
four-year phase-out schedule for
soon,
now faces a crucial decision: It
fixed-term (usually six-month to
must
either drag the thrift industry
four-year ) deposits - but the thrift
into
the
era of free-market conindustry promptly .mounted a court
sumer
finan
ce or acknowledge that
Upper Rt. 7
Gallipolis, Oh.
challenge to that plan and defeated
it
is
unable
to
dismantle an archaic
ilona legal technicality.
Across From the Silver Bridge Plaza
Late la st year, the DIDC was plan- system that is costing· dpositors $30
ning to initiate a pha ...~oul of in· billion in polenliar interest paymen-

Regulation Q was supposed to be a
temporary measure, but between
1966 and 1980 thrift industry officials
successfully lobbied for no fewer
than II extensions, allowing them to
continue paying 5.5 percent interest
when open market rates were
soaring to two to three times !hal

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with offices
. in
Point Pleasant and Mason
Mason,. W.
. V.
Phone 773-5531 or 773-5~32

. The Proteuional Building
2513 .llcbDn Ate. •

Point Plusant, W. V.
'

Phone 675·5511 or

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"

The admin istration since they
carne to power in Washington has
ooen backing the Duarte government. The nucl eus of the guerrilla
force headed by marxist Carpio may
have received training and arms
from Cuba so that made the whole
guerrilla movement a no-no to
Secretary Haig and President
Reagan. They· are willing to pay the
interest on communist debts for
Poland,' sell gra in and phosphate to
Communist Russia and accept a
communist pipeline to Europe but
they couldn't accept a few communist guerillas in El Salvador.
Consistent?
·
Senator Claiborne Pel! of Rhode
Island, has made a fact finding trip
to Central America and is of the

(Internal Medicine and Pediatrics)

lhe year.

'

stake in the election today is a 60 opinion that not all guerrillas in El
member constitutional assembly Salvador are conununists ana • ·
that would name a presidenl until suggests negotiation: He warns that
presidential elections are held each United States subversion in , "
year. They could also draft a new Nicaragua, as has been rwnored, ·
constitution. One faction of wealthy may force its Sandinista leaders to ·
land owners is the rightest party led conclude flley have no choice but to ,
by Roberto D'Aubuisson who has turn to Cuba and the Soviets for
pledged to exterminate the massiVe assistance. He adds,
guerriUBJI and scrap the present jun- " Throwing guns and military ad- '
ta's program on banking and land visers al what are basi cally
reform. Another faction is made up political, economic and social
of the military and a junta ol problems will not work and could
business and professional men well lead to a contagious form of
headed by Jose Napoleon Duarte, in- conununism poisoning all of Central
cumbent president. The guerrilla Amerita.''
Tomorrow the election will bt! over
faction is headed by Salvador Carbut
not the trouble in El Salvador
pio, a top conunander of Marxist
and
not
the propaganda. We may ac;
guerriilas, and Guillenno Ungo,
cept
the
murder of nuns or televisio~
chief political spokesman for the
crews
wilh
equanimity but lei one
revolutionaries, who is not a
military
adviser
be killed by a stray
Marxist. They are demanding a
bullet
and
all
hell
will break loose on
negotiated settlement with the
the
propaganda
front!
government to secure a share of the
political power.
Perhaps the most desirable . - - - - - - - - - - - solution to El Salvador's troubles
would have ooen a negotiall'tl setjunba~ fimn • ltrntinrt
tlement bt!tween Duarte and the
guerrillas. Carpio and Ungo. The
IJSPS57:Hm
A Mullbnt.•c.Ha Newtpaj)l'r
Reagan administration, however,
Publl!lhl"'l ea ch Sunday, W Third
has been dragging it.-&lt; feet against
Avenue, Uy the Ohio Valley Publi11hing
Co lll!)lltly- Multimedia , l11e. Sec:nnd cla.u
any negotiated settlement by
postage paid at Oal!ipol!ll, Ohio, 4f1631.
Medcan President Portillo until it is
Bntt..'t't.'fl as st't.' Ond cln~_ ma!llnt.t 11'\lltler
Ill
Pomeroy. Ohio, PostOftlce.
possibly too late for any definite
result.s. Now it Is possible that
Mtlml)tlr: The Auoclat(.l(j Pt·esll, Inland
Daily Prell.li AllllOCiution a11d the
D'Bubuis•on, who has been
American New11paper PulJi i!lhers
descriood by former ambassador
Aysul'latlon, National Ad\lertisln~
Kept'Cst!lllatlve , BraU1Nnn, 171 17 West
Robert E. White as a "pathologtcal
Nim• Mile Roa~. Suite 204, llct rolt
killer," may win the election and
Michlt.t~tn, 4M75 .
,
'
plunge the country into another
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
round of senseless bloodshed .
8)' Ca~rrler 11r Muh1r Ruultl

IAKSHY A. CHHIIIER, M.D.

history .

; Today's highlight In history:
, On March 28, 1979, the worst nuclear accident In history occurred at the
Three Mile lsland reactor In Pennsylvania.
: On this date:
: ln 1938, Japan Installed a puppet government or the Chinese Republic at
Nanking.
: ln 1939, Madrid's surrender to General Francisco Franco ended the
Spanish Civil War.
· ln 1945, Germany ended Its V-rocket attacks on Britain In World Warn.
:· In 1985, an earthquake struck Chile, killing at least ·428 people.
.; Ten years ago: Thousands marched on ,Parliament In Bellas!, Northern
'Jreland, to protest against British rule.
: Five years ago: 'U.S...sovtet talks on detente and arms control opened In
:MOt!COW with the Soviets denouncing American statements on human
tights.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A· J

El Salvador election"---=-------'.:. . :. ,________~_____Lowe_u_w_i-=ng_eu

t.\ar. 211, 1982

.

For Spring

t

Mar. 28, 1982

Olfices hl!_un

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cost. Not as a legal representative. but to explain how your
return was prepared . We're always ready to stand behind
you, year-round.
618 E. Main St.
lnd &amp; Brown St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

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Sat. 9-S

Mason, W. Va.

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Mar.

' I

Retardation centers•••
said.
The Meigs mental retArdation
board Is seeking the paaaage of a
U&gt;·mlll operating levy Ia the JWJe
primary, expected tnralle$210,001.
" U It passes, It shows a definite
need there should be more loCal
support of our programs," Layh
commented.
Meanwhile, the lix percent cut
has accelerated the amount of
cllents at Galllpolls Developmental
Center . which have to he
discharged.
When the budget problem beian
In January, it was announced more
than 500 jobs at Ohio's three largest
institutions for the retarded, at Co

Mar. 28, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Polnt Pleuant, w. va.

Page-A-6-The so Relay Times-Sentinel

.
(Continued from A-1)

State aid plan ruled illegal

clients were to ~ released.
Although the layoffs have begun
at Columbus and Orient, Zimmer· ·
mail said GDC's reductions were
being partly covered by reUrement
and no further hiring.
And even it the accepted stsff·
ellen! ratio of 1: 1.59 Is maintained,
the super1ntendent said the cuts
could jeopardize further Medicaid
certification of beds and reimbursement at the center.
In his memo to the staf!, Zimmerman said this Is all possible it
ODMR Isn't exempted from the
cut, and he urged them to write or
call their legislators to express
their views on the problem.

lwnbus, Orient and Galllpolls,
would have tn heabollshed. But the
abollshmenta would take place
mainly because of projected cllent
placements lntn the community,
according !D ODMR spokesmen.
However, GDC Superlntendent
Robert Zimmerman informed statf
Friday that when the six percent
cut goes ' ln!D effect Aprtl 1, 185
clients will~ discharged by May 1.
as ordered by the ODMR - and
wtth It, 300 jobs, rediJCing the statf
level tn approximately 320.
This additional statf reduction Is
not added to the l2il that were antic· .
lpated to be laid off at GDC by the
, end ·of the fiscal year when 84

Redistricting plan challenged
By Tbe AIIIIOCialed P.,..

so tar have shown nothing that

Ohio's new congressional dlstrlcts were challenged In U.S. Dlstrlct Court In CollU'IIbus Friday as ·
allegedly violating equal protectloll
provisions of the U.S. COnstitution.
The plan, approved Wednesday
by the Ohio Legl$lature and signed
Into law Thursday by Gov. James
A. Rhodes, creates Z1 new congressional districts. Ohio at two u.s.
House seats because of national
population shifts rellected In the
19110 census.
Plalntifts In Friday's court motion are Juanita Brandon and
Mane Higginbotham, both officials
of Local 4310 of the Communications Workers of Amerlea.
Their complaint wu tiled. as a
motion to intervene In a case tiled
by RepubliCans In February. ,That
suit had asked the federal court to
Intervene In drawtne new dlstrlcts
if the Legislature faDed ID act.
The complaint contends the new
plan violates the ConstitutiOn's Uth
Amendment guarantees. The ll1()o
tlon Usts five complaints, Including
the charge that voting strength of
blacks was Intentionally diluted.
Meanwhile, Republican Congressman John AShbrook, who Is
t'llnnlng for the GOP U.S. Semite
nomination, will return to a hospital
ItS an outpatient for further tests
next week as doct.on continue ef·
forts to determine wilY Ashbrook
fainted at a restaurant March 17.
Ashbrook spo~ Reggie Ba·
sbur said medical tests conducted

mlgbt have caused the fainting
spell.
He said Ashbrook hopes next
week's tests will provide a deflnlte
answer, and the coni:ressman
plans to Issue a statement on the
results.
Tbe Ohio Young Democrats have
endorsed candidates for most of the
key statewide offices up for election
In November.
Following Thursday's flllng
deadline for the June 8 pr1mary, the
Young Democrats said they will
back Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,]).
Ohio, for reelection. Attorney Gen.eral William J . Brown got their
endorsement for governor,. said

I

tor the request Is a claim of tnciirCINCINNATI (AP) -Ohio's merect grant computation," the ruling
thod of notifying Aid ID FamiUes
said.
.
wtth Dependent Children recipients
"(It)
also
states
that the appllof cbanges in benellts is illegal, the
cant
'may'
rather
than
'will' con·
·6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
tinue
ID
receive
previous
benefits
said Friday.
a
bearlng."
pending
· The appeals court, in a 2-1 de:;lPeople who received deficient noslon, ruled that the state's standard
notice of modlllcatlon or termlna- ' tlces must be sent a new notice that
complles wtth the law, the court
tiOD violates federal regulations. It
said. But It refused to require the
ordered odtctals to change the not!·
state to pay benefits that mtght
ftcatlon and sent the case back ID
accrue while the new notices are
U.S. Dlstrlct Court to detemtine it
being dellvered.
other remedies are needed.
The notice provided by Ohio
"The record before us Is Inadeunder the Omnibus Budget ftl!con·
quate to assess the need for addl·
cwatlon Act ofl98l,vtolates Departtiona! remedies, the equities of the
ment of Health and Human
case or the likely consequences to
·Services regulations, the appeals
AFDC recipients or the state of an
court said.
order requiring the continuation of
"The notice ... Is InadeqUate ...
previous benefits," the ruling said.
because It does not make clear that
The court noted that state offian appliCant has a right to a hear·
cials have estimated the amcunt of
lng upon rEquest where the reason
benefits ·In question would total $8

mUllan a month.
Judges Pierce Llv~ly and GUhert
Merritt combined In the majority ·
decision. Judge Nathaniel Jones
dissented In part, saying the court
'
"must not forget the plight of the
.
welfare recipient. "
' '
The appellate court has the authority tD order restoration of benefits without remanding the case
to dlstrlct court, he argued.
" Nowhere In the majority's
order of remand do I note a single
decision cited which mandates that
resu1t," Jones said. "On the other
hand, there are key decisions which
hold that the Interest In providing
uninterrupted payment of benefits
to welfare recipients until a pre- , · •
termination hearlng Is held outweighs financial and
admlnlslratlve considerations of .. •
the state.

..

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Mrs. Paul Shain and daughter,
Amanda Spaun, Raymond Stacey,
Dorothy Switzer, James Taylor,
Pearl Van Cooney, Warren
Wallace.

DISCIIARGm! MARCH 25

'
Sara ·Abels, Erln Arnold,
Helen
Bailey, Frances Berry, Kenneth
Boyd, Patrlcla Christian, Geraldine Craft, Patrlcia Evans, Mrs.
Robert Grlm and son, Robert Hall,
Shawn Hesson, Lewis Holberg,
Bess Jeffers, Cynthia Jenkins,
Donna Jenkins, Eva Johnson, Shirley Kay, Okley Lenaster, Ruth
McCutcheon, Jason MUler, Clinton
Murphy Jr., Marcella Phllllps, Ka-

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

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Hospital news .

'374."

11115 SLANT

f

Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Burnette,
daughter, GaWpoUs; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Helb, daughter, Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ken·
neth Vickers, daughter, New
Haven, W. Va.

l.

Willi 11115 ADVERTISEMENT

POINT PLEASANT GRANITE COMPANY
675-5548

500 Main Street

Area deaths

·~.-

' '

t

.

COFFEE
.

POMEROY-John M., Bentz, 81,
Akron, fonnerly of Meigs County,
died Thursday at the Citizens Hospital In Barberton.
He· was born at Alfred In Meigs
County, a son 11 !he late c. D. and
Laube · Bamhlll Bentz. He had
worked as a farmer most of his Ute
and as a rural mall earner.
Surviving are two sons, Dorset D.
of Lakemore, and. Malcolm v. at
Hurst, Tex..; two daughters,
MUdred (Mickey) Chetlo, AkrQn,
and Helen Nleklson, Fort Worth,
Tex.; a brother, Conrad (Rex)
REV. RICIIABD CONNELLY
Bentz of CoolvUle; a sister, Bemlce
Hawk, Hemlock Grove; 11 grand·
cblldren; 10 great-grandchildren,
and a number of nieces and
nephews.
Preceding him ln.death were his
wife, Mrs. Irene Bentz who was the
mother of Helen Nlcldson; a son,
John and a great-grandchild, Angela Taylor.
.
Homer. S. Smith
Services will be at 1 p.m. Monday
at the White Funeral Home In Cool· _ POINT PLEASANT- Horner S.
The ann al
GALLIPOLIS
u
ville wtth bUrial In the Bentz Ce~De­
Smith, 70, of Ojllo River Roa.d, died
tery at Alfred. Friends may call at
andsponsored
lndustrlal by
appreelationawards
banquet
the
at 3:45p.m. Friday In Holzer Medi- safety
the fUneral home from 9 a .m. tD 9
Gallla
County
Safety
CouncU
will
cal Center following a sudden
p.m. Sunday and until the time of
lllne$5.
:,,~~~~~: :I) p.m. AprU 5 at~
services on Monday.
Bom Oct. 18, 1911, In Point PleaGuest speaker for the event will
sant, he was the son of the late HoCindy K. Curtis .
mer and Vause Beale Smith.
be the Rev. rucbard eonnelly, chaA member and tormer vestry- plain for the Clnelnru!.ti Bengals.
A Newark native, Father Con·
POMEROY-G'rav~ rites for · man of the Christ Episcopal
Cindy Kathleen Curtis, 16; Route 2,
nelly is a past grand national cha- .
Church, he was a prominent busl·
Pomeroy, who died riear Little
nessman, clvtc leader and farmer.
plalnoftheElks,andwasalsostate
chaplain
for the order. He's also
Rock, Ark., .w ill be held at 11 a.m.
He was vice president and director
Monday at the Rock Sprlngs Cemeof Citizen's National Bank and was been past chaplain for the Ohio
tery wtth the Rev. Richard Roowner of Kirkland Memorial American Legion, the Catholic War
Veterans, the Ohio Knights of Co
themick omctatlng.
Gardens and the State Amusement
Miss Curtis Is survived by her faCo. He was also former chairman lumbus, and past national chairman of training school chaplains.
ther, Wllllam .Keith Curtis, Pomeof the Mason County Democratic
Presently, he's pastor emeritus
roy; her mother and stepfather,
Executive Committee. He gradu·
of St. Colman Church In WashingMary and John Her:bert, Columated from Point Pleasant High
ton Court House. He was also for·
bus; two sisters, Angella Curtis and
SchoOl and Parkersburg (W.Va.)
merly chaplain with the Cleveland
Jennifer Herbert, Columbus;
Business College.
Browns.
grandparents, George and Mary
Surviving Is his wife, VIrginia K.
Master of ceremonies lor the In·
Starcher, Pomeroy; greatSmith; two daughters, Mrs. Nancy
banquet will be Lester Ply·
dusUial
grandfather, HoUle Starcher,
S. Jewell of Charleston, W.Va., and
male,
chairman
of the Gallla
Pomeroy, and great-grandmother,
Mrs. Lynn S. Barr of Point PleaCounty
Safety
CouncU.
Invocation
Della euius, Pomeroy. Several
sant; a sister, Jullet L. Smith of
will
be
given
by
the
Rev.
wunam
aunts, uncles and cousinS are
Point Pleasant; and · tlve
Myers
of
St.
Louis
Catholic
Church
survive.
grandcblldren.
In
Galllpolls.
The
welcome
will be
The Ewing Funeral Home Is In
Funeral services will be held at
given
by
~TUllam
Eachus,
Galllpocharge of arrangementa. There are
11 a.m. Monday In Christ Episcopal
to he no call1ng hours and the tam·
Church, Point Pleasant, wtth the lls Area Chamber of Commerce
president.
Uy requests that no flowers be sent.
Rev. Paul Daggett and the Rev.
Industrtal recognition will be
TallY Hanna offictatlng: Burial will
done
by Paul Knotts, lndustrlal
be In Kirkland Memortal pardens.
Aupta E. Powell
committee
!»Chairman. The com·
Friends may call at the Crowmlttee
In
charge
of arrangements
Husseu Funeral Horne, Point PleaGALLIPOLIS- Augusta E. Poconsists
of
Plymale
and Curt
sant, after 2 p.m. today.
well,~. of 525 Magnolla Drlve, Gal·
Mlller.
The body will ne In state In the
Upolls, ~'Jed at 6: 30 p.m. Friday In
Dinner tickets are $7 .50, and reschurch
one hour prior to the serHoi.zer - MediCal Center, having
erva\lons
ml.!St be made by Aprtl2.
vice. In Ueu of flowers, contrlbubeen In fall1ng health for the past
Call
the
chamber
office at 446-{)596
tions may be made to the Chrlst
tour years.
for
reservations.
EpiscOpal Church memorial fund .
· Bom Feb. '{7, 1909, 1n Oak Hill,

v.

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GALLIPOLIS - The foUowtng
couples filed lor marrl~ licenses
this past week In Gal11a County Probate Court.
Rodney J . Myers, 25, Scottown,
miner, and Loretta J . Ferguson, 27,
Rt. 1, Galllpolls, secretary.
Danny Brumfield, 17, Crown
City, student, andTracyL. Raynor,
16, Gallipolis, student.
· Curtis W. Matheny, 31, Rt. 1,
Leon, electrlclan, and Shirley A.
Preston, :ll, Rt. 2, VInton, registered nurse.

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Troopers said Lana E;. Cozart, U,
Tuppers Plains, was turnlni right
onto 7. four-tenths of a mile north of
Ohio 681, from a private drl"'"'ay
at 6:45 p.m . and collided with a
southbound vehicle driven by Gary
L. Bowman, 38, CoolvUle.
Bowman was unable to stop
when the collision occurred, the roo
port said. There was moderate
damage to Cozart's vehicle. while
Bowman's aulD was sllghtly dam·
aged . Cozart was cited lorfallureto
yield .

..

. ..
" ..
••• •
-.

• •

slight dam~. Rutherford, who
suffered minor Injury In the wreck,
was taken to O'Bleness Memortal
Hospital 1n Athens by the patrol ,
wherehewastreatedandreleased.
Troopers said a vehicle driven by
DonaldS. Miller, 18, Galllpolls, was
southbound on Bulavtlle-Porter
Road, a mile north of Ohio 100, at
7:29 p.m. Friday when he lost control whUe rounding a curve.
Hls vehicle went off the left side
and struck a utlllty pole, coming to
rest In a field.
The vehicle was severely damaged and a passenger, Terry L.
Adams, 18, Gallipolls, was InJUred.
He wasn't treated, the patrol said.
Mlller was cited for excessive
speed .
.
In othe r accidents lnvestlgated
Friday, the patrol cited James F .
Evans, 50, BldweU, for DWI after
he drove his vehicle Into a ditch
wbllebacklngoutofaprlvatedrtveway on Ohio 554, six-tenths of a mile
west of lEO, at 5 p.m .
Evans' auto was sUghtly damaged In the accident, the report
said.

I. ~fobltcHitcllon
The Eaoe-Back Room
5a'MIMIII Recllneno ate

TABLES
•

Annual
safety
fete ·set

GALLIPOLIS - Three people
were Injured In separate accidents
1n the area over a 24-hour period
Friday and Saturday.
The Gallla:Metgs Post of the
state highway pall'OI said John L.
Gallagher, 34, Pomeroy, was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
early Saturday ·after his vehicle
overturned on Meigs County Rd. 24.
Gallagher was eastbound, eight·
tenths of a· mne west of Ohio 7, at
4: :ll a .m . when he lost control of his
vehicleandwentofttherlghtsldeof
the road, forcing the vehicle to
overturn .
The vehicle was moderately
damaged and Gallagher was taken
to Veterans by the Pomeroy EMS,
where be was later treated and
released.
In another Meigs area accident,
the patrol said Ph!Wp C. Ruther·
ford, 25, Frankfort, was travelling
southbound on County Rd. 1, a mile
south of Ohio 143, at 10: &lt;15 a.m. Frl·
day when his vehicle went off the
right side of the road and Into a
ditch.
The vehicle overturned, causing

.

END

TABLES

•

Three area residents injured

'

daughter at the late John and Lora
Herbert Pope, she attended Rod·
ney United Methodist Church and
was a member of the RodDey Unl·
ted Methodist WOJnell.
She married Wendell Powell on
Feb. 2ll, 1935, In Jackson, and he
also preceded her In death on July
7, 1968.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Esther Fanning pt Lancaster
and Mrs. Norma Klskls of GalllpoUs; two grandchildren, seven step.
grandchildren and seven
step-great-grandchildren.
..
She was also preceded In death
by two sisters. · ·
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday In the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home, wtlh the Rev.
Charles Lusher otflcla!lng. Burtal
wtU be in Gravel Hlil Cemetery,
near Cheshire. Frlelljls may call at
the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
today.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va .

Hovv to buY a

FINAL TWO DAYS

CREDIT
TERMS
AVAilABLE

.t

Point Pleasa!J

BEVERLY'S THE.BOSS
I

t·.

t

. . DI~COUNT SALE.

,

idd

john M. Benlz

Rockne W. Clarke, Young Democrats vice president.
OtherDemocratlccaodldatesta- r---------------------------------------~--------------------------vored by the group are: Anthony J.
Celebrezz.e Jr.. attorney general;
Thomas Ferguson, auditor; and
Sherrod Brown, secretary of state.
Former U.S. Rep. Wayne Hays
will have to walt a few days to find
out whether he can run for the Ohio
Senate seat now held by f\E!Publlcan Sam Speck.
Although the postion Isn't up for
election this year, the Democratic
Hays filed for the 70th Dl.strlct seat.
Speck's dlstrlct was shifted
under legislative ~lstrlctlng, and
this year he .Is seeking election In
the new 31st Dlstrlct.

r

1982

KENNEBEC .
SEED POTATOES

SOLB.

BAG .

.,

'599
'

SAVE S 1.0 0 '

1

�Pomerov-Middleporf-Gallipolis, Ohi~Point Pleasant, w. va.

Page-A-8-The Sunday Times-sentinel

.'

H~eflich's Beat o.f the Rend

.~

Thank Volunteers

(

'

By BOB HOEFLICH·
'
Rhonda Dailey and Gloria Jewett,
co-chainnen the 1982
County Heart Fund
a big thanks to
this
year's
workers who sur·
passed the goals
set for the year and this means
that you as a oon' tributor were
generow.
Mrs. Dailey and
BOB
Mrs. Jewett will hold a recognition
tea from 7 to 8:30p.m. Thursday in
the east-west dining room of
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
that time volunteer workers will be
presented awards. Now that's a nice
gesture- if it weren't for dedicated
volunteers, accomplishments of so
many groups would be at a
minimum.
·
Do be advised that State 'Route
near Great Bel1d will be closed Wednesday so that a new culvert can be
installed. The detour route is State
Route338.

'
,.l
'

·j

· The many young people who over
the years have ~n a part of the AllOhio State Fair Youth Choir should
be· interested in knowing tbat an
alumni day marking the 20th anniversary choir is being planned.
Special efforts are being made to
make contact with members of the
1963 group so if you were a part of
that do contact Eddie Keller, 13890
Lancaster-Newark Road, Millersport, Ohio, 43046. The alumni day
will be on Aug. 21 a! the Ohio State
Fair.

1
f

Gary Nakamoto and Greg Thomas
of the Meigs wrestling team were
presented ceramic wrestler
figurines by the cheerleaders at
J Tuesday evening's sports banquet at
Meigs High with Robin Buffington,
j' captain,
making the presentations.
I;,.,Basketball cheerleaders p•·epared
; ~~.scrapllooks of newspaper clippings
• ·and gave each senior player one of
: 'the books.
.
j,.. ~ cheerleadersare live wires.
&lt;jt.' That was an . ~specially nice
gesture on their part Friday when
• ~!-·they, ' joined by the pep club,
!~gathered at .the Route 33 by-pass,
; t f'thsomeneatsignstheyhadmade,
" to provide encouragement for the
;~ buthern Htgh basketball team as
bus carrying the team and the
J ·llccmpanylng caravan passed the
' ' pol enroute to th e state tour-

if:

te

nament.
Meigs Countians, five to 14, are invited to take part in the Point
Pie.asant Soccer League. Last year
there were seven .different teams
taking part and it was quite a successful season.
Anyone needing further information may call· The Family
Clinic, 675-6971, Point Pleasant, 9
a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through
Friday or from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday.
Oops!
Ann Holter FoJ!i, now living at
Mason, Ohio, and a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Holter of Chester
Road, was a state winner in the Ohio
Junior Miss Pageant in 1968. That
year, Ann won the hostess awarda category which has since been
dropped from the pageant.
We had mentioned that Meigs had
only one state winner since it started
taking part in the Junior Miss
Program some years ago.

Charles and Margaret Hartenbach
Russell marked their 41st wedding
anniversary on March 15. And so we
congratulate them ·and comment
that we miss seeing them on the benches at the mall.
Leona Kohl enjoyed company at
her Middleport home the past week.
Her guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Koch and family of West
Germany who are traveling to
California before returning to their
home.
The anhual spring style show and
cheese and wine tasting event of the
Meigs Unit of the American Cancer
Society will be staged this afternoon
at the Meigs Inn. The affair will get
underway at 2 p.m.
Two Meigs County schools
received bomb threats Friday
creating a general disturbance and a
lot of trouble for a lot of people.
Authorities will undoubtedly sock it
to the offender - a word to the wise.

Mar. 28, 1982

List Meigs Central Commiitee filings
f or the COliUlU'!tee posts.
Republicans had no candidate in
one precinct while there are 10
.
,
.
precmcts lD which Democrats had
no candidates.
'
Those Befking election of the com• ts f th .
pecti
rru11 ee pos or e1rres
ve parties include:

· Counbans
·
POMEROY - Mergs
will elect their respective party
county committee at the June 8
primaryelections.
Thursday was the deadline for the
filing of the candidates and the
.
ha
n1
RepubItcans
ve o y one race
while the Democrats have four races

Adult ed class offers
medical orderly training
RIO GRANDE - The latest
statistis infonnation received by the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD from
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services, "Ohio Labor Market Infonnation Fact Sheet" shows· that
unemployrneQt is down in man.dacturing industries by approximately
219,000 for the time of January 1979
to January 1982.
Employment has shown a rise
during this period In nonmanufar.turing industries, notably
·services and especially health services.

Therefore, to as.ilo'l individuals
who want to enter the field of health
services, Buckeye Hills Career Center adult education division is offering classes in medical records
and nurse aide/orderly.
These spring seSBion courses wiU
begin April 6, 1982 and will meet on
Tuesdays and Thursdays. For infonnation regarding course and
time, please stop by the adult
education office of Buckeye· Hills or
call 2~. The office is open Monday through Thursday 2-9 p.m. and
Friday 8 a.m.-4 p.m.

DemocraticDemocrats
county central committee candidates are : East Bedford, Russell I. lillolson; West Bedford , Davtd Bnckles; North Chester,
Henry Hunter; South Chester.
Clarence H. Schmucker, Raymond
H. Boatright, Celia_E. Bailey; West
Chester, No Candodate; Columboa.
·No candidate; Lebanon, Virginia
Pickens; East Letart, Lola J . Prof-

i'

•

nolly;

Welsh ;

Bradbury,

Evelyn

B.

Thomas; Laurel Cliff, No Can·
didate; Rock Springs, No Can didate ; Harrisonville. Francis
Alkire; Pageville, No Candidate;
Racine Village, Ernest A. Wingett;
racuse Village, Woodrow T .
Zwilling,, James M . eentz; M iners.·
N . I hie; Racine Precinct.

Reep :

Rutland, Patrick H. O' Brien; W~st
Rutland. Jame$ R. Sheets; Salem,/l.John ·F. Colwell ; MiddlepOrt - Jst

Candidate; Middleport - 1st w .. No

2nd W., Catherine L. Welsh;

Reedsville, Alvin

Orange, Rolland Torrence; ~utla~d
Village, Elizabeth Hobstetter ; EctSl

w., Frank E . Powers; Middleport "-

Candidate; Middleport - 2nd w.,
Kenneth E . Imboden ; M idd!eport Jrd W., Lewis Long; Middleport 4th W .• Ruben A . Coll ins ; Pomeroy
- 1st w.. Audrey Young ; Pomeroo;

2ndW .• Carl J . Horky ; Middleport;...
Jrd W., Curtis

Jenkinson ;

Mid·

dleport - 4th W., Dorothy L McGyf·
fin ; ' Pomeroy - 1st w.• Evelyn
Clark; Pomeroy - 2nd w., Robert

H. Hysell ; Pomeroy 3rd Vf·•
Charles W. Legar , Sr .; Pomeroy ,4th W., Leslie F. Fultz; Bradbury,
Edward Templeton ; Laurel Cliff .
Nathan Bi ggs; Rock Springs,

George Nesselroad, Jr.; Harr'ison·

ville, Lola Clark ; Pagevllle, No Ca-n·
didate; Racine Village, Cora ~ .
Beegle ; Syracuse Village, Em ·
m.oo.e ne Holstein ; Minersville ,
Phyllis Harris Baker : Raci~e
Precinct, James Carnahan.
,

Judge ends ten cases
GALLIPOLIS -Ten cases were
terminated Friday In GaWpolls
Municipal Court.
Rocky L. Freeman, 24, Cheshire,
charged with no motorcycle Ucense, fined $15, six months jaU
~Jentence suspended and placed on
six months probation.
Forfeiting bond for speeding
were:
Mike A. Lent, 18, Ashville. $36;
l{athleen P. Belllnskl, 27, Bidwell,
$38; Doris w. Petty, 50, Dublin, $38;
Paula J. Thacker, 24, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
$38.
Robert D. Alderman, 31, Addl·
son, $39; Henry P. Cook, 42, Rl 2,
GalllpoUs, $41; Charles D. Ellis, 23,

ALL SIZES OF AIR CONDITION
'

SPEOAL PRICED·

Meigs Industries

GAWA REFRIGERAliON, INC.
152 3rd Ave. ·

Gallipolis. Ohio

Open DailY 10-9;
Sunday 1-6

By CHARL~IIIE HOEFLICH
Tlmes-Seotloel Staff
PoMEROY- While it goes unnoticed by
many, there is in our midst a small but
growing business which is providing adults
with menta,l retardation or otber handicaps an · opportunity to perform
meaningful work in a sheltered workshop.
The business is Meigs Industries.
Incorporated as a non-profit
organization nearly a year ago by several
local businessmen who serve on the board
of directors, Meigs Industries operates out
of faCilities provided by Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and. in a
sheltered situation provid!ls employment
training as well as work evaluation.
All explained by Carol Layh, assistant
administrator of Meigs Comunity School
and Sheltered Workshop, the state of Ohio
mandates that adults with mental retardation, or any other handicap that preventhem from joini~g the labor force, shall

The Saving Plac{1 '"

I have said many times that you
could be the best anything in Meigs
County and who would know? Now
that Southern Tornado Team has
proven me wrong. There they are
the best and are in Columbus
proving itto the state. I'm so pleased
to be wrong that I'm smiling, aren't
you?
' •

•

foundation warrants are now belng
written directly to Individual school
districts. Previously, the warrants
were wrttten directly to county audItors, who In tutn made the founda·
tlon subsidy distribution to the
school districts within their respective counties.

Regular

Wrong loser

Panty
Hose

GALLIPOLIS - Due to a reporter's
error, It was Incorrectly reported In
the Thursday and Friday editions
of the GaWpolls DaUy Ttibune that
Gallla County Cominlssloner Lonnle Burger defeated John Belville
In the 1978 election for the commissioner's job.
Burger, a Democrat, defeated
Republlcan ,opponent Bob Saund·
ers. Belville, who flied the position
at the tlme, was defeated In a renomination bid In that year's primary_ the Tribune regrets the error.

~ llf'ltl inlentlon it to n.v. .....,.,. .....
Of1 ~
t ii
ldvetliMd item II fiOI tvti~ !QI' pur·
cll .. t dut1 lo any 11rllorttttn rtaton ,
K mart wiN luue t Rain Cl'lllck 0t1 r~ll
lof 1M ~Mnd!H (OM 11.,-. 01 ~..on.
101t I~ qutl)!i~IIO be purct1tMCI .al tt1t

w......."

liHd Item "' tlocll

SiM, Ml/T

Ull po1Ce

~

IYIMitlit Of Wlf Nil

you I eompat"abll ct'JI~ty i!lm Ill comp&amp;•
rMlle r~ion lfl pr101

Our Reg. 76¢

Each

2For1
$

4001

c

{ 401 ) .

iS'"

SOle Price

Savel Misses' Pretty D.u sters
Cotton/polyesteJ. Patch pockets.

126 lnslamatJc• Camero Outfit

Misses' Nylon Panty Hose
Reinforced panty 01 all-sheer.

This alternative is sheltered employment.
,
As explained by Layh, it is the goal of all
sheltered workshops to provide an atmosphere in which handicapped in·
dividuals can perfonn meaningful work
through subcontracting a.nd prime
· manufacturing.
That is what is going on in a small way
with Meigs Industries. .
·
Currently, the employes of Meigs Industries are involved in salvage work making use of valuable metals contained
within recycled industrial lamps,
collating, a service offered to persons in
the community needing lo assemble
materiala to be distributed, as well as

12.88

Camera: color film. wrist strap. ·

GALLIA REFRIGERATION, INC.
••

152 3rd Ave.

''

(614)446-4066

Our. Reg. 3.17

Gallipolis, Ohio

{402)

1.97

~ .

Men's Pocket
Tee With kode ..

IS ANNOUNCING ANEW
5 YEAR WARRANTY POLICY
CALLED.
I &amp;4
.

Kode i 1 / polyester I
cotton; short sleeves.
1

· Eos1mon ~o. •

Our Reg. 4.37

3.47
Hartl

{403)

. leflectlng Collars
FOr cats or dogs.
Kills fleas or ticks.

.

1 YEAR FACTORY
4 YEARS GALLIA REFRIGER·
ATION MATERIALS &amp; LABOR

Sale Price . ( 404 )

Our Reg. 7.97

Vloslc" Pickles
Choose Polish or
Kosher dills. 46 oz."

1·d0zen Golt lolls
Centurion•: '2-pc. con'
struction Save now.

1.33each 5.97
"Netwt .

r. JTl!MCWvi
:.I 'I

I/\ I

--COPY PRINTS

..., or lodall:' In·

ON THE FOUOWING NEW EQUIPMENT:
ADD-ON HEAT PUMP
GAS FURNACE
OIL FURNACE
AIR CONDITONING~ CENTRAL

1tant •tchnoJ,

oM Any . . . . . .
IIU lnopthotl

'

' )I

OR

PRINTS
FROM
SUDES

3'
1.14

Pl'tntafor

-~.eP:t 89~
VOivollne• 011
10W40. All weall ter.

-•·

Come In and Discuss Your Probl•m
With us •

•J

a growing business
•

~

'

GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County's
!I :two schOol districts received a net
;,~ payment of $275,539.32 In March
:f:trom the state school foundation
jil:auhsldy payment.
1!,; State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguiii' 110n reported that the GaWpolls City
· ~ School District got $238,491.99.
;~I From the amount, $6,387 was de:; dueled for the school employees' re'" tlrement fund and $38,33'7 was
J~ take.n out for the state teacJ!ers' re. ~ tlrement fund.
••' The net paymenl to the city
;• schools was $193,767.99.
:: 'Jhe Gallla County Local School
;1. District was awarded a total of
I~ $142,703.53, with $13,232.20 sub·~ tracted for the employees' retire- ·
;; menttund and $47,700 taken for the
;f teachers' retirement fund.
The county schools got a net pay:; ment of $8l,m.33. An allotment of
I •
, $22,264.59 was deducted · for the
county board or education.
Under the state's new budget
law, Ferguson's office said school
t •·

" ... persons with
mental retardation
and other handicap·
ping conditions can
and do make goo~
"

GaWpolls, $41; John J. Koenlng, 37,
Louisa, Ky., $42; Dana M. Whitt, 18,
Huntington, W.Va., $43.

r~unty receives net paylnents
••

KObleniZ ; west Chester. Virgil Win-

Let~rt , Lois 'Allen; Long Bot·
tom. Dorothy Wells, Francis H . An·
drew ; . Olivedale, No Candidate ;
Reedsv il le, Hazel Barton, Hugh
Martin ; Orange, N.o rman 0 . Weber;
Rutland ·Village, Samuel B. May ;
East Rutland, No Candidate ; West
Rutland, Norman C. Will; Salem , No

Pomeroy ·- 3rd W,, No Candidate ;
Pomeroy - .4th W., Cather ine L.

Mar. 28, 1•12

don, Maxene R. Goeglein ; Columbia, Dennis Facemyer :. LebanOn,
Clarence Lawrence; East Letart,
Cl_arence I. Norris, Letart, Harfy ,
H1ll ; Long Bottom, Dorsel E . t
Larkins; Olivedale, William A. Con-

.. fitf ;

~

Section~

theri

Republicans
Republican county centra l committee . candidates are : East Bed·
ford, Helen Quivey ; West Bedf4Ji'td.
Brenda S. Roush; North Ches1er,
Robert Wood; South Chester. David

weighing and measuring, packaging and
mailing.
Last year, workshops throughout Ohio
were engaged in marketing products and
services that generated well over $1
million, according to Layh.
·
She explained that today Meigs Industries is involved in two important
operations - relocating to new facilities
equipped to enhance the delivery of services to many aspects of the conununity,
and seeking a prime manufacturing ite!l'
that · can be marketed to help arhieve
financial independence from the Board of
Mental Retardation,
. · The new facility in Syracuse will provide
for Meigs Industries the advantage of an
area that can handle enough equipment to·
expand its services.
As jn other southeastern Ohio
workshops, those involved with the Meigs
program are hoping to become involved in
a variety of new 'York activities once the
move into the new building is completed in
•
early swnmer.
Types of work activities carried out in
other workshops in this area include ball·
point pen assembly, screen printing, and
recycling and production of medical and
dietary uniforms. These are only a few
examples of the prime manufacturing
products that workers with handicaps
have been successful at marketing, commented Layh.
She referred 1o Ohio Industries for the
Handicapped, an organization that,locates
and markets skills and products. Irene
Ward of that organization repeatedly emphasizes thst "persons with handicaps are
no different from anyone else. They

measure their success by their earnings
and their worth by their independence."
Ohio Industries' for the Handicapped is
allowing a function that will help to enable
workshops - like Meigs Industries - to
become self-supporting. . But Meigs lndw.1ries has another function, too, according to Layh, and thst is to
provide an environment in which each
adult can reach his or her maximum level
of independent functioning.
As a past job placement counselor, Layh
remark!!&lt;! that "persons with mental
reta~tion and otht!r handicapping conditions can and do make ~ood employees."
Economically speaking, she said,
sheltered employment is advantageous to
any community.
She noted that costs relating to a person
with mental retardation living in an institution last year reached·$27 ,000 per person. Through sheltered employment, most
adults can learn to functon In thtilr own
homes or in semi-independent living
situations.
"It is the goal of sheltered workshops to
provide meaningful employment opportunities to people who otherwise could
become burdens of their corrununity,"
Layh concluded.
Meigs Industries has a five year goal to develop training programs in janitorial
services, kitchen helpers, prime manufacturing products, recycling center and
agriculture programs.
And Meigs Board of Mental Retardation,
with Chris Layh, administrator, and Carol
Layh, is appealing to the community for
suggestions on how Meigs Industries can
be developed more fully.

\
Bennie Skinner, 01100r
Price, Bill Lehew ami Bill
Rice (top photo) concentrate on recycling imiu.ttrwl lomps dnmrted to the
sheltered employment
workshop fry- a localmnnufacturing concern. The
valiUible metals extracted
from the lomp• are being
separated ami will be wid.
Memuring, packaging ami
weighing product• (above
photo) for a food di.ttribution firm i.t a job of Meigl
Industries. Lindo
Sommer works in tluJt activity umier the •uperv~
sion of Orva Jean Holter,
workshop speciali.tt. Collating, or assembling
materwls 10 be di.ttrib·
uted, {left photo) i.t afunction which many
luJmiicapped or mentally ·
retarded perwru can per·
form. RicluJrd White,
Samiy White, Arthur
R~ ami John Proffitt
work on ~U~embllng mat~
rwls With Holter. (Photos
fry- Clwrlene Hoeflich)
I

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

Mar. 28, 1982

Mar. 28, 1982

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-8·3·•

Drew Webster plans egg hunt
POMEROY - Drew Weboter Post
39 ci the American Legion and
Auxiliary wiU host an Easter egg
hunt and potluck dilUier on Easter
Sunday at the poo;t home in
Pomeroy.
The egg hunt will be at 2 p.m. with
the potluck dinner at 3 p.m. Prizes
will lle awarded. Mrs. Gerald
Rought is chalnnan for the dinner

&gt;'f

.M

'*:

:

""""'-

urge capacity
heavy-duty
Kenmare ' washer

MARRmD- Terry llrewer, left, and Bonllle Copplck, right, both
of Middleport, were married Marcb Z4 at the home of Roger and.Pam
Hoffman, Chesler. 'lbe bride Is lhe daugble!' ol Zelia Copplck, Middleport, aad lhe groom Ia the 1011 of VIolet Brewer, Pomeroy. At.leodaall for the couple were Geae alld Judy ADBpacb, · Mlddleporl,
Route

Mr. and ~rs. Sopher
RACINE - In a double-ring
ceremony at Racine First Baptist
Church, Dec. 22 at 7:30p.m:, Mickey
Ann Mugrage and Jeffery Wayne
Sopher exchanged wedding vows.
Rev, Don Walker performed the
ceremony following a half-hour of
music presented by Kathy Baker.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles L. Mugrage, Racine,
and the groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Sopher, also of ltacine.
The altar was decorated with red
and white candles and pots of red
and white poinsettias.

·•

·"'

...
•

..' •

J

'

•

• r

•

~~

and

:~ POMEROY
In a double-ring
'dieremony a MI. J'4oriah Church of
CJod on Feb. 1, Loraine McCoy and
kenneth Killer exchanged wedding

~ws.

~rs. ~er
ceremony. A two-tiered cake was
topped with a traditional miniature
bride and groom and was decorated
with red, purple and blue flowers.
The bride is a 1980 graduate of
Buckeye Hills Vocational School.
Her husband graduated from
Southern Local High School in 1980
and Jackson Manpower School and
is employed by Shoe World in its
management department.
The couple resides in Ewin~ton.

Escorted
to thewasaltar
by inhera
father,
the bride
attired
floor-length gown of white polyester
fashioned with a high·neckline, long
sleeves with lace trim, and an A-line
skirt which nowed into a . chapel
train . Her shoulder-length veil fell
from a cap of white polyester and
lace. She carried a bouquet of red
and white silk poinsettias with red
streamers .
Teresa Johnson served as maid of
honor and wore a floor-length gown
ol wine polyester and carried a
white poinsettia. Kallarie Little of
Columbus, niece of the bride, was
flower . girl and wore a long wine
skirt and white satin blouse. She
carried uf red and while silk poin·
settias.
Robin Fortune of ltacine was best
man and ushers were Chrles I, and
Todd Mugrage, brothers of the
bride. Mrs, Judy Hood, sister of the
grom, registered the guests.

Dual-,.ction •• Agita·
tor for our most effec •

tive wash action . 2

was in a gray and navy floor.Jength
gown and both mothers wore 'cor·
sages of red and white poinsettias.
A reception was held in church's
social room. A four-tiered cake was
served by 'the bride's aunt, Virginia
Salser. Host and hostesses were
James pape, Mrs. John Paper, Mrs.
Charles T. Mug rage and Vicki Wood.
The bride is a senior at Southern
High School and the groom is a
graduate of Southern now serving
with the United States Army at Fort
Drum, N. Y. The new Mrs. Sopher
will join her husband there in May.

speeds, 8 cycles. Self·

cleaning filter.

Tl2831

urge cap•clty
electric dryer
. SPnsor senses load dry ·
m.·~~ ~o

heat shuts off au·
when pre--set
dryntoss is rrache'd .

T~~=======~~=r
II

' ; The bride is the youngest daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Earnle McCoy,
Ewington, and the groom is the
The bride's mother wore a noor)ouugest son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliey
~iller, Route 2, Jl,acine.
lcngth gown of red, white and black
nora! print. The groom's mother
:. Rev. James Satterfield performed
.lhe ceremony.
~ Given in marriage by her parents r;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~and escorted to the altar by her
;father, the bride wore a formal gown
00
~f pale yellow silk fashioned with a
:~ictorian neckline, sheer bishop
sleeves and a sheer yoke, It was ac·
cented with lace as was the bride's
• « ... Automatic
Frequency Control
.
.fingertip veil of lllusion. She carried
• IOO'Io Solid Stole cnossts ,
~a bouquet of blue carnations with
M ;,...Line PICIUI&amp; Tube
;blue and white satin streamers tied
• VHF P1e-Sel Fine Tuning
In lovers' knots.
• 70 Position "Click-In" UHF
' The groom wore a blue three-piece
Tuning
"suit with a blue shirt and white car·
• Aulomolic Col01 Cont1ol
·• Molded-In Handle
'·nation boutonniere.
1O"~IGgOno!COlOR JV.t .
·· Loretta Keeton, sister of the bride, ·
Vo nillo finbh on high Impac t plastic
.was matron of honor. She was in a
.formal lavender gown with a sheer
This BeautifullO" Color TV Is Only
,)ong·sleeves jacket, and carried a
$256.81 With This Ad
'basker of lavender carnations.
While Supply Lasts
·. David Findley was best man and
ALL OTHER SIZES IN STOCK
Offer Good 1 Week Only
;wore a dark blue suit with a white
'carnation boutonniere.
, The bride's mother was in a blue
.street-length dress and had a white
;rose corsage. The mother of the
lido W.C.rwy M11.
:¥room was in a green suit and also
Drive a little I ""alol-lrttdoiiwry wilftlo 15 miles
In, •• 11nl&lt;1 al ,.., local Jlolpolol DNitr
•had a white rose corsage.
510ft lbm: l:lO lo 5:l0. MUI CloMd It 5:00 P.M.
: A reception was held at the home
LANDMARK ®. s.rv~., Mttp, Gall~'"' • - c.,of the bride's parents following the

:bf

BRING THIS AD IN AND SAVE '100.

tom.atiG~IIy

'270~.

STATE FARM

I

INSURANCE

&lt;t

Quarters
by Juanita

Call Sean Service
"We Service What We SeJI''
PHONE 446·2902

R CK Pi:.Ril•U

Now in our " T" c~ talog !oupptement • Mitny f'enmore modeb

Spring Valley Plaza
Phone 446·096

quire connectors not lncludl'd in pr lu ttlown • As._ o'lboul Se&lt;~rs ~

~vllll•ble

11re

c;:;,.~.,

in calors at •••r• chute • Kenmore dryon re·

.....

u

Each of these advertiSed ttems IS readily

Like a good neighbor,

available for sale as advertised

S..tilfMIIon Gullf..,IH40f 'l'out MOOI)' bl;k

State Fann is there.
$11ft flflll IMIIIIM:t CelfiCIIIIoU

Ko1t1 Olltctl: IIMIIIItftt!lll, 1111111111
Most men:n.nct!M ~, . . .
for pkk -up wtthtn • lew d¥

Silver Bridge
Plala

ISears I

Ph. 444·2770

SEARS, ROIEIUCK AND CO.

and

~rs.

~r.

Williamson

and Mrs. Burger

GAWOlJS - Sara Jayne Sim- cented with Brussels lace and seed
heart-shaped necklaces and
earrings as gifts from the bride. All pkins and Jeffry ·Hal Burger ex· pearls. Framing the yoke was a ruf.
three dresses were made by the changed wedding vows in an af· ne of cluny lace. The lower s~irt had
bride,
temoon ceremony Nov. 28 at Grace three tiers of ~hanUIJy lace which
Darla and Diana Williamson, both United Methodist Church, Gallipolis, swept into a chapel train and bustle.
The bride carried a silk bouquet ot
sisters of 'the groom, registered the The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
guests and handed out rice bags. Mrs. Carl Simpkins, Gallipolis, and white roses, peach carnations and
They wore identical two-piece beige the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and white forget·m.,.nots. Her jewelry
was a pair of pearl earrings, which
knit dresses and pearl necklace and Mrs. Joseph H. Burger, Gallipolis.
earings which were gifts of the
Pastor David Price of ProctorviUe she borrowed from her aunt. A blue
bride. They each wore a carnation performed tne double-rin g garter served as "something blue,"
dipped in apricot.
ceremony. Prenuptial music was a handkerchief which belonged to
The reception was held im- provided by Lisa Allen, who ac- her grandmother was "some.thing
mediately '!fter the ceremony in the companied Teresa Ford as she sang old," and her wedding attire was
c)lurch basement, which was
Escorted to the altar by her father ljsomething new."
Letty Wall!er served as maid of
decorated in streamers olthe wed· and given in marriage by her parenhonor
and bridesmaids were Ann
ding colors with the tables covered ts, the bride wore a gown of while
in white with hurricane lanterns and chantilly lace trimmed in cluny lace. • • • e • e e • e • • • • • ••
streamers carrying out the wedding
Fashioning the gown was a high .. THIS WEEK'$
e
colors. ·
,-!~~~..!!!~~,!!; sheer
e
•
Serving at the reception were Bet·
:...:::..:::::....z.=::.=.:::..j •
L
•
te Biggs, . Madeline Painter, Becky
•
•
.•
•
Am berger, Vicki Smith, Catherine
Russell and Nancy Morris,
•
:
A 1980 graduate of Meigs High
•
School, the bride is employed at ·
e
Bank One of Pomeroy, The groom is
a 1978 graduate of Meigs High Schol
and is employed at Gavin Power
Plant. He is also in the Army
National Guard,
e 8-16 Ol.
BIIS.
Following a honeymoon at Burr
PluS e
Oak Lodge in Clouster, the new Mr.
Deposit
•
and Mrs, Williamson reside at

•

139:

•
•••·
••
••
Walburn.
For
something
new,
she
r~;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;j
wore a pair .
pierced small
7oz.
79e ,e••
•
Bg
diamond set earrings, a gift from the
•
groom's parents. For something
•• CHIPS Reg. $1.09 •
SPRING 'SPECIAL
borrowed, she wore a small diamond
•• ICE COLD BEER,
necklace belonging to a friend, Mar·
••
•
,ly Ferguson. For something blue,
• WINE &amp; POP ••
she wore a blue satin garter. For her
•
bouquet, she chose silk carnations
•
•• MondayHOURS
and baby roses of apricot, mint
thru Saturday •
green and yellow with lily
the
•• 8 A.M. tilll P .M. ••
valley and baby's breath with
apricot, yellow and green ribbon
• Gai~pofls Ice Co. ••
hanging with lovers' knots.
·
•
,
THRU
•
• DRIVE
The ceremony was preceded with
CARRY
OUT
•
=
•
-a program of music played by Ruth
•• 709 First Ave. ••
Durst. Catherine Russell sang "You
Light Up My Life" before the
••••••••••••••••
Write for Free Brochures Showing Memorials in Full
ceremony ; and during the
SI'ICIA~

of

1

eereryony, she sang

Areard-setting 1st )man
means acelebraHon llice iJr you!

AMAZING
PLAYER .
•

NOW THROUGH EASTER
10o/. Off All Perms
. Gallipolis, Ohio
•s.oo Off Lumlnlze

0

·a

-~ •

.llin lbe u.a.m wbo - magical n lnutcDB:bimneN
Now you can "Itch tht 'bttt In Hollywood movl11,

.up•stsr rock eonuf'ts. cNidr'"'• propems end mor•jult 1ly ploylnt a ra&lt;Of&lt;l TIM ACA

v-.c P I - IH&gt;oka

up to AJ TV ~nd llYft JCKI thl• l*'loue w•lely of
tnttriMnment wfltnt"Wtf you IIIIa
'

No wond• FICA h• .old mot"• VkteoDitc Pleytrt then flfl'f
ottl• .,.. wlcMo product In htltCM'J. And now-11 thlt 1st
AnNw•~ ca1•e1lon pr"--lt's JGp"·• • • t home
tnetn....,...t wllul.

DANDlE

•

1

PARADE OF
EASTII;R SPECIALS

~~ Because,"

!'The . Wijling Prayer" and " En·
ptess . Lqve." The altar was
~ecorated with a 15-branch can'jlelabra w;th two seven-branch can~
lilelabras cln each side trimmed with
'kreenery and white bows, as well as
hndles in' all the church windows. A
J.asket of ~owers was on each side of
Jhe altar consisting of carnations
tJlpped ilj apricot, mint green, and
low ailing with baby's breath ,
The gr!Mlm, as well as the fathers,
t mall, groomsmen and ushers,
rore malching dark brown tuxedos
f'ith satin and velvet trim. -The
groom's•.shil:t was white trimmed in
brown nltfle with brown bow lie and
rlohite carnation.
l Best rrian was Alan Stewart, who
;.ore a solid apricpt shirt with ruffle
~nd brown bow tie with a carnation
jlipped in apricot. The groomsmen
lvere Bobby Williamson, who wore a
)iolid yellow ruffled shirt and yellow
'Slipped .;arnauons, and Rick John,
~on , who wore a solid mint green ruf·
lied sliirt and mint green dipped car·
~lions. , Both wore dark brown bow
ties. Ushers were Mark O'Dell and
Ouane Weber, who both wore white
ilhirts and brown bow ties with
)pricot f dipped ' carnations. Both
fathers wore white shirts trimmed in
nutmeg 'with brown bow ties and
lohite cahwtions.
' The ~d of honor, Suzie Ught·
~oot silter of the bride, wore a long
·~prt'eot1dti!l8 with lace elbow length
leeves ,and ruffled neck edge. She
wore an apricot picture hat and
ca~ a hurricane candle lamp
•with :dpl&amp;les and carnations in the
ree Wedding colors with apricot

~

bbOn hanging,

Atterldani'a were Susie Stewart,
ho wore a long yellow .dress, and
&lt;M•rie ~ar, who wore a long 'mint
rr- · jll'ltlilllke lbat of the maid of
• They each carried hurricaile
}with daisies and carnations
.
rlj)bonl hanging lbat matched
1~ clnaes; and they lfOI'e yellow
nd green picture hats. 'nle maid of
• honor and both attendants wore

·R: Joy Hudson, Chris Reynolds, Mary Edwards, Merri A!!'sbary, Juanita ~!'.~.iliders, ,
Charlene BenthaH,lTina Saber, Karen "Johnson, Rita (Edwards) Meaige &amp; Ron :sowerds.

: i····························~··············
,,
'.

~r.

RUTLAND - Cherie Lynn Light·
foot, Pomeroy, and David Lee
Williamson, Rutland, were married
Nov. 28 in a candlelight double-ring
ceremony at Bradford Church of
Christ. Rick Gilbert, minister, per·
formed the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Lightfoot,
Pomeroy. The groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Williamson,
Rutland.
Given in marriage by.her parents,
the bride paused to give her mother
an apricot rose as she was escorted
to the altar by her father. Her gown
was of chantilly lace, fashioned with
a Victorian neckline, a fitted bodice
with a pleated flounce down the
front. A see-through y!)ke with a ruf.
fie ol chantilly lace draped over the
shoulder and around the front and
back of her dress. Her gown had long
fitted sleeves . of see-through net
trimmed in chantilly lace. The skirt
was accented with tears of chantilly
ruffles which flowed into a chapel
train. The bride's veil of illusion was
trimmed· in chantilly lace falling
from a cap trimmed In seed pearl
and lace matching the gown. For
somethi'ng old, the bride carried a
lace-edged handkerchief belonging
to her late grandmother, Mrs, Katie
of

POMEROY LANDMARK

The hair place

.

with Dorothy Jenkins aa telephone
chainnan. The dirmer will be corn- .
prises of ham, escalloped potatQea,
green beans and desserts. Jenkins
should be advised of what dlah each
family plaiiS to prepare.
All post members, auxiliary and
juniors and their families are invited
to attend the dinner.
·

...

•
'

\

I

Color with Sizes and Prices Usted.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
POMEROY, OHIO
Ponte!GJ·MISOn Bridae
992-2588

VINTON, OHIO
W. M1in St.
31U&amp;03

Look wbats cookin'at

New!
Our Half 0' Pound·
DinnerAnd Hu
],ppings!
Stop in today ~ try our new tender 'n tasty Half CY Pound
Dinner! k'o prepared j~t lice you would al home, 10 it's exlla juicy and
ftavorful. \\\! start with a tender ground bod peltJI charbroiled to
yoor ordet; and """" it with your choice of four delicious toppqL
Choose melted cheddar cheese. fresh oauteed mushrooms, oniono, or
green peppers. Plus french fries (or baked potato after SPM), warm
toasted grecian bread, and aD the hot homemade IOUf' and garden
fresh salad you (Me to eat. Try our Half CY P'!"nd Dinner now and get
)'OW' choice ol the four toppingo at no ex~ cott.lt'• our ::eweot way
oloaying, "Thank you for co11111111 to Shoney's.

328 Viand Street

Pt. Pleasant, w.v.

STYLES

FROM
PLAYTEX

Epling, Lucy Norvell, and Vicki
Baxter, all of Gallipolis.
They all wore identical floor·
length gowns of peach qiana adorned with waist-length capelets of
chantilly lace with a ruffled
neckline, similar to that of the bride.
All the attendants carried a silk
nosegay of peach roses, brown and
peach mums and white forget·men.ots, all centered in a vase of baby's
breath,
Leah Johnson , Gallipolis, was
nower girl. She wore a tiered dress
with mlltching capelet, similar to
those of the bridesmaids', and
carried a straw basket trimmed
with peach and brow11 streamers
containing white rose petals, ·
The groom wore a brown tuxedo
with velvet collar and satin lapels, a
ruffled while shirt and brown bow
tie. His boutonniere was a peach car·
nation with a white rose in the cen·
ter.
Charlie Corbin, G•llipolis, was
best man. Ushers were Fred
Wheeler, John Davis and Todd
Lockhart, all of Gallipolis.
The jacket, vest and pants of theil
tuxedos were identical "to the
~room's, and they wore peach ruf·
ned shirts. All wore boutonnieres of
peach carnations, The bride's father
'
'
wore the same
attire,
Sam Waits of Columbus was the
ringbearer. He was dressed as the
ushers and carried the rings on a
satin pillow trimmed in la ce. On the
the bride's and

names were written in seedta
pearls. The pillow was d~signed and
made by the bride.
•
Regi•'lering the gui!Sts and preseiiting each with a weddin~ scroll were
Sandy Petrie and Laura Schmidt,
both of Gallipolis.
•
Following the ceremony, a recep.
lion was held in the church diniDJ
room, A buffet was served to the
bridal party and their guests by t1ie
church women with Deborah unit In
charge,
The bride's table featured a four·
tiered cake decorated with peach
roses and brown forget-me-nots. The
cake was baked by Setty Carpenter.
Hostesses for the reception were
Polly Hudson, Gallipolis, cousin of
the groom; Carolyn Cooper, South
Charleston, and Janie Cooper,
Marietta, cousins of the bride.
After the rec'eption, the couple,
dressed in full wedding attire, went
to Scenic Hills Care Center to visit
the groom's grandmother, who was
ill and unable to attend the wedding.
Th~ couple spent their honeymoon
in . Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania, and visited New York
City before returning home.
The newlyweds reside at 520
Spring Valley Dr., Gallipolis.
The new Mrs. Burger is a 1980
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School and attends Rio Grande
College. Mr. Burger is a 1976
graduate of North Gallia High
School and is employed wiibI.B.E.W. of
W.
•

ND
At Our New Location
448 SECOND AVE.
Come in to register for 20 prizes to be given away .
Saturday, April3rd
•
Refreshments Saturday
Free Conditioner With Each
Shampoo &amp; Set .
Our door to beautiful hair is open to you .

Fountain of Youth
•
Beauty Sal.o n
448 2nd Ave.

FITNESS CENTER HEALTH SPA
417 Second Ave .

Ga IIi polls, Oh.
'

WOMEN'S HOURS

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

MEN'S HOURS

Mon.·Fri. 7:00p.m. to 10:00 p.m .
SPECIAL

MEMBERSHIP
Reg.
$30

• NOW

'20

Offer ends March 31st

Phone 446-4108 ,
FITNESS.CENTER H~ALTH SPA

�.. . . .

Page-B-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

] Engagements :j
·Stollar-Bentley

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

engagement and approaching
marriage of their &lt;!aughter, Pamela
Sue, to John David Sharp, soh of Mr.
and Ml'll. John F. Sharp of Ga!Upiliis.
Ranegar is a 1981 graduate d
Kyger Creek High School and i.s employed at Shoe World. Her fiance
graduated from Gallia Academy
High School in 1979 and from Rio
Gr$de College in 1981. He works at
Super America.
An open-church wedding i.s plarr ·
ned lor May 1 at 2:30 p.m. at
Gallipolis Christian Church.

Stollar, Bentley
POME ROY - Mrs. Shirley A.
Stollar, Route 1, Fleming, announces the engagement an(j approaching marriage of her el&lt;lest
Qaughter, Sherry Ann Stolar, to
Donald Eric Bentley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis G. Bentley of914 Patricia
J_.ane, Cincinnati.
The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate
of Waterford High School and a 1981
graduate of Ohio University with a
bachelor of science in education. She
is employed as a first grade teacher
with Eastern Local School District
at Chester Elementary School.
Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of
Anderson High School, Cinci nnati,
and a 1981 graduate of Ohio University with a bachelor of science in
civi l engineering. He is employed as
a project engineer with Professional
Services Group in Colunnbus.
The wedding will be June 5 at 2:30
p.m. at St. John' the Baptist Catholic
Church in Churchtown. The custom
of open-church will be o~served.

WhittingtonRoush

Rariegar

WoodwardLucas
GALLIPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. H.
I

S. Queen, Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their son,
Wendell A. Lucas of Gallipolis to
Dawn Woodward, Qaughter of
Richard Woodward and Grace
Gilmore, all o( West Belmar, N. J ,
The wedding will take place in
June in Glendola, N. J., at Bible
Bapiist Church with Rev. Melvin
Brindley officiating.
Lucas is stationed at Fort Mon·
mouth, N. J., with the United Slates
Navy. Woodward is a secretary for a
Spnlngl.ake, N.J. law firm .

w. va .

Mar. 28, 1982

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. 1/a.

Style show at Gallia .I Wedding. plans complete I
seniors' center to be
held April Fools Day
SYRACUSE - Plallli have been
completed lor the open-church wedding of VIcky Lynn Rizer, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William Rizer,
Syracuse, and Roger.. C. Tolley, son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Tolley Jr.,
SlssonviUe.

Rizer,sister·irrlawofthebride.
Joan Adkins of Portland will be
matron of honor and Elaine Tolley,
sister of the groom-elect, WJll be a
bridesmaid. Kristy Rizer, ni':"e of
the bride-elect, will be flower g1rl.
Larry Jo Harper, Sissonville, will
be best man and ~hers. will be
Michael Burdette, SISSonville; and
Walter Taylor, Nitro, W. Va. Kenneth Rizer jr. will be ringbearer.
A reception will be held following
the ceremony at the Syrac~
Asbury Methodist Church fellowship
hall.

Theweddlngwill~April2at7 : 30

GALLIPOLIS-Gallla COunty Senior Otlzens' Center, Jackson Pike,
GaWpolls, will host a style show
comprl.se!l of home~ clothes ol
spring lashlnns on Apl111 at 1 p.m.
In the multl·[llll'(l0$e room.
The show will Include about 20
women and one man, from Gallla
COunty and Mason COunty, W. Va.,
modeling clothes they have made
. as well as shoes !rom Madison
Shoes, Silver Brldge Plaza, hair
styles from Hair Happenings, and
make up from Maxine Kinnaird, ol

Merle norman CoSmetics, PL Plea·
sant, w. Va.
The event Is being plaJined by
'Mildred Jenkins and Ethel ~­
son with the help of Evelyn Gooch,
Jo Ann Fabrics manager.
Gooch will also moderate the
style show and relay lntonnatlon of
each out!lt.
Following the event, refreshments will be served and music
proviped.
The publlc Is Invited to attend the
style show.

Gallia County senior
citizens' calendar

p.m. at Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene. Rev. James B. Kittle will
officiate.
Mu.sic, to begin at 7 p.m., wili be
presented. by Mrs. James B. Kittle,
with Janet Lavender as soloist.
Gue~ will be registered by Kathy

She's got

"!l.~J:.·~' ®

,

wnau:,j

: THURMAN Roger and
:eatherine WiUiams will celebrate
' their 40th wedding anniversary with
fan open house given by their
!children April 4 from 2-4 p.m. at

Candie's Frilly
Nothing-Of·A·Shoe

''•

•white
•beige

.•

•

The

CHESHIRE- Mr. and Mrs. Fred-

•

Shoe Cafe

..""

......

:- GAWPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
Smith of Route 4, Gallipolis will
~~;~~~=~ tho!ir 50th wedding an·
~J
April4 with an open house
l'2iven by their children, Mr. and
Max Smith, Tipp CitY, Stella
"""'~"• Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
Rutland, and Mr. and

Mrs. David Smith of Tucson, Ariz.
The open house will be held at the
Jaycees' building on the corner of
Burnette Road and State Route 35,
between 2and 6 p.m. April4.
The couple luis six grandchildren
and one
are

and Mrs. Fred Thomas, Lori
die L. Moore of Cheshire celebrated Thomas, Mrs. Malvin Little, all of
their 30th wedding anniversary with Cheshire; Mrs. Barbara Wolfe,
a surprise reception hosted by their .Laura, Mrs. John M. Hager, all ci
children at Kyger Creek Club House Bidwell; Mr. and M!'ll. James Perry
recently.
Jr., Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and
They were married March 5, 1952 Mrs. George Case, Jewett, Ohio;
in Canton by Rev. Eilward White.
· Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Case, Carroll·
Mr. Moore is the son of the late ton, ·Ohio; Barbara Will, Ha,rrilwnMr. and Mrs. Seldon Moore, ville; Mr. and Mrs. David A. Moore,
Cheshire. Mrs. Moore is the Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Q8ughterof Mr. and Mrs. RalphKer·
Majors, Russellpoint; Jeffrey L.
wood, Gallipolis .
Moore and Scott J. Moore ci
The couple have four children, Mr. Cheshire.
and Mrs. David A. Moore, Gallipolis, r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiij;;;;;;~
Mr. and Ml'll. Robert Majors,
Russellpoint. They have one grand·
rHIS WfiK
child, Jason Scott Majors.
Those attending and sending gifts
inClude Mrs. Ralph Kerwood, Mr.
and Mrs. Ona L. Moore and Charles
Kerwood, all of Gallipolis; Mr. and
'Mrs. Richard
Waverly;
Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Rutland;
WEDNESDAY; FRIDAY
Mr. and Mrs.
Mr.
&amp; SATURDAY

SOUTHERN
REVUE

RE-GRAND OPENING
LOOK GREAT IN THE
EASTER PARADE

MATTRESS
SETS ·

Join the Easter Parade, with a new hair
style. Complementing your appearance
an.d lifestyle. Let your good looks go to
your head.
·

FULL WEDDING SERVICE • CATERING AVAILABLE.
Phone 304·675-4281

.•.
•
,,

..

PRICES! ONE·
WEEK ONLY!

AHer 5 p.m.

Whittington

.,. POINT PLEASANT - Mr. and
;:Mrs. G. Robert Whittington, 2903
: spruce Ave., Point Pleasant, an·
; nounce the engagement and for;'thcoming marriage of th eir
'" daughter, Gail Lee, to Steven
:. Douglas Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs.
'~ackson R. Roush, 1106 30th Sl., Point
; Pleasant.
. : . Whittington attends Gallipolis
:· Business College. She is employed
:·by Joann Fabrics. Roush is employed by Jack Roush Motor Car
.

TWIN
Reg. $19~
PER SET

FULL
Reg. $399
PER SET
NOW

•99.50

•219

NOW

.

~Jnc.

PER SET
SAVE
599.50

. PER SET
SAVE
$180

QUEEN
Reg. $599
PER SET

K'ING
Reg . S649
PER SET

NOW

"' Both are graduates of Point
:'Pleasant Hi~h School.
; The open-church wedding will be
; April 10 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul
: united Methodist Church, Point

•319

/z ON ALL
BEDDING

1

..
ltanegar-Sharp
.
~Pleasant

·PER 'sET

SAVE
$280

$500 0FF
SHAMPOO, CUT &amp;BLOW DRY
·REG. $12.00
OR ANY PERM OVER 125

NOW

'448

*******

I

------------------'

I'

THERE'S STILL TIME TO
ENROLL FOR THE SPRING QUARTER.
SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER. THE TREES AND
FLOWERS ARE NOT THE ONLY THING'S THAT CAN BLOOM. LET
YOUR OWN LIFE BLOSSOM -

NOW
AnEND
GALLIPOLIS COLLEG'
IT WILL COST YOU LESS AND YO~ WILL GET
ON THE JOB SOONER.

,."',.

..
•

'

!t..

......

Silver Bridge Plaza

. '

State Route 7

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERG.IST ·

.

...

'

,.•

..
...

.,

OHice Hours by Appointment Only'

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

Cl iBIA

..

,,
!'

6 Different Stains

STOP IN TODAY. FOR OUTSTANDI
SAVINGS ON QUALITY CABINETS ~~~~
FOR YOUR KITCHEN OR BATHI OUR fi
TRAINED SPECIALISTS CAN CUSTOM
.DESIGN YOUR KITCHEN OR BATH
AT A. TREMENDOUS SAVINGS TO .
YOUI ,

~

'

l

l

WE STILL HAVE CLASSES AVAILABLE IN
COMPUTER SCIENCE ......
ENROLL NOW- CALL 446·4367

IAPPROV~ FOR VETERANS I
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

IFINANCIAi. AID AVAiLABLE I

SPRING VAUEY PLAZA
"A profrninl College Df Business with Your Career in Mind"

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
IVINING APPOINTMENTS
1 AVAIL.ILI
.

,.

GREAT PROGRAMS IN:
•BUSINESS.ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
•ACCOUNTING .
I

All Wood Construction

"'..·'

It's a treat that's worth the trip!
Four big Gulf shrimp, our crispy
fish _fillet, plus fryes, slaw &amp;
hushpuppies! Shrimply delicious!

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

13 Door Styles

~·'

Special $2.99

.

ON RIVIERA CABINETS!
KITCHEN OR BATH

.

"'"

Shr·imp &amp; Fish

FITNESS &amp; BEAUTY STUQIOS
"Over
Top of .
the
OoUar
PH • -992-6720
_____
. _Pomeroy
.... ___,.__________
_____ _~I
Ge1181111
Stont In

'

Lounge &amp; Canyaut

EYE INJURIES
splashes.lt can come from gases,
Eye injuries can happen to ·· vapol'll, and funnes, and just plain
anyone. Thousands of people are ordinary dust, if there's too much
injured every year lhrOUIIh freak of it.
·
accidents, careless, or from e1II you need safety eyewear it
posures to hazards on the job.
should be the highest industrial
U you wear glall!les, good quality to protect you from acquallty impact·re.t~istant lenaes cidehts.
will give you as much protection
You and your eyll!l deserve the
as posalble. Your glassel should best possible protection. Your opbe checked often to make sur'e the tometrist can help you get it.
lenaes fit finnly in the frame and
have not been scratchod. Looaenttlng or dainagod giassell lrr
creaae the danger of eye injuries.
Anyone exposed to unusual
In the Interest of better vision
hazards in his work should wear
from the office of
safety goggles or some other kind
of protective eye shield. The
Geo11e w. Dam, O.D.
• danger may nO! be jill! from
4S8Second
Ave., GaWpolls
ftying metal objecta or chel'l)ical
Pbone 446-2238 ·

446-3353

PER SET
SAVE
$200

Thru April 11; 1982

'

QUA~TER

~---OPTOMETRIST----

Silver Bridge Plaz~
Gollipolis.·Ohlo

SAVE 45%

••
•

FRENCH

'DR. GEORGE W, DAVIS

BY PREPARING FOR
YOUR FUTURE

NOW THRU APRIL 20, 1982
Bring ACopy of This Ad!
Come in and Register For
.. FREE PRIZES"

; ' CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs. John
'
:'.Ranegar of Cheshire
announce the

•
•
•
••'
•

Those wishing to send cards
should address them to 32'/ Silver
Star Road, Osoee, Fla., 32761.

Mr. and Mrs. Moore, 30th
I '

:wu Second ,\ve.
GALUPOUS - Activities for the
Monday Baked spaghetLafayette Mall
· week of March 29-April 2 at the ti/cheese topping, buttered
Gallipolis, 0.
Senior Citizellli Center located at 220 cauliflower, tossed salad/dressing,
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Italian bread, apricob&gt;, butter, milk.
Monday, March 29 - Vinton Site
TuesQay - New Elglaild boiled ~---------,----------:---:-­
Exercises, 11:30 a.m.; Chorus, 1-3 dinner/ham, potato, cabbage,
carrots, onions, cornbread, peanut
p.m.
.J~
Toesday, March JU - Tax-Aide, butter cookie, butter, milk.
9:30 a.m.-3:30p.m.; S.T.O.P. Class, - Wednesday - Liver and onions,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:15 bu!lered carrots, buttered kale,
a.m.; Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
. fresh fruit, bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday, March 31 ~ Vinton
Thursday - Macaroni and cheese
Nutrition Education, 11 :30 a.m.; or chop suey on rice, buttered green
· Vinton Bible Study, I p.m.; Card beans, cole slaw, baked pineapple,
Games, 1·3 p.m.; Amedcan bread, butter, milk.
Literature Class, 1-2 p.m.
FriQay - Baked friod chicken,
Thursday, Aprlll -Style Show, I mashed potatoes, buttered beets;
p.m.; Vinton Site Crafts,! p.m.
lima gelatin/fruit, brown bread, butFriday, April 2 - Tax-Aide, 9:30 ter, milk.
.
a.m.-3:30p.m.; Yoga Css, 10 a.m. ;
ChoiCe of beverage served with
Advisory Council, I p.m.; Art Class, each meal.
1-3 p.m.; Woodworking Class, 1-3
"Services rendered on a nonp.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1·3 p.m.; discriminatory basis."
Social hour, 7 p.m.

OPENED BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Mrs. Stewart,

J

'

Wilson's Bridal Accessories

Mr. and

GAWPOUS- Mr. and Mrs. Oty
Stewart will celebrate their 55th
April2 at their

••

I'

:Jt£~

I

Thunnan United Methodist Church.
The couple is the parenls of three
sons, Kenneth, Gary and Roger, and
have seven grandchildren.
They request gifts be omitted.

I

•navy

a~

Mr. and Mrs. Williams, 40th

,

,,
'•

HIICHenS
Dt'MII awn ,,

. PHoNE 446 4367

75-f2-Mm

�The

Times-

Pleasant W. Va.

Astrographs
March 28, 1912
Although it is probable that you'll increase your income and bolster
your material Security in the eoming year, progress may be slower than
you'd like. Be grateful for small favors.
.•
ARIF.'i (Mareh ZI·Aprll II) You sometimes have a tendency to
neglect the enliUed and reward the undeservihg. This characteristic
could be prominent in your actions t!)day.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) You may feel the need to Use flattery in
order f.O get others to do your bidding today. This is the wrong approach.
Sincerity will have far more impact.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you have a discussion today with
l!Omeone who can help you careerwise, keep the conversation on a serious
course. Levity won't work.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be frank and forthright with anyone who
comes to you for advice today. You'll be of no help to them if you tell them
what they want to hear.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Decisions should not be based upon easy outs
today, because nothing will be resolved. Make your judgments
realibiically, even if the alternative decided upon is more painful.
VIJlGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Treat everyone you deal with equally
t_oday. II Will anger your other pals if you're nice only to those who can ·
help you achieve what you want.
LffiRA ISept. 23-0ct. 23) It's true that members of the opposite sex
always find you appealing, but don't misread the signals and think
another is making a pass when he or she is only beiqg friendly .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your practical skills are likely to be more
pronounced than your artistic ones today. Temporarily shelve your
creative pursuits until another day.
SAGmARIUS !Nov. 23-Dcc. 21) It's important today to follow
through on promises to others. they may cause you inconvenience, but it
will enhance your reputation.
CAPRICOR~ Wee. 22-Jan. 19) Tpday you could be pennywise and
pound foolish, so don't be surprised when you total your ledger if you find
your books won't balance.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You're not apt to apply the full spec·
trum of your talents today unless you are materially motivated. When
you see profitable possibilities, you'll shift into high gear.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You have great capabilities today, but
your initial assessment of situations might be negative. However, your
positive altitude will emerge. Success will result.
March 29, 1982
This coming year you may have several opportunities to get involved
with successful people who have some good things going in which you'll
be invited to participate. Believe in yourself and join up.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Just because you're eager to negotiate in
a fair and open manner, not everyone else is so honest. Be watchful today
for conniving individuals.
TAURUS 1Aprii20-May 20) Profit motivates you today and you'll expend much effort make a buck, but don't na4nt your earnings. One with
little scruples is eyeing your pocketbook.
·
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) You're such a hail-fellow-well-met per·
sonality today that it would be hard to believe anyone would be deceptive.
Be extra-careful in legal matters.
· CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don't be so ready to give everyone you
meet or deal with today the benefit of the doubt. There is one who is not
telling the truth.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're exceptionally clever with c.onceiving or
developing large plans today, but to overlook small details would cause
confusion and consternation.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 As long as you are acting alone you are bold
· and assertive today, but the minute a partner comes on the scene you
could become too timid to be effective.
LffiRA ISept. 23-0cl. 23} Be sure every small detail has been checked
out thoroughly before you sally forth into the breech. If things are well

to

~

.,

GALUPOUS- Abenefit concert in support of Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Chapter of Big Brothers/Big Sisters of America will be held at 8 p.m.,
Saturday, April24, at Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis.
The benefit concert will be perlormect in Voices of Uberty, a choral
group from Meigs County.
The local Big Brothers/Big Sisters program formally began one year
ago after several months of developmental work by interested citizens.
Dr. James E. Levernier, local chapter president, said, " Once fully implemented, the program will screen and match volunteer Big Brothers
and Big Sisters with children in need of guidance. Many of the children involved in the program,'' he continued, "will be from single parent homes,
and the volunteer Big Brother or Sisler will spend some time each week
with the litUe brother or sister in some kind of activity which benefits the
child."
The local chapter is affiliated with the National Big Brothers/Big
Sisters Associaliqn which · provides information and advice on ad·
ministration and quality control.
The public is invited to attend.

by 8trideRit~

'
·I

MOBILE HOMES
ALL TRADE-INS ON MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
THIS AREA.
1971 BELMONT 12x65 . .. . ................. . .... .... $7,395
1972 BAROII, i2160, CENTRAL AIR ............•.•.•.. . .. $7,395
1976 OAKWOOD 12152, furnished with central air conditioning ..... $7,395
1967 ELCONA 10x50 WITH TIP-OUT IN LIVING ROOM •••••••...• $3,450

8trldeRite
WIN! STRAWBERRY
·SHORTCAKE DOLL!!!

© AMERICAN GREETINGS CORP lli Ctr.4U01)1,

ASK ABOUTTHESE HOMES AT OUR
BELPRE LOT

1973 SHENANDOAH 12x60 .. ..... ...... ... . .. . . .... . . $5,500
1970 BUDDY 12x52 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,495
~

Kl N-GSBURY HOME SALES

Just Come In

And Reeister.

POMEROY, OHIO

DRAWINGS:

SAT., APRil 3rd
SAT, APRIL lOth

CHAPMAN SHOES

992-7034

LANDMARK IN POMEROY
SERVING MEIGS-GALLIA-MASON CO.
YOUR DISCOUNT CENTER ON
HOTPOINT APPLIANCES AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVISIONS
WE WILL NQT BE
UNDERSOLD

.

THE MARCH ~lble quiz, 'sponsored by the Meigs County United
Methodiat Youth Council, will be
held Sunday at 2 p.m. at Rock
Springs United Methodist Church. Youth from several United
Methodist Churches will compete
in the quiz show on the book of
Isaiah. The ~xl quiz will be held
a! Sulton United Methodist Church on the last Sunday in May 8fl1l
will deal with the book of Matthew. Study guides lllld more in·
formation may be obtained from
Rev. Mark Flynn.

MGM MEN'S Softball League
meeting, 1 p.m. Sunday at Middleport Village Hall to organiz~ .
for upcoming season. Represen. tatives from last year's program
are to attend meeting as well as
representatives of new teams
who wish to apply. New officers
will be elected and a discussion
held on playing fieids, placement
of teams into clasllificalions. For
. more information call Jerry
Davenj,ortat 992-7323.
MEIGS.MASON Girls Softball
Association meeting, 2:30 p.m.
Sunday at Royal Crown Plant on
N. Second, Middleport. all
coaches or team representatives
' should be present. Those with
questions call carolyn Grueser,
992-31153, or Barbara Pratt, 992·
~-

DEER CREEK Church will
hold a revival beginning Sunday
with Rev. Robert Preston. There
will be singing each night. Rev.
Don Price invites the public to the
7:30p.m. services.

-

Euster flowers

''

~E~\llNOl

.

•'

BE UNDERSOlD

i!M

1·

\f"a•~'

l;l· Itt ·

u~

'" · · .

f.1 7 Cycle buill-in dishwasher !!! Pot -washe r
with Power-Scrub® cycle Iii Energy-saver dry
cycle Iii Revers ible color fronts 1!11 ShOrt Wash
cycle 111111 Crystal Clear'"' rinse _dispenser iJ11 Soft
food disposer Ill Sound msulatron .

•so DISCOUNT

•

out o

SPRING BLOSSOMS FOR SOMEONE YOU LOVE
•LILIES • MUMS • AZALEAS • CORSAGES
eCUT FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS•
•PERMANENT MEMORIAL FLOWERS•
.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
"THE WAY AMERICA SENDS LOVE"
PHONE 992-2039
106 BUTTERNUT AVE.
or992-S721
. POMEROY, OH.

s100 DISCOUNT

CENTENARY - Cub Scout '
Pack 203 will meet Monday at
· Centenary United Methodist
Church for the Pinewood Derby
Race at 7 p.m. Registration wiD
be from 6:311-7 p.m. Those attending Should take their derby
cars.

11JF.SDAY

MEMBERs of Eleanor Circle
of Heath United Methodist Church will m~tat 9:30a.m&gt;Tuesday
at the chUrch for a workshop on

•

i
.

''·

Ill Deluxe microwave with large 1.3 cu.
.ft. capacity II Solid-state touch controls Ill 10 Power levels plus defrost
cycle 11 Cooks last by time or temperature II Qu ick-set control fo r popular foods Ill Double-Duty'"' shelf 11!!1
Black glass front.

'50 DISCOUNT

ll!l Deluxe self-cleaning 30" range Ill
3 Plug -I n and 1 "Power-Saver" Catrod® surface heating units II Digital
clock. timer. automatic oven til Full-

width cooktop light Iii Black glass
window door 1\1 Infinite heat rotary
controls.

·'50 DISCOUNT
STARTS AS AVALUE .
••• STAYS AVALUE!

QPOME~!~~ANDMARK
•
,..
I

Drl11e a litHe and save a lot-Free delittry within 75 miles
Yes, •• smict at ,aur laallllltlaint Dultr
SJon Hours: 1:30 to 5:l0.111H CloMtl at 5:00 P.ll.
Stni1JIItip, G.-.111d ,._ C.lltlts

I,
I

· arc

Ansoll
. .. ·... -.

... and Into the Spring se uon
tremen.dous discounts on all our
cerpetlng, color TVs, and major
appliances. So come to Hatfield &amp;
MCCoy and let us show you why our 9
store buying power means greater
savings for yquf

ULTRON1i-

One of the tlneet cerpet fibers ever developed
In deep IUICIOUI coloretlone and tonel. The
unique conetr'lctlon actually repall lOll ·and
mollture and ·rellltl etalnlng tor years of
trouble tree performance.

Manufacturers
Authorized
Rich multltoned earthy coloratloneln a etylleh
•
h b t
1t .diSCOUntS On t 8 es Jf 100% ULTRON NYLON CONSTRU9TION.
....~ performing carpet Jf_Jf... $cotchguarded" and e~atlc controled for long
•:.."1"1'
.
lf:..••. • llte and 881Y malntence.
• ~· yarn syst~ m s .......

ALL PRICES INCLUDE CARPET PADDING AND INSTALLATION

DO UP TO 3 BEDROOMS FOR AS
LITTLE AS

..._..,

(aea.ct on 311 oq.~do.
other alzeo
comparably priced.)

'

(BIIId on 311 aq .ydl.
Other IIZII
comparobty priced.)

,.

DO A LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM,
AND HALLWAY FOR AS LITTLE AS

' : . (Bated on' 42 oq. ydo.
other otzeo
., comparably
priced.)

$

"

$

•'

(Bated on 42 oq. ~do.
other otzeo
comparably priced.)

.

"

DO YOUR ENTIRE HOME (BAND
..ed on
oq.yda .
(Bm.donra.q.yd•. SAVE EVEN M 0 REI.
otherol•e•
other alzea
·•
comparably priced.)
78

comperebty priced.)

$

&lt;· Exhibit for the monlh of March ;;49 pieces c~ art by Marjorie
:-, Rinehart, Gallipo~ . Watercolor, ·
• -"'•1 collage conte' crayon and
"• .---'
'
charcoal.
.
: Gallery. Hours - Tueslay and
:;:'11lurlday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Salurdaf
~and Sunday, I p.m.-6 p.RI.
f; Sunday, Mardi 28, 2-4 p.m. ~on for new and old members.
i; 'l'hunday, April 15, 6:30 p.m. ''ereative writing claasea begin. Call ·
"'Jerry · Skaggs, 448-3834, for
. registration.
·
••• Thunday, Aprlll5, 6:30 p.m. •b.nce c ' - relllllle•
Judi
......._ 446-'18116, for reglllration.
,,..-.
,. Exhibit for the month 111 April ~ "Nature lntetydrl H Sponwoi ed by
the anctnnaU Mllleum of Natural
Hillary )D c;GOperaUon 1l'lth the Ohio
FoundaUon on the Arts statewide
Arts Sei'VIcel Procram·

.can

•

7'*"N
CONTEMPOR

• Top quality black
matrix picture
tube
' 1 00% a·o lld state
chassis
•. F~ont acceas
, color controls

CONSOLE

RCn

25" DIAGONAL XL100
TRANSITIONAL COLOR
CONSOLE e Single Knob Electronic
Tuning
e Automatic Frequency
Control
• VIew operated color
and tint control•
• Reliable extended life
chaele

',$28

e 15 Minute timer
e Removable gla11 tray
e SM thru window

$1'97

SUPER
SAVINGS

UNDERCOUNTER
irlp~!&gt;l DISHWASH .ER
-·=== · • Multi-cycle wash

ON 1982

o(

-

Whirlpool

action
e Dual spray arm
e No-heit drying
ewltch
e Porcelain enamel
Interior

24

REFRIGERATORS

!

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, ·oHIO
.PHONE
•

S498

•

MICROWAVE OVEN

the Easter bazaar.

f·Riverby
:;calendar

-1-tutp..o-i.n.

-I I u I 1• •• in I

We Accept A11 Major Credit Cards, .
Al!d We Wire Flowers Everywhere.

bite out
of high
prices!"

MONDAY

CHESTER- Slldea of the Holy
Land will be shown Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at Chester Church of
the Nazarene. The public is inVited.

Ill 19.6 Cu. ft. food center II Equipped
for optional .icemaker II Adjustable
shelve·s llil Twin see-thru dairy bins,
meat and vegetable keepers Ill Automatic Energy-Saver system fill Just
30Y•" wide.

"Take a

with Carpeting, Color TVs, and Major Appliances
SUN. 12:3Q-6:30 MON.-THURS. 1 Oam~9· pm

GALUPOUS - Pembroke
Club will meet Tuesday at the
Robert Sheard residence.

-H-otp.oi..ld

·
.
. j1'
tc .Jtcp Aiq~ P'''

Old Man i:latfield and the boys are

TWENTIETH
ANNIVERSARY obllervance .when
OH~KAN Coin Club meets Monday evening at Riverboat Room,
Diamond Savings and Loan, W.
Main, Pomeroy. Out of town coin
dealers and guests will be present
for a trading session. There will
be· a coin auction and refreshments. Meeting Open to all area
residents inte~esled in coins or
currency.
THE RUTLAND Garden Club
will meet Monday night at 7:30
p.m. at the hbme of Mrs. Pauline
Atkins.

TRADITIONAL

•

·,

GAIJJPOUS - Rio Grande
College Choral~ will perlonn at
the 10:45 a.m. wonlliP service of
Grace United Methodist Church
Sunday. The 14-member group
has peifonned through the
eastern part of the states. The
church is I!)Cated on the,corner of
Second Avenue and Cedar Street,
Gallipolis. The pubUc is invited to
attend.
'
·WlUTE Shrine ins\allation
practice has been set for Sunday .
at 2 p.m. at the Pllmeroytofasonic
Temple. All officers and members are asked to attend.
HYMN SING will be held at the
Nease Setuement Chtirch Sunday
at 2 p.m. The featured ~ingers
will be "The Happy GOb-pel
Voices."
The public is invited.
..

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II may not be wise to lake a subordinate
role in joint ventures today, especially if you see your counterpart acting
on an unsubstantiated tip.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Someone may be jealously watching your social successes today- just wailing for you to do something
. silly in order to ridicuil! your behavior.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) This should be a most productive day.
one during which you can make up for lost time, but you must know when
to stop. If you gel too tired, careless errors could result.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 19) Today you're fortunate to be around exciting people who will stimulate your actions. Be realistic, however,
about how much you can spend on activities.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Today, someone who cares a great deal
for you will help you solve a problem you may have found overwhelming.
Make certain to give them proper credit or they'll be hurl.

....

•'

Thars rlghl. Slrawberry Shortcake'" is here. We've just Ill·
cei'l!ld a flG\N Shipment of Sfra\Werry Shortcake sneakers
and SOndalsandwewonted you to know about nQSOOrly
os possible. These sneakers and oondals
~.....~
ore oo cute lhat you'll wont to ruSh nght
in to our store. so come on in while
there's still a large SBiection and you'll
know why she says: 'Ue is Delicious".

LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN, PRE-OWNED

.

~-~~p~ .

Calendar
SUNDAY .

Concert supports Big
Brothers and Sisters

1100 E. MAIN ST.

w. va .

28, 1982 •

Mar . 28,1

7.'./IPPJUI 30" GAS or ELECTRIC
LRANG_ '.· E • Lift up top &amp;

'" _ L

•-

removable

door ·
-- !

· -~~ --

lt•:::·:'":.'·..:•:...•.:...---,1

• Lock-off heat
controls
. Large oven
cavity
YOUR CHOICE

�•

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

S rts
Southem second

WIN YOUR GROCERIES!!!
There will be a drawing EVERY DAY! Just put
your name and phone number on your
register tape. The· ·one drawn will win that
·amount•.

t

•

THURS., FRI. &amp;
SAT., APRIL 1,
2&amp;3
FREE cup·
OF R~C •.

stORE HOURS:
Mon.-sat. 8 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
~ERC)Y, 0.

AP Sports Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -AIJ.OhloJayByrne'sscortngexploslonof22
points In the fourth quarter Saturday night Ufted Middletown Fenwick (9a
64-44 vic lory over .Racine Southern for tlJe school's first Class A high school
basketball championship.
The 6-foot-6 Byrne, a two-time all-stater, 5ank seven o! his first eight
shots In the final quarter and finished With 34 points as the Falcons closed
out a 21-7 season.
Hot Secoad lllllf
Byrne hit 10 of his 15 Door shots In the last eight minutes. Byri!e•s
performance overshadowed another brl111ant e!fort by Kent Wolfe, Southem's all-state guard: The 5-10 senior poured In 24 points to give him a
two-game total of63.
However, It was not enough to stave off the Meigs County team's second

•••••••••••••••••
••
• •••
••••••···couPON·····
•••
•
•:
CORONET
!•
•
••
••
•

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH APRIL 3, 1982

•
ID

Class

Tornadoes drop title tilt to Fenwick Falcons, 64-44
By GEORGE STRODE

Sundlf 10 am-10 pm

~imtt~· Jentin:el

defeat In 28 games this season. Soutbern was appearing In Its first title
contest.
The Tornadoes, after falling behind 14-3ln the flrst4 ~ minutes, reeled
of! 12 straight points In the second quarter to earn a 23-23 hallUme tie.
Tim Jorden, only a freshman , led a Fenwick spurt at the siart of the
second half tllat gave the Falcons a 31-23 cushion. Jorden , a 6-2 fo,.,ard
who did not start until the !Ina! gaine of the regular season, hit a pair o!
baskets In the streak.
Southern, behind Wolfe's outside accuracy, stayed close until early In
the fourth quarter.
•

FOUIU! Quarier llllt.
Then Byrne took charge and scored live straight baske ts and two !ree
throws to give the Falcons a 49-36 advantage with less than six minutes to
play.
Jorden supported Byrne with 11 points, while WoUe was getting no
double-figure scoring help !rom his teammates .

Named Moot Valuable Pla,yer
Byrne was named as the Most Valuable Player In the Class A state boys
prep basketball tournament.
·
A panel of sports wrlters selected Byrne to head their all-tournament
team tllat also Includes Ed Watson of Fenwick, Kent Wolfe of ruMerup
Racine Southern, Alan Kortokrax of Delphos St.John's and Terry Peter·
son o! Wlndbam.
Box score:
SOU'i'HERN (44~- Rees 12-24, R. WolfeOO.OO, Brown20.14.K . Wolfe 10
4-5 24, Roseberry 1 0.12, Beegle 3 2·2 8, N. Bostlc~O,erick 10.0 2, C.
Bostic 0 0.0 0, Cummins 0 ().() o, PapeOO.OO, B
rO
0. To&amp;aJa 188-ll
44.
FENWICK (64~ - Byrne 162-234, T. Jorden51-111, Clark20.04, Hulburt2
1·25, Watson 3 2-28, J . JordenOO.OO, B. McQulnnOQ.OO, Acra 10-02, RosstO
().0 0, Fink 0 ().0 0. Totals 211 &amp;-7 64.
Team fouls-Southern 9, Fenwick 13. A-12,798

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•

ByJOHNNE~N

AP Sports Writer
, NEW ORLEANS (AP ) - Eric
Smith had four big shoes to fill Sat·
~rday, and. he proved to be more
tllan equal to the task.
With Eric " Sleepy' ' Floyd, Georgetown's All·&lt;"Unertcan guard, In
foul trouble, and freshman center
Patrick Ewing battUng an aggrerslve Louisville defense, Smith was
left with scortng duty for the Hoy as.
He responded with a game-high

14 points, lncludtog eight In a cru·
eta! burst, as Georgetown sped to s
!i0-46 victory over Louisville In the
sernlllnals of the NCAA Basketball
ChaJTiplonshlps.
.
The victory moved Georgetown
Into Its first championship game
since 1943, against the top-ranked
team In the nation, Nortn CaroUna .
The Tar Heels defeated Houston.
~. In Saturday afternoon's open·
lng round game.
'!be chalriplonshlp game Is slated

'

an outlet as he Is trapped by Middletown

Fenwlcl&lt; forward Jay Byrne (riJhl) , iuKI guard

"We .just play tllat way," Smith
said of Georgetown's versatile of·
tense. "I got some good openings ,
and they were covering Ewing
pretty well."
That may. have been the day's
biggest understatement. Ewing,
!Jghtlng two - and someumes
three - defenders, was held to
eight points, but be grabbed 10 rebounds and helped turn the game
around In the second half with his
lnUmldatlng defense.

Orner Hurlburi In the tint haH of the Clau A 81Me
HIJh School Bo)'A' Toomey pme In Coloanbwo Salul'
day niJhL (AP LMerphulo).

enrollment.

Roth won Its second straight
state championship. '!be Falcons
ruled tla.u AAA a year ago and
also won tbe Class AA crown In
1976. The Falcona posted a 244 record In their !lnal season .
.
Carton, a 6-foot-1 senior, led
Roth's balanced attack with 18
points.

..

Carton 7 4-4 18, S. Smith 6 3-4 15,
HunterO 2-22. J. SmltbO~O. Spells
10-02, Wllllngham02-22, WeaverO
0.0 0, Bailey 2 2-2 6, Sims 0 1-2 1.
Totala u t+at ..
&amp;\YEN (Ill) • Spivey 1 2-2 4,
McCee 0 ~ 0, Bligp 3 1·2 7,
McClendon 10 3-5 23. Lyle 2 1·2 5,
Taylor 3 1-2 7, Phll11ps 0 0.0 0, Staples 0 (l.() 0, G. Smith 3 4-410, Tom11

UU.17M.
Box score:
IU)m (Ill) - Byars 2 6-9 10,
McCray 3 4-5 10, ~ 1 ().0 2.

'

Fouled . Out-Malden, Bligp.
Spivey, Lyle. Team !ouls-RDth 13,
Rayen 22. !(- 12,500.
·

Louisville's defense," said Georgetown Coach John Thompson .
Crum, however, said Georgetown's defense was the dlt!erence.
''They've got great quiCkness and
tllat Intimidating big man," Crum
said . "We didn't play well enough tn
Win. We shOt poorly and we played
awful."
"I don't know anything about
North Carolina," said Ewing, who
probably accounted lor the four·
point · dlt!erence between the
teams, although he was at no point

Bacon cops Class

Dayton Roth bows out with
victory, AA championship
· By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Day.
ton Roth made Its !Ina! basketball
·game a gJortous one Saturday,
whipping Youngstown Rayen 68-56
lor the Class AA state boys' high
school basketball Utle behind
guards Mike Carton and Sieve
Smith.
Roth wiD be closed after this
school year, one of lour Dayton publiC high schools beln&amp; pbuec! out
beCause o! th_at . city's dwlndUng

The dlfferenf"-l,n tbe game may
have been In field goal percentage.
Georgetown, which set an NCAA
tournament record by shoollng 74
percent In Its 69-45 victory over
Oregon State In the West Region
final, managed to shoot only 43.9
percent against Louisville, but the
Cardinals were even wprse. Denny
Crum 's Louisville team manc.ged
only 39.6 percent from the field .
" I don't remember when we've
been so poor o!fenslvely, but I've
got to attribute some of that to

here Monday night

•

'

TRAPPED - Soulloem JUArd Tom llmleberry
looks for

'

It's Hoyas ,vs~ Tar ,Heels for NCAA crown

••••

~i 'PAPER !!
:i•• TOWELS ••~:
•:

UP FOR THE HOOP - Middletown Fenwtcl&lt; fol'- ( 45 ~ as Souihem panl Keot Wolfe CUI) watchea In the
ward Jay Byme II""" for the basket but hB8 his allot flnol haH of the a... A RIP Schoollloya' Toumey
blocked by Racine Southern cenler Robet1 BIVWil · championllllp game In Columbus Sa&amp;unlay. (AP
Luerpholo ).

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP~ - Four
free throws by Greg SchUdrneyer
and.two more by Rick Bierman In
the last 51 seconds o! ov~me gave
ClnclnnaU Roger Bacon a n-67 triumph over Barberton Saturday In
the Class AAA state boys basketball finals.
· Barberton, the 1976 slate champion, bad raJJied from a 13-polnt de- :
licit late In the third quarter to force
the overtime.
SchUdmeyer, who led Roger
Bacon with 22 points, broke a ~
deadlock with four free ll\rolw
within 34 aeconds to hand the Spar-

tans a 69-allead with 17 seconds to

play.
Richard Sims sank two foul shots
lor Barberton to cut tbe margin to
69-67 with 11 seconds remaining.
Blennan then hit both ends o! a oneand-one to give the Spartans their
!lnal victory margin with four seconda to go.
Barberton could not get of!
anotbei' shot as time elapsed, lrlg·
gerlna a wild celebration by Roger
Bacon's players near rnldcourt.
It wu the lint state basketball
champlolllllop lor the SpartaRJ and
gave·them a 24-4 record after their

dominant.

· In fact, a t one point durtng the
tltst half, Ewing had a jump shot
blocked by Rodney McCray, who at
6-foot-7 Is five Inches shorter tllan
Ewing,
,
Ewing was asked the last time a
shot of his was blocked and he replled, ..I don't remember.''
Smith, carrying much of the of·
fenstve load for Floyd, scored eight
straight Ge-lrgetown points In a 14-4
run tllat e rased a one-point de!tctt
and produced a nine-point lead.

AAA

title

only state tournament appearance.
ij()X score:
Bi\CON (7}1 • Knolle 5 3-6 13,
Schlldmeyer 8 6-6 22, Ntehof! 6 2·2
14, Blennan 6 2-414, Morrissey 14-6
6, Breen 1l ~ 0, Hausfeld 0 2-4 :i.

Tolala 28 1&amp;-28 7L

.

BARBERTON (87)- Sims I~ 4-4
24, Smart 5 2-2 12, Banks 1 1·3 3,
Ondecker 3 0.0 6, Onuale 3 7-13 13,
Walker 0 0.0 0, Mullett 2 0.0 4, Weigand 11-2 3, Greynolds 1 0.0 2. To11111 28 15-%4 87.
Fouled out-Morrissey, Srl)8rt,
S!lhlldmeyer. Team fouls-Bacon
15, Barberton 22. A-13,420

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

Page-C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va.

Mar. 21; 1982

•

Pomeroy-M

Southern gains Class A cage finals
By GEOJI(lE STRODE
AI' l!porte Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Kent Wolfe, scoring more than a point a
minute, had 39 points to lead Racine Souihern' to a 74-66 victory wer
Windham Friday night In the Class A state hlgh school boys basketball
sernlftnals.
The Tornadoes from Meigs Cpunty, 2&amp;1, played Middletown FenwiCk,
2().7, for the small school state crown Saturday nleht In StJohn Arena.
Fenwick upset Delphos St.John's 5().48 In the first semlflnaJ contest
Frtday night.
Wolfe, despite sitting out almost 10 minutes, hit 12 field goals and 15 of17
free throws. The 5-foot-9 senior guard, a third-team all-state selection this
season, sank U of 12 foul shots In the last eight minutes to stt1le a Bomber
rally.
Score F'lnt Seven Polnill
'1'he Tornadoes, reaching the state llnals lor the llrst t1me In three state
tournament appearances, scol'!'(l the first seven points of the game.
They led 21-15 alter the first quarter and 33-31 at halttlrne before a
Windham rally gave the Portage County team a 38-37 lead midway In the·
third quarter.
'S outhern outscored Windham 15-41n a eight-minute stretch of the second
halt tor a 59-46 lead. Wolfe hit nine points In the winning spurt.
Windham raWed again and cut the rriarglri to three points twiCe late In
the final quarter before Wolfe's foul shooting ended the Bombers' season at
24.-3.
· ·Robert Brown scored 14 points and Richard Wolfe, no relation to Kent
Wolfe, added 12 tor Southl!!rn. a 1911J semltlnallst.
Terry Peterson, a S-4 senlor center, led Windham with 18 points, all but
!QUI' of !helD coming In the first hal!. John Mizner added 14, whlle Allen
Knight added 12 and Mike Fabry 10 for the losers.
Soothem Coach Carl Wolfe, no relation to the 5-foot-9 guard Kent Wolfe,

said his team was not ready to consider a champlonshlJ? until after Saturday's match against Middletown Fenwick.
'Came To Wln'-WoUe
"We came down here to win the title, not just. to celebrate a great
season," he said. "We learned our lesson two years ago and we even kept
our kids penned up In their room until just before tonight's game."
Wolfe said his team played all season with their " backs to the wall," and
said Friday night was no exeeption.
"When K!mt got Into foul trouble and missed almost 10 minutes of
playing ttme, you could see we weren't the same team," the Southern
coach said.
"However, our ldda gained confidence even though we lost our early
lead just before halftime."
Windham Coach Marty Hill saki there were only two factors that cost his
team the game.
"The first was ~nt Wolfe," he said. " I've been down here seven years,
seen.
and that was the greatest one-man performance I've personally
The second was our lnabWty to play decent defense.
'Dkln'l Have 11'-HID
"We shltted Into our franUc pace offense to try to catch up, but we just
didn't have enouli:h to mRkP It"

ever

BOYSCLASSA-STATESEMI·FINAL

St. John Arena- Columbus
WINDHAM86
Player
Larry Mullenax
Gregg Isler
Bill Spencer
Mike Brown
MikeFab!'Y

FG-A

FI'·A

~

0-0

. :J.-8

2-3

0-0
0-0

0-0
0-0

4-5

2-4

RB PF TP
4
1
0
0
3

0

4
8
0
0

5

10

5

3
I

Wolfe sets
new Class A
scoring mark
By SCOTl' WOLFE
, .
COLUMBUS - Kent Wolfe's 39polnt effort against Wll\dham here
Frlday night In the Class A semlfl·
naJs of the 60th annual Ohio State
Basketball Tournament set a Class
A scoring reconl.
The past record was 35 points set
by Mike Allen of New Leidngton In

Tim Duvall
John Mizner
Rob Bradley
Terry Peterson
Jeff Olson
Allen Knight
TOTALS

0-0

0-0
4-4
0-0
0-0
0-0

5-17
0-0

9-13
0-0

5-10

2-3.
10.14

28-59
RACINESOUTHERN74
FG-A FI'·A
0.2
2-3
~
2-2

PLAYER

0
3
0
2
0

0
14
0
18
0

4
23

12
66

01

4
1
12
0
4
33

2
1

By GEORGE STRODE
AI' Sporill Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -If you
go tor dramatic basketball finishes ,
the boys prep basketball semltlnais
was the place to be Frtday.
All four games went down to the
final moments, capped by Barberton's 50-48 Class AM decision over
Toledo Scott, built on ~}~chard
Stms' JO.toot desperation shot at the

2
12

3
3

39.
2

0

0

0

0

0
0
0

0
0
0

'1\vo others were settled by two
points and,ln thelaugherofthehectlc day, Racine Southern ousted
Windham 74-66 In the Class A

2

5

semltlnais.

0
4

0
14

15

74 '

buzzer.

Bruce Knolle's rebound basket
just before the bUXl.er handed Cincinnati Roger Bacon a 49-47 Class
AAA victory over !Jma Senior.
Middletown Fenwick s hocked
heavily favored Pltlphos St.John 5().
48 In Class A.
So that set up Saturday's cham·
ptonshlp menu In St.John Arena : ·
Ciass AA - Dayton Roth (234).
last year's Class AM titleholder,
vs. Youngstown Hayen (2().6).
C!ass AAA - Barberton (22-51,
the 1976 vtc;tor, vs. Roger Bacon

66

74

r==-------~==================

SPRING OPEN HOUSE

(13-4).

SATURDAY and SUNDAY, APRIL 3 &amp; 4

Class A -

Times-Sentinel-

Fenwick (2().7) vs.

another first ·time flnallst, Southern
(26-1).

Jack Greynolds seems surprised
the Magics have reached the finals
tor the third time In seven yean,
saying, "The secret of our team Is
that the ldds have learned to play
within themselves. We're not greet
at anything - except hustling and
wtnnlng.''
'
Jack Greynolds, the coach's son,
David Blanks and Sims all reached
double figures In sending Scott
home with Its seventh consecutive
semltlnal defeat a.nd a 20-6 record.
No Toledo team has won the big
school title tn the tournament's 60

years.
"I don't have anybody to blame
but myself, " said Scott Coach Ben
Wllltams. "We lOst our poise. We
showed panic. We let them play
their game."
Ron Niekamp, Lima's coach,
sald of Roger Bacon: "They are
fundamentally sound. They don't
heat themselves. The right player
takes the right shot at the right
tlme."
KnoDe matched Greg Schlldmeyer's 14 points to lead ROger Bacon.
Bruce Andrews had 17 points ahd 13
rebounds for the Spartans (2().7) .

Byrne, a 6-foot-6 senior forward,
hit 12 of 27 shots and had 29 points
and nine rebounds.
"We couldn't contain him," sald
Delphos Coach Bob Arnzen.
Wolfe, a 5-10 setilor guard, was
. even more brtlllant. He sat out almost 10 minutes with foul trouble,
but still scored 39 points on 12o0!-19
shooting from the noor and 15-of-17
at the foul line.
"That may be the greatest orteman shooting performance I've
seen in seven years of coaching,"
said Windham Coach Marty HUI,
his team ellmlnated with a 24-3 record. "It was not only his shooting.
He controlled their tour-comer
offense.''
Southern Coach Carl Wolfe, no
relation, sald of his star: "He
doesn't have the statistlcs the oth·
ers do. He only plays an average of
2~ quarters. U we'd tum hbn loose,
he could do that au the tlme."
Class AAA Semifinals
SCOTI' (lit)· Smith 84-6 20, Pope
OO-Oo; S. Whlte54-514, Roberts32-3 •
8, Draper 4 0-0 8, Shelmon 00-00, M.
White 0 0-0 0, Harris 0 0-0 O; WWl·
· arns 1 IH 2, Shelton 0 0-0 0, Taylor 1
0-0 2. TOTALS 22 IIHG H.
BARBERTON (16. - Sims 4 5-7

--·..

13, Smart' 3 2·2 8, Blanks 5 3-6 13,
Ondecker 2 34 7, Onusle 1 2-2 4;
Greynolds 4 3-3 ll, Mullett 0 0-0 0,
Weigand 00.20. TOTALS II 18-18118.
Fouled Out-Roberts. Team
·fouls-Scott 22, Barberton 14. A_:.

13,M6

•' .

BACON (48) - Knolle 6 2-214, · • ,
Schlldmeyer 4 6-10 14, Niehoff 4, .
3-6 U, Blennan 3 0-0 6, Morrissey ,·_ .
2 0-0 4, Hausfeld 0 0-0 0. TOTAL'!
1811-18 49.
LIMA (47) - Meeks 2 1.2 5, An·
drews 8 1·117, Tyson 0 0-0 0, Kim·
brough 3 0-0 6, Pitts 4 0-0 8• .
McClellan 21·2 5, Haywood 0 0-0 o...
Tullis 3 0-0 6. TOTALS 22 U f7• ., .
Team louis-Bacon 5, Uma
A-13,9.36

to.

Ciall8 A Semifinals
FENWICK (50) - Byrne 12 5-5 29, .
P . Jorden 3 0-0 6, Clark 0 1·31, Hurl·
burt 1 0-0 2, Watson 5 2-3 12, B. •
McQuinn 1 0-0 2. Totals 22 ll-1116:
ST. JOHN'S (48) - S. Pohlman 2 24 6, D. Geise 1 0.2 2, Kortokrax '8 ;
0-0 16, Schomaeker 5 1·2 11, Trent..
man 1 4-4 6, D. Pohlman 0 0.0 O,
Bockey 3 1·2 7, Noonan 0 0-0 0. Tolals 20 8-lt 48.
Team fouls-Fenwick 1~i
St. John's 12. A-14,001 ,
•

..
•

BOUNCING AWAY- Delphos St. Jobn guard Kevin Trentman ba~
an errant paosto teammate Roo Schomaeker ( 12) as he collides wllh Middletown Fenwick gUard Omer Hurlburt 12%) In the first half of a Class A
State High School -Boys' Tourney game in Columbus Friday. Fenwick
woo, SlHll. (AP Laoerphoto 1,

LILIES • MUMS • HYACINTHS
TUUPS • AZALEAS • HANGING BASKETS
•FOUAGE•

FREE REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES WU BE AW,IIUlU

Sund~

Barberton, Bacon, Middletown
Fenwick advance to championships

RB PF TP

3
Tom Roseberry
2
Richard Wolle
12-19
15-17
4
Kent Wolfe
1-6
~1
3
ZaneBeegie
0
Rusty Cummins
0-0
0-0
0-0
O-O · 0
Scott Frederick
Tyrone Brinager
0-0
0-0
0
0
0-0
0-0
Nick Bostick
0
0-0
0-0
AllenPape
5
2-3
1·2
JayRees
0-0
0-0
0
Chris Bostick
~
4-4
5
Robert Brown
25-46 24-29 2ll
TOTALS
Score by Quarters
Windham
15 16 11 24
Racine Southern
21 12 16 25
OFfiCIALS: Al Berger and James Bline
A'ITENDANCE : 13,176

The

•
•

1954.
Following Southern's 74-66 vic;
tory frlday night, Bomber coach
Contlnl!ed on C-4

Pep rally plann,ed
COLUMBUS- Wbelber they won
or lost lasl night, a huge pep rally I•
planned today for Coach Carl Wolfe
and biJ Southern Tornado teoom upon
their return from St. John Arena iq •
Columbus. The ieam spent lhe
weekend at a hotel away from the
Ohio State University Campus
where lhe tourney was held.
Rick VanMatre; formerly of Middleport, and a former player for Carl
Wolfe al Melp High Sebool, assisted
tbe Wolfe pack before, during and
a'lter Friday's game, serving as a
scout and guide for lbe Meigs counUana.
Van Matre, a tlnl year coach at
Greenlidd In Highland Counly, was
tbe AP Cla111 AA Coacll ollhe Year.
Year.

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---

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HUGS FOR THE COACH - ·Middletown Fenwick head coach John
Roasl ls hugged by a cheerleader after his team defeated Delphos St.
John's io a Class A State Wgh School Boy•' Tourney semi-final game in
Columbus Friday night. The win gave Rossi ' and the Falcona tbelr first
trlp lilto a alate tournamenl champloD..hlp ga"'e. (AP Luerpboto) .

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BOUNCING AWAY - The ball booalltetl away as
..:-·Windham guard Larry Mllllenax, rlghl, collides wllh
::. : Racine Soulhern forward Zane Beegle while guanliag

him ln lhe flnt bait of a Class A State High School
Boys' Toomey game ln Columbus Friday nlgbt

..
-~~yton Roth coach looking ~or job despite another state title
Soutbem wou, 74-86. lAP Laserphoto) .

~

-~~

.... . ·-~.. .

ORANGE TAG

.

.,..,..; COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Day~loll Roth basketball Coach Mike
; ::J:Ialey has two key decisions to
. ;'IDIIke during 1!182.
' 'My first concern Is where I 'll he
::::.y;orklng next year," Haley Sald, af·
" " ter his Falcons won the Class AA
1;•state championship with a 68-56wln
""·~l:&gt;ver Youngstown Rayen.
;!:~ "Maybe I'll get a college job," he
.• ;'5uggesled. "And then after that's
~~ 'deCided, I guess my next problem
:."Win on which finger to wear my
~: -pew 1982 championship ring."
Haley wears his Dayton Roth
:;-.1976 Class AA championship ring
...;-on the left ring finger and the 1981
...: &lt;:lass AM award on his right ring
:! ·~ger.
::; : : Haley said his team had a lot to
~::Prove thiS season after winning the
.,.. ·I981 big school crown.
"We wanted to finish with a lot of
...~•uccess
,. . and prlde," he sskt "When
~:--the board of education decided to
our school, our kids wanted tO
~!:;':;end their last seaso.n together as a
;:.-jroup by repeating as champions.
.,..• : "We've used that modvatlon all
f::'l"ason as our blg factor."
:1'•' . Roth will be closed after this
.. :-:*'hool year, oneottour Dayton pubhigh schools being phased out
::-:recause of that city's dwindling

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�Page-C-4-T he Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleoort Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va.

w. Va .

Mar. 28, 1982

Scenes of Southern's state tournament win over Windham

.

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APRIL lOth, f982

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Assist drive

f•

RIO GRANDE- Ten member&gt; of
the Rio Grande basketball team
recently did voluntefr work at a
Ga)lipolis area busineliS to help raise
funds for the Tri..State American
Cancer Society Fund drive.
According to head basketball
coach John Lawhorn, the players
b;lgged gri)Ceries, and sold raffle
tickets and balloons. The players
worked between 10 a.m. and 2:30
p.m. and again between 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. at the Ohio Valley Foodland.

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I.
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BIG JUMPER - Southern's Robert Brown f 441
goes high off the Door to pour in a jumper at the key
during the Tornadoes' victory over Windham Friday

Players working included Watson
McDonald of Warren; John Maisch
of Austintown; Rick Penrod of
Nel&gt;onville; Paul Morrison of Rio
Grande; David Wallace of McArthur; Bob Shaw of Wheelersburg;
Dan Curry of Derby; Jerry Mowery
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night ln. the Class A semi-finals at St. John Arena In
Columbus. Windham players are Jeff Olson 145), Larry
Mulleaax (11) and Gregg Isler (15).

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--

DETERMINED LOOK - Southern's Tom Roseberry ItO) shows u
determined expression as lie goes np lor a jumper over the outstretched
hands of Gregg Isler of Windham Friday night.

Wolfe.•.

___

Marty HUl saki, "We had a good se-

GOES TO BASKET - Kent
Wolfe, Soulhern'ti point guard
and floor leader, goes· up for a
basket, one of his 12 on the night
against Windham In Friday's
Class A semi-finals at St. John
Areaa.
·

Continued !rom C-2

___;;::;:::::::::::;~::.:.___-

-

boys really believed that then. They
may not wtn the state championship, but, at least they have the opportuntty to have a chance at it,"
Wolfe commented.
·
Responding to the question, "does
Kent Wolfe play this well all the
time?" the veteran coach replied,
"Kent always plays this way. He's
had super games all year long. He
may not have had some ot the sta-·
tlstlcs other players ln the state
have enjoyed, but, that's because
he just played about hal! ot every
game. We helleve in the whole
~am concept here.

' cond half comeback and had some
people who dkl a heck ol a job. We
- waited too long betore we started
playing intense basketball. We let
Southern control the game's tempo
which we dldn't want to happen."
Carl Wolfe, veteran Tornado
mentor, In postgame ,Interviews,
said, "We were -concerned about
their lns!de game and rebounding
strengtll. We stayed even with
them on the boards and when we
'smelled' the victory, we really htt
the boards. especially Jay Rees
and Robert Brown.
"We went into a !our corners ot- r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~&amp;i
fense toward the end ot the game I
1
.with the purpose 1n mind otmaklng
our tree throws which we did,"
..
•
:wolfe continued.
; '''1\vo years ago when Southern
was in the state, we took the soph&lt;r
•
mores wtth us as reserves.'' he
. added. "They always remembered
·PORTABLE " FITS.
that trip, In fact, when we were In
. · !he locker room tollowtng our toss
MOST ANY ROOM
-ID Sandusky St. Mary, those sophoy
·
N d
mores said they Would return.
For our Wtnter ee .
''On the blackboard in the St.
Cali 304·429·4788
John Arena l!)Cker room they
wrote, '1982 State Champs.' Those

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Store Hours: Monda1·Friday 8 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

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�Pomeroy-M(ddleport-Gallipolis, Ohi o-Point Pleasant, W.va .

Mar. 28, 1982
Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

Mar.

Reds manager not
sure of batting order
..

If you now
...

OUT OF REACH- Wlndllam celller Terry Peterson, left, and Racine Sou then forward J•y Rees battle
for a loose haD under lhe Windham basket. In the lint

haU of Class A State High School Boys' Tourney game
In Columbus Friday night. Southern woo, 744. I AP
Laserpholo).

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

·'••

.

-

...

.

•

Nolan
traded to
Orioles
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Trading
away catcher -Joe . Nolall has
plugged ll.nother hoJe.ln the Clncln·
natl Reds' defense; Reds Manager
John McNamara says.
"He's a very good hitter. But a
poor throwing ·arm·and defensive
ability hurts his overau play. If we
uSed him to pinch hit, we'd probably have to pinch run and we'd be
using three players to make one
move," McNamara said.
Nolan hit
and .:nl durtng two
seasons with the Reds, but his defensive deCiclencfllli kept club President Dick Wagner looking !or help.
Trade rumors Ctrculated this
spring until the Reds annOUDCed
F rtday that Nolan hall been '!i'aded
lor two minor-league prospects,
pitcher Brooks Carey and outfielder Dallas Williams Jr.
Nolan heand the trade rumors.
"Most of the rumors were just
that, rumors," Nolan said. "But
there's some truth from them. I
can't really say It's surprising. I
was supposed to go to Baltimore
three years ago.
"You could see It' corning Wtth
(Alex) Trevino coming here. I
knew they weren't saUsfled with
what I did for them," he saki.
Nolan started catching regularly
last season when Johnny Bench
started playing Oilier positions
more olfen. But No~·s throwing
arm was so weak that Tom Seaver
asked that the weak-hitting Mike
O'Berry be his regular catclwr.
"I knew they weren't satisfied
with what I did for them," Nolan
said. "It was kind of disappointing.
I had a bad year throwing."
Nolan threw out only· nine of 75
potential base stealers.
The winter trade for Trevino
made Nolan expendable. O'Berry
will probably stay with the Reds,
but even now, rookie Dave Van
Gorder can't be sure he will be
kept. O'Berry was happy With the
news.
" I haven't known what's been goIng on all sprtng," Gorder said. "I
couldn 't tell If there were going to
be three or two catchers ... I'm glad
to know I'm still here. I'm glad It's
not me.
"I feel t.h€y have confidence In
me. I think Joe's a good player. If
they get rtd of him, they must have
confidence In some facet of my
game," he said.
.. Wagner said the Reds traded for
tntnor league players to buijd Cor
the future.
"We're trying to Improve our·
selves," the Reds president said.
you can't find wbal you want to
help yourself at !be big league level,
you look Into the future. "
.
· WUllams, a 24-year-old left·
handed hitter, ipe!U the last two ye,.irs at Trtple-l\ Rclcbester aDd hit
,270 and .~. He led tilt! lnternadClllll Leque ID stolen basel wtth
$1 Jut year. Hll oddest achleveI,Jiellt'm.y have tJeea IOini o-tor-13
lit , JUt year's ~-aeUJDr 33-

Hurdle, the left fielder, popped
hiS shoulder out of joint earty In
training camp and has been slow to
find his hitting stroke. HI$ average
has been mired below .100, and
McNamara Is considering platoonIng the lefi-handed·hltting Hurdle
with Mike van.
HouSeholder has played well defensively In right field . McNamara
Is considering the rookie for the
sixth spot In the batting onder,
where Householder's power could
be used.
Much attention has been lavished
on Johnny Bench as he tries to convert from catcher to thlnd baseman
- with mixed results. Bench has
had some problems rteldlng badhop grounders off the sun-hardened
Flortda Infields, and McNamara
has considered using Wayne Kren·
chickl as a late-Inning defensive
replacement.
TheRedsshowedfalthtncatcher
Alex Trevino when they traded
veteran Joe Nolan to Baltimore on
Frlday. Trevino, acquired from the
NewYorkMetsCorhlsdefense,has
' hit around .200 In tra1n1ng camp.
The closest competition has been
among the pitchers vytngfortwoor
three open spots on the staff.
The Reds figure to go.wlth thetr

to~

198% RIO GRANDE BASEBAU. TEAM - Members of the 11182 f!.lo
· Grande CoUege basebaU team are, front row, left to right- Head Coach
Larry Cook, Eric Frazier, Steve Green, Jim Freppoo, Dave Wright, Paul
HaUer, Sam Toppins, Jlm Stults, Russ Arters, and Jeff HaUleld . Second

row - Assistant Coacb Jell Savage, Dan Knost, Karl Hocbull, Jolui
· .Farlow (Manager), Rich Slone. Third row- Brian Blake, Jerry Stover,
LarrY Carter, Steve Uttle, Rick Stalder, Larry Stults, Bob Shsnnoo, Jeft
Gangwer, AU DetwUier, and Assistant Coach Tom Herbert. •

•
on
waivers
Cleveland Indians place veteran Dave Rosello
PALM SPRINGS, CaUl. (AP)The bad news for Dave Rosello was
wonderful news tor Mike FtschUn,
the man Ukely to succeed RoseUo
as the Cleveland Indians' utility
Infielder.
RoseUo, 31, was put on waivers
Frtday for the purpose of gtvlng
him his unconditional release.

s~rs

H~spentthreeyearswlththeln-

dians after spending parts of six
seasons with the Chicago Cubs,
compiling a Ufett:me .236 average In
the major leagUes.
RoseDo played second, short and
thtnd In a reserve role Cor Cleveland
last year, but apparently lost out to
reserve shortstop . Mike Flschlln
this season.

"He filled his role very well,"
Manager Dave Garcia said of RoseUo. "He knew how to sit, and whenever we put him In, he did very
wen.
"It simply came down to the fact
that we needed a shortstop to back
up Jerry Dybzlnskl. Flschlln Is the
second-best shortstop w~ have.''
Dybzlnskl moved Into the start-

lng shortstop 's job after veteran
Tom Ve~r was traded to tbe
New York Mets Cor relief pitcher
Ray Searage durtng the offseason.
Ftschlln Is hitting just .16'7 this
sprtng, but he Impressed Garcia
with his work In the field .
Last season at Class AAA Charleston, Flschlln hit .238 with 40
stolen bases.

rt;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;.-..................................

returning
- Tom
Seaver, Marlo Soto, Frank Pastore
and Bruce Berenyl - as long as
they remain healthy.
Former starters Mike LaCoss
and Charlle Lelbrandt have been
. dueling for the fifth starter spot.
Bill Bonham appears to be on his
way to recovery from the shoulder
problems of the last two years and
he could chaUenge for a slarter's
spot with the Reds or another team,
depending on whether Cincinnati
can get around a baseball rule that
would prevent him from signing
with the Reds before May.
· The buUpen will be anchored by
·Tom Hume, Joe Prtce and Jim

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Before departing on a four-day
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Connors advances to semis

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MILAN, Italy (AP) - Jimmy
· Connors beat Czechoslovakian Tomas Smld 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 to advance to
the semifinal of the $350,00) Cuore
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In other quai'terflnal action, Argen)ina's GuUiermo VUas whipped
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SbruMili Old!:l, Car.JillaL'
lind Chcv .
71
C. and D. 1\:nnr.oH
67
Hltth ind. l(lltne - PeDble:~ Hall liS; Dtlores
Surfil"" 1~ ; Barbara Whlttinl(f.on 112.
Hll( h ind. ~ames - BarbMra'Whittin){ton
516; Delores Surfal.:e482; AnnGrovcr478 .
HiM h team l(.l:lme - Two's Comp~ny 813 : Mu's
Inc.•. 808; Two't~ Company 781.
Hl..: h t.c~:~m th~~illl'lt!ll - Two'11 Cotnpllny

437: Federal Mo~tul - Sharlern! Dixon 159-437:

Jadt'll Awninjl!. - Stlery! W~:~ llt!l'll 167-478 ; Johnson'II Market - Ga~ Fe r~U!JOI'l· !86-493: Thn 'tl
Body Shop - AliL&gt;eSmlth 172-442.
,
Spl ib convcrlt.'tl by : Sue ~olley tht! J..~lfl ;
Virlo!iniHGruver the 4-5-7 : R0101~ Sht.W the 4-10 ;

FINANCIAL AID IS AVAILABLE

PoGU!ftl)' BowiiiiJ l..ant't

Early Weda-y

Mm:b li, IIIIIZ '

Tt!am

Team ~Jlandinl(ll ilfter bowlinM M•rch 19, l!Nl2:

Junt.n'sGH.S~ i~

J 's Food Mart and Dtli

132
128

Jack's Awnlni(Sil leg
Key Really

122
122

Johnson's Ma rket
Pony Ke~
Tim'tJBodyShop
Blue Turtan

117 99
116 100
114 lll2
108 IM

84
U
!M

I would like more Information about your
adult vocational programs. Check one or
more.
Your N1me ., .. . . . .. ...................

$20

Address • • .• •• • .•.•• • •..• .•.••. • .•. ••..

00

Phone • . ...••.• •• • , ••••••••• • • •• •• •• • ••
Mail to : Adult Education
Tri· County vocational School
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

OFF
Largest savings ever on a
Sears batteryl
Sears . 48 Battery wit!l
415 cold cranking amps.

•

45 !.,
9

trNt-

Jailblg game betweeft Rochester
and Pawtucket. .·

~

merchanct+te .v•IIMH•

rot pltlf-up wltNn • ft'W

•I

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d¥

!SearsI

Silver Brldgt
Pill I

Ph ..... 2770

SEARS, ltOEIUCK AND CO.

.

m.

9'1 uo
96 131
78 140
70 1411

ADULT EDUCATION
. DEPT.
'Rt. 1, State Route 691
Nelsonville, Ohio
Phone614-753-3511 Ext. 44

$197

MATTRESS and
FOUNDATION

5 PIECE MAPLE /

BEDROOM SET

Girls All-America
High School Squads

Reg.
689~'

Later PratN. MJM.; Michrlle McCoy ,
Cm'lto1, caur.

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

O.wa CuUen, Nortor\, V•.; I.Jia Channtl, Penland. Ore.; Connie Yort. Ankeny,
low•: Janet Scl!wtn. Hillldale. N.J.:
Clerndte: Huldftl, BowllJIC G.-n, Ky.:
Jl!ndler GWom. Oxford, Mia .; Tori Hat·
rtiOCI. 'l'owlon. Md.; Ronnie Sm)'the.
PbllldelptU, Pa.; L.IN O 'Olnnm'. Car·
\em'll)e, Ca.: V\riln!l ScM11a. Rwmon.
N~ .

DINETTE

$57

44

Tony'11CarryOut
36
H l~h !Wrie!l - Larrx OU~H n
Marlen~
Wl\litln &gt;30; Tom Smith 542, Betty Smith 4M.
Hl!ih !(arne - Larry DuH.!in 212, Marlene
Wilson 189: Larry Du!ian and TomSmilh 202, Pal
CarSI.In 177 .
Tel:im serieg - Ea~o:letl C1 ub 1!128.
Tt:IUllliame - £s~o~ tes Club 686.

-WELDING
-AUTO BODY REPAIR
- MACHINE TRADES
-BUILDING MAINTENAIIICE
-FACTORY MAINTENANCE
-ELECTRICITY
-CARPENTRY
-HEATING &amp; COOLING
-OFFICES OCCUPATIONS
- FOOD SERVICE
-AUTO MECHANICS

'

64
52
50

Smith-Nelson Motor~
Smith 'H Body Shop

FULL TIME ADULT PROGRMS

Tri-County
Vocational School

66

I..oo~o: !iliot.s

N

BOSTON
ROCKER

PLI .

Zidt!'1 Sport Shop
Ea~ l es Club

W. L

5 PIECE
MAPLE or PINE

MAPLE

Mbicd~•pe

MarC' h 17, IMt

~-s~':~~'A~:,~;'::,----1 N FORMAT ION--.....
REGISTER IN PERSON OR
MAILINTHISCOUPON

Cash If You Have It!!! Credit If You Need It!!!

and Bt!U)' Wise t !ILJbl tht! 6-7·10.

BOWUNGBELLD
BOWIJNG LEAGUE

P«l&lt;ral MUI(ul
Detd'!l Dlrr)' Out
Te11m No. JO
RobbiN~ and Myen

I

Kc~ - Aih..~niAn~ 204, Pel( FcrK~Lm ll'uh \ 484 ;

100

101

Tum

It's A Mass Sell-Out ...
Profits Forgotten Losses Expected!

D!al's Carry Out - O.:bby Nibert 170, S ht~ ron
Wattersoo 434 : Blue Tartan - Violet Cmc 186,
Ma~rllynn JI.L'd.WI fsubl 493; J's Food Mlirl Lorene GOI(Iollrl!J 187, ~lphin e Starlin$!. 47% : Pu ny

2342: Max'!:l lnc. 2260: No. S2202.

HAVE A SKILL! with training
Jn·less than one year •••

Our tough, smooth·rldlng
Silent Cushion radials

McNamara of Australia beat VInce
Van Patten, 6-1, ~. 7-6.
Australia's Wendy TurnbuU
toppled Mirna Jausovec of Yugoslavia 6-1, ~. 6-2 and Anne Smith
battled past Kathy Jordan 6-2, 3-6,
6-1 to move Into the semlflnals of
the $300,00) Avon Tennis Championships at Madison Square
Ganden.

Individual hiMh to: a me al'lll hi~h series :

M•rch Z3, lMZ
T,..m

:·rt

j

.'

'I

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•

... '

...

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Threefourths r1. the way through 'Pring
training, the team .with baseball's
best recond In l9811sn't even sure of
lts batting order for 198'2.
That's how much things have
chailged lor the Cincinnati Reds . ·
The Reds' sweeping changes In
the off-seasol! left t.Iiem With new
siJirterS at five positions In the field.
Tbey also lost ' three of their first
four hitters In the Uneup.
Manager John McNamara came
to sprtng training with a preUmtnary batttng order and Uneup In
mind. The Reds would rely more on
pitching and · defense and speed
than on power.
It's too early to tell whether the
Reds can make that combination
translate Into enough vtctortes to
win the National League West. But
there are some unanswered questions a week before Opening Day.
First, the Reds must lind a leadoff hitter to get on base ahead of
Dave Concepcion, Cesar Cedeno
and Johnny Bench.
McNamara has two candidates
for the lead-off spot: rookie outfielder Paul Householder and second baseman Ron Oester. Both
are ·switch-hitters, but Householder
has more power and Is a better base
sU!aler.
When McNamara put kouseho(4er In the lead-off spot at the
start of the spring training exhibition: season, Householder ended up
In a:slump. And McNamara moved
Oel\ter up from second to lead-o!! In
the ·order, with Dan D1'tessen bat·
tillfi second.
McNamara said last week that
he hadn't decided which one would
lead off on Opening Day .
Second, there's the outfield, popula~ by three new starters.
"(Clint) Rundle, Cedeno and
Ho!15eholder Is the outfield that we
projected In the winter, but It
wasn't set," McNamara said.
Cedeno has played wen this
spring- when he was healthy. The
center fielder, who suffered
tlu'ough ankle problems with Ho.u ston last year, has missed games
. this sprtng because or a sore thumb
and shoulder.

_,._,

S&amp;rall Carnpbfll. tea,... ary. Mo .;
Jl.ddt Jane.. CKart8ton. S.C.; A1l1Jon
Gelleha Hatp!r Woocb, Mlch. ; CU·
•ndn lanl!!l, Fort Laldtrdoalt. n..: L&amp;

SETS

$397

ONLY

RECLINERS
ST

A:~ING $

$97

5 DRAWER

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97
WAGON WHEEL

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with bedding

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Je JltiiCIIOIS. ~ . 1&lt;)'.; ~ t..Pqll&amp;, Rochelter, N.Y.; K1m SOloway.

SlJollrl-., Vt.; Becky Wot·
wrt. N.Y.; Mel&amp;nda Hall, AlldenoD,· S.C.;
Dlphne Smtih, Ypdli.Dtl, Mich.

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Week Marc~ 28, 1982
DATE - GYMNASIUM
March 211 H p.m./Open Recreation

of

8· 10 p .m./College Recrea1 ion

March 29•·8 p.m./101 Class

·

Come And See Hundreds Of Bargains!!
POOL
1·4 p.m ./Open Swim
8· 10 p .m ./College Swim

8· 10 p .m ./Col lege Swim
8· 10 p .m./College Recrea1ion
8· 10 p .'ll ./College SWim
March 30 8·10 p.m./College Recreation
8·10 p .m ./College Swim
March Jl 8· 10 p.m./College Recreation
8·10 p .m ./Col lege Swim
Aprll18· 10 p.m./CoiiOQe Recreation
April2 H p .m./R.O. T .C.
8·10 p.m./Open Recreation
2·• p.m ./Open Swim
Apr ill 2·4 p.m./OpeD Recre•tlon
2· 4 p.m / Open Swlnl
Apri14 H p. m./Open Recreation
1-4 p.m ./Open Swlm
·
8·10 p .m./Colleoe Recreation
8-10 p . m .ICollege Swim
·
ATHLETICFI!¥LDSIHomeEventsl
DATE
AP,i11 Baseball vs . Glenville S1ate. 1 p .m . doubleheader
,.
Ap[i l l Baseball vs. Ohio Dom inican, 1 p.m . dOubleheader
Ap~il• Basebarl vs. Thomas ~.ore. 1 p .m ., doubleheader

HURRY!

�Page-C-8- The Sunday Times-Senti nel

State/ ational

'

Congratulations, Southern Tornadoes!

.

' Frenchtown Car Co.

1rims- ~entintl

.

LOOK INTO 'DIE J1VruRE

.

- 'l1doi ....... ....,.,...,. ...
vklln&amp;• clllawa,y..tewofa..,...
llhuUie carrylac lbe Eurupeaa
!lplllll! AJenct• Stw""'•h, ._.
Intel bow lbe eo;!ow4111() expedllloa wiD look whelllbe mlooloa ..
canted out • In October 1181.
Expe!fmeaa aboard lbe owrent flllht of the . , _ obul&amp;le

1981 CHEVY IMPALA 4 DR.

Columbia are
J

,

I

,

helpl•1 re-

aearchen prepare lor the luAare
expediUon. (AP ~rphoto )

'

•'

O.N.
......
--~~ ,.

Chevy 's Fa.mi.l y siied sedan, 18,3.71 miles, 4.4 lifre V-8 engine, air cond i tioning ,
c ruise control , wire wheel covers, accent stripe and extra, extra sharp .

-....... ...

Ill •

.,

-

..

'

1981 BUICK REGAL

-~

. -- -

$7599

Priced Accordingly

1980 CHEV; MONZA 2 DR.

1981 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

--

•

ALL SMILES - Southern Coach Carl WoUe and . hls bench earlier as the Meigs County quintet downed
members of the rampaging Tornadoes' basketball Windham, 74-eG, to gain the 1982 Clan AA State Tourteam are all smiles In thiB Tim Tucker photo, taken In nament finals Saturday night against Middletown Fenwick.
St. John Arena, Columbus, Friday night. Two seconds
remained on the scoreboard cloek. WoUe bad cleared

'7995

Wa s S849S
SALE

..

NadoulllMIIeetJd •

IAI AJI&amp;elel al Klnsu City
Kouaton at GokWn State ·
PoMland lt StltOe .
New York I t New Jenley

1a

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w •• Pd. OR
"""'"
" "21 .'186 '"' "'~·~
WI
New,.,., .," .,34 .000
,_......_ .429 ,."'
EA.!ri"ERN OONFI!:RENCI!;

NewYori&lt;

Edmontorl 1.1 La

Wlnnlptt at

NHL results

.671 "" 37"'" .471
.&lt;93
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........
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"
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WESTERN "
CONFERENCE

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N..-.llloekq l.dpe
WIIM c-fert!llllle
P.utdl DlvWoa
WLT GFGAI"Ia
x·NY lalaDd!n 51 ~ ' Jli2 Zll W
NY Rancert
38 :u JJ 3XI a
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36 3J 9 n
298 81
Pi ttsbu rgh
28 36 u :133 lUI "67
Waahtrctoo
:u 411 u 'BT n9 ee

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Cleveland

17 ~

31 ~

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31

.!117

Sea ttle

Golden Slate
Portia""

16

ll'lida)"'a G.,...
Bolton ~. Detroit 104
Atla nta 100, Indiana 87

-

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10
36 ~ 15
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3'.1 2t lt J11 311
28 • u n• JU
29 l!l 8 295 l'M
20 • 16 211!

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Tonmw

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Calaary
VancouV1!1'

...........18

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2G
23

17
lZ
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New Yo•rk

l'hlladelph.la al Ekwlton
Cblcqo at tJklana

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18
81
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15
17
16
15
12

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«1J 289 1111
313 m
T1
IJ] %76
611
291 332 61
m m 46

Lol ~ lei
Cokl'ado
x-eliDCI!ed nrst p&amp;ace In diVIIon.

f'tloen1N IJJ, MllwaUk.ee 112
Houl ton 99, Setttle '11
Goklen Stile 102, Ponland 8!J

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ilWill

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St. l..CWI

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340 D 100
291 Zl6 9'l
28.1 2M fJ1
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Bulta~

.oauu 96. Kansu City 87
'

..... .._

X·Montreal

Philadelphia 115, l':.ll'velarx! W
WuhJneton 101, New J eney 88
Sin AntoniO 110, l...ol An(elei!M
Chlcqo lJl, Ne\lr' York 1m

.'

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New

Milwa ukee

ALLanll
Detrdt

Phoenix at Utah

Pittsbu rg h at Waahlngb)n
Bolton a t But:fa.la

-.o....

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PltlJa,delpllia
Wu lll!W(On

WuiiJ.nitoll at Clrn!land

8udQ'I Oarncw .
SU .oula a t Chkago
Toronto at O&amp;trolt
Mlnnelota a t }JarUcrd
New York Rangers at Philadelphia

~alo,

St.l..(IUIJ: 4, Wlnnlpl!l 4, tie
Edmonton 6, ~ado 6, til&gt;

'5~95

Folks,

Was SS49S
NOW

. Folks. Qu alit y· Pickups
to find .

'5295
1977 FORD MUSTANG II

•'

Green F a s tb!ck Mod el
I •P••ed, V ·6 engine . Rallye wheels.

An&amp;ell'S

ValiCOU'o·~r

NASA officials lean toward
Monday landing for shuttle

Cheyenne m odel has two

nt . Auto . trans .. power ste••r;n.a .l
wide bed a nd new Prem ;urrll

1978 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME 2 DR.

1981 OLDS CUT. SUPREME

.·

1979 CHEVROLET PICKUP

We have the cars and
,;,.... we are ready to Deal.
TRY us· TODAY!
'4995

Scoreboard•••
NBA results

'7695

~

Motldat• Game

•

York lalandc!n at New ¥ ork

THIS WEEK
SP E CIAL

Save$$$

Transactions

'2495

wasS299S
SA~E

"Home of the Sharpest Used Cars In the Volley"

Frtcl.J'• Bpon. Tnn · rt' ...

...................
IIA8EM!L

BAL'MMOR E: ORIOLES-TradOO DaU111

Bill Gene Johnson
Terry Hamilton

renchtown Car Co.

Wl.l.Uama, outfteldf.r, and Broolu Carey,
pltchir, to thl! Cincinnati IUd!. for J oe
NOlan, catcher.
CL EVEL AN D I NOI AN S- Walved

.,.,.

446-0691

ru.Uo, ln.fteilk'r, tor tbe PUJ'POifOIIiv·
tna him till uncoOOIIIOnal release.

1640 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis

"We Appr.clate

Your Bu•lnell11

446-0069

N.._. .......
CHICAGO CUBS-Tnded PaW MJrabella, pitcher, !ll1d cub to lhe Texu
Ranaen for 8UJ:np WW.., Inftelder. Sent
Mike Grlffln, pitCher, to the MootrNJ
Elfp.)l to complete lhe trade r1 March 15
deal In which the Cubl acqlllred DIU\

By HOWARD BENEDICI'

.r

AP Aerospace Wrller

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Space shuttle·
astronauts prepared for Columbla'slast thermal test
Saturday and Pressed ahead toward their sche(luled
Monday landing, optimistic that a stonn front headIng f9r New Mexico would not prompt a day-earner
return.
NASA fllght management assessed the weather
outlook !hls morning and made an 'Initial assessment
that condltlons would be favorable for a Monday landing on the Northrup Strlp at the White Sands Missile
Base. They were to take another look later In the day.
Astronauts Jack R. Lousma and C. Gordon Fuller. ton flew 150 miles above the' landing slte today and
liked what they saw.
" Looks Uke CAVU (celling and vlslbWty unUm!ted)
at Northrup," commander Lousma reported. Hesald
he could see lights In the town of Truth or Consequences, N.M., and "aUof White Sands loud and clear."

Who really poys "the hi 9hest IRA rate?

Brl&amp;ll. nnt buernan.

NEW YORK M£TS.-..Plllced Tom Hai.LSman, pilt'her, oo the 21-day cllaabled Usl
r«ro~ctlve to Marth :n.
PH I LADELP HIA P HI LLIE S-

0

Re.....
Dave RaJ.tch, pitcher. P\aa.od Marty
Byatrom, pl ~her. on the 21 -day d!Mbled
IJ.ot.
m'.LOUIS CARDINAI...S-Plac£d GeriP
Tertace. catchrr, on the 2l-day dll.abled
u.t mroacuw to Maret\ 22.

Wayside Furniture
Gallipolis, OH.

241 Third Ave.

SPRING SALE

''I
I

•
'

,.
,.
•
lmJDUAL

MANY MORE SPECIALS DURING OUR SPECIAL SALE

TV's &amp;OVENS_

WATER BEDS

$29995

$359.95
$599.95

19" QUASAR COLOR TV
26" QUASAR COLOR TV

KING SIZE WATER BEDS
-IncludesKing size mattress, heater,

Maple Finish-E arly Ameri c an

headboard, rails, pedestal.
6 Different Styles to Choose From

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD

.Quasar Conventional
MICROWAVE OVEN
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD

.,.,,
MONITOBB SPACE EXPEBIMENT - Todd N"eJ.
- · 18, a Mht ...-. ld&amp;lt ilcllooll&amp;lldea&amp;, 1111 In the
hatch or a space 111u111e llmulator at floe JC!hnoon
Space Center 111111 wllldlel a televlllon monitor replay ol hill experlmeDI coadue!ed aboard the orbltlnl
. , _ llhullle Columbia. The otudy .... conducted to .
1111ow the .ell~ of a ""~-tree emtronmenl 011
llylnllnlecla· (AP Luerpbolo)

"Tile weatherman agrees with your observation
there and says Northrup's going to be pretty good for
the next couple days," said capsule communicator
Brewster Shaw. "That's good news," Lousma
replied .
H the NASA brass decides 19 attempt a Monday
landing, and then the weather worsens , fllght officials
say Columbia has supplles to stay In space for three
days beyond Monday.
F11ght Director Tommy Holloway sald the shuttle
had full communications despite the fallw:e or sev·
erai radio cl1.o.rmels, and that the !allures dld not
prompt any dlscu.slons of an early, or late, landing.
Even It all radio channels were lost, another night
director said they could figure out how to get home
with their hand-held computers.
Landing at Northrup Strlp on New .Mexico's White
Sands Mlssjle Range Is a· top priority !or NASA. The
primary landing strlp, In cautomla, already has been
knocked out by soggy runways.
Return to Earth was set, for 12: Tl p.m. MST Mon·
day, but weather at the New Mexico runway was
expected to be deteriorating about then, Holloway
said. He called conditions today "marginal" on Northrup Strlp, but said predictions were good for Sunday and called for deteriorating conditions sometime
on Monday.
Lousma and Fullerton were treated to a tape recording of all or their family members shortly after
waking up thls morning.
"God bless you , we love you and have a nice day,"
said Lousma's wife; Gratia after his three chUdren
sent him short messages or greeting. Even Lousma's
1%.-year-old son Joseph piped liP with some cooing
and mooing, the latter In Imitation of a cow.
"Good morning, Gordo, we love you, " said Fuller·
ton's wife Marte, who followed their chlldren Andrew
and Molly Marie on the.tape played by Mission Con·
trolln Houston.
"That was a good Idea and all signals came 0\ler
loud and clear," Lousma told ground controllers after
the tape was played.
·
Mission Control specialists struggled through the
day Friday to restore three of four primary S·band
communications channels that failed In the direction
or ship-to-Earth. They finally gave up and decided to
go with the one remalnlng prlme channel and three
backup Unks, one UHF, two FM. All Earth·to-shlp
channels were functioning nonnally.
S.band systems, so named because they operate on
channels In the band or radio frequencies known &amp;S
the S-band, are the crew's primary means of voice
communications with the ground.

IGNI'DON FOR S'J'8.3 - The ooUd rocket booelent
on the Colum... orbiter are Ignited Mit belfns to 11ft
off from Its launcll pad at KftDledy Space Center
early Monday lor a aeven day voyage In opace. Thl8
pll&lt;K
made by a remote camera pla&lt;JH
the
rocket gantry. (AP LaoerphoW)

wu

on

'

I " Substa nti al pena lt y for ea rly IRA w lthd tawaU

Diamond's IRA rate will be higher than

CARPET

$} Q99

100% Nylon Sculptured Saxony
Pad-Expert Installation
·
6 Colors to Choose From Pad &amp;

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lation Included

any advertised rate In Ohio.

SOFA &amp;CHAIR
SOFA &amp;CHAIR

,,

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'

A subsldlery of

lbowlnllllht CUI'\'lllul'e, Vricallall

.3 DAYS

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podl, rtpt, backp'ouad. (AP

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two orblUIIIWNVerfatr Qllt!ltll

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VIEW IN SPACE - '111111 mw

olthe orbllblc space lhulile Cohunbla, made off a tele-vlllon
·moa~~er at the dolnon 8pllee
Cealer, lhow8 the carp PIJ·
load. Earth Ia In the backaround,

MtOiillll ini!Hafro

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S~SANDUOANCOMANY

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Mar. 28.1982

;P~a~g~e~D~-~2~T~h~es~u~n~d~a~y~T~i~m~~es~-~sge~n~ti~n~e~I~==~:=~;;~~~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~~M~i~d~d~le~p~o~r~t~G~a~ll~ip~o~.l~is~,~O~h~i~o--~P~o~i~ngt~P~I~e~a~s~agn~t,~VV~.~V~a~.========================================;;~~;:;;; ,,

Mar. 28, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport

-

Gallipolis, Ohio--Point Pleasant, VV. Va .

The Sunday T im es-Sentine i- Paqe- D-3

County agent's corner

OU offers management ·program

Don't forget Tuesday's meeting at Meigs Inn
By JOliN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs COWity
Gas, 011, Coal
Leasing MeellDg i
POMEROY - Thesday, March 30
at the Meigs Inn. The meeting wiD
get under way at 8 p.m. The meeting
is a joint effort of the Meigs County
Farm Bureau, Landmark, and the
cooperative Extension service.

'

Beef Tour

The Athens County Beef Cattlemen are sponsoring a tour on
Saturday, April 3. The tour Includes
Jolly Farp15 and -Benedict in
Jackson and Vinton Counties and
also the Jendre Winery in Jackson.
The invitation is open to surrounding
counties asweil. ·
Four-H season is here. This is the
time when 4-H clubs get into full

Homemaker's circle

Patterns .worth r,epeating
.
Mary Elizabelll Clark
ch, Route 588. •
By

hours

Joe Gliem, assist.ant professor of
swing. Four-H provides ·a variety of
1experiences for youth. The tH ' agricultural engineering, 1be Ohio
project providea an opportunity to state University, says that before
'!learn a basic skill or explore new ex- you ca'! know which oil to buy, you
musl consult your operator's
perle~. There are over 200
manus!.
It will tell you the right kind
woJects from which to choose. The
callll\ing program provides another of oil for your car, truck, or tractor
wonderful experience. The 4-H based on engjne performance,
caritp, loc!I'J!d near Jackson, is one engine design, ou~oor tempratures, ;
.
of the best in the state; The camp of- etc.
The
American
Petroleum InStitute
fers outdoor education, canoeing,
Issues
a
·
service
classification for
swinuning, and getting together to
different
types
of
oil. .Thii appean'
plan campfire activities. The Meigs
on
every
can
or
drum,
ranging from
County Fair is one of the highlightS
API
service
SA
or
CA,
whlch
are oils
ol the 4-H program. It gives the ·
that
contain
no
additives,
tq
API
seryouth a chance to show to othel'l!
vice
SE
or
CD,
which
cootain
large
their accomplishments. Four-H is
for everyone. The time is now. We amounts of additives and are
primarily used in autos and'trucks.
need you.
Oil additives include detergent ·
Graded Btill Sale
Saturday, April 24, at the Union dispersants, which keep particles in
.:Stockyards in Hillsboro. Sevel)ty- the oil in suspension, anti-foam
'two bulls consigned, 29 Angus, seven agents and oxidation corroSion
Charolals 25 Polled Hereford, three inhibitol'll.
You should also understand the
Chianina, 'a.nd eight Simmental.
Now Hear This - It doesn't pay to viscosity index. It is a letter and
.replant frost-damaged corn. An Ohio number designation that indicates
study shows that even if the corn how fluid an oil is.
After the lettel'l! SAE (SQciety of
dies completely back after being
frosted, it will not only ['fC_over, but Automotive Engineers),' there will
will produce significanUy more be a number. The higher tlte numgrain than the same llybrid replan- ber, the less fluid the oil, Gliem exted following frost damage to the plains. For instance, SAE 10 is more
emerged seedlings. The growing fluid than SAE 30. Some oils are
point of corn remains below the soil designated SAE lll-30, which covel'!!
surface ... even when the corn is six- a range of viscosities. Check your
eight inches tall. So the plant has a oper~tor's manual for the rightviscosity for your engine.
remarkable ability to recover.
It makes little difference what
Learn The Oil Alphabet
brand
of oil you use because all oil
When you buy oil it's important
companies
participate in these"
that you understand what the
classifications.
hieroglyphics on the can mean.

-

Installs new lines; _________ :

;r.

Extension Agent
Bring your quilts and share their
Home
Economics
beauty with others. From ·the
- WAGON FACTORY- Thla bulldlng oa the 4011 block ol Secood Ave.,
GALUPOUS - Come to a display of quilts, a committee from
aowlmown as llle Libby Hotel, sta.rted out as a wagoa factory. It was buill
traditional
quilt show and program the Dairy Bam will make selections
In 18M.
on quilt conservation sponsored by for their June quilt show. Selection
The Dairy Barn Southeastern Ohio procedures are as follows :
Cultural Arts center, Athens, Ohio,
1. From the group of quilts
and the Ohio Cooperative Extension available for judging, at least three
Service.
to as many as six will be selected
The Dairy Barn in Athens plans to from each county for inclusion in the
hold a traditional quilt show during show. All quilts mU&gt;i have comthe
month of June, 1982, of quilts . pleted entry forms attached on
music was provided in the lobby and
BY JAMES SANDS
the visitors were most graciously available from the local area . In judging day.
Spedal Correspondent
2. No unfinished quilts, fragile
received and shown over the March, April, and May they have
GAWPOUS - The area around
agreed to cooperate with the quilts that could be damaged by an
building.
The
lobby
of
the
hotel
is
Flist and Cedar in Gallipolis
comfortably and tastefully fur- · Cooperative Extension Service in exhibition, or quilts of nonfi!J;d with wagons
nished. Large leather chairs, holding quilt conservatio~ programs traditional design will be accepted.
and carriages
writing desks, soft hangings and and quilt shows in each of the nine
3. Quilts made from kits are not
durmg the Civil
shaded
lights make it most inviting. counties in the Jackson Area.
eligible to be judged.
War. Here was
In the rear of the lobby a large
The educational program in each
4. On judging days the three
located the wagon
dining
room,
not
yet
equipped,
will
county
will help answer such judges will:
·
factory of James
be
open
for
service
son.
Large
plate
questions
as
:
a) individually look at all quilts;
Vanden who in
glass windows on the south side of . I. How do I determine the age of a b) from the remaining individually
11180 had . taken
the building on the fil'l!t floor provide quilt?
over from his
choose 12-15 using a fudging form
a
splendid view of the avenue. "
2. How should I store quills in my with a point system, judging the use
father Joseph
SANDS
AS DESIGNED the Libby had 40
home•
Vanden. The Vanden family
of color, fapric, and craftmanship of
guest
rooms. Each room had a
(originally known as Vanden Bern3. What's the best method to use in piecing, quilting, and binding, anq
den) came to Gallipolis in the 1790s talephone, desk, wall coverings, and cleaning quilts?
the overall effect of the quilt and
from Holland and early established attractive window drapes in additi.on
4. If a quilt needs repair how is this how the individual Qtilts will coortJw;mselves at First and Cedar,in the to the -other trappings. AU rooms done?
dinate with the entire show; c) conwere outside rooms and were steam
wagorunaking business. .
The hours of stitching and the sult with each other in a final selecheated.
The
Libby
barber
shop
was
While the Vanden business was
creativity that_ go into the making of tion process, coming up with a list of
maps or aerial photographs,
strong prior to the Civil War, It first occupied by John Haner. From a quilt -result in a valuatile piece of
By ROBERT L FIRST
illu&gt;-trations,
and a guide to help use
boomed from 1861 to 1865 filling the outset the Libby also had a bus needl ework . Conservation is im- 10 final quilts for the county. These
Dlstrlc! Conservationist
.
10 will be photographed.
the
survey.
government orders for wagons used · 'terminal.
Soli Coos. Service
In the early 1930s the Libby garage portant for an heirloom quilt as well
5. After all the judging-days, quill
"II always helps to know
to haul supplies in the West Virginia
POMEROY
- Soil that stains
was renamed the Libby Arena and as for a. recently made bed cover selections will be announced on May
something
about your busines:; partcampalgi!s.
clothes is usually not very complex
[n 11186 James Vanden decided to was the scene of a number of boxing that may become an heirloom. The 17,1982. ners,"
Shaw
says, "and when land
and is easy to remove, aceording to
6. Those selected will receive inabandon the ancestral wagon corner and wrestling ma~hes. Among the purpose of the program is to muse
is
involved,
the soil is a primary
moot detergent manufacturers. Soils
afFirst and Ced!!r and build a large participants were-nationally famous crease appreciation for quil);s that struction on how quilts will be picked
partner."
that produce food, clothing, and
factory on Second Avenue. From pugilists like Nick Bouzlnis and Ray may represent a family's heritage of up by the Dairy Barn &gt;'laff from the
"The soil we depend on for so
shelter
are very complex and, if
Carpenter
as
well
as
the
NCAA
quilting and the history of particular county Extension offices. Quilts will
11186 to 1894 the Vandens manufacmuch
can be damaged beyond
mismanaged, are also easily
tured carriages, pony phaetons, wrestling champs of the early 1930s. quilts; and to inform quilt owners bensured to the insurance value
repair,
and II can play ruisty, exremoved, displaced, or at least
buggies and spring wagons. They The Libby Arena often held up to 300 about safe stora~e . display , stated on the entry fonn from the
pensive
tricks on the unwary," Shaw
reduced in quality and quantity.
alao sold buggies, mowers, reapers, fight fans. It Is interesting to note cleaning, and repair techniques so time they are dropped off at the Exsays.
Knowledge of soil limitations, how
al)d plows that were made in other that Galllans In the 1930s seemed to . that quilts may be preserved for tension office (after final selection in
. He adds that most of the soil
have
an
obsession
with
boxing
and
to
slop soil damage a[\d loss, and inpresent and future generations. May)' until picked up by the quilter
places in Ohio. One of the Vandens'
related
problems can be avoided by
formation on how to make the best
most popular items was the wrestling for in that same period Cooperative Extension Service after the exhibit closes in June .
using
the
soil survey. Crop losses,
Gallipolis had two other arenas for agents, home economics, will be
posSible use of land is more readily
"Eureka" buggy wagon.
There
will
be
no
registration
fee
or
"ntiS WONDERFUL vehicle, by these professional matches - Harry · doing the educational part of the charge for the county meetings. If available now than ever before ac- foundation problems, parking lots .
and streets breaking up, flooding of . ·
a ~imple, yet Ingenious and most Holmes Open Air Arena (across program.
cording to Robert E. Sha--:, Ohio
we find it necessary to .pay for the
from
the
present
s
tockyards)
and
homes and businesses built in the ..
substantial arrangement, can be
state conservationist for the U. S.
A demonstralion of quilting skills meeting space, contributions will be
wrong places, and septic sys!-em
changed in twenty seconds, into a the Silver Bridge Arena (beside the and quilting supplies is planned for
.
Soil
Conservation
Service(SCDS).
failures
are a few of the problems
comfortable tw~H~eated covered old Silver Bridge). Among the locals ea ch county meeting. Quilt meeting taken.
Shaw says soil surveys are bein~
In order to know how many plan to
the
survey
can help avo.id. Soil ·sur- ,
carriage, or a neat single-seated top ' who participates ewre : Muddy Duck dates and locations are: Scioto
.ma&lt;le for the entire state of Ohio on a
veys
contain
data and information.
buggy or a tw~ated pleasure Neal, Slats Borden, Sweet Mitchell, County, March 30, New Boston Com- attend the meetings and how many
county-by-county basis, "Soil Surthat
can
help
people
make decisions.
wagon without top, or again Into a John Reed, Parker .Bowen, Fritz munity Center; Hocking County, plan to bring quilts, we need adveys are published for 51 counties ·
vance registration at least two
for
everything
from
farming to facfine appearing open or trotting Stover and Harold Howell.
and 19 more counties are now being
FINALLY, IN the late 1930s John March 30, Extension Center on the weeks in advance of the county
buggy.'' (1876Vand~nad).
tory
or
housin~
development.
mapped," he says. Each survey in·Fran 1894 untlll903 E. W. Vanden Harrison sold Overland-Willys cars Fairgrounds; Alhens County, April meeting. You do not ne_ed to bring
Soil maps are completed for 82
cludes
sections on the use and
in
the
Libby
garage
and
Fred
12,
Athens
County
Extension
Office;
quilts to attend this meeting.
nin a hardware store at 444 Second
percent
of the state and nearly 10
management of soils for crop
Advance registration information
Avenue and also repaired and sold Wheeler sold Hudsons here after Pike County, April 14, Pike County
million
people
in Ohio now have ucproduction and for non-farm uses,
bjlggies and wagons, but does not ap- that. In more recent yeal'l! the Neal Senior Citizens Service Center; is due in Gallia County by April 29,
cess
to
modern
soil surveys.
deiailect description of the soils, soil
Insurance Company has been Jackson County, April 15, Jackson 1982. You may call the Gallia County
pear to have made too many.
About 1903 Vanden combined his located In the hotel part of 444 Area Extension Center; Meigs Coun- Extension Office (446-7007) for adstock with the J. M. Kerr Hardware Second until. their move to Second ty, April 22, Chester Firehouse ; ditional information.
and the two firms operated at 444 and Grape. In 1982 the law offices of Lawrence County, April 27, Sybene
Missionary Baptist Church; Vinton
stcond as the J. M. Kerr Company Ronald Calhoun are located there.
You can write to the author, County, April 28, Vinton County
fi'OIIl 1903 until 1927. The Kerr compiny had begun in 11186 at the comer James Sands, at P. 0 . Box 92, Community Builing; Gallia County,
of Second and State. Here they Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
May 13, Gallipolis, Christian ChurTrojan TXS115A.
remained until 1894 when they sold ~----------------------'---i
Field tested for
Ojlt to the Ohio Valley Bank and
moved to Third and Court. Besides
coosistent yields.
Today, our rese~rrphen are working harJ; M. Kerr and the Vandens, Fred
der than ever to peHecl more dependable,
IQ!rr and A. M. Blake also had inbigger yleldi.·ng com hybrids.
Uke TroJan TXSII~A . .
terests in the company. Kerr HarJust lry and find a monJ COfl.'listently highdware finally passed out of existence
yielding ll~Y hybrid.
This favorite Trojan yield producer has
about 1938 and was then located at
proven 11.8 consistency on com land Uke
~Second .
,
·
Easter is coming Sunday, Aprilll. Surprise your child
yours.
the W1'de ada ~
All excellent ~brid with
,IT SHOULD BE noted that from
with a special book on Easter. Choose from such
1~14 until1927 what was later known
tabilily••
;;;"''
the Libby Garage was used by
tales as:
&lt;reorge Rader and E. E. Myel'!! as
tile Maxwell automobile garage and
b,y Womeldorff and Thomas as the
TXS115A
dlevrolet and Buick garage.
We'll give you a free gardening attadunent to prove it.
0 115-day maturity
"Perer Rabbit's
It was in 1927 Mr. andMI'l!. John B.
0 One of the 1highest
Giant Treasury
yielders across
Clendenin look over the building and
Dunng our spring sale you get your choice of any one of thr_ee
•Velveteen Rabbit
the corn belt
djd extensive remodeling. In August
gardening affilchments with the purchase of a Gravely Z·wheel
•uncle Wiggily's
0 Consistent year
of that year the Clendenins opened
tractor. You can choose between our rotary plow, rotary cultivator
Storybook
arter
year
0
or
tooiholder with tools. No matter which you choose. it will
.., for business in the old wagon facThe Easrer Book
0 Fast dry down
maKe
your gamemng a pleasure.
tOry -the Libby Hotel.
•Perer Rabbit &amp;
0 Widely adaptable
Vei-sltlle.
Gravely tractors are priced an~ sized to handle all
•The Gallta Times wrote of that ocHis Friends
gardening jobs. But t he tra&lt;'tor isjust the beginning. The Gravely
casion: "Saturday evening a large
(Boord Book)
'
TXS11.3
'iflti~M... System of over 20 atta&lt;hments lets you mow. till. hoe.
0 Perer Rabbit's
number of townspeople visited and
1
sweep,
furrow.
cultivate.
plow.
ooze.
naul.
remove
0 11~-day maturity
inspected the new hotel. Orchestra
Podrets (Ooth
snow .. OOJUst about any job imaginable.
•
0 Consistent performer
book that comes
Hurry. Come by and see the Gravely 2-wheel
0
Excellent
seedilng
with a doU.)
--· ~
~ractors soon. The special tree
vigor
and
stalk
"Par the Bunny
offer ends April 30tl\.
strength
(p~schooler
0 ttlgh test weight
book with things
0 Sultable for grain or
10 touch, movr
q uallty silage

Vanden wagon factory
'-b oomed after Civil Wa~

.

Soil surveys being made
on county-by-county basis

,

a

OPENS AGENCY - A local bi'IIIICII oft1ce of IJfe
Investors Insurance has opened at t63 Secolld Ave.
and Is operated by Rex Rumley (above). Rumley,
who Is helping the Iowa-baaed ftnn gain a foothold In

IN THE GROUND, ON THE GROUND.
ABOVE THE GROUND.

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.

Good news for
beer drinken

WASIUNGTON (AP) - The
Airfculture Department has some
lli)Od news for beer drinkers: InventD!'Ies of hops are up from a year

BSO·

As of March 1, says the departrnA!nt's Crop Reporting Boanl, the
1111bPIY of hops held by growers,
dejllen and brewers totaled about
71.7 mllllon pounds, a 7 percent Increase from a 'year earller.
Hops production rose 5 percent
last year to 79.1 mlllloo pounds, a

reConiiiiJIII, ...... .....
AltiJoell 4 I 5 . . . . . . .
Washington, there also Is produc·
don In some olher states, including
Ca!ltornla, Idaho and Oregon, otticlaiB said.
.
· 1be qeucy reports levels of hops_
stocka as of March 1 and Sept. 1
each year.
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or~)

•

NO-TILL

"Richard Scarry's
Egg In The Hole
Book (Put your
finger in the hole
to find Henny' s
lost egg.) ·

I

Ohio, l8ld Ufe Invellon often life, heal&amp;h, fann and
property coverage. He hopes to open aome branch
oftkles In Melp, .Jackaon and Lawrence counlle8.

GALLIPOLIS - Rex Rumley
Military Academy in Fort Dewouldn't have opened an insurance
Dance, Va., and served a hitch wtth
office in Gallipolis, covering a fourthe U.S. Marine Corps. Following
county area, unless he felt there
service, he joined Van-Orr Foods,
was a chance he'd ma~e II.
Zanesvllle, a small firm managing
So far, he's the only representarestaurants in Ohio, and had a mantive for hls parent firm, Lite Invesagement position.
tcrs, but he thinks the Insurance
Admitting there wasn't much in
policies he can· offer through his of·
benefits In the restaurant busln~s.
flee will attract customers.
he left Van-Orr In 198l, and wtth a
"First or au, you plck up the
llking for deallng with Pe&lt;&gt;ple on a
phone book, and out all of the insuone-UHJne basis, he went to work
rance agencies you '11 see, only four · selling insurance for Prudential.
may offer life Insurance," Rumley
He was I'!Ventually voted rookte.sa·
S&amp;ld. "A few more might have
I~inan of the year and won numerhealth insurance. Almost none for
ous sales awards in health, life and
farm coverage."
auto insurance.
.
Those three categorles, plus a
But It wasn't unW he met wtth a
few others, is what Rumley hopes
Lite Investors representative that
to offer Illterested persons In Galtia,
Rumley said he almost became
Meigs, Lawrence and Jackson
"ashamed" of what he'd sold his
counties: Rumley himself Is pretty
Prudential cllents when he comimpressed wtth what Life Investors
pared programs and poHcles.
has to offer - so much so that he
"It just kind of stuMed me,"
left a successful position with PruRumley said. "I almost felt I'd done
dehttal Ufe ln Zanesvtlle to help
some of my cllents a disservice."
Ufe Investors, headquai-ted in
Life Inv~tors appeals primarily
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, bl!!Zf! a tratl or
to poople interested in lite, health,
agencies throughout Ohio.
farm and property insurance. It lrlHis office is loocated on the sevolves a decreasing whole lite polcond floor &amp;r the K of P Butiding at
icy with a 13 percent annuity, while
463 Second Ave.
·
interest gained on the policy ts tax
But it was also a return to the
free. The firm, which started In 1!Mi0
area in which he has some roots.
witll. assets of $4'h 'h mJlllon, has
Born ll years ago at the home of his
increased to $1.1 billion and ranks
grandfather, Pete Houck, on
among the top 30 insurance flnns in
Frlendly Ridge Road in Gallla
the UMited States.
County, Rex and his parents, Jim
Although Rumley's encouraged
and Ruby Rumley, moved to Lan- - he brought a few of his old Prucaster, w~re he grew up.
dential customers along wtth him
He later graduated from Augusta
and his already landed a few sales

........

The Akove

42 Court

~~-------~-·~--------~-...:.:._.::___._;....:_

I

lAfayette Mall
Oh,

____

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES and SERV1

RoGER VANOO'S TROJAN
SEEDS
Ph. 245-9525

MANNNG I10U5H.owner

Rt. 35
Gllllipolls,Oh.
1 mile south of Rodney

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PH. 99Z-2175

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----

4I
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,For as little as

•

,.

$10 per week

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- ,.._

..

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"

will give you

• II

,,

.By William B. Kughn
" P lease a nswer the followin g qu es tion f or m e and print i n your ar·

ti cle: Does the phrase. ' Being _born a ga i ~ ,' describe,~hat the sinner
gets in sillvation rather th an betng someth1n g he.does. ..
.
..

To sa y that there is noth ing ma n must do m the. new b1 r th. or
" beihg born ·aga i n," is to advoca te that~?" i s p_a ss ,~e (not ac t. ve).
hav in g nothi ng to do or say in r ega~d to the ~ew b•rth .
Is Man PiiSSIYC Or ACtiVe?

Jesus emphatic ally states, " Except a m an ~e born again, he can·
not see me kingd om of God." T he phr ase " k•ngdom of God" has
r efer erice to the c hurch. Si nce " kingdom" has r~f~ren c e. to a system of
government. so does it have r eference to the sp•n tual kmg ~o m &lt;ch u~ ­
ch) or governm ent es tabl is,hed by . Goc' on . ea~th accord1ng to H1s
w 1·sdom and power . To become a sub 1ect ot •· ·c; kingdom (church), one
m ust enter it. The only way can en1er i t is by bei~g born again !
In th e physi cal birth, there i s a begettmg, concept1on, and
deliver·;; so it is with the spi r itual birth . The word of God (the g_ospel)
is the incorrup ti ble seed { Lk . 8: 1: I Pet. 1 :23 ; Jms. 1: 18) by wh1ch we
are spiritually begotten. God has appointed the teachers of the t~uth as
th'e instruments in sowing the i ncorruptible seed. Pau l, by teac htng the
c or inth ians th e gospel , had begotten th em through the OOSJJ:CI (I C ~r .
-4 · 15) The conception takes place when the heart rece•v es w1th
nieekness the engratted word (Jms. 1: 20) . At thi.s tim e: the wor.d
(
d) ha s been implanted in the heart but t her e tS no btrth at thiS
~~~ent, only t he begetting t'!nd conception. The bir.th i~ complete at
delivery a coming forth from one state and passmg mto another .
Wh n m'a n is immersed in water, he comes out of the water , by the
and work of God, a tiew cr eature, pass ing fror:n a losl sta te !O
~e saved state. from the kingdom ot dark!'~ss to the kmgdorry of Gods
d arson and becomes a partaker of the ~ 1 v1ne nature.
e Man 'ts definitely active in the new berth! He must be bego~ten bV
the ospel ; therefor e, m an must hear the O«?S~I. He mus~ conce1ve the
and therefore, he receives the gospeltn hts heart wtth mee~ness.
s
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at a·g e 65

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rtl/uzfi~l ,.Yf'tll ~"-:~ of rtf!HM
Bulaville Road . -P.O. IJox lOa
GALLI POLIS,
. 0141045631
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Through participation in our Individual Retirement Account (IRA).

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Example shown based on worki ng individual, age 25,
depositing $10.00 p_
er week each year until age 65,
assuming 13.5% annual interest rate. Deposits are
deducted from your income and tax deferred, subject
to Federal regulations and penalties for premature
withdrawal.

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-

Equally aHractive tax-sheltered IRA programs
available for all age groups and Income levels.

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Evc,.lnt
1: 00

R•dlo
" Mttu. . from

the llblt"
D• ilv· WJEH
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Expect more from

hio Valley Ba~k

Four location• to aerve you better.
Member: FDIC .
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BORN AGAIN

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r_:::::::~o=r~:~~poo~p~e·~--t~in~u~in~g~ed~u~ca~l~io~n~u~ni~ts~-(~CE~U~s~),~p~a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ,,

'I

For F. rcc Bible Cor resPon dence Course Wr ile ..

OPEN m 8:00 EACH EVENING
MONDAYTHRUSATURDAY

1

AME~SAGE
. FROM THE BIBLE...

In the physica l bir~h , we ~a-ve no control o-ver ou r etng ego en: .
b 0 n but in the spi rttual btrth, all are under the control of the sub
~r t ~~n can refuse to hear (be begotten), believe C c~nceiv~) or_obev
~~~bapti sm) the gospeL His being in control makes him acteve '"the
new birth!

.•

- organizing his agency a~d getling career representatives and supelirnrvisoHers occeutuplells homupesch ~fope~
e.
I'!V n a Y
offices In Pomeroy, Jackson, Ironton and Rio Grande, and Is actively
1
interviewing f sal

. '

th •I baptism .

.

.

.

Rumley opens insurance office;
will cover four-county area

gift of lasting remembrance.

at

ATIIENS - " A Manager's Guide· ticlpants are eligible for two
of
For additional informstion, conto Hwnan Behavior," part of the six- academic credit. Completion of any tact Karen Jones, Workshops Office.
course basic management skills six of the courses leads to an OU- Memorial Auditorium, Lower Level,
program, will be offered at the AMA certifi cate of basic Ohio University, Athens, 45701 ; ..
Belpre Public Library, Belpre, management skiUa.
telephone 594-6851, or series coor- ,..,
beginning Aprll6 at 6:30p.m. to 9:30
Co..i for each course, including dinator Dr. Lucian Spataro, training '
p.m.
.
textbook , is $135. Organizations sen- development programs, Cot&gt;eland
Sponsored by . Ohio University ding more than one participant are ·107B, Ohio University, Athens, 5701 ,
Ufelong Learning in cooperation entitled to special rate.
telephone 594-5446.
with American Management
Association's Extension Institute,
the course will meet for three hours
each Tuesday evening through May
PORTLAND
Ge ne r a l visor.
4.
Telephone Co. of Ohio is installing
Calling paths to Athens and
Walter Stewart, Instructor in 100 new customer lines in its equip- Pomeroy also will be increased.
..:..
management, Ohio University, will ment off.ice here, according to a
The project should meet the needS
be the instructor for the coul'l!e. spokesman.
of the exchange through 1985, Miller,+o
Coverage of topics Including "the
More than $36,700 is budgeted for said.
::i:
structure and dynamics of work the project which will help meet
~ !:I
groups," " management ap- requests for new and improved
The Portland exchange serve$ • ·
plications of motivation theories" grades of service, said Harold Miller more than 225 customers in a ISand " improving relationships .....:,of:...J:..:a.. :c.::ks:..:o.. :n.,:. cu.:.='-to::.:. :.m::.e:.r..:se:;:rv:.
.:
.:. ::ic:.:e..:s::u!:.pe="'--sq-·;_u_a_re-_m_ne_a_r_e_a_of_M_e_i_gs_C_o_un_t_y_,."
through a performance review" will
teach participants to Increase their
managerial effectiveness and to supply motivation to their workel'l! and
supervisors.
The basic management skills
program was designed to provide
NEW OWNERS PAUL .DAILEY &amp;YVONNE SCALLY
the latest in managerial methods
and information for men and women
LUNCH IN THE LOBBY- DAILY SPECIAL 11·2
'
who want to advance in their careers
by means of li formal, integrated
ALSO FEATURING PEEL &amp; EAT SHRIMP, SOUP Of THE DAY,
educational program. Each course
' SANDWICHES, SIDE ORDERS AND DESSERTS
.,."'
is eomplete in and ot Itself and
CHEF
DWIGHT
BURTON
assumes no prior knowledge so par,n
ticipants may sign up on an in.,
CARRY-OUT &amp; CATERING AVAILABLE
dividual course basis.
PH. 992-9917
..'
Upcoming coul'l!es in the program
are " Computer Basics for 1-----:-:==---===:-::::-::-:-:-;-;;;;;:;;--;;u.;;;;;;:;r-- --l ·,l·
L- ROOMS BY DAY, WEEK and
;
Management, •• ~ ~Accounting for
~--~~~~~~~~~~---------1
Managers," "Training for Productivity," ~~communication Skills for
COMING SOON : EVENING DINING HOURS
Managers ,"
j ' Fir s t ~ Lin e
AND PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES
Management," "Getting Results
with Time Mailagement," and
LIVE ENTERTA INMENT IN THE LOUNGE
"What Managers Do."
MON &amp; WED
8: 30-12: 30
T H U R., FRI. &amp; SAT. ..
'!'
Instructors are profes:;ional with
'
''
both business and educational bacltLONE WOLF BAND
Rec~rding Artist .
ground. In addition to earnin" conDAVE
DUNKLE
~
Featuring Van Johnson

.'

.~

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1

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Mar . 28,1982

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

Mar. 28, 1982

Pomeroy- M iddleport-Ga I

w. va.

Ohio-Point

Official asks for lie detector
tests in Belmont election probe
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (AP)
- The Belmont County prosecutor
says he would Uke to conduct lie
detector tests lor some members ol
a Columbus advertising finn as
part or a two-week probe Into the
valldlty ot JUl!'De&amp; on petitions for a
local liquor option.
A 17-year-old youth told the Belmont County Board of Elections
Friday he forged six names on one
or the petitions !or a local llquor
election after h1s boss told h1m to
get more signatures "any way I

ClatrsVme.

''The election was Invalidated
and canceled," .Thomas said. "It
was supposed to have been held on
March 23 but after they (election
board ~bers) found out ibe slg·
natures were In !act forged, they
refused to put the question on the
ballot.''
He said the false signatures apparently were. added to petitions
Jan. 6, the day before the filing
deadllne.
Thomas said Cooper told the
(..'9uld.u
board
he folged the names alter
The youth said one of lhe names
Todd
Pressman,
his boss at the Cowas of a man who died ln llm.
lumbus
advertising
firm or Hlll,
County Prosecutor Wwtam Tho- ·
Zoog.
and
Sttnzlano,
told
him to get
mas said Chris Cooper, 17, or Coto
10
more
signatures
on petiseven
lumbus made the statement as the
tions
"any
way
I
could."
board continued Its Investigation or
Thomas said Pressman testified
names on petitions tor the election
to
the board a week ago that he
ln Richland Township near St.

-••

446-2342
PHONE 992-2156
675-1333

followed all legal procedures ln obtalnlng the signatures.
PressmaD could not be reached
!or comment Friday. His olflce
said none of the sta!! that works on
local elections was available.
Thomas said part a! the problem
traces to what he termed a weakneSS ln Ohio election law.
"The weakness. and the reason
we are concerned Is that the elec·
tlon laws allow anyOne, other than
in candidate elections, to circulate
petitions," he said. "You can bring
ln a J.2.year-old boy tram New York .
state, and he can Jegtt!male!y circulate petitions anywhere In Ohio as ·
long as 11 Isn't !or a candidate
petittton."
·
He said circulators or petitions
lor candidates must, bylaw, Uveln
the voting jurlsdlctlon where
names are solicited.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE' OF OHIO
OEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTA·
TION
Columbus, Ohio
March 12,1982
Contract Sales Legal
copy No. 12 •283
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depar·
tment of Transportation,
Columbus, Ohio, untl110:00
A.M ., Ohio Standard Time.
Tuesday. April 6, 1982. for
improvements in:
Gallia and Meigs Coun·
ties. Ohio. on GAL ·S.R. 325·
16.82-7 .291 (18.211 - State
Route 325 in Gallia County ;
GAL-S.R. 325·( 13 .971 State Route 325, in the
Village of VInton; and
MEG·S.R. 325· (0 .00·5.221 State Route 325, in Meigs

Judges·favor . videotaped trials
•

-'

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REUNITED WITH MOTHER - Four-year-old
Denise Gravely, kidnapped 19 months ago, was found

by Cleveland police and FBI agents In Mayville, N. Y.,
On Friday and reunited with her mother, Patricia
Thompson, left. (AP Laserpholo).

MARION, Ohio (AP) - . Some
court otflclals In the Marton County
area see the videotape concept as a
possible boon to helping clear court
dockets cheaply, but others say
they would miss seeing witnesses ln
person.
The first videotaped criminal
trial ln Amertcan history ended
Thursday at Sandusky when David
Lange pleaded guilty to voluntary
manslaughter ln the crossbpw slayIng of a Sandusky man .
"Mistakes and errors can be
edited out ol the tape' before It Is
submitted to a Jury," said Marl()n
County Probate Judge Edward
Ruzzo. "This would reduce the

number of appeals and give the
Judges lime to research before
making a ruling."
Marton Municipal Judge RIchard Rogers discussed the use of
video equipment ln the courtroom
with Erie County Common Pleas
Judge Lincoln McCrystal. whO said
he was pleased with the way
Lange's criminal trial was
conducted.
Rogers said McCrystal; who has
used videotape In civil cases !or 10
years, Is using less than $5,!m ln
equipment !or the trlal.
Other court olflclals remained
skeptical ol the new method . .
... It leaves out the human part o!
trying a case," said Mar!Qn County

Prosecutor B. Edward Roberts.
"The Judge or Judges mtss observIng the witnesses !ace to face."
Marion County Common Pleas
Judge Thomas Fetter agreed, sayIng, "The jury does not get to see
reaction o! the witness In a video
trial."
Roberts !eels a videotape trial
could Jeopardize the credlblllty o!
witnesses because It would ellml·
nate the manner ln which they
·
testify.
Marton County Common Pleas
Judge Eugene Yazel suggested
that the competition between lawyers would be mtsslng, while Rogers
said the equipment could kU1 courtroom drama.

FBI arrests suspect in kidnaping
napping statutes, said John H.
CLEVELAND (AP) The
an agent with FBI's ButThurston,
brother of ·a man charged with kid·
.
!alo
otfice.
napping said he anguished for days
Law enforcement agents said
before turning ln his relative to pothey closely watched the house Frillee, ending the 19-month case of a
day where the child had been kept
child apparently kidnapped for sale
since shOrtly alter her disappear·
to an upstate New York couple.
ance In August 1!180 !rom the front
Four-year-old Denise Kay
yard of her west side Cleveland
Gravely laughed and·squealed with
home.
delight as she was photographed
"We walled unW the couple came
with her mother and stepfather afout
ihe door with the chUd and then
ter their reunion here Friday night,
them," said Joseph
we
confronted
although she had not Immediately
Grlf!ln, special agent In charge of
r~ognlzed her mother.
the FBI's Cleveland otflce: "There
The ~hlld's moiher, Cleveland powas no resistance."
llee and FBI agents traveled 150
He said Denise apparently was In
miles to the village of Mayville,
good health.
N.Y .. on Friday after checking In"From all Indications, there was
formation provided by Don Gress
no mistreatment of the child, but
of Cleveland.
she will be checked by a pediatriCharles William Gress, 21, was
cian," Grtrfln said.
arrested In Cleveland and charged
The blonde, curly-haired toddler
Friday with violating federal kld-

Changes
conference
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The
White House says President Rea·
gan Is shifting a press conference
!rom Monday to later next week because of scheduilng problems Including Monday's return of the
Columbia astronauts and the telecasts of the national collegiate basketball championship and the
Academy Awards ceremony.
Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said Friday
that the news conference would be
pushed back to sometime In the
middle of the week. He said he did
not know whether It would be held
In the afternoon or evening.

Will close highway
Bernard Gilkey, superintendent
of the Ohio Department of High·
ways In Meigs County, reports that
· State Route 124 near Great Bend
will be closed Wednesday, March
31, to permit the Installation of a
new culvert. The detour route will
be over State Route 338.

; Meeting set

•

••

'

GALLIPOLIS -A meeting of the
Ganta County Youth Advisory
Board has been set for 7 p.m. Tues·
day In the probate-juvenile otflce at
the Gallla County courthouse.
Discussion will center on the Ohio
Department o! Youth Services' sub, sldy grant for 1983. The publlc Is
' Invited to attend.

' Emergency calls
POMEROY - Two calls were answered by local emergency units
Friday, the Meig.s County Emergency Medical Service reports. At 10:411
a.m., the Rutland Unit took Kevin
Gallagher from Meigs Mine I to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
4:43 Jl,m. the Pomeroy Unit took
Doris Spencer from 122 Mulberry
Ave., to Veteram Memorial.

-·

June 30 long day
WASmNGTON (AP) -Because
o! an adJustment to the nation's
atomic clock, June 30 will be the
longest day of 1982, the U.S. Naval
Observatory says.
Dennis McCarthy of the observa·
tory said Friday that the minute
beginning at 7: 59 p.m. EDT will be
stretched to 61 seconds to keep the
o!flclal clock In step with the slowIng pace of the Earth's rotation.
Similar "leap seconds" were
added last June 30 and on Dec. 31,
1979, according to McCarthy .

didn't remember her family andre·tused to be called Denise, her
mother said.
"She cried. She didn't want to
come with me and that's what
broke my heart," Patricia Thompson said. "But she's getting to la!ow
me. Everything's !lne now as far as
I'm concerned.''
Don Gress, who pollee said approached them with ln!armatlon
about the c.ase. said he was a friend
of the child's late father , Earl
Gravely.
'
Gravely, distraught over his
daughter's disappearance, died of
carbon monoxide poisoning four
months to the day alter she was
reported mtsslng. The coroner
ruled the death a probable accl·
dent. His wife. remarried In June

1981.
Pollee said Gress told them he
noticed the child on a visit to his
family's home ln Mayvnte last Sun·
day. He said the girl's "lazy" or
"wandering" eye condition helped
him make the connection.
"She (his mother) had a baby
with her she called Susie. It was

DenJse/' Don

G~s

said. ''I am

sick. I will be sick for years that
Someone In my family could be Involved In this,"
Cleveland pollee detective Matt
Pampean! said Gress' mother, ldentlfed by the FBI as Susan
Schmidt, had four sons and had
wanted a daughter since her own
was stillborn. She had renamed the
child Susan Dawn, Grtlfln said.
Thurston said Charles Gress Is a
son of Mrs. Schmidt by a previous
marriage.

Around the state
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
psychiatrist for Wlntam Mllilgan
says the man diagnosed by some
doctors as having 24 separate personailties should be transferred to a
civil mental hospital and gradually
given more freedom.
However, another report said
Mllllgan Is no longer mentally Ill
and should be released.
.Judge Jay C. Flowersconsldered
both reports Friday In.a Franklin
County Common Pleas Court hearIng to review Milligan's maximum
security commitment ln the Central Ohio Psychiatric Hospital's
forensic unlt.
In 1978 Flowers found Mllllgan ln·
nocent by ·reason of Insanity on
charges of raping three women and
ordered him committed.
Dr. John M. Davis, Mllllgan's
psychiatrist, said· the setting at the
forensic unit Is obstructing therapy.
Davis said a h06pltal review
panel recommending M1lllgan's release doesn't believe he has multiple personaHtles and dtagn~
Instead an anti-social behavior dis·
order with narcissistic trails.
)Wlllgan Is the subJect or a recent
. book, "The Minds of 81lly MWl·
gan." ·At h1s trlal, doctors testlfled
he had at least 10 personalltleli.
Later, dociOIJ said he had two do-

zen personalities.
IRONTON.

Ohio

IAPl

Twenty-nine area high school stu·
dents learned the hard way that you
don't mess with the new school bus
driver.
The students !aced c~arges a! disorderly conduct Friday !or trying
to set fire Thursday to the hair of
driver Cathy Johnson during a bus
ride between Rock Hill High School
and the Lawrence County Joint Vocational School.
Ms. Johnson, Z7, slarted driving
the bus Monday as a substitute. She
told shertr!'s deputies the juniors
and seniors had been giving her a
rough time all week, smoking on
the bus and generally being
disruptive.
.
But setting her waist-length hair
on !ire- then dousing It with water
- was the last straw. Ms. Johnson
drove the busload o! students directly to the Lawrence County sheriffs otllce.
Deputies took ail o! them to court.
Five of the students are legally
adults and are scheduled to lace
trlalln mun1clpal court next week.
The other 24 are juveniles and are.
to face separate trials under Judge
Uoyd Bwwell. The Judge has
drawn attention ln recent weeks
slilce being sued by the American
ClvQ Uberties Union alter he sent:
enced a ~year-old girl to a night In
the county jaU. While there, she al·
legedly was raped by a jaller.

br resurfac ing
with asphal concrete .
county,

Pavement

varies.

Width

-

Project and Work Length
- 72,864 feet or 13 .80 miles.

·

" The date set for com-

pletion of this work shall be
as set forth in the bidding
prgposa 1. "
Each bidder shall be
required to file with his bid
a cer:tified check or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but irl no
event more than mtv·
mousano quuars, or a oono
tor ten pet cent of his bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms, for
~.._ · qual if1ca1lon at least ten .
, , days prior to ·the dale set
for openinP, bids in ac·
cordance w1th Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specificlltions
are on file in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy Director.
The Director reserves
.,. the right to reject any and
all bids.
DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8·17--73
March 21. 28
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City Commission of
th e City of Gallipol is will
hOld an informal public
m eet .in~ on Tuesday, M ay
.11, 1982. at 7:00p.m . in the
Muni cipal Court Room.
City Bu i ldin9. 5.18 Second
• t Av enue, GallipOliS, Ohio, to
• di sc uss th e · "F aci lit i es
Plrtn
tor
Wit Sh~ wat er
: Collr:oction and TreaT!Tic nt"
- ;. for th e Gallipolis Plann 1nQ
.. . Arer~ .
••
This plan is n ow bci nq
.. • prepMed b-; Bu rqrss &amp;
~ · Nipje. Limited . E=ngineers
.-., &amp; Ar c h i tect~ , to meet the ,
• ~ water Qual1ty standards
... required by The Clean
.... Water Act .
•
The facil ities p iAn will in·
cl udr a study of present
and future wastewater
collection and treatment
needs , an anlysis ,of alter·
native collection and .treat·
m ent methods, inCluding
cost·effectiveness analysis
a nd
en~ironmentat
assessment, and the selec ·
tion of most cost·effective
and environmentally sound
• · alternatives . Represen ·
tnt ives of Burgess &amp; Niple,
Limited will be in at·
' tendance to present in ·
f ormat ion on the alter·
natives now being studied
nnd answer questiOns.
The purpose of this
public m eeting is to give
people in the affected area
an oppbrtunity to express
thPir com m ents on lhese
il l lernativ es
to
solve
wastr wa t cr problems in
rhl" r.rrc1 All concerned
r1 ti1C"ns r~rr inviirct to r~ t
tr nd .
M f'lr cn 28 , April .II , MrlY 3

p.

TWO ARRESTED- Cecil Ferguson, left, and Edward Lawrence Johnson, right, were arrested Friday

In New York and charged In ihe October 1981 bloody
Brink'• robbery·murder In Rockland County, N, Y.
fAPLa•erphoto).

Judge Burwell defends record
as tough juvenile magistrate
IRONTON, Ohio (AP) Lawrence County ProbateJuvenile Judge Lloyd W.
Burwell says his h'on fist is
often the only thing standing
between a Juvenile and continual run-Ins with the law.
" My overall philosophy Is
that It Is not really Important
what a kid has done," Burwell
said. "What Is important Is
what he wtll do tomorrow. We
wtu take any measure to keep
a kid !rom getting In trouble

tomorrow.

l l

The fear o! punishment in
his court Is meant to outweigh
the pressure young people feel
from peers to commit unlaw·
ful acts, Burwell said. Known
to children as the "Iron
Judge," the 57-year-old Republtcan has put hundreds or
youths behind bars since l!e
came to the bench In 1977.
He routinely Jailed truants,
with approval of many school
officials. A new state lilw prohibits imprisonment of status
offenders, youths who commit
acts that wouldn't be crimes I!
committed by adults .
"I've been outspokerl about
a lot of things," said the
stocky Burwell, who chain
smokes and sips coflee even
while on the bench. "Yeah,
I've got apoltcyo!puttlngk!ds
In Jail. "
Burwell has drawn national
attention for his handltng of
the case of a 15-year·old girl
whom he had jailed for five
days becau~ she ran away
from home . While In county
jail, she was sexually ' assaulted by a Jailer and two
male prisoners.
The Judge Is also under attack from the Ohio Department of Public Welfare over

his use or the county child·
ren's home as a detention center. The home, whichdellends
heavily on state and federal
funding, Is supposed to be lor
abused, dependent and neglected children and orphans.
"We're on this collision
course," satd Mary H. Turney
o! the welfare department.
In a.ddltlon, Burwell's feud
with the lawyers from Southeastern Ohio Legal Services
.has degenerated Into a court
battle. The 4th District Ohio
Court of Appeals has stayed a
finding o! contempt Burwell
made In 1980 against three legal service lawyers who he
said weren't prepared for a
hearing In a child custQdy
case .
"They were not authorized
to represent the people they
said they would," Burwell
said. "I don't want to fool with
the damned people."
In a separate case, U.S. Dis·
trlct Judge S. Arthur Spiegel
has ordered Burwell to pay
$4,524.90 in legal servl~e lawyer lees . That stems from a
dispute In which Burwell refused to let the Ia wyers see
their client, a minor, and
another youngster's court
Illes. Burwell said SEOLS
didn't have proper
authorization.
Burwell said the Incident In·
volvlng the attack on the 15year-old jtlrl was never fAr

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Notice is hereby given
that sealed bids will be
' received by the Ci tv
Manager of the City of
Ga llipolis, Ohio at his offi ce
in the Municipal Buildi ng,
for one 1982 1 Ton (one ton)
4· wheel drive pick-up
tru ck .
Bids will be rE-ceived at
the above named office un ·
til t2 :00 Noon, on Thur ·
sday, April 1, 1982 and
pub icly opened and read at
that hour and place . Bid
forms may be obtained in
the Off ice of . the Citv
Manager,
518
Second
Avenue, City of Gallipolis,
Ohio.
M.arch 21. 2S

from his mind, but he hadn't
changed his thinking about
the effectiveness o! his gettough policies.
"Maybe, we are a little bit
more apprehensive about
what we do," Burwell said,
"but we still have one goal In
mind: to aid the kids. If my
hands are tied, who wlll aid
them ... ? I'm the last resort
the. parents have got."

Wastewater plan
will be reviewed

GALLIPOLIS - An ln!or'mal
public hearing will be held by the
Gallipolis City Commission at 7
p.m. May 4 ln the city building to
discuss a !acllltles plan for waste. water collection and treatment In
the city.
This plan Is now being prepared
by Burgess &amp; Nlple Ltd. , a Colum•
bus engineering linn, to meet water quallty standards required by
the Clean Alt Act.
The plan will Include a study of
present and future wastewater collection and treatment needs, an
analysis of alternative collection
and treatment methods, including
cost-effectiveness analysis and environmental assessment.
Cost-effective and envlronmentllllY sound alternatives are also beIng formulated. Burgess &amp; Nlple
representatives will be on haitd to
present Information on the .a ltema·
tives
now being studied and to
Veteratul Memorial : ·
answer
question.s.
'
Admitted
AlleMra Wlll,
The meeting's P1J1110Se is to give
Rutland; Dori.s Spencer, Pomeory.
people lh. tile al!ected area an opDischarged - Thamas Justice, portunity to eXjHea their views on
Mabel Pic,kens, Elizabeth Bartoe, the alternatiVes. AU clt12Jens are
Bertha Diehl, Allegra Will.
urged to attend.

It

CARD OF TH"NKS
"

To dall of the friends

an . neighbors Of
Lillian Oldatre, we
deeply appreciate all
of the kindness shown
to the faml'ly 1-n her
passing. .
Her Loved Ones.
2 __ _,l_,_,nc:M:.ee'-'m
!!o,r_ia,m
, ""--

.

In Iovino memory of
our husband and father ,
Dale Rothgeb, Sr. who died
six years ago today .
The rolling stream of life
rolls on ,
But still the vacant chair;
Recalls the love, the voice,
the smite,
Of the one who once sat
.t here,
To some he may forgotten,
To others a part of the past .
But to us who loved and lost
him,
.,
His memories will always
last .
Wife Glenna and
Sons
tn loving memory of Goldie
Wyant Lynch Wh o departed
this life one year ago March 28, 1982. Sadly missed by
Husband and Children

In memory of Paul
Raymond Booth, twin
brother to Paula Hazel
Booth, birthdate March
21, 1U6. sadly ri1issed
by Family.

--------- --

3

Announcemen1s

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair , par~s . and
supplies.
P ick · up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up'
Georges Creek Rd. Call
«6·0294 ..
Fishing License on sate.
Come and see our new ~hip·
ment of 1992 Fising Rods,
Reels, &amp; Lures. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza . 446·8025.
Turkey Hunters We have
mouth cal ls, slate box
calls. camo gear &amp; decoys
in stock . Spring Valley

2~pr:;~E~~~!0_
in~~~y

Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Va l ley Plaza. 446·2134.
FREE
Easter
candy
making class, 7:00 Thurs.
March IS &amp; 25. No
registration necessary .
Chocolate $1.60 lb.

EaSier

·-candV -Iearn- ~o
make your own hollow or
solid chocolate Bunnys.
Filled easter eggs and
much more . Free candy
making demonstrations.
Carousel Confectionery,
Middleport. Calt for date
and time . 992·63A2.
c ence
Background? We Can
Make You an Engineer.
If you atrudr hilt • bat·
ulllureale detree ltlt Air Foree
Will floll ,.. Up IO $11,0011 I
AND, PiiJ tuition and fees
1m up lo II moolh1 of Khaal
ntCtuaiJ to cotnpltlt u
tnlinft'rilll dt1rn. Wonder·
ing how to chan1e tlretn wilhOIII
suffenn1 the loss of jM securitf
'this miJ be JOUr ro&amp;Gen op.
portunity. Openinp are limited. so
t~t

rt!''

Kt rtOW. ca n Collect :
614-446·8500
T rtllc
ohn McGuire

1:(H) P.MA.

Leaving state so will sell tl'le following . Locatt;t s
miles south of Athens, Ohio on St . R~ . 33 or 2 miles

north of Shade. "HOUSEHOLD"
Hotpoint 19 cu. ft . refr i gerator appro)(. 6 . mo . old,
- d sk RCA black &amp; white T .V .• Realistic s!ereo
w~~ord player, AM· FM radio and .casse tte, 24x34
large speaker!!, chest of drawers. n1g.ht stand, par·
table sewing machine, double bed , mirrors, lan:-ps,
dresser, electric stove w/ top oven , .metal cab.net
base, metal wardrObe, Eureka canister_ ~weeper.
single bed. cabinet, chairs, Royal type~rater . gr~en
K nmore dryer, auto. Kenmore washe~, m•~c .
criairs, couch. misc . tables. P.~ctures, whate mtlk
lass collection, Radar range mu: rowave oven, oval
~able &amp; chairs , small buffet, sewing tools and ~ther
misc .
"MISC."
Mercury night light, electric grinder, vice, misc .
hand tools. !otep ladder , wheel barrow, push la:-"'n
mower, electric fan. misc. r~kers &amp; hunting
knives, and work benet:!.
,
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS
Picture tr.ames, table, child's tea set, sessrons elec·
!ric clock wood cabinet and other misc.
OWNER, MR. &amp; MRS . MORTON CLONCH
h
Posltlvei.D.
SMITH
JIM
Mf· 20ll
JIM BROWN, Appr.

'

..

~~N

.

shipment
ladies
.New
slacks $7.9'1 and blouses
$8.99. Mens Wranglers an
blue jeans S12.99 pr . Ladies
Purses 510.00 . Mens and
children western boots.
Baileys Shoes, M idd leport.
We need dealers, for new
stand·up cookbook . Free
details. Weist Publishing
Company, S. Main St.
Dept .S. P .0.
Box
164,
Englewood, Ohio. 45322 . .

FLEA MARKET
EACH SUNDAY

lawrence County

CAR~:.~~

The abandoned Antiquity
Methodist Church building
and Its land Is for sale. In ·
terested persons may sub·
m it bids to : Athens District
Unltep Method ist Union ,
211
MUlberry
Ave .
Pomeroy, Ohio 4.1769. All
bids must ~ submitted by
April26, 1982.

ANY PERSON . who has
anything to Qive away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer anv other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
column . Ther e will be no
charge to the advertiser.

Part Beagle 2 puppies, S
wk s old . Call 367 ·7743 .

250·400 Dealers
Set up SS.OO per space.
Rt. 7, 1 mile abOve Pro·
ctorville.

Four small house tvpe pup
pies. 985·3891 .

supervisor to hire,
train people from 6
months
of
year .
Teaching, ·business or
pilrty plan background
helplul . No setli~g. no
investment . Trilining
provided .
Call
1·800·821 -3918 or collec!
for BarD 816-763-7272
' TO¥ S &amp; GIFTS
HOUSE OF LLO¥D.

.,..__--·- --.------

ROSENBERG RECYCLI
NG Opening Fri. April 2,
307 Upper River Rd ,
Gallipolis . Blue build ir'l g
across fro m Silver Bridge
Plaza . Open Mon., Wed., &amp;
Fr i. 10 to 4. Sat. 10 to 3.
Specializing in aturninum
cans. aluminum siding,
sheets &amp; cast alum .. copper
wire, brass, radiators , auto
batteries &amp; IBM cards.

-----__:::==
Giveawav

7A.M.·4 P.M.

SHARP
HOMEMAKER
PARTY PLAN
PEOPLE

AntiQue oak furniture ,
round t ables. book cases .
desks, dressers , chests, ice
boxes, etc . Catl446·3759 .

4

White long haired mal e ca t .
Call446·9604 .

i=-oi'lnquires
Phone 614·384·2871
or 245·5506
sponsored by
Jackson County
Harness
Horseman's Assoc.

CASH PAID for cl
l•te
model used cars .
I
Buick.· Pontiac, Gall ipolis,
Ohio. C•tl446·2282 .

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVA L
Profess ional
Electrolysis
Center . A.M .A. approved ,
Doctor ref~r81s, by ap·
pointment onlv . 304-675·
6234.

Fairground

Jackson County
Fairgrounds
at Wellston, Ohio
Suriday, April4

THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1982

.

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun s~oot . Sat. nights
6: 30p .m ., Bashan. Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun .

FLEA MARKET

PUBLIC AUCTION
.

For bulk del ivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fueL cal l Landmark,
9'12·2181 , Pomerov. Oh.

Mate Irish Setter . Contact
Jim
Bentz .
4th
St.,
Syracuse .

Buying
Gold ,
Silve r ,
Fllatinum, old co in~ . sc rap
rings &amp; si lverware . Daily
qu otes available. Also
co ins &amp; coin suppli es for
sale .
Spr ing
Valley
Trad ing , Spring Valley
Plaza . 446·8025 or 446·8026 .

YARD sale · Ch~rch Of God
ot ~rophe c y . 2129 Linco ln
Ave. Saturday, March 27th.

9·?

We ar e now hirin g, ev ening
cooks. front des ks cl erks ,
~--.----.----.n ight auditors. Apply in
We pay cash for tate mOd el person , Holiday lnn. EOI;: .
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
wou ld like man to Pour and
Bill Gene Johnson,
finish concrete floo r . Call
446·0069 .
388·9909.

4 puppy;s to give away, 10
weeks old .992·2779.

PUPPY 304-882 ·3380 .

-----------6
. Lost and Found

---------LOST black &amp; white Collie.

female , name Harr iet on
Blessing Rd . area . Call 4.46·
3('~1 if seen.

LOST : male beagle dog.
outside of Rlft lan d In the
Leading Creek Road area .
Also Depot St. area . 7A2·
2249.
Lost : gray and black male
Keeshound in Racine area.
It seen contact Jim Per~
singer, Mile Hill Rd.

1·7 month old mal e puppy .
House broken . Mixed
breed . 9'12·6790.

- ---------- - Found : Walke r ' coon dog.
Vi cinit-; of Burger Chef.
9'12·5826.

LOST ·North Pt Pleasant.
medium site male dog,
black &amp; gray, shaggy hair,
nome " Toby". 304·675·36113 .

IlL - - - - - - - - - - '

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

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SA~E
ring Cattle Roundup Sale
TUESDAY,~ APRIL 20~ 1982

SALE STAATS AT 1:00 P.M.
Selling all types and grades of feeder
cattle, springer cow, and cow &amp; calf
pairs .
Accepting cattle the day before the sale
from 1: 00 to 7: 00p.m . and from 7:00 un·
tiiJ : OO the day of the sale.
For information about consigning or
buying cattte give us a call at these
phone numbers .
stockyard .. . .. 1-614·592 ·2322 or 592 -9789
Owner, Rodney Mowery
at home ... . .. .. ... ... ..... . 698 -7231
' Manager, Mike Crouse ........ 698·6520

CONSIGN YOUR CAnLE EARLY

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., APRIL3, 1982 ·
10:30 A.M.
3 mites east of Jackson. Ohio on u .s . JS between
CHILLICOTHE &amp; GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
Selling contents of a local 6 room house .
ANTIOUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES :
Early Walnut stepback cupboard, Sq. Oak table
with fancy legs, {extra lean. unusual oak chair.
V ictorian dresser &amp; washstand, tall wardrobe,
loveseat &amp; chair, ladie!l desk, walnut dresser,
clocks. child's wicker rocker . Sellers kitchen
cabinet , sev. chairs, rug s, wool wheel , dome top
trunk , silver tea set. Other silver . Quilts, &amp; many
linens . Stereoscope . Powder horn, Old baskets.
WOOdenware . Blue &amp; grey granite. Kitchen items,
blue crocks, stone jugs, jardieniers. ·Blue &amp; white
coverlet . Old store Lemonade dispenser . Old t i n
windup toys. ~aper Items : catalogs, sheet music.
valentines, postcards, books&amp; maQatines . Sev . nice
early lamps. 1920's lamp . Old wood planes. Currier
&amp; t Ves print. Old pi ctures. China &amp; Glassware :
numerous pieces of crystal , pattern, depressio(l,
hand painted German China. Ironstone. etc. Nice
1930's bedroom suite. Several sm . tables. 19-40's
bedroom suite.
Many other items too numerous to list. Plus usual
kitchen &amp; household items and tools from out·
buildings.
Auct. Note: Plan to attend for a large Interesting
sale. S~le to be held inside.
Lunch served
CASH or LOCAL CHECI&lt; with I. D.
PRESTON MUSTARD, Auctioneer
614·2U.SNI or 214-llll'
Terry Loyd, App.
BUD McGHEE, Auc!,

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

8

. Wanted timber . We cut,
payi ng good prices. Call
446·0706.

Rick
Pearson ,
E:.x ·
per ienced AUCTIONEER .
Estates. antiques, farm ,
household . Licensed Ohio·
WV. Buying antiques. 304·
773·5785, 773-9185 .

Gold , s ilve r , st er ling,
jewe lr-;, rin gs , old coin s &amp;
currency . Ed Burke1t Ba r ·
ber Shop, M idd leport. 992·
3476 .

------

L .E. Neal Auctioneer Ser ·
vice
Estate · Farm ·
Household· Misc . We sell it!
Licensed &amp; bonded Ohio &amp;
wva . 367·7101 .
Auct ion every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consi·gments of new and
used m er chandise ...always
welcome .
Rtchard
Reynolds Auctioneer . 175·

3069.

-

Saturdav

" MACHIN E R~ "

2x14 Ford plows, 9ft. Ford 3 pt. disk, 1H 46 ba ter, 9·
13 chise l plow, 12·16 ft. harrig ator, John Blu e 500
gat. anhydrous ammonia applicat~r 5 sh~ n k. , .400
gal. sp·r aver tank s, 2 shan k sub so1ter , 48 m . 3 pt .
lawn mower and other misc . N 1 picker, sheller,
grinder, anvil, lawn mowers, CB &amp; TVs.

" AUTO. &amp; MI SC."
19.118 Chev . car
1974 Dodge Custom Van
Wood en desk, si lve r doll ars, whea t pennies , rocking
chair .
This is a partial· listing . We will tak e consignments
April 1st, 'Znd &amp; Jrd. There will be someone stay ing
on the grounds to unload and wntch thing s.
Cash
lunch
Positive I. D.
DAN SMITH
JIM CARNAHAN
949-20]]
9&lt;9·2708
JIM BROWN, Appr.
s % large items - 10% sm.-.11 items.
No charge for no st~le If no sated on y.1rds.
Machinery to ~ c:! ll at 11 : 00 A.M .
" Not responsiHe tor accidents or loss at property "

uc AUTION

218

ACRE

FA~M

REAL ESTATE
TO BE SOLO ON PRE.MISES
SATURDAY, APRIL3, 1982 12:30 P.M.
Location: From Gallipolis. Ohio lake State Route
141 to Stole Route 775, turn toll, go approximately
41J2 miles to H1nn1n Tr•ce Rd ., turn right go I mile.
Mouse and building on the right.
Farm consists of 218 acres : toba cco base 1847 poun·
ds, ~3 acres tillable, 16.5 acres pastUre, wOOded area
10 acres. Wel l fenced, 2 acre pond, tree running
creek. This could be a relll beef producer , land is in
good prOduction. Farm most recently used for hog
production.
Buil d i ngs : farrowing and finishing hou ses, 18 x100
equipment shed, weaning house , barns 70xl10 &amp;
20x70, several outbuildings lind storage sheds .
' Farm House : 9 rooms, 1 bath, 4 bedrooms,
f ireplllce, public wllter, Gallia County schools,
southwestern High School (near Rio Grande) .

To ' " ihfs fine form contact lhe Au ctioneer and
real estote broker listed below .
W1tch for equipment s1le •t • later date.
TERMS: u.ooo cerllfled check day of sale, to be
clos•• on or before M1y 3, 1912. Taxes to be
prorated to day of closing. To be sold with the conflrmotlon of the seller.
Sate conducted by:

421 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 4S.31
Phon• C614l 446-1552

ASSISTANT
C HI EF
TECHNOLOGIST·LABORAT·
ORY . Jackson Generel
Hos pital. Ri pley W. VA . Is
now i nterv iewing for an
assistant
chief
T ech nolog is t
tor
Labora t ory .
J ob
will
require ability to work in
all areas of th e lab,
Scheduling, and tra ining
assi st in wr itin g procedure
ma nu el.
maintaln.lng
quality contrOl r ecords ,
malntance of equipment in·
eluding min im a l and r epai r
and ca tabration. And some
week end work . Quallfied
person wil l have 2~ years of
supervi sing experience In
Medical Labotatory , have
a B.S. degr ee in Medical
Tec hnology , and be ASCP
registered .
Excelle nt
be nef its and ss tarv. tn·
terested person may ca ll
personnel department at 1·
304-372·2731 M onoa v thru
Friday , fo r m ore in·
fo rmation . EIJIUal
p toyment opporrun ity M · F·
H.
..

Aoril3. 1982

10:00 a.m•

New Hol land 270 hay ba ler , No . 9 MF h ay baler, MF
3 point hay rake, spike tooth harrow, small ai r com·
p ressor , step ladder, western saddle and bridl e, 3
electri c motors, sin gle bl ock and li ne, mowing
scy the, sledge hammer, pit chf ork. , l og chai n, vice
rope, dog house, 32 gallon ro und ta nk , stone Iars, 5
a nd 10 gallon milk can, _gate, 100 ga ll on livestock
water tank. !ay ·ofl plow, metal drums, lives tock.
squeeze shute. 6--75 0 ~ 16 8· ply tires , horse col lar ,
cabl e, tobacco press, baler twi ne, m etal snute,
assorted lumber , neck. ch.ai n s and tags, sc r ap iron ,
pump for oi l drum Oi Re new ), vet syri nges and
need les, v et dosage and syri nge , tat oo set , t n·
tern ati onal fence c har ger, old kitchen cabi net, an·
tique writing desk, 5 otd k. itchen cha ir s, br eak fa st
set w i th 6 chairs, roll -away bed, air cond it ioner, cot fe e and end t abl es and other miscell aneous items .
Term s: Cash
Sau l Sau nd ers , Own er

•1•"

Lee Johnson

AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio

Phone 256-6740
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property

AU

ION
SATURDAY, APRIL 3; 1982
. 10:00 A.M.
L.ocated 9 miles east of Ripl ey on Route JJ . Turn
nght on Frozen Camp Creek Road, 2.7 mil cl'o to
farm .

H~ving sol~ part, of far,m and is d iscontinuing farm.ng, owner B1ll Ram cs will be offering the
following farm machinery to th e highest bider;
1979 M .F . 145 Di esel , 709 hr s. P.S.. cJdf er cn tt allock

~uxilia r v hydr au lic : 1976 J .D . 20d0. ~tO h p., P.S, &lt;tit '

terenti al lock , auxi l iarv hydrt1Uitc, A speed rr an
smission, radio. canopy, 2,038 tv ~ .• 1973 Chev 1 ton
12' flatbed truck with r em o v r~ hl i'COvurf'd . livr.-st ock
bed, P,S., P.B .. 67,000 mi les; 197B M F 12&lt; b.11or
1978 M .F . 560 round ba ler ( 1500 pound hrliCS I : 1979
HeSStOn model 1070 7' hitybt nP, M .F 7' d ynAb Air1 nCc
mower; N .H . model556 pu l l ty pe rilk &lt;', two I .II ' M I=
naywagons ; N.H. 32' hay Clf"V .l tor vn th el cc tfl (
motor ; rou~d ~a t e mower : M .F 1.-t" 1 boltom ptow:
M . F . 3 pt. 6 adtUSta btc d isc ; A .C 10' tr t1nsport disc;
1978 J D. model 71 1 r ow r orn p1 .1 nr r r : L •lflr ql nnt
c orn elevator; 300 gal. cPnlu ry s p r t~y N ; 1 row
c ultivators ; .8' EZEE · Flow frr tii• 1Cr spr enocr ;
M . F . front -end loader ; 130 bustl eI P.T.O. m Anur e
spreader ; 7' M .F . bl,de; 3 pt post ctr. Vcr ; J pt.
wood splitter ; cut·off saw ;. 3 pt . c c m ~n t m ixer ;
h eavy duty boom pol e; l pt. secd ~r : M . F , 5' brush
h og ; J.D. S07 r otary mower pull t yp e; 3 pr , ~&gt;u b
sailer; 1962 F 700 Ford t or parts: 3 r ound Dil le
f eeders; 2 cr eep feed ers ; ca n le sea lcs ; m cctn~ en rtl l.'
SQueeze chute: 1000 ga t. undorwound fue l ranK never been u sed ; J fuel oi t tanks ; 1 set l.t .9x28" tra c
tor chain s; an tique stone burr m i II ; two •n scr tccJ
tooth saw mill blades site S4" J"lnd 56 " : waqon IOr1cJ
~m*

~ud'

"R.o't,lf..

Human Service Position :
Th e Ga l lia ·Ja ckson -Meigs
M ent al Hea lth Board 1~
looki ng for an ind ividual
wh o can work on a month
to- month contract bas is to
seek out, f i nd and licen se
extr amural care homes In
Gallia, Ja ckson and M eigs
Countie s.
M l mimum
requirments : B.A . or B.S.
in a human service field
with an empha sis i n
Psy chology or Soci al Work .
Pl ease apply by ·submltting
a res um e to the Gallia ·
Jackson ·M eigs
Ment al
Hea lth Board , P .O. Box
514, Ga llipoli s Ohio, 45631 .
The Gllllla ·J ack son·M elgs
Mental Hea lt h Board is an
equal Opportunity Em ·
piOyer.

PUBLIC AUCTION

To be held ·at the Meigs Co . Fairground north of
Pomeroy , Ohio on State Route 33. Watch for sale
signs .
" TRACTORS"
1981 Four wheel d ri ve diesel, 16 HP Mitsubishi ;
M .F . 65 Di eSel ; I .H. 706 ; S N Ford

M~GHEE

Get out and live! ·Meet in·
teresting peopl and make
good $$$ w i th Avon . Call
446·3358 .

Sal es person wanted at
Milste ac;ls Bakery . Apply
9AM til noon. No phon e
ca l ls .

em·

SAT., APRTL 3, 1982, 10:00 AM .

ACRE'PUB·-

1 nsurance Agent. Start at
$175 to S300 . . Experience
pref erred . Call Mon. 3·29 at
10:00 to 3:OOPM, 446· 1005.

Fast Food Restarurant
Managem ent Opportunity
no experi ence necessary .
Send resume 6nly to wendy's I nternationa l At ·
tention Gary Ham 1\ton ,
3199 Core Rd , Parkerburg,
WV 26101. EOE .

OLD FURNITURE , beds, Fu l l or part tim e RN tor 7
iron, brass, or wood . KJt· to 3 shift. Full or part t i me
chen cubbards of all types. RN or LP N for 11 to 7 shill .
Tables, round or square. Call Nancy VanMeter ,
Wood ice boxes. Old desks Pomeroy Hea lt h Care Cen ·
and bookcaseS:. W ilt buy ter. 992-6606.
complete household. Gold,
silver. Old mone y, pocket
watches, chains, rin gs, and
etc. Iridian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.
located on State 'Route 790 one mite East of lecta
i and 6 mites west of State Route 218 , the following
\will be sold :

______ _
Consignment Auction

-~_:.

218
FARM

Full or p ~ r t t i me sates .
starting
com ·
H ig h
miss io n s. Man age ment
po~ ition available. 446 ·3320
Tue. 9· Noon.

--

-~

Hel wanted

.

AUCTIONEER 'S NOT E : II you a n~ look•n q f or
f arm macinery don' t mi ss t h1S opportu nity . Mr :
Raines is olfering an e)(ccllcnt li ne of f ie ld r N ldy
equipment . Not man-; sm rtll trrm s. Please llr on
time.
Tf;RMS : CASH
Lunch served
OWNER : BIIIRaines - Phonel72-9713
Sale Conducted By
WINTER'S AUCTION SE RIIICE
AUctioneer : Edwin Winter
Phone 'Z73 ·J447

OWner :
Lennord ond Jienelce
l'fewberry

Myron L . "Bud" McGhee

REAL ESTATI! BROKI!R- AUCTIONEER

•·

�11

1_8 _

Hel wanted

_ wanled ro -po-

-

--~

GET VALUABLE traonong

as a voung bust ness person
and earn good money plus
some grea t g•fts es a Sen
t.nel route earner Phone
us right away and get on
the ellg•bdtfy l•st at 992
2156 or
2157

m

- -- - - - - Need Stud serv•ce tor AKC
OacMund 992 7891
Ld~-e

guards and Sw•mmtng

tnstructor for the M•d
dieport muntctpal pool Ap
pltca fton avatlable at the

Mayor s Office
1

SOMEO N E to live 1n wtth

elderly coup le lady needs

some asststance Conta ct
Mrs CrUtckshanks at Pt
Pleasant Job Serv.ce 304
675;2710

EMPLOYEE wan ted for
yard matnfa•nance &amp;
tani1onal work Must be
able to opera te far m tr ac
tor wtth brush hog Pt
Pleasant area 304 4S5 7531

E!\.PER IENCED
•a l e•
pepon needed at furn•ture
stQre 10 New H aven, wv
I ntere• ted peroon• • hould
cootact Mrs Ann Sm•th at
3Q.I BB2 2462 on or before
noim, Wedne• day, March
31 r 1982 Equal Opportunity
Ert&gt;ptoyer
~ --- - - - -

12 r;

Babystttmg tn my home
Have references
prefer
day •holt Call446 1749

21

Bus•ness
Opportuntty

Ctgarette
Vendtng
Bus• ness Call30.4 773 5651

22

Money lo Loan

REF INANCE or purcha._
your home 30 year ftxed
rate WVa &amp; Ohto Leader
Mortgage 17 E State St ,
Athens, Oh 592 3051
23

Professional
Servtces

Tuntng
&amp;
P ta no
Repair Ca ll Bttl Ward for
appotntment
Ward's
Keyboard, 446 4372

C &amp; L Bookkeepo ng In
co me tax r eturns for tn
dlvtdual s &amp; busmesses
Carol Nea l d46 3862
STARKS Tree &amp; Laym Ser
VICe il ll typeS tnmming &amp;
removal , msured:. 304 576
2010
FIRST
and
seco nd
rnorgages, land contracts
and receivables purchased
614·4.16 4113

sl tUcitiOnSWa"*nfed -

w,nted someone to halt
expenses on return trtp to
MN!)mt , Flortda on Mon
da\' Must be honest and
have r eferences 446 8669

Wan ted an elderl y lady to

stay or ltve m to take care
ot an elderly lady Call 446
4537

Have vacancy tor elderl y
person Room and board
reso nab le
anb laund ry
992·6022
Nursmg car e f or elder ly tn

thetr home Good reteren
ces 992 2055

- - ---- ----

-

lJ ~----lns~~t1c!_ __
SAN DY A ND BEAVER In
sur:ance Co has off ered
seevtces for ftre Insurance
co~terage 1n

Ga I Ita County
f or' alm ost
a ce ntu ry
Farm, hom e and persona l

property coverages
av:a llable

to

meet

a re
10

dtvtdu al needs
Contact
Fdster Lew ts agent Phone
379 3318

-15r•-------·-- -------Schools lnstructton

- ~ - ------

I&lt; i rate the ulttmate tn se lf
defence all pnvate lessons
Wn, women, &amp; children
lnstructton thru bla ck belt
A(M avaolable Karate
urttform s pu c hmg a nd
kl!:kmg bags and pro tec
tl ~e
equtpm ent
J erry
Lowery
&amp; Associates
K'a r a te
S tudto
143
BUrlin gton Rd , Jackson
Oh Call286 3074

- ----------Wanted ~PL_-

1!;_

Houseclean tng
Od27

Call

36 7

- ---------

l.linestone tor dnveways
wo) l•pread Call379 2642
Expert l awn m ow rn g ser
v t ~e. dependable tow ra te
free esttma tes Call 245

SOH
- ~ ~-

-----

Spectal made weddmgs &amp;
arintversary cakes, at
r el!sona b le pnces Ca ll 388
B482

O!?D oob• 30d 675 515 1
AfJY odd oob
ge neral
house
H ave expe nence
wt1h el ec tn c plumbt ng
carpentry 304 675 5918 or
676 3770
POLY M ER coat on g on
plaque.mou n t any shape
arid stze of poster ptcture
el&lt; 304 675 591B

31

- -----~-- -

Homes tor Sale

1972 Concord Mobtle Home,
12x65 Ca ll 446 7015 alter
5 lOp m
Beautiful brtck &amp; frame. J
bedroom home w/scentc
vtew
wood burntng
ftreplace f ormal dtnmg ,
central ai r w/hea 1 pump
Lanscaped
1 acre tot
w/fenced 1n back yard,
$45 900
11 % tonancong,
sm all down pay m ent Call
446 3766
6 rm
house attached
ga rage, good condt tt on 345
East Broadway (Rt 35)
Jackso n
Prtc e o nl y
$12000 2866305
House fo r sale tn Ga lltpolt s
nea r Holzer. c tty schools, J
bdr
a ll
brtck
10%
assum ab l e tn te r est on
$53 000 Call 446 7080 or 675
2990
2 bedroo m cottage on Blue
L ake south ot Galltpolts
tu st off of Raccoon Creek
$175 per mo $175 depos1t
Call286 4346
NICE well kept hom e wrth
fu l l base m ent on 1 2 ac r es
tn rural setting 5 mt n
from Ga llt polts Incl udes 2
story garage $39 000 Call
446 8285

--- 31
Homes for Sale

HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad
dttton 3 bedroom , t amtiY
room WI th fn eplace cen
frat a1r ba sement 30A 675
1542

--...-----~

2 bedroom, ch ild excepted,
no pet. or drunks, utilities
paid, John Sheets 3 and o;,
miles south
Sr 7

TWO
bed room, un
furntshed One bedroom ei
lociency lOA 615 2122

44

1-----------,------~---~
32

1975 Ro•ewood 12x65, ex
cellent cond central air
awntng Oi!IS heat. Set up on
a tot on Cheshore Cat I 304
B82 2994 alter 6

2 bedroom house for rent
Comp letely furnt shed wath
atr cond all utihttes patd
$350 month plus depo.,t on
Racone 949 2801

SEVE N
room
house.
ut thty 150x85 lot J,4 mtle
trom Shadle Brodge, Rt 35,
$37 000 304 675 1325

12 X 60 tr culer
excellent
condotoon Call 446 1552
Furntshed alf condtt1oned
underptnnlng set up on lot
tn Mtddteport

6 room house tn Mid
d l epo rt
total
atr
condtttontng Deposrt and
references requtred 992
2676

Mob1le Homes
tor Sale

T RIS TATE
MOBILE
HOME S Gallopol" Proce
r educed
used mobile
homes CALLA46 7572
CLEAN USE D MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL'S
QUA L ITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS RT
35 PHON E 446 3860
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
m obtle home Set up with 2
or 4 lots. gas heat. rural
water close to town, flnan
ctng avatlable Phone 446
1294
1979 Won•or l4x70 3 bdr,
mt crowa\/ e stero, wood
floor m k•tchen full bav
wtndow, turn 1ture $14,995
Call446 3547
1970 m obt le home Elcona
wtth ex pando La rge lot m
M er cerville Call 446 0827
after 5
House tra der on lot Wtll
sale on land contrac t Call

446 BOI2 between 6 &amp; 7
19Bl 14)(]0 Shannon All
elec trtc . 3 bedrooms Call
alter 4 30PM Weekday•
and al l day Sat 8t Sun 4.4.6
4665

Proces
Ever
On

New 14'Wide

MOBILE
HOMES
From

$9,995 00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
Wrth 2 Locations
Rl 93 North
Jackson, Oh•o
28&amp;-3752
or
Corner 2nd &amp; Vaand
Pt Pleasant W Va
675 4424

MoblteHomes
tor Sate

---;------1975 M em ory 12 x60 un
derptnntn g and 2 porches
742 2156
1976 2 bedroom Htllcrest
mobtle hom e
Down
payment
assum e l oan
payment 992 3917
12X60 2 bedroom trader
U nderptnnmg and block
$4000 992 6711

Che•ter
14X70 19BO 3
bedroom mob1le home on 2
acres $21 .000 9B5 4395
Deluxe 14X70 Holly Park
excellent cond , J bd room
tully furntshed 2 por ch s
underpinni ng out butldtng
w tth or. wtthout land Close
to Mine no I 742 3008
anvtime

- 4-.,._. - -- - - - - - USED MOBILE
576 2111

HOM E

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Ltcensed &amp; tn su r ed Call
3(1.4 576 2711
For •a le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailers, furn tshed, wtth
aor Call 30A 773 5651
19BI ALL ELECTRIC 12
W I DE
2 BEDROOM
mobJie home setttng on lot,
ready to move mto $8995
10% down, BANK FINAN
AVAILABLE. 304
576 2711
14' WIDE
3 bedroom
mobile home. $8995 All
State Modular Homes, 304
576 2711
1973 GRANDVIL LE 14x70
b~droom mobtle hom e
Must be moved phone 304
BB2 2B20

3

1972 HANNA Ltne Trail er
21 foot self contatned tan
dem axle $2750 ca ll 304
B82 2767 alter 4 p m

6663

4'

Apartment
tor Rent

Nlc eapartment unfurn

-

----- -~- ---

256-1579
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2 lots tn M emory Gardens,
S300 Call 4.16 1391
JS

Lots &amp; Ac:reage

For sale 5 acre• Qn Hockory
Cl)apel Rd, le" than one
n•lle• otf Rt 2 Call 304 615
2313 alter 5
TWO acre l ots 150 ft road
frontage
Cttv
water.
behond 84 Lumber, call304
675 6873, 675 361B

Houses tor Rent

Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land Contract in town, or
country
Call
Strout
Realty, 446 0008

Clipper Milt 3 bdr home
Call446 1780

West Des Mo1nes. Iowa

5 rooiT} hou'" with bath
L.arge lot near Racine 992
5858

4 bedroom, central air and
heat, city water, ftreptace,
unfurnished except kot
chen
1300 month ptus
utlhlles
Reference and
deposit
required
tn
Racine 941 2293

.'

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment tor rent Call
4.160390
_ _ __ __
3 room unfurntshed apart
ment adults only, no pets,
ut111t1es pard Call446 3437
2 bedroom unfurniShed
apartment tn Crown C1tv
Call 256 6520

APARTMENTS
I
bedroom, rent starts at
$152 per mo &amp; 2 bedroom
•tart• at $188 per mo
Spectal rates for Senter
Cotozen. Call 4.16 2745
Furntshed upstatrs aprt, 4
rms &amp; bath Clean, no pets,
adults, dep 8t ref req Call
4.16 1519

2 &amp; 3 bedroom apartments
tor lease or sell '2 bedroom
house 3 bedroom hou'" A c
and pool Call 304 675 51Q.4
or675 72B4
2 car deluxe garage apart
Central atr 1 bedroom &amp;
utthtv rm , no pets. lst
Ave Gattopol" Call 256
6506 or 304 523 21 B7

Ma
Space for Rent

Offtce space homes and
apartments for rent Call
Clealand Realty 992 2259

ground floor tn town Qu1et
neoghborhood. A rms &amp;
bath, all carpeted, ha•
range &amp; refrigerator Call
Earl Tope at 446 0690
business hours and 446-0161
evenings a nd Sun

PASTURE tor rent
6755110

3

Would ltke to rent or buy
garage and lot m Mtd
dleport. Pomerov or Mason
area Call773 5905

bedroom
unfurntshed
apartment
543&lt;1 or
5914 or 3Q.4 B82 2566

m

m

- -- -- - - - -

47

wanted to Rent

I bedroom turnoshed apt
992 5A34 992 5914 Of' 304 882
2566
st
Unfurntshed 5 room Apt
985 3350 or 985 3351
Ntce 1 bedroom apt tn Mt d
dleport, close to school
Uttlthes furntshed $235
month m 3190

APARTMENTS, mobi le
hom es,
hous es,
P1
Pleasant and Galltpoits
614 446 B221 or 614 245 94SA
For rent small furnrshed
apt • unturnt shed a pt
Reference• Call675 1365
NE W Haven one bedroom
apartment, furntshed &amp;
uttltttes patd
$225 00
adults only A cross from
SOlo 614 446 7526
NEW Haven two bedroom
apartment, furnt shed &amp;
utolotoe• paod
$250 00
adult• only 614 4467526
Across from Solo

--- -- ---45
Furn i shed Rooms
-- ----------

SLEEPING ROOMS and
ltghf housekee pmg apt
Park Central Hote l

~ --_J pa_Ee

tor Rent __

Large tretler lot on Ad
d"on Bulavotte Rd Call
446 4265 or 4.16 4736

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33 North ot
Pomeroy Large lots Call
99l7479

__ _

for~ent

Hou sehold Goods

GOO D
U SED"
AP
PLIANCES
wa•he" ,
drvers
refr1gera tor s.
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pltances. Upper R tv ~r Rd
bestde Stone Crest M otel
446 7398
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofa, chatr rocker ot
loman 3 I able• $500 Sofa
cha1r and loveseat $275
Sofas and cha1rs pnced
trom $285 to $795 Table•
SJB and up to $109 Hode a
bed• $340 , queen • •ze, S380
Recli ners, 5175 to S295
Lamp• from SIB to $65 5
pc d1nettes from $79 , to
$3B5 7 pc, SIB9 and up
Wood table wtth 4 c ha~r s
$219 up to $495 De•k S110
Hutches, $300 and S375 ,
maple or pt ne ftn1 sh
Bedroom su ttes
Bassett
Cher ry $795
Bunk bed
co mplete wtth mattresses,
S250 and up to $350 Cap
tatn' s beds, $275 complete
Baby beds $99 Mattres.es
or box spnngs full or twtn,
SSB , form $68 and $7B
Queen sets $195 4 dr
chests $42 Bed frames,
$20 and $25 10 gun Gun
ca b1nets
$350
d 1nette
chatrs $20 and $25 Gas or
electric ranges $295 Or
thoped1C super ftrm $95,
baby matre.ses $25 &amp; $35
bed tr ames $20 S25 &amp; S30
Used Furntture bookcase,
5 pc dmett set 3 L 1vmg
room su1te Ranges and
TV 's 3 miles out Bulav1lle
Rd Open 9am to 7pm Mon
thru Fro 9am to 5pm Sat
446 0322

Re•l Eatate - Oener11

__ _

2 mobtle hom es for rent 2
bdr eac h, tully furntshed,
arr cond adults only Call
446 4110
For r ent 2 bdr house
tr atl er Call446 1052 after 5
wk days anytt me wee ken
ds
Tratler for r ent corner of
Chatham &amp; Burger Ave
Ga ll1pol ts Call 446 07.56 or
446 4225

Ohoo-Pomt Plea

5} =~ H ousehotd Goods
Coffee table &amp; end tab le•
Must see to apprectate
rea•onalbe Call4.16 3937

304

- - -- - --- Mobtle
- ----- ---Homes

42

STROUT. REALTV Inc.
v{ll~~

Copper tone kttchen ap
Pl 1ances s td e by si de
refrtgerator,. butlt 1n gas
ov.en, gas cook top and 36
1n hood sofa and chatr
Cal l 4.16 1171 , corbin &amp;
Snyder Furntture

RAY USED FURNITURE
COUCh SJ5, Woodburner $85,
oak l tbrar y tab(e 545, chest
ot drawer&gt; S55, cottee table
S10, automa ttc washer$100
baosanette Sl2, de•k &amp;
ch atr S25, oak mantel $100
Call367 0637
G E
16 lb
capa.,ty
wa•her, 2 •P&lt;l , $100 G E 3
temp dryer electrtc $100
Call256 1207
For sale 12 cu ft manual
defrost refngerator, 2 yr
Old Call3677637
So ltd cedar chest &amp; war
drobe exc cond Call 675
1176 after 5PM
For sale 19 cu ft gold Ken
more refr toerator
frost
f r~ automat1c tee m aker
ex tended warranty , gOOd
thru Sept 19B3 less than 2
yearo old, S300 Call 675
3769
LIVING room SUtte, 4 odd
chatrs, good condttton, call
304 675 2310 day, 675 4076
even tngs
FOUR ptece old rose lt v tn g
roo m sutte tn good con
do l oon $75 00 phone 304
675 5297 alter 3 00

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Otove St
Galltpolts New sofa beds
S250, used sota beds $100
recliners $80, bunk beds
$100, bunk1e mattresses
S40. maple rocker&gt; $49
maple donett seto from Sl25
to $175 bedroom su ttes
$150 3 pc hvtng room
suot"' $199, 2 pc loving
room suttes S140 love seats
$70, owl lamps $25 rtnger
washers
S75
dry ers
several
r efrr gerators
utaltty
ca b t n e t s
mrc hantc's tools
beds
SILVer stone TV ,s wood
burner s stero s and lots
more Open lOam to 5pm
446 3159

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

I

HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.

A LOT FOR YOUR MONEY - That •
what you get wtth th1s like new bnck
rancher 3 BR's, 1'h baths. t6x27 famtiY
rm w 1th heatatator ftrepla ce 14x20 l. R
Wtth WB stove, equrpped k1tchen
double garage w1th auto opener cent
atr ce nt vacuum tar~e fla11ot &amp; much
more Located 1n Rodney Call Ranny
Blackburn for a personal apotntment

992 2259
NEW LISTING - MIDO LE PORT
A
b ea utifUl 3 bedroom
modular home 2 baths
garden tub WBFP cen

START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pasture farm, mostly rot11ng &amp; htl
tv grassland wtth appro)( 10 A wooded
tots of sprtngs 1'12 story home has 4
rms &amp; bath, large barn tobacco base
fronts on 3 roads tn Walnut Townsht p

NEAR EWING TON - 141 acres Ieveii!.
rolling land, lots of frontaqe on Ra ccoon
Creek some mature ttmber r ep orted
6,000 young blac k walnut trees aPProx
6 yrs old Asktng $63,000 partt al t1nan
ctng avatlabte

A

2 large dehumtdfters, $85
each Call446 3912
For sale Hosp1 ta1 beds and
halt beds Ca ll 4.16 1052 af
ter 5 wk days anyt1me
weekends
Cut glass basket, baby bed
good as new large ceramtc
tamp, &amp; old ptcture Call
446 78d2
Excelstor Otl Co 636 E
Matn Sf , Pomeroy, Ohto
992 2205
Chma Cabtnet, new Qu i lts
9927115
Fash10n Mate sew tng
machtne wtth ca bm et Ex
ce llent cond Sl60 9B5 3537

USED Sears bu tlt tn
I ~rep lac•
SIOO
304 675
2533
46 FORD truck, 16 It •ko

boat 304 675 1751
CHROME cratt table &amp; 6
swtvel chatr s t tlt t rat ler 16
tt long 22 000 BTU air con
dttioner AC
etectrtc
welder &amp; ace tyl ene &amp;
tanks anttque ' mammys
bench ' call after 5, 614
367-0160

IN GOOD SHAPE

614-"2-2112
INT I HP
RIOIHGMOWER

Ptasttc Sept•c Ta nks State
and countv approved 1 000
gaJ tank proce $340 Other
s1zes tn stock, haul tn your
plok up truck Ca ll 614 2B6
5930 Jackson Oh RON
EIIANS ENTERPRISES

- L --- - -- ---

11 HP TRACTOR
WITH MOW ER

TURf: FLITE 1 HP
REAR EN G INE
RIOIHGMOW E R

$495

TWO month old goats, $25
Yeertlng buck Reqlstered
American Atpone, S50 304
675 2283

ORA GO NWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow puppoes
C FA
Htmalayan, Perstan and
Stamese kittens
New
Soame'" kitten• Call 446
JB«otter4p m
HI L LCREST KENNEL
Boardtng all breeds, clean
mdoor outdoor faCihttes
Al.a AKC Reg Dober
mans Cat1446 71..c9:..
5 c____
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Bollrdtng and groomtng
Engltsh Cocker Spantels
AKC
setters
Ca II 388 Gordo"
9790

-~-­
Good clean horses for sale

e roto rr
OFFICE 14'J JOOJ

ir5

.Jiii
~~c~-g~~""§"~~~§::=~==-:::;;;~;~~~;~
IUltit{1

-

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

Call388 8623

&amp;

POOD LE GROOMING
Coli Judy Taylor at 367
7220

''

~

'

,.,

tl, esraell

Farm Equipment

Young Am azon Parrots &amp;
Mynah bord• Call286 1429

New &amp; U•ed T roy buolt
toilers Bulk garden seed
Swtsher t mplement, 'nc ,
Galllpol,. Call446 0475

For Sale SIOO 6 month old
AKC regtstered Bassett
Hound puppy House broke
and good wtth ch1ldren
Call 9923005 or 9926167
He's so ugly he's cute

1 12' John Deere wheel
dtsc 1 set of John Deere 4
bOttom 16 .. m l mount
plows, 1 H i llsboro tn axle
goose neck 28' trailer Call
614 256 6534

For adoption
5 mtxed
breed pupptes dtfferent
co lors 8 week• old 992
6505 Metgs Co Humane
Soctetv

8N Ford t ra ctor wr1h loader
Sl.SOO Power sprayer trac
tor dnve suttable for or
chard or bush spray SSOO
Call otter 5 614 286 2391

57

Four year old Appaloosa
mare &amp; western saddle a
good rtdtng horse Call 2.56
1322 alter 5 30PM

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT 446 1615
Lono tractors
Vermeer
baler. &amp; hay equipment,
bale movers
tobac co
spravers
rotarv ttller.
&lt;fi•c, post digger &amp; driver,
seeders
rotary cutters,
blades, wagons &amp; gat~s
And '"e us to get your parts
&amp; complete service
USE D EQUIPMENT IH
hydro 70, MF 245, 601 lord.
hayblnd, rakes, toba cco
setters discs culttvators,
plows, manure spreaders.
bushhog &amp; cornptanter

WANTED TO TRADEIO
ft truck camper for 8 ft
truck ca mper 304 576 2585

Farm tractor for sale
Massoe Fergu.an 05 Oak
Hill Oh 614 682 7549

MUSICal
Instruments

Good used Spinet Piano
Call between 9 30 &amp; 5 992
2054 alter 5 992 5301
Electrtc guttar case, amp
&amp; •peaker.
Cal l 304 458

1775

POMEROY
LANDMARK
USED MOWERS

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5 YR SOLO SPL IT LEVELFEATURES 4
OR 5 BRS 3 BATHS, 30 FT LR, 2 FAMILY RMS , 2 WOOOBURNING
FIREPLACES, LARGE KITCHEN AND OINING AREA, 2 CAR GARAGE
ONE OF THE COUNTY'S NICEST POOLS (20xSO} AND A TRUL Y
PROFESSIONAL, LANDSCAPED LOT LOCATED ON DEBBY ORIVE
OWNER SAYS SELL
SO CALl RANNY BLACKBURN FOR A PER SONAL
SHOWING YOU'LL BE PLEASED YOU DID
LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN
CHER plus 7B ACRES of land on
Cheshtre Townshtp offers lots of good
ltvrno for vour growtng tamtiV Home 1s
tUS1 ltke new w1th 1438 sq ft of il vmg
area plus an attached garage '2
spacious BR '•· 2 baths Bx27 LR 10x24
kttchen wtth refng , d1sp , ow double
oven &amp; range washer &amp; drver stavs '"
laundry Land IS mostly rollrng pasture
land wtth appro• 25 acres wOOded Call
for appotntment
GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fran
tage on State Route 588 Fa1rtretd Cen
tenary Road &amp; vance Farrfteld Rd e)(
cellen1 for farmmg or development
Older 5 rm &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
stlo mcluded Owners w tll constder
selling smaller tra cts of short term
ftnanctng Call for more mformahon
COUNTRY, YET CONVENIENT Great tamolv home woth 3 BR, 2 bath•
15x27 LR w oth gas /oreptace, large
modern kttchen wtth range , self
cleantng oven OW and d1sp laundry
rm wtth washer and drver, part bl!se
ment, ll.lrQe covered pat1o, garage and
over 6 acres ot land at ! he edge of town
GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/1,
toceted •outh ot Mercerville Approx 20
A ttllabte, balance woods. tab base
Owners wtll help finance

$200 PER ACRE - Greentoetd Town
Shtp, 84 acres M L • appro• 10 A bot

.....

tom, 35 A wooded, 35 A •tropped •matt
creek, excellent hunti ng
TOTAL
PRICE$16,800
~

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 176
acres m/ 1 vaca nt l and f r onts on lht
coon Creek &amp; the To m Glen Rd Ap~tox
Jl to liable &amp; th e ba lance wooded under
$400 per acre

S9

--

850
SJ95
1

----

-~- -

For Sale or Trade

·- -----

_,

THE SETTING IS SUPERS Beautotull 8 acre wooded lot on the 0 J
Whole Rd 311 It trontag•, 12x6S 2 BR •
mob1le home w1th expando Priced to
sett atsl2 900

2971
John deere .4 row corn pian
ter, SA50 John Deere 14 T
hay bater S500 Call 256

6205

John Deere 4010 A 1 con
d ltoon 985 3537 or 985 4131
alter 6
310 Case Dozer Diesel
GOOd cond 992 5170

--- -·----

For sale 2 used rea r Trac
tor tores soze IB 4X34 good
years 949 2574

LIFE
INSURANC E
428 Second Ave
Call44' OS52 Anvt•,.,e

BMR J" - GREAT LOCATION! - Two storv
home presently betng used as a duplex, could be
easily c onverted to stngle famtiV Cho•ce 1ocat1on
near Washtngton School Call for details•

544 THIRD AVE
You don't want to spend !Ots on " fix1ng' ? Then thtS
lovely older home Is tor you Complete new kolchen
&amp; eat area Formal dining &amp; living room Family
room with woodburner, 3 bedrOOIJlS new vtnyl
sidtnQ &amp; storm wtndows Completely msulated Full
basement S•nole car garaoe

SHAPE!
Just a little prettier than so many Modern 3 4
bedroom brock home Formal loving &amp; dining room,
Large kitchen Ful l basement Large 2 car gera~
Work shop &amp; barn Sittmg on 58 acres, more Of" l"s
of la ndscaped grounds Sprong w ilt be breathless
here 1 owner will help finance, 10% tnt Rate

BMR 391 ·- REDIJCEDt - Owner wants It .old
now ' Mob1le home located on rtver front lot

t

: TWENTY-SEVEN ACRES - M a.lly level good
t producrng land 3 bedroom home has two sun por
• hes wood and co al burning stove, new furna ce
: ~ath' and water system Alum mum, s•d •no Barn
:l&gt;tus ot}ler o~tbl dg Rural water Located oust ott Rt
•160 SS'A,OOO
HE SMALL FARM you ve always wanted Only B
• 11es from town. Kyger Creek Schools 2 bedroorn
1 vr old furnace 5torm wtndOW$ Barn. other
~wtbtdg Proce SJ2,000

;fame.

* Wlllll T LNdltlltlam, lltaltor, Ph

HomeAU-9539

"PhYIIII LOVt411Y, .._
446-2330
"Joan lono, P - 4u-32t4

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

ATTRACTIVE OLDER
HOM E
Well kept 9 room• 5
b~drooms
On State
H1ghway ,
ap
proximately 1100 sq ft
ltvlng sp ftce Concr ete
block cellar with frame
smoke house Large tool
s hed
lar ge b l ock
workshop w ith '1 cBr
carport wtth concrete
floor Four lot ~ - over 1
c"'cre of lev el l ctnd All
tor only $41,900 oo
1513

own
n•ce
area
one
1 516

MEIGS COUNTY 3 25 ACRES M or~
POND 8 room remodeled country nome beautifully
landscaped, all 3 25 acres mowed Garage with con
crete drlvewav 24'x27' famllv room wl1h fireplace
Large block storage Dulldlng Fr uit trees Been
reduced over S17,000 You must see this countrv
home Phone now for en appointment
N 507

DUTCH COLONIAL
Styte, beauty, charm, comtort - all descr ibes thos
home, 4 BR 211&gt; beths, equ ipped eat on kllc 'en
famltv room with fireplace, formal liv ing and din'
tno room You won't believe th•s hom, unless vou
see It tor yourself Make your appointment tOday to
walk into the entrance of one of the most lovely
homes 1n the are•
, 322
WHAT A llU'I'

2 LOTS GREEN ACRES
LOIU 21. Sidewalk, 75'xi4S'
Lot, 23 Vacant88 frontage by 148 depth priced to
sell
1 334 - 1333
TASTE?
""
citement when you 11p tn the
this luxury
home offers Largit formal livtno room w i th W B
f1replaCe Formal dlntnO room w1th huge bu ilt •n
chtna cab1net 3 modern bedrooms, 2 baths built In
ki1Chen with breakfast bar FamtiV room with
shdmg paho doors leaden~ to a 18x36 pool and patio
gas qr•ll 2 car garage Beautiful decorated home
Gas heat and central atr Professional landscaped

PEACEFUL AREA
A half acre more or tell w ith fru rt trees plus a three
bedroom home, living room kttchen w ith butlt In
cabinets. utility room full basement and garage,
portlallv converted Into a den An unf onlshed room
with • heetolator fireplace NIce fenced In yard
Call for delaols
1 4f2
WOW I
Look what you can get on o land contrect at 9% In
ternt Owner reduced the price $7 900 and Is
anx ious fo, ~ell This three tedr~,m spcttcs::; air
condit ioned nome has J baths l l von g s lo~o ge
bu•fd•ng, heated garage, all furniture tncluded
Everything you need In one purchase In ct tv school
district
N4 1
IACRE28EDRQOMCOTTAGE
Nice comfortable home Wtth n rce lar ge shade tr-ees
toncrete front porch, lots of troll trees !apple,
cherry, plum and peach) , grape erbor . raspberry
vines, IIOOd garden land ell level In Green Twp
Rural water, 2 car garage, tuel oil F A furnace
Basement, barn approx 16'K24' Pr iced In the S20's
14ft
J.ACRES
Within 10 min drive to uown ocwn Ga•liPOtl• City
SChool Svstem Has hookup tor mobile home Ga lllo
Rural Water, electnc and 5eP1tc tank, n ite light on
pole, 200 It frontage on Graham School Rd Tomber
Building soles Call Now
1477

o

see

BULAVILLE ROAD - $125 000 - Pro me buoldong
t
137 acres Frontage on Bulavtlle, Morton
t ~~ s and vale College Road s 60 acres ttllable 15
pasture rest timber Ntce 3 BR ranch home. ea t tn
.. kitchen, storm doors and wtndows Kyger Creek
Schools, 6 miles from CttY

llllll!Nr. - ca-1

Pf'arlv to mo\lc? Wr ¥e '~nt ru st wt1At ynu ,.,., look 1n(j
fnrt Fumtshcd or unturntS ''f'f1 Gr r.AI fnr slilrt 1nq
ut or r r t•rrm,-.nt E)( tr,, r'l ( 4' 1979 mnctN m nhllr
11 f m 1 11 n I'I Pn ff l )' 1~ "''C: r! I( VI li nt With r h ~1 1 n hnk II 1'\
,. ~ L kl nrw Pr (NI n '''r l nw ?0-.
;su

nrnunni•Sh~nbyap~~intm•,nt.

BMR ~09 - OWNER FINANCING - This split
tover home Includes 3 bedrooms. 2 tutl baths, large
den with fireplace, heal pump
tills tully car
pet~d home now L.ocated tn Crown City I

Bri ck and vtnyl srdtnQ make
the extenor of tht s home a breeze 10 ma 1nta ln 3 BR ,
equ 1pped kttchen central a•r cond Atta ched 2 car
garge Natural gas heat City school s S49 900

Craig swenson 1 593 5571
Bill Childs 992-6312

WELL BUILT AND COZY
tn Mint Condition
3 or 4 bedrooms with large clo..ts One bedroom Is
perfect for office or ~ew i ng room Llvmg room
dtnlng room bath and eat In kttch en wtth but It 1~
cabinets Front and back porches full bo .. ment
and garage with 3.4 acre more or less, In Ct1Y
Schools Priced In the mid .00 s Cat I today for
details on the charrnlng hOme
N 519

BMR 404- LOW 30 s - Coty schools, newly car
peted a nd patnted Th• s 3 BR home ts a great buy on
tOday 's market

eASY CAR E ranch

R.C.S. REAL ESTATE CO.

NICE -C LEAN
6 room house bath c~llar, 2 stora ge butldtn~s
water system, n1ce countrv atmosphere
ground lots of shrubbery large lev el garden
and pri ced only $29 900 You must see thts
Phone

BMR 402F - CHECK ON THIS ONE - 37 acre•
woth 1401 tb toba cco base 30x30 barn Coli' Jdoyl

GOOD TIMES - Country kotchen
o
• fam1ly room 1S perfec t for tnformal
1 ng,
' fam•IY fun Four large bedrooms tn c tudlng a master
sutte w1th a walk in closet and pnv ate bath, FamilY
bath Formal dtntng 2 car a tta ched garage 11112
acres very pnvate loca t ion near R 10 Grande
$79,500 Assumable mortgage

IF HUNTING &amp; MINERALS IS YOUR THING we
also have a 208 acre farm with owner tlnonc lng No
aulldlniiJ, lust tots of animals, woods &amp; provacy
This farm hes an oil &amp; ges lease until June '82 The
rights ot rne lease will transfer to the new owner
PRICED AT LESS THAN 1400 00 PER ACRE Make
us an offer

WHATAVIEW - WHATA HOME
Brand new 3 bedrooms, nice stze 2 baths In
suta1ed ctoors thermopane wtndows Dtshwasher
garbage disposal Large famrly room approx
12'x20' Finished 2 Cl!r garage 1600 sq ft plus ltv
lng space Just listed See ot now
;s2o

BMR 139 - OWNER FINANCING! Two story home
on Second Ave, 3 or 4 bedrooms REDUCED' Bet
1er~ee thts one

UL LINES• And tns1de some genutne
Ltke a 14 x24 ltvtng room Wtth tradlttonal
ir~~~fo~i~,, :enormous master su tte For easy 11vmg
k1tchen w1th tot~of counter space butlt
1n
m oven statnless stee l counter top rang e and dtsh
• washer J b at hs Cen a•r '2 car attached garage
"' plus 24 x26 stora ge butldtng Shown by appotntment
: only 596 000 00
: viSUALLY EXCITING - A ftreplace open1 ng tnfo
hvtng and d tnlng rooms guara ntees a cozy at
FamtiV room wtth woodburner that
make you took forward to wtnter 4 bedrooms.
baths Basement wtth r-eams of storage 2 car
attact1ed garage $87 000 A••umable mortgage

REAL ESTATE
MEIGS GREEN- Farming or Mlnerets - lake ad
vantage of bOth Wllh thiS ISO ~ere farm In Meogs Co
Approximately 45 to 50 acres to liable ground with
balance In posture lwoods An older 2 story 4
bedroom tarrn house with garage, barn &amp; 9 other
OUtbUildings Every •dlacent farm has an oi l and/ or
gas well This farm has all mineral &amp; all gas nghts 1
whoch witt transfer to the tucky new owner This
larrn Is priced to sell, owner lsanxlous

FIND l'OUR ROOTS
(Extra Lot Avolloblo)
The perfect ell br ic k
home Is r ight here In
Northup and teatures J
bedrooms, l'h baths
spactous living room
din ing area, cheery kit
chen :2 car garage
patio plus much more
Celt now and tel us
make vour drenm!o
come tru e
;I S12

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

BMR 412 - NEW LISTING - Older hOme loceted on
Thurman Contains 7 rooms and bath, 2 ftreplaces,
professtonalty Installed wood burner forced air fuel
furnace Outstde fea1ures a garaoe and a screened,
summer kttchen With bUilt 1n grill Call for ap
potntment

jJ

GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE - fJI tl
front on State Route 55.4 cornttr lot
over 3100 sq ft 5 bays presently u sed
tor auto, tractor &amp; tarm e&lt;;~lllpment
repatrs partial f1nanctng avatilble

Stlhl 032 AV, chain 18W,
less 15 hours, case &amp; ac
cessorles. S325 Call 446

______

BMR 411- NEW
rptles from ctty Owner
Situated on large flat tot, vonYI
heat Carport wtth storage area

RODNEY CORA ROAD - Approx
acres woodland, located 3 m1 \ fr O~
Rodney , countv water rwa• ttttte
$12,000

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Reslrlt/id
bU!Idtng lot 1 22 acre ntce wood•d Wt
t1ng, c tty schools $5 900

61__ -'F
'-'a"'r'-'m,_,E3q!!'ul._.p'!!m'!!e!!!n'!.t_

NEW LISTING --" Noce
rwo story nome, A
bedroom•. bath
par
ttallyo forntshed
Ex
cellent corner lot near
grade school in M od
dleport $16,000 00
BROADWAY ST
RACINE - Large twO
story
home
with
beautiful woodwork
Four bedrooms, lovong
room , famlty room, rec
rOQm modern kitchen,
garage
and
tu ( l
basement
Room for
garde('l on the level
119 xi2A' lot Must see to
apprecoate S32,500 oo
CORNER LOT - Mid
dleport, spacious thr~
be-droom hOme, l l vtng,
fam il y
and
dmmg
rooms, sunny kitchen
tull bo .. rnenr Ideal f~r
rettred couple
L..ot
50 x60 One car gerage
ACREAGE
Two
acres and beautiful ran
ch stvle home with ap
prox 1267 sq II llvong
w /s toraoe .
utilitY
build ing SA5,000 00
Velma Nlc•nsky. Assoc
742 3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
742 3171

Broker Aucttonee.r

T IMBER &amp; pulp wood ap
proximately 75 acres
phone 304 576 2597

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Stvlosh 2 •tbr~
home was bu11t •n 1894 and must be sMh
to appreciate Large open foyel" Af'ltt
statrway, LR dtntng r m par lor cdlit\
pletely equopped moder n k otchen, ~
BRs 2112 baths new Sl dtng ga ra ff,
near schools shopptng etc

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABl l i 2Mb down - Camp• otes on t he W•tht
Nat tonal Forest 5 to 8 acre tr acts -NW"CII
ed land, good huntmg Prrces sfaff •t
$3,500

IIMI E""'la - Gatwot
2 Reg Angus bulls I yr
old 3 9 ma.
bulls 3
Heifers
Call Clerence
Layne, 256 6210

LUMBER
l"x6"
and
1"x8"x6' thru 16' Poplar
sheathtng, atr drted Mtll
Wood Inc Yard near tn
l er.ectlon US 33 and WV 2
304 273 2522 M F B 4 30,
Saturday 8 1

CALL

OLO TIMER lookmg tor a famtly
acres cl ear, barn, outbutldtngs 1ob
base Perry TWJ&gt; commeret al ttm ber
r eported Mkong $43 500

BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx 5117 acres loca ted on the
Graham School Rd co water, over 3()_9:
ft rd frontage Green Grade School &amp;
Gal ita Acad emy Htgh School $10 900

REALTORS
Henry E Cleland, Jr ,
GRt
992 6191
Jean Trussell 9~9 2UO
Dottle Turner 997-5692
Ollrce
992 2259

5x8 uttlt ty trailer, sa nd
dunebuggy, and 3 pc
bedroom su tte Call 446
4426

W 1/a.

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLVlE"'

NADAY
REALTY

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 58B
- - Remod eled home tncludes 6 rm s ,
and bath
c arport
stove ref n g
dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land and
prtced for qutek sale

bUilt tn range double
ove ns
Excellent
loca ttan wtth n•ce lot
$45 000
PRICE REOUCEDt On
lh" 2 3 bedroom home
tn Sy racuse New car
p et1n g
st or m s
tn
s ulat1on
Gas heat.
remodeled bath Plus
low interest aSsumable
loan 1 Just $'25,000
POMEROY A 2
bedroom home forced
atr gas heat, c arpet,
pat io,
garge
tn
basem ent Large double
lot pnce reduced to
$20 BOO
TRAILER
OR
BUILDING LOTS RACINE Several 1
acre
lots
Utll•ttes
avarlable Ask mg $6,500
an acre for tots w1th
road frontage
A GRACIOUS HOME IN
POMEROY
4
bedrooms. hardwood
f loors, oas forced atr
heat, fi re place, front stt
tlng porch A good pnce
$29 900
NEW LISTING IN
SYRACUSE - Ntcecor
ner lot with llh story
frame home that has 3
bedrooms famtiV room,
utrltty r-oom, workshop
&amp; go age
Lots ot
flowers, shrubs &amp; trees
Present loan can be
as.umed S35 000

Bunk be~ complete tul
stze bed wtthout head
board, 2 rockmg chatrs
black naugahyde rocker
recliner &amp; other furn1ture
2 20 tn b1cycles and a large
Schetterla plant Call 245
9132

::_

matertals block
bnck sewer ptpes, windows lintels, etc Claude
Wrnters. Rto Grande. 0
Call 245 5121

Reel E1t1te - General

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beel hay &amp;
gratn farm 80 acres m/1 approx 35 A
good cropland 10 A woods bal ance
pasture good fences 9 rm / bath, f1ome
was butlt tn 1872 &amp; has been part1 ally
remodeled 50)(50 ca ttl e barn wtth con
large sti O •Wtth auto
cr ete fl oor
unloader, severa l sheds, large pond,
spnngs sta nd1ng crops go to new
owner
NEAR CADMUS - Forty acre• ap
pro x lh t1llable and 'h woods old 2
story farm hom e tn need of repa1rs,
barn sheds fronts on 141 Owner t1nan
cing avatlable at 10%

~~~~~r a•;cr:~~~~tc ;,~~~·

Ant1que c ha ir for ltvtng
room. needs reupholstered
S20 Call446 7762

- - - -Merchand1ce
----_

TWO bedroom furntshed
12x65 all electrtc Glen
wood. WV $200 monthly
plus electroc 304 576 9073
or 576 2441

TWO or 3 bedroom, fur
ntshed and unfurntshed
Also 1 bedroom apart
ment 304 675 1371 and 675
3812

s}_:i!uild lng supptles
For Sale Beauttful floor
model console stero, AM
FM 8 track &amp; record
player. $300 00 Call 371
2314

5~ 1SC

2 bedroorn mobtle home 2
mtles from Holzer , ntce
loca tton Dep &amp; ref req
adults only Catt 446 4344

POMEROY,O

House 3 bdr tn Rodnev
Vollage II S200 mo Call
446 4416 after 7PM

PHONE446-7699

For Rent Unfurntshed 3 or
A bedroom 2618 Madtson
Ave PI Pleasant, WVa
Large garden &amp; yard Pav
own uttllt1es , $225 per mo ,
SlOO depostt, 1 year lease.
r efer ence• 304 B63 5995 No
collect calls

I

Farm 76 acr es
Good
nouse, barn, work shop
small chtcken house 1 mtle
w est of Langsv1lle on Sr
124 742 2860 alter 4 p m

41

LEADINGHAM AGENCY

In Pomeroy n1ce 5 room
hom e,
stove
and
refrt ge rator
provtded
Available Apnl 2 Adults
only no pet • SIB5 per
m onth plus uttl tt tes and
Phone
securtty depostt
992 5292

SMALL FARM FOR SALE
A nt ce 4 bedroom home
wtth 8 acres of pasture gar
den space barn mce out
buddtngs Locat ed one mtle
trom Slat e Rl 7 Call 256

s18,000

INSURANCE
COMPANY

Pomeroy
2 bedroom,
newly patnted and car
peted Adults preferred No
p et s
References and
depos1 t req utred 992 3054

Farms for Sale

33

FARM FOR SALE

We tnsure only nondrinkers. Check the extra
benefits we offer on all
your insurance needs.

Houses•for Rent

41

-~---

26 acre fa rm , hou se,
barn
other
out
butldtngs tobacco base

NON-DRINKING
MAKES CiOOD
SENSE

44

Apartments 675 554S

OWNER out ot state 1!.
mu•t •ell th ,. older • lyle all
bnck 3 bedr oom hom e, 1112
baths
full basement,
double car garage Extra
halt acre lot
Quick
Possesston Call eventngs
304 675 3431 Day 615 3030

32

Mtddleport,

In Pomeroy, ntce 5 room
home
stove
and
refrtoerator
provtded
Avaotabte Aprot 2 Adults
only, no pets $185 per
month plus utthf•es and
secupty deposol 992 5292

THREE bed r oom home, 5
acres 9 mtles from town
Phone after 6 00 p m 304
675 7198

NOTICE
Lowest

3 bedroom fa mt ly room 2
car garage new fur nace
centra l a•r double lot 949
2337

2 bdr trailer furntshed.
adults only , Brown Tratler
Park,m 3324

NEW INCOME LIMITS II
you earn between $9000 to
SIS 000 a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobtle home)
tqr •• lottie as $135 a mo~th
No down payment Catl992
7034

For sal e by owner a 3 bdr
house wtth a garden spo t 3
miles from Mercerv 111 e
Oh $26,500 Call256 6040

2 bedroom large tot 10
Sy ra cu se
Will constder
land contract Call 992 7896
after 6

Eureka, 1 bedroom , river
front tot, adults ref &amp; dep
SIOOpermo Ca11&amp;432644 '

House for sale '" town
Pr tced on •nspectton J or .t
bdr FR. 2 baths Call 446
1223

TWO homes. w.. acres.
land contract by owners,
Hartford water &amp; sewer,
household goods and an
toques 304 882 2965

Mar 28, 1

_ __,t or Ren,~'--~

Vmton Bndge, gotng West
on 325 For sale or trade for
smaller place clo~r to
town No phone

1972 Indy Mobtle Home$600
down tak e over pay m ents
$124 per
mo
balance
$3,400 Call 388 B747

3 bedroom 2 acres har
dwood floor s la rge gara ge
2 bedroom renta I Make me
an off er .n Mason John
Shee ts, Ja nd lf2 mttes South
Middleport Sr 1

They'll Do It Every Ttme

8 rm &amp; bath on 30 acres
more or less 500 ft ff"Om

5 room house wtth la rge
yard and 2 n1ce garden
spots wtth garage and out
butldtng All for $11 500
Call1614 l 367 0619

2ND AVE.

w.
---- --42
Mobile Homes

p

Page-D-6-The Sunda Tomes-Sentonel

BMR 389 - Thts f tne home has 4 bedrooms and Is
loca ted close to town You woll hOve a large tot with
a country atmosphere ar~ d have all the city con
ventences Call now!
BMR 391 - GET REAQY FOR SUMMER I Owner
tran•terred and must '"II thos 3 BR ranch Close to
town Includes deluxe lh36 lnground pool Call for
an appo1ntment tOday 1
BMR 407F - Camp sole Potential' 32 acres m / t with
frontage on Raccoon Cr as well as frontage on
blacktop hoghway
BMR 410- A frame situated on a beautiful wooded
settong you will tove the atmosphere Owner t lnan
clng tor quatiloed buyers Low 30's
BMR 316 - REDUCED- Qu iet country home on 'h
acre tot Includes 20x20 barn woth toft, and partial
basement Call for detai ls'
BMR 413FJ - Mono farm located tust oft the Ap
palachtan htghway near Jack son 3112 acres m/ 1
wtth an older two BR home. several outbu•ldtngs
Just r ight for letsure ttme or full t1me hvmg Low
$20'•
BMR AlA - 12x60 mobile horne sotualed on a I acre
lot Includes furn•fure, has rear patio w/c.over.
covered front deck 12x2.C garage wtth storage Low
S10's

+

ASSUMABLE
N 11&gt;(4~ lnf llalt.
MILLION SIS VIEW - Off Stale Route 35 - Close to
Holzer Medical Center Doctor moved out of the
area needs ro sell this tovety new rustle L shaped
ranc'h Thn. verv plush home f ea tures 3 large
bedrooms\ forrnal entry and 1tv1ng room Built In
k ftchen, 2 full baths full besement 3 car garage
Sotlong on 3 2 acres Be one of the Best Addressed
Peopl e In Townt Proced in the SO's I
POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT - 6 acres, more or
less would make a gOOd home stte good well and
some t1mber on the property Approx 800 lb t obac
co base
1980 BAY VIEW U x70 with 1x24 It extensoon, 3
bedrooms, 1'/ 2 baths. buolt In kolchen. builtin stereo
system, patio. stodlng doors Loan assumptoon
possoble Monthly peyment of $215 U per month
payment•

ASSUMAILI LOANS
ONLY U,OOO DOWN - 11% lnt ' Rete Mon
thtv pavmer.t- S353 71 Including raxes &amp; tns
3 bedroom ranch Only 2'h yrs old
lOAN ASSUMPTION - Olllv $2,500 down
II% lnt rate Modern 3 bedroom brock home
state entrv tlvong room with w b flreptece
Sctuded In J acres Of prlvac:y Buy before
April 15 and ot can be c t - In 1 -~ Bftl
buy on 111e INirket

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lot•. nice size butld in g lots wtth all uttlt tl es
there Lot soze 101 8 by 171 2 Better get ·um now
#156
CITY SCHOOLS
3 bedroom rench style home Eat In kitchen, full
b41sement Specious tlvl"'l room Owner must ._II
Priced draotlcotlv tow S29,900
1412
OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk Into formal entrance with open staircase to
this lovely completely redecorated hOme toca ted on
the city Within walk ing distence to shopping ar ea 3
bedrooms, 21ull baths and charming large kotchen
Spac:loua ltving room with WOOdburnmo ftreplace
This grac ious home has e natural gas F A furnace
like new Immediate pos.sesston Were watttng for
Your c111
, 146
REMODELED COUNTRY HOME
In Ohio Township, set son 2 acr es more or less hi!ls
alum.num sid1ng, J bedrooms, and barn Pr iced
121 900 see bV appoontrnent only
1 473
NEW AD DAIL Y

�.. ·.

Page-0·8-The .
63

28, 1982

Ti

p

Livestock
~-·

------

For sale rabbits, goat,
chi ck ens. &amp; ducks. Large &amp;
small rabbi ts. Call 446-7920 .
64 ___

t!~Y_&amp; _Grain_ _

Mixed hay and a lit1 1e
straw, Jack son. Ca ll 614·
286-2394.

2.000 bales of good clea n
straw, wire t ied . 51 .25 per
bale. Call 614-869·2250 .
Mixed hay for sale. Call
367-7417 .
Hay for sal e. 949·2283.

71

7J ---~5 for $ille
1977 Trans Am, auto, PS,
PB , air, low miles. 1979
vw; 4-spd, air cond. Call
446-2599.

1976 Ply mouth Vo l are
wa gon. 6 cyl., AT, AC,
77 ,000 m iles, needs minor
r epairs,l350. Ca ll «6-3759 .

Nova-350 engine . 4 barrel
oversize cam . 4 speed on
Hoar, Cutlass wheels, good
condition . 1969 model. 742·
3063 .

1969 VW Beetle runs good,
body exce llent. new clutch,
$625. Ca ll 446-2235 or 245·

5406.

For sale : Lawn fertilizer,
weed and f eed. 20 lb . bags,
$2.00 . Phone 992 2374 .

LIBOR

TEAFOR
VIRGILB.SR .
216 E . 2nd St .

ll l-" 11011

(ll

Ho11sing
Heaclq11ilrters

---~---

1973 vw Beetle. can «60827 after 5.

Reel Enate - G•n..-.1

I

I I]( I I II)"

Jum~" ELDER

BRAWL

QUORUM

BUREAU

,

PHONE 446-3643

Antwtr: COUld make one think of food-lllne of men
welting for halrcuteA "BARBER QUEUE " (ball&gt;ecull

.'·

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smaitest
Heater Core- to the
Largest Ra~:tiator .

LOWER RIVER ROAD N ice r anch with 3
bedrooms. fireplace , full basement with garge,
owner will rent or finan ce with down payment.lf 164S

1 ms

Good rollin g land , old house, out·
buil d ings, tobacco base, m inera l rig hts.
II 1195
YOUR PRIVATE FARM r - 43 acres, attractive
wooded country setti ng for this big beautiful 4 BR
Colon ia l home, only 3 years old . Ni ce view.
~ OS28

LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING - . Has 4,000
Sq. Ft .. exce ll ent for grocery , har dware or anv
small bus iness, additional space for storage
overhe ad, living quarter s in ·back has 2 bedrooms,
bath, kitch en-d ining and livi ng room . Ca ll for more
;2255
details
• **A BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOTS • • •
Just in ti me for spr ing, located cl ose t o town, look
tod ay . Excellent r esidenti" l.
. . $5,000
1'11 acres
3
acres
. . . $8.000
.. $12,000
5 ac r es

SPRING IS HERE and we have 2 nice. com ·
fortabl e retreats near Tycoon Lake. Both situated
on wooded lo~ s within walking d istance from lake.
Rela x and en10Y nature and t he good ba ss fishing at
Tycooo Lake in your ow n r etreat.
LOOKING FOR INVESTMENT property . We have
two properties located with in the city of Gall ipolis.
5 rental un its in all . Ca ll for complete details!
NEV'f l~STING - 3 va can t lots within th e city of
Gallipolis . Buy all3, or 1-at ·a·tim e. $5,000 eac h.
MOOE~N_. 3 - bed ~ oom home with 19')(32' sw imming

pool , w1thm walkmg distance from Holzer Hospita l
If you: r.e looking for com fort able home with sever a i
amen1t1es you should look at thi s home as soon as
possible.

REDUCED
R E DUCED
R E OUCE 0 - Owners anxiou~ for offer
&amp; have r educ ed pri ce ss,ooo. 4 yr. old
colonial bi·level near town . 3 bedroom ,
2111 bath , beautiful kitchen, large fami ly
r oom area. woodburner. oversized
garage &amp; 10'12% assumpti on w/ pymts.•
appro)( . $400 per mo. Low down i
payment.
.

All STEEL

COMFORTABLE . 3-BEDROOM, ol der coloni a l
h~me within 2 mi les from Ga llipoli s. Owner wi ll
e1ther r ent or sell . I f i nter es ted, pl ease give us a
call!
MODERN . 2· BE DROOM downsta ir s apartment
l~c ated ad1acent to the Gallipoli s Golf Cour se. Ca n
Clther be used for off ices or resi den ti al.
wood ReBity , Inc.
32 Locust St., Gallipolis
446-1066

BUILDINGS
Sizes startfrom JOx24"

T B "ld•
Uti ity Ul 1ngs

I
I
I

I

HOME
us - Double with one
2 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, Jlh baths,
one Side . 1 _lledroom, living room , kitchen ,
bath other Side . Has been remodeled . Owner
Wiil ·hetp finan c.ing . In town location.
~ 923

~UY IT!

Your ERA®

13.90 acres with nice ranch

STONE RANCH A spac1ous 4
bedroom home over looking the river .
Owners have priced wel l under ma rket
value. Has fami l Y room, fi rep lace, 3
baths, dining room , nat. gas, cent. air &amp;
2 car garage. A must to.see.
91 2% MTG. ASSUMPTtON - Owner
moved out of state - m 11c:.t sell fast .
Making double hOU!-.P rayrTt cn:s .. 3
bedroom bl· levcl wit h 2 bC: ~n; . fd rn iiY
room. fireplace, deluxe k1tchen; nM .
qas, cenT . air &amp; garage. Nearly / 2 ac.
w f pOO I. $55,000. L ess l han 1 m ile fr om
town.

I
I
I
1I
I
I

Mercerville area, modern 2
llvmg room , family r oom , kitchen-dining or 3 bedroom house, 2 barns, approx. 1800 lbs .
combined, 1 bath and utility room . 300 lb. l obacco base, 25 tillable acres, some of the
tobacco base and 20x60 barn . Located in KC best. Fences ar e good, 56 acres pastur e, 10
school distr ict.
/1962 acres woods. Let us show you th i s f arm . 11964

INVESTMENT PROPERTY ~ Good return
on investment . 2 mobile homes rented for
$175.00 ecich unfurnished. One modern 5 room
hous~. woodburn er, new refrigerator, other
appliances. Close to Holzer M edical Center.
County water. Call for details .
191116

ACREAGE - Located on Rt. 35 near Rodney, COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1 acre more
less, on Upper Route 1. Property runs to
16 acres. more or less wooded acreage.
Beautiful place to build Your new home . N968 nver . Financing available. Just l isted Call
today. don't let this one get away .
· N925
ACREAGE - 2.20 total acres loca ted 2 miles RIO GRANDE - 21J:.~ lots located in the
from VInton . Land is rolling and part wooded. Village of Rio Grande. Sewer and water ·
Rural water runs across property. Asking available. Close to church. school and stores.
price $4;500.
#963
W927

MEIGS COUNTY - Picture perfect is this
well maintained 30 acre farm . large barn.
Work shed, corn cribs, ~tor age buildings. All
buildings helve been freshly painted. Large 5
bedroom
modern
home .
Fireplace .
Basement. Give a call today .
1926

I
.

I
I
I

l ACRES - Ready to set your mobile home
on. 2 septic tanks, city water, small garage
THIS ONE YOU SHOUL·D SEE - 70 acre and located inside Vinton city lim its. Priced
#967
modern dairy farm . Well constructed block at$4,000 . •
building . Rural water, farm pond, concrete
watering trough . Tobacco base. Green Twp. LOOKING FOR ACREAGE?· 7 acres of
$50,000.
, 91S rolling land. Barn. Tobacco base. Rural
983
water. Septic tank. Priced to sell .

The ERA®
Pay

owNERs tSESPE.RATE Well kept 3 bedroom brick hon1e on Up·
per 2nd Ave _, full basement, :nat gas
heat. ca r port . T hi s is a real bar,ga in .

JUST
LISTED lmm ediafe
possession. Owners anxi ous to setl1hls
bedroom maint. free home in cen - ·
tenary. Has full. base ment (COUld ~aSily
be used as famrly &amp; rec . room) , equ ip-·
ped k itchen, ga rage &amp; flat yard. Only
$ 41,600.

[

!

/

I

MOBILE &amp; 15 ACRES - Ver y e! ·
tr ac tive sett ing. 1 mi le west of Thtir ·
man . 12x65 K irkwood mobile home. The
15 ac res include 2 ba r ns, stocked pond,
•
some fences. and som e nice stl&amp;de
tree s. Must see t o appr eci ate . S28,900 .
1
Poss ible loan ass umpion . ·
~-

I
I

-torq-•

speed IbiD bia normal ploy.

Opelliqlact "

"""' ia a 1w1c1 from about

PH. !192-5682
OR !192-7121 ·

l

JJ
I

160 ACRES - Form er dai ry operation
nea r Ri o Grande . 50·60 ac . cr op, 70 ac .
pas tur e, balan ce il'l woods . B.:: r n~ . ~i le,.,,
tobacc o base, gzs 1P.m;e ;:&gt;l u3 an o~ d e r
re mode led 4 bedroom home. Frontage
on 3 road s includi n!=J Rt. 325 .

1964 Volkswagen con·
vertible ,
co mplete ly
restored. With Baja kit .,
$3,200 . Call675·2835 .
- - - - - - - - - - - --78 CHEVETTE, 4 cyl.
automatic, 2 door hat·
chback, 41 ,000 miles, ex·
cellent condition, 52650 ,00
2316'/' Mt . Vernon Ave . Pt.

AND

1

J

I

-CONSTRUCTION
Dozer 1·&amp; backhoe ser· ·
vice, wilter, sewer,
ponds, · foUndations,
r@cl~m~tion. ·
• Licen~ed 1 Bonded
· Phono 949-2293
'
00 949-2417
J-3-ttn

J

-a-

II

'D"

TO BUY A

I

'
HOME!

Specialist Today

* Applic_able for the First 5 Years

I

II I
i

~

NEW BRICK
11 , AC .
Excellent
c:onst ruction by owner who expec ted to
11ve here the rest of their 1ives. 1ncludes
3 bedrooms, fam ily room with wood ·
burner, heavily insulated. ove r sized 3
c~ r g~rage . Good neighborhOOd, n{ce
v1ew ~~ Green Elementary. S67,500.00
buysthiSbeauty , '

I
'I
I

L DC AT 10 N
-_' LOC A,TI 0 N
L.OCATION - This one IS I h block s to
c•~Y par'k. Well kept 3 bedroom home
With basement, modern heatrn g
system, and large back r,ard . 2 car
garage. Pefectfor anv s1ze am11y

~

1

~

----- -------------:
_
·

H.
I

1
.

. •Dryl!n

• """91!1

eDhpo••h
• Hot Wolter hnh

9 5 ttc

•Mobile
Sifts
•Wilter &amp; Gas lines
•Spring Developments
"Small Jobs A
Specially"

JIM LUCAS
PH. 742·2753

1972 International tractor
· w/ sleeper, single ax l e.
gOOd cond ., 250 Cummings
engine. Call 379·2320 after

5.
76 Chevy C·20 p ickup truc k,
6 cyt. ·standard, good cond .,
S1, 150.00. No trade. Phone
379-2729.
67 1nternational, 68 In·
ternat i onal,
69
In ·

For Sale 1913 Ford l og
truck . S speed fran ·
smission, 2 speed axle.
Good condition. Good tires.

985-4351.
71 FORD If" ton, automatic,
power
brak es , power
steering ,
good
tir es,
$375.00 , 304-675 -3056 .
1973 DATSUN tru ck with
topper, excellent condition.

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"Learn How Free"
one Simple Class
•Summer Coatings
•A complete line of
Molds &amp; Candy
Supplies
•Wilton Cake
Decorat ing Supplies

CANDLELIGHT INN
PH . 992·"13
Rt. 1 Cheshire. Oh.
St. Rt. 7
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
Open Mon. -Sal.
12 :00 p.m . to 2:30a .m .
Sun. 12a.m.- 12 p.m .
· Cilrryout Beer
Available
Bands Every Fri. 1
Sat. Night
THIS FRI. &amp; SAT.
MARSHALL
TENNANT BAND
Coming Next
Lone Wolfe Band
Then Tr•nzit
Happy Hour

something Special
\ 103 washington St.
Rav.enswood, W. Va .
PH . 304·273-3141

Mon.·Thurs .

.J~: ~ ~=:: ~~~;,,
. Tues.-Ladles Night
Weds. -Gent. Night
Thurs. -Pool Tourn.
3-24·11&lt;

ROUSH
cONSTRUCTION
I

New Homes - ex·
t'_h,. remodeling

fP Electrical wortc

• C~ltom ~ole Bldgs .
• Roolina wort&lt;
' ' Y o1r1 'lxporlence

.'

'

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

or992·2282
1

3·17·1 mo.

~·-

·------·---

-- - - - - - · - -77
Auto Repai ~--Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Protessibnal cvstom
paint work on motorcycles.•
Auto Tr im Center, 4A6·1968.

Gallipolis Divers if ied Con·
st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us tor free
estimate s. A46· .t~O .
84
Electrical
-·~-' Refrigeration

Scout CilmP
Chester, Oh .
..
•shottgame practice
., Pro Golf lessons
for all ages .
•Repair: J::leilning
refinishing,
new
grips,
tengtn change, w~lght

ch1nge.

-..!__:.....-----------!-----------------""1

v.-l'Y.oo.ec 111.

1980 DATSUN pick up, 4
speed, short bed , 304-675-

4568.

------------.. - ------ ·-- --.D.
- - -vansi4W
-----

73

1976 Dodge Van good cond ..
PS, PB , carpet on inside.
two big seats, two bucket
seat in front, air cond.,
good church bus or hunting
va . 52.000. Calf 379-2712 .
1978 CJ5 Jeep Renegade, V·
8. w ith extras, 37,000 miles.
$4800.00, 304-882 -3128 .
74 CJ5 jeep, A·1 condition,
304-VB. 2 tops, $2000.00, 304-

Nu·Prlme replacement
WindOWS
Storm wlndowl I dilon
Aluminum I vinyl
siding
How met Pallo Coven
scrHn

ICE·
446·3915
No Answer 446·2062
Modern ste•m cleaning
for carpet &amp; upholstery
(insurance work) .
• Scotchguard·lM
• waIts, floors,
windows
• Water &amp; smoke
damage
Industrial
Commercial
Residential

years ex do care! ·
l ~;":::~:;:b~:; 1

JACKS REFRIGERATIO ·
N Air condition service,
commercial, industrial.
Phone 882-2079.

SOLUTION

ELECTR IC IAN , licensed&amp;
certified, all types of
wiring, low rates, guaran·
teed work. 304-8Y5·3826 .

=--=-==-==
==- =: ==~
General!!!_U_!!!!JL_

IS

JONE S BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367-7471 or
367-0591.
JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier , 304-675-7397.
--.---~--

---

- ' --- -----~-

17

upnolsle r:y_ __ ·-

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave., Gallipolis .
446-7833 or 446-1833 .

B -10

TRUCK camper, S600. or
best ollor, 304-675-4373 or
675-1478.
____ ·- ______, __
79 - - - iiiotO.tiome- - -&amp; campers
Sllde·in c8mper with gas
furnan ce, GE refr igerator,
toilet. 30 gal. water tank,
s le ~ ps6 . Coll245-5415.

Set lees
81

Home

11

Autos for Sale

75 Monte Carlo. Call 304458-1775.
SALE or trade -66 El
Cam ino, 6 cyl., good con dition, 304-576-2865.

- -·- ---

1972 NOVA , automotic ,
power · steering, air con ·
dilloned, vinyl roof, 1
owner , good condition, 304·
458-1817.

'76 PINTO
STATION WAGON
25MPG

A•dial ttres, no ·r ust,
low ml!tage, AM· FM I
tr•clc stereo. Excellent
&lt;OIIdlllon.

'
304·675-6662

STUCCO PLASTER ING t ext ured cei l ings com·
m~rcial and
residential,
tree estimates. Call . 256·
1182.
PAINTING - interior and
ex rerior , plumbing ,
roofing, some r emodeling.
20 yrs. ex p. Call 388-9652 .

CAPTAIN STEEMER Corpet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt BrostheJS Custom
Carpet s. Free estimates.
Call «6-2107 .
Fren ch City
Painting
residential &amp; commerc ial.
interior, exterior, paper
hanging,
&amp;
textured
cei lings. Call 361·118A or
367 ·7160.
Bell Contracting General
plumbing service. hOme
remodeling &amp; repairs. Free
estimates. Call «6·4002 .

1!-_- --w.

-o,-; -, r-cies--

--=-

All used b ikes reduced at
Bet1 Honda , check with us
before you pay to mucn.

1979 DS100 Suzuki , exc .
cond . Call 245-9294 or 2455175 after 5.
80 Honda A TC -70, 3-wheet ,
ekcellent condition . Call
446-2470 .
Honda 7SD co custom . Call
388-8711 or 388-8673.
For Sale: 1980 XR 80 Hon da . Good condition . $450 .
992-5977 .

LOCKSM IT H
Service .
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service . Call
882-2079.
Special March and April
only . Gene's Deep Sleam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 992-6309
wanted to do : remOdling,
interibr and ederior pa in·
ting , plumbing, and
rooting. Free estimates.
98H121.
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house coils. Phone 576-2398
or «6·2454.

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
12S K T M Motorc~oss, i Ike - stump removal. 675-1331 .
new , never raced, rode
very lillie, 304-882-269S.
!!INGLES'S SERVICE u perienced mason, roofer,
XR 75 HONDA, good con - carpenter,
electrician,
dillon, needs clutch handle, general repairs and
$150. 304-675-6287 .
remodeling. Phone 304-6752i)lfl or 67S-4560.
76

-Au1o Parts
I Accessorte•

1970 DODGE Challenger
parts, phone 304-451·1882.

Woter wells. Commerciol
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sates and Service .

30H95·3802.

128 Ent...:t•

-*tv
nom-tot

t3t Flying

71Copudl0o

tt~

tB Dono
21 DO.

22Aoold

- 23Htgllln

24-

25 HlllttiMIV

71SinQino

71~

12 Pwlalutng

totherNnd
11481.,. filth
115Soelll

morathon
129 Boby'l bod

'""""'""

132 The .....
133 lrrtt•ted
135 Mild

t38 Torrtd
13D Salton, e.g.
140 Heovy
..,tghl
t4tNatha'llol.
to trtenda

2Blyln0-

30- .

32 """"
fold or"""
focef
:13Gt34Mr. 35-t

,._

88 Cloc:lt

saer-.

""~
llllfte

42E-.3~

_.

44 Dig "" ""'"
45At-

411Bolhlr

50cantMW
51 Streta
50 tJquld

56 Fotco

grocl.

B0 Lliolr

t2F,_,_

... "'"'

fiiiA-

grocl.

l&gt;or
87Tol&lt;.mod

811TIIe-

70Golly71 Lobo&lt; 0111-

72-

143 Slbo&lt;lon

110 llonchl

tfQiedilnla

92Forlun0101-

lngcwds
114 Hlghody
ligllll

144t45 Turt&lt;llh
doaM

147 Aquollc

mammal
t49 Undo

. 1111 Trwl tor

150 Slrenglh
152 01""'
ISO Hindu

IOOT102-In

t56 Gteek tenet

numbet

God

103

eo.-• Of

1114- ...c:ll
105 S..c:h tor

tOO Robbllo'
tOO Sc:ottloh

ttllt Ttullllum
oymbol
ttO Y•.ln AvMe
tl t P!no lnlll
112 t1 contrite

t148Np'o

~lng

t te ll&lt;tlloh

86W_.P&lt;*d

ee IL'o nllgh-

to2Chllllle'o
~

37Drll*-

per-.

Ma rc um
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 veers ex·
perienc e. specializing in
built up roof. Ca ll 3BB-98S7 .

.

, .._

- -on
-- -tve
--- 1111211- - 118- 47-· -58511__.. ..,.
-- 1 Nixon's

675 -6726 .

~=========-l ~a~-446-·2_24_0:____ -

• f~st service
•frH

-=.:: :

Bill's

SEWING Ma~hine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sl'!des &amp; Serv ice Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy, 992·2274 .

ACROSS

I "!_P!:._O.Y_e_!!l_!f!!~ __ _

ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repair gutter and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleanirig and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-22,3
949 -2160
2-24-lfc

............. 1'.
................
c ....

J

ALL MAM ES

eWuhen

3-ll ·tfc

CARPENTER
SERVICE

'I

PARTS AND Sf RVI &lt;E

•

J "ll

...._

----------·-------·--------·
83
ElCCillvatlng_,___

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
LennoN. Heating I Air
Condi!ioning. All Types
Insulati on . E leclrlul
W iring.
Call 446-1515 or 446·044$
aller4:30p.m .
tic

675 -4154 .

---------+----------t------------1 3-0~ 8~5~3~~~ --- --- - EXCAVATING

-·--- - - - - -

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Glass . Insurance
claims wel come , fr ee
mobile service ava ilable.
ta ll 446-1011.

Co.
Remodeling repaii", new
can.s truction,o afl types .
Free estimates, all work
I
rantee'd .
om lnd&lt;ostriial

MOWREYS UphOlStery Rt .
1 Box 124, Pt . Pleasant, 304 -

L WHITESEL

1

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

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

77 Datsun p ick -up king
Cab. 4 speed . A.M .·F .M .
Radio. Sharp. 614-949-2631.

C&amp;M

_ ..... _._.,1

CUSTOM AUTO BODY
WORK &amp; PAINTING Free
es tim~Jt es ,
low rates,
guaranteed work, also
small engine &amp; lawnniower
repair. ~A6 · 91S9 , Guarar
··---72
Truck' s for Sale
teed Automot ive . Behind
·1977 Ford p ickup, good Arca de on Court St. in old G
&amp; J alley, Galllpo)is.
cond . 6 cyl. Call 446-4554.

•DI,hwnhen

MARCH
PERM SALE

3·3·1 mo.

. . - o r live?" ukecl Soul.b
olter bo bad flniahed maklnc
lbo slam.
"OIIIy four." n!pllecl Eut.
'"but I bad to try to pi you
to play me lor more 111an
one heart."
,

valves in engine, $500. or
best offer. Also 1964 Ram·
bier American . 4 door,
~400 . Call 304-882·2767 after
-4 p,m .

:=========j=========~t.===::::::;~;::::;:==:j

c.tl 992-2725

aee 1

out and
n!mar1tecl, "Niee play!"
" Did you have four ella·

76

Autos tor Sale

GMC
. Call367·7533.
ternational,
69 Ford, 72

I
J~~I

111 ACR ES - Step in &amp; start to work . 1
Approx . 40 ac. crop balance in pasture ·1
&amp; woods. 2 large barn s, well fenced ,
2400 lb. l obacco base, 4' ·5' coal vein · . f
re ported (i ncludes a ll minera ls) plu s '
I
re modeleJ 3 bedroom home. Ca ll f or
more Info.
100 ACRES - ~3500 OOWN - 10% IN·
T E REST - Ownl'r s must sell t his 100
acre f arm nea r Thurman . Mosfly •
wooded wi t h some crop .&amp; pasture
l and . Also has larqe 2 story 4 bedroom
home. 1 mi le north of Rt . 35 . LoW 40's .
REDUCED TO SS9,000 - S7,so0 DOWN
- Low interest loan r:tssumption. 4
b~droom bric~"C!O'
has lorm e l
d1n1ng, lar ge f t ;;, '" ..... m, f irepl ace t
Jlh bath, deluxe k itch{'n , full basemen t:
1
2 car garage &amp; 1 Ct cre

Call Ken Young
For Fast Serv ice
985·3561

CO.

3- Z~Hc

Kajs leauly Sllon
16911. 2nd
Micklleport

bta

1-:----------,---....-------1

SERVICE

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Calf for free siding
estimates, 949·2801 or
949-2860.
No Sundav Calls

AlSO IIAIISMISSIOIIS

Mon., March l
th'ru
I
W81f,, March 31
Reg. no
Now Sfi.so
Reg. S25
Now S22.SD
Reg. $30
Now S27.SO
135 Wave lentn
For Longer Hair
NowS29.50

took

35 Court St.
Ohio
Cal1446·l l "
446·301(1
li e

Galllpoll~ ,

MIT CONSTRUCTION
I EXCAVATING INC •
Back hot and doror work
by lhe job or by tho
hour. Also licenstcl liP.
tiC linkS lnSIIIItd.
Dump truck . Frtt
tsllmltu. Call 3U·tl21
or 441-94S9.
lie

1-3-tfc

BISSEU.

·AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

I

ASSUMPTION - Ve; y attractive ·
home w ith excell ent f inanc ing terms .
or 4 bedroom tri-level home located off
Rt. 35. Ha s 1'h baths, wOOdbvrner
dinlng room , eQ uipped kitchen, 2 ca;
garage &amp; centra l air . $59,500.

8IJ2%

4% Below the Going Rate *

PLEASANT LOCATION IN TOWN Attractive older home in a priv a te
location . 4 blocks from schools, has had
excellent care and is very n1ce inside.
Modern kitchen . 3 bedrooms, l lf1 baths,
family room , fireplace , In-ground pool
and beauty shop.

~-~
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Partnership MortgageMis Here!

Call Your ERA®

·I'l'

~nooo -

YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT

NO
REASONABLE
OFFER
REFUSED - Attractive cedar ran ch
near Rodney . Energy efficient 2 yr old ,
' 3 bedroom home has 2 baths, very. nice
kitchen, dining room &amp; flat y ard .

*

·I '

•Applicable on Qualified Homes

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 8nd Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477

51 Dl NG

P - . 011.

Sllll2'

Nextcamea
dlamood
from dummy. Eul Dla)'ed
111e
wtl.b slicblly

Plumbing
_ __,&amp;'-'H
'-'eating_ __

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

I,

Specialist Today

91J2% ASSUMPTION _.:. NEW LIS r iNG
Owners in Saudi Arabia and must
sell their home immediately. 4 bedroom
tri · level situated on 3 acres overlooking
Oh jo River . Hes family room. llh bath,
equipped kitchen &amp; carport . It's
unusual to find a home like this with an
unbeatable view for only $53,000. K.C.
Schools. ·

~tv.le home. Home consists of 3 bedrooms, GOOD FARM -

*

8-20-ttc

GARAGE
•

82

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

PH . 992·6011

Roger Hysell

I,

dwnmy"s ..,. ud slopped to
llllDII lor .....p lime oo u

to
moke lAin! billf!:5:~II
woUld.bia
..... .

20 yean ...... 11 wu playediD a very Important mal.cb. ·
All players lillie table """'
of world claD tad IOOd
friends. 'l1ley olao """' ....u

u .s . Rt . so East
Guysville , Ohio
Authorired John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

FREE
ESTIMATES

81 ---HOme --~
_ _,_,
lm_erovemenr~ __
Carpenter
work .
remOdeling , &amp; roofing . Call
367-0194.

fi.,......
Elst uowecl

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms,. remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating .

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
Owners

I'

IF WE DON'T SELL YOUR HOME

Call

CQNSTRUCTJ.ON

pi~.:r llle jack.
lila ... of
SDideo IIIII
I'Ollu.-lllle lUlL
!IOulll - wllb Ilia kiDI· He
clldll"t aeed to try to ooore

South

BOGGS

(Formerly B'ilre Metal)
278 W. Main, Pomerov

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RIO GRANDE - J or 4 bedroom home
righf on cam pus. Has 1112 bath , fam ily
room, fireplace, full basemen t , nat . gas
heat . garage plus nearly l,~ acre. Cold
be used as rental. $38,900.

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• La-Boy
•Trencher
• Water
• Sewer
oGasLines
• Septic Systems
large or Small Jobs
PH . 992-2478
J-11-lioo.-pd

MAIN STREET •
GARAGF

...

LAND CONTRACT _ NEW ~fSTING
_ Well maintained 4 bettroom hOMeoon.J
Rt. 160 . Thi s l'h story home has an
equipped k itch en, dining room , large
master bedroom , servi ng room, new
roof, garage &amp; Ji.,_ acre yard with
storage bldgs . 11 % interest . Priced in
30's.

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PRICE REDUCTION - w as $52.000,
Now SlS ,SOO. 9 room , 2 story on 1.7 ac .
on the bank of tt1e Ohio Riv er . At·
tractive older t1om e. Owner m u_st se ll
now to se ttle es tate. Woul d consider
helping w / finan cing .

I

: ~~~Pn':r~ck s

BRAKES-TUNE-UPS
OVERHAULS·
DlESEL· EXHAUST
Open Mon.-Sat. 9-5
3-S-1 mo .

A· FRAME MOBILE HOME - You
have to see it to believ e it . J bedrooms,
fire place, loft. mu ch mor e. Only $8,000.
Call us and let us show you th is unusual
home.

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218 1ST AVE . - One of th e best
dressed homes i n town. Thi s -to,laiiiY
r enova ted col onial. Ci r ca 1860, has
terr ific ri ver vi ew p nd conv enien t
eyerything. 3 bedrooms. 21h baths,
f amily r oom, 2 f irep laces, insul.ated,
qas h.w . hea t . Call for more i
$135. 000 .

PLEASANT vALLEY ESTATES You will en joy the care this attra ctive
brick home has been given. tm ·
maculate inside and ouf. Plush carpet ,
lovely firepl ace, 3 bed rooms. d ini ng
r oom . equippedkitchen.n at. gas. cent .
air, 2·car garage and corner lot . $59,900.

I
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CITY - ExSTEl (NO time
cellet L·shape ranch. Living, dining and this ranch with 3 bedrooms,
si ze diningdeluxe_ family room with large stone, heat-a· kit~hen combined, bath and 1 car garage.
tator f1rep1ace. Natural gas furnace . Central Ma 1ntenance free siding and all of this in the
air condition ing. City water. Let us show
SJO's! ~real value for YOU!
11 982
mor e.

•;;·

wri'!!iW · m
OWNERS TRANSFERRED-Immed iate possession on this new ly listed
b i level in Rodney . Th is family sized
home haS 4 or 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge
f am ily room. 2 car garage, plu s 1h acre
yard . Priced in loW 60's . Make us an of ·
fer .
LAND - LAND - LAND - c r op _
Pastu re ~ L ots of woods _ Tobacco
Base ~ 217 acres. SJOO per acr e. Call for
more informat ion .

WE WILL

Pus
Pus
Pus

aware of each otber'1atyle.
Weot OfltiiOd llle cleuce of
lpllleo. Soutb looted over

POMEROY.
OHIO
PH .
992 · 2063
STOP and look at· our
line selection of plaster
and ceramics .
-banks
-statues
-plt~nters
-paint .
- mirrors
- spray
-plaques
- brushes
FREEA n.oo detail brush ,
with the purchase_of a
. 1 -1
P~'" kl ·

.,.-bly 1101 a ao-tnunp
dam, but II ....td eool 111m
lbo bout slam if bo failed to

promptly led a bout ana
dummy'• nino.

3-7-lfc

EXCAVATING
• Dozers

~ t-1
wlt.b llle IKt 1M
lour. T1lil bod -break would
~ lloiJier I club a1am ud

1ri~d::; led I bean to

~=====~~~~~~C.~~R~.~M~A~SH~~~~~~~=3~-~5-~1~m~o~.~pel~-~ :~:a~~o~-A-cor;;;:;;;w

PRICE REDUCED OVER $4,000 Low down payment and payments un·
der $320 m o. on this 12% m gt. assump·
tion . Redecorated 4 bedroom hom e in
Washington Elem . and Galli a Academy
Sc hool District . Has full base m ent,
fam i ly r oom. equipped ki tc hen . $35 ,600 .

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PULLINS

Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine.,Oh.
Ph. 614·143·2S91
6-15-tt c

mt

.
a.

For a II your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service· and
insta II a tion.
Residentia 1
&amp; Commercial
Ca II 742· 3195

Pn'. 949 -2160 or 949-2i22
7-5-ttc

Sites from 4 TO 1 and all
wood buildings 24xl6,
Insulated Dog Houses

1

.... -. -I.

SERVICE

TOM HOSKINS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

I
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43 ACRES -

+JJOI
VuiDoroble: Bath

ELECTRIC

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing o.f all types
eSiding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 't' rs. u peri ence

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGG5
35 Yrs. EXf1"rience

II

-RIO GRANDE - Lovely 4 bedroom home. dining
room, f ir epl ace, full basement, 2 car garage, cen·
tr al air, owner will fin anc e with down payment.

• Q lot 7

+u
sotml
•xJS

•tuti7s
tAl

MILLER

ROOFING

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2-26-tfc

I ,..1,

••

I+

OHIO VAU.EY

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

JUST LISTED- Owner must sell. Nice
4 bedroom ranc h near town in Wash .
Elem . School area . Has 1111 bath, del uxe
kitchen, full base ment, fam ily room,
firep lace &amp; garage , Nat. gas heat .
S44,000 .

tau

.171

Dealer: Nortb

•~•1rr) 11

WOOD REA~~' _ IN~. : ;:- t
446-1066

•

&amp;A8T

.AQIII'I

Times-sentinel-

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

AERIAL BUCKIO.T
TRUCK SERVICE
47 11. Working Htlght
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Tnlrd Ave.
614-446·2716
ti C

1... boarll m!PI

WIST

eltTI

•1nz

Water-· Sewer· Electric
Gas Line·Ditches
Water line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367· 7S60
1-7-1

3· 17 -l mo.

m

(-Monday)

Russell D. Wood, Realtor~.Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971 ·
Mose Canterbury, Associate ~46-3408

TOBACCO AND HAY FARM - Best r eturn
frorn your investment of any farm 1 know of
for sale. It also includes woods and paSture. 56
acres. $22.500. 4,000 lbs, toba cco base first
year.
w94 &amp;

' PH. tft-3543 or H2-2316

• AQI
t IIU
+AitQII

SERVICE·

AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN

Re•l E.tate - Generel

OFFICE 446-7013
-.

or

, •

d11111111y ud wu lllebUy
UDbappy. Not lUI 11:1 beorta
wua'! a IOOd co.tnct.
• ActUUy. wu alm(ltt
c:ertalD lUI llle Soli.. lillie
table bo .. that
..,.
loeart o1am. N~

••-IB

TheSu

Services Offered

Good, friendly play

TRENCHING

New Construction
.and Remodeling.
FRO~ CONCRETE TO ROOFING

w. va.

BRIDIE

REESE~·:

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!

-REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Real Ettate - Gener81

M -

J

----------WISEMAN

WHAT THA'T
N!!WCOME'III:

MADE.

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
-REALTY ·

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
John Fuller, Realtor, 446·4327

FOWLER ~NSTRUCTION

1969 VALIANT . 74 International travel, 4·wheel ·
drive. 1979 DOdge truck •.1 ~
cy l, standard, LWB . 19tll
Pont iac, 400 c:u. in. engine
&amp; automatic transmislop . · ..,
304-675-6628.
'

o~p~t~io~n~s~·:C:a~lf:2:56~.6=86~2 ·~--~-A-·-1~.S~1-000~-~9-92_·_37_9_B:a~tt-e_r_s;.__------------------~rk)

ICORNEEI
PrfntanswerhMI:"(

Reel Ettete - Gener11l

GREAT LOCATION - GREAT VALUE is of·
fered by this nea t ' n cl ean bl ·level home with 3
bedrooms, 2111 baths, fir e p l~ce in livi ng room.
2 car garage and much more. Would possi bly
consider land contract to qualified buyer . Call
now.
'
t/952

1971 vw Super Beetle, fa ir
body, good tires, needs
some engine work, ~­
Call 256-1157 .

1960 Chevy . 3 speed . 6 cyli n·
1981 DOdge Omni 024, many · der. 50,000 original miles.

)

Business Services

· Auto for Sale

74 Mecury comet 302, V-B, . HART S Used Cars, New
auto., ruff cond ., c.hea p. Haven West V irginia. Over
20 tess expensive cars in
Call 446-3044 .
stock.
-

1980 Plymouth Horizon, 4
door auto. 992 -2174 . 1980
Dodge D-50 Pick -up. 5000
miles. Sell cheap. 992 ·217 4.

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
NEW LISTING 9
room home in Mid·
dleport that needs some
fi x ing . Has 2 baths,
natura l gas F A. fur ·
na ce, 3 or 4 bed r ooms,
ni ce k itchen. ca rpeting.
Short jog to the stores.
ASking $19.500 .
COUNTRY
3
bedroom nice hom e.
Carpeting 1 large ea t-in
k i tchen , bat h , full
basement, for ced air
furnece, and la rg e lot.
Will se ll on tim e or take
trade.
BARGAIN 2 or 3
bedroom one floor plan .
Bath, coa l or wood fur nace and 3 lots. Want
just $9,000 .
CAR WASH - A won derful oppQrtunity tor a
business minded per·
son. Requ ir es littl e time
to care tor. Can you bea t
$15,000.
NEW liSTING
Redecorated 2 bedroom
home in Middl eport with.
bath , natu ral gas forced
air furnace. l ar ge kit·
chen with lots of woOd
ca binets. Uti lity room
and garage on level lot .
Only $16,500 .
MIDDLEPORT - Very
ni ce 3 bedr"oom home in
excellent cond ition. Hot
wat e r heat , form a l
din ing , nice ca rpetin g,
·full basement . garage
and fenced yard .

- - --------

I

71

71 --:-P,. utos for Sale

1977 Chevy Chevette 45.000
actual miles. Calf «6-9219
between 4 &amp; B.

KXJ
·.:"Ll.-z=--·

Ytllorday-o

Real Estate - Oenerel

AU lOS for Sale

75 Monle Carlo, 65,000
miles. Calf 245-9283 .

76 Granada 6 cy l. , auto.,
PS, PB , good mechan ical
cond . Call 446-3044.

1974 PINTO Runabout,
gold, good work car . 446·
3159.'

6J=..= Se~d~&amp;Fert iliie_,- Funk seeds Interna t ional
Seed Corn flow avai lab le.
Call col lect 614·682·6602,
Bill Bush .

1973 AMC Hornet, air
cond ., $300.00. Call 256·1598.

1977 Cutlass Supreme
Salon, Ps.. pb ,, p.w .,
recll ning buckets, T·top,
velour interior . Like new .
$3600. 992 -6362.

Ohio-,Point Plea

Mar.

t58 Predpitoua

159"-'&lt;11
110 wants
181 Liquid

DOWN

t Petionn«

2 Cluotly
3Short81eop
4 And, in okt
Roma
50emp

8Tell
7 Time Of day
8 Oittll'lf
9 Actor Aaner
tOC«clolh

t17~1no

tt Donllholf

flllotr120122 Kniglrt'o

12

r..,-

13 Froe1

t 4 Greek letter

15-1

t24P:--t25FI8c:dd
t2lllta.lng

taw-t1LMd

,_,.

-tl Exlats
tslllgn.,.
oprlng
20 Marsh bird

27 Mountain on
Crete
29 Goollor
t Down
31 Norweglen
ooln
S8 Time gone
by

37 Warble
39 Time
periods

40 Poet TeeadoiO

4t Melli
flltener
42 Permits
43 Hurries
44 Llon 'a pride
46 Exist
48Biemlolt
49 Floh limbo
50 Hill
51 Citrus rrult
52 POl/live
pole

QO ConMCrlte
lit WOird
92 Pilon
93Yourmet--

tyl
95 FaiMhooda
98 HlndiK

97 Oinnlf
COIKH

D9 Shari hit
101 Writer's ·

.-

105 Gordon
10011
106 Succor

t07 Slupely
11 1 Shellfish

t12Ectg0o
tt3 Mix
115 O!ttence
me..ure
tt6 Zeal

....

-

tta Voucher
1 t9 River

....

l-'ands
121 Contlntd
"':
t 23 Cotlogt Clog. •
125 Second of
~:
two

-

53 Small
lhoots
55 Gllnsold

126 Aftecttontte ·~

56 Foray

t29 Cuts up
130 R202
131 Prohibition

57 Choice pori

.....

58 Remllne&lt;l

127 Fluohoo with :

132 Floeta In air

61 Weight

t34 Nice

63 Thliland,
lormerly

13e Proverb
t37 Iranian coin

~Heavy

139 Mutlcat

lllowonc:e

hammer

68 Ftoo
70 Bogaed
down

7t Nets
73 way out
74 Strltr:n
75 Frighten
17 Sedate
78 Region
80 Permits
61Thellll
83 Penpolnt
&amp;4 Co.gulate
87 Sandal
feetures
89 Not present

111m mer

--

..
~.-.

lnttrument
140 INoody
plant
ICC Tiny
145 "- a grend
night ... "
' ·'
146 Soo 00010
147 Numbfr
148 Querrtl
149 Encoun-

..

!etod

tst Both ot uo
153 Three-toe&lt;~

.,oth
155 Diphthong
t 57 Grlduate
diQ.

-..
..
J

....

�Page-0' 10-The Sund

Times-Sentinel

Gallia .deputies investigate incidents
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Sheriffs Department Is Investigating a break-In and theft at
.11.11 outbulldlng on Cox-Mercerville
Road sometime within the past few
weeks.
DepuUes were notUied Friday by
the owner, Olive Swain, Rt. 1,
Crown City, that the building was
entered and tools and some farm
equipment was taken.
GaWpolls City Pollee were Informed Frtday night lhe drtvet's
side window of a car owned by Tim
Spires, Rt. 1, Langsville, was

.

Ohio-Point Pleasa

Spires was apparently not Injured
In lhe Incident.
Pollee also cheeked a minor twovehicle accident at Second Avenue
and Sycamore Street Friday

morning.

vandalized.

The report said a truck drtven by
Richard L. Cochran, 37, Rock·
brtdge, was attempting a right tum
onto Sycamore at 10:53 a.m. when a
vehicle drtven by S.L. Gatewood.
31, Gallipolis, was tmable to stop In
time and struck lhe rear ol the
truck.
There was only slight damage reported to Gatewood's vehicle.

Spires told officers he was eastbound on Portsmot~lh Road at 10: 15
p.m . when an t~nknown subject
tossed a rock through lhe window.

Cited by pollee Friday were Oscar G. Stephenson, 66, Rt. 2, Gall1polls, Improper lane t~sage, and

'

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

Myrtle A. Thompson, 53, Gall1polls
Ferry, speeding.

-

SUPPLENEil.fO THE SUIDAY TUUS SENTIIEL ·

JACKSON-PERKINS

Levy chairman chosen
POMEROY ~ James O'Brien, att orney-at-law, hall been named
chairman of the Meigs Co~~nty
Health Department levy committee.
O'Brien accepted the position
Friday at a meeting with Frank·
Petrie, deputy health commissioner ·
of the Meigs County Health Department, and Nonna Torres, R.N., nursing supervisor and Deborah
Lavalley, WIC director.
The committee is being formed to
promote passage of the Meigs County Health Department levy which
will be on thejune 8 ballot.

LOCUST and PEARL.S_
TREET

.WE FEATURE U.S.D.A. CHOICE .BEEF • FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
1M IV•., .- ill ,_ ·• rli... IV111i6j ac..- ••• • iut tt•••• ._ lfce Net_...... Mtlllllf • ·.. .

CLIMBING ROSES
FLORIBUNDA ROSES
HYBRID TEA ROSES

Foil Packaged Plants

Plants

PATENTED
Am er ican Pride
Color Magic
Fragrant Cloud
Madras
Oregold
Proud land
While Masterpiece
Angel Face
Sunsprite
T empo

NON-PATENTED
Queen Elizabeth
Ch ar . Armstrong
Chry sler lmp ~rial
Garden Party
King' s Ransom
Peace
Tropicana
White Swan
Blaze
Don Juan
Royal Gold

. . . . , . . llli6 ..........

.
SALE DATES: MARCH 28 THRU APRIL I, 1182

Redi Plant Packages ·
PATENTED
Love
. Double Delight
Fascination
First Prize
Honor
New Day
Fristine
Red Masterpiece

..
•

.

·tEAII FLAVORFUL FRESH

SELECT YOUR JACKSON-PERKINS ROSES ON THE 1st FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY
'

Bryan Fulks, GaDipoBs, and Joe HoDem, GaDiiJolls
area Navy recndter. Looking on (ll&amp;andli.g, from left)
are BW Hannum, Long Botlom; Vlrgll Can-, Patriot;
Jame~~ King, GaWpo118; John Bond, Mason; and
Larry .Gorby, Crown City. HoDem and any of lhe
above 11880Ciatlon members can lie C!lntacted · for
tunher lnfonnatlon. The group wiD hold llllillher .
meetlnlt at the recndlmenl center AprD 10. (TimesSenllnel photo by Kevin Kell,~) . .

Center

Recndtmenl
In Galllpo118 Saturday morning
to organize the Fleet Rellerve A.Moclatloa. 'lbe 111180cladon, a ftr8t In IIIIa area, hopi,s to altracl memberllhlp from GaDia, Melp and Mason coun"es, alld Is
:

compatible with other area velel'IUIII' organlzatt01111.
Attending the meellng were (seated, from left)

.w

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
•

SMITH

;"I.;..

. SALE-

3 COPPER
2 AVOCADO
2 HARVEST
3 ALMOND
"...

3 ALMOND
4 AVOCADO

HOTPOINT
40" RANGES
7 HARVEST
3 WHITE

HOTPOINT
30" HIGH-LEVEL
DOUBLE OVEN

HOTPOINT
WASHERS

..
1WHITE
1AVOCADO

3 WHITE

DRYERS
3 WH.ITE
1 HARVEST

OVER .,. . BELOW
WHOLE PRICE

ALL FURNITURE REDUCED

1TAPnN GAS RANGE

Avocado

25 OFF ON ANY

ONE ONLY

1-19 CU. FT.
UPRIGHT FREEZER

4-CONSOLE 25"
CABINET MODEL TVs .
5-19" SYLVANIA
COLOR TV
AFEW

,HOOVER SWEEPERS
WASHERS &amp; DRYERS

'

.

•

ON

PARK AVENUE SEDAN

Buick Skylarks
Buick Skyhaw_ks
Pontiac Phoenix
Pontiac J2000
R_ebates

" Factory Officials Car"
Loaded with factory options, low
miles, charcoal with dove grey vinyl
top. Balance of factory warranty .

$250000 Discount ·

31

• Bring This Ad In For AFree Gift! •
81 OLDS
CUTLASS CPE.
Cru ise, landau top, am -fm ,
s p ort wh ee l s, 100%
war r anty .

81
. MONTE CARLO

V -6 engine, air, burgundy,

custom interior, 17,000
m iles, 100% warranty.
NOW

80 BUICK SKYLARK
~J r .

air cond .,
auto., 26,826 miles, dove
grey . Expect the best,
100% warranty .

4

sedan,

WHERE THE
BARGA
ARE

$7495

80 PONTIAC
.-· GRAN PRIX
Air , cruise, R. wind .
defogger, tutone silver,
Rallye wheels. Sharp.

$6495

2-SYLVANIA 21" TVs

KERO SUN HEATER

DEALERS
WELCOME .

82 "BUICK ELECTRA

Wa s $7995

All Items Subiect To Prior Sale
WHERE THE
' BARGAINS ARE

AC

$750 REBATES

YOU WILL LIKE THE QUALITY
AND YOU WILL LIKE THE PRICE!
HOTPOI NT
HOT POl NT
HOTPOl NT
REFRIGERATORS 30"-RANGES
MOBILE
DISHWASHERS
4 WHITE
3 WHITE
3 ALMOND
1 AVOCADO
1 HARVEST
1 WHITE

SliefiL
.

.

"SALE ENDS
3J"
THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS - - WE'VE BEEN SELLING ~ND SERVICING QUALITY CARS FOR 28 YEARS • .BUY YOUR
NEXT NEW OR USED CAR FROM THE DEALER YOU CAN
DEPEND ON-

ALLISON ELECTRIC

78 DODGE ASPEN
Tudor. air cond .. Slant 6
_, r ed w ith white matlandau top. Cu stom
.&amp;roe" v inyl interior . Nice.

-._$3995
75 V.W. RABBIT
2 Dr .• 4 speed , red , driven
only 55,106 mil es. Gas
Sa ver .

77 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
Seda n, a m-fm

stereo. · Ra llye

wheel s, br own with &amp;a ddle v iny l
top. Custom saddle interior . lm·

macuate.

Air, burgundy with custom ,
inter ior , 14,000 miles. Ex·
pect the best . 100%
Warranty.
·

MORE 81
MODELS IN STOCK
All carry our
100% Warranty.

$6995

1976 BUICK SKYLAR

Features V -6 economy,
automatic, air, power
steeri ng &amp; brakes, local
owner.
Anniversary Special
NOW
Was 53295

$2

80 CHEV.
CITATION
'

Air, V -6 engine, 5 door
Hatchback. low · mil es.
Local executive's trade.
Anniversary
Special Price!
Was $5995

15

. .

81 MALIBU CLASSIC

Was $7495NOW

$4995

76CAMARO
76 MONTE ~RLO
76 MUSTANG

MIDQLEPORT, OHIO
UJke'le ~ldp ANd SaviHg3 Go. Hcuul 9K .Htucd

rdinal
SUPER MARKETS

JUST ARRIVED!

A lot of new var iety including the
rose of the year - Jackson-Perkins
Roses are known for their excellent
qual ity and ease of •planting. Super
rooted fiel d grown ro se~ are foil
packaged - the patented ones are
boxed (plant, box and all ).

NAVAL VETERANS ORGANIZE - A poop of
, lonner 111111 active U.S. Navy, Marine CofJill alld
Cout Guard ret~ervllls· met at the Anned Sen-10011

.

2295 ..
1
2195
11595

1

These cars ha.ve a iittle ·

Famous ~ rust and are sold as is.

...

c
.

.

,,

Q\IAN'I:JTY RIGHTS REIIERV.ED
!NOT REIIPONSIBLil FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORSI

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