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                  <text>Area deaths
Wilbur VanCooney
Wilbur VanCooney, 72, Sa lem, former resident of Meigs County, died
April 16, al Salem Community
Hospital.
Mr. VanCooney was born June 22,
1910 in M•ddleport the son of the late
F'rank VanCooney and Nannie Mae
Lee VanCooney .
Hl' was empl oyed at Ely ria Foun-

dry and later was a molder at
Quaker City Castings reltring in
1973.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs .
Dorothy Rohrbaugh Grimm Van·
Cooney; four daughters. Mrs. Jack1e
Adams. Mrs. Nan Board. Miss

1

Eleanor Van Cooney and Miss
EstherVanCooneya ll ofEiyria; one
son, Wilbur VanCooney, Jr. , Elyria;
two sisters, Miss Hazel Van Cooney,
Middleport and Mary Knauff,
Pomeroy; four brothers, Albert
VanCooney, and Pearl VanCooney,
Middlepurt; Clyde VanCooney and
Ira VanCooney, Arizona; one stepson. Thomas Gri rrun a nd three step-

dau~hters , Mrs. Ke_nnelh !Ma ry!

Hogue, Darlene Yorkovich and Mrs.
Gay nelle Tafini, all of Salem; 19
grandchildren, six great grand·
c h tl d r e n and nin e step·
grandchildren.
Bur ia l was in Spri ng Hill
Cemetery, WellsvJlle.

Meigs County happenings
Sponsors games
Emergency runs
Ractne
The auxiliary of the

Fire

Department will be sponsoring
public games beg11111ing lhts evenin g

Osc&lt;~r and Cecil Maynard , Racine,
reported lhe thefl of a six foot dozer
blade and the cyl in de rs from a doze r

Th ursday

Parkersbu rg, W. Va .

ment.

Support sought
A suit for support under the
Reciproca l Agreement Act was filed

in Meigs County C01runon Pleas
Court by Phyllis J . Wells againsl
Ra lph Benton Wells.
.
Sally Ann Aleshire, Pomeroy, flied
suit for divorce against Stanl y
Ales hire, Pomeroy.

Checks complaints
tn the Meigs County

shen ff 's department. The theft oc·
curred afler 5 p.m. Wednesday.
A deer was killt•d when it r&lt;Jn into
the path of a vehicle dri ven by
William A. Harmo n. Ntlro, W. Va ..
who

Wil S

travel im.( south nn U .S. 3.1

Thursda y at 2: 10p.m.

Ohio's tax increase hitsanother snag
COLUMBUS, Ohio I API - SquaDbling between Republicans and
Democ rats in the Democra tcontrolled House has halted action
on a lax hike proposal neither party
wants to be blamed for this election
year.
The Senate-passed proposal was
pulled from the noor for the second
slra tghl day Thursday after quiD-

aboard'" give the measure a bipar·
tisan flavor. He want.&lt;; 20 GOP votes,
he said, and will get them "unless
they want the schools and hospitals
to close."
Minority Lea(ler Corwin M. Nixon,
R·Lebanon, said he could provide
only 17 votes from his caucus and
that he reached that total only with
difficulty . Democrats control the

to the Rules Committee pending the
offering of more Republican votes.
"When they (Republicans)_get 20
votes, we'll bring it up for a vote,"
Riffe said.
Assistant Minority Leader Waldo
Bennett Rose, R-Lima , said he
doesn't think there will be more
GOP suppurt unless some members
detect "a change of opinion in their

bling ove r how many Dc rqocrats a nd

House 56-43.

local home dis tricls."

how many Republicans should support it.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
J r., D-New Boston, said 30 to 35
majority Democrats stood ready to
vole for the measure, which cuts
spending and imposes a temporary
25 percent surcharge on the slate in·
come tax.
He said Democrats would not act
unless enough Republicans came

Riffe ordered the bill , designed to
Rose conceded some Republicans
cut spending about 9 percent except .are concerned about pulitical reper·
for education and welfare, returneq,., cussions but said they also are
unhappy with "a bill that is suD-

Tag day Saturday
Pomeroy Youth League wtll hold
tag da y Saturday from 9 a.m. to I
p.m . Pony league and lillie league
players are to meet at Pomeroy
Village Hall al8 :30 p.m.

A marriage license was iss ued m
Metgs County Proba te Court to
r.regory Glenn King, 20. Pomeroy.
and Nancy Jo Samos. 20, Rl. 3.
Pomeroy .

Junipers
Aborvitae

•Sweet Peppers
•Hot Peppers

•Fruit Trees
Spruce Trees

•Cabbage Plants
•Broccoli
•Cauliflower
•BIUssels Sprouts
•Cucumber Plants
•Cantaloupes and
Watermelon Plants
• Bulk Garden Seeds

• Ex berry Azaleas
•Creeping Phlox
• Rose Bushes
•Garden Mums
•Clematis Vines
•Bleeding Hearl
•Dogwood Trees
berry Vines

.

~~

• Seed Potatoes
•Onion Sets •
Sweet Potato Plants
•Egg Plant
•Strawberry Plants

• Petunias
•Marigolds

Our C redi t Ca rd ~cretana t gives you a. place for your credi t cards,
prot ec t ~ by Rolf• Cr~it G uard. plu~ room fo r photos. bill ~. yo ur
chedbook and a pen . And for a change. a vtry room.v coin purK.
But Rolfs hu alway• had a way of giving you a lot of good things in
a good loo~ing package.

ROLFS .. .it shows vou care•_:_·-----=-~
Tlw \lll tk th.tt Lt1me s 1n1m know Ing \'1\tJ r1·g 1,·mg thl' lllll'~ l 111 I ~ Kt .(!1 dd 11\'l'rl :1\ l',l rrlll ~:-. :tnJ pl'nJ,mh
Lll :-.&gt; ll h\·:1Ut\· tll,t l :; fl ;n,· los h- l·1,1tkJ .~nJ :ttl llrJJh h- t'tl lt'J ... . t' l 111
,I lunJ.\1 &gt;llll' ~ Itt h11\ th ;11 ht'LI mll':O. :1 iJ ;11lJ\ lt'l•.\'1 !')' L.tJJ \ l -~ !11ll' Ill lllli&lt;J\' :tnJ
:-l't' , ,ur , ~&gt;lllt' l t· ll' 't·ln t 11111 u l F lnl' Filshlllll Jt'\\'l' ln

FOR MOTHER'S DAY GIVING
ROLF'S ENTIRE SELECTION
REDY.CED
WOMEN'S WALLETS 20'ro~".c;uding
Plus Sale Prices On:
•ROSE BUSHES
•DRESSES
•SCARVES
•LONG GOWNS &amp;ROBES
.COSMETICS
•TAPES &amp; ALBUMS

•Begonias
•Coleus
•Impatiens

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•Zinnia

•Pine Bark Mulch
•Cow Manure

0
.•
"SNAKE Tales' by Allen
"Sols" Salisbury makes its
American debut in today's
Times-Sentinel comics. The star
of SNAKE Tales is armless,
legless and friendless, but not
fanless. SNAKE is considered a
national celebrity In Australia,
where the comic strip is ranked
number one. The creator of
SNAKE views his cartoon
character as a "virtim of cir·
cumstances." Salls"ry refers to
himself as "a keeper of a suicidal
public serpent."
0

Regal Geraniums, Impatiens,

Reiger Begonias.

• Pine Bark Chips

•Moss Rose

•Garden Fertilizer

•Alyssum

•Plant Foods For
Roses &amp; Azaleas

•Geraniums

or lwtHflll'l.

:r-a1, ., ... adiums,

NEW HANGING BASKETS

~,, .

New Guinea Hybrid Impatiens, Boston'. ;.;
Ferns, Begonias, Ivy Geraniums, Coleus '''

• Sprays &amp; Dusting
Supplies

and Vines. Also Fuschias
And Black Eyed Susan.

YOU ONLY HAVE TO BUY WHAT YOU NEED

PORCH BOXES AND COMBINATION POTS

INSTEAD OF MORE THAN WHAT YOU WANT.

A Mini Garden of Summer Flowers For Porch or Patio

An•a's Best {;.: Largest !je/ectiou At Reasonable Prices
•.
Bob and Corena Barnitz and family and employees would like to wish you a

"Ca.ddysback" airs tonight as a
special movie presentation on
CBS. Ted Knight (left) Is a pompou country club president and
Rodaey Daagerfleld Is an obno~OUB tycoon In the fUm wblcb · ends: wltb 1111 explosive
£baolpi0Diblp gplf match. For
prOgrammlug detaiiB couult
Take-ODe.

EXPRESS IT WITH FLOWERS

Rt. 33

Phone
v

773-57~1

..

not ,·easonably adjusted.

wh ile

tmes

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-sentinel Stall
VINTON - Although it' s · just
another job to the state, news Ohio
325 between Vinton and Rio Grande
will be repaved this summer is being
met with some enthusiasm by local
officials.
" If you've dri ven that stretch
through Rio Grande and Vinton, it's
a big deal," commented Vinton
Mayor Harold Brown .
Part of the project on the
deteriorated slate road will run
through the village, Brown noted.
"I do know I run my mail route on
325, and it's been that way for a
couple of years," he said.
A low bid by the Shelly Co. of
Zanesville was accepted by the Ohio
Department of Transportation . for
the project on April 6. Estimated
cost will be $440,000, according to
Larry Coler , district op-erations
engineer for OOOT's District 10 office in Marietta.
Coler said the project will cover an ·
eight-mile length between the two
villages, starting at Vinton and en·
ding just north of U.S. 35, near
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
Part of the cost, at least for the
quarter-t~&gt;-half·a·mile which will af·

feet Vinton, will be borne by the
vi llage, Coler said.
Brown noted lhe v i ll a~e wi ll pay
approximately $1,300 for repavi ng
that section out of l~e fund it has for
gasoline lax money which is relur·

entintl
II Sec !t o n s. 78 P.1ges 35 CP nt s
A Mul1 1m e d1a In c . News.pa p er

Sunday, May 9, 1982

ned to villages on a monthly bas is by
the stale . Even so. ht• fplt tlw

amount " isn't enou~ h " for the part
being repaved.
Coler said the S().ca lled,7 and •·
half fund was created for Oht&lt;l

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

municipa!Jties to help in the repa11·
of stale roads leading through thetr
towns. The state detennin ~s how
much the town or village sh,•uld \:onlribulc lolhe roa d work after ODOT
l1&lt;1s rev iewed the fund . A lum p sum
determination is usually made, he

Janue1ry ~Jrgamza ti ona l meeting,
and Brow n sa td he's not iced tha t
some cul ve rt replacement has
al ready begun on the road .
Coler said Shelly has an October
complclwn datl• set on tlw job, but

added.

lw ~ i n mn g

Vint on roun cil approved fund1n)-!
1ts sh&lt;:1re for the project &lt;Jt its

Sht'lly clears tls schedule .

the

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPI - Efforts
to get a budget cut-lax increase bill
through the House have been thwarted for a third consecutive day
and delayed until Wednesday .
Leaders gave up in frus lratio.n
F'riday and r ecesse d the
proceedings until Wednesday.
"We've exercised our responsibility. All we asi&lt; is that they exer·
cise theirs," sa1d House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
referring in the latter instance to the
43 members of the Republican
caucus.
Riffe reiterated at a news con·
terence that he lined
for

Along the River .... &amp;.1-8
Area•deaths ••••••••• A..S
Clas41fftid ......... D-2-'7
.F.dJtorlal ,.• • . • • • • . • A·W
Farm •• •·, .....•..•• E-2
. .....~u • • • • • • • • • • •' • ~+8

Masan, W. Va.

s.,..,.

Sta~NaUopal •• : • • • • D-1

C..l-8
~e· ........ IDiert

I.

I I t t t t

t

•

t' ' '

•

ext~ct

t1mc of the repavi ng's
won't be knuwn unti l

1 Continued

on A-ti 1

....----------··-------- ----

News briefs ...
Dexter man dies in crash
McARTHUR - A 3!"ryea r·uld Dexter man dic'!l Fnday nt ghl of

Ill-

juries suff t:n:d in a motorcycle-van co\hston m Y1nton Count y.

The v1ctim was ulentified as Ralph Leland Goble .
The J ackson Post of the Ohio Hi ~ hwa y Patrol s&lt;ud Goble was
trCtvclling westbound on Oh10 160 . fnur-tcnth."i of i'.t Tn tit· t.:i:tSl ofOh1u 324,
at 5:38 p.n1. when he co\11ded wJth the van. dn w n by n.ichard A. Le mmeyer. HiLlgev1ew, Ohio.
Le mrncyc r . who W(!.S eastbuum.l. lusl cuntru\ on &lt;t ld l·hi:tntl curve .
~ nin ~ lefl nf ce nter. Goble's nwtorcycle struck tlw rq •hl re&lt;J r cornt'r of

the •:a n, wlllch then rolled over Gobl e.
Goble was ti-.l ken to O'Biene.ss Menwrii-.il Hosplli:illn Atht•ns Hnd dierl

SET FOR REPAVING- A car travels south from Vinton on Ohio 325,
which is slated for a repaving project to be completed in the fall, the Ohio
Department of Transportation reports. The job will cover an eight-mile
stretch from Vinton to Rio Grande, and is expected to cost $440,000.

the Senate-passed bill from 30 to 35
members of his 56-member caucus,
and that he still wants at least 20
Republicans aboard to defuse the
tax increase as a politJcal issue io
this election year.
On Thursday, Minority Leader
Corwin M. Nixon. R-Lebanin - who
supports the bill - said he and 16

said they offered Riffe three amend·
ments to the bill which, if adopted.
could have increased GOP support
Riffe confirmed that he rejected
the amendments. saying he had
agreed to go along wtlh two or three

other Republicans were ready to go

that the more c han~es that are made

along.
But on F'riday, the oumber had
dropped to 14, according to Assistant
Minority Leader Waldo Bennett
Rose, R·Lima . After a closed GOP
caucus, Rose said, "The speaker
should have taken our advi ce. He
shiluld have let us vole yesterday."
Rose and other
members

in the bill the greater chance that he
could lose some of his Democratic

shortly after being admi lted, a hospital spokesman sa id Saturday.
Lenuneyer was cited for left of center tnlhe incident.
Goble's body was later released to the McCuy·Muore F'uneral Home
in Vinton . An obituary appears on A-ll of loday's edi tion .

Rain~
Showers I111JI

earlier GOP cha nges.

"That kind of thing can't go on
forever," the speaker said . adding

votes.

The bill imposes a tempora ry 25
percent surcha rge on the income

WEATHER F'ORECAST- Showers are due fur most of the Rocky

tax, ra ises some corporate and other

Mountain region and rain is ex~ch·d for northern half of the Great P la ins

taxes, and slas hes spending by about
9 percent to try to erase a $1.3 billion
deficit.

region in the forecast period Saturday until Sunday, accordi ng to the
National Weather Service. IAP Laserphotu) .

Jets enroute to armada; UN efforts continue
By The Associated Press
Twenty more Jet fighters were en
route today to the British armada off
the Falkland Islands, and U.N.
Secretary-General Javier Perez de
Cuella r headed into talks with
Argentina and Britain in a last-ditch

effort to resolve the crisis.
Asked by a reporter in New York 1f
"this could be a make-or-break day"
for finding a diplomatic soluti on,
Perez de Cuellar ~aid, "Yes, I should
say. I hope that today we are
ha vin g ... rea l progress or at
least... we will know whether .. .there

Stanley Tuesday .
The Brtlish have asked the United
States fur U.S. lanker planes to
refuel Bri tish aircraft fl ying to the
Falklands in line with the Reagan
administration 's offer of materiel
support .

is reason for hope."

.:

c~$/!lN.O-.
ISLANOS

----

BOB'S MARKET &amp; GREENHOUSES
OPEN 7 DAYS TILL 9 P.M.

I&lt;Jikled as " preliminary" and are

SR 325 paving project scheduled for summer

~

•Bulk Garden Seeds, Vegetable Plants, Fruit Trees
Can Be Purchased With Food Stau".ps.

Happy Day and express their feelings that vegetables can nourish your body,
but flowers can nourish the soul!

-

+

Herrier Lost In Combat
3. Argentine Cruiser Gen.
Befgteno Sunk
4. ltgenlllll Gun Bolts Hit·
One Sunk ·
5. H.M .S. Sheffield Sunk
6. Two See Herrlers Lost
1. Btilain Imposes t2 Mile limit

and Many Types Of Green Foilage Plants

A SPECIAL NOTE: TRY OUR BULK GARDENSEED DEPT.

are&lt;:~

the precedin g month in Gallia Co un-

ly

Tax hike bill dela.yed again

POTTED PLANTS
Mums, Hydrangeas, Gerber a Daisies,

•Top Soil

•Michigan Peat

• Joseph's Coat

fJI(IIt I

in the tw o county

remaining relatively sta ble
Nationa lly, Apri l's jobless rate
varied by nearly 2 percent between was up by 0.4 of a percentage puint
F'cbruary and March.
from the prev1ous month, more than
The OBES reported an unem- enough to set a record. In March,
ploymen l rate of 11.5 percent 111 joblessness in the U.S. was 9 percent
Meigs County m December 1981 . The - eq uall ing the post-World War II
statewide average was 11.8 percent. record set111 May 1975, lhe high point
In F'ebruary, joblessness 111 Mei gs uf the last severe recession .
Count y rose to 12.4 percent. D urin ~
Not since 1941, when the governt hat month, Oh1o's avera ge unem- ment began compiling monthly
ployment ra te stood al12.2 percent.
slalls l• cs. has un employment
In Ga llia Count y, the 1981 yea r-end lhroughoul lhe country topped 9 perunemployment rate was 10.6 per· cent.
cent. That fi gure dropped lo 9.6 per· . OBES f1gures are estimates
cent tn F'ebruary. ORF.S March prepa rL•d lll c'OOJWrat ion wtth the
statislt cs show a total increase m llure&lt;iu of Labor Slatisllcs, U.S.
unemployment of 1.8 percent over Department of Labor. They are

Forecast For 7a .m. EST

f'lmt ·(•r.• utultJiuttl.• /(•1/mottl yott cun• ulwul l~t•r. For ull lfw
tllin~,, ,,,,, is to you , for allth(• thin~., .,f,•'s doll(', gin&gt; ller a

• African Violet Soil

•Salvia

• Dianthus

GiUes Villeneuve, a :!().year old
Grand Prix driver rrom Canada,
was involved in an 170 mile-anhour crash Saturday and was
pronoonced "clinically dead. "
For details of this and other sports consult the ().section in today's
Tlmes..SCntinel.

Mother's Day May 9th

•Ageratum
•Celosia

•KODAK CAMERAS
•BATH TOWEL ENSEMBLES
•JR. TOPS &amp;BLOUSES
•LAWN FURNITURE
•ENTIRE STOCK OF CHAIRS

To Mother Witll Love

vices show unemployment duri ng
the preceding month in Ga llia County standing at 11.4 percent. while in
Meigs county the ra te reflects total
jobless ness at 11.8 percent of the
labor force.
During that same pen od, lhe
OBES report stales, unemploy ment
across Ohio average&lt;\1 2.3 percenl.
According to the · OBES re port.
1,629 of Gallia County 's total
ava ilable work force of 14,280 were
wtlhoul jobs. In M ei~s County, the
11.8 percent unempl oyment ft gun•
represents joblessness for 1,382 uf
the county's total labor force of
11 ,671.
During the first quarter of 19R2.
the number of unemployed workers

• Middleport· Pomeroy- Gallipolis- Point Pleasant

Today's T-S

·'Jn'f'iul

'

By LARRY EWING
Times.Sentinel Stall
GALUPOUS - A comparison of
federal and stale labor statistics in·
dicates that while unemployment in
the Gallia-Meigs area remains
below the statewide level, the num·
ber of jobless workers in the two
county area exceeds nationa l
averages by more than two percent.
According to figures released
F'riday by the U.S. Labor Depart·
rnent' s Bureau of Labor Statistics,
un employment throughout th e
nation jwnped to a post-World War
[I record of 9.4 percent last month. A
total of 10.3 mil!Jon people were out
of work.
F'ig ures issued last week by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser·

unba
Vol . 16 No. 11

•Potting Soil 4, 8,
20, 40 lb. Bags.

~

UNEMPWYMENT - House Majority Leader James Wright, Jr., !}.
Texas, gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill standing in
front of a graph showing the rise In unemployment in the United States
since 1981. I AP Laserphoto ).

MISCELLANEOUS
ITEMS
•14 Varieties of
Tomato Plants
1Featuring Beller
Boy and Supersonic,
Hybrids

/

Copyrighted 1962

,Gardening Time
•Large Budded
Rhododendron
•laxus (Yews)

I

/
"-/·'

C/

Public round and square dance
wi II be held at the Eli Denison Post
467. American Legion, post home,
Saturday night from 9 p.m. to I a.m.
The dances a re held every Saturda y
night there.

FOR THE BEAUTY
OF THE YARD

Gallia, Meigs Counties below state level

coming spending cuts envisioned in
the proposal, the taxes are supposed
to erase a $1.3 billion state budget
deficit.

Admitted-Eunice Nutter, Reed·
sville; Christopher Diddle, Racine;
JoAnn Weyersmiller, Pomeroy .
Discharged-Maude Bpi ley, F'rancis Young, Julian Moore, Ra lph E!ltt·
cher, Robert Hysell.

Saturday dance set

Marriage license

slantially out of balance."
The veteran . All en Count y
lawmaker also claimed Democrats
have the votes to pass the bill, If they
~et help from JUSt 15 Republicans.
Riffe said this is not the case. '' I
only have between 30 and 35_.". he
said, adding that "after all, th1s IS a
Republica n Senate bill that was sent
to the House."

Local unemployment rate exceeds national average

Combin ed wi th earli er and up-

Veterans Memorial

SEE K&amp;C JEWELERS
FOR YOUR
MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS
.
..-··

Loca l uniL-; were again on the

move iJn s wcr ing num e r ous
emergency calls Thursda y, the
Mei gs County Emergency Medical
Serv ice repo rts .
M•ddleport at 10 :40 a.m. took
Keith McCa rty from Sycamore St. ,
to Holzer Medical Center and at
11:03 p.m. took John Motley from
Hamilton St. . to Veterans Memorial
Hosptlal. The Middleport F'irc
Department answered a brush fire
call in the Shady Cove area at 2:33
p.m. Pomeroy al10 :53 p.m. took Jo
Ann Weyersmille from Spnng Ave ..
to Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Tuppers Plains Unit at 4 p.m.
trea ted Bob Racquel on Route 124.
Tuppers Plains at 4:59 p.m. took
Doris Barringer from Route 124 to
Velera ns Memorial Hospital and at
8:56 p.m. took Sally Pooler from
Route 7 to St. Joseph Hos pital in

at 7 p.m . a t the RaL·me Fi re Depart·

Friday, May 7, 1982

Pomeroy - Middleport , Ohio

Page- 12- The Daily Senti nel

.Falklands at' a glance

'l1dl m8p sbowt major lnciCients to date In the fighting
between Great ~taln and Arge!JUna over the Falkland
Jalanda.

Perez de Cuellar talks first with
Argenti ne Deputy Foreign Minister
Enrique Ros, then with British Am·
bassador Anthony Parsons. The
sessions took on new urgency after
Britain threatened F'riday to attack
any Argentine warship or warplane
found more than 12 miles from
Argentina's 2,50()-mile coast.
The 20 British Harri er fighters
landed on Ascension Island after a
nine-hour, 3,200-mile flight h om
England during which they were
refueled in the air. They were ex·
peeled either to ny down to the
Falklands armada 3,500 miles to the
southwest, or be carried by the container ship Atlantic Conveyor, which
would take about seven days.
· Britain now has 17 Harriers with
TEUS OF
- Argenthe
carviers Hermes and Invincible,
tine Navy Captain Hector Bonza
which
normally have a capacity for
who was commnnding officer of
six jets each. Presumably the Atlanthe Argentine cruiser Gen.
tic Com'eyor would serve as a
Belgrano tells a Buenos Aires
news .conference Friday evening · makeshift carrier for the new
Harriers in the war zone. Two
about the ship's sinking. Tbe Gen.
Harriers were lost in bad weather
Belgrano was a SundaY victim of
Thursday and another was shot
a· British sub's torpedo and was
down
over the Falklands capital of
sunk In the South Atlantic.

ADMIRAL SAYS
TINA LUCKY'' - Admiral of the
Fleet, Sir nrence Lewis, (right)
Chief of the Defense Staff, at
Naval Headquarters at Nor·
thwood, near London Friday,
said " Argentina had a certain
amount of luck" on her side when
the missile attack destroyed HMS
Sheffield off the Falklands.

�May 9, 1982

Commentary and perspective
~~
~v
11%5 Third Ave., Galllpoli•, Oblo

ll1 Court SL, Pomeroy, Oblo

(6141 44&amp;-234%

(814) !m-%156
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PATWiflTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER uiTbo.- Anucla~ Pns1, lat..Dd O.Uy Prnl' ..\UO("ladoo •ad Uw Amnk:.D

Nf"Wf,.p!ll" P\lbllltwn AIIIIOC"i.lllkla

LETTERS OF OPINION •"' '"I('"Omed. Tht-y aboukt ~~!.baD M word• k)q. All
ktwn
111b}f'fl lu e'diUq ud mull tw aJ.a:Drd with ume, .tdrnl •ad t.ekpbaur
..aJDb«. Nuu•I(De'd kt\t'n wiD tM- publbibftt. Lrttrn ~ tM-1.1 a:ood ll•tc. •ddrt'Aial

•rY

w.un, _. ptnoo~IIUa .

Budget assumption
One ttung to keep in mind about the great budget debate is that it is about

WASffiNGTON - Let us shed not
a single tear·over last month's rejection by the United States of the
proposed treaty on a new Law of the
Seas. The treaty is a bummer. We
are well removed from this arrogant
grab for power by those Third World
nations who suppose that the rest of
the world owes them a living.
For the record: Ten years of onesided negotiations came to a head in
the United Nations on April 30. On
the table was a proposed trety running to 175 pages of tightly printed
provisions . In the history of
diplomacy, a more preswnptuous
document scarcely can be recalled
- but the Third World nations thrive
on presumption as cats thrive on
milk. The vote was 130 nations for
the treaty, four agamst and 17 ai&gt;-

Western nations to ally themselves

with the ragtag gaggle of claimjwnpers were France, Canada and
Japan. The Soviet bloc, prudently
looking after its own best interests,
passively abstained.
What all this rigamarole means is
that in December, representatives
of at least 60 nations will queue up in
Caracas to deposit instruments of
ratificatiOn. The treaty will become
operati ve a year later. Most of the

Berry's World

... WAA~IN6 : IH~
fOI..L.OIA.IIf\1~ ~S fro6AAM
COt-l'fA.It.lS DEI'R~~ t N G-

too\A'fE:RtA.L. 1\Nll MA"'
IJNSVI'TABt..E:

~

fo~ VIEW~S

Wl-40 A~ Af...R&amp;AT&gt;~

l

As this is written. it is the third
day of the actual shooting war in the
South Atlantic between England and
Argentina. So far, if you believe the
public relations people, there are no
losers. Only winners - and each
publicist is willing to give details
backing up his story at the drop of a
sombrero or a bowler. It is a battle

~€1.-IN~ "I&gt;OIAIN"
AOOVf ~ 1N&lt;7S .

·~
!

Today in history
Today is Sunday. May 9, the I29th day of 1982. There are 236 days left in the
year.
Today's highlight 10 history:
On May 9, 1978, the bullet-riddled body of Italy's fonner Prime Minister
AJdo Moro was found in parked car in Rome, $4 days after his abduction by
Red Brigades terrorists.
On this date:
In 1926, Americans Richard Byrd and Floyd Bennett became the first men
to make an airplane flight over North Pole.
In 1933, about 25,000 books were thrown into a bonfire in Berlin in the first
of the Nazi book-burnings ..
In 1936, Italy annexed Ethiopia, and King Victor Errunanuel was
proclainned Emperor.
And in 1968, U.S. and North Vietnamese negotiators assembled in Paris for
preliminary talks aimed at ending the Vietnam War.
Ten years ago: Hundreds of U.S. planes and a naval force staged strikes at
North Vietnam following the mining of its harbors.
.
Five years ago: President Jimmy ·Carter met in Geneva with Syria's
·
President Hafez Assad on Middl~ East problems.
· one year ago: More than 100 students walked out as Secretary of State
AJeunder M. Haig Jr. addressed the Syracuse University graduation class.
Today's birthdays: CBS newsman Mike Wallace is 64 years old. Actress
Candice Bergen is 36.
Thought For Today: Of all the things you wear, your expression is the
most impOrtant. -John Ruskin, EngliSh writer-art critic (1819-1900).

and it will pose large risks. Under
our free--enterprise system, a suc-

cessful operation would return large
profits. But under the bureaucratic
inhibitions of this treaty, the Council
would control everything - sites,
permissions, teclmology, profits,
volume, Ires, taxes, royalties. Indeed, the Council would have its own
"Enterprise," a supranational
mining corporation with power to
compete with private consortiums
and to share their tehcnology.
Apart from its utterly unacceptable provisions on mining, the
treaty is not without merit. The
agreement codifies a substantial
body of international law dealing
with sea lanes, 12-mile limits, 200mile economic zones and the like.

of

reluctant

warriors,

each

beseeching the world, "For God's
sake, stop us before somebody gets
hurt."
So far, the only loser I can see is

the United States. We have trailed
the good will of most of Latin
America for the good will of
England . We have sacrificed
whatever influence we have ever
had in the emerging nations of South
and Central Am~rica by declaring
our support of the British. If any
nation on the North American continent should have come to the aid of
the British, it should have been
Canada. But if the Canadian government ever offered its support to the
mother country it was not noted in

ratifying

nationS

have

not

'

1

IS 'HONOR NON SATISfiED?

the

A vote for Bell?

slightest capability of actually
miring the sea noor. They lack the
capital, the know-how and the
managerial and technological skills.
but under this treaty all these
prerequisites for a successful undertaking would be handed to them
free. This is the Something for
Nothing Treaty. No wonder that
when the roll was called up yonder.
they all cried "yes."
Without U.S. participation, the

This began as an endorsement of
Jeff Bell for senator in New Jersey,
and it is still that in a way, but in
examining Mr. Bell's campaign
material, one runs into a problem,
and this itself is worth looking into.
Background : Sen . Harrison
Williams of New Jersey got caught
up in the Abscam net, and after
more farewell appearances than
John McConnack, finally resigned
from the Senate. The new
Republican governor, Mr. Kean, appointed to fill out the unexpired tenn
the wonderfully agreeable and
as tute businessman Nicholas Brady,
senior partner of Dillon Read, who
however made tl plain that he was
willing to spend the time between
now and the end of the year in the
Senate, but not more. The seat, then ,

Courtconn~p~a~S~Sl~·o~n~========Ja=ck=A=n=de=rso=n
WASHING TON - U.S. Supreme Americans as they grow older.
Court has one thing in common with Unlike the rest of us. Supreme Court
the Kremlin . Both are overjustices need never worry about
populated by obsolescent curbeing thrown out of their jobs or formudgeons, who are vested with an
ced to rely on their children or the
arrogant and arbitrary power. They
welfare agencies to stay alive.
tend to regard the entreaties of the
A member of the high court would
aged and atnictcd as an intolerable
have to try really hard to die broke.
An associate justice can retire at
affront.
The " nine old men" of Franklin age 65 after 15 years' service, or at
Roosevelt's era have been replaced age 70 with only !0 years' service,
by Snow White and the eight and still draw a full salary for life:
codgers. Snow White is th e $93,000 a year. A chief justice can do
youngest; Sandra Day O'Connor is · the same and draw $96,800 a year.
52. The next in physical age. William
Whenever justices retire, they can
Rehnquist, is 57; b11t in other ways,
count on a pension worth at least
he is the oldest of them all. the
half of their salary - more than
majority are in their 70s.
enough to put them in the upper
Yet they have shown little com- crust of American wage earners.
passion for their own generation. My
So perhaps it' s not surprising that
associates Joseph Spear and Corky
members of the court find it difficult
Johnson have carefully isolated 14 to relate to the problems of aging
Supreme Court decisions that have Americans. Five decisions since
affected the elderly since Warren
1969 concerned forced retirement
Burger became chief justice in 1969. because of age; the court ruled
A discouraging 12 of these rulings against senior citizens in four of the
undennined the ri~hts of senior

ca::;es.

citizens; only two strengthened their
basic rights .
The justiees live in a privileged
world of thei r own, isolated from the
fears and hardships that beset most

Three of four Social Security cases
were decided against the elderly
petitioners. In two other cases involving health issues; the old folks
wound up losers. And in still three

other rulings, involving pension
rights. the elderly again lost every
time.
Here's how the Supreme Court
voted on the 14 test cases:
Chief Justice Warren Berger, 74;
For the elderly. 2: against. 12.
William J. Brennan. 76; for, 9;
against, 5.
Potter Stewart, 67 !retired); For,
2: against, l2.
Byron "Whizzer" White, 64 ; For,
2; against, 12.
Thurgood Marshall, 73: For, 10:
against, 3: did not participate tn one

Much has been written about the
" imperia l presidency," and the fact
that election as chief execul! ve
automatically guarantees that the
men will live like a millionaire for
the rest of his life. Less has been said
about the members of the Supreme
Court, probably because their every
move does not make headlines
around the world.

Yet in some ways, a Supreme
Court justice is in better shape than
a president. The job isn't nearly as
harrowing ; the hours arc a Jot better, and the pay and perquisites are
pretty close to a president's. They
case.
Harry A. Blacklnan, 73: For, I : also don't have to worry about getagainst, 12: did not participate in ting re-elected; once appointed and
approved, barring flagrant
one case.
Lewis F. Powell Jr .. 74: For, 3: misbehavior, they serve until they
against, 9; did not participate for decide to quit or until they keel over.
one case.
Furthennore, unlike a president,
William Rehnquist. 57, For; 3; members of the court are anagainst. 10; wasn't on the court for swerable to virtually no one. they
are the arbiters of their own as well
one case.
John Paul Stevens, 62; For, 5: as everyone else's conduct.
against, 4; declined to participate in
It's small wonder, then, that these
three cases, and wasn't on the court pampered members of a uniquely
for the other two.
privileged class show so little symJustice O'Connor was not serving pathy for those in their age group
on the court when any of the 14 cases who have not attained such exalted
were considered.
status.

lfunba~ ~imto • ltrntintl
USPS ~25-300
A Multimeci1a Newspc~pt"r
PuiJJishcd eaeh Sunt.l.ay, 825 Tlun.J
IIVI:nue, by the Ohio Valll'y Publishinl!:
Cumpi!ny· Mulliml'tlitt. lnc. Sel"Und diiljS
])l lSU:Igl' paid al Galh])l)l ls. Ohiu, 45631.
F.nll•red as set.'tmd daSll III&lt;UIIllg 111allt'r
&lt;! I Po111eruy, Ohiu, Posl Ofrin·.

Washington Post."
"I can't do ~t. Bradlee had to get
a job for his godson, so he called up
Otis Chandler at the Los Angeles
Times. Chandler said he'd give the
kid a job if Bradlee hired his godson
to work on The Post. Bradlee had to
use up his last draft choice in the
trade with Chandler."
"What about the White House? My
kid is willing to start anywhere."
"I can't ask the White House for a
favor because if they give your kid a
job, they'll expect me to go in the
tank for them in exchange."
"What about the State Department?"

"I don't know anybody in the State
Department. Besides my job there is
offered first to the kids of -big
Republican contributors. You have
to understand. I have nothing to
trade with anybody. I can't just call
up and ask for a job for your kid in
this town. if I can't gel one for his."
"So what you're saying is I should

tell my kid you won't get him a job in
Washington."
"That's unfair. I like your kid, but
I have 4~ resumes from sons and
daughters on my desk right now, and
I can't even get them in the Marine
Corps.''

"How about calling up your friends at Public Television'"
"I don't have any friends at Public
Television any more. They were all
laid off."
"My kid isn't proud, he'll even
work for a lawyer."
"Look, Phil, I'd love to help you
but I don't have any ~lout with
lawyers. The word is out on the
street I can't get their kids a job in
this town, so they have no interest in
interviewing anyone I send them."
"You turned out to be one helluva
friend. All I ask you for is ·one little
lousy favor and you give me the
brush."

"Has yolir kid come to Washington
and tried to geta job for ~If?"

I

?fiJI&lt; aw oo'ld.dl'1 Uw4ed lo atknd

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
HyC11rrlcr ur Mulur Ruu\t'

..
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One yc&lt;tr .

. .. $!"12.80
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PRICE

;irakmal !l'u1Wuf dl~ 'k/e&amp;t al

Nn su!Jseriptinlls lly r11ail pt'l"llllllcd 111
hmnt• l'H I"rit•r Sl'I"Vil'l' lS

fJ~t

Argentina, Secretary ci State,
Alexander Haig grabbed the reins
and took off on a shuttling m1ssion
designed to make Henry Kissinger,
his old boss, look like a piker. All
Haig got for his " lake charge"
maneuver was plenty of free riding
on aU. S. Air Force jet.
When the United States came out
on thl! l:iide of England, the Argen·
tine junta expressed surprise and
shock. With their own record. ! can' t
see why they should be too surprised. After their landing Reagan
called bolh Argentina and England
"good friends of the United States ...
It was only after pressure by
Congressmen and citizens that he
labe led th e Arg entineans as
aggr~~sors.

Even while Hai g was

making his highly publicized shuttle
tnps, the Pentagon was acting with
the British fleet, relayi ng message,;
to the British fleet. relaying
messages to the Britis h s ubmarines,

etc. That was the two countries who
were still "two good fr iends." The

Umled Stales was being impartial In
fa vor of England. Were we the
" honest" broker'
So now we have three nations involved in the war in the South Atlantic. The United States is as much involved as England, since we have
chosen the English said. We ha ve
promised to deliver plane fuel,

the aggressor. The junta government seized the Falklands to divert
attention from run-away Inflation
and !ugh unemployment. Prime
Mini s te r
Margare t Thatche r
welcomed the invasion to lhvert

England's attention from her own
political problems of inflatiOn and
Utll'mployment. Both countnes'
govl' rnm cnt::; a rc f1 ghtm g fur the ir
po!Jtica ! l1ves by endan gt•ring the
Jives of then· arrned furl'CS. Just

wha t the hell

I'll'

are do1ng 111 the

rn1dd!e is unl'lea r. Your guess IS as
good t.t s mine. Wt: could ht.t ve ct.tsi!y

remained ne utra l. But. if something
c:HJd Russ1a l'liiC rgt~s as
the fourth factor of the cquatiun . tl

J.!OCS wron~::

would be. in President Het:tga n's own
words, ·· A Jncssy situati on .··
That WH S thl' understa tem ent
the year 1

ur

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ONE STEP
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munitions, equipment and other sup-

plies to the Ascens ion Islands for use
by the English fleet.
For the life of me, I can't see how
any of the three countries can
escape frurn their self-imposed
dilemma with honor . ArgcntinGt w&lt;:1s

Jr.

Po 1aro 1d's T1me Ze r o OnP Step

rtw w orl cl" s so mplec; l c r~merr1

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Directors and officers of the Ohio
Valley Bank are folks with a
whole - hearted interest in th e
prosperity and well -being of the area
we serve. They have a real stake in its
future . They know its conditions and
needs intimately. It is their home.

p.m. lo 4 00 p.m

f&lt;ejwlrnwntJ ....LI 6e Wi..ed
I&lt;$ VP

1-1&lt;.20

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A good portion of our depositors'
funds are invested-in the co mmunities we serve-in so.und loans
to the individuals and businesses of
our banking area.

You do business with the officers of a
Gallipolis independent bank. We're
right here to advise and serve you.
There's no problem of decisions
made from a "home office" somewhere else.

.,

.,.,....

'
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"

of American States, as is Argentina
and the United States.
Most of the blame for the war in
the South Atlantic can be laid
squarely on the shoulders of
President Ronald Reagan. Since he
has been in office, he has acted on
the assumption that anything his
predecessor, Jimmy Carter, did was
wrong. Carter had cut off aid to
Argentina for civil rights abuses in
the disappearance and political
murders of thousands of its citizens.
Immediately after taking office,
Reagan began playing footsie with
the military junta which controlled
the country . He overruled Carter's
order cancelling aid to the junta
government and turned a blind eye
to their civil rights record. Perhaps
the president unintentionally sent
the wrong signals to the Argentine
junta and they assumed they could
take the Falklands with the U.S.
blessing . They assumed the Reagan
cajolery was sincere, just as many
in this country have assumed. Less
than three months ago he was
dickering for Argentine mercenaries to act with the CIA as a
covert force in Nicaragua .. ·
The Argentineans had made their
surprise landing on the Falklands
before either the United States or
Britain could intervene. When
President Reagan asked them to
reconsider, they ref...,.ed. That was
the first hint they ·had that the
Reagan blandishments had not been
sincere. Although the president had
suggested Vice-President Bush head
a negotiating team to settle the dif·
ferences between England and

35 Cents

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Independent banking is a vital and
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Ope11 dl&lt;uMe ;., ~ ~

:. ~~

j·

Page

Mll"hiJ.:i:ill, 4807:i.

"That's more like it. Whom are ·.:.!·
you going to call'"
: J:
"I have a friend in the NBC bureal) --•·•
here, who is looking for a job for his ,' ;
kid at CBS. I know a guy at ABC who ;:&amp;
is looking for a job for his kid at '~
NBC. If I can swing that, then the ~
guy at ABC will owe me one, and I :;l
can get him to interview your kid." · "'•
"Great.I'll tell my kid."
;,f
"Hold it! The whole deal hinges on - ''
me getting a job for Bill Paley'~ ;.•~
granddaughter in cable television." . ;l;

'\

The Sunday Tin1es·Sentinel

Important Reasons Why
You Expect More
From Ohio Valley BankYour Hometown,
Home-owned Bank

~;

'

va .

~---------------------------------------------------------is for all intents and purposes tically none of the major proposals en route to his highly or- all diffi cult to bring down 1ntcrc:;t
vacant, and the two Republican con- newspapers had in hand even a thodox proposal that at the end of the
rates. The Fed merely buys bonds.
tenders for the nomination are Jeff photograph of the young contender, line we should re-embrace the gold
and the banks wake up and find that
they have huJ;e reserves. wh1ch they
Bell - and Millicent Fenwick.
so safe did they think Mr. Case in of- standard.
proceed to Jet out competitively,
Mrs. Fenwick is a wonderfully fice . A few months later, unhappily,
Now it is true that the continuation
bringing down the interc::; t re:ttc.
colorful woman who plays an Jeff Bell lost out in the general elec· of high interest rates is
But how far ' The investor will on
audience with supreme skill. She tion to Bill Isradley, the basketball economi ca lly depressing and
the one hand gladly seen the interest
can be toughly analytical or soupy- hero who is also a Rhodes scholar, politically emharrassing. It is also
rates come down. on the other hand ,
sentimental, as the situation and an effective politician.
true that no one has come up with a
will examine what c &lt;.~uscd it to com e
warrants; or rather, demands. She
But there is this problem with Jeff definitive explanation for why they
down. And if he deduces that the
is, by rough designation, a liberal Bell, and one that any number of should remain so high. Certainly it 1s
Republican. Indeed she voted with conservatives running for office are true that the anticipated budget ca use was an inrodinotte expa nsio n
of the money supply . he will hold his
.Jimmy Carter 65 percent of the time facing, and it is the problem of high deficit doesn't help.
- more often than some very liberal interest rates. Bell has insisted on a
But what should be the result of own savings back from orthodox lenDemocrats. And then, though it is series of recommendations that such Fed-forced inflation as Bell ding sources, and seek hedges again unkind to say this about a lady, she challenge conservative orthodoxy recomme nds' It is objectively not at st the infl ation that would follow. as
the night the day .
is getting on, and if she won and and are ardently dismissed as incompleted the tenn she seeks, she flationary by many of the faithful.
would be retiring at age 79. On the Bell singles out as •· the bottom line"
whole one would be better off with a of his "entire campaign" a
young man in his late 30s, par- challenge to the policies of Fed
ticularly one so bright and well Chainnan Paul Volcker. Bell's plan
schooled in political conservatism as is "simply a reversal of present Fed
to have effected the biggest upset of policy." Keep the Fed's discount
the year when, in 19'78, he won the rate below the market rate; begin
primary against Sen. Clifford Case. dwcounting commercial paper; and
This victory was both a political and have the Fed stop its open-market
a journalistic upset, since prac· operations. Bell makes these

Hl'prt·sctli&lt;tllw, Br&lt;~nl"lalll. 17117 Wl'sl
N111c Mile Road, Sutll' !H, Ol'Lroil,

"I told him he didn't have to
because I knew you. It's pretty late
in the game to tell him he has to find
his own job. It will break his heart
that his Uncle Artie wouldn't even . .
help him fulfill his lifetime dream."
"Why didn't you call me first · •
before you told him I could get him a
job?ll
1
"Because if you said you couldn't
he would lose all respect for me... . rl
"Okay, I'll make a few calls: ·. ~1

Maybe I can get lucky."

w.

William F. Buckley

Mt·mlkr : Tht• Assnt' lah•tl Pn·ss, l nl&lt;~nJ
Da1ly Press A.ssodatmn anti lhl'
Alllt'l"ll" ~ll
Nl•ws p&lt;!po•r· Publi s lwrs
Assot" li:i\11111 . National i\tlvcrll slllg

YOUthful job trainill2ez:===A=rt=Bu=ch=wa=ld
Most of the telephone calls I've
been receiving these days go
something like this.
" Hi, it's Phil."
"Hello, Phil, how are you' "
" Never mind the small talk. My
kid is graduating from college this
year and he wants a job."
"This is a bad time to get a job in
Washington."
"That's why I'm calling you. I
figured you would know somebody."
"I know a lot of people, but I don't
know anybody who can give him a
job."
"What about all those senators
and congressmen you're always
writing about'"
"I haven't had any luck with them.
I called a senator the other day
about a job for my nephew, and he
asked me for a job for his niece. It
was a standoff. Neither one of us
could do anything for the other.''
"You know Ben Bradlee?"
"Of course I know Ben Bradlee."
"Good, get my kid a job with The

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

any of the newspapers or magazines
I have read. Still, they are members
of the British Empire and have the
same head of state.
Our other neighbor on this continent, Mexico, has much in common
with Argentina. They have the same
language, the same religion and the
same customs. So, if someone from
North America was needed to act as
honest broker in diplomatic
negotiations for Argentina, what
better choice than Mexico? Mexico
is also a member of the Association

The United States was joined only
by Venezuela, Turkey and Israel in
spurning this can of worms. The only

To start with, the original administration proposals back in January
were based on an optimistic assumption that after a virtua lly no-growth
1982. the gross national product would reswne expa nsion by a healthy 5.2
percent the next year, 5 percent in 1984 and 4.7 percent in 1985.
Those were regarded as excessively optimistic assumptions by the
Democratic opposition and most economists, and one result of the weeks of
otherwise unproductive congressional-White House budget negotiations has
been to scale them down .
The consensus assumption now is the GNP will decline by almost one
percent this year, with an upturn in 1983 projected at 4.5 percent. The figures
for the following two years similarly have been revised downward to 4.1 and
3 7 percent.
And then there is inflation, with assumed rates currently in the six percent and seven percent annual range throughout the four-year period.
On this basis, and assuming all tax cuts take effect as now planned. it is
bemg assumed tax revenues will rise steadily from $623 billion this year to
$780 billion in 1985. But expenditures, as now projected. will rise more
rapidly - from $742 billion in 1982 to more than a trillion dollars in 1985.
What you get from putting these last two sets of figures together are
asswned federal deficits beginning at $119 billion this year and cltmbmg
steadily and steeply to $233 billion in 1985. The government could be in the
red by three-quarters of a trillion dollars for the four years.
Don't try to remember any of these figure s. There will not be a quiz on
them. When the books are finally closed on the years in questton. any or all of
them - more likely the latter - may turn out to have been more or Jess probably the former - off the real mark.
,
What they point up is that the bud~eting process works with asswned

Middleport

staining.

asswnptions.

rather than proven figures . At best, they are highly educated guesses otr
jectively arrived at. At worst, they are wishful thinking. And the wishes
usually have a political coloration .
This 1s recognized by both parties in the budgeting process. The normal
procedure i.s for administration and Congress to proceed to a compromi::;e af·
ter scoring reasonable numbers of political points. Deadlocks can be broken
and the chaos of a congressionally drafted budget avoided by submission of
revised drafts, leaving initiative with the White House, as happened in the
Carter admmistration. Although that may not be the most encouraging of
examples to trot out at this point.
But this time we appear to be in for something different.
With an oceupant of the White House taking a p&lt;lsltion that unyielding
may inadequately describe, and the congressional opposition taking a stand
on its own principles that has the added advantage of promising electionyear issues, something eventua lly like nonnal procedure toward a
reasonable compromise is not necessari ly to be assumed.

future of this grab for undersea subsidiary offices. The 3t&gt;-member
sovereignty will remain in doubt. Council, functioning as the executive
Not surprisingly, the whole organ of the Authority, is to run the
elaborate administrative structure operation. The United States would
is to be financed at the outset by not even have been guaranteed a
assessments "based upon the scale seat on this executive body.
used for the regular budget of the
The basic idea is for this new
United Nations." That is to say, U.S. Authority _to proclaim its sovereigntaxpayers had been expected to put ty over tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the surface of
up the largest share of the expenses the planet Earth. We are talking,
for a new "Assembly." By refusing among other things, about two
to ratify, we have been spared at 'million square miles of accessible
ocean shelf thought to contain 500
least this imposition.
The treaty projects an In- billion barrels of oil and 1.5
ternational Sea-Bed Authority quadrillion cubic feet of natural gas.
headquartered in Jamaica. All In the Pacific alone, we are talking
ratifying nations will belong to the of 16 billion tons of mineral nodules
Authority. Under the Authority, the rich in manganese, nickel, copper
treaty calls for an Assembly. a and cobalt.
Council, a Secretariat, and a small
The recovery of these natural
colony of assocated tribunals and resources will demand large capital

Pomeroy

U.S. in the middle-------.-.------=Lo:.:....:.w:...:..::en:.....:...:w:..=in~gett=-:

May 9, 1982

Law of the seMa======Ja=m=es=J.=Kll=·p=atri=·c=k

A Olvt.ioo ol

HOBART WILSON JR
Executive Editor

P.~gt-A·,2

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�May 9, 1982

May 9, 1982

f'age- A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

--- -

.

'

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - At
least 8,000 Ohio school teachers will
lose their jobs this summer unless
the Legislature can get grind out
passage of a long-debated ·tax increase bill .
And even if it pAsses, the layoff
figure still will be about 2,000, says
John Hall , chief lobbyist for the
80,000-member Ohio Education
Association (OEA).
He reitereated Friday, when the
House failed for the third day in a
row to get agreement on the Senate
passed bill, that Ohio's schools are
sliding into an unprecedented
disaster due to lack of state funding .
His message is typical of many
other lobbyists these days - which
are not necessaril y lost on
lawmakers.
But the simple fact is that the

I

·- ·
.

'

....
crowd

_

---.. .;-.......

-~

OEA PIIOTEST - Ohio Education Association
president Nancy Lnddeke stands at the top of the Ohin

of OES members who marcht'll to the
Statehouse to protest education cutbacks. The OEA

St.atchuusc ."ih·ps Friday and prepares to talk to the

ntmc to Columbus for a convention. ( AP Laserphotu).

AMC urges union concessions
TO I.E DO. Ohlll 1 AP 1 - A vice
president of Amcn can Motors Corp .
said Fnda y the curn pany has urged

U111ted Auto Workers in Toledo to
recunsldl·r a conl ral't conct•ss ion
plan that 1ndudes wo rk er tn\'estnh:ll t 111 the ftrtrl.
Fulluwtng a meeting between
AMC fH"L'Stdcnt J ose Dedcurwaen.ier
and UAW !.neal 12 officials 011

au to workers to finance a com pany

product devel opment program .
AM C workers would ha ve been
repaid the money plus 10 percent inlerest by 1985.
About 700 members of the local
mel Frida y night. l11cluding la 1d-off
workers, the ]IJCa l includes ~:~bout
5.GOO rne1nbers, offi cta ls sat d.
No decis ton wa .s reached on
annther vo te, UAW local cha inmm

Friday. the t"t Hllpi:in y's vtce
prt'Sidt'nt fur labor relaltons,
l{t t h:-~rd
Ma cC rr~cken .
said the
i!Uiolllakt·r wants thL' kntatt vL' cnn-

meding d&lt;Jte W&lt;J S announced. He

trat ·l rt't "t HlSitlerell .
Tht · TulPdo lot'&lt;Jl rejl'ded the pbn

sa1d also that lhl' union's 111krnatt unal t·o uld lll"l lt-'r &lt;JnolhPr

last wet·k by Jbout 200 vott:s. It had
bt't'll &lt;-tppro\'l'd e&lt;JrllL•r by locals in

\'U tl' .

\1dw;.~ukt•t• and Kt •nnshi-1 . Wi s. bn1
lht• Tokdo local's llt')..!alt V L' volt' loc&lt;J l
k11lt-d ilw pa l'l .
Tht• cunt r; wl . t•ndu rst•d e;tr ltL' r thl _\
year by UA W's llltunalH)na l lcl:l der-

shtp, would have cunceded $1 15
million 111 pay rat ses ami benefits nf

Ray Okdie sa id . He sa1d he would try
to set up another meeting. but no

MacCral' hn scud comp&lt;Jn y official s. at tlw ll'lt'Pling with the union

lt·"ders. " urged that the contract be
n·const den•d. We hctll two specific
purposl'S tn ~ ~ n in g ln lhL• meeting and
feel that bot h were &lt;Jl'cutttpl tshed .
" We felt th at tt l th e meetm ~ f wL·nt
Wl'

SR 325 repaving ...
11u\ tlllL' uf tJLJr pnrn&lt;:~ry
proj l'l'!..., . but wt • dtl put &lt;I )()\ of
" It 's

l'redt'll t't' til nut Id ling these ba ck
l"llctds dt'lt •ntwatl'... tht · offi ctal
ll tllt•d. " Hu1 y ou have p~._•op l e who
ll\'i' out lhl' rl'. ;tnd you ha vl' to do it. "
Coler s;ud Lhe road wtll receive i:l
hotuu x s urface - wh te h 1s the fi r st
tune the rn&lt;Jd has had a mort•

durable tran·ll1ng lup. Tht• Vtn tunHitl Gran dL' rep&lt; JVement is purl of
ODOT's n ·ncwed co nu niltnl'nt to
resurfa ctn g roads now tl11:1t revenue
from thl· J percent ~ a.solinc t&lt;Jx ha.s
bt.&gt; gun rulltng into the sl&lt;Jte tre&lt;Jsury .

This yea r. ODOT plans to repave

ruu ~ hly 160 nul cs thruugh D istrict
10. whieh !'l')Ji'l'senl&lt;; &lt;J 60 percent inLTeasL' uvcr last year's work list,
C'tller addl'd .
BecatiSl' funduw l1as been L'O min ~
in , Brown nuted the county highway

department h&lt;J s pi&lt;Jced gra ve l ~:~nd
lar on sonw roads agi.lin . " That s ure
ts a blesslllJ,! in disguise for those
people who li ve on county roads." he
S&lt;Jlti .

Gallia Count y Engineer James
Baird S&lt;llll Wlothcr res urfa cing
project - a t.9 mile stretch of Bid-

well-Rodney Ro"d - is awaiting
final approval from the slate. The

well and we expect that
management's message to the group
was well received," MacCracken
said. The message was reconsideration of the contract.
In addition, there were rwnors. in
the plant thai AMC's Jeep di vision
had sudden ly been awarded a big
contract by the U.S. Army. " We
wanted to discuss how that rumor
got started, because it is not true,"
MacCra cken said. Such a contract
could affect UAW members' reaction to contract concessions, he said.
" We wanted to try and set the
record straight, and to remind them
of details of the contract and the employee investment plan ," MacC:racken said.
The existing contract at AMC's
Toledo plant expires Jan. 31, 1983. A
Sl'parate

agreement

covering

wo rkers at the two Wisconsin plants
expi res Sept. 14, 1983.

1 Cootinucd

from page All

timing of an attempted solution to
Ohio's fiscal crisis has been forced
in an election year, with all99 House
seats and 17 of the 33 in the Senate at
stake. Add to that the fact that the
legislature only last November
raised taxes - including a 25 percent boost in the sales tax - in a
move that was supposed to solve the
fiscal crisis.
The revenue estimates they had
been given completely collapsed,
and the Legislature had to go back to
the drawing boards - this time with
a projecled budget deficit of $1.3
billion.
Last week in the House, Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
kept the Senate bill, raising the income tax 25 percent, bottled up.
The reason was that minority
Republicans, having to run this year
in districts drawn by Democrats,
refused to come forward in numbe rs

Rhodes gets
trucking bill
::lLUMBUS, Ohio (API
Legislators have sent Gov. James A.
Rhodes a bill backed by the trucking
industry that would allow longer
trailers to be used in hauling goods
across Ohio.
Representatives OK'd the Senatepassed measure 88-9 Friday .
The General Assembly also wraJ&gt;ped up work on a bill to revamp the
Public Utilities Commission.
The trucking measure would not
change the current limit of 60 feet
for the total length of a commercial
tractor and semi-trai ler combination.
It would eliminate the 4:&gt;-foot
ma ximum length that now applies to
the lra1ler section. That would clear
way for use of vehicles in which
longer trailers are pulled by shorter
tractors.
Rep. Arthur R. Bowers. the House
floor manager. said the bill would
allow more efficient transportation
of lightweight products.
Trailers at present ca n be fully
loaded with certain products without
reaching the maximmn weight load
permitted . Bowers, D-Steubenville,
said overall length and weight limits
would not be changed by the bill .
" It would permit the hauling of
more lightweight material," he said.
Rep. Ike Thompson, D-Cieveland,

county will bear 25 percenl or the
cost, while the slalt• will undertake disr~greed .
the rest.
"The trucks on the highway are
Ba1rd said his department is the ma in culprits that tear up our
hoping for an August sale dale on the roads and bridges ," Thompson said.
project, and in the meantime, his ofHe sa id he had trave led
fi ce is working on preparing plans throughout the state recently as a
and engineering studies. Another member of a panel studying needed
G"Ji ia prt&gt;j ect, cove rin g the . bridge repairs.
replacement of a bridge on Little
Thompson blamed trucks for
Kyger Road , is also in the planning causing 80 percent of the damage
stage, he sa id .
but said they do not pay their share
or maintenance

large enough to suit the speaker.
He said he would provide 30 to 35 of
the 50 votes needed, but that the
GOP would have to provide at lea&gt;1
2Q, so that the tax boost would be
adequately neutralized as a campaign issue.
But Assistant Minority Leader
Waldo Bennett Rose, R-Uma, said
at week's end that only 14
Republicans, including himself,
were willing to support the bill. Rose
said that much support from the
GOP, along with the fact of earlier
pa ssage by the Republicancontrolled Senate, should be enough
to satisfy Rtffe.
He accused the speaker of holding
back Democratic votes, even members running this year in safe
districts in which a vote for a tax
hike would not be politically fatal.
Rose said the majority party was
playing "a petty game of chicken''
The speaker categorically denied
that he was holding back votes, and
he sa id " I'm not playing any
He said that the Republicans will
have to give him 20 votes "unless

they want the schools and hospitals
to close ."

The House will return Wednesday,
Also heading for the governor's
after what many are calling a
desk was the bill restructuring the coo ling off period, ,to resume the
PUCO, the panel which regulates
tedious negotiations.
how much utilities may charge
Meanwhile, the Senate will be
customers.
marking time until a joint con·
Representatives voted 9().2 to acference committee - to be named
cept a joint conference committee
following House passage, whenever
report which made a relatively
it comes - has agreed on a comminor change in the House version
promise bill . Both houses then would
of the measure. Senators followed
have to vote on that committee's
suit 23-4.
version of the bill.
" It is a major piece of refonn that
should hold rate increases in line ,"~------------Sen. Sam Speck, the chief sponsor,
said.

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio I API - The
owner of this area's la rgest
unionized carrier or trucking company says deregulation or the
trucking industry brought a nood of
new truckers and less money for all.
Robert L. Wise, owner of Bob's
Truck Service, said that before
deregulation in 1979, truckers were
getting 91 cents per hundred pound
weights to ship loads to Chicago.
The rate was supposed to be increased 8 percent by the Interstate
Commerce Commission, but
deregulation occurred and new companies fonned, he said.
As a resplt, new non-union
carriers cut rates to 87 cents, and the
drop has continued to the current 80
cents.

SYRACUSE, OHIO
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
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LEE'S CARPET

Kenny Holley, Tammy Patrick,
Waverly Wickline, Laurel Henson ,
Patty Camden, Sarah Daniel ,
Teresa Donnell, Theresa Hall , Usa
Saunders, Elaine Tirpak, Theresa
Todd, Denise Hunter, Becky Irwin .
Betsy Irwin, Stephanie Isaacs,
Debbie Kuhn, Lori Langhorne,
Jessica Montgomery, Christy Prince, Pearl Fraley, Julie Rainey, Connie Dyer, Shari Howard, Wendy
Knox, Angela McGuire.
&lt;!
April Graham, Usa Wedemeyer,
Sherri Thompson, Kim Jefferson,
Beth Lynch, Kelly Gra ham, Jenny
Merry, Jo Ellen Oliver, John Gloss,
Russ Shaw, Rod Morgan and Crissy
Richie.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The banana plant Is a herb which can grow
to 25 feet - the world's tallest.
The edible portion of the plant is a
fruit.
Bananas grow In hundreds of
sizes, shapes and colors.

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BODY REMOVED - The body of Charles Kidd, 4 White Ave.,
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and city police personnel. Kidd's body was discovered lying on the kitchen floor of the home by the EMS, who had been reportedly notified by a
neighbor. While the cause of death was not available Saturday. death was
known to have followed extreme bleeding. Gallia County Coroner Dr.
Donald R. Warehime is srheduled to conduct a full examination of the
deceased. Investigation of the incident Is continuing under the authority
oflhe Gallipolis City Pulice. (Photo by Kevin Kelly)

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PUrrs AND SUBPI.()TS- While Cornelius I Richy
Steele),lower left, convinces Barnaby (Jamie Rainey)
to accompany him on a trip to New York, Dolly I Amlie
Wiseman). at top right, listens to the romantic

problems of Ermengarde 1Angela Ramey I and Am·
brose (Todd Haner) during first art action nf " Ht•llo,
Dolly" at Washington Elementary auditorium this
weekend.

WINNING HER WAY Dolly (Annie Wiseman) turns the charm on with Horace
(Jeff Sanders) in the combined Gallia Academy High
School combined choirs
production of "Hello, Dolly"
this weekend. The show, c~r
directed by Anne Fischer
and Michael Corbin, is based
oo Thornton Wilder's famous
comedy "The Matchmaker."
(Times-Sentinel photos by
Keith Wilson).

Beat of the Bend

Middleport alumni reunion
slated Saturday, May 29
By BOB HOEFLICH
The Middleport High School Alumni Association officers are working
hard in preparation for the annual
reunion to be held
on
Saturday
evening, May 29.
Besides the
usual activities of
the reunion, the
association this
year will pay
special honor to
General James
BOB
Hartinger, a Middleport grad who
will be honored by the Middleport
community over the entire weekend.
Incidentally, General Hartinger,
now wearing four stars, emceed the
alumni reunion several years back.
Also attempts are being made to gel
the Middleport High championship
football team of 1942 assembled for
the alumni reunion and the weekend
for that matter since.Gen. Hartinger
was a member of the team so that
v
should enhance the weekend.
Only out-of-town Middleport High
Alumni will be receiving letters this
year and those went out last week
advising everyone or reunion plans.
Classes holding reunions will go
back to 1907 and will include all
those for each five years after the
1907 dale through 19'72.
Joe Young, observing his 40th
graduation anniversary, will be
master of ceremonies for the dinner
which will be held at 6:30 at the
Pearl St. bulding. A dance at the former Middleport High School will
begin at 9 p.m. with The Last Shot
providing music.
The Middleport Alumni
Association does award the Susan G.
Park scholarship each year and
parents of applicants must be
M.H.S. grads. Applications are to be
sentto Mildred Bailey, Route I, Middleport; Lois McElhinney and Mary
L. Boggs, both of Middleport.
Now about the price so that you
can get your reservation to Carolyn
Grueser, asspciation treasurer, 1625
Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy, The
banquet, dance and dues for one
alumnus is $10; for twQ alumni, $20;
$18 for one alumnus
guest; $2 for
dues and if you want you can send
along an additional donation to the
alumni fund or to the Park
Scholarhsip Fund.

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Fruit of the herb

HOURS
Monday thru Saturday ll8 A.M. tilll P.M.

Our best selli ng carpets at this year's best prices. One
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(Minimum 18 sq. yds.- Sale ends May 29th

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David L. Holter, 43, Gallipolis,
charged with assured clear distance, fined $12.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Timothy L. Lawhon, 38, Rt. I,
Gallipolis. $39; Charles K.
McGrady, 51 , Erlanger, Ky .. $39;
David R. Cheese brew , Point
Pleasant, $45 : Michael E . Johnson,
49, Reynoldsburg , $45.

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Page-A -7

Allen, Debbie Mullins, Lori
Hamilton, Tina Jones, Usa Sheets,
Jeff Roach, Greg Woodrum, Scott
Slone, Andrea Kiesling, Jennifer
Thaler. Rhonda Pushkar, Mandy
North, Connie Zeoli, Kevin Dobbins,
Mark Killen.
Erich Seamon, Bryan Vance,
Susan Conley, Frankie Henson,
Lukie Patrick, Rita Shaw, Scott
Chevalier, Don McCallister, Marc
Cameron, Gene O'Rourke, Art
Casey, David Brown, Harold Copley,
Steve Patterson, John Bostic: Ted
Neal, Brent Adkins, John Owens.
Amy Bush, Treda Miller, Lori
Brumfield, Debbie Bradley, Kelly Jo
Chapman, Shayna Chapman,
Cryslelle Howard, Tammy
McGuire. Kelly Miller , Vickie
Noble, Wendy Thompson.

Musical presented
at Southern

llll-

llllll-

Plus tax
&amp;dep.

The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. _y__a ,

Judge ends nine cases

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

51 ARTS MONDAY, MAY lOth

~u

In the secondary roles, Richy
Steele and Jamie Rainey are a fine
comedic pair as the two innocents in
search of a good time in the big
town. Both . receive ample opportunity to exercise their singing
talents, and as senior members or
the Madrigals and its off-shoot
group, the Silver Supremes, they
light up the stage with their presence.
Kelli Kemper, another old pro,
makes Irene a most attractive object of both Horace's and Cornelius '
affections, and Susan Stewart adds a
delightfully nutty air to the
proceedings as Minnie. Todd Haner,
playing Ambrose, and Angela
Ramey, as Ermengarde, are earnest as the young couple quivering
musical supervision of Anne Fischer
and directing by Michael Corbin, under Horace's thumb.
rose to the occasion with their ren- . About the neatest piece of work
dition of the musical at Washin~ton comes during the restaurant scene,
when music and choreography blend
Elementary School auditorium.
for
the " Helly, Dolly" nwnber, with
The Jerry Herman-Mi chael
Aaron
Saunders' near-faultless
Stewart extravaganza, taken from
Thornton Wilder's straight stage Louis Armstrong impersonation a
comedy of the 1930s, "The Mat- highlight.
Brian Oglesbee was the orchestra
chmaker," deals with Dolly
Gallagher Levi, a blithe spirit of director, and Patty Fellure handled
turn-of-the-century New York who the dance and movement routines .
helps gel people married. Dolly's Marlene Hoffman was assistant
latest project is fixing up a tightwad director and Mike Dyer the
Yonkers businessman named technical director.
Others featured in the cast were
Horace Vandergelder with Irene
Molloy, a widowed millinery shop Lisa Roush (Ernestina l; Janice
Evans !Mrs. Rose) ; Matthew
owner.
As things like this gu, however, O'Donnell (Stanley\; and Kenneth
Dolly decides to marry Horace her- Clark (Judge).
The others in the cast were Lisa
self. The problem of Irene is solved
when Cornelius Hackl, Horace's oppressed hay and feed business employee, decides take a night on the
towfj,and encounters Irene while attempting to avoid Horace.
In related subplots, young BarGALUPOUS - Nine cases were
naby Tucker, another of Horace's terminated Friday in Gallipolis
employees, is matched up with Municipal Court.
Irene's assistant Minnie Fay, and
Carolyn Stone, West Columbia,
Dolly helps Horace's niece Er- charged with passing bad checks unmengarde find true love with Am- der $150, fined $50, six months jail
brose Kemper, a struggling artist.
sentence suspended and placed on
Annie Wiseman, playing a sar- one year probation.
donic, worldly-wise Dolly, brightens
Charged with no operator's license
up the production with occasional and fined $2Q, six months jail senmonologues directed at her tence suspended and placed on one
deceased husband, Ephraim. She year probation was Gerald L.
also sings several moving songs in Traynor, 2Q, Rt. 2, Bidwell. Also
workmanlike fashion.
charged with speeding, Traynor was
As Horace, Jeff Sanders paints a fined $12.
portrait or an alternately haughty
Tamara L. Woodward, 25, Patriot
and bluff individual, impressed with Star Route, charged with failure to
his own success yet lacking in com- display valid registration, forfeitt'&lt;l
panions to sllJjre it with. His control $35 bond.
or the "It Takes a Woman" routine
Charged with assured clear
with Dolly and the chorus is par- distance and forfeiting $40 bond was
ticularly affecting.
Terrv G. Ward, 25, Gallipolis.

By KEVIN KELLY
GALUPOLIS- Recently, a group
of music students at Gallia Academy
High School got together and said,
" Let's put on the spring show."
The question was raised as to what
show to present. " Hello, Dolly" was
the answer.
Simple, right? Hardly .
Putting on a show like this new
f-dvorile which has tested the acting
and musical talents of such diverse
actresses as Carol Channing and
Jean Stapleton is no sma ll feat, as it
requires timing and precision in the
execution of some fairly complex
scenes.
On Friday and Saturday, the combined GAHS choirs, under the

games."

Truckers fight
deregulation

Middleport

GARS musical production
'Hello, Dolly' review given

Schools face budget cutbacks
.

'

Pomeroy

Wolfe,t-r. Tbe~wudlreetedbyMn.LeeLee.

"·-

Speaking of the Hartinger ob. servance, Dave Diles, also fonnerly
of Middleport, now a television sports personality, has sent along
regrets that ~ will be unable to
make the weekend activities since

he has been assigned to cover the
Pro Bowlers Tour in Tucson over
Memorial Day . Dave sends along his
heartiest congratulations to Gen.
Hartinger and best wishes for a welldone celebration .
Running doesn't seem to be the activity in Meigs County that it has
been in other locations. However,
we're getting there. The Meigs
County Heart Branch will sponsor
the first annual Meigs County Fun
Run on Saturday, June 5, at the Rock
Spring!&gt; Fairgrounds.
There will be trophies for the first
three places in several age groups of
men and women which include 13-18.
l!f-30, 31-40 and 41 and over.
Registration will begin al8 a.m. and
there will be l·shirts to mark the
event given to the first 100 entrants.
Nita Wisniski, Pomeroy, 992-&lt;;626, is
serving as the race director and
Joan Tewksbary of Middleport will
be receiving all or the entry forms.
We will be printing an application
soon so that you can gel registered.
By the way , the race will be three
miles.

last Sunday &lt;:~l her home . 558 PalJJtL'I"
Sl.
Still quill' &lt;:~di Vl', Mrs. Pulll'n ~ocs
to town to shup t!lld J 11 t' ~ her own
banking in addit1on tu kl' L' rm1g ht·r
own horn t:' 111 gnud slwpc . Slw tTl'Lltls
her heal tllltless 1111 pll'nty t~f hard
work over tht.: yt•ars . An unu s u~:~l indJvidual , Mrs. Pulll'n wa::; remt:m·

bered with many c"rds. g1fls and
nowcrs un the occasion .
The 17th Paul H. Canwhan
Memonal SrhularshqJ of $500 will be
aw~:~rdcd

lo a gradua t10n SL'n tor &lt;1!

the Racine Alumm Banquet un May
29.
Racinl' Hi l-!h Alwnni uniibl e to at-

tend are asked lu send $1 fur the
scholars hip to the Sl'Crelarytreasurer if unable to ~:~ltend the
reunon.
Tickets for the annual dinner are
on sale at the Village Cut Rate in
Racine or may be secured by sending a check and self-addressed
stamped envelope lo Mrs . Raymond
Pierce, Route 2, Box 44. Racme.
There are no reservations to be
made by phone anti deadline for
reservati ons

Cora "Grandma" fas she is known
in her Middleport neighborhood 1
Pullen observed her 91sl birthday

IS Ma y 25 .

Mrs. Pierce

will

rece ive lhl' $1 scholarship
money from thost' not plrmnin g on

attendin g llw I:M nqud .

Electrical safety Rotary club topic
MIVVL~PURT .. Ron
Ash,
manager of the Ohio Power Co. in
Pomeroy, was speaker when the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
met Friday evening at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Safely in dealing with elecncity
was the topic of Ash who also conducted a demonstration to stress
how danager area can be avoided in
dealing with electricity. He
distributed cards also giving safety
tips to members. Ash was introduced by Judge Robert Buck.
The club will stage a dinner at 6:30

p.m. on Friday, May 28, at the Middleport Masonic Temple to honor
General James Hartinger who will
be honored by the M1ddleport community over Memnrial Day weekend
at 1:1 number of ~:~divities .
·
Tickets for the dinner al $7 .50 each
and may be purchased al the Middleport Department Store. Bahr
Clothiers, New York Clothing House
and the Swisher-l.ohse Pharmacy .
General Hartinger is a native of
Middleport and is now one of 12 four
star generals in the nation.

No one injured in tanker crash
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) There were no injuries k hen a
tanker-truck bauling propane and a
car carrying two people crashed into
a traller loaded with steel, police
said.
The fiery accident occurred
Friday night after the trailer fell off
a truck on the Long Beach Freeway,

police said.
The occupants of the car at first
were believed killed, but later
showed up at a hospital for treament
of minor injuries. The lanker-truck
driver was uninjured.
Authorities were unable to locate
the truck that lost its trailer.

·
.
.
:

�page

A-8

Pomeroy

The Sunday Times-Se ntin e l

~-

M iddleport

Alo

I Skydivers will present exhibition

Area deaths

MIDDLEPORT _ Sky High The first is the canopy stack. Each
Skydivers, Ltd., of Charleston, W. skydiver flies his parachute into the
Va. , will present an exhibition in skydiver above him and the process
POMEROY - Delbert Bruch. 92 , of
Middleport on May 29 in conjunction is repeated until the stack of divers
Rl. 3, Pomeroy, died Sat urday in
with the General James Hartinger reaches the exhibition size. The
Pumeroy Health Care Cen ter .
welcome home observance.
second is the canopy plane. The
Born May 14, 1889, m Pomeroy,
c.
D. Mcintyre is chairman of a third is called a side-by-side and is
sun of the late Phillip and Kathenne
Middleport Chamber of Commerce done with two divers. The fourth is
Heilman Bruch, he was a re ti red
committee which is working on the most difficult and is ca lled the
t•oa l miner.
games and contests and has secured diamond . This formation has one
He was also preceded in death by
the services of the skydiving parachute on top, two in the 1niddle
his wife. Bertha Bruch, eight sisters
organization.
Other members of the and one on the bottom. This forand a brother .
GALUPOU S - Fred Shato, 88, of committee are Jim Pape and .rna lion has only been done by some
Surviv ing i ~ a son, Bernest of
Mount Vernon ; two da ughters, 544 Jackson Pike I Parklane Trailer Charles Diehl.
Mildred Meredith of Pomeroy and Courtl , died at 9:15p.m. F riday in
Sky High Skydive rs, Ltd., is a
Margaret Kilper of Shreveport, I.a .; Holzer Medical Center , having been skydiving exhibition team which
a sister. Helen Blake of Erie, Pa.; in failing hea lth for the past six mon- was funned in April, 1979, and is a
member of the West Virginia Fairs
•
seven grandchildren, four great- ths.
Born April 7, 1914, in Guyan Twp., · and Festivals Commission . All team
grandchildren and several nieces
Ga llia County , son of the late Ira and members are current United States
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 1 Addie Rose Shalo, he was an owner Parachute Association members.
p.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral an d employee o f United The group· practices at Ravenswood.
Horne. with the Rev . Robert McGee Refrigeratio n Co . , Co lumbus, The group will appear locally at 4:30
. PORTABLE SPAS FITS
officiating. Burial will be in Beech retiring in 1977 afte r 25 yea rs of ser- p.m. over the Middleport Community Park, the scene of an afMOST ANY ROOM
Grove Cemetery . Friends may ca ll vice.
He was a lso a World War II ternoon program honoring General
at the funeral home after 1 p.m.
For Your Winter Need
veteran, serving in the U.S. Navy, a Hartinger.
Ca II 304-429 -4788
today .
The group uses four formations.
member of VFW Post 4464, York
Lodge653, the Scottish Rite Valley of
Colw nbus and the Aladdin Temple
of the Shrine .
Surv i v in ~ is a son. Freddie of
VINT0:-.1 - Ralph Leland Goble.
35, Dexter, di ed Friday night as a Ga lloway: three grandchildren; a
result of injuries suffered in a motor- brother, Raymond of Ga llipolis;
three sisters. Mrs. Faye Wright and
cy cle aCCi den t in Vinton County .
Born Nov . 14 , 194£. in Riverside, Mrs. Ross I Ethel! Roush, both of
GALUPOLIS - Two minor acW.Va .. he was the son of Frank and Gall ipolis, and Mrs. J im (Maxine I
cidents were investigated by the
Mary Hudnall r.uble , who both su r- Boggs of Hawthorn, Fla .
A daughter. four brothers and a Gallia-Meigs Post of the state highvive in Cincinnati .
way patrol Frida y.
sister also preceded him in death.
Also surviv ing ·is his wife, Connie
The body will be cremated.
The patrol reported that a vehicle
Lowe Goble: fi ve brothers. Frank of
Arrangements
dri
arc
by
the
Waughven by Robert W. Price, 17, RL 2,
Radcliff. John of Carlton. Mi ch.,
Halley-Wood
Funeral
Home.
Vinton
. was southbound on Ohio 325,
Charles of New Richmond, and ArIn lieu of flowers. contributions four-tenths of a mile south of Gallia
thur and James, both of Ci nc innati :
and a s1ster. Mrs. Dav1d !Eliza beth will be made to the American Can- County Rd. 2, at 5:30 a.m. when a ·
deer ran into the path of the vehicle.
cer Society, in care of Pat Boye r. Rt.
Ann I Sparks of New Richmond.
Price was unable to stop in time
A. Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be held at II
and struck the deer, killing it. His
vehicle was moderately damaged.
The windshield on an auto driven
by Ronald A. Pitchford, 22, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, was damaged when a stone
flipped up from the ground struck it
while Pitchford was northbound on
Ohio 160 at 2 p.m.
The accident occurred a half-mile
GALI..IPOI.IS - The public has conforming use.
- Erection of signs or outdoor adfrom County Rd. 4, the patrol said.
fai led to comply so far in obta ining
i1 pplications fur zoning certifi ca te~ vertising structures.
Boster sa1d the followi ng is the fee . - - - - - - - - - - - - --1
and building permi ts pri or to construction, acco rding to James schedule for zoning certificates :
Si ngle family dwelling, $5 ; acBosler. Gallipol is cit y code encessory bui l din ~. s i ~ns or fenc~s. $3:
force ment off icer .
Bosler sa1d fa ilure to compl y in two-family dwelling, $8: multiple
getting the certificate or the pt&gt;rmit dwelling, $20: conunerc1al or in-

:Delbert Bruch

. May 9, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.va .

40 or 50 people.
Some of the games to be hetd at
lhe park include a horseshow throw,
$1 entry fee, with prizes of $20, $10
and $5; Rubie cube, entry fee, 50
cents and provide your own cube.
prizes, $10, $5 and $2 ; girls' softball

a.111 . Monday in the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton. Friends may
call at the fun eral home from 7-9
p.m. today .
In li eu of flowers. contributions
ma y be made to the Gallia County
Children's Hurne.

throw, entry fee, $1, prizes, glove, $5
and softball; sack race!! for
youngsters, no entry fee and there
will be prizes; tug-of-war, double
elimination, five man tewns, prize
of $50 to the organization winning, oo
entry fee .

THE NEW .FEDERAL LAW PROVIDES
ANSWERS.

WHOLESALE RETAIL

SWIMMING

Lee

c. Mittman

Pamela N. Maggied
Attorneys-A!-Law
88 E . Broad St .
Columbus. OH . 3215

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

OSPinvestigates~~~~~~~====~~====~sT;oR~E~Ho~uR~s:~~~
two mishaps

and financ1al loss if the buildings
don't measure up to the code.
After

meeting

with

citi ze ns,

Boster sa1d he found ma ny people
don 't know what is requ1red in obta in ing ei ther
mit.

iJ

ce rtifi ca te or per-

The offi cial sa id the following arc
t:ond iti on:s under wh1ch the certificates and permits are required:
- Constru ction or slructuri:ll
a lterations of any building, incl uding acce ssory buil dings, such as

garages.
- A chan ge in usc of an existin g or

accessory building lo the use of a different classificatiOn .
- Occupancy and usc of vacant
land , such as off-street parkmg lots,
drilling gas or oil wells .
- A chan ge in t he use of land to the
use of a different classification.
- Any c ha nge in the use o£ a non·

$25:

im;tilutional

The fel..' for building permil'i

A special love

i
!

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff

POMEROY - " A beautiful baby
and I loved her'"
That was Mrs. Darl enl' Curry":-;

description of her feeling s when she
looked at her newborn daughter - a
child diag nosed as mongoloid .

She had shunned the advice of her
doctor to not see the infant but to
have her inunediately placed in an
instituti on .

And wi th the doctor's words
··always a vege U:tblc, grow in g but
not knowing" ringing in h ~ r ea rs.
Mrs. Curry courageously walked out
of a Michigan ho8pital 16 yea rs ago
w1th her newborn 111 her arms. She
sa id thal she couldn't be~r to give up

IS

n ..&gt;q uires anyone who wants to make

an opening in the stree t, s idewalk or
driveway to make an application lo
the city.
The applica tion must be accompanied wi th a cash depoSit or
bond of $100 and be posted with the
city. A $0 fee will be charged to
cover costs of supervision and in·
s pcction at the time of the opening.

Boster said these specifications
ca n be obtained from his office in the
city building, and further information ma y he obtained by
ca lling 446-2951.

cmother child , having lo.st
Refl ectin~

on her days in the
hospital , Curry recalled that she turned to a Gideon Bible open to the
book of Job. She read Job's story of
constant faith over affliclion and
while devastated by the diagnosis
was determined that her child

How soon college!
you be ready

when they ore?

·· deserved more than being put out

or sight. "
Her faith was rewarded. for toda y,
Mary J a ne Curry is a pe rso na ble,
achicvmg and enthusiastic young

life insurance can help.
Call Garland M. Davis
512 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh .
Ph. 446-8235
Home Ph. 388-9691

woman.

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
frt~lanrll
Ofl ocf"-

Home

99~

Lif e lmurancr

Lb.

Roc k l1lond. lll inoil

l

Holl ywood

SPARE
RIBS

She is the first to admit that thmgs
haven't always been easy. She
recognizes that Mary Jane is retarded, but she also knows lhal her
daughter is a contributing member
to the family and society.

'159
.

Lb.

_rryor hospitalized

ABOVE PHOTO : Leisure lime activities are Important In making a
well·round_ed Individual. Mary
Jane's participation In the olYmpic
program for retarded children earned her three gold medals ln 1980. In
gymnastics that year, she recorded
the highest overall score In the competition at Ohio State Special Olym·
pics at Ohio State University. This
photo was taken that day. FAR
RIGHT PHOTO: A student at
_Carleton School, formerly Meigs
- ·Community Classes, Mary Jane
works with the Systems 30 teaching
machine to Improve ber skills In
reading and arithmetic. RIGHT
PHOTO: Communication Is one of
the most vital of all skills. It reaches
over the aloneness and uniqueness
that each experiences and unites
singular worlds. Mary Jane Is joined
by two classmates lor some teen
talk.

:- BATON ROUGE . I.a . I API
; Comedia n Richard Pryor was in
'oatisfactory condition Sat urda y 111 a
; til.ton Rouge hospital where he was
:aamitted for bronchial pneumonia , a
:libspital official sa id.
:; : Pryor, who haLIL&gt;t!en working he re
· ~ the film "The Toy" with Jack1e
·Gleason , was taken to Our Lady of
the Lake Hospital on Wednesday
·night.
. Julia Lee, of the hospital ad.rilissions office. said the .star of s uch
'l!)rns as "Silver Streak" and "Stir
Drazy" was suffering from bron"rhial pneumonia .
: A publicist for the film crew, Peter
E mmet, said Pryor was treated a
week ago for a cold . However, he
descibed the ac tor-c omedian's
current hospital stay as a rest from
work .

Ladies' 7-Diamond
Cluster
Whit e
Only

Fireside

fiG .. · 21!J. $}59

$4950

BARS

Pk",.. -

.· ·

Buy of tile Yur This ladies' 7-Diamond

TAWNEY JEWELERS
424 Second. Gallipolis

25111·

KRAFT
·'

~O~E ..
ORANGE ·

Compare at $125.00
Clusllf Is 111 incredible value. Compare
our dllmood prices anywhere!

DOG FOOD
.. .

.89
3 BREAD

$

Hyland

-Chunk Style

TOMATOES

59¢ LB.

JUICE

' 6401~149·
Jar

) lb.

·

lvs.
CouPQn

SAVE $1.9b
FOLGE,RS

Instant Coffee.

:I 01· $339:
1
1

I

.

10
·Jar

·

.

$}19

va

I

.
•

Buy

Heiners

I
I
I
I
I

'

. .•
'

Incredible Value!

three

before.

Will

May 9, 1982

CLOSED SUNDAYS

and

$1.50 per thousand of estunatcd cost
of co nstru ction .
Boster said that on Jan 2. 1979. the
city adopted specifi c sidewa lk and
standard driveway specifica tions. ft

Sundil

Mon.-Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm
Fri.-Sal 9 am til 10 pm

Builders to comply
with city ordinances

mobile home park, $25 ; use of land,
$5.

Section[ID

Mrs. Darlene Curry and
her daughter, Mary Jane,
share a special love for one
another. Mary Jane was
diagnosed at birth as a
child without potential.
Mrs. Curry set about to
prove that diagnosis wrong.

BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13
Call for information
1-221 -5379

POOLS

duslri~l .

ientin.tl

FINANCIAL QUESTIONS?

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;.-l

can cost someone co nsiderabl e tim e

~imts ~

r-;:;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:~

FredShato

Ralph Leland Goble

the river

•

Witn

this
&lt;OuPGn

Good onty at BMr's
. F.&gt;piresS-15-It '

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

I

J
I
I
I

----~--~·~-,,.

.'

In th ose earl y years. ltll' t.lla g nosis
haunted Curry who · so id shl' kept
reassurin g herse lf tll&lt;:t t th ings co uld
never be so ba Ll that th ere cu uldn "t
bl' some improv eme nt.

Her first ~ Iimmer of hor&gt;e e~ftcr
tak ing the baby hoJOL' wa s when she
noti ced tha t this child who was sUJ&gt;poseLI to be like a vegctabiL' was
respllntlin g.
She r&lt;:tlsct.l her hci:\t.l wlwn she was
a few weeks uld. She rolleLI UVl'l" 111 a
few more weeks. She \ookt·d arounJ
and smiled .
·· How could we trea t her likl• a

vegetable when shl' didn 't act like
one?" asked Mrs. Curry .
HP r

philosophy 111 dea ling w1th her

mongoloid daughter wa s to treat her
a.s if she were normi:! l.

g;lllll'd s on~t· basw s k1ll s 111 t' utn ·
11\Ulllt';J\IU!l

s(Utill'li

t' Ull f iLit•IJL' l'

St•Jf-l"ill'l' .

&lt;illd

be-tiki

&lt;HHI

i:illd

llt'r

Silt •

St&gt;lf -

jh'I" SU I\,1]1\~

IJJnSS lll llt•d .
1\fkr rdurmn g In 01 110. Mar.\
,JiJilt' &lt;:~ tknLil'd lht · (;uHill h: !land
St"hoolu1 ChL·shtrL' .
It was wiHh· she w e~s tlwn • that slw
l'XtTIJed Ill I~ Yl lllla SI I L'S a nti at till'
SpL't "I&lt;J I 0\yn l ptt·s at Ohw S l&lt;:ih'

Uni \T I'Stty ren'l\'t•d lht· IHglles\
n\· er&lt;-~11 sron· lll lhe stall' . Th.JI saint·
year . s ill' eaplurL·d two ntlwr gold

medals - unt· 111 f!tHtr ext·r t· tst· and
the ullwr 111 upen tUinbltll ).! .
Fur lhl' pc.t sl \ Wtl Y P &lt;:~rs. Mar ~ .l ant ·
ha s attendl'd Mt' IJ.!S ( ' t~t l llllLJIIII~
Classes. nwJT I'L'l'L'Illl .\ llctllll"d Ill, ·
Ca rleton Sc hool.

She was given plenty of space to
explore. She took a normal plcu.:c in

Her pr ugnn n
t'l'plion &lt;tl.

the famil y life. She was Llisciplinetl
when s he llf!eLi eLI it. She was g iven

Jllath and nt•xt )'L'cu · wdl IIIO\"t' 1nto

plenty of love a nd lots of praise for

\·oratwnalc lasses.

her accom plisluncntst
Curry said she worked tu curred
movemt•nls or adion.s wh 1ch a re
pt:culi a r to re tarLicJ d u!Jrcn but not

Curry IS prn utl of llt'r d ;tug h lt ·r·s
at'l"OIIIplishlllelltS ctlld IS lJ Uil" k \II

normal ones.
Three years later, another doctor
examining Mary Jun e changed the
dia gnosis from " mongt)luid " tu
" mosa ic'' and prc1ised Cmry for
"doing eve ryth ing ri ~ ht."

She rea ds.

wr:lt•s

has

and

[)l'eJJ

ex·

dot 'S .'\OJll t '

t"l'l'd lt lilt' St' httt lls s ill" h&lt;i S a t\t'IH!t•d
What bolht• rs hL•r IS tlw tl;u q ~ t'f' uf
an absoluil"l '\'&lt;-tlua\lllllltf pntt·nt1a l 1n
h1rlh
b~
tht ·

an 1n fa nt at
pnlrt'SS I11llal s.
After C:lll. s ill'

pruVl'd ilt·r dodur

wrong .

two she wa ~ enrnll ed in a schoo l for

Toda y. throu g h hL"r l11VL" an d tlw
courage \ 11 iJ&lt;'Ce pt t he d1a l! t·ngt' uf a
retankd chi ld SOIIIl' 16 ~· t·cw s agu,
.she can po111 t w1th ,L! r ei:il pn de to

tht• menta lly retarded . There she

Mary Janl' .

The famil y moved tn California
when Mary Jane was still a ba by. At

�May 9, 1982

,•.•.·.·.•.•.
,,I•'""
'"
I "

"

o

'""'
,',',',',','

/

:::::::::::.

I
I

"" '
','.',',',

"""
·'·''·'·''

Be
Kind to Animals Week
POMEROY - In observance of Be problem.
-

GALUPOUS - A series of piano workshops is not to compete with a give the name of the piece when
workshops will be ta ught at Riverby,
student's regular music lecher, but registering .
home of the French Art Colony, next
to inspire and discuss practice
Epling will do a public perSaturday by Mari Christine Epling.
habits.
formance at Riverby at 8 p.m. SaturShe 1s the daughter of Mr. and
Admission fee is $2 and pre- day. Her program will include
Mrs. John A. Epling and a graduate
registration must be made by 4 p.m. "Sonalll in A Minor, K. 310" by
of the Cincinnati CollegeFriday , May 14. by ca lling Jeri Mozart, " Ballade in A-flat Major,
Conservatory of Music, where she Skaggs at the French Art Colony, Opus 47" by Chopin, " Ballade in C
wasthe recipient of seveal honors
446-3834, or contacting Phylli s Minor, Opus 23" by Chopin, and
and awards as a perfonner.
Rowan, music department chair- Scllwnann's ''Krei.sleriana, Opus
Her tra ining began when she was
person, 44&amp;-4622. Each session will 16." A donation of $1 will be accepted
three and at age seven, she was ac- be limited to 10 students . Students at the door.
wishing to perform must have his or
The French Art Colony is located
cepted at the conservatory where
she studied with .I lona Voorm, rh.::e::.r.Lpl:·.::e.::.ce:__.:&gt;~n.::.e:.:m:.:o~r::iz::.ed:_a:.:n::d:_..::'::h&lt;:.:&gt;u:.:ld:__"::.
· t:_5:.:3.:.0_:F_:i_rs:.:·t_A:..:._ve:._·_ _ _ _ _ __
Professor Emeritu~. and John
Meretta . Other teachers have included William Doppmann, Richard
Tetley-Kardos, Dr. George Lucktenberg, Nonnan Beedie and Monsieur
Painchaud at the Palaise de Foun~FULL WEDDING SERVICE
tainebleau in France.
She now studies with Bela Siki in
~CATER ING SERVICE
Cincinnati. Epling has appeared as
soloist in southeastern Ohio, Hun~INVITATIONS
tington, Cincinnati, Detroit and and
Do
Fountainebleau. Her most recent
After S p.m.
appearances were in Ohio, playing
carolyn Wilson. Proprietor
Phone
the Grieg Piano Concerto. and in
~ij',..-""':3(t4·-e,75·4:281 Rt . 62 South, Point Ploa .. nt
southwestern Florida, where she has
just completed a thre.,..week tour.
She has been invited to play for a
concert series in Florida next year. 1-i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;.,
Along with her career as a perfanner. Epling is the director of the
Marshall University Music
Preparatory Departiment in Huntington, W. Va., and teaches both at
Marshall and privately in her own
studio in Huntington .
She has been awarded a teaching
assista ntship at the University of
Miami, Coral Gables, F la., where
she will study with Ivan Davis.
Next Saturday, she w1ll be
teaching two works hops - one from
10 a.m. to noon for beginners to early
intermediate level and lht! second
for . •••llilllt
from 1 to 3 p.m. for intermediate to
advanced level. The purpose of these
Qualilycrafte4

Kmd to Am11r~J s Week. M ~y 2 to May
8, the Me1~ ' ( ou11ty Hwnane Society
remmds P1'1 11 Wilt·rs of th L• benefits of
havtng thetr a!H tnals neulered .
Even though the cost may at f1rst
seem h1 gh, thi' is a on.,..time investment and will 'avt• money in the
long run . Tht• first and most obvious
advantage 1s that your pet won't
keep hav111g l1tters of unwanted ki twns and pupp1es that you may ha ve
difficulty flnd mg suitable homes for
or that &gt;mght enti up being
m1slreateti.
If two unaltered cats or dogs breed
\wire a year, and 2.8 kittens or puppies surv1ve, and they breed during
their first year, in just six years
these two cats or dogs and their offsprin g can exceed 73,000 1 Any way
these fi gures are tallied, it adds up
to a mass ive overpopulation

"Will

\

'~ ~ ,~~~~
j

ROYALTY-Tina Beaver. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Griffith, Roult' I, Long Bottom. and John Beaver.
sun of Mr. and Mrs. John Beaver, Route :l, Pomeroy,
wen• aowncd queen and king of the annual Eastern
High St'hool Junior-Senior Prom ~' riday night. A blue

and silver setting carrying out an "open arms" theme
was used for the prom. Brenda Rucker Weber, last
yl'ar's prom queen, presided o\'er the coronation of the
nt' W kin~ and queen.

Turner, Downs to appear
at Communication Week
liUal Cwrli!\U ili Catwn Week. May 10-

Th ts year marie-; the 14th yea r for
the conferetH'l' whi ch bnngs

14. wil l bnn g mnn· th~tn 50 rnetlla

pr nfl'ss ionals m radio, lelt•vtswn.

rruftos~ IUIWI S \ll l'i-llllJ)US,

phulu~ r&lt;:~phy

ATHENS - Ohro Urllvers tl y's an-

lllciUlllllg

t'&lt;-tbk !t•l t·\·ts Jun' s TL•d Turner . ABC

nt·wsca sll'r I-I ugh Downs and the forml'r press secretary to Menachem
ReJ,!IIl , Drill Patttr .
Tht• for us uf t h1s yc&lt;:t r 's eonfL'l'lll'l'
IS the llllpact o£ IJJ ).,dl tt•chn o] ogy Url
runun unt t'&lt;-tlton 1111W and in llw
futun• . CuL•sllt·L·lurers (;llld pcmelt sts
wtll discuss thl' efft'l'b of nt·w
tech nolt )~tes nn such &lt;t reas as
for~t ~n relattons, &lt;:tiblc vtswn. etectronH' rll'wspapers and i:.IUdtence

&lt;:~nd bus tnes!'i L'lllllto s h&lt;Jre tllt•tr experience cmd expertise wt lh uni ver" t)· student' anti faculty .
Fnnner ls r&lt;:J eli journa list Dan
Pct ll tr wtll dtseus.s technol ogy's influenn• un forl' t ~n relations at 4
p.111 .. May !0, 111 Murton 201. A'
press secreta ry to Prime \1i111ster
Bl')..(lll, Pattir plrtyed rtn acti ve role
111 the Israeli-Egyptian talks anti the
stgnmg of the ptaee treat y &lt;tt Camp
Da v1ti.
rnum c &lt;:~ttun s

Ted Turner. president uf cable
television's Turner Broadcasting
System, Inc .. wi ll de live r a n 8 p.m.
address on Tuesday, May 11. in
Mt•rnoria l Auditoriwn . In June !980,
he launched Cable News Network,
providi ng in-depth, 24-hour new s
c overage on ca ble tel ev ision
systems around the nation .
ABC-TV's Hugh Downs. host of
"20/20 ," will speak at noon, May 14,
111 Memorial Auditoriwn . In 1981.
Downs won an Emmy Award for hi s
work as host of PBS's "Over Easy. "
He has been a fami liar figure to
telev ision vieWl'I'S since the 1950s.

mattmiiS JJ4I llox

.......

TWIN SIZE
hplao,nu•mt~Stl

FULL SIZE
•fll!lo,nct ' l!9~\ol

Playwright
Williams
not upset
MfAMi lA P I - The New World
Fest1 va l of the Arl' says 11 won't
present a new play it commi ssio ned fr om Tenne ssee
Williams. but the playwnght say&lt;
he' s nnt upset.

Will ia ms. a rcsitiL•nt of Kt~y
West. Fla .. calleti the ticl'IS11ln
" realistic ...

Student center
nears completion
RIO GRANDE - Officia ls at Rio
Grande College and Conununity
College saiti toda y that the new
s tudent-l·omrnun ity
ce nter is
nearing completion and will be
ready fur use by tntd-August.
Ac~·ordi n g to college Pres1dent
PHul C. Haye&lt;. the structure rs 90
percent complete and will be ready
to open Aug ust 15.
The 30,00 square-foot structure
will ,e rve the student populat iOn by
providi ng dini ng, study and
rl'Crt&gt;tiona l facilities. space for continuing education, and house the office of student hea lth. The center
will also house student activities offices. the counse ling center, and a
snack bar.
'
The project. when completed, will
be one of eight bui ldings that have
been constructed on the campus since 1965. Six others have undergone
remodeling during that span.
The latest additions to tne campus
were the E. E. Davis Technical
Careers Center that was fonna lly
de(jicated in the fall tlf 1979 and the
Fine and Performmg Arts Center
was dedicated in the winter of 1981.
lh addition, a project will be start~d later this spring to add walking
malls to the center of the campus.

Computer help
WASHINGTON (AP)- Doctors
may eventually be able to tum to a
computer for help In selecting treatment for an alcoholic patient, reports a medical publication.
I!'amlly Practice News says the
"alcoholic lite cycles model," a
computer m9(1el of alcoholism, has
been developed .and Integrates
available knowledge In the field to
represent an Individual's lite. It
s)lows lnterarillons among the patient's job performance, health,
self-esteem, social network, coping
s kills , stress and alcohol
consumption.
(

Fe.sti \'&lt;tl off1nals announced
Wetinesday that they ha ve rejected the commissioned work,
" Now. the Cii t' with Jeweled
Cbws." fur a nother WillianlS
play , .. A House Not Meant to

'Nine to Five'

Stand, " now making its pn: rn ierc

LOS ANGELES I AP) - Singer
Dol ly Parton has fil ed suit asking
that a judge declare that she and
her music publishers have excl usive rights to the song, '' Nine
to Five," a spokeswoman sa id
Friday .
The federal court suit seek' to
establish tha t "Nine to Five"
docs not infringe on the copyright
of a 1940s song, " Me and My Fiddl e," written by Benny Martin
and published by Cedarwood
Publishing, sa id Beverly Magid,
a spokeswoman for Miss Parton.
Besides Miss Parton, plaintiffs
in the suit filed Wednesday are
Warner-Tamerlane Publishing
Co. and Fox Fanfare Music Co.
The plaintiffs contend that the
Pa rton work is an original work
which has bee n va lidly
copynghted.

run at Chi cago' s Goodman
Tlwatt•r.
Officials of the arts fe&lt;tival.
which beJ::ins in Miami next month . said · Ca ts" is too short. The
ont"act. tw&lt;~ scene play wo uld
run about 50 minutes.
"We fe lt that the play was weak
dramatica lly and that it needed
reworking," sa id Robert Herman, festi val founder.
" I'm not upset," Williams &gt;a lti.
He ag reed that at 44 pages. the
play IS too short. But he addeti .
" It 's a very beaullful play . I
should put it on somewhere 111 a
double bill , m England or
somewhere in the United States."
Herman sa id offi cials wi ll have
to negotiate a settlement with the
playwright, because the $15,000
contract ca lled " for a full -lengt h
play ."

rights

,-------------------------------1

NAME-FU RN ITU RE-&amp;-APPLIANCES
SPRI NG -SALE -0F-FA M0US
•FLEXSTEEL
•LANE
•DIXIE BEDROOM
•YOUNG-HINKLE
•RIVERSIDE
•SPRING AIR MA nRESSES
•FRIGIDAIRE
•RCA
•ADMIRAL
•HOOVER
•ARMSTRONG
f

ll H Rl S1 VA I Ill :;

BAKER -FURNIT URE
1¥1 I IJ II I I I' Il li

IJ ~ )[] ,I l l'/ I

Jill ' II
1
X t:I~[Jl !IIIII: 1 i ,' '1'1/ .'. .'.11
I

..

~~
roo-

Epling

sung by the groom as a dedication of
their lives to God.
Attending the guest btlok was
Robin Underwood of Little York,
Ind., s ister-in-law of the groom .
Hostesses included Sandy Bl edsoe of
Milton, W. Va .. Cindy of Ga lilpohs,
both cousins of the bride , Marilyn
Underwood of Glenmont. aunt of the
groom . a nd Barbara Dills of Cinl'lllllalt . fn e nd of the cuuJJie .
F'ollownlg the ceremony, a recepa sc oL~.
twn w&lt;1s held m llw ('hurch'.s
Before the bru.k was escorkd fellows hi p lrall. The brtdt,.S table
down the aisle by ht•r fa tlwr . a grun 1 was deeorated 111 lavt•ntkr and dl' sa ng .. My Lad y Wa lk' 111 l'l'lll ed wtth p111k. bluL'. yellow. (;l nd
Love liness" tn ht•r . The bnJt•'s ~ rt•en . The thret'-tlered c&lt;J k t• was
proee!'isional wa s " Trump('( Tum• 111 also dL·cu r&lt;:~ted 111 lhl'Sl' l'Uiurs with
D Major.'' During the ceremon y, the nbbon s and wh1te doves
groom honored the pa rents and Ius
The hrtde and groom are
brid e wi t h th e s elel't!un l.(r&lt;:Jtl ualt•s of CJnctn natl B tblt'
''SO! Jietimes. ' ' · ·consenat Jun'' was St•mtrw r) and res tde HI Cinrtnna tt.

Another important benefit of
spaying and neutering is that female
cats and dogs are spared such
problems as uterine infections
breast cancer, and tumors:
Neutered males are spared prostate
problems, and neutered male cats
are Jess apt to spray in the house,
especially if neutering is done before
the cat reaches eight months of age.
Neutered pet;; won't roam as often
and get into fights. They are calmer,
content to stay at home, and more
loving to humans.
Most veterinarians recommend
that a pet be neutered or spayed between the ages of six months and a
year.

Pet owners are invited to call 9926505 if they have further questions

about spaying or neutering their
pels.

QUEEN SIZE
Rftll• Putt '19! ~ S..l

~~

'149.97 .

~

'1 99.97

:cr '249.97

·-

,..... ~ -ol "" .
IS SEEN ON - ....... - ~·
llolr--&lt;l

-

TO MOM
WITH LOVE

,_
.•

~··~

Mr. and Mrs. Underwood

CONCERT- Southern Junior High instrumental mu&gt;ic students, under lht• direction of the district instrumental instructor Joe Malesick,
presented ins trumental music programs for the elementary s tudents at
Letart Falls, Portland, Syracuse and Racine. The students played "The
Greatest American Hero/' "Lady/' "Song From Mash," "Hill Street
Blues," "Fame," "Celebra tion," "Arthur's Theme/' and "Endless
Love." Musicians included, front row, left to right : Roger Dowell, Angie
Davis, Angie Hayes, Marci Merrifield, Kellie Mullen and Mary Flagg ;
sernnd rnw: David Det•m, Kris Sellers, Bruce Wolfe, Heidi Cobb, Kerri
Beegle, Karla Smith and Diana Simpson and Joe Malesick, instrumental
instructor.

Wedding plans completed

PRICE

wing-tip shirt and a wh1le ascot. Hb
boutonniere was wh1le stephanolls.
His best man was Tom Claiborne &lt;i
Winchester . Groomsmen inqlutied
Jon Underwood of Cincinnati , David
Underwood of Little York, Ind., both
brothers of the groom. Sam
Giarru~o of Bowling Green. and
Steve Stewart of Lima . both fnend'
or the groom . The grooms men WtJI'l'
gray taib with pin-:ltriped pt~n b
with white wing-tip shi rts and

Any Portion Requested"

......,_

n·st~arrh .

Sunday/People

The Sunday r{mes-Se ntinei- Page-6 ·3

Workshops, concert at FAC

WILSON'S BRIDAl. &amp;
CATERING_ SERVICE

)

May 9, 1982

POMEROY-Plans have been
completed for the open chu rc h wedding of Laura Rupe, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Rupe, Pomeroy,
a nd Randy R. Lee, son of Mrs. Sue
Lee, Waynesboro, Tenn., &lt;.t nd Kenneth Lee, Hohenwald, Tenn.
The wedding will be Saturday,
May !5, at 4:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Uni ted Methodist Church. Music by
Miss Linda Eason, organist, will
begin at 4 p.m. Rev. Robert McGee
will officiate .
Mrs . Linda Faulk will serve as
matron of honor for her sister. The
bridesmaids will be Mrs. Nancy
Woolard, Blounts Creek, N.C., and

Mrs. Terri McLaughlin, JacksonC.
Ronnie Lee of Waynesboro, Tenn.,
will serve as best man for his
brother, with the ushers to be Ricky
Lee, Waynesboro , Tenn. also a
brother, and Kevin McLaughlin ,
Jacksonville, N.C.
Stephanie Lee, niece of the groom,
wi ll be nower girl. Guests will be
reg istered by Beth Perrin ,
Pomeroy; Christy Grice, Dayton,
a nd Annette Vanek, Pittsburgh, Pa.
A reception will be held in the
church social room irrunediately
following the ceremony.
v ill e,~.

BIDWELL - The Mt. Washinb&gt;ton
Church of Christ, Cincinnati, was the
selling for the open church wedding
of Nancy Joan Brown and Dan iel
Ray Underwood on March 20. The
bride lli the daughter of Ca rroll and
Eleanor Brown of Bidwell and the
groom is the son of Harrison and
Hazel Underwood of Ridgeway.
The doubl.,..ring ceremony was
perfonned by David Underwood.
brother of the groom, and the
groom's father. Thirty minutes of
music preceded the ceremony with
vocal se lections of " Charity,"
" Long e r," "Sav ior, Like a
Shepherd," and "Sunrise, Sunset"
performed by David Mahoney,
brother-in-law of the groom, and accompanied by Kathy Underwood,
sister-m-Jaw of the groom. Organ
selections included " We've Only
J ust Begun," "0 Perfect Love,"
"Liebestraum," and "Nun Bulen
Wir" performed by Jana Stiles.
friend of the bride and groom.
The bride wore a fonnal gown by
Milady of New York . Its Victorian
tiesign of organza and chantilly lace
was sty led with a lace neckline with
embroidered illusion yoke. Long full
lace sleeves were gathered at the
wrist by a three-button lace ruffled
cuff. The fitted waist accentuated
the A-line skirt which nowed into a
wide rufned semi-cathedral train
edged with chanlllly lace. A Juliet

cap crowned the finger-tip length
veil. Her only jewelry was diamond
earrings, a gift frorn the ~ roorn. The
bride's bouquet was a nosegay of
stephanntis and roses wi th baby's
breath.
Becky Wells of Bidwell was
matron of honor for her sister.
Britiesmaids included Denise Chase
and Diana Brown. both of Cincinnati, also siste r,; of the bride.
Becky Mahoney of Portland. Ind ..
and Debi Underwood of Ridgeway ,
sisters of the groom.
Attendants were attired in formal
gowns of sheer hyacinth tone on tone
&lt;lriped chiffon. The peplum jackets
were accenleti by a wide satin ribbon with a large bow tied at the
waist in the back . ,'heir hatr was accented w1th violets and baby's
breath. Each attendant ca rried a
basket of daisies, cornations,
violets, irist:s, roses,

i:llld

r------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THE
N. 2nd Ave.

LaSALLE
992-9917

Middleport, Oh.

IN THE LOBBY
SPECIALS SERVED 11-2 AND 8:30

MONDAY-Spanish Meat Balls
TUESDAY-Roast Beef and Dressing
WEDNESDAY-Sweet &amp; Sour Pork ove1 Rtce
THURSDAY- Beef Stew
FRIDAY-Baked ftsh
SATURDAY-Lasagna
DAILY MENU INCLUDES-Chef Salads, Sandw1ches. Soups, Desse&gt;ts. Vartely
of Steaks, Ham &amp; Baked Fish.

baby's

breath highlighted with hyacinth
:latin ribbon str eamers.
The gown was attireti in a wh1le
full dress tuxedo with tails , a white

ROOMS BY
WEEK
AND MONTH
CATERING AVAILABLE
I

Look whats cookin'at

ON

DOLLA

DAYS

Monday 4PM To Closing

Thomas Myers

Sale ends. Saturday, May 22nd.

We Don't Skimp On Shrimp!

Monday N. ht Is
All.fou-Care- o-Eat
Shrimp Night!

$1 BARGAINS

• "POSH" BLOUSE AND LINING FABRIC.
Polyester; machine wash, dry; 45" wide. Reg. 52.69
yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR 52.
• BROADCLOTH AND BATISTE. Polyeste&gt;/coHon ;
machine wash. dry; 45" wide. Reg. $2.69 and $2.79
yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $2.
• SUMMER PRINTS. Poly/coHon : machine wash, dry,
45" wide. Reg. S2.491o $2.99 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR
• BOBBIN BOX. Clear ptasltc box holds all sizes of
bobbins. Reg. 52.50 eo .. NOW ONE BOX FOR $2.

• T-SHIIll' PRINTS AND STRIPES. Poly/coHen;
machine wash, dry, 60" wide. Reg. $4.99 yd., NOW
ONE YARD FOR $3.
• GINGHAM CHECKS. Poty/coHon: mac~Ine wash.
dry, 45" wide. Reg. $2.29 yd., NOW TWO YARDS FOR $3.
• THE $PORTABLES. Poly/coHen denim, soltclolh
and Trtggere poplin. Machine wash, dry, 45' wide ..
Reg. $3.49 to $4.99 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $3.
• TOUCH AND SEW BOBBINS. From Slngerl Clear
plastic bobbins. Reg. 90c pkg., NOW FOUR PKGS.
FOR $3.

Monday from 4PM to closing you can get all the boiled ,
shrimp you can eat, along with fries, warm toasted greciari bread,
Shoney's own cocktail sauce, and our all-you-care-to-eat
soup and salad bar, featwjng our great new homemade seafood
gumbo, for just $4.99. Children under 12 get a·free
dessert with any dinner purchase. It's a new, nicely nautical way
we're saying, "Thank you for coming to Shoney's~'

MOTHER
In-stock McCALL &amp;
SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

IUY2,
GET ONE FREE.
Mr . &amp; Mrs . James Oav tson Sr.

$4

Erica R enae G

arnes

L1 ll y CosgrovL·

STYLE-SETTERS

• SUmNGS. Gobodreme Supe&gt; Flex'" and VIsa"'
Cadence poly wilds. Machine wash, dry, 60" wide.
Reg. $4.99 and $5.99yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $4.
• STRETCH TIRRY. Poly/coHon; machine wash, dry;
60" wide. Reg. $5.99 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $4.
• DIES$-UPS. 45" Shimmer satins. Polyester:
machine wash, dry. Reg. $5.99 yd., NOW ONE
YARDFOR$4.
• PONGEE PRINTS. 100% polyester. Machtne wash.
dry, 60" wide. Reg. $4.99 and $5.99 yd., NOW ONE
YARD FOR $4.

Mrs . Virginia Menster

Greg Zimmerman
Leo nard cencu til

Chuc ..

· ~D!~~~!Cl~~~~~·~NB~•-•oo. r~

POINT PLEASANT

SILVER BRIQGE PLAZA

SHONEY'S o ·NLVI

• ·Mon. :t~r11 iSif. 10 i.m. to 9p.m.
Sunday 1p.m. to 5

I

FOR LIFE

$2BASICS

$3CLASSICS

FeaturiDgOurNew Homemade Seafood Gumbo

THANK YOU

• PREMIUM MUSLIN. CoHan; blea ched or
unbleached. Machine wash, dry, 38' wide. Reg.
51.49 and $1 .69 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $1.
• NYLON NET. 100"/o nylon . Machine wash, dry, 72"
wide. Reg. 69¢ yd., NOW TWO YARDS FOR $1 .
• INTERFACING. Polyester tusible and non-tusibles
trom 18" wide. Reg. 69¢ yd., NOW FOUR YA~DS FOR $1 .
• THREAD. Polyester thread in many fashion colors.
NOW FIVE SPOOLS FOR S1.

.

"'

..

.

'

$lORE HOU~S: · .

..

PHONE-·'"''

Borg ert
Judy Borgert

Ed s\a."'\C.

S tl'\l't&gt; 1\11

pau\ Maxim

Elaille Myers

Marv sorgerl
Malfllt

P&lt;Hty Stt~tes

w Zlmmerma,.

Yers

Richard Myers

~"~

.,,,s~"( ,eso(\
Conn;e A.1

Tbis Message is Sponsored by the Right to Ute Group of Gallia County.

~e,,

�May 9, 1982
I

· - - - - --

!

Siders-E isnaugle

Syrru nes Valley High School and is

GALUPOUS - Penny Darlene
Siders and Gary L. Eisnaugle will
marry June 14 in Gallipolis.
Siders is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Pear l Willia m Sid ers.
GallipoliS, and Eisnaugle of Fox Co.
212 2nd Pit., Camp L€Jeune, N.C., is
the son of Mr . and Mrs. Eisna ugle,
Spri ngfield.
The bridL•elect attended Gallia
Aca de my High School and
grad uated in 1980. She is employed
by Holzer Medi ca l Center. S1ders is
employed by the U. S. Marine Corps.

Agency , Inc., Gallipolis. Pope is a
1976 graduate of Southwestern liigh
School and a 1980 graduate of Ohio
State University, majoring in

now employed with Wood Insunmce

CA I.I.I POI.I S

Mr arHI Mrs.

Pa ul C. Ht't'S uf (;&lt;JJI!poiJs wtll
cdt• brate the ir ~n ldtm w t•d din ~ an-

ni ve rsary w1th an open rL•n•pt Hm (l{
GrcH't' Un11l'd Mdhod1:-; t Churl'h ,
St·(·ond Avt·nut·. G a l!q) u! J ~. All fnt ·nds and rl'lall\'l'."i an· lll\' ltl'd to ell -

Paul E. Ht·•·s of Dayton w1tl Dun E.
Hl't·~

uf Gad 1polls. Tlwy hH ve two
L: r;mdsu ns, Tudd and Nick Rccs.
Mr. Ht&gt;cs wa s assocwted with the
(;aiiJpniJs Motor Compi::lny pri or to
hts rl'llreiTll'n t frum thl' White Implt•Jm•rlt Company. Mrs. Recs is
known m Gallipoli s illld s urrounding

tend .
Mr. i:lnd Mrs. Recs were lll&lt;.IITJed

nm ununitie.s for her bakmg .

May 21. 1!!:12 at Catlettsburg. K) .
Tht•y an· lht• parents of two sons.

Avenue. Gall ipol is.

Siders

Tlw Heeses reside "t 550 Third

Rice-Pull ins

\.all rpolrs. They a rt• the parents of
Carroll Jr . Ruu lt' 2. Ga llipolis: Bonme Fruth . Rou te 2. Point Pleasant.

Burneltl' nf Ht1utt' 2, Pat n ut rnarkt:LI
tht: lr 50th wcdlh ng allnl \'lTsary

April I.

~

.J·•

. --, • •(
Hawk, Mill er

r-----------------------

,-------------COUPON·-------------,

I

l

MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL

I

VISITTHE TOP OFTHE STAIRS

I

!

FITNESS CENTER &amp;BEAUTY STUDIO
You can save S10 on a
month 's memberhsip, if
you r eg iste r with a friend .
You will both qualify for
a $20.00 membership
regularly $30.00 .

ALL PERMS
$500 OFF
PH. 992-6720

I
II
I
I

I

They ha\'t' fi ve grandchild ren .

POMEROY - Mother's Day
will b€ celebrated at Heath
United Methodist Church Sunday
during the regular worship ser·
vice. Rev. Rob€ rt Robinson will
speak on "B iblical Mathematics"
and there will b€ music from the
church choir. The public has been
given a special invitation.
PLANS have b€en completed
the Christian parade to b€
Sunday. The parade will
at 2 p.m. and move from the
Pon&gt;erc&gt;v parking lot to MidCommunity Park where a
sing will be held. Those at·
the sing are asked to take

I
I
I

Henderson-Pope
PATRIOT - Mr. and Me&gt;.
Hichard Henderson of Route 1
Patriot , i:lnnouncc the engagemeni

Rice
POMEHOY - Mr. and Mrs. T. W.
1Hill I Rice nf Route 2 Racinl' announce the engagement a nd appruCJch ing rnarrie~ ge of their

anti fo rthcoming ma rriage of their
da ughter. Linda, to Dave Pope. son
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pope of
Patriot.
Henderson is a 1977 graduate of

GALUPOLIS - The Unroe
Pamily will appear at Bell
Chapel Church at 7 p.m. with
Rev . Everett Delaney as
speaker. The public is invited.

NOW APPEARING

MONDAY

daughter. Teresa Lynn Rice. to
Steve Duane Pullins, son of Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. r Bill ! Pullins, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
The bnde-elect will b€ a 1982
graduate of Southern Hi gh School
anti is employed by Sue's Green

STEVE YATES
BAND

JlOU.'SC in Athens . Her fiancl' is a 1981

Mr. and Mrs. Cook, 62
POINT PlEASANT, W. y,~,

-

Nnrthup, Ge~lli poll s Ferry; Mrs.
Hcnry I Mar ge~ r e1 1 Pit:l'l'l'. Pnint
P leasa nt . a nd Mrs. Mike ( Luc y 1

The

t' h!ld ren tlf Mr . and Mrs. John W.

Str l'l'l , P tnnt
Plt·asant. W. Va _, an nnunn· lht• f1 2nd
Wl'th_h ng anmvc rsa ry tlf lht·tr pa rcn -

Cook .

Ka nawh(;t

Mitdwll. Nashville. Tenn.
They ha ve fiw stl!ls, Charles.
Culwnbus: Cecil . Ga l]q)O ]is; John

bu nM a y ~ .

Thl' enuplt·

he~vt·

t Me~ry

Bt•lle 1 Pa squall- .

Dunne~

Sht' line. Don s H enr y. i:lll of
Galli pulls. Ohn1; Mrs. Tom 1 Huth 1

Tht •y h&lt;IVt' 30 )!. randchil drL'I1 e~ nd 14
g n ·at-g randcht ldren.

$@y@y@i@iq:{f)~tf1ib®®@J@Jf{f)@

~

CINCINNATI/HAWAIIAN
VILLAGE WEEKEND

~

- --»-

@ " ~~

· _

~

$
@
@

VIA

-JUNE 5 THRU 6

$

@rour F.eatures:
Intern a t io nal Mark el Place
~ Frreman s Mus e um , Taft Mu se um, Sharon Wood~~
re:~Vrllage, Lodgmg at Howa rd Johnson Motel , Tri -County '&lt;:8
@Mall , Round Tnp Am track Fare.

rtl!JS&gt; PHONE 446 -0699
Trawel Agency

$
@

~

! -..,
~

..Q.TAQll 4

Tuesday thru Saturday

ONLY

9:00 P.M. · 2:00A.M.

$26995

NOONE UNDER21
ADMITTED

French Quarter

wedding .

LOUNGE &amp;CARRYOUT

® ® ® ~~® ® ®

360

Second Ave.
fDJ ® ® fDJ ®

®
c®

HYSELL RUN - Revival ser·
vices will begin Monday at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church
located on County Road 15 off
State Route 124. Terry Kender of
Elyria will be the evangelist for
the services to b€ held at 7:30
each evening. Rev . Theron
Durham is the pastor.

20% OFF ALL COTTON KNITS
W E SERVICE All MAKES OF MACHINES
WE SHARPEN SCISSORS
SALE GOOD MAY 10th· 1Sth

W. Jr .. Walter. Henderson. anti
i &lt;IIT)'. Gall 1pol1s Ft· r T~. W. Va .

sevt• n dc:IU ~h tt • r s.

M rs. Roy ( Vtrgiill(;t l C1bstlll, Mr~.

Tum

graduate of Meigs High School and
IS empl oyed by Pullins Excava ting
Cu.
The open-church wedding will b€
June 12 at 7:30p.m. at Morning Star
Methodi st church. A reception will
b€ held at the church following the

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chapter S3, Disabled American
Veterans, will meet at 6:30p.m.
Monday at the chapter home on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
RACINE Village Coun cil
special session Monday at 7 p.m.

MO DEL
5522 1324

GOSPEL
MEETING

~··· IS ~·r~.····

-·· -

YOU ARE CORDIALLY
INVITED TO ATTEND THE

RAVENSWOOD·
CHURCH OF CHRIST

MA YR9t11oi11wrvu 14th

TUPPERS PLAINS EL€mentary Boosters will meet Monday
at 7:30 p.m. Speakers will be
Richard Roberts, superintendent
of the Eastern Local School
District who will talk on the
school levy, and Carol !Byh,
assistant superintendent of the
Carleton School, Meigs County's
school for the retarded and
disabled, on the 1.5 operating
levy. Both the head teacher and
the Title I reading teacher will be
giving suggestions from the staff
on activities for the students to do
during the sununer months.
Packets will b€ given out for each
grade level.

115 W. 2nd
POMEROY , OH.
Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved_Eealer

SINCER ~~·· ~.": '. · ·;~

AT THE

KAISER &amp; DOUGLAS AVE .

THE FABRIC SHOP

SINGER

Gospel Meeting
AT THE

7:00P.M. EACH EVENING
PREACHER: JERRY TOOTHMAN

POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at tb€ school with safety
patrol to be honored. Program by
fifth and sixth grade band studel)o
Is under the direction of David
Bowen. Refreslunents by the sixth grade parents.

CHAPEL HILL CHURCH
OF CHRIST

ORRVILLE, OHIO

MEIGS COUNTY Association
of Garden Clubs will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at Trinity Church.
Hostesses for the meeting will be
the Star Garden aub. The
program will be given by the
Shade Valley Council of Floral

THE WEEK OF MAY 9th,.1982

Thru May 21, 1982

ArtS.

3-Pc. Fish Dinner
Special $2.69

GALLIPOLIS - Bossard
Memorial Library, 641 Second
Ave. , will hold "Once Upon A
Time" story telling Monday at 7
p.m. It is open to all school-age
children.

'.

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

at:

Sliver Bridge Shopping Center, '
Gallipolis

DAVID PHARR

.

WILL BE 'DELIVERING THE
GOODNEWS

. · TUESDAY

,

. ;SUNDAY MORNING AT 9:30 &amp;1P:30",
.I '
.
SUH.D~Y EVE~I~G ~16:00 . ,. ., ·;
'MONDAYlHROUGH
FRIDAYA'F.....7:30P.M .. I I,, . il
.
A .. Friendly Welcome AwaltJ '"fou,

.

'

01/112WS

'

'

•

J
'

•

'
''

'.

•·'

(.

.

.
t

.

GAWPOUS - lB Lecbe
League will meet Monday at the
ho(Jle of Bobbi Hood at 7:30 p.m.
Tile topic of the lnfonnal
di$Cussion will be "Getting Started: The Breastfed Baby and the
Family." For meeting I~
fonnallon caU ~14 or ...,. .
4010.

.

SYRACUSE PTO will met4 . '

r t1!'1iadliy at 7p.m. at the sclloo.l'
apeaker will. be Carol

Ll~h, administrative IISIIistanl at

· t~1ofeigs'Communlty Classes for ·
~retarded and dlaablect.
't

111

.

~

I

l' {

'

•

/~ntlnued ori 11,1)

•·

•.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps- We R - The Riehl To limit Quantities

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRESH WHOLE

CHICKEN

MOTHERHOOD IS ASPECIAL WAY OF LIFE ...
Motherhood is love in its greatest and absolute form. The respon·
sibilities of Motherhood are many. She must love her children
without possessio~ them and still gain their respect. Understanding and patience ts an every day endeavor for a mother.

Super
Specia

Super
Special

USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

$3''

T-BONE
STEAK

LEGS
Super
Special
FRESH

PORTER HOUSE

'3~~

STEAK

LB.
ARMOUR

GALLIPOLI S
Merle
Stewart, Mansfield, will sing a nd
speak at Jubilee Christian Center
Sunday at 10:30 a.m.

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY $ TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 9 TO 10

Stamps

"t¥e ·Reserve the Rig(!\ to Um~ Quantity"

GALUPOUS - Kings Chapel
Church will hold a baptizing ser·
vice with Rev. Jeffrey Sunday
between 12:30-1 p.m. The service
will be held behind the Carl Caldwell residence un State Route 7
b€low Eureka. The public is invited.

Henderson, Pope

Federal
Food

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gallipol5, Ohio Phone 446-9593

I

-------------------------------4

W.Va .. a nti John . l-ft&gt;ntlersnn. W. Vet

Mr . Rurn d h· rnanwtl Uw fornwr
Ruth Cnl'hran Apn l I. l!l! ~ 111

POMEROY - Me&gt;. Wi lla J . Hawk
engagement of her daughter, Judith
Lynn Hawk , to Willard E. Mi ller Jr ..
son of Mr. and Mrs. Willa rd Mill er
Sr., Union Ave., Pomeroy .
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of Alexander High School and is employed at Der Dug Haus at Athens

Accept

POMEROY - Meigs American
will hold its final sign up
Sunday at I p.m. at Meigs
School Ball Pi eld. All inIPre"tea youths are to bring birth
certificates, shoes and gloves.
This is the final sign up for the
year.

of Route 5, Athens is a nn o unc in~ the

Our Bea uty Salon is open
daily - Evenings by appointment.
This Offer Expires May 15th, 1982
'' Ov e r the Dollar General Store
, Pomeroy

Burnettes reach golden
PATHI OT - Mr. anti Mrs. Ca rroll

POMEROY - The newly orRev . Wanda Johnson of
Middleport and Syracu.se First
United Presbyterian Churches
will b€ guest speaker at the
lvation Army , Butternut
Avenue, Pomeroy, Sunday at 7:30
p.m. The public is invited.

Hawk-Miller
GALUPOUS - Stanley Jones of
Bunce Road and Mrs. Hazel Camden
of Route 4, Ga llipolis, announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Reb€cca Jane, tu Scott F. Maha n,
sun of Mr. a nd Mrs. Prank Mahan of
Rio Grande.
The bride-elect is a senior at
Bucke ye Hills Career Center
enrolled in Diversified Health Occupations and is employed at Holzer
Medica l Center. Jones is a 1981
graduate of Buckeye Hills Career
Center and is employeq at Bob
Evans Fa rms .
·
Wedding plans are incomplete.

We

SUNDAY

MeigS High SchO&lt;ll, Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will take
place Saturday, June 5, at 3:30p.m.
at Arabia Missionary Baptist Church on Route 243. Deering. A reception will follow the ceremony.

Jones-Mahan

alenda

-· . • I

e:tgricultural educati on. He is a
vocat ional agriculture in.structor at

Jones, Mahan

Mr . and Mrs. Rees, 50

Mall. Her fiance graduated from
Meigs High School in 1980 and i~ e1J1ployed at Twin City WeldinW and
Machine Shop in Pomeroy .
,
Weddi ng plans are incomplete.

$109

12oz .
Pkg.

HOT DOGS ~

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

Super
Special

Super
Special
GOLDEN
RIPE

$1~!.

POTA

BAG

STRAWHERRIES

Quart

$149

Gallon Plastic

ROYAL CREST

BUnERMILK

HALF
GALLON

99e

$129

SWEETHEART 9 INCH
WHITE PAPER PLATES
100 CT . PKG.

SCOT FAMILY

DINNER NAPKINS ~~g~'· $149

Super
Special

'BANQUET

79e

HEAD LETTUCE

TEA BAGS

Heil d

'
'

.'

TOMA~

;,o; OT~ 119

t-=A-1 STEAK
SAUCE

$159

1001.
Bottle

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
49 OZ . BOX

Super
Special
rop·, DIET 7-UP

BROUGHTONS
PREMIUM QUALITY

ICE ~REA~u$159

ORANGE CRUSH
BARRELHEAD
ROOT BEER

'
'

I

BOUNTY

MACARONI
DINNER
7.25 Oz. Box '

I),

TOWELS

.

''

.

'

.'

JOY LIQUID
32 OZ. BOTTLE

Jumbo roll

.79t

$1 ~'~
Deposit

TROPICAL BLEND

KRAFT

22 Oz .
Jar

DELMONTE

'

I

10 oz.
JAR

Super
Special

GAL

.

.;· .~ll9

.

ICEBERG

COFFEE CREAMER

Special

11 OZ.

FROZEN .sox
DINNERS

100 Ct.
Box

Super

1

240z. Ctn.

TOMATO

COFFEE MATE

LIPTON

Super
Special

Super
Special

COTTAGE
.OIEESE

RED
RIPE

INSTANT
COFFEE

2% MILK

HOUGHTONS

L~119

WITH
RIB S

BREASTS

MAXWELL HOUSE

'/ALLEY BELL

OR MORtON

FRESH CHICKEN

Super
Special

Super
Special

Super
Special

LB.

Super
Special

IDAHO

BAKING

PORK
SHOULDER
STEAK

$.159

PINACOLADA
SUNTAN OIL
OR LOTION
80z. Btl.

$359

AOUA FRESH.
TOOTHPASTE
6.4 Oz. Tube
25c Off Label

$}29

�Mav 9. 1987

Po me

The Sunda Tim

TUESDAY

Sports

ELL

!continued from B-71
GALLIPOLIS - A Di ck Celeste
for Gove rnor mt·e llll~ will be held
at the Ohi o Valley Bank on
J ackson Pike at 8 p.m. Those
wishing to voluntel'r and all \ lltcrcs tcd per sons ar e inv ited to at-

STORE HOURS:

lend. For more information , ca ll
Hav Matu ra at 446-8263. or Elaine
Ruuse at 367-7 12!&gt;.

Mo11.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.

GA !.IJPOLIS
Pembrokl'
Club will meet with Mrs . Jack
Matthews Tuesday tt l 8 p.m .

WIN A TRIP
FOR TWO ro

PRICES IN EFFECT THRU MAY 15, 1982

on Tu c:·a.biy at 7: 30 p.m . a t

Elem ent ar y

CASH

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Gel a tr ee game
hckol and collector card at any part1C1pat1ng store

Sc.·hool .

--,

'You may also rece1ve a lree game l1ckel andtOf
oolleclor card (please speofy) by ma1hng a sell-

MIDDt.F. POHT Lodge 363
F&amp;AM Tuesday at 7: 30 p.111
Refreshments will be served.

P ill[[
VA.I uE

addressed _ st.:1mped envelope to Fabulous For1u ne
ol Pnzes, P 0 Bo• 26272 . 81rm1ngham . AL 35216
L1m11 one hcket per request. one requesl per person
per day Each rcauesl mu st be ma,lcd separately
S1mply punch out the perforated sections on the
game hcket to reveal lour game marke1 s to play on
your collector card Some game 11cke ts conta1n a
marker whtch states "YOU QUALIFY FOR GRAND
PRIZE DRAWING " II you obtatn one or these
markers you are eligible to enter the Grand Pnze
Drawings and the chance to wtn unc ol s1• tr~ps tor
two to Hawau or $3,000 c ash Two Grand Pnzo
Drawings will be hold All valtd entnos recorved by
May 27. 1982 wrU be ehgrble lor the lu st drawmg on
May 28, 1982 Three Gra nd Prrzes Will be g1ven
awa y at thrs 11me All vahd entnes recervecl w1thrn 14
da ys attar game ends will be eligrbte 101' the second
drawtn g Three more Grand Pnzes w1ll be award ed
m the second drawtng

GALLIPOLI S - The reg ula r
meeting of the Gallia Count y
Di stri ct Libra ry Boa rd of
Trustees will be held Tuesday at 5
p.m . in the Rare Book Room nf
the Dr. Samuel I.. Bossard
M e mor~ a l Library. 641 Second
Ave.

i

Plltl£S

10

' '1

1200
2!100

2

IM .OOO

~O~ Al _

II]~;&gt;(!

t 1000

\

1 GAME

I

1lG/.ME

2fiGAI.IE

IICI(£1

1

TICI(£1&lt;;

rrcro:ns

,-..,,39!&gt;8:11

1:1'0

1001

OOOS f~

OOOSfOA ' OOOSFOR

NUioiB(R 01'"

'"''0'37'

, .,!.3611

, .,

~~~

,.,
, .,

1?2

,.,

6

, ..,

5b

~ lonl]9~.i -1&lt;&gt;1 ~73~
6'00

,,~

~000

•v• JJ'&gt;O: ' "

:

j

t~9

, .,

r ,,.,

1n

~~~ :- ,..,

"..:.~'_
'oIl]

I

~'6

128

Ma y 12. I and 2: !:&gt; p.m . - Oh1o
Da nt: c Cu mpan y &lt;Jt
WCJshington School, c ~ s pun s nr c d by
Wa~ hin g ton

School PTA ami F .A. C.

Ma y 15, 10 a.m. and I p.m. Pia no workshops ta ught by

M &lt;:~ r i

Christine Epli ng .
May 15. 8 p. m. - Pr&lt;J /111 pcrftlfm ancl' by Mari ChnslJllL' Epli ng.

May 16. 2 p.m. - Nature Art in the
Park at Raccoon Creek County
Park . ct;-sponsored by 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Park Distncl and rAC.
Ma y 18 , 8 p. m .
ln -

Steve Howe, 2-1. picked up I he w1 n
in relief. The loss went to Bill
Gullickson, 2-2, the Montrea l starter
who gave up eight hits and seven
runs in his thre ~ innings of work .

Fabulouti Forluoe ol Pni&amp;S

Seroes "'WM!i2 os Deong

~ ayecl

n

159 stOles lotaled on Ot\oo. Indiana. Mocttogan. Vorgonoa. Wesl

GETIING PAST THE TAG - Milwauke-e's Paul
Molitor scores as he slides around the tag of Minnesota
calcher Si Butera during sixth inning action Saturday

NEW
YORK
(A p)
_
h 1 k. •
, _ dl
_
Cz ec os ova ta s 1van wen over
powered Jose Luis Clerc of Ar en. "2 -5 Sal d t
g l
ur ay o move m o
l ma .,. , 7
the finals of the $500 000 WCT Tour· ' llh f ed
namen o
mpwnsa
e am
w ts·dt fTCha ·. Cl b
~s- dll e enndls eedued. . lh . 61
wen , secon s
m IS t th ·
_,
. ld 'II
I
f1e , wt mee e wmner Vfpayer
• th
·f· 1 th t ·t
Sal urday s o er semt ma a pt. ted t op-s eeded J ohn McE nroe agaml Eddi D'bbs the def di
ha _
s
e t '
en ng c m
Pion who is seeded loth this year ·
Sunday's finals will be nation· lly
l
· ·ed b ABC..TV
a
1
e evts
y
.
The winner of this champions-only
tournament will receive $100 000 and
a fur coal valued at $43 000 ~hile the
, '
runner-up poekets $40 ,000 .

Whole Fryers ..': ..49¢
•
$}49
1/4 Pork l o1n........ ·
LB.

terdepartmenl&lt;ll rncetin)..! .

mONTON- Athens woo the boys'

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST . . . . . • •
BUCKET CUBE STEAK • •

May 23, 1-5 p.m. - Work party for
spring d t•amn).; dl Ri ve rby. Potluck
dinner al5 :30 p.m.
May 25, 8 p.111 . - Trustees
meeting .
June Ex l11b1t - Ca rved birds by
McMahan ctnU drawin gs by
Neis wender.
June 7-18 - V1sual Arts Classes. 10

in Milwaukee. Molitor scored from third on a fly by
Robin Yount. (AP Laserphoto) .

Lendl dominated Clere m the batlie of clay court spec1ahsts and
.
..
.
.
.
posted h1s 88th v1clory m 91 malches The Czech rioht-hander is in
·
b
his 18 consecutive tournament final
and is ooino after his 15th title
~
b
·
Lend! jwnped on lop by breaking
Clerc in the openin" game at 15 as
"
the Argentine suffered nwnerous unforced errors a malady that would
•
the match
affect him throu.,houl
0
·
In the seventh game, Lend! broke
Cl
l·n and g l·n at J&lt; ' -ndl
ere aga •
a a
"· we
th ·
d a lo
m to take the
en serve
. ve ga e
first set.
'fh t
t d d . . b e· k . to
e wo ra e servtce r a s
begin the second set, but Lend!
broke his Argentine opponent again
in the third game to take a lead he
. .
never rehnqu1shed.

LB .

• • • • • •

' L,B.

• • • •

$179
$249

Southeastern Ohio League track
meet and Waverly the girls' crown
here Saturday afternoon.
In the boys' meet, Athens tallied
136 points for top honors. Ironton
was second with 129.
Waverly was third with 87,
followed by Logan with 68. Gallipolis

was fifth with 37; Wellston sixth with
32; Meigs seventh with !4 and
Jackson last with 41.
In the girls' meet, Waverly was
first with 100 points. Athens finished
second with 78.
Meigs was third with 68; Jackson
fourth with 6.1; Logan fifth with 58;
Gallipolis sixth with 45 and Wellston

ENERS

12 Oz. Pkg.
i

•

• • • • • • • • • • •

•

all ages. Laugh! by James Melswendcr, Cinci nnati .

Gallia senior
citizens' calenda
Activities for the week of May 11114 at the Senior Citizens Center

.
,

1

Van Camp

1s oz. cAN

Pork &amp; Beans

LETTUCE
2% MILK •BROUGHTONS
• • • • • • •
PARKAY
MARGARINE
.
.
.
POT PIES DINNER TREAT
I

Hyland Brand .

Dog Food ••••••••••••

25 LB. BAG

$329

•

In lhefourlh game , lhdwo trade~
groundslrokes m long ralites - one
inl lakin 33 hils as the two
po
g
maneuvered each other around the
·
•
·
Bt
court, lookmg for an opemng. u
U!ndl fought back from 30-40 to hold
d
serve and grab a 3-1 1ea .
.
Clerc fought off three match pom.
· h
h. h
tt
ts m the mnl game, w 1c wen o
·
·
• bel
, h !d. ·
deuce five ltmes,
ore o mg ser, dl for the. rtrs·t
ve . Then he broke 'wen
.
.
h · h Olh
t
l1me m the mate mt e I game o
even the second set at 5-5.
.
But Lend! came nghl back,
.
. .
.
breakmg Clerc at 15, the fmal poml
·oming on a running forehand
e .
passmg shot.
,
Lend! then held serve at lJ to caplure the set and match.

I

•

I

I

'

•

.b •

Head

• • • • • • •
Plasti!= Gal.

• • •

•

•

•

•

•

LB.

I

I

I

I

I

• •

seventh with 20. Ironton did not participate.
Gallipolis' Cora WoUe was top
scorer in the girls' meet, finishing
second in the long jump, first in the
hurdles, second in the !()()-yard dash
and third in the 200 meter race.
Complete details will follow Monday.

Coach
resigns
new post

FRENCH CITY

sess ions. Monda y lhruugh Friday,

located at 220 Jackson Pike arc as
follows:
Monday, May 10 - Vinton Site
Exercises, 11 :30 a .m. ; Chorus. 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday , May 11 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11 :15 a.m . ; Craft Class, 1-3 p.m.
Wednesday , May 12 - Vinton
Nutrition Education, 11 :30 a.m.;
American Literature Class, I p.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, May 13 - Vinton Site
Crafts, I p.m.; Bible Study, 1-2 p.m.
Friday, May 14 - Yoga Class, 10
a.m .; Art Class, 1-3 p.m. ; Woodworking Class, 1-3 p.m.; Craft MiniCourse, 1-3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menu :
Monday- Liver and creole sauce,
carrots, buttered kale, bread, butter, fresh fruit, milk.
Tuesday - New England boiled
dinner, cornbread, butter, peanut
butter cookie, milk.
Wednesday - Baked spaghetti
and cheese, cauliflower, tossed
salad/dressing, Italian bread, butter, apricots, milk.
Thursday - Chop suey on rice,
green beans, coleslaw, bread, butter, baked pineapple, milk.
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, buttered ~ts. brown
bread, lime gelatin/fruit, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
'Meals subj~ to change withoui
notice.
"Services rendered lin a nondll!criminatory bas~."

Sunday, May 9, 1982

Da rre ll E van!i followed wi th a

NEW YORK I API - Chili Davis
and Jack Clark each drove in two
runs as the San francisco G1ants
scored six limes in the eighth inning
to beat the New York Mets 8-3 Saturday.
The Giants started their late rally
with one out against Ed Lynch 1-2.
when Jim Wohlfon.l singled up the

middle

and

J ohnnie

followed with a n infie ld

LeMaster
~ in g l e.

I.yn-

ru ns in the second mmng. Jum ur
Ke nnedy reac hed on a n err or by
third base man Ra y Kn ight . went to
lhiraon a IHl·and-r un sin gle by Ryne
Scmdbe rg e~ nd scored on Noles'
sacnfice fl y.
Ste ve Henderson then drew a walk
nff loser J oe Niekro, 3-2, and Sandberg scored on &lt;.1 single by Wills.
Noles. 4-3, was nicked for a run 111
the fourth when Alan Ashby s1ngled
a nd scored on a double by Phil Ga rIll' !".

sacrifice fl y and Clark duubl ed lu
ri ght , scorin g Morgan ct nd O'Malley.
th~rd

Giant

Brewers 12, Twins 1

pi tcher , got th e v ictory .

MILWA UKEE
Thomt~s

Cubs 3, Astros 2

I

AP I - Go rman

lined a thr ee-run home r i:Jild

a n RBI s111gle and M1ke Ca ldwell
hurled a fi ve- hitter . le&lt;:H.itng the

Bwn p Wills

and pitcher Dickie Noles knocked 111
a run Saturday to lead the Chicago
Cubs to a 3-2 v1ctory over the
Houst on Astros.

It marked onl y the second tnne
thi s ::;cason that the Cubs had won

two games in a row .
Wills beat out a bunt simdc in th e

first inning, stol e second . went to
third on a passed ba ll a nd scored on

a single by Keith Moreland .
The Cubs added two unearned

Milwaukee Rrewers to a 12-1 rout of
the Minnesol;J Twms Saturday .

Chis ox 7, Tigers 4
DETROIT I AP I - Ch1 cago's
Marc Hill , Tum Paciorek and Rudy
Law each home1·ed and the While
Sox scored four runs in th e last two

innings to to take a 7-4 victory over
the Delnllt Tigers Satu rday.
Jl·rry Koosman. 1-1. who n u nc on
tn start the seventh inmng. pu:kt·d up

tile v1ctory for tile While Sox .

Athens, Waverly loop champions

$ 39

,

Da vis took second on Ellis Valen-

scored one run e~nd drove 111 a nother

Giants 8, Mets 3

howev8f. Fabulous Fortune o! Pr11es ofhcoally ends when an
oame tiCilets are Otstnt:w..tted

Grade A

Spare R1bs ..... !~ ... }

_

tine's throw. Allen then walked Joe
M01·gan intentionally a nd on h1s way
lu walking the next batter , Ti111
O' Malley, a wild pilcil by All&lt;•n
allowed Leona rd to sco re.

CHI CAGO (AP I -

VII"Q!/111 and Kentucky

Sc:heduled te&lt;m•nal&gt;an date ol lttos promoliOI"' •• Jujy 19 1982 .

Lendl gains WCT finals

Country Style •

.

ch walked pin ch-hitter llave
Bergmcm to load the lxt scs.
That brought on Mcts' reliever
Ne1l Allen, and Davis hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run
smgle into right field . Pmch-runner
Jeff Leonard wound up at llurd and

Ga ry La velle. 1-1 , the

ning .

()(ld$ vall clependtng on the numtler or Game lockets you
obtaon Tl"\e l"nOI"&amp; you c:olloct !he t&gt;ett&amp;• rou• Chances ol
w•rm•nQ Odd~ to obtaon GranO Pnre Ora wo no;~ marke r and q~al• ly
lor clrawo no;~( s) are I on S2 ~9 to wtn Grand Pr1n Dr 8Wi fl9f$)
woll dtlpend on 1M number ol qualih9 rl

Riverby
calendar

S ta t e

I

251

ROCK SPRINGS - Me1 gs H1 gh
Vocal Music Boosters will meet
Tuesday at 7: 30p.m. in the music
room at the high school.

and cerami cs.

,

WIN •1 ooo • •1oo ~ - •1o • •s ••z

CHESTER Township Trustees
will meet in regula r session at
7:30p.m. Tuesda y at the Chesler
Town Hall .

MONTREAL I AP I - Dusty Baker
spearheaded a 1!&gt;-hil Los Angeles atlack with fi ve hils and five runs balled in as the Dodgers oulslugged the
Montreal Expos J()-1\Salurda y.
Baker stroked a pair of home runs,
including a solo shot in the first inning and a three-run dri ve that
highlighted a four-run third inn111g.
Bill Russell added a run-sconng
smgle w1th two outmthe tlurd .
The Los Angeles rally wiped out a
3-1 Montreal lead which came on a
lwl}-oul, three-run horner by Gary
Corter in the bottom of the first in-

oil SJ,OOO

HAWAII ·

CHES HIR E-KYG ER
A
spring music concert wi ll be held

May Exh1b1t - :&gt;4 P1eces of Gallia
County H1gh Sehoul A1i Work . incl uding 01 1. ac rylic. pencil, 111k ,
pastels. tissue collage, scratch
board , ma cr &lt;:~m e. wea v 1n g ,
photography, papier mache, pla ster

Section

LA Dodgers outlast
Montreal nine, 10-8

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

GA LI.IPOI.IS
Rl vc rSidt•
Stud y Club w1l l meet Tuesday l
p.m. at lht• Mrs . M. T Epling Sr.
residence.

Cht•s hirt•- Kyg t•r

'iimts- itutintt

2JS1
$}59
2/$1
It

-

8 Oz .

. i

. ·' ----·

m~.~::::~:~ reacts to a putt

on the elxtb greeD~ play ol the United V
Baak GoU Clliulc at
· the Sleepy Hole 'Golf Coune In Suffolk, Vlrglnla, Saturday. (AP Lasel'-

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio IAPI Roger "Buzz" Kirkhart, who led the
Tiffin Calvert High School football
team to the 1980 stale championship,
has resigned at Middletown High
School without ever coaching a
game.
Kirharl said in his letter of
resignation Friday that the
"animosity" of the Middletown
Teachers Association toward his
hiring presented an "atmosphere of
hostility" which he fell would be
socially and academically detrimental to his wife and children.
The teachers association opposed
the hiring of a teacher from outside
the school district at a lime when
economic difficulties prompted
layoffs of 47leachers.
" The challenge of building a football program that would instill pride
in its members and those associated
with it is great/' he wrote, "but also
must be mel with wholehearted enthusiasm from the athletes, staff,
community and faculty."
David Annentrout, school board
president, said he believed the
resignation was prompted by an
anonymous critic who scribbled
"Scab" across a front-page picture
· and story about Kirkhart. The story
was published in the school
newspaper.
Karen Woodrey, president of the
teachers association, said in a
prepared statement that officials of
the organization were "shocked" at
Kirkhart's resignation and particularly at the reason he stated.

New York Mets in the second inning Saturday at Shea

ONE THAT GOT AWAY - Jim Wohlford of the
San Francisco Giants ends up on the ground as he tries

Sladium. Two runs sc·nrt'd on the play. I AP Laser-

to catch a ball hit to left field by Kookie Wilson of the

photo).

Crash kills race driver
ZOLDER, Belgium I API
Canadian racer Gilles Villeneuve, a
Ferrari driver, died Saturday night
after a 170 mph crash in the final
qualifying session for the Belgian

Grand Prix.
He s uffered severe neck and brain

injuries and doctors never held an y
strong hope for his survival.

Ferrari withdrew its other car,
driven by France's Didier Piron1,
from Sunday's race.
The last Grand Prix driver killed
was France's Patrick Depailler,
who died testing his Alfa Romeo at
Hockenheim, Germany, 10 1980. The
last fatality in a race was that of
Swede Ronnie Peterson in the
Italian Grand Prix at Monza in 1978.
Villeneuve's death put a pall over
the qualifying session.

Rt:: nault..s dri ven by F'rcnctuncn
Alain Prost and Rene Arnoux took
the front row positions for the re~ce.
fifth of the problem-ridden World
Champions hip series which Prnst
leads.
Behind them were Fmn Keke
Rosberg in a Williams and Austrian
fonner World Champion Niki Lauda
in a McLaren.
Villeneuve was taken to Lou vain
hospital with "severe neck and bra 1n
stern injuries, " unconscious and
with his vital functions mainlamed
by intensive care, the hospiwl said .
His Ferrari flew aboull50 yards in
the air after touching a rear wheel of
German Jochen Mass' March in a
passing manoeu ver. Villeneuve was
thrown into a fence , some 30 yards
from where the shattered car ian-

tied .

Villeneuve was on h1s first lap after a long p1l slop for attention to his
tires.
Doctors admini stered heart
massage ctnd other emerg ency
trealmennt. including mouth-ll}moulh resuscitation, at the scene of
the accident before Villeneuve was
wken by heli copter to the hospilal.
Afterward, Mass 'aid , " I was
g01ng down the middle of a straight
and saw Villeneuve Jn my mirror
cmmng up. I moved right tu l et him
through, but he came in on the ri ght
as well. He touched m y right rear
and somersaulted. "
Villeneuve's wife Joanne flew
from their home in Monaco to his
bedside. Tlwv ha ve tw D young
children .

I
I

.'
,

,

,...

'

~.

--·
,Q •

-·
t

I
~-

pheto).

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
3-LB. CAN

$649

·Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires May iS, 1982

FRANCO AM£RICAN :

CORONET DELTA

•
•

TISSUE ·

•
4

~OLL PACK .

69¢.

Limit One Per Customer
O.n ly ·At Powell's , · · o
Exair,es· May IS, 1982

••

SPAGHffil &amp; CHEESE .·

lH~OZ.

4/$1
1

Limit One Per Customer

_Good Only At Powell's

Expires May 1~, 198:2

Def:ision ma:v. perm.lt Raiders to move to Los Angeles
ID; ANGElES (AP) ~ A·legal
decision that apparenUy wiU allow
AI Davis and the Oakland .llalders to
move to Los Angeles aiBo l~ves ·in
Its jVake more questions than anJIWer&amp;.
.
••
•
\VJ!en the National Football
]· League ~nt' wiU be able to move to

Los Angeles is unej!rtaln. Also unanswered is the queStion of the legal
decision's effkt on the NFL - and
other pro sports leagues.
A federal court jury of six women
declared Friday that the NFL had no
rijWI 19 bar Devia from·tnritclling his
Ralileril frOm Oakland to Los

Angeles .
The verdict in the retrial of the antitrust suit brought by the Raiders
and the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission against the NFL came after
just 5t houn of deliberation•by the
pjlnel, which had received the ·case
Thursday aftemoori .

CRASH REMAINS- Race track officials ell8mlne
the remaflls of a \ formula ooe Ferrari driven by
Canadian GlUes VWeiiQeve that touched the wheel of
another car durillg a filial quallfyiDi! lap for the

Belgian Grand Prix Saturday at Zolder, Belgium.
VIUeneuve was crltlcaUy Injured in the 170 mph accident, solfering a broken neck and other lnjurlet&gt;. f AP
Laserphoto).

�Page--C -2

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Coal Gr ove! in ~et·ond round play of

the 1982 Class AA Sectional Tournament Monday .
Fnday, the Blue Devils elumnated
Chesapeake 113-91 by a 6-5 count in a
fi rst round game.
The victory left Ga llrpolis with an
s-14 record.
In Friday 's second npening round

contest, Coa l Grove eliminated Rock
Hill, 6-5.
Thursday . South Point upset
defending sec ti onal champion Por·

tsmouth, 7-'l. and will fa ce topseeded Fa irland r IS-51 in a I p.m.

Winn e r s

collide

at

TEAM SEOAL BASEBALL
J ac kson
"'; 2 L2 ~5 o5~
11 3 95 56
AI hens
Ironton
10 4 135 65
1

innings and received credit for the
win. King got credit for the save in
the fmal inning.
King led Ga llia 's attack with two
hits. Other Blue Devils hitting safely
were Steve Skidmore, Kev Eastman, Jerry Eutsler (a triple, Tim
Madison and Ken Russell.
Bartee and Lockhart had two hi ts
apiece for the losers. Romans was
charged wi th the loss.

game Monday. The GAHS-Coal
Grove game will follow at 3:30p.m.
Jr ont on

Stadium for the sectional title and a
trip to the district at 3: 30 p.m. on
May 13.
Gallipolis built up a comfortable 61 adva ntage over the Panthers
before Chesapeake came back with
four runs in the bottom of the seventh to make it a close game.
Gallipolis scored what proved to
be the winning !1lll in the top of the
seventh . Phil King singled , stole
second, went to third on a wild throw
on the play, and scored on Mike
Edelma nn 's single.
Darren Haner hurled the first six

According to Ri o Grande head

coach J ohn Lawhorn . the school wil l
have a pic ni c for booste rs, ad-

ministration, fa cult y, staff. and
parents of players at 5::W p.m. that
day with the game to follow. The
Newt Oliver Awards for outsta nding
achievement in men's and women's
basketball wrll also be presented
that night.
Lawhorn sa id that Ri o Grande
r age rec ruits Ron Furnier, Steve

Cluxton , Tino Ri chards, Kent Wolfe.
and Brad Ri vers will all vie in the
Red-White-Blue game.
Furnier, a 6-5 forward fr om Por-

season . He was honorable mention
a ll-state.
Rio Grande has severa l key
players returning from last season's
team that went 26-7 - the most wins
in the state by a college team and the
s;xth highest regular-season win
total in the country .
Rick Penrod , a 6-0 guard from
Nelsonville . who was the second
leading scorer on the team with a
14.2 average is returning as are 6-7
forward Da n Curry and 5-9 guard
J erry Mowery. both of the Circleville area. Curry and Mowery
were named to the Mid-Ohio Conference All-F reshman team last
season and Mowery was tabbed
.. Rookie of the Year."
Gone from last season' s squad is
powerful 6-6 forward Watson MeDonald of Warren, who averaged
ove r 22 points and !2 rebounds per
game. He was one of only four

Rivers. a 6-4 forward from Westfall Hi gh School, averaged 17 points
and II rebounds per game la&gt;1

playe rs in the country to average
over 20 points and II rebounds per
game .

runs was walked in and a nother run

scored on the error. Lawson then
delivered a two RBI double, his fourth hit of the game.
PPHS got two runs in the top of the
seventh as Rod Gleason collected his
third hil of the game and Devin
Slone reached base on a walk. Mike
Huddleston then plated both base

~~~~~·;;~~~~·/makeup!

TEAM
Logan

a home run, double and a

a double.
The loss gave the Big Blacks an 1112 record on the year and ends thei r
regular season schedule. This w the
first losing season for PPHS skipper
Dave Rawson in nine seasons. His
nine year record now stands at 109-

7!1-2.
Sectional tournament play begins
this week. PPHS will play Millon .
Linescore:
Pt. Pleasant
120 001-2- 6 II 5
Ravenswood
210 064 x- 13 9 1
Smith IL), Wamsley (6) , Vi gilotti
(6) and Porter ; Carter IW) , Lawson
(7) and Belue.

g

OR

~~: 1 ~

9 s 176 113
8 6 145 131
6 8 156 157

W e llston

Wave rl y
Meigs

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - The
Professional Bowlers Association
says bowler Marshall Holman has to
go back to school.
The association has banned
Holman from further participa tion
until he attends a three-day PBA
school. Holman, with $47,633 in 1982
winnings, is the fifth-leading bowler
on the tour.
He is one of about 300 PBA members to have skipped the school,
mandated by the association's
executive committee. The PBA has
2,200 members.

J ac kson

TOTALS
Tuesday ' s gam e:

CLEVELAND (AP) - The fiveyear deal that brought Tom
Cousineau to the Cleveland Browns
will pay him twice as much as all the
club's defensive players made last
season, a National Football League
Players' Association spokesman
says.
The linebacker will receive a
$500,000 annual salary and a $1

This Week's Happenings And
Specials At

54 54 1089 1089

M ei gs a 1 Loga n , &lt;ma k eu p )

Brian's Steak House

Jackets
ahead in
OACmeet

And The

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

McKinley and Tom Fowler of Baldwin-Wallace finished first and
second in the long jump Friday to
take the leading pace mto Saturday's finals of the Ohio Athletic Conference track and field championships.
McKinley jumped 23 feet, 10'"' inches to win the event Friday. Fowler
was second with a jump of 23-7.
Derrick Rippy of Mount Union set
meet records of 10.59 seconds in the
100-meter dash semifinal and 21.29
seconds in the 200-meter dash
semifinal.
With three events completed - the
long jump, discus and 10,000-meter
run - Baldwin-Wallace had 28 paints, followed by Wittenberg with 22,
Mount Union 14, Ohio Wesleyan and
Otterbein 12, Denison and Ohio Northern 2 and Muskingum I. Capital,
Heidelberg, Marietta, Oberlin and
Wooster fail ed to score.

r_::::::::_____

Scottish Inn Lounge

25 YEARS AT SPEEDWAY - A. J . Foyt from Hous.ton, Texas, the
only four-time winner of the Indianapolis 500, breaks into a large sntlle
during a press conference In Indianapolis Friday afternoon. Foyt
celebrated his 25th year at the Motor Speedway when pmctlce for the
Memorial Day classic began Saturday. (AP Laserphoto) .

Sunday Buffet 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Includes 3 meat entrees, 3 vegetables, salad. desert and bevemge.
Mary Lucas at the organ II :30-2 :00

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
· AP Sports Writer
It wasn't a classic victory , but it
doesn't take much to make Texas
Manager Don Zimmer happy these
days.
"This might be the happiest I ha ve
been over a win in my whol e
lifetime," Zimmer sa1d after the
Rangers, although outhit 12'4, edged
the Boston Red Sox I -!I Friday night
to snap a 12-gaine losing streak .
"That's what I've been looking for.
Son of a gun, we played great.
"They have taken this thing like
men, stayed loose and not blamed
each other . They wanted this one."
Although Doc Medich and Danny
Darwin were tagged for 12 hits - 11
singles to go with a double by Dave
Stapleton - and issued three walks,
the Rangers reeled off five double
plays, tying a club record, while
rookie Bobby Johnson provided the
onl y run they needed with a fifth-

Tuesday - Shrimp. includes ~· ren c hfries. slaw_ .... ___ .. .. ,$4 .95
Kiwanis meet6 : 15 p.m.
W.clnesda v - Swiss steak, includes Au Grautin potatoes. green
beans. sla~.- .... .. .... , .. .... _... .... . .... .............. $4 .00
D.. ,._In Lounge 8 p.m. - II p.m. Rotary Meets 6:00 p.m.
Thursday - Grilled ham, includes hash browns, salad, only· · .$4 .00
Fridav - Surf &amp; Turf . includes salad and your choice of potatoes.
$13.95
Saturday- New York strip, baked potato &amp; salad .. .... ...... $7 .37
Mary Lucas at the Organ Friday &amp; Saturday
7:30p.m . to 9:30p.m.

j~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~

..

~

IT'S CHANGING THE PLACE TO MAKE
YOUR DEAL, WITH DISCOUNTS AND DEALS
THAT MAKE IT WORTH CHECKING OUT
ON NEW OR USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS!!!

College.
Dafler, 32, compiled a 7:;..)6 record
in six seasons at Bethany.
He succeeds Dick Gi ese, who
becomes Mt. Vernon financial aid
director.

4

or

se da n, 4 cy l. , automati c. a ir cond ., P.S. . PB ., t inted window s, AM F M ste r eo, w ire w hee l

LIST PRICE $9599 .27
ROSCOE'S DISCOUNT 620 .06

'8979.21

1982 CHEVROLET CITATION
4 Dr se da n, 4 cy l. , auto., a ir cond .. P .S.. P .B .. tint ed wi ndow s, AM -FM r ad io, r al l y wheel s, betge
cu stom c lo th, b uc k et s. dr. r edwood m e t a lli c fini s h .

LIST PRICE $8990.67
ROSCOE'S DISCOUNT 678.97

AVAILABLE THRU
YOUR LOCAL
OFFICE

SIMMONS SALE PRICE '8311.70

1982 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA

446-0699

4 Dr . sed an . 4 cy l. , aut o .• a i r cond .. P .S.. P .B.·, tin ted windows, AM -FM ster eo. w ire w heel cove r s.
r e dwood vi n y l int eri or , white ex t e r i?r .

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.

1982 CHEVROLET CITATION
4 Dr . hatchback , sedan, V·6, auto .. air cond .. P.S., P. B .. ·tinted wind_ows, ~ea ~ win dow d~ fogger . sport
m irr or s. t ilt w hee L rall y wh ee ls, AM · FM radi o, delu xe tw o· tone patnf , Mtdntght blu e/ silver , dk . blu e
cu st om c loth in te r ior .

2 dr ., Sti ve r , 4 s p ,

AM/ FM .

~~~S6195

2 dr ., r ed, 4 spd .

$5995

~~~S469S

1979 FORD LTD
tr an s., a ir.

~~~S4695

,

4495

$4395

WASS5295
NOW

1979 FORD
FAIRMONT

1 fORD
GRANADA

4 dr., Red , auto ..
tran s .. air.

$3295

WAS S3495
NOW

4dr., Green.

4 dr .. Black.

1979 FORD
FIESTA

'l dr ., Green.

WASSI395
NOW

$1095

1979 FORD
FAIRMONT
4 dr ., Red and whife.

WAS S995
NOW

'595

$3495

~~~S3895

1974 MERCURY
CAPRI

1976 CHEVETTE

List Price $7795.00
1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Roscoe's Discount 400.00
V-6, auto .. A .C. . white with bfue interiore •• • •••• • • •• • • •• •• SIMMONS SALE PRICE $7395.00
List Price $7895.00
Roscoe's Discount 600.00
1980 Oldsmobile Delta 88 4 Dr.
V·B, auto., A .C., white with blue top interior • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SIMMONS SALE PRICE $7295.00
List price $7295.00
Roscoe's Discount 300.00
1980 Chevrolet Delta 88 4 Dr.
Auto., air. drk . blue , cloth seats (extra nice) ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SIMMONS SALE PRICE $6995 .00
List Price $6995 .00
1981 Chevrolet Malibu 4 Dr.
·
Roscoe's Discount 400.00
v-6, auto., A.C.. Lt. blue metallic tcleanl,••••••••••••••••• SIMMONS SALE PRICE $6595.00
List Price 56995 .00
1979 Olds. Cutlass Surpeme 2 Dr.
Roscoe's Discount 100.00
V·6, auto., A.C., u . t lue metallic ISharpl•••• ••• . . •• •• • •• ••SIMMONS SALE PRICE $6295.00
List Price $5895.00
1978 Buick Regal2 Dr.
Roscoe's Discount 500.00
V·6, auto., A.c .. tilt, cruise, silver/charcoal2 tone• . . ••• •••• .. SIMMONS SALE PRICE $5395:oo

Orange.

'3595

~~~um

1980 FORD
PINTO

FAIRMONT

Wagon. Orange.

2 dr., White .

2D

Second in thefts

List Price S5695.oo
1978 Olds. Cut Ias 5upreme
r•.
Roscoe's Discount 400.00
V·8. auto .. A.C., tilt, it. blue metallic, super good! . . . . . . . ••• . . SIMMONS SALE PRICE $5295.00

1981 CHEV.
CITATION

1979 FORD FlOO
Blue.

1978 DODGE

. PICKUP

~dr .• Blu~ .

'rJ~~ 56395

These are just a few examples of some ~f the su_pe~ deals waiting for · yo~ at
the dealer that's changing 'Pomeroy .&amp; S1mmons 1nto THE PLACE TO MAKE
V.OUR DEAL ... YOUR DEALER ON THE RIVER ....

Green.

s5995

'rJ~~ru

(OPEN TILL 9:00 li»,M.)

'3995

PAT HILL FQRD
.

.

MIDDLEPORT,OH.
PHONE 992-2196
·
. .

.

.

.

461S.THIRDST. · -

.

DALE R. SANDERS-GEN. MG1l."

SIMMONS dlDS.-C:AD~CH.EVY ., Inc. ..

•

•

. .

I

308 E. Main St.
Op.e n

.

PH. (614.) 992-6614
(ANYTIME BY.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.Saturday

IJ

making thai money.
" He's never played a s;ngle down
111 the NFL. There are players who
have played fur 10 yea rs or more
who a re not getti ng ont ri fth of wha t
his basic salary might be...

the y did in college ...
The Rrowns' clt•fensrvt• startt•rs
last season earned a rombrned fl at
salary of $1. 02 nullr on. whil e all
dt&gt;fPn.sJve pl ny t-~ rs on l ht· rostt•r ea rned a total of $1.75 nullron . Duber-

Ga rvey,

president

of

the

players associa tion , says the
Cousineau deal proves tha t the
NFL's team owners conspire to
prevent free agency in the league.
·' The only teams that made an offe r for Cousineau were Houston a nd
Cleveland," Garvey said. " Twentysix teams chose not to bid for him,
which proves that there is no such
thing as free agency because onl y
two teaJ11!i were acti ve ly involved in
the bidding. "
Duberstein said the Cousineau
deal " points up very clearly the
inequities of the system." ·
"Our point is not that Cousinea u is
getting more than what he's worth,"

win. " This kind of win is better than
a blowout because we had to concentrate more and show we were
tough."
Asked what went through his mind
when he whipped a called third
strike past Rick Miller to end the
game, Darwin replied, " I just
thought, 'Finally.' "
" We were sitting in the dugout
with chill bumps," said pitching
coach Jackie Brown. " It was like a
World Series, or something."
Mariners 5, Yankees 2
Todd Cruz homered and Jim
Maler drove in two runs, while Mike
Stanton, Ed VandeBerg and Bill
Caudill p;tched out of an late-inning
jams. Winner Floyd Bannister was
replaced by Stanton after Willie
Randolph opened the eighth with a
double and J erry Mumphrey singled
him to third. Stanton struck out
Dave Winfield and VandeBerg got
John Mayberry to ground into a

umon's proposal for playe1·s to share
compensated for what they con-

Dube rs lein said that under the

stein sc11d .

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Caudill came on with runners at
first and third and one out in the ninth and retired pinch hitters Osca r
Gamble and Bobby Murcer. New
York's Lou Piniella hit into an inning-.,nding double play with the
bases loaded in the first inning and
Rick Cerone rapped into a double
play after the first two runners
reached base in the eighth as the
Yankees suffered their fourth consecutive setback.
Cal Ripken Jr .. batting .162 at
gametime, broke a 1-1 tie with a solo
homer in the fifth inning, his first
since opening day, and Scott
McGregor beat California for the
lith consecutive time, with eighthinning help from Tippy Marllnez.
Gary Roenicke and Dan Ford also
homered for Baltimore. while
Reggie Jackson hit his third of the
season for California .

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g · Bill Lane of South Carolina ..
both completed their college
ca~rs in 1979.
~r free-agent signees include
t"11/S;Mark an&lt;l Steve Brady, defensi~ backs fl'(lll Brigham Young;
d~ive back Mike Davis of
the twih brother ol
W
g quarterback Phil Davis,.
,hal eledl!d to playin the
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li•cker Kyle •·Wllitlingham o1 .
BYU, ·an-, Nil-W~m . Athletic Conference chotce as aaemor.

[g) 5 YEAR OR 50,000 MILES OF OUTER BODY RUST-THROUGH

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OE:NVER (AP) - The Denver
Brqilcos on Friday released a list of
66 free agents the team has signed,
indl!ding 63 who were eligible for ,
lasl · month's National Football
Le4gue draft but weren't picked by
anyleam.
One of those who wasn't eligible
for: trus year's draft is Mack Mitch~, a 6-foot-a, 260-pound defensive
lin~man who was the No. I draft
chdce of the Cleveland Browns in
197i, Mitchell, a University of
Hoaston graduate, played for the
BrOwns from 1975 until1979, and also
pla'fed for the Cincinnati Bengalsin_

•

\

ln bute to the leagut•. nut fur wha t

Buffalo when the Bills ag reed to
match the offer. Buffalo then traded
Cousineau to Cleveland in exchange
for the Browns' first-round pick in
the 1983 draft and other future draft
considerations.
Ed

five-year contract worth about $3.5
million, Mike Duberstein, the
association's research director, said
Friday.
Cousineau, a Clevel a nd-area
native and a product of Ohio State,
was the first player cMsen in the
1979 NFL draft. He passed up the
Buffalo Bills' offer that year,
however, to play for the Montreal
Alouettes in the Canadian Football
League.
Cousineau signed with the Browns
on April 24. Buffalo Bills attorney
Ralph Halpern later said an offer
sheet from the Houston Oilers
s howed that the $2.5 million salary

Broncos list
fteeagents

SIMMONS ALSO LEADS THE WAY WITH DISCOUNTS ON
SOME OF THE VALLEY'S CLEANEST USED CARS ••••

$4895

sel ves withm the leag ue a re nut

cagers select Rio Grande College

SIMONS SALE PRICE '9363.13
2 dr, r ed , 4 spd .

million offer but loot Cousinea u to

SALE

LIST. PRICE $10,102 .67
ROSCOE'S DISCOUNT
739.54

1980 DATSUN
310

TWO more

inning homer.
Elsewhere in the American
League, the New York Yankees fell
into last place in the AL East by
losing to the Seattle Mariners !&gt;-2,
the Baltimore Orioles defeated the
California Angels 5-3, the Cleveland
Indians pounded the Oakland A's 156, the Chicago White Sox downed the
Detroit Tigers 6-5, the Milwaukee
Brewers beat the Minnesota Twins
4-1 and the Toronto Blue Jays
shaded the Kansas City Royals 6-4 .
Medich surrendered 10 hits in 7 1-3
innings and was constantly in
trouble. But the Red Sox failed to
break through, while Johnson,
giving regular catcher Jim Sundberg a rest, produced the game's
only run with a leadoff homer in the
fifth, only his seventh time at bat
this season. The Rangers managed
only three other hits off Boston's
Dennis Eckersley.
"That was a good one," said Dar-

Sears

LE PRICE '8979.21

Dale R. Sanders- Gen . Mgr.

I he league's profits.·· Playe rs wrll be

Rio Grande
Rrvers becomes the third Westfall the abilities of Tino," said Northland Wilmington ; 5-9 Kent Wolfe of Meigs
coach John High School product to join the Red- coach Art Signore. "He played a key County, and 6-5 Ron Furmer of Portsmouth.
Lawhorn announced today the
men in two years. Freslunen Dan role in our super season, averaging
signing of two more players to let- Curry and Jerry Mowery were both in double figures and directing the
offense.
ters-of-intent for the 1982-83 season .
starters on this year's squad.
"He has the amazing jumping
Brad Rivers, a 6-4 forward from
With Richards working in the
Westfall High School, and Tina backcourt the Vikings.streaked to an abilities for someone his size Richards, a 5-10 guard from Colum- impressive 20-2 record in 1981-32 and being able to dunk the ball anywa y
bus Northland High School, ha ve a No. I ranking in the United Press possible. He's excellenl at
join•d the Redman fold .
International and Associated Press penetrating the lane and either
" We're pleased to bring two slate polls. In 1980-al, Northland passing off or taking the shot, but he
plaY.ers rn wi th the abilities of Brad went 16-5 and claimed the district also has the· capabilities to haul up
and take the 15 or 20-foot jump shot.
and Tino," Lawhorn said. " Brad is a title.
great peri]neter player who is funRichards averaged 12 points, five He's just a tremendous all-around
damentally sound and has shown assists and three steals per game athlete."
Rivers and Richards will be
trer(lendous improvement every last season while shooting 51 percent
joining a Rio Grande squad that is
time we've seen him. Tino is a great from the field .
He is also a standout in track for coming off an almost remarkable
athlete who can do many things well.
'IF YOU CAN FIND BETIER PROTECTION . TAKE IT
He'~ got tremendous quickness and
the Vikings and has recorded a per- season in 1981-32.
IF YOU CAN FIND A BETIER CAR. BUY IT ..
The two bring to five the number
speed and is a n outstanding leaper sonal best of 49. I in the 440-yard run.
who ha s good le adership He -also competes on the school's of players signed by Lawhorn for
next season . Earlier, Lawhorn
state-iJualifying mile relay team.
capabilities.
signed
6-4 Stave Cluxton of
Rivers averaged 17 points and 11.5
"I really can't say enough about
rebOunds per game last season for .-~-~~--~------------------1
coach Randy Williams' squad. He
shot 51 percent from the floor and 56
percent from the free throw line.
He was named the recipient of the
Bob Bowsher Award as Pickaway
Cou~ty's Outstanding Player, and
[I] 5 YEAR OR 50,000 MILES ENGINE AND POWER TRAIN
was tabbed All-District and
PROTECTION~ L•m•led war ran ty co ver s cngonc bloc k lr ,r n~m•SS•O" C&lt;'bt• and &lt;•vP•v
honorable mention AII-8Late. The
51ngle pan 1ostde them •n both tron t and rear whee t·d r•ve car s P•ot&lt;&gt;CI "&gt; you 1 Qa•n ~t
Mustangs finished 11-3 in the conunexpected repatr e -.pe n~ A $25 de&lt;l ucttb!e m&lt;1y be requu ed
ference and J()-10 overall.

(Over s, Lt ja d e . s t one m e t a ll ic . j ad es t one c loth i nt

SIMMONS SALE PRICE

Duberstein sa id. " The issue is Ihat
players who have been in the league
for years and have proved them-

RIO GRANDE College basketball

1982 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA

r-;::==========~;1
DRIVERS
EDUCATION
CLASSES

.-

.;

offer would make Cousineau the
highest paid player in the NFL.
The Oilers made the original $2.5

Rangers end losing spell, Zimmer happy

Monday - Beef roast &amp; noodles, includes mashed potatoes &amp;
gravy. gree n beans. sa lad , . , . .. .. .. __ .. _.,, .. , .. _, , _.... , ,$4 .00

Si mmons-0 Ids. -Cad. -Chevy. -Inc.

The Sund a y Tim e s-Se nlin e i- P age-- C-3

Cleveland paying Cousineau more
than entire 1981 defensive unit
mill ion signin~ honus, making his

5 8 10.11 112
I 12 89 166
0 l3
67 230

1 ron ton

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

The Medford, Ore., resident had
complained about the school rule,
which requires all tour bowlers to attend one of the seminars by May 23
or lose the rightto bowl in PBA tournaments.
PBA spokesman Lyle Zikes said
the next PBA schooi will be held
beginning June 25 m St. Lows.
Holman is banned from tournament
play until at least that time , but he
would be unlikely to bowl anyway ,
since he broke his hand in an outburst at the Firestone Tournament
of Champions last month in Akron.

LIST PRICE $9599.27
ROSCOE'S DISCOUNT 620.06

2 dr .• green, auto.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College infielder-outfielder Dan
Knost, a 6-0 sophomore from
Warren, Ohio, is the second ranked
oose stealer in the Mid-Ohio Conference, according to statistics
reieased recently.
KnOst has been successful on 18 of .
21 attempts to finish just one theft
short rl Slulwn Nye of Ohio
Dominican, who is 19 rl 21. Ar.t
Varga of Walsh is third with a 13 of
16success rate. .
KnOIIt led botll Nye and Varga in
· last week's statistics.
.

:~

A th ens
Ga llipoli s

and tennis coach at Mount Union

single ; Shephard, a triple and a
single; Ables, two singles and Belue

GALUPOUS - Gallia Academy
High School 's Blue Angels defeated
Southwestern, 22-7, in a non-league
softball game on Memorial Field
Friday .
The victory left Gallipolis with a
16-6 record . It was Gallia's final
regular season tilt.

WELLSTON - The Wellston
Senior League Team will hold a
Men's ASA B&amp;E Slo Pitch Tournament on May !&gt;-16 at Jaycee Field
in Wellston. Trophies will be given to
top four teams with individuals to
top two teams.
Entry fee is $65 and two ASA balls.
For further information call Bill
May.le at :J()U7!&gt;-3899 or 614-384-0640
or Alan Jarvis at 614-~29.

SEOAL SOFTBALL
w L R

ALLIANCE , Ohio (API - James
DaOer, who guided Bethany College
to basketball titles in 1978 and 1982 in
the President's Athl etic Conference,
has been named men's basketball

game.
Collecting hits for PPHS were Rod
Gleason with three sin gles ; Mike
Huddleston and Kevin Smith each
with two singles. Mike Porter. Devin
Slone, Nick Hardin and Troy Duncan
all collected singles.
Hitting for Ravenswood were

Angels win, 22-7

Plan tournament

5~ ~l ,:~ !;~

Mt. Union coach

runner s w1th t1is second hit of the

Law~on ,

9 72 90
3 11 56 98

Dafter named

Big Blacks beaten, 13-6
RAVENSWOOD - The Ra venswood Red Devils took advantage of
14 walks and fi ve fleldm ~ errors by
the Point Pleasa nt Big Blacks in
coasting to a I ~ triumph here
Friday night.
In the bottom of the fifth Ra venswood took the lead for good as the
21-4 Red Devils plated six runs arter
two outs. The big blows in the inning
were a three RBI triple by Sheppard
and a two run homer by Lawson .
In the top of the sixth, PPHS
scored one run as Hardin got on base
on a Ra venswood error. The Ra venswood pitcher then balked moving
Hardin to second and he went to
third on a wild pitch . Steve Wamsley
plated Hardin on a sacrifice fly to
keep left fiel d cuttting the Ravenswood lead to9-4 .
The Red Devils added four more
!11llS in thei r half of the innning.
Three walks and an error by the
locals opened the inning. One of the

~ ~ ~~ 1~

5

Friday's result:
Athens 31ronton I (makeup)

Linescore :
Gallipolis
000 320 i- 6-3-2
Chesapeake
100 000 4- 5-!}.0
Batteries - Haner !WI, King (7 )
and Eutsler. Corder, Romans ( L)
and Lockhart.

tsmouth West HighSchool , ave raged
27 points and 16 rebounds per game
las t season. He shot over 50 percent
from the floor and was tabbed
honorable mention all-state.
Ciuxton, a 6-5 guard-forward from
Wilmington High School, averaged
28 points and 13 rebounds per game
last season. He was Southwestern
District " Playe r of the Year," and
first team all-state.
Richards, a :&gt;-!0 guard from
Columbus Northland High School,
averaged 12 pomts and five assists
per game last season. He was the
ballhandler on a team tha' went 2().2
and was ra nked No. I in the state in
the Associated Press a nd United
Press International polls.
Wolfe, a 5-10 guard from Southern
High School , averaged 22 points per
game last season . He scored 39 poinIs in t11e slate semi-finals and was
all-slate as his team went 26-2.

~~~~~~olis

Wellston
Wa verl y

*'J~iLs

Annual red, white, blue
game scheduled May 15
RIO GRA NDE - Area bas ketball
fans will get a sneak preview of the
1982-&lt;13 R10 Grande College basketball squad Saturday, May 15 when
the school hosts the annual RedWhite-Blue game at Layne Center.
Game time is slated for 7:30p .m.
The ga me will be a battle between
two squads made up of players from
the !982-8.1 Redmen. New recrui ts
are also anticipated to participate.

May 9, 1982

ISEO standings IPGA bans Holeman

GAHS moves to second
round play in tourney
IRONTON - CO&lt;lch Dean Mason's
Gallipolis Blue Devils will battle

May 9, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

.,

�Page--C-4

Pomeroy

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport

May 9, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Decision backfires,
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
San Diego Manager Die~ Williams
knows what many others know in
baseball - that Pete Rose is tough
with a man in scoring position.
So when the Philadelphia Phi llies
had ~he potential winning run on
second base rn the ninth inning
Friday night, Willrams ordered the
clutch-hilling first baseman to be intentionally walked.
Turns out, it was a big misl&gt;lke .
Mike Schmidt was the next batter.
and he promptly belted a prtch from
reliever Luis DeLeone into the left
field seals at Veterans Stadium for a
three-run homer that gave the
Phillies a 5-2 victory.
Despite the backfire, Williams
says he'd make the same strategic
move again .

" ll wasn't a difficult decision at
all, " Wi ll iams insisted. "You set up
a force at any base. And Pete Rose is
one of the best hillers ever to play
the game. I ha ve a right-handed
then~

relit&gt;ver in

and Schmidt is hJt·

ting 167."

HAPPY COACH - Former Ohio State University football Coach
Woody Hayes was all smiles during a ceremony Thursday when OSU

Schmid t ha s been having tr ouble
geltrng his hils since relurnrng to the
lineup May I , after being out since
Aprrl13 with an injured rib. Schmidt
and Rose both agreed with Williall'lS.
" Pete Rose is the best hitter
around with a man on second ," Schmidt said. ''I'd have walked him.
I'm hitting under .200. You've got to

trustees renamed a university street after him. Stadium Drive, which is

walk Pete . '•

on the north side of the OSU football stadium, has been renamed Woody
Hayes Drive. CAP Laserphoto).

Redmen conclude league
play with two triumphs
URBANA - Ri o Gra nde's Red-

,runs while walking three and fan-

rnt·n wrapped up their l eag ue season

He struck out the side in

hert• Thursda y afternoon with a
cl ouble/lealler sweep uf the Urbt:Hla

Blue 1\rlrghts. 18-4 and 18-4.

nin~ nin~ .

Uw seventh inning - his final inning
as" c oll~ge playe r.

Larry Stults paced an 18-hit attack
for th e Kedmen wt lh five hiL,, in-

The twin \\-·ins moved the Redmcn
tu 1~20 overa ll and 9-5 in the Mid-

cludrng four si ngles. a double and

Oiuo Conference. whrle the Blue

four runs scor ed . He (J!so drove in

in leag ue play . Rio Grande we nt 11 -5

one run .
Steve ,Little coll ected three hrts

11n·r 1ts last 16 ga mes.

and sco red four runs wh ile knocking

Km ghts finished 4-13 ove r&lt;:~ II and 2-10

" We've been reall y pleased with

inl wo and Mike Worrell contributed

till' way sornc of our youn ge r pla ye rs

thn~e

have bee n performing," Rio head

Sarn Toppins added twn doubles to
the Rr u hrt parade.
The Redmcn jurnped out to a 6~
lead in the first inning and stretched
it to 9~ rn the second . Rio added two
rn the third and seven 111 the fifth to

coach Larry Cook sa rd . "Our streak
dl the end of th is season is prov idin ~

a sound bas1s for building for nex t
yea r. And I can't say ' enoug h a bout
our two se nwrs - Jerry Stover and
Ka rl Hochul 1- who p1l ehcd lremL'Il·
tluusly e~gcun s t Ur b&lt;:1na ."
StoVL'r. :J- 1, pitchL•ll tfu· opene r and
suiTl'lltlcn·U just five hit:-; and four
nms in gomg the dista nce. He

hits and thn·c runs bi:ltted m.

the wi n.
Urbana's runs ca me 111 the second

i l't!

Clnd fifth inning!; when

they sco red

three and one ~&gt;lili es respectively .

Rose : " He played the percent.lge
and when

i::l

manager does that t1 c

P~dres lose

usually comes out in the end. Per·

'' He's embarrassed me more often

sonaily I was glad because of the
way I was swinging."
Rose had only a walk in four
previous at-bats.
Losing 2-1 going into the last inning, the Phiilies lied the score 2-2 on
Bob Denier's RBI grounder before
Schmidt won it for reliever Sparky
Lyle, H . Gary Lucas, 0-2, was the
loser.
Sixlo Lezcano and Terry Kennedy
hit run-scoring si;gles for a 2~ San
Diego lead in the first inning. The
Philli es threatened throughout the
game and finally got to John Curtis
in the eighth when Bo Diaz hit hrs
sixth homer of the year.
Elsewhere in the National League.
the Atlanta Braves beat the St. Louis
Cardi nals 6-3 in to innings; the
Chicago Cubs ~outed the Houston
Astros 12-ii ; the Cincinnati Reds
blanked the Pittsburgh Pirates :Hl ;
the New York Mels defeated the San
Francrsco Giants 3-2 and the Los
Angeles stopped the Monlreal Exprn
6-2.
Braves 6, Cardinals 3
Chris Chambliss' lhree-r~n double
wrth one out rn the lOth inning
powered Atlant.l over St. Louis.
Chambliss' hit. his second of the
night, came off Jim Kaat. who
relieved John Martin, 3-3, with a 2-ll
count on Chambliss.
The Braves had tied the score 3-3
in the top of the ninth inning on a
fielder's-choice grounder by Biff
Pocoroba with the bases loaded off
Cardinal relief ace Bruce Sutter.

than I have him," Chambliss sa id of
Kaal. " It was a low fastball. I didn't
try to pull it. He had to throw a
.strike."

May 9, ,1982

tilt

Winner Charlie Puleo, 3-2, allowed .
. six hits, walked three and struck out
six before needing last-inning relief
help from Neil Alien. Bill Laskey, 12, took the loss.
"I fell strong enough to go the
distance," said Puleo, "but the
manager (George Bamberger) felt
he had to go to his bullpen. But when
you have relief pitchers like Allen
it's like money in the bank."
Dodgers 6, Expos 2
Dusty Baker knocked in four runs, ·:
two with his fourth home run of the
season, and Bob Weich scattered
seven hils to lead Los Angeles over
Montreal.
Weich, 4-1, struck out three and
walked one after failing to last the .
first inning against the Expos last
Sunday. The only runs Weich
allowed came on Gary Carter's four·
th-inning sacrifice fly and Andre
Dawson's homer in the ninth.
Steve Rogers, 4-2, took the loss.

Cubs 12, Astros 6
Keith Moreland drove in seven
runs with two homers and a single
and pitcher Randy Martz doubled in
three runs as Chicago routed
Houston.
Moreland hit a three-run homer in
the first inning off loser Nolan Ryan,
2-5 who came into the game with an
11-l.lifetime record against the Cubs.
Moreland hit .another three-run
homer off reliever Frank Lacorte in
the sixth. His other RBI came on a
single in the third, when the Cubs
scored six times to knock Ryan out
of the game.
Martz, 3-2, left after allowing one
run and four hils in seven innings.
" There's no question that the
ballpark helps me, " Moreland said
of Chicago's Wrigley field. "The If;;;;;;;~;;;;~
bail carries well. On certain da ys the 1
park plays big and on certain days it
.
~"iil
plays small. The wind was blowing
J""~or l
from right to left today and the baU
·
carriedweli."
...,._
Moreland was obt.lined by the
;:II~
ConvetH Chr~s Evertt The ~ lhOtl
Cubs in an off-season trade with the
Chn_.,..,_.,.. lnl_.,.eyof
play..-a, lhly ...,, r11.:1
Philadelphia Phiilies.
No 1lol' style. oomfOft
Mels 3, Gianl• 2
ck.orat*ity. lnd ¥.U
Dave Kingman capped a tw(}-run
first inning with his loth homer of
the year and Mookie Wilson belled
two hits and scored twice as New
York defeated San Francisco.

we-11 put
•

Jn Chris Evert'$,

•

1

Buy

lll a.t-d "~t .
t..ley•tw i'bll

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Alexa nder here last week. Here a re
Meig s' results:

For your LAWN and GARDEN WORK

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The Rednwn had a s hm 5-3 lead
~ oin~ l!lltl lht•

fifth inning. but exploded f1n· l wo 111 the fifth ami three
111 tht: st:ve nth to ice tht.• win.
Four Hedn lt'll had two hits L'ach to
pace an 11 Jut Hio attack. Allen AzC:Ir
had &lt;:.1 single. tripl t· an d three runs

balled rn . while Dan Knost, Eric
frazr er and Jeff Gongwer each had
two SC:I fl'til's.
In lht• ni ghtl'ap. Hoch uli, 3-3,
spa ced seven hil!:i and three earned

Sneed ends
long slump
HOUSTON fAPl - Ed Sneed.
breaking out of the worst slump of
his nine-year ca reer, had troubl e a d-

justing to the wind. He wasn't alone.
But Sneed, who finished 92nd on
the Professronal Golfers Association
1981 money list and lust his exempt
status. overcame that obstacle
friday a t the Woodlands Country
Cl ub. He shot a one-under-par 70 for
hrs tour over the 7,071-yard layout to

Designed and built for hard work with OPf;!rator convenience and comfort
in mind. Powerful, yet smoot~ and qure~ ... thts 16 HP brute wtth a cast-_tron.
transaxle will tackle any yard or garden Job wrthou~ a lot of norse and vtbratron.
Big 44-inch mowing deck with twin timin~-belt driven, overlapping blades
provide smooth even cutting wtthout streaktng ...even on a htgh speed tum.
Four-speed drive with five position _cutting h_~ght adjustment means precise
matching of ground speed t9 mowrng condrtrons.

halfway

mark

of

the $350,000

Houston Open golf tournament.

Sneed, who has three lour VICtun es. finished the first round Thursday with a seven-under-par64 and a
one-shot lead after 1ain delayed play
for 2'·, hours and ca used the frnalli
holes to be played in near-darkness.
On Friday the wind made cl ub
selection a problem for the field .
" I pulled out the wrong club more
than once and I saw some other

•
•

•
•

plctyers doing the same thing," said

-·

Sneed. whose 36-hole total was 134.
" I just felt that with the wind, it was
a different course."
Sneed's eight-under-pa r total
allowed him to fend off challenges
by Peter Oosterhurs. whose secondround 681eft him two strokes off the
pace at 136, and Au.slralian Bob
Shearer. wllo ca rded four straight
binlll's at on&lt;· stretch to tie for the
lead before bogeying the final two ·
holes for a round of67.
Shearer, who won the Tallahassee
Open three weeks ago, started the
day on the hack nine at two under.
But his string of birdies on the front
side put him eight under with three
holes to play. He parred No. 7, but
bogeys on the final two holes left him
at 136.
"I'm happy to be in the position
I'm in,". Shearer said, despite his
back-to-back bogeys. "I'm trying to
hit the shots I've always tried 'to hit
and now I'm hitting them.
1

Thts young graduate of yours IS just startmg off m hts
adventure "to the top ." He'd be well-advised tn take h1s
climb up with a boon compamon along - a fmancJal counselor from 'the Commercial and Savmgs Bank. He will
suggest varrous services of the bank to aid the graduate m
his goals and objecti~es.
As a good financial guide, and a gond famrly friend. we
can help change the course of his journey upward.
A trip to our door rould well bt&gt; the start he needs ln the
beginning of his great adventure. We'll bl' happy to)!rt't't
him here!

•

16 HP Briggs &amp; Stratton twin-cylinder
engine
4~peed cast-iron transaxle drive to
wheels.
44-inch mower deck
5-position cutting height adjustment
lever
1
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•
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Hill-holder brake
Independent blade~ngagement Jiwer
Combination clutch and brake pedal
15.00 by 6.50 tubeless front tires. 23.00
by 9.50 turt-saver tubeless rear tires.
Variety of work-saving attachments
available

.

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.,

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GARDEN POWER EQUIPMENT NOW
•

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'

I

POMEROY LANDMARK

25 Court Street

Silver BndQP Plaza

w.

I

'I

Th e Sunday Times-Sentine i- Pag e--C -5

as the 76ers scored three fast-break
baskets to lead 84-70 with 8:32 to
play. A jumper by reserve Clint
Richardson made rt 88-72 with 5:50
left.
In the first quarter, Bob Lanier
scored fi ve baskets from rnside,
while Winters sa nk three long jurn-

Philadelphia got a lrft off the bench from Mike Bcmtorn, whtl scor ed

three quick baskets. The 76ers also
started trapping in the backcourl
early in the second quarter. oftt•n
forcing the Bucks to shout as the shot

pers and scored on a drive, as the

clock wa s windi ng down to a few

Bucks broke to a 27-21 lead. In the

seconds.

$26

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Reg ' 31

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• Wide grooves lor good

• 2 ply poly cord s
•

2 s teel belt s

• Five continuous riding rib s
tor good mileage
• A great tire value!

• 5 rib tread design
SIZE
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E76 x14
F78x 14
G7B x 14
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' 34
'41
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'29
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H78)( 15
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Oils exceed new car specs of SF/CC

AR78, 13/P165

Poly Whitewalls
Benchmark 78
traction on wet pavement

Motorcraft
10W40 Oil
Sale 89•qt. Limit 12

FR78' t 41P205
GRIB• 14/P215
GR78x 15/P215

'58 '53
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'65

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'6 5

F [ I 1/f.

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after rebate
Motorcraft 011 Filter

Sale 2.19 Reg . 3.44
Mo st dam . cars onl y

2.88

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. Most dome s ti c &amp; import cars
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18 oz. 1fT . 15
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Starters or Alternators
Both for most domestic cars

except Integral and Motorola
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137 tnlegra!
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21.88

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after mfg. rebate

'·

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PER QUART
LESS THAN

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, First illad.~· lndlvjdual, third
RiaC!' "team a~!DOSI hits tropbles
Will be
Contact Nelson .
Dray at: ~ - fqr addiU(\1181 iJI.
1

proce ss , Liley forced nine
Philadelphia turnovers, in t·luding
four pa sses stolen alon g the
baseline .

Bridgeman were sidelined with injuries, appeared to be

ss OFF ALL KELLY SPRINGFIELD

limit 2

::; Entry.fee is f65FPius-two ASA soft.

fOI'Illll~oh~
\•

regained a nine-point spread at 66-57
with 4:42left in the third quarter.
Two free throws by Toney and
dunks by Bobby Jones and Julius Erving made it 72-09 with 2:50 left in
the period . It was 7tHi6 at the end of
the quarter, as the Bucks made only
seven of 23 shots in the quarter
agair.st the 76ers' pressure defense.
The Bucks, outmanned throughout
the playoffs because guard Quinn
Buckner and swingman Junior

•One container will do a
complete oil change
•Easy pour, screw lop

'·

!:AWF:Qus

·-

w. Va .

SALE!

in 5 qt. Container

Oil&amp; softball
.will sponsor an
~ s8Miioned ~May 1~18. ·

1112-7

I

Cheeks, who sank six of his first
seven shots, scored five points in the
early minutes of the second half as
the 76ers stretched a nine-point halflime lead to 55-43.
Moncrief, who had missed four of
his first five shots, sank a long jumper and Brian Winters added a pair
from long range to help the Bucks
pull to within four points.
But Cheeks scored on a drive and
on a break-away layup and the 76ers

3.29
Nationwise 10W30

~INCINNATI (AP) - Reds stars
from the 1950s and '60s will play next
month in the first Cincinnati Reds'
olcjtimers game since 1974.
The game will be played June 6 in
Riverfront Stadium and will fe~ture
Rtids st.lrs from the 1956 Reds learn
lhft tied a major league record by
hitting 221 home runs, and stars
from the 1961 National League
chjlmpion Reds.
'J'he 1950s roster includes pitchers
Johnny Klippstein, Brooks Lawrence;.and Joe Nuxhall; catchers Ed
114iley, Smokey Burgess and John
Pramesa; infielders Alex Grammirs, Chuck Harmon, Ray Jablonski
· arid Ted Kluszewski; and outfielders
Jitn Bolger, Bob Borkowski, Jim
Greengrass and Bob ThU111)11n. ·
l'he 1960s roster has pitchers
Gerry Arrigo, Jifrr Brosnan; BiD
· H~nry, Jay Hook, Ken Johnson,
BiUy McCtiol, Jim O'Toole and Bob
Nrkey; catcher Johnny Edwards;
infielders Leo Cardenas, Gordy
Ccileman, Gene Freese, Tommy
Hebns and Woody Woodward; and
ou.Uielders Gus Bell, Jerry Lynch
atfd Art Shamsky.

balla.

Sprrng Valley

Gallipolis, Ohi o-Point Pleasant,

le

Rlanto~eot

1.11'111her FI!IC

'
(

GALUPOUS- For the first time
in the event's 34-year history, girls
will participate in the Gallipolis
Rotary Club's Gil Dodd Mile Run
this week on Memorial Field.
The event began in 1949, one year
after the then famous national indoor miier, Gil Dodd, dedicated
Gallipolis' new track. Dodd died in
1977.
The 1982 event will be held
Tuesday, beginning at 4 p.m. Ail city
and county high school athletes re
eligible to participate.
John Ackerman, Gallipolis, is the
boys' defending champion.
Trophies will be presented winners in both divisions, and the champions will be dinner guests of the
club during its regular meeting on
May25.

•

Jack
Carsey, Mgr.
Drive a little and save a lot
Free delivery wlthll! 75 mi,les
Yes, we service at your local Hotpoint Dealer
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Miil Closed at 5:00P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallla and Mason Counties
ALWAYSONYOUIISIOE

Girls to
take part
in event

Eastern Conference series 4 to 2.
The 76ers advance to the conference cham pions hip series against
the Boston Celtics, st.lrting Sunday
in Boston. The Western Conference
championship series allio begins
Sunday with San Antonio at Los
Angeles.
Mickey Johnson led the Bucks
with 23 points. All-star guard Sidney
Moncrief. playing with a sprained
right hand, was held to nine.

Oldtimers tilt
scheduled June 6

ON SALE NOW!

t•xpa nd his lectd to two strok eS ~t the

MILWAUKEE (APl - Point
guard Maurice Cheeks scored 26
points and directed a relentless fast
break. leading Philadelphia to a 10290 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks
Friday night to capture their
National Basketball Association
semifinal playoff series.
Andrew Toney added 17 points for
the 76ers, who won the best-of-seven

By The Associaled Press
The Columbus Clippers were on
top of the International League
baseball standings Saturday with a
one game lead over the Richmond
Braves.
Dave Wehrmeister and Kurt Kaufman combined on a seven-hitter to
give the Clippers a 4-1 victory over
Richmond Friday.
Columbu.s locked up the game with
two runs in the eighth inning , one
Scoring on a squeeze bunt by Andre
Robertson and the other on a single
by Dave Stegman.
In other IL action, Glenn Adams
lashed a tw(}-run homer in the bottom of the ninth to give the Syracu.se
Chiefs a 8-7 decision over the Toledo
Mud Hens.
Adall'lS, who had misjudged a high
fly ball in the top of the ninth that led
to a 7-ii Toledo lead, attoned by lining
a tw(}-()ut offering by loser Paul
Boris, 0-2, far over the right field
fence.
Right fielder Paul Engle got two
home runs and a ninth inning triple
for Toledo.
Syracuse, which had blown three
leads in the game, snapped a 10game losing streak with the victory.
Marvell. Wynne hit a tw(}-()ut, RBI
single in the eighth inning and Mike
Davis added an insurance run with a
home run in the ninth as Tidewater
defeated Charleston 5-3.
Chico Walker batted in two runs
and scored one as the Pawtucket
Red Sox beat the Rochester Red
Wings4-2.

POWER A'PLENTY!

Middleport

Philadelphia eliminates Milwaukee Bucks, 102-90

Clippers
on top in
ILchase

POMEROY - Warren Local won
a trrangular meet with Meigs and

Sho t put
Ftr st pla ce. Ashley .
46 ' 10' ' , Nakclm oto, 4'1 '9"
H tq h 1ump
Firs t pla ce. Eod cs.
5'7''. second . Bl ount , 5''1"
Lonq 1ump
Sco tt , l ourth pla ce.
16' I ;" •
110 Me i N htQh 11urclle Ftrst
pl(1ce. As hl ey , 17 3
Pole va ult
Ftrst place . Bloun t ,
7'7" Sc r new sct1oot r ec ord . Second
pl ace, Br~u c r . 11 '6"
100 Meter das tl
Thtrd pla c e,
E ades
1600 Me tN r un
F ourth pla ce.
Kenne th, S rntn .. '13 sec
400 Mei er dns tl
SPco nd plr~ cc.
1anncrill1. 55 3sec
300 Meter low hurdle
Second
pl ace. Smt i h
800 Meter run - F •r st pla ce,
Wlll 1ams . 'l mtn. 13 sec.. second
place. l anncril l t, 'l m tn ., 13.'1 sec.
3200 Mrlcr run
Seco nd place,

Pomeroy

•

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HOURS:
10-5
&amp;11.
8:30.
7
M·F ·
8:30.6
Sat.

209· Upper River Rd.

446-3807

•

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•

SECTIONAL CHAMPS - Friday evening the
Southern Tornadoettes Softball team rolled to 7·1 vir·
tory over Symmes Va lley to cla im the Southeast Sec·
ti tHJ.a l cha mpi onship. Earlier SuuthenJ clinc hed the
S\' AC championship with a !H mark, now owning a 1!&gt;-2
sla te overall . Pictured are, fron t. 1-r: Linda O'B rien,

Becky Mic hae l, Becky J ohnson, Ca rol O'Brien, Missy

Cummins, Mel Weese, and Karen Hemsley. Bark row
- Coach Suzanne Wolfe, J enny Bentley, Renee Smith,
Debbie Michael, Amber Wa rner , La rcn WoUc, Elai m·

Smith, Michelle J ohnson and Tonja Salser. Missy
Wolle Photo.

.
advance
.
.D
Tornadoettes
1
I
7-1 Class A Sect Iona WID
e

walkednme.in aga me thaf hadalit·
lie bit of everything, including a
total of 24 walks.
Petrie went one inning for HT
posting two s trik eout~ and four

e

SYRACUSE· Fnday afternoon at ber Warner two singles, Becky
Syracuse Mun icipa l Pa rk the Michael two singles. Me l Weese a
Snuthern Tornadoe ttes spotted the single. and Renee Smi th a single.
Symmes Valley Vik ings a run in the Synunes Valley had five sinoles b)'

Southern will play the wi nner uf
the Northeast sectional.

rtrst

Souttl('rn

mnm~. t Iwn storm ed back to
1·l;:tirn a 7-1 sed tonal championship

I'Jctory. The big win boosts the TurnadJ,.,lles to a berth in the District

Johnson . Rncht•, D.
Copely. and Dcrnon .

'"'

McCa rt v.
·

~outhern threatened in the first
when Ocbb1e Michael reac hed un an
l' rCor , Tonja Sa \st:&gt; r had a perft'ct
saCrifice, and Elaine Smith bounced
Gack to the pitcher. Sm ith was edged

100 000 o--- 1 5 5

031 012

X- l

baseS·Oil·balls, before Barnes came
on to complete the game. Barnes
had five strike outs and 11 walk viclims.
In the fi rst inning, Eastern jum·
ped out to a !-!I lead, when J ohnny

B

h d

eaver reac e

on an eror, stole
second , then r ode home on a Mark

ning and slowed down the torrid
pace, but the scoring didn't end
there. Eastern had four more in the
filth, and three in the seventh. HT
had one in the fourth, three in the
sixth. and one in the seventh.
Eastern hitters we re Rogie Ga ul
with a single and double, Mark
Holler a double and two singles, Rob
Smith a triple, Nick Leonard a
single, and Jay Carpenter a single.
For the Wildcat,, Webb singled
twice and bobbled twice, Petrie had
three singles, J ames had three
singles, and Sheets a single.
The championship game was
originally slated for Satu rday at I
p.m. but was postponed to Monday
at 4:30p.m. due tu wet weather .
Linescore :
Eastern
I 4 10 040 3- 22 8 3
HT
4 4 0 103 1--13 II 9
Batteries : Ritchie, Allen fWPl.
Smith " nd Leonard. Petrie, Ba rnes
( LPl 2nd and Waug h.

ner said .

THIS THE ONE THAT HURTS? - Pittsburgh Pirates' batter Bill
Madlock grimaces in pain as team trainer Tony Bartiremo looks at his
left hand after he was hit by a pitch from Cincinnati Reds' pitcher Marie
Solo in the fourth Inning of a game Friday night In Cincinnati. madlock .
was able to continue playing in the game, but he was not given first base
on the play because his hand was on the bat when he was hit. ( AP Laserphoto) .

Local bowling
POMERO Y BOWli NG LANES
MOR NING GI.ORJ F..S
April27, 1982

Charlie Ritc hi e reac hed un a n e rror ,

and a run scored on a fi elder's
choice.
Holter kept the drive alive with a
single, Chris Allen had a sacrifice,
Leonard walked, Jewett walked for
the second time, and Jay Carpenter
singled home two runs. Ritchie and
Beaver walked to force ho'Tle two
more runs.
The rains came in the fourth ir&gt;

CINCINNATI (APl - Pittsburgh
Manager Chuck Tanner found his
ballclub in a n~rwln position.
" When he got his pitches up, we
would hit fly balls. When they were
down, he struck our guys out," said
Tanner, who watched Cincinnati pit·
cher Mario Solo strike out II Pirates
for a :;..o victory Friday night.
The right-hander allowed just fi ve
hits, walked one and boosted his
National League-leading str ikeout
total to !i4 in 49 innings.
Tbe Pirates got just one baserun·
ner as far as third base. Soto reti red
the flnalll batters in order.
"Solo was outstanding. He would
have beaten any team tonight," Tan·

G&amp;.J Au\u Pilrl~
Two's C'Ulll J W fl ~

1:16
133
133
104

Su..:11r Rw1 Ashland

M11x 's Inc.
C. &amp; D. Pcnnzml

Indians bombard A's

96

Sinunnns Olds, Cad., Cht•v .
94
~l i~h Ind . Game - Duns GrueSt'r 176 . Thl'lm11

OAKLA ND ( AP l - Everyone hit
for the Cleveland Indians, and
Oakland A's Manager Billy Martin
struck out trying to hit Rick Sui·
cliffe.
Things we re that one-sided after
the first inning F'rid"y night as the
Indians rolled to a 15-6 victory, en·
ding Oakland's seven-game winning
streak. Andre Thornton, Bake Me·
Bride and Von Hayes drove in three
runs apiece and the India ns totaled
19 hits.
But a mid-game incident, ra ther
than the Indians' hitting, made Mar·
tm lighting mad.
" I definitely wanted to fi ght. I
would have hit him right in the jaw if
I'd reached him," said a frustrated
Martin, who has been involved in a
number of fights during and between
his seasons in baseball.
Umpire Terry Cooney held back
M" rtin, keeping him away from Sut·
cliffe, the Cleveland pitcher who, according to the A's manager, yelled
at Mike Heath he would hit hi m in
the head the next time he pitched to
him. Heath had blocked the plate as
Thornton scored a run in the sixth inning.
" He'd best not ever throw at any

Col lins 175 , Ann Gnwt• r 172.
Hi~h Ind. St&gt;nt's - Belly Whitloll'h 1f4. Loulst'
E&lt;ilb476, J WJc Lambert 450.

Hil(h Team Game - Twu's Cuml)&lt;:lny 790.
SugHr Rwt Ashland 771. G&amp;J Autu P1:1rl.'i 768.
H t~h Tl'am ~nt's - r &amp; D Pl'nrtzuil 22!10
G&amp;J Auto Parts 2241 . Twu"s Cump&lt;~ny 2126
.

Huller single.
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•

For All

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a t U)e plate then on lhe th row back to

huine. Mi chael was nailed at the
pll\te to end the mning, the score 1-!1.
Fro111 tha t point on pitcher

83

Wolfe &lt;W 1 ~1nd BentiPy Myers 1L i

oncl Copley

Tournament to be played the week of
May I 7 at a site not yet dete rmined .
The Tornadoettes uf Coach Suzanne
Wolft' now own a fine 15-2 mark .
Sophomore pitcher Laren Wolfe
wqnt tlw distance for Southern tu
p1ck up the Will, while D. Myers suf·
fered the Joss for the V1k1ngs .
Symmes Val ly squee zed a run
;.wr Oss til the ftrs t on a leadoff single
tu Johnson . a stulen ba se, a pa ssed
ball , and an Prror

L•ncscore-

Symmes Valley

RIO GRANDE - In sectional
baseball tournament action here
Friday evening, Eastern's Eagles
claimed a 23-13 slugfesl win over
Hannan Trace to advance to the sectional fi nals against Southern Mon·
day even ing at 4:3ll.
A Hl·run outburst boosted the
Eagles from an 8-5 deficit in the
third inning to break the game open.
Eastern is now 1&amp;-7·1 overa ll.
Charlie Ritchie assumed the star·
ling role for Coach Ral ph Wigal's
Eagles, but lasted only an inning due
to control problems.
Ritchie, however, fanned three in
that stretch while giving up a couple
of walks. Chris Allen, a hardthrowing lefthander, came on in the
second and went three innings compili ng four strike outs and three
walks, before Rob Smith came on in
the filth to fini sh the game.
Smith fanned fi ve and walked
four.
Overall , EHS fanned 12 and

Hannan Trace combined timely
hitting with EHS control pro blems to
plate four big runs in the initial
round. Bays sta rted the rally with a
walk, Greg Webb singled, Waugh
wa lked, Petrie singled home two
runs, and J ames followed with
another tw~rrun single.
Eastern counteracted the HT fi rst,
when it came up with lour markers,
Nick Leona rd, Deron Jewett, and
Jay Carpenter filled the bases on
free passes before John Beaver did
the saine to force home a run.
Another run scored on a force play,
then Senior shortstop Rogie Gaul
roped a two run single for the fina l
. run• of the frame.
In the second frame, Hannan
Trace again rolled up fours when
with two out Halley walked, Bays
reached on ·,n error, Webb and
Sheets each singled, followed by
another walk, and single by J ame•.
The third inning made the dif·
ference in the game for the Eagles.
Rub Smith Jed off and reached safely
after being hit by a pitch, Jewett,
Carpenter, and Beaver walked,

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W olf~

and the Soutlwrn Defense held the
visi tors srurelt'ss m six in nings of
shu t uul b&lt;:~IL Mc;mwhllc, Wol fe led
nflUw Sl'COnd w J!Il i-1 long triple, and
l'&lt;JirJe hmnt· on ;1 linl' single by Am·
bet Warr1t·1· . W1th nne down, Me l

Authorized Sales
and Service

Until recently, the Reds hadn't
supported Solo very well. The hardthrowing right-hander has allowed
two or fewer runs in five of his seven
starts, but his record stands at only
2-2.
The Reds scored 10 runs for Solo in
his last outing, a complete-game victory over St. Louis. They supplied
him with a tw&lt;&gt;-run lead Friday night
until Ron Oester slapped a key
double in a three-run sevent h inning.

" It's better (to pitch ) when you've
got the lead," Solo said. "That's
when you really pitch.
" If you've got the lead, you' re
more relaxed. You know thev are

going to have to score to tie the
game. Lately, I've been more
careful because of the long balls I've
given up."

Soto was referring to the seven
home runs he allowed in his first fi ve
starts. He said Johnny Bench has ad·
vised him on how to keep the ba ll in
the park.
" When I'd gel behind (in the
count), I'd throw the ball down the
middle of the plate," Solo said.
"Now I don't give up.
"Johnny told me, 'II you're behind
guys, you have to go after them.
Don't give in to them.' That's how I
was getting hurt. He told me not to
throw the fastball down the middle
of the plate for a strike."
Solo managed to stay ahead of the
hitters Friday. Only first baseman
J ason Thompson had more thao one
hit - a pa ir of singles that extended
his hitting streak to 15 games.
While Solo was stri king out fi ve
batters in the fi rst three innings, the
Reds we re scoring a pair of runs.
Cesar Cedeno and Larry Biillner
singled and Bench hit into a fie lde r's
choice for a run in the ~econd off
loser Paul Moskau, 0.2, 'and Dave
Concepcion doubled to score Oester
after a walk and a stolen base in the
third.
Both managers ag reed that an in·
fi eld hit that touched off the three·

t1

pOSSt'd ball and trotted home on the
end of anot her Wa rner sinKie . SHS

ag~in sco red a s1n gle run in the fi ft h

on: a Sa lser walk and a booming
doObil' by La ren Wol!l', who was nipped

&lt;:ll

.:;ccond trying tn

;-:;trdch

her

hi t·inlo" triple.
Southern whi rled up " small

A seven-run rally in the fourth ir&gt;
ning, when Thornton belted a tw~r
rup homer, sparked a Cleveland
colneback in the game. Rick
La ngford, 2-4 , who shut out the lr&gt;
dians on three hits a week earlier,
was give n a 5-0 lead in the first with
the help of Cliff Johnson's tw ~rrun
homer off Rick Waits.
" The A's had been pus hing us
around this season. This game was
just one of those things. They had the
same kind of game, beating us 8-!1
last week when Langford pitched,"
said Thornton. "This kind of win is
good for us because we've been
struggling."
Thornton ratsed his RBI total to
25, tops in the American League, and
Toby Harrah upped his batting
average to .383 with three hits.

BETZ HONDA SALES

SUFFOLK, Va . tAP) - Ja n
Stephenson is an admi tted frontrunner. She also says she plays her
best in :i4-hole to urnaments on the
LPGA circuit.
That's why Stephenson appea red
to be the playe r to beat in the 54-hole,
$125,000 LPG A-United Virginia Bank
Classic even though she was tied
with veteran Kathy Whitworth at Sunder-par 68 going into today's
second round over the 6,174-yard
Sleepy Hole golf course.

Upper Rt. 7, Gallipolis, Ohio

UNEQUALED

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8 10 p .m ./ Co ll ege Rec

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in explaining her success 10 the shorter tournaments. "When I play 54
holes, I can take a da y off and fee l
fres h, ready to jump out of the box ."
Stephenson. the defend1ng cham-

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IN THE aROUND. ON THE GROUND.
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out," Tanner said. " His legs take

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omelo

scored une r un with two out. and
Oester followed with a twu- run
double down the third baselllle .
"The key was the hi t Mi lner beat

Stephenson front-runner

.-u.12m• • •~

scoring drive in the sixth on two

w~Jks and three consecutive SV
errors to complete the victory wi th
twO insurance runs a nd a 7-1 score.
Leadi ng the winners were La ren
Wolfe with a double and triple, Am·

run seventh was the final blow.
Reliever Rod Scurry walked two
batters with one out and a passed
ball by Tony Pena put them both in
scoring position.
Eddie Milner topped a grounde r
and beat it out for an infield hit that

u.s. ' '

Srfli t h t:ach s;ngled lu pia h.' anot her
ruil bd urc M 1 c h~u· l rcat: hcd on a

stole second . went to third on

The Sunday Tim es -Se nt i nei- Page- - C·7

of my players. If he docs. I'll be the
first one corning out of the dugout to
punch him," said Ma rtin.
" I never said I'd throw at Heath. I
don't know where Ma rtin got that
idea," said Sutcliffe, who pitched 32·
3 innings of relief a nd got his first
victory of the season. But he added,
" May be tha t will put a spark under

Weesl'. Beck1· M1ch"el. "nd Renee
pasi;ed ba ll ,the score now 3·1.
.hi the third 1nn ing Salser wa lked.

w. va .

Soto fans 11 in 5-0 win over Pirates

Eastern claims 2~13 win
in Class A Sectional play

•

~~,- _

Pomeroy- Middl epo r t- Gallipoli s, Ohi o- Point Plea sant,

M a y 9, 1982

Pom ero y- M iddl eport-Ga llipoli s, Ohi o- Point Pl ea sa nt, W. Va .

Pomeory, Oh.

'

426 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

675·3930

�-8- The Su

Scoreboard...
·Majors

Leaders

Prt·~ .~

Ry Th1• AliMM'iutt-d

AMERICAN LE AC ;tf:
Eas tt•rfl llh is iun
w I. I' !'I.
18
667

Ho~ \ ull

'
10
"10
"15
10 "
10
10

16

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H&lt;Jll i llltWt'

t'lo·n•liwU

Turun tu
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Utd T IN(;
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39:1 .
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17
16

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HRI - Murph). AU .

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625

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304

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Sunday's c;u mn
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&lt;lt•nlan•l .11 Uakland
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Transactions
J'OOTBALL
ATLANTA F ALCONS - S t ~ ned W a ll&lt;~~" '"
Tlioll lil.'i . D.Jillllt' l.t.&lt;::nwdt• and Mt l"hHt'l
Kt•ttnt•d_r. ddt'I L&lt;; lVt' bat•k s: Darryl M &lt;1 ~ on ,
11 ~ hl
t·t tJ . Chnstopher Kut' hllt' , offen.s 1 v ~

DUU BJ.J·:S -

HOME

ls la ndt•rs,

Ya s-

Mt l. :111
:15. 6 Tll'd Wtl h

' PITCHI NG •:I

Dt.'l."lS IIllbl Hu\'1. rill . 60. I 000. I 29. l"a uJ dl. St·a . 1-0 .· I 000. I 9~ .
7.otlm. C.:ol. ~ -l. 800. l 88 F H&lt;IIllltslr. S..-a.
4-1. 800 . :t 21. Tudor. B.~ n .1- 1. 750. ~ 18 :

,.,la r klt· .

M&lt;trk

a nti

MIUWtk~t.l.

Wlllta tns.

d l'ft'll SI\"t'

Lwt·k .

ant.!

· " This year's preregistra ti on far
:exceeds th&lt;:~t of our previous runs
: &lt;:~nd indi cates we may expect the
: IHrgesl parti cipation ever," said

·Ron Sa unders and Bob hails, Run
:coord' "latu rs. More than 100 have
;preregistered.

: Sponsored by Holzer Medi ca l Cen;ter Rccrea twn Conuni ttee and the
:oh1o Valley Publishi ng Company.
:the French City Run will open with a
;5,000 mct&lt;·r 13. 1 mile I event begin-

at 9 a .m. on the Upstream
Public Use Area . !orated along the
riverfront below the city park off
First Avenue.
The main cent. a 10.000 mete r 16.2
mile! mce will begin at 10 a .m.
During this race. the Dinosaur Dash,
a one mile fun run designed for the
novice jogger or runner, will start at
10:15a. m.
A ~e groups for the 5,000 and 10,000
meter races are 1I and under; 12-16 :
17-20: 21-25; 2&amp;-30; 31-35 ; 36-40; 41 45 ; 46-50: 51-55 ; and 56 years of age
and over. There are no age groups
for the Dmosa ur Dash.
Awards will be presented to the
first two male and female finishers

Big Ten athletic di rectors wil l
meet at Ohio State next week to con. sider a recommendation from the
conference basketball coaches that
the th ree--poi nt rule be tested during
the 1982-&amp; season.
··well, I guess if we get a strung
recommendation from the coaches,
we would probably adopt it," Hindman sa id. "We always try to support

ball Association, which features the
three--point play, uses a distance of
22 feeL
·· we think that distance is too
far," Miller said Fnday. "We want
to actually spread the defense with
the shooting arc." '
If the directors approve the
proposed rule next week. the Big
Ten will ask the NCAA rules committee fo r a rules waiver to penni!
the use of three--point goals nex t
season.

our coaches.''

Hindman said he had no idea how
the rule change would affect the
game.
"'I'm not sure yet," he said. " It's
experimental. Ask me after the
season. I' m s ure we' ll be
knowledgeable about it then."

Coaches were asked to indicate
their preference on the distance
:beyood which a basket would count
for three points. The choices will be
19 feel, 20 feet, 21 feet and 22 feet.
Miller said he intends to propose a
distance of 21 feet.
The professional NatiOnal Basket-

The three--point play. the home'
run of pro basketball , is expected to
result in higher scoring games since
it will relieve some of the congestion
zone defenses have created,
"I think it will give more of an
edge to the offensive phase of the

"-ttl l 11t.ll

'89'5

UNEMPWYMENT FIGURES- Ja net Norwood,
right, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
testifies on Capitol Hill Friday before the J oint

in both the 5,000 and 10,000 meter
races and to the male and female
winners of each age group. The male
and female winners of the Dinosaur
Dash will be awarded.
Registration on Saturday will be
$5. A registration desk, located at
the parkfront, wi ll open at 8 a. m. All
runners must check in at the
registra tion desk to receive a runne r's package.

Von Bulow sentenced;
bail set at $1 m)llion

Pomeroy Landmark
~--~--------~----~~s~~~RT=s=As=A=~=Lm:--1
... STAYS AVALUE!

WE WILL NOT BE
UNDERSOLD

PWS

dressed to run . No dressing room or
shower facilities will be ava ilable.
Restrooms will be ava ilable at the
starUfini sh area . Medical care will
be provided.

game," Miller said. " Right now, our
defenses are doing a real good job of
protecting the. basketbalL With the
new rul e, we're going to have to be
concerned about our opponents
scoring three pomts .. ."
Defense provides the real excitement in college basketball , he
said.
··Defense makes possible the transition games - the fast breaks,"
Mi ller pointed out.
The Buckeye coach also fa vors introduction of a 3()-second shot clock.
" I think it would provide great intensiliy in the college game because
we all would. be trying, for 30 seconds, not give up a good shot, " Miller
said. ·· And the 3()-second shot combined with the arc would force us to
defend on the penniter ..."
Miller said a shot clock would
eliminate all the counts officials
must keep during a game - "the
fi ve seconds to cross the hash mark,
the fi ve to dribble, the five to hold.
Officials would be . free to concentrate on important calls.

NEWPORT, R.I. I AP I - There were gasps m the
courtroom but Claus von Bulow rema ined stone--faced
when a judge ordered him to serve 30 years in prison
for two "cold-blooded and cold-hearted'" attempts to
kill his heiress wife.
Superior Court J udge Thomas H. Needham. who
handed down the sente nce Frida y, agreed to the

LANDMARK -

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hospital.
" There is nu remorse, your honor, beca use there is
g uilt ,,. defense lawyer He ra ld P. Fa hr inger had said
tn a rgui ng for d ii ghter .sentence.
nt J

$100.00 DISCOUNT
PLUS $40.00

CASH REBATE!

Danish·born fi nancia l consulta nt to remain free on

bail , pendi ng appeal.

Alexa ndra Isles, 36.

The judge ordered von Bul ow 's bail increased fro m

In add iti on to increasing von Bul ow 's bail. the judge

$500,000 to $1 million and gave him unti l Friday to post
the requi red 10 percent bond. Until next Friday , vm

dema nded that vo n Bulow prod uce a list of his Rhode
Island assets. whi ch defense attor neys cla imed exceed

Bulow remains free on the $500,000 bail that ha.s been in

$l 1nill iun.

effect since his conviction.
Defense attorneys said they would file a notice of a]}pea l shortly.
Supporters applauded vo n Bul ow when he emerged
from the courthouse, just as they did after he was
found guilty March 16.
Von Bulow smiled, waved, and got into a tax i.
A jury found von Bulow guilty of attempting to kil l
Martha "Sunny" von Bulow by injecting her with insulin during Christmas visits to their Newport mansion

The prosecution called the crimes " cold-blooded and
cold-hea rted" and asked for a maxim wn prison term

coma in1980.
Under Rhode Island law, if his a ppeal fails, von
Bulow would be req ui red to serve 10 years at the Adult
Correctional Institutions at Cranston before being
eligible fur pa role.

19.0 Cu . 11. no· frost relrtgerato r-freezer • 13.8-Cu. ft .
fr esh toad c apactl y • 5 2 Cu II. freezer section • ReRugged Tnlon II door and cab i n~
\'ersible doors

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AUTOMATIC
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. DELUXE 30" 0VEN-RANGE WITH
e LACK Glj\SS WINOOW OOOAI

ckley Jr. Mrs. Hinckley concluded her second day on
the witness stand, after a total of six hour testimony.
(AP Laserphoto) .

SPRINGFIELD, (&gt;hio {AP ) - Police officer Barbara Schantz, who feared she would be fired for posing
nude for Playboy .magazine, says she's satisfied with
only being suspended for '¥/ days and plans to reswne
her law enforcement·career.
After the suspension was announced Friday, she said
she expects to remain on the police force long after she .
reswnes work June 15.
" !believe I have 22 years to retirement," she said.
The city manager of this. central Ohio city of 72,000,
Thomas M. Bay, announced the disciplinary action
Friday.
As part of a settlement between lawyers for the city
and Ms. Schantz, slit issued a written apology to police
and the community; agreed to drop a $1 million federal
court suit against the city; and agreed not to appeal
her suspension.
Bay said the city drBfted the apology and .Ms. Schan. tz agreed to sign it at hearing Thursdliy.
"I feel strongly for people that have been deeply hurt
by this or embarassed ·by It," she told reporters. But,
Ms. Schanl2 added, "I personally don't feel what I did

a

liner • See-th ru meal keeper and lrut l /vcgetabhtpan~.

Tinted glass, air conditioner, sport mirrors, whitewall tires,
AM/FM/Stereo, plus a lot more. Brand new. Also 12.8· GMAC
financing.

Tur,~irfg

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VoniiiO finish on Ngf, lmQoet Q!Oittc

a

POMEROY. LANDMARK

was wrong."

Ms. Schantz was critical or''- city Poll~ Division
board of inl!uiry which recommended she be fired for
viol!ltlons of police regulations. Bay said Ms. Schana
'

"

I

I

this economy will get moving aga in," Reagan said.
Some 10.3 million Americans were out of work last
month as joblessness a":long ad ult men, bluN:ollar
workers, blacks and teen-agers was the highest in
modern ti mes, the L;obor Department said.
Roughl y 453,000 people were added to the unemployment lin es in Ap ril. In March, the jobless rate was
9 percent, matching the previous post-World War II

figures prompted Reagan\ critics to talk of a return to
the hard times of the Depression era.

rect!ssion peak reac hed in May 1975.

unem pl oyment r&lt;i k ··ce rl &lt;:~ lnl y docs not help"
chances of passing Reagan 's ecunmnlc prog ram.

Only hours after release of the new fig ures - wh1ch

" Rona ld Reaga n':-.; breml line.s grew Iunger by 450,000

people. ·· Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. D-Mass .. said at a
meetin g of the conhress Juna l .Jmnt Economic Commtttee .
On the

R~ p u b lt c&lt;:t n

s tde nf lhl' a is le. House Mi nuri ty

Leader Robert Michel of IllinOis conceded that the
th~

i
VON BULOW AND DA UGHTER - Cosina von
Bulow, J5, lert, looks over a t her fa ther, Cla us vo n

R.I. Friday. Von Bulow was senten!'cd to 311-years in
prison for twiC'e trying to murder his he iress wife wUh

Bul ow, right, in Newport Superior Court in Newport,

insulin injections. I AP Lascrphoto 1.

WASHI NGTON I AP I - In an essay about his murdered idol, John Lennon , John W. Hinckley Jr. sarcastically a\Iuded to President Reagan's oppositi on to

ziness. l&lt;Jck nf conct•nt ra ti on, di ~C lHnfo r t in h1s throat.
a pa in in hi.s abdomen &lt;:~ n d ti ngli ng sensa tions.

gun control and sa id Reagan needed " guns, guns.

tw icl' in Jul y 1980, but he sai d Hinckl ey rejected the

guns" lo make Western movies.
The essay, introduced into evidence Friday. wa s
written within four months of Hinckley's March 30.
1981. shooting spree outside the Washington Hilton
Hotel. He wounded the preside nt and three othe r men.
Hinckley's mother testified Friday that her son
deeply mourned Lennon , the fonner Beatie who was
fatally shot Dec. 8, 1980. in New York City. ·· what I
cannot comprehend is the fact that people are trying to
carry on with life now," Hinckley wrote. "What's the
use' The dream is over.
"'The rich are getting richer and the poor don 't know
what the hell is going on , and most important of all.
Ronald Reagan never missed a beat," Hinckley said in
his unda ted essay. "Of course , he 's not in favor of gun
controL How can you make a Western movie without

idea. Two others. Including the Hinckley fam1\y
phys1cia n. euuld not f1nd an y physical cause for his

guns, guns, guns?"
The trial recessed until Monday aft er Mrs. Hinckley
and three doctors who treated her son testifi ed for the
defense.
The physicians treated Hinckley in 1979 and 1980 after he complained of an assortment of ailments : diz-

One of the doctors s uggested psychiatric counseling

problems but saw

ll tl

nc&gt;ed for Hmekl cy to see a

psychiatnst.
Hinck ley contends he was insane and nut legally
res pons ible for shooting Reagan , Whill' House Press

Secreta ry James Brady and two la w enforcement offi cers. He is charged in the l:l·coun t tndictml'nl w1th
crimes that include attemp ting t&lt;1 kill the president and

assault with mtent to kill white armed.
In the undated essay. part of the gn1w1 ng list of Hinckl ey 's writi ngs s ubmitted tll the jury, HW"lckl ey ex·

pressed feelings about Heagan and the killing of
heroes.
He wrote: " In Allll'l'i cct, he roes ore mect nl to be

killed. Idols are meant to be shot in the back. Guns are
neal little thmgs. aren't they'"
And later : " Le t's :&gt;cc how

tni:lll y

more tdnl:-.; we L'i:l n

wipe off the face of th e ea rth . It"s no b1g deaL Murder
happens al l the time ."
The essay was fo und by Mrs. H111ckky 1n a box 111 her
ga rage after Rea ga n was shot.

'Playcop' expects
to remain on force

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o VHF Pre-Set Fine

'' If it were to ha Vl' occurred, a n cconulnl c upturn, we
thi nk it would &lt;ilrcady hctve tJCc ur red," he .sct 1d. " Wt!. do
nut fee l we can a fford tu wa tt an y longe r.''
Details of the plan are to be wurkPd uut nex t week .
but Wright :se~id hctlf of the IIIUnt·y would gu tu luwenr1g
111 terest r&lt;:~tes on honw mortgages as a wHy of rev 1v1ng
the a iling housing nu.J. us try . The re m &lt;:~ 111111g $1 b1ll ion
wo uld go t o public works projecl'i s uch cts rebuilding
deteri ora ti ng h i gh w&lt;:~y systems, im proving mass tra nSit and re nova ting bndges, he sa id .
On severa l other fronts. the new uncmployu1ent

'In America heroes
are meant to be killed'

DEPARTURE - John W. Hinckley Sr. and .his
wife JoAnn depart federal court In Washington at the
end of the second day of the defense presentation lor
their son, accused presidential assailant John W. Hln-

trnmenr ptOCtd~ttl Actuil energy
c:onur~.r•CJtO ~~~~ ~ ¥1ry ,.,,,. IIJI

proaches but that April's figun·s reversed that trend .

=======================

$50.00 DISCOUNT
PLUSUO••

sw1 tc h tn norma l positio n • Efl1cientloa m msutation •

House Majunt y Leader J im Wn ght , D-Texas. noted
that employment nun na ll y n :se; as :sunun er ap--

of 20 yea rs on each of the two counts uf attempted mur·
der.
Mrs. von Bulow recoveret.l after s lipping into a coma
in 1979 but fell into what doctors say is an irr eversi bl e

. Model AE ~ 1

"lilt«~ on rtDO•IrotJ '"" ultdll• 110•·

19.4 percent - House Dcmu•: rats announced they will

Investi gators said Von Bulow wanted his wife out of

l

• Uses JUS ! 89 kw hours per month• wi th energy -saver

$9197~

in 1979 und 1980 . She remains in a coma a t a New York

the way sn he could inherit $14 million of her $75 million
for1une an d ma rry his love r. former soap opera actress

'82 BUICK REGAL

Stock No. 767

April jumped to9.4 percent, breaking a post World War
II record. Senator Edward Kennedy, 1&gt;-Mass., a member of the rnmmittee, listens to Norwood's testimony.
1AP Lascrphutn1.

E('UIJUm k Commi ttee stating tha t unemployment in

K1rk

:Miller 'excited over possible change'
COLUMBUS. Ohio I AP I - Ohi o
State University Athletic Director
' Hugh Hi ndman declined to speculate
·Friday on the impact the three-point
:fi eld goa l might have on Big Ten
:college basketball But Coach E ldon
Miller of the Buckeyes is excited
about the possible change.

Stoek No.1 11D1t1

a round and come down but so wi ll in terest ra tes, a nd

Wilsc•n. wu lo- ren tvt·r

!More than 100 have pre-registered
:for this Saturday's French City Run
ni n ~

Cob111 3ILTO S.O.S.

around ... joi n us m adopti ng the budget that wa s
passed out of the Senate Budget Committee." - a GOP
plan calling for cuts in Social Security and $95 bil lion 111
new tax e~ over three years.
"'They do that and not only wi ll unemployment turn

"EVERYTHING IN TWO-WAY RADIOS, ANTENNAS &amp;ACCESSORIES"
UPPEfl Rl 7 • ACROSS FROM THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPO_LIS, OHIO 45631
PHONE 446-4517

: Participants can still register May 15

: GALLIPOL IS
Althou gh
: preregistration has d osed for The
:French City Run. scheduled Satur•dHy, Ma y 5. runners can still par·
' ticipatc by registering on the mor·
ning of the run .

propose a $2 billi on public wn rks a nd hous ing program
111 hopes of producing jobs.

'179'f

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

wtdt• rt• t'l'I V-

Clfl C.o\r.O BEARS - Nouned Slt.·n· Kaw r spt'CI&lt;l l learns t'OU d l
NEW ENGLAND PATRI OTS - St);!ncd
M1k1· Kcrn ~ a n anti Tum St.JHt'qU t'.s. qua r·
ll'rbat.•ks: Juu Donnd ly, 11"' ht l'lld : ilnd
Pf! l Conra n. dt•ft' IISIVt' ~nd
TAMPA BA Y BUCCANEE RS - S t ~nt&gt;d
Ntl i"Jllall Rrn wn. wult· rt 't"t'IV•·r . a nd O&lt;t vt•
Mt·Nt·t'l. luwba l."kr r
WAS HINGTON
HE DSK INS
StKIIt.'d
Chns Garnl \". 4U&lt;Irh ·rba r k :
Juhn
Antln•ulJ. luw b&lt;iekt"r:
Tun Ba r ry. punlt•r :
fir'I." C

unem ployment on his economic pol icies while they

of hi s policies following the release Friday of" government report showing that American joblessness in
April jwnped to 9.4 percent - the h1 ghest \evel1 n more
than four decades.
He told reporters that Democra ts "can't blame 11 on

Emergency CB Outfit.
Self - Contained
Storage Case Holds
Radio, ?lug-In Power
Cord, Magnetic Mount
Telescoping Antenna
and Red S.O.S. Flag .

lkstuf ~ vr n
Tu t'sd~ty's G~t m r

NH tiuna l F ootbHII Ln)(Ut'

C'" ll&gt;~" r.

showed unem ployment in the cons tructJUn 111dustry at

our policies and I can tell them how they can tur n that

CAMPBEll.. CONFERENCE
FINAIB
NY

WASHINGTON fAPI - President Reagan is Insisting that Democrats can "t blame record-sett i n ~

Reagan rejected a chorus of ca lls for abandonm ent

(.' unh·r~ nfr FlnH I ~

.-tl

Sunda , Ma 9, 1982

refuse to support a revamped budget and tax plan advanced by Republicans.

.

Nuli111wl llockry l.t'HJ(Ut·

Mtl.

:\J
Hal.

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LIMITED QUANTITIES '
WHILE THEY LAST ~

Mil .

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26.
Harrah .
l"k. 2.1. Ttlllrnlnn. ('] ,•. 20 . HUJnhn . H&lt;tl.

r.oo

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HH I - Thorn ton . Cit·. 25
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Section Io)

Rising unemployment
renews partisan fight

COBRACB

CONFERENCE SEMI F I N A L.S
lksl uf St-no

Euslt•rn Co nle r~lK't'
Frlda y'li G11mr
Plll l&lt;l t.l t.•l phtH 102. MtiW&lt;Iuket'
dt.•lp hl&lt;l WillS St.' fi ~S 4--2
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SAVE ONA

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~~

"'

~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;::::;;

NBA results

(; u]h,·k." m. Mil .

481

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STHIKEOUTS- FBa nruslr. ~tl . 42 : Perrv. St!a. 32 : F. ck~ n l cy, Bsn. 30 : Denny.
l;k. 29 : r. uitlry. NY . 29

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Mundcl\·

26. Morl'ianJ . Ch1 .
1!1 . JThornpsn. ~h . 25 . Km~ lllitll . NY .
N . Kllrnandz. Sl L, 21. TKt•nrH:•dy . SO . 21
HITS- Mnrt'land. Clu. 39 . Wtlsvn. NY.
39 . LliSIIllth. Stl. , J6. Ot'slt•r . Cin. 36 .
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L• ~'i11n l h . SLL. 14 . Wtl.~o n .
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379.

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4-fl l lm. .15.1 . Ba tr Sll.. ~-fl. 1 ()')()_ 1 08
l,o.lllur . SD. :W. 1 000. 2 55 Shuw. SD. 3-0.
1 OOJ. o ~ 8. Ht·rl•np. Cm. +l. BOO. 2 93
Suu ..n. ll tn. 4·1. 800. 2 82 . l h'tL~s. I.A . ~ - \.
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admitted violating certain regulations, but he did not
think the violations warranted her dismissal.
Bay would not discuss the specific violations for
which the punishment was handed out. He based his
refusal on a pending court suit filed against Playboy by
parents of children who appeared in a Playboy
photograph of Ms. Schantz on the job.
.The suspension began April23, Bay said.
The board of inquiry had found Ms. Schantz guilty of
violating 10 Civil Service regulations, but Bay said he
did not necessarily agree with the board's findings.
Both Bay and Ms. Schantz, 26, said they hoped the ·
decision on disciplinary action would end a monthslong controversy for the city and one of its three female
officers.
Ms. Schantz said she first wrote to Playboy last
spring on a whim, "like you'd write to your
congressman.'! She said she suggested the magazine
do a pictorial on women polire officers, but did not
identify herself as a member of a police force.
Later, she ·said, a representative of the magazine
telephoned her about her note and learned she was a
poli.;liwoman. When the caller suggested she"))Ose for a
pictorial, she said, "No, not me. I've got big hips. I'm
pretty ugly."

'

.
&lt;

PLANS TO RESUME LAW ENFORCEMENT

CAREER -: Pollee officer Barbara Schantz, who
po~ed nude for Playboy magazine, saya sbe IDteads to
resume ber pollee career after a 37-day HlpeDSioa ea-

ds. The city and Ms. Schaub agreed to the

suspensio~ ,

and she apologized for any embarrassment to tbe COJDo :
munlty she may have caused, but said she didn't tblu ;
she did anything wrong. (AP Laserphoto 1.

·-

�Page-D 2- The Sunday Tomes Sentonel

Pomeroy

Moddl eport

Gallopolos, Ohoo--Poont Pleasant,

- fh&lt; Me ogs and
Galloa Soot and Watco ConMI\dllon

NACD has sponsored Soot Stewar

Dt stllt L"i "''II JOing lht.: natiUnwtdt:
l d l br~tJOn of Sod Stt w~rdsh r p \lonk

3 000 ~ 011 and wt:tler conservatwn
doslllds
Infonnatlvt.: Jncltt:nal on the SOil
Stewanlsh op Week theme each year
" dostrobuted through local con

tu take place on Ma) 16-23 fheme
th1~ )car~~

A Tun~ fur T cmu.:rly

1 hiS os A lome for 1 cnaut) 111
our ftuth tn t onu.: pt on c..:u111
lllumcatwn Hl

tooperatwn 111 the

to del gy mer1 Illy
lc&lt;1deJs &lt;-hUJdH:s CIVI C anti
educat1 D11&lt;1l orgamzatwns and to 111
dov oduals partoc1patong on the observance
Woth the growth of popuiit1on
and the world demand for food and

sUV&lt;lllon dlstn&lt;- Ls

poillll.: ctl drt.:ntt 111 expcn nenls ;md
fl.:!sca n:h tn! t .tth; rshtp Jn pnunt tcs
a nd m totalt onumtment ti les tht
N at10n&lt;Jl

Assoctatwn

of

cultovatoon we must turn our at
tentoon to the task of savong every
acre accordm~ to NACO The
d1cam of adc'Quate supplies of food
and shelter must cover a perood that
extends far mto tre future because
this ts the only world we have and
the total herota~e of our descen
dants
lnforonatoon and mateo oat for the
1982 observance of Soot Stewardship
Week are avaolable tn this area from
the Meogs Sod and Water Con
servat on Dostnct at 221 West
Second Street on Pomeroy or by
ca lling 992-M47 or the Gallla SWCD
at44&amp;-8687

Wt.'~k

s ln t.: c 1955
111
~.:ooper atwn w1th the natwn s nearl y

Li s h1p

Con

, eo-va toon DIStill Is NACD I on the
16-p&lt;oge Soil Stewardship Week
l&gt;O&lt;lklet Foo"a od fnr th&lt; publllalo un
\\O S wntte n by Pr~ s 1dcnt Ronald
Ht ctgan

w1th lhl c leanng and development

ol most land that " suitable foo

May 9 1982

va

Former mental patient charged

Meigs-Gallia districts join observance
PO~E ROY

w

der

£or

Monday s

slaymgs

11

BURBANK Calof ( AP) - A twm
engone plane crashed mto a house
Satuo day then exploded and bur
ned kollon~ at least two people of
focoals sa od
Thcr e are at least three bod1es
saod poloce Lt Rochard Cutler APparently ot s two from the house aJid
one or tnore from the plane

HELP C:"l I
l or I an
d1cappcd w u 1 01n n home
Must
l II
coo k
I qhl
ho usekeep nq rl nd nurs nQ
Refer encfls r equ rf' cl 367
7549 after 6

Attorney killed
ROSLYN HARBOR NY (API Leon Stern a former assostant
dtstnct attorney and counsel to Son
of Sam koller Davod Berkowotz was
killed m hts home Saturday by a robber pollee saod
Pollee say the 56-year old Stern
and h1s wtfe Laura returned shor
tl y after qudmg ht to theor home
where Mrs Stern was accosted by"
man who took her valuables hand
cuffed her and Oed

tn

Russtan Jack Spnngs Park m the
heart of the coty He was held on $4
omlllon bail
Pollee say he has admitted
shootmg two teen age boys when
they discovered ho m stealing tapes
from their tent whtch was potched m

os, Ohto--Poont Plea san

fwo die in crash

the park and th~n shnuhng two If).
year old gorls who came to on
vestogate the gunshots

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (API - A
menta l patten! charged w1th
shootong four teen agers to death m
a c1ty park was on leave from a
nearby psych1atnc hosptlal where
he was sent after another park
slaymg nme years ago
Charles L Meach II ts charged
woth four counts of forst -&lt;Iegree mur

May 9 1982

Veterans Memorial
Adm otted John Motley, Mod
dlepoot Nota Brown Pomeroy
Charles Rockard Clifton W Va
F:doth Watson Pomeroy
D sc harged Clara
Shuster
Joseph Bowland Charles Clark
Sha ro Freeman Chrostopher Dtddle
Cuo los Luckadoo Jo Ann Weyer
sono ller

II

He l p Wanted

Wanted Rchablf'
woman
f or qenc rnt housework n
Mil son F ve hour s a day
lw o day s cnc t1 ..ve c k s tea dy
work
M n mum
wage
SJ 7S S S pard Two adults
A pply to Box holder BoK
552 P omrro y Oh o 45769

ll

Help_Want~d

13

Mercnandlsct

Financial

Hav e va ca ncy n my home
for eld er l y
Ambulatory
man or woman 7 yea r s ex
per ence
667 3402
Tup
p~rsp l a ns Oh

CIRssrfied

7 1 Bus ness Opportun tv
22 Monty o Loan
23 Pr o fess on tll Sc rv ccs

l C ~rrt of Th an ks \ pad n l dvnnccl
7Clrdo flh ank s( pad nHiv~nccJ
3 An noun ce m en t s
.t G ve awa y
s Happy Ad s
b Los I and Found
Ynrd Sale (p~ d n 1dv~ l(t J
8 Pub l c Sa le
&amp; Auct on
9 Wtln l cd to Buy

5 I Household Goods
52 CB TV &amp; RadiO E QUipm ent
53 An t1 ques
54 M1 sc Merchand 1se
55 Bulld1ng Supp l 1es
56 Pets tor Sa le
57 Mu se a l In struments
58 Fru ts&amp; Vegetables
59 For Sa l e or Trade

Real Estate
3 1 Homes lor Sa le
37 Mob lc H ome s for Sal e
33 Farm s for Sa le
34 Bu s ness Bu ld nqs
35 Lot &lt;:, &amp; Acrc aq e
36 Re.=~l Es tate W ant ed

~

41 House s or Rent
42 M ob le Homes for Rent
13 Farm s tor Rent
44 Apartmen t for Rcnl
45 Furn snrd Room s
46 Spa ce for rc nt
47 Want ed to Rent
48 E qu pmentlor Rent
49 For Lease

ANTIQUE AUCTION

Announcements

NOTI CE TO
CONTRA CTOR S

tor open nQ n d'&gt; n nc
ro r ct 1ncr wIll Ct ~D I N 5525
0 o Rrv sed Code
Pl1n s 1nd spec I c ~Ions
'l r f' on 1 If' n lh e D e p .=~r l
mf'n l of 1 r 1nsportM on and
ttl(' ott Cr' o f lht 0 s ir c l
DP pu t y D f'c to
ftw D rprto r rrservec,
thr r 01 to r p I CI 01ny ~I

SWEEPER
and sew1ng
m1rh ne repa r part s and
suppl es
P c k up and
del vert
Oav s Va cuum
Clec1n er one ha lf m le up
Geo rq e~ Cree k Rd
Call
446 0794

Copy No 82 SOl

CONTRACT

t

')C rill d pr opOS li S w II 11('
r( Cf' vNJ 1 lll f' oft '" of lh f'
D rN tor of nH 01 o Of'pO!r
lm,.,n t o f fr 1n o:, por tn t on
( n umbu':l Ot n unt I 0 00
I M
Oh o St 1n llr(l I mr
l u sctw Mw 18 19RI tor
mprovc mpnt &lt;., fl
0111 n Coulty Ollo on
A L ') R
1'\0 3 76 R II
'i ll
Routr 160 tw f &lt;., ur
I 'lr net w h
t.,p 1
con
c rrl f"
r 1v1 mt n t w ctt1
\ 1r e~
Pro f' C
(I W t r k Lt 1q1t
) 1 96) I
I or I 19 Y1 If'&lt;.,
T ~ f' d 11r
1 for com
~lf' t on ot lh s w ork sl 'l l bt
•s &lt;.,f' l for t h n llw b dch nq
pr opos 'II
E 101 b ctdrr " 'n il h r
rf'QU C'd c I If w I ~ s h cl
n c rt f Nl
Cl f'C k
or
c n&lt;;. t rr s 0 t ck for 'In
1m oun t r'Qu~l to li ve per
cf' nt ot h1 s b1d bu t n no
vf'n t mor e 111nn I I l y
thou o:, 1nd dol 1r o:, or 1 bond
for ten per cent of h• s b1d
p~y01b iC' 10 111 0 rr c l or
0 ddf"r .. mu st .-'l p p t y on
thf'
proprr
fo rm s
for
qu nt I c nf ,on 1 lf' as t trn
dny s pr or 1 J 1 1 dllt se t

( ! &lt;,

DAV DL WEIR
OIRFCTOR
N 1y J Q

Pub liC Noltcc

PUBLIC NOTICE

Nott ce 1S hereby g 1ven
th&lt;lf on Saturday May 15th

1982 at 10 00 a m a public
sa l e w II be h eld a t lOS
Un1on A venue Pomeroy
OH1 0 to sell for ca sh th e
l oll owmg colla tera l
1979 Mercury
4 Dr
Wagon - Mfr s Sc r a l No
Model
9K36T643441

Zephyr

The F~1rmer s Bank .1nd
Si1v 1ng s
Company
Po m er oy
Ohto reserve s
th e nght to b1d r\t th, ~ sa l e
and to w tthdr aw the above
ve h1 cte pnor to sa l e Fur
th er The Farmer s Bank
a nd Savt ng s Co mp an y
reserves th e nght to re tect
any or .1 11 btds sub mttt ed
Further
veh tc l cs are
so ld m the cond tt iOn they
ar e 111 w 1t h no expreHed or
1mplt ed warran t es g tve n
(5)9 11 14 3t c

In Memonam

Rnvcn 75 1u tomat c p stol
$47 79
Jenn nq s
aut oma t c
p "&gt; fOI $66 65
Rod &amp; r ee l co mbo Zeb co
600$1099
Rod &amp; reel combo Zebco
707$7 99
Me 600 Jr r el oader for 12
qauqe $69 9S
Federal 22 LR amo box of
50 $159 or $ 1450 a br c k
Must br nq copy of ad wtth
you Spr1nq Va lley Tr ad1ng
Co
Spr n g Valley Pl aza

n

Ga l pol s 446B025
Lontr ol hunqer and lose
we qht wilh New Shape
0 e t Plan and Hydrex
Wa ter PIt s Fruth Phar
macy
RctCrne G u n Club Atlentwn
;"jJI member s fr sh ng der
hy B B Q horseshoe tour
nament
Sunday May 9
I r om 9 a m o 7 p m
J um bo B ob Wh te Quail
EQqs
also
ava labl c
La Bonte s Qua I Farm 614
985 4345

In- lovmy memory
of
Kevon
B
Stewart who doed
May 9, 1975
Seven years have pas s
ed my son
Stnce las t I saw vour
fate
The sm tf e that won so
m a ny fn cnds
w~ 11
treasure to th e
las t
We m•ss you son so
very much
Y~ ur
place tn
our
hearts are empty
But
those pr ec tou s
memones of you we
sttft chen sh
A"d yo u II always b e
lov ed and remembered

Profess ona l
E lcc tro t ys s
Ce nter A M A approved
Doc tor r ef era ls by ap
po ntm ent only
304 675

6?34
CRE DIT PROBLEM S Obt
am a Master card or V 1sa
No c red t ch ec k Grara n
feed
for deta Is
send

SAS E to CCC

Box 727

Ca rrollton TX 75006
No Trespasstng on Nott
Property
RI
6'1
Pont
Pleasant
G 1veaway

4

ANY PERSON who has

To Mom
Our Sunbeam m the
darkest
hour
a nd
blank et of sec u nty We
lov e you
Happ y Mothers Day
Dad &amp; K1ds

anyth 1ng to grve away and
does not off er or a tt emp t to
offer any ot her th 1ng for
so le may place an ad tn th1 s
column There w tlf be no
c harge to th e adve rt1 se r

In the World

5 female pup s 1/2 Dober
m an
l/ 2
Germa n
Shepherd From Gallipoli s
I r st hou se on r Qh t on Rt
160 ns dec t,.- I m I s of V n
I on

3 pupp es to good home 7
wk s o ta worm~;;d Ca ll 379

2796
Free pu p p es Calf 4.46 4036
2 6 wk

992 7406
Ma te dOQ 7 months old
Part Lab ra dor Retr ever

LO N G hatred k1ttens

6

Lost and Found

OHIO VALLEY BANK BRANCH

Jackson Pike
lntroducong "Becky" - a umque com
pany w1th a dostonctove hne of custom
handbags, soft luggage &amp; accessoroes A
spec1al drawurg will be held for any
l'lon-profttable
organ1zatton
woth
any order

&amp;

FIVE tam ly yard sa le
Mav 10 11 12 9 30 to ., 4
m les out Sandhill Rd Pt
Pleasant
8

Pom eroy
98S-- Chester
343- Portland
147- Letart Falls
949- Racme
741- Rutla nd
667 - Coolvl lle

ow

Up to ! Sword&lt;.,

On f'

Up to 15woras

Thr ec dily

Up to 15 Words

R1ck
Pearson
Ex
penen ced AUCT IONEER
Esta tes an t ques
farm
i'lousehold L1censed Oh o
wv Buy ng an t.qu es 304

S1K day

n scn 1on

S3 OU

1n ser tt on

S&lt;IOO

10:00 SAT.

L occlftOn Ga fh a Cou nty Juntor Fatr Grounds Jet
Sf Rt s 160 &amp; 3S fOllr m1les west of Ga thpoh s
Oh 10
Lunch prov1ded by the l ad tes of Calvary
Penteco stc11 Chu rch
Due to !he slle of th1 s sa l e a prev1ew of th1s coll ec
t1 on w1 f b e held
Frtdcly Mtty 28 S 00 PM to9 00 PM - The public
ts mvtted to atte nd lh1 s spec tal sh ow tng
Owner s note Th 1s co ll ect on of ant1ques spans the
years 1800 to 1900 The turn lure s pr m1 f1 ve coun
tr y Shera ton Emp1re Eastlak e and go l den Oak
Most of th e pr m t ve s ar c handmilde and held
toqeth cr w l h pe gs or square na Is and da te before
the C vI War Seve ral p eces hav e been n store and
ar e n a s found cond f on many need repa1r s
The g tnsswa re ts m ade up of early o• eces along
w th A m er ca n patt ern q!a ss
Mr Sa unders ha s been a coll ec tor and local
h st or c1 n fo r
many year s
Spec al z ng
n
memorab llt a of loca l nterest Ttl s auc tt on conta1ns
art if ac ts from h s cofl ect1on that relate to the
11 sto r y o f Ga ll " County Many of tne tlems have
des ce nded !rom so m e fo th e early fam l1 es of th s
co mtry Se veral ar e from f rm s that have been out
of bu s ness for f fly to on e hundr ed years The coun
ty r ela ted matena f offe r ed c omprtses the f•nest
co lec t on of su c h a nature n Gall a County
The foflow.ng w ill be offered
1(

~ il

o rwn
~

1

1860 Pop

800 Wil
ilrld w 1n drilw('
1

830 'A

M

6

i1

App $20 000 p1pe ft tt .n qs qa tvan 1zed &amp; plastiC all
k1nds of f1tt10g s bath tub hot &amp; cold water ptpe
OWD ptpe 50 lb box na Is marble top l or van!fy
e lectnc heater s Teflon tape n ew door knobs gate
valves some electr 1ca 1 fttt1ngs several store
she lftng ba th &amp; k 1tc hen faucet sets turnbu ck les
eye bolts fuel oil filters new house parnt bath
l avatory k1fchen Sinks trav s r ods smoke al arms
snow shove ls panel1ng na Is lo ts &amp; lots &amp; lots more
New bench gnnder VICes soc k et sets wrench set
sever a l new tools
Dealers - Contractors - Eve ryone We lcom e
Terms Cas h or approved check
Aucftoneer - Lonnte E Neal - J67 7101

Cil 840 '&gt;e 5
1830 MilQ Hf'p

I l VI.'I.Kl&lt;l d

1800 Pop
~

Cd

(upbot~ r d

870 P

ne

810

'"'
BOO

j
~==========j==========~~

PUBLIC AUCTION
AUCTION WILL BE HELD AT
SILVER DOLLAR AUCTION
THURMAN OH
SAT URDAY MAY IS 19B2
630PMSHARP

YardSafe

5 Fam fy Carpor t Sale firs t
one n two years May 11
12
13
F rst house on
Georges Creek rd Off of
Rt 7 To much to I s t
Ga rag e Sate May 11 &amp; 12
534 Hilda Dr Fatrv1ew Sub
d v son EJoys g r ls &amp; adu lt
clothes
m1sc
househo l d
Iems Hours 9 6
Y r~rd Sa iP every th ng must
&amp; Tue 20 1B 112
Eastern Ave Rear 10?
New work pant s &amp; sh1rt &amp;
mtsc

go Mon

Buy ng
Go l d
Sli ve r
Plat num old co ns sc r ap
r nqs &amp; silverware Oa ly
q u otes ava lable
A lso
co n s &amp; co n suppl es for
sale
Spr1ng
Va ll e y
Trad ng
Spr.ng
Vat ley

We pay cash for l ate model
c lean used car s
Frenchtown Car Co
B I I Gene Johnson

446 0069
Pull type camper se lf con
ta1ned to steep 6 Cal l 2S6

6574

Camp'"g tent Ca ll 367 0632

Wanted to Buy

WAN T TO BUY Old fur
n lure and An t ques of all
k nd s ca ll Ke nneth Swa n

446 3159 and 256 1967 m the
eve n•ngs

CASH PAl D lor clea n late
model used cars Sm 1fh
Buck Pont1ac
Ga llt po lt s
Oh o Ca lf .446 '1'182

or 446 3560

BEDS IRON BRASS old
tur ntt ur e
go l d
s t ver
dollars wood ce box es
st one 1ars an t ques etc
Co mpl ete
household s
W nte MD M ill er Rt 4

Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760
Gold
S1 l ver
ste rf1n g
tewe lry r.ngs old coms &amp;
cur rency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop M 1dd leport 992

Women
men
c hildren
c l ot hs
household goods
mtsc ttems I mtle from
Langsv ill e Co Rd 10 Dex
ter Rd F r1 Sa t Su n 10 8

446 280 1

pm

~~ -

11

Don t m• ss th s one The
perfect famtfy bustness no
r1sks
hav e fun
mak e
money Call 992 2088 a fter 6

~
He lp Wilnted

roo mnny bU s" E xc f' l lrnt
f' 1r 1 n q
o np o r un ty
P /\R l I1M E
FULL
T MF
For
11 r p
n
for m 1t on Lnll 146 335A
H qt Sr i not ~...&gt;rnc!uol tr o:, &amp;
Srn or s you c 1n f'rl rn ovr r
SSSO 00 per m ont! wt If'
,., ~1rn nq il ViliUrlhlf' &lt;:, k II
I kf" co mputf'r
rrpii r er
o:,t1ef'l melill wo rk f'r
or
rrfr (f ('r'tl l o n Plu s ynu wIt
h'lvc =t sc cur p1rtt me 1ob
w th the Amry N;~t onill
uuard .1fler sc hool nq
BPncftt s nclu dc r1 $1 500 00
cn l s tm e nt
h o nus
S35 000 00 1 f(
n ~ uriln c e
1nd fr f'r' tu I on to nnv
co iiN ir' or tra ctf' sc ll oo l n
West v r o n il 1n trrcsted
per sons m'ly Cel li (30 41 675
3950or nWc~IVrqnnc~ll

toll FRE E I BOO 64? 36 19

E xperren ced man t o do
body work Apply .n person
at H yse l l s Used Cars
Ru tland Oh1o
Coc k ta I Wa tf ress App l y n
person at The Me gs 1 nn
P omeroy Oh o
Help wa n ted Sa lesperson
to se ll automobtles Ex
per ence he l pful See Dale
Sande r s Pat Htll Ford Ap
p t y 1n person
Fos l er
Grandpa r ~ nt
for
Buckeye Comm untty Ser
v1ces to work w•th c h ldren
w 1th m en ta l retardat1on
Requ rements nclude At
least 60 yea r s of age
rnco me gu de f1nes s ngle
S5 390
m a rrt ed
S7 11 5
family of three $8 840 Ca lf
.446 9595 or 379 2639 for fu r
!her 1nforma f1 on Bu ckeye
Commu n 1t y Se r v 1ces 1S an
em
eq u a l oppo rtuntty
player

3476
OLD FURNI TURE beds
1ron brass or wood K 1t
c hen c ubba r ds of all t ypes
T abies round or square
Wood 1ce boxes Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
compl e te hou se hold Go ld
s li ve r old m oney pocket
watches c ha tns r ngs an d
e tc 1ndtan Art f ac ts ot a ll
types Also buy ng baseball
cards

Osby

lr________..;,._..:,.___________,

Mar t.n 99'1

6370

Wanted swa r ms o f bees

Ca ll 245 5055 or 446 1052 or

343 1 ev en ng s

=

AuctiOn eve ry Fn ntght at
the Har tf ord Comm un ty
Center Truckloads of ne\1\o
mer c hand tse eve r y week
Cons1gments of new and
used merc hand1se a lways
we l come
R r char d
Reyno lds Auct1oneer 275

9

304 675 3030 days 304 675

Plaza 446 B025 or 446 B026

773 57B5 773 91B5

&amp; Sa le
Huntin gton Ga l1ar es Hun
t n gt on WV May 8th noon
unhll 9 00 p m May 9th
noon unftll S 00 p m 30
Dea lers ant ques o f al l
d1scr.pt ons Ext 8 I 64

WANTED
to buy small
John Boat good cond tmn

GOOD used P1ano
upnghts 304 675 1645

no

Phone 742 260B
May 10 Woodrow Mora
Famtty SR7 ac r oss from
Memory Ga rdens

YARD sa le al 153 Ma1n St
Tuesday

&amp;

lllh

121h

&amp;

Wednesday

9 304 30

Fr u 1t 1ar s blue 1ea ns all
s1ze
c l othmg
s hoes
var tet y of ttem s

Follow auctron

EOUI PMENT

sew 1ng machine rollaway bed small air com
pressers
refngerator one third H P electrrc
motors step Ia der gnnt;l stone wood cattl~ racks,

22 111 cut 60 H P Cr~ttsman mower, tow bar, swongo
set m1sc tools napsacK sl!pyer d1snes pors, pans
green stoneware m1sc tMctures and :UO Honda
Road b1ke
OWNER - KATE ARMPRIESTER
Lunch
Eats
Cash
J1m Carnahan

949 2033
949 2708
' Nol respons•ble for acc1dents or toss of property"

NOTICE

Sealed bids will be received
until 12:00 Noon, May 22,
1982, for the purchase of real
estate of the late Winifred F.
Knight, located at 126 First
Avenue, Gallipolis, Gallia Coun·
ty, Ohio.
No bids of less than
$150,000.00 (appraised value)
will be considered. Executrix
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids.
Property may be seen by appointment only. Call ~6.0287.
A. Jacqueline Knight, Executrix
of the Estate of
Winifred F. Knight, Deceased.

A r co mpressors floor ta cks 4 ton porta power s
dr II pr esses 0 A s ander roll around tool boxes
dr II pre ss stand c rc le hand saws a r 1m pa c t wren
ches I n sn ps belt sande r s body gr nder s 10 x 14
tarps la r ge assortmen t of socket sets - 1 4 1 318
3.. ex tent, on cords t ap and d1e se ts dr1ll btfi benc h
gr ndcr!l crescen t wrenches .=~tr hammer torc h
hoses screwdr vcr se ts battery cha r gers chan
ne locks c h sel se ts 12
c ut off saw a r mpa c t
sock e t s ball pe n hammers 'i5 lb anv I bolt c ut
ters auto body repa tr too ts so lder ng guns loc k
blad e pocket knife s troublellghts 1umper ca b les
open and boxed wrencnes c tect r c mpa ct wren
c hes dr 11 press f re ext 1ngu shers 2 ton come a
lon gs dwell meter 4 5 6
v1se m etr c sets
routers gear puller s a...- hose measurement tapes
deep wel l socke ts 4 foot levels a tr file vrce gnps
and many other tools
Also terns for th e l od tes owl and table l amps hall
trees watches sc ,ssors s l ver stone sk I lets bells
radto s etc
Ca&amp;h or a pproved check wtth proper 1 0
Not responstble for acc1dents or property a fter sold
Sponsored by S•lver Dollar Au cfton
Doors open at 5 30 p m Door pnze s Refreshments
Tools guaranteed by D&amp;R Tool Co
AuctiOneer O ennt s E Reed
D&amp;R Tool Supply &amp; AuctiOn Co
Carroll OH 431 12
AuctiOneers Not e A ll of th e above m erchand 1se s
new and brand names n c l ud1ng Rockwell Sk II
Channel Lock Shopma re Su n B co G r eat Neck
Bla c k &amp; Decker Rodac Cumm 1n s Coni nental
Sanborn Blue L 1ne Roe Woods W 1re Rosco S K
C r aft Cham p1 on Fu ll er M ll er Fall s llltn o ts n
dustnal et c
Cl u bs
orga n tzat1on
f1re departments
school
groups - ra 1se money wtt h a benefit au c t10n Con
tact D&amp;R Too l Supp ly &amp; Auct10n Co for deta Is
70% u S Mad e Tools

Help Wanted

II

Many
to choose from
at savings up to

25% &amp; More!
To help reduce our Inventory,
we are passing big savings on
to our farm customers Our
lhtse Items will
never be lower It you need a quality built farm tractor
but thought you couldn't alford one - well, now you can,
during Long's Spring Clean UpSala'
U

0.:.• .. N,., Alo &lt;l&lt;l

-

J1VIDEN'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
R oute-2, Box 248
Gallipohs, Ohio 45631
614-446 1675

1

ITEMS FROM HERE DOWN ALL NEW
COME OUT OF BIDWELL PIPE &amp; SUPPLY

( ll l'~ l

f'it~ Hl

.t

MAY 15 1982

Se lhng the c hatte l s off th e farm of Charle s Smtih
Reason for selling movtng out of st a t e
From Ga lhpolt s t ake lS to hosp1tal turn nght on
Rt 160 go to Porter turn nghf on Rt 554 then 3
m tl es on nghf Watch for s1gns
7ft heavy duty grader blad e ntce farm wagon 6 It
bushhog 3 p i h tch boom pole cool&lt; s tove new
sma ll woOd burn ng s tove ex h au st t an 2 goOd push
lawnmowers old horse drawn wagon good shape
comp le te bedroom su 1te rock.ng chat r S 17 I t cu
tn upr ght deep freeze bu nk beds couch dryer
bnbv bed small rur co mor essor draoes nter1or
decorat1ngs .400 00 Fooseba I ga m es metal off1 ce
desk coffee l able wood spnnd le log c ha tns b n
ders
battery charger
work ben ch
shu tter s
several 11res hedge tnmmer pos thol e d1gger &amp;
several m1sc too l s

S7 00

m sertton

Wanted to Buy

9

Wanted to Buy

Old organ or p a no for ch l d
to learn on Calf 446 1488

AN TIQ UE Show

7

9

Pub l1 c Sa l e
&amp; Auc ti on

Galltpol s Ca ll 3BB 8BIO

HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC "
Drop leaf !able, mosc chairs Arlington treadle

Sm•th

10 6

3069

9 N Ford wlloader &amp; dtsk harrow

Dan

GA RAGE sale 1409 E lm
St
M ea dowbrook
Ad
d t on Pt Pleasan t Man
day &amp; Tuesday May 10 8.
11 4 Fam ly m sc tems

LOST
Brown,sh
b l ack
B flfold
IOSI 1n VICi n ity

From Route 7 Bypass take 51 Rt 143 approx St;,
TRACTOR

to

good home 304 67 5 5B50

m•les to Z1on Churctl_ of Chnst
stgns to the Tro Ch1 Farm

OPEN HOUSE
MAY 14th, 9:00 to 3:00

old male k 1ttens

SAT., MAY 15, 1912
11:00 A.M.

W e love you
Larry Melinda
an d M1k e

/

9338

PUBLIC AUCTION

To The Best
Mother and W1fe

Sadl y mt ssed by Mom
&amp; Dad L md a Edd1e
C~rla
Angela
and
daughter Chnsty

8 wks ol d ma tes 112 fr sh
Se tt er Cal l af ter 5 4.46

992 3577

PERMANENT

The lam l y of Mam•e Blake
w shes to extend our thanks
and apprec al ton to all
those who exp r essed the r
sympathy
sent fl owers
food cards and hel ped 1n
other ways dunng the
death of our dear wif e and
mother
A very spec a t
thank s to Wh te s Funeral
Home
and
R ev
Roy
Deeter for h s c onso f1ng
words
Thank s t o th e
pallbearers
eme rg ency
squad and Tupper s Pia ns
Commun ty Fr ends w C
Bl ake and famil y

Yard Sa l e

Gtveaway

4

HAIR REMOVAL
Cc1rd of Thanks

475-Pt Pleilwnt
458-leon
}76-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882- New Haven
895-Letart
937- Buffalo

992- Middleport

1101 w Ill f'tl\ll'!. Of'
~f'
tou n cc prc"&gt;~biiC k
i\ ~iln dflllchnU O( k
f hO&lt;;Pf'~ S IJlkl I Cllilrrocke.H\0
lib
~w oo orQ n
oo i10i:l o c Ollf' Sf' .'I C&lt;'l 900 PAT
TERN GLAS~ 011e If V p Cf' ~ wet ~ !. L deled Compares op n
compo e~ ~IXJ(lr"l(' s crean en cake p .'1 r~ Ou erd Sllf'\ cmont~de
~c l p lchcro; p kl&lt;" ct~s l or s C
f' er y vase ~ &lt;1n&lt;1 over II rly qob f'l~
Some arc \e l ~
n such pa lf'rns it5 H 1no 6nH &amp;. Bilr LOCI Ct~O n
Loop C r~ S i o'l Wedel n" GOO&lt;t Luck Fo r Fru Is Cup d &amp; Venus
Wilt L v D&lt;~ k o"' Sw.'l ando her s
GLA SS WAR E Lom po l r~ ~ c 5 umbc '&gt;~ I lumb ers m kqass
c a~ e p &lt;1 r
ov ~ ;.nrlw &lt; bow ~ 19]0 ~ \ 1 1d os 4 !&gt;I av nq muqs o
n&lt;1n&lt;1 eleS\ (UP~ nkWf' IS !. ~I pepl)('f \ St' S '&gt; I Ol Q l ii~!&gt;CS Sf' l IS
s&lt;~ d ps and ma'&gt; ler &lt;.A ll l rup pli!Tf'&lt;, l'loolheCMY iH!o wh skev
uo
ol no p n p o. r r1 ppcr seve r&lt;~ p eces milo c l bread
piles dr c ~nl r 1816 Cf'n 1nnil ndel)('ndf'flCe Hill Qlii SS bi'!nk
bows n st cs ilnrl milny sma ten ~ CHINA Toomp ck mu~ 1 aro
pol pl.'l ll e r ~ q ~vy bOiii S p r c he r ~ ( UP t~nd Sii UCf'r S covered
C1 !.hCS &lt;hCE'SP kt'f'll"r ) f &lt;~r 1/ pil l !'~ Eit 11 ABC pl .. l(' Cilfl'l 11 &lt;1
AB C plill e '\OiiP f1 sh !.4'1 hilnd Pel nl!'d ~&lt;I 1d P!o and !of'Vf'fill plt~le ~
RONSTONE capo! compole covf'ff.'d 1 ~ h nnd Tureen FLO
BLUE 6 p, I'S 1 bow s J SilLiCN!o ray ,11 QC' c up~ 0 SlUCC s
CUP saucf'r pli!f' fliCher illld3pilles LUSTERWAR E •suqM
t:Jow s 1 p l r hf'r~ wl ol O lill~ s
TEA lE AF ~ arf' comporr tru 1 bowl bu ller d sn qr&lt;~vv and
under piMe suoa r bow 9 bullf'f pelt ~ ~o up plaTe 7 wrv nq
dshes desse 1 ~ s .1u cer~ 1 cr 0 pa 1 ~s nne9 ile., .ln04Pil
ter s fr om !. mi'l o u k f' ~ s 1e CAST IRON M n ron ill'ld lr vet 6
Eilg e ~ee l on fencf' dutch ov!'n 7 skI f' l ~ w Th 1ds daled 1925 q d
dlf' \ild ro I r('p iiCf' ~eT sm pol w 1o washbo IN ov il roa~ l er
&lt;~ndc or nt&gt;rc t~dpa n SllVERPlATE S uo&lt;~ bowl butlcrd!&gt;h copper
bO• Art N ouvr t~u ewel y OO• copper n£&gt;t~t rr o~ MQe orna e
sn mp d sh br dt&gt;~ bilskcl lr ame many p c cs of lilblc scrv ce and
serv no Pf'CI'!. sl rr na '\1 ! &amp; pepper and 7 sels Bone hi'lnd ed
kn v e ~ nn ro k LAMP S M n t~mp 7 1nocr r no tamps AI add n
b • ii'&gt;S lit 1 p &lt;" ('
t f'&lt;t Rwo &lt;~mp over 7 Q l iiS~ l ('lmp~ &lt;,omc arr
iln y one s 0 &lt; 914 POL IT CAL IT EMS McK n ey S n
F
Roosrvf' C rln Kenne ly Stevenson ke Humphrey and r.. xon
bu on '&gt;
il l! plntc B van muq Gar &lt;' d umbler L nco n
IMPerwt (lh (d&lt;lm&lt;IQl.'dl E senhowe PlPCrwe gh l Wl i'I CC 1 ms
D&lt;"wt&gt;v ilnd w l ~on pamphlt&gt;l!o
STON EWARE nkwcl SC i11 ppts Jt~r Jas 6l' l dl n C 110 0
r rock 3 p QQV bilnk s Rock nqham cow C fe&lt;~mer {d ~m&lt;~q ed a
d~ led
891 10 Qtl uq w II tree hand 11 ((' but lli'lmaged J ug5
mil kf'd Roy crof fol ow nq are o Ul' ~11 1 wn 1e ~il 1 ql,uedware
Clovf's Holder QfPi'ISe M sponoewa t&gt; m lk p 1c rr Ia real be&amp;uly l
1 Of' ouw it d ~ ltlt ~~ ~ R~~ 1 til ~ P« k n p Tcher d sh sm
bowl ~r e bow loolhbr usn holder ~&lt;I 1 crock &lt;tnd soap d sn
ClOCK S DlilC k n&lt;~n l e Oue&lt;~nd wh If' de ll 11P€' 1 c O&lt; k c a~s 7
Oil ~ k tel en c ock~ 0 n1 e cuckoo wil
U l 1875 much n ~~I needs
wok i'IM 3 pockc wal e es WOODEN WARE Lil QC bvller bow
" "' wQO(I b
e Morlo buller Pildd e polalo mt~~ner 1 lowe
holoers Du l iN ~ t~mp S buller mold~ i'ln&lt;1 spoons BOO I&lt; S H AIQN
Bultt~l o B II Jciln Sir&lt;! Ton Porter MOdel 1 Ford Inter H,rvester
LO Ccn1 of Reaper 3 McG uffevs STory of the A rsh p 1931 Boy
Srouls 19 I Empre5s Joseph ne 1860 W II Roctqers H slo v of C v
Wit 1804 il ndmanyolhers Ths s&amp;p&amp;rl t1 ~ nq
COI NS L ncoln Head Cent bOOk No 1 coni a ns 41 cons L ncolnCenl
No I con111 ns 63 co ns L ncoln Cen t No '1 coni a ns64 con!. 9 Bulla o
N cktes 1919 To IQ37 28 n ck el5 19.0 s 15 Steel Penn es 19•3 4 s lver
quarters 4 1 all dOIIan t964 9 n ckels 1939 rol 1963 penn es un
c ult~ led 1 Mercury d me!&gt; 943 t~nd 1 936qut~ 1cr 1916 19~ 3 ~1 c'lnd «
hill dOIIMS IS s tver d m£&gt;s J tal l do tars 19 l)('nn es 190910 1919 1•
1930s pennies •e warn ckcls 6' t9•0s ))elln es and 113 19.SOs penn es
GAll! A CO UNT Y ITEMS Group mllfked c gar bo•es com
memorat ve &lt;~no po tea r bbons 3 d shes
DeMdOrft &amp; Poore
00 hp c ~ Adm B ClQ 0 HE fl ass c vClhO Clef!'. m1'1fk,d B Clwc
v ew and adverts ng plc'IICS 0 H Ramsey Chesh r e Gil II pols
whilrl Iron ! Harr s Cnur ch Harr sburq covered br dQe V nlon
Mf"lh 1961 Mustrr OilY pli!IC pamphleT lT e Ht~no nq of James lane
1890 Cf'l'11enn i'lf H story ol Gil pols 2 19t&gt;S Crn lenn al p1 111es Grace
Me h .:~nd ol11f' ~ BOTT L ES C A N Cl.!ly C 0 Kerr E L r'lcoln
Neal Or Lew s Bean Ga lt po s Bolling works J Jones Henk mQ
Bov e S vermiln Lev e C C M nk Cole niln Da ry Bu t cr Oil ry
Spr nqh II Gilll pot s Oa rv CarlO'&gt; N dill/ Baker Oa rr STONE
JAR S Stoc khofl Bros E l MenaQN u q &amp; SIOCkhofl 1 1lems
l rom L1'1fay&lt;'11&lt;.&gt; HolE' cook slove m.!lrked Treasure STOVE' Work s
several ds from Gall pols lour'ldcr ('!&gt; '1 II'~ kl!llles marked F W
DalleS Slf'
1 &gt;poon ildm b dQ OHE bus ness "'nd lrilde Cilfd!&gt;
bus nen lellcrhe"'ds old newspaper~ q ve &lt;~way Type advert s nq
tems slerl nq woon G~t l l pol s all the co mp l et~ work~ of W G
S bf'y fhc L l e of 0 0 Mclnlyr(&gt; iluiOQ ri'l p~d by lhe ll thor all ol
0 0 Mr nr~r r s books sev&lt;'rill terns rc ill no 10 0 0 M all !he
books havr. been autoqraphcd bv Mrs 0 0 Mcintyre 187~ Lan
downers Atlas of Gill I"' Co 18112 HardesTys Alia~ ot Gall a Co I)Oih
bOOks M e or Q na ls &lt;~nd n good cond I on cov~r l e t Signed J A Van
v f'Ck dont&gt; n red wn IP and b ue (nus Is ll r11re lem - one Of these
son d spli!'f al they Our Housel Manv of these have been loaoed tor
len 0nn al and 1or ary diSPfllys M sc old 71 records o I pa ntlng Of
member ol R qgs l am ly ca 1860 quIts postcards va entlnes g ass
paper we ghl mllrked Nash daguerreoTypes penc I bOM old bot
1 • s. 2 metal kraut cullers d"'ted 1918 sausage milt Art NoueauM
starue trunk J wOOd cash drawers h ckory spilt basket Cider press
f met11l parts only) picture frames wood kraut culler 2 sm oak tile
boxes sm modern snowcase lot oak turnuure frlm tot wa lnut trim
and knobs several sets old turn lure brass !ets fum lure castors lot
gl~e rbread lr m Jot wreck~ turn lure salvage
wal oak pop
cherr y useable tor repa rs tap ~sk 2 walnut mantels several glass
Da sey churns and parll old tin Items .,wter ttapot cal 1120 15
Pewter 1ray dated 1154 lot oak fable leaves H v R: R Jock
H V A A globe R R key l11roe coiiHtlon of different type k~ys ap
pte peeler 20 gal cooper kettle In tine condition old mi91Xinet
collec tion old buttons end other Items too numerousto mention
Plan to Spfl'ld the DIY IS ThiS I l l LU9t Sill
All Items mu1t be Re movH the Dly Of the S1111

't4f 2033

Oh Ca l ?B6 3074
18

Wanted

iODo- -

W II c are for el der l y man
or woman on our farm
pr v ale r oo m $700 per mo
Call 446 8163
Would I ke to do babys t
trng n mv hom e by day or
week Call 446 4380

BABYSITTING

cab1net QU ILTS

&amp;

QUILT TOPS There are eoght'"

a ll All appea r to be tn exce ll ent cond1t10n Most are

very old Jenny L1Md bottle box ol Roya l
Copenhagen 16 pes SILVER BARS milk glass
ptano bench platd c ha1r dave nport t ole tamp
tnla1d table 3 pc map le bed room hatr rece tve r
maple chest vantty and bench breakfast set

severa l moscetlaneous household otems NOTE All

my

304 675 27B4

Elnanelal
Bus1ne ss
Opportun_!IY

Bus ness or store room
Park Central Hotel

Bus ne ss bu td ng w1 th
go ng bus ness an d apt

$35000 992 3142
C garelle
Vend ng
Bu s ness Ca l l 304 773 565 1

mob
concesston
van
1974 le
GMC
1 1 ton truck
fully equ pped se lf c on
Ia ned I rm $3 0000 Phon e

304675 1712after s
22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or pur c ha se
your hom e 30 year fixed
rate WVa &amp; Oh o Leader
Mortgaqe 77 E State St
AfhPnS Oh S92 305 1
Hnve land" Want to hu ld"
N oth1ng down low nt eresl
no payment tor 6 month s
6 145923053
Proless .onat
Serv1ces

13

C&amp;L Bookkeep ng
Bookkeep ng &amp; t ax se rv cc
tor al l types of b u s1nesses
Caro l Nea l
446 3862
Wtndsh e td brok en" Call
Southern G lass In s urance
cia m s welcome
Free
mobile serv ce a vailable
Ca lf 446 101 1

P1ano tun n g and repa.r
Lane Dante fs Assoc1ate o f
Brun1card s
Ga lltpOI IS
and Cunn tngham s Athens
74'1 '195 1 or 992 2082
11

He lp Wanted

Sl 7BB 00 A MONTH
S447 00 A WEEK
S74 25 A DAY

Hamlin C King, Attorney

for the estate of Evelyn
L Doll Probate 117131

Auctioneer
M L "Bud" McGhee
Tetephon~ (614) 446-0552
TERMS Cuh or chkk with oroDtr I D All items to
be pald for belore removed from the oree Buyer os
responsible tor all Items purchased

Jim C.rnatuln
f4t 27,.

I

\

For sale Spac ou s 3 bdr
ranch st yl e home 1 b~lh
I v ng room d n ng room
kttchen laundry r oo n
2
3/ 4 acre
c ar garage
pr operty Cat I 997 S064 a f
fer 5PM

Custom
butl l
fur n
7
bd room Mob I(' tlom(' on
ren ted R ver fror 1 to t All
f" l ec
w lh c~.: ntral A C
ma ny
ex tr as
nc lud nq
8xl2 ". l or nq e b l r1q
w lh
wor k benc h A I cond Mu st
sec to app r ec ate Pr ccd to
sc tl Ca lt 304 7J 3 S680

75 K rkw ood 14 x70 ') bdr
ell I elecf r c new cnr p~ l
fron t end k ! c hen w 11 ap
ohanccs Loca ted n Q ua 1
Cr ee k Rod ney Oh Ca ll af
ter 4PM 745 S288
20K65 7 bd r
woodburner
stove ce nt a r nf'w c ar
ppl w lh 17x74 Q'lr lQC' r~p
pr o I 2 ~ c
loc_atrd Rnc
coo n Cree k Rd C HI 446
3810 111 rr 5
17x60 I twc!room 110IJ lc
o m t w th 7 lots G~'l t c1 t
rural wl l ('r Cl ost to f t y
I m IS ('Ill 446 1294

l

Mod er n hom e 2 bdr 5 r
by owner Fully carpe ted
well 1nsutat cd larqc lot
c ty sc nools Ca ll 256 6060
Take
over
pnym cnl':.
r emodc l f'd
3
N ew ly
n M cl
b ed roo m home
FHA approved
d lepo rt

Balance$23 000 992 5B41
N ew log hom e on r vcr
fr ont n M ddteport 446

1551

4 t urn shecl
/)d room
mob l e
h omp~
Browns
Tra cr P~rk MlnC'rsv lie
0 11 99') 332 4
196Q New Moon llx60
lr il l('r w1lh cx rBncm l v 1Q
r oom se t up rr' Jdy to t vf
n on I ;t r q( co r ne r tot n
Ml drllcport
C 11
997 7101
dur nq dily or 991 73 19 nit er
5p "

Ca l 614 9B5 435B

J

11x70

IWU OOm

1979
o 1f'
EX
304 S76 7490

L brr y mob IE 11 0m0
lW ('r
W II \ilcr I ( I

tr

1~

nc ludf'd

( r 30-l 675 747 4

Rod)VUC k
ous
er
II x51
Un
tu r n1sh ed Has stove and
rr&gt;fr,qe ralo r
Far cond
Mu s t be movect $ 1 100 Cilll
997 306Q b e l or e 9 p 1

Real E1tate -

General

l r.=~

NOTICE

VIRGil 8 SR
216E 2ndSI
Phone
I (614) 992 3325
OLD BUT NICE -

0

Lowest

Prrces
Ever
On

New 14' Wide

MOBILE
HOMES

8 , per ce nt
assumable
l oan one year old tr1 level
Meadowlan d
E s t a tes
$67 500 Call 304 675 1S7Q af
ter 5 PM
H ouse M eadowbroo k Ad
d t on 3 bedroom f am ly
room w th I replace cen
Ira I a r b.=~ se ment Ph one
3046751547

From
$9 995 00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
Wtth 1 lOCclhon s
Rf 93Nor th
Jack ~ on Oh o
786 37 52

HO US E l or Sdll l&gt;y o w nu
4 bedroom s ca ll l or 1p
po ntment PI one 30 1 675
3270nfle r 4 p m
THREE bedroom r ousf'
basement
1
ocrf' s o f
n r ou nd 30 4 675 3279

or
Corn er 7nd &amp; V 1and
Pt P l ca~~l nt w v~
67S &lt;1474

Real Estate Mobil e Hom e&lt;,
for Sa l e

CLE AN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KE SSEL S
QUALI TY
MOB LE
H OME

Must s.
lr'r 1 00

I Lakes 7 bd r
w'lshcr &amp; dry f'r
1 Cn l l 756 1906 " '

I Q7 3

H om e on 1 S acres loc ated
ilboul 5 m les north o f
Pomer oy tn Baum Ad
d t on Spl I level Pn try 3
bedroom s I baths I 'l m ly
room
w th
I u pt ace
Cu stom drapes tn 1 v1nq
room and d •n nq r oom
H e 'll p um p w fh cc ntrnl
a r
0 shw as hcr
tr ash
c ompactor
qar~q c
w th
au tomat c doo r opener
Many nt ce l ea tu res L ove ly
se tt1n g w th many tr ees

31

r co ne!

SALE 5

4

Ml

WEST GALLIPOLI S RT
3S PHONE 4.t6 3868
Ca lf Sk dm ore for m ob le
homes moved Green lawn
Transport
Call 446 '1783
days
446 3479
l ve nn q ::.
L ce n sed &amp; nsured

RUN -

General

CUSTOM BUILT
HOME
Fully

carpetsd

5 bed

rooms

2 h baths hvmg
room wrth woodbummg
ftrep lace
d nmg room
fam tty room utthty room
furn1shed krtchen atuc 3
porchet 4 acre lot 11ary pn
vate On lm co fn Htll
Shown by appotntment

CAU 992 6149
AFTER 6 PM

General

MODERN LOG HOME
W1th well wa t er l Br
117 ba th lg ftrepf.l ce
w/ Ftsher woodburner
b ea m ed
cathedral
ce 11ing full basement
wood/coa t/ otl lD 8 ac
mostly wooded
Near
Merccrvtlfe

S39 000
256 1S79

Real Estate -

General

FARM FOR SALE
26 ACRES SM HOME

2 bedrooms ltvong ' rm
w/ loreptace
w/ k otchen ex water well could be poped
on 6 acres tollable rest woods and
pa s ture Fruot trees large barn many
other outbtdgs oncludong toe house and
cellar 1 440 lb s tobacco base Secluded
yet on county road Near Mercervote
$18 000 Call256 1579

Reel Estate -

Genera l

CAR E DISTRIBUTORS
INC
9150 49th Stree t North
Ptneflas Park FL 33565

8

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Au ct1on

PUBLIC NOTitl

We 1re tryme to keep the cemetery
11 lel1rt hils la its ptewnl con
dthon but must depend on JOUr

•nlettsl and help to 11tsurt lhat
JOII' lot •Ill be bpt cltln lhts
Yll' Plust send check cash 01
moner otdtr to Clarence Noms
23262 HII ROJd ftacme Ohio

45771
SlO for One lot

$HOI\\ lol

THANK YOU
TheltWI Folb
C.met"J Truslees.

FARM AUCTION
SAT, MAY 15
11.00 A.M
Tu10 N oil R !46 b""""
AINn! &amp; IIWoo Ohoo 011to VIR
ton (o 43, hi lont to ""''
It'- II Villl...lltop Co. hntl

Gathpohs, Ohoo 45631

17 ..- 60
I ra II r
I lli Ce ll f'n
cond d on Ca l l 446 1557
Furn s hed a r cond 1 on~ d
undN~ no nq Sr' l up on lo t
n M ddlep o rt

Mobile Hom es
tor Sale

1 BOO 824 78B8

sander Several small tools

428 Second Ave

MOBILE

H OMES G all pols Pr cc
redu ced
u sed
mob fe
11omcs CALL 446 7S1'l

31

03

Ask for operator 26
or wrtte

floo r model Zen1th TV 12 gauge Rem1ng1on doubl e

Sale conducted by
'Bud" McGhee Au chon Co

Bea utiful br ck &amp; fr ame 3
bedroom hom e w tsc en c
v1ew
wood burn ng
f replace
forma! d n nq
centra l a r w t he at pump
Lansca ped
I
acre to t
w / lenc ed w .ba ck ya r d
$45 900
11% f nanc n g
smal l down paym ent Ca ll

On a total cash outlay
of S3 585 00 you ca n
control
an
S11 950 00
route of htgh ear nmg
vend 1ng
m ac htn es
ava tlabl e to ftnancJ ally
r es ponsible tndtv tdual s
seekmg a sa f e yet htgh
CASH
tncome
With
a m1n1mum of f•m e and
mon ey 1nvested
Deaf
wtfh an es tablished 5
year old company Ca ll
toll free

barrel 22 nfle S&amp;W 32 p1 stot Sears ss 15 nd1ng
mower Craftsman 3 7 cnam saw !Sears upn ght
freezer motor and gnnder ladders 8 &amp; 30 e tec

Dough las M Cowles, Attorney

TRI ST ATE

for Sa fe

Real Estate tammt Cl ark w 11 decora te
cakes for b rthdays an
n versar es et c No wed
dng c akes 9926145

hou sehold tlems lt sted are '"good cond tf1 on Lawn
mower 3 5 hp Electnc tnmme r refg elec range

Guardoan lor charles W Daft
Probatell713'

n

Lawn Mower &amp; Garden
Tra c tor Sa les loca ted at
Junctton of Rts 1 &amp; 35 1n
Kanauga
dong
good
bustness Owner wan ts to
ret1r e Ca l l.446 3670

O...-ecfton s from Gallipolis State Route 160 N E
past Holzer Ho sp1tal turn nghf on State Route 325 at
vmton contmue appro)( 11 t mt les S1gns w1fl be
posted
Wa lnut breakfront wal nut table 6 wa lnut c h a 1rs
w/ nut ca rv1ng washs t and spoon rack cherry tab e
s m all desk Emptre c hes t walnut dresser wa l nut
chest oak dresser base oak htgh c ha tr severa l
s m all tab l es lots of p1ctures (so me old) lamps
wash bowl and pttc her set 7 p c qud t m g frames
trunk lounge c ha1r w1 c k er cha tr vase sew1n g
basket open ba sket patterned g lass od l amp pa1r
g lass ca ndf est tc k s sma ll p1fc h er brass btrd cage
ftnger lamp large c lock blown glass egg tea ket
fi e bowl sptce c hest rose bill urn d epress1on g lass
cand testtc k s- amber hat p1n holder cond1m ent
fl at 1ron kett le f trestde se t b lue glass candtest1cks
la rge 1ron stone pttcher seve ral old books mu s1c

n

home 7 days. eve n ngs
days full or part t me
beh nd Ord ,na nce St. hoo t

71

Hom e~

31

Mobtle Hom es
for S;ale

446 3760
The S k House (custom
s l k fl owers)
Co mplete
br dal I ne w edd ngs and
all occas ons Call367 7566

5-22·82 PERSONAL PROPERTY 10:30 A.M.
ESTATE AND GUARDIANSHIP SALE

Not rt5pons,ble tor accidents or ton of property

,,

Karate th e uft1mate 1n self
defen ce a ll pnv a te l esson s
Men women &amp; c h1foren
tnstruclton thru black belt
Also ava table
Karate
u n form s pu c h ng and
k ck ng bags and protec
t ve equ pment
Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
Assoc tafes
Karate
Stud o
143
Burl ngton Rd
Ja c kson

PUBLIC AUCTION

AUCTIONE&amp;RS

Dan Smith

31

after 6PM I 2B6 5740

PUBLIC AUCTION

M

The Sunday T1mes Sentonei- Pa

Schools Instruction

Lawn Mow ng Serrve no
yard to b1g or sma ll hou se
pa nt ng &amp; roof ng and
l •ght haul.ng Call 446 3159

(Avprngf' 4 words per line)

Pub I c Noftce

UNIT PRICE

Masoo Co wv
Area Code 304

Me1gs Coun ty
Area Code 614

446-Galhpohs
367- Ches hlre
388-Vmton
14s-R to Grande
256-G uyan Otst
643- Ara bta D1sf
379- Walnul

8 1 Home Improvement s
82 P lumb ng &amp; Heat1n g
83 E xcava t ng
84 Elecr cal &amp; Refr q e ril l on
85 Gene r al Hauling
86 M H Repa1r
87 Uphol stery

6 1 FarmEqu pm€nt
62 Wc1nted to buy
63 Ltve stock
64 Hay&amp;G ra n
65 Seed &amp; Fertd 1zer

Pub lic Not1ce

DEPART M E NT OF
fRANSPORTATlON
Columbu s Ohto
Apn 17l 1987
Co nfr acf Si! ICS Lcgcll

Galha County
Area Code 614

&amp; ll ~estuEI!

11 He p W&lt;ln tNt
11 S tu 11 on Wan ted
13 Insur ance
14 Bu ~t n ess Trr1 n nq
I S sc noofs ns tru c l on
6Rado TV&amp;. C BRep&lt;~r
17M sc ellaneou ~
IB Wnnted To do

cover the

following telephone exchanges. ..

SetVIEES

Farm Sppplles

services

STA TE OF OH IO

71 Autos for Sa le
72 Trucks f or Sa le
73 Vans&amp;4WO
74 Motorcy c l es
75 Boats &amp; Motors
76 Au t o Part s &amp; Accessor es
77 Au to Repa1r
78 Camp ,ng Equ pment

page.&lt;~

Pubhc Sa te
&amp; Auction

8

PHONE I 614 446 414S

1ranspartatlan

surance Co has offered
serv ,ces for f re nsurance
coverage 1n Ga l•a County
for
alm ost
a century
Farm home and personal
p rope rty coverages are
ava1labte to meet 1n
d vidual need s
Con t act
Harry P tchford
agent
Phone 446 l.t27

614698 7 111

8

Insurance

SA NDY AND BEAVER In

I ve Call 742 2755 or collecl

OWNER MR TOM SAUNDERS

446-2342
PHONE 992-2156
675-1333

Ga ll ipOliS OH 45631

AVO N Be a success Se ll
Avon where you work or

Adm ss ons r epresent at ve
tor Gall1pol s Bus 1ness
Colltcge Salary plus bonus
Sal es eK per1encc he l pful
bul not necessary Phone
{614)446 4367 ask for Lee
Tyler lor nl erv ew

lS

Lady to share home w t h
w dow Mus t g1ve referen
ces Wr te P 0
BOK 10

Telephone soi1Cfor wanted
someone w1th good sence
of humer and nt ell gent
Call 446 4367 ask for L ee
Ty ler

SWIMM ING Pool Manager
needed at the New Haven
Sw mm1ng Poo l
and a
Willer Safety 1n structor
App l c .=~ t ons available at
H aven C ty
h e N ew
Bu ld n g 5th St Between 9
nm&amp; 4ptn

SAT URDAY MAY 29 1982- 10 OOA

junbaJJ ~imes- ientinel

12

Help Wanted

W Va

Alt1 I Ctnlolilll is ...,., 11001
VoniOII Co. IIIII 1lill sell Zllltlln
lllld I U01 ol llrm IOICtoiiMIJ
(ha-IC'bvtmooltlpl

ounllioc «dorl fona &amp; '"""ttr
IOitll; ~~~

IOOiiiiC: .., -

- trit .......... ""' ...,
llltt. ... ' tr-.
flf ..... illfonllltloo "" 411-

4263 ..........titlllldo!
Eats. c. f Stleriflll, lllct-

218 1ST AVE.-WHAT APLACE TO LIVE
Wha t a place to five- th e v•ew 1S outstandmg all day tong but es pectan v 1n
ffie evenm~ when the nver s npplmg current r efl ects the golden moonbeam
w1th a soft cool bree1e btowtng and all you h ave to oo 1S s t ana cn 1oy 1t
What a place to hve- wh en the chtldren can walk to sc hoo l the ball gam es
or th e playground and you can do all your shopptng or take .1 n even 1ng stroll
through the park and go to church an d never need a car
What a place to hve- You get the bes t locatton tn town ~nd one of the f 1ne
older hom es that dates back to so m ew her e a round 1840
What a place to hv e- when you can buy a hom e that so meon(' e l se spen t 8
months remodeling repatrtng rebutfdtng iind redecorattng Putt ng on a new
roof repafnng floors tnstalhng a bea utiful new oak k1tchen a new 3 zone hot
water heamg system 2 new b a th s all new electrtcal w•nng w1th 200 amp ser
v1ce new plumbing throughout and of course new carpetmg and floor
covenngs
What a place to l1v e - when the owner •s wtlhng to se lltt for l ess than he ha ::.
it because h1s employment requ1r ed htm to move out of area teavtng htm 10 a
bind but g1ving you an opportumty to buy an outstand'"g pr operty

'

-

Yes, what a place to Itve - It's romantoc, 1l's convement, of' s
outstanding structurally , ot's been completely rebulll and woll
be purchased by someone who knows a good buy when they s,..
one. Call Ike Wtseman for an appoontment to see ot at your CCIIIIvemence

'

�D-4-The

Times-Sentinel

Mobtle Hom es

3S

fo r Sal e
1 ~1 .1
~-.ooc1

MOBILE

41

HOM E

J bdr home in crty , no pet s.

r et Ca ll 446· 1158
TWO r epossessed m ob i l e
hom es, 81 m odel s, see at K
&amp; K M obile Ho m e Sales.
341 1 Ja ck so n Ave

' "l

Fur '-.rl lf' I &amp; J 1lN1r oorn
tr.rno(,hl' Cl. will l
·.-;., lo' r (,
,.., C111 JllJ l/J 56)1

41

THR EE bedroom house,
n rce loca t ion, refer ence
r efl urrPCI 304 675 1090

HOU!i CS for Re nt

5r Muse wrlh batn, Org
QMMtC. good
locn t ro n
1nqu rr c c=~ t 918 Second live.
Grl llrpolr s

19HI /• Ll fLEC fRt C 17"
1/vrOE ,
J
BEDROOM
•lrnh li&lt;' h o rnP sc 11 1nn on lot .
r C' ncty !O rn ovf' rn t o $8995
10°o clo wn . BA N K FI N A N
( t N G AVAILAEllE . ) 04
ll6 7711

LOV EL Y 6 room co ffaqe rn
coun try , $225 . per month
with 1 month sec urtty
depost t Loc ated 79 J•m
H i l t Road , Henderson, WV .
for rn f orm a t ion call80 3 884
454!l

4 ocoroom , cen tral a tr ilnd
heal. cr ty wa ter . lr r cp lacc ,
un fur nrshcd
except
ktl
chen
$300 month plus
ut r ld rl' ~
Re fer en ce an d
dcp os ot
req urr pr!
In
Rae rnc 949 :'/93

Lot&lt;. &amp; Acre.1gc

IH &lt;l C rf' ~ l or Scllf' Loys nrce,

rne,Htows &lt;~nd woodlnnds ,
98S 41 16

s 10.000

Mu st Se ll~ 3 bed room ranch rn th {' cou ntr y, arr
condtloncd , fully c.1rpe tc d, f ull b,Hemcnf, wr th
21x1J r ec room , g.1r.1 ge, over 1 acre Excell ent
l oca tt on cl ose to M e1gs Hrgh Sc h oo l rn Filtrvtew
Hi s., Po m eroy Prrce below lllMk et wrth iiSSumab le
lo.ln at 11 °t. . SS2,500 . Ca ll 992 -S348 .

LMQC' tr ,lilf'r lot for rent rn
M l ctcJi rport Cn ll 992 / 101 or
9 Q'} '2319

Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

41

r e nt hous e

1

n

H ouses for Rent

3 bd room , 'l stOry. Bath
and 1J, refn g, and stove,
furn , newly redecora ted,
good res id ential area ,
$300. mo $400. deposit. 99 2
'1361 between 3 and 6.
POMEROY . 105 Spring
Ave Nr ce liv e room house
with two bedroom s, bath,
lrvtn g room , dming room,
kitchen with stove and
refngator furnrshed . Ba ck·
yard . Srorm w indow s, rn
sulated . for ced arr furna ce
make utrlrtres low during
hea t rng season . $165 per
month
r e nt,
sec urity
deposrt $100. Adults, no in
srde pets. Phone 992 5192 ,
after 5 weekday s, anytrme
weekends .

42

H ouse f or r e n t 2 bd . room .

a l l new pa tn t. som e carpet.
a range in kitc hen, no in

Syrilc use . 992 7896

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobil e hom e for rent . Ca ll
446 4225 or 446 0756.

side pet s, d epos it required

992 3090
42

Mobil e Homes
for Rent

Mobil e home for rent . Ca l l
446 3101 aft er 5PM .
12x65 m odern &amp; clea n.
bdr ., furntsh ed, ut il iti es pd
exce pt for electric Con
ve n1ent loca ti on on Upper
Rrver Rd . across from
John Dee r e Tractor Sates.
Sec dop r eq . Ca ll 446·8558
after 5.
2 bdr . unfurn1shed mobtle

hom e 12x60. r ef. &amp; dep. r eq.
On Rl . 35 Ca l1446 4229

Ni ce furn1 shed mob ile
home. central air, 1 m •
be low city over look1ng
nver , adult s only Call 446
0338

2 bdr lrf'l!ler f or r ent, no
clrunks Ci! ll 379 243 5
1 bdr trad er furn rs t1ed.
C'ldults on l y , Brown Trailer
Pa rk . 992 3324

Mobile H om e, 1 bedroom ,
furn •shed , atl elec tr i c,
washer,dryer hookup, $175 .
month l y p lu s e lec tri c tt y .
304 576 2441 .

2 bd room M ob rle llom e fur
nrsh ed
Pnr d
u lilrl tl'S,
loca ted 1 a no 2 l enth smrte s
on
Rt
14 ) , d e p osrt
r equ1red . ndutt s on l y or
cou pl e with one child A ft er
5 992 3641

m i le out Sa ndhill Road ,
Poi nt Pleasa nt Phone 304
61S 3834 .
J •

Two or 3 bedroom mobil e
Home s, Furn rshed or un
furnrshed .Phone 304 675 ·
1371 or67 5·38 12

F~rm~

43

44

CANADAY
REALTY

A PARTMENT S
bedroom, r en t starts at
$152 per mon th '2 bed r oom
starts at $188 per month .
Spec h11 rat es fo r Senior
Cdrl('nS . Cal l 446 27 45 .
Jackson EstaTe s
Furnished apt
bdr .,
adults, S200. etec trrc, wa ter
paid Call 446 4416 after
I PM .

for Rent

PASTURE for r en t, 40 or 50
head ca ttl e, no horses, good
fenc e, abu ndan ce of water
&amp; grass. 304·675 1269.

Reel Estate - General

Real Estate - General

HOME FOR SAlE BY OWNER

bd r oom .
P o m e roy 7
rem odeled. 408 Sprrng
( rtrpf' IN I sec u rd y clcpos d
$100 Rc n! $195 Cn ll ,l f tc r6
p m 99) 2788

May 9, 1982

.• ~ .. c: Pc;lor Re~t

J bdr . d e lu xe hom e, cxc . 4 For

TW O ocr c lots 150 II road
lr on1og (',
c rty
wa te r .
b e ~1rnd 84 Lu mber . co l i 304
615 6813. 615 3618

MOBILE HOME S MOVE D
L o(('rl 5NI 8.
rnsu r NI Call
lO-t 57 6 1711

w. Va .

Hou ses for Ren t

neighborhood, pool, ce ntr a l
a1r Ca ll 304 67 5 5104 or 675
5386

446 1194 .

Slrl ) ! I I

JS

Real E1tate - Gttneral

to d.t,y lunds, $4,850 00 Ca ll

99/ 3917 clft er 5

USED

Loh &amp; Acreage

/IO ISw 11h rural wa ter c l ose

Hll tcrcs t 7 bedroom
cond . mu s t SPI I

~4.800

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipo li s, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

Furnrshed 3 r . with pr ivate
bath
845 Second Ave .,
Ga ltrpol• s Ca ll 446·22 15
Fu rnr shed apt ., 2 bdr .,
$275 , Ut i l i ti es pard Child
OK . Call 4A6 4416 after
IPM

Apartm ent
for Rent

Fu rni shed one bedroom
apa rtment , ex tro ni ce,
adu lts only . No pet s Phone
304 675· 1386.

Furn1shed eff1cie nc y $135,
ul ilrtres pd , one person
Ca l 1446·4416 aft er 7PM

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636'
-Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 Locust Sl, Gallipolis, Ohio

OFFICE 446-7013

CENTENARY - S43,500 - Thr ee bedrooms, l'IJ
bath ranch Cozy fam i l y room with fir epla ce . You' ll
l ove fhr s fr iendly neighborhood ju st a few minutes
from Ga i !Jpo ll~ . Ne ar l y one half acr e leve l l awn .

3.2 ACRES
New contemporar y brr ck &amp; c edar ran
c t1 w o!tl ,1 m rlt :on cJoii M vrew 1 IU J.~ 1n t r OTC I to b C'
rl S~unw cJ t Qu 11l l y burl ! homf' E xt f'llf'n ! IOCcl i 10n
W t1,11 f'ISf' cou ld you wnnt1n ,1 11ornr")

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve,-Ph. 446-0971
. Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408,.,

RIVER "V I EW - S38,00C - Beautiful view of th e
Ohro and only a few m tl es tram city, immacu la te
br1 c k ranch , fully ca rpeted, large ea t in krtchen
with doubl e_oven r anqe. ni ce fr on t porch ond pa ti o,
black top drrve, stor aqe building . Cr ty sc'hoo l s

TH I S IS A STEAL!
til only 7.SOO down paymen t you rr1n buy th rs
!rl ul 3 bed r oom br1 ck ran ct1 Sl t1 1flCJ on 3 acres
sc(' nr c w oodlnn cl Nr ce pond , oil l encPd Only 9°o
In ! R,Jte You cn n' l berl t ~ dcallrkl' lt11s one'
LO A N ASSUMF' T I ON
OW N F R ~ AY~S FLL NOVV•
You r o~o l n'nv c 1n IU'-. 1 on lrmr' I n f'lli OY lllr '-.Unl nler
,l ll (! OtrOI lH ll]6 L,"l ll ("(,&lt;._ ,lp1 rl qr ou ndc, n o (~' p~l l o n
,HI ' d c~nrt q,1c, qr 1l l llf' ,lu lil u l 1
1()!1\ o· tormc1 1 r11flon(l
roorn r•n1rv &amp; II Vrl\( 1 r oom woll' w b lrr! ·p l,tr 1•
F rllllol y &lt;&lt;ul n' 0n nldon lluo1 l ,uq~ rt '( roor n ,ln(l
W ll t rrr ·pl,l t r· 1n h,l'\t rnrn t 1\ (jlt,d dy l l url t 1 ' 0111 ~ · rn
o•xc t·rl •·n r t nr utrtron

GOOD CITY LO CAT ION
Co?y ) BR rrt nch wr tll
full 1J&lt;l'-.l' '1H ' rl1 &lt;1ilCI lrl rqo ' tcncf'cl ~ o t l ow ut rlr l rcs
On ly
$29.SOO

1

ON ! Y $7.000 00 DOWN PAYM E NT
p,1yr1wn 1 ot S353 l1 w olh tax es anU rr l ':&gt;
3 /wcJr (10m r,tn c tr Cct lltor more de l arl s

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

RIO GRA NDE
Lov ~ · ty .\ 1Jr'c1 ronm t1o rnC' . ctrnrnn
r oom. l rri ' Picl &lt;1 lull 1J,l SP!llf 'rll . 7 { ,1r qnr,lctC'. cPn
lr rll il rr owne r wdllrn,t ncf' wrt11 clown p,lyn1cnl
ll 15SS

M on 1t1ly

I', yr s old

14 2 A(R E:l
Gut•tl IHHnr ' WIH1 4 1&gt;f'Ci roomc,, bcl lll
w rtt 1 &lt;, tro wer t u lly c .trpr •tr·c1. '! t,t uw 1JMns, tobn cco
brl&lt;;(' , I ~ cl\rf'"&gt; bo ll nm 1,1nct
p 1009

f i r lOP S H APE '
Ju o., T ,I ollh · l)rl ·!t wr ll1,11l 0.,(1 !ll,H1y Modern 3 4
hl '(l! '"' Ill IH o( k II()PW Forrn ill loVI ()(j &amp; drnr ng room .
Lcl!•i'" koli 11&lt;"1' Fu l l 11ol '-. \' 1Tlf'n t LrH (JI' ') CN r garaqe
W(lo l&lt;. o., l ltl tJ &amp; 11,1rn S1t l1nq on 5 A clf ' o•&lt;, mor e or less.
ii i l,ti1(h&lt; cliWd w nund ... Sprl llq W•l l lw tJrl' A1111(&gt;&lt;:)&lt;,
l1t"! &gt;"' Ow rwrwdll •,·ln f on,Jil(l' l0°o ln l R,l lc

4 A CRES
N rCf' rolhnq lrtn ct on F toyct (lclrk Rd
8C'rtu l rf ulhurlc1rnq &lt;; rt f' PrtcP rt'riU CC'Cl
11 t012

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Nella Smith, Assoc. 388-8649
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162

)44 lH1RO/\ V r
'l' f•t1 non I WiHll 10 &lt;, fwnd l oTs on '" l 1xrnq "&gt; ! llf'll !Ill&lt;;
rnvt ly nl&lt;!&lt;·r honw ,~, !nr yo u Complr l &lt;' nr ·w k r ! r ~wn
&amp; • ,J fJ.-rrf', F orrn&lt;ll (lrrl rnq &amp; I1 VIH! rnnm F ,1 mily
room wrn·1 wn ncHJurnl'l" J twc trr 1n!ll&lt;, nP w v 1 nyl
". 1fi11 H18. &lt;; TOrfn wonctnwo; Cornplr ' Tr •ty lno;u l r1 1f'cl Fu ll
h,l (, f"' !llf'n l ~o nq l&lt; ( ,l r (/clrCI(Jf •

John Fuller, Realtor, 245-9473

Real Estate - General

Apa rt ments 675 5548 .
APARTMENTS , mob ile
h o me s,
h OUSE'S,
Pt
Pl easant and Ga llipoli s
614 446 8221 or 614·245 9484 .
Apa rtme nt s, furn ished and
unfurn1 s hed .
Po i nt
P l er~sa nt
Ref e r ences. 304
675 1365 .

____

FR EE GAS - Sup er mobrle hom e
1979 m od e l
l 4x70 p lus 7x'24 Ex pc1nd o 3 bedrooms , equtpped kri
cllf'n . plu s cc~r pc t Cur tarns and d r apes , d1net1 e se t
6 ncrc K voer Cr eek area A s teal at S27 ,900

iJO,OOO
w rll buy a ne&lt;1rly new 3 bedroom r anch
t1 omP . full y cclrpclcd Ca rport On over an acre
K yq c r Cree k Sc hools Ca ll soo n for nn ap pornl ment

TYCOON LAKE : Relax in the tr anquil sur roun
dings of Mother N ature in ei ther one of two, 2
bed r oom mobil e homes situ ated nea r T ycoon
L ake . Sur veyed lots with trees and orner
am enities ... Pri ce d fr om $ 12,900 00

BULAVILLE ROAD - Sl 25.000 - Prt me buildrnq
s1tes, 137 ac r es. Fron1aoc on Bu lnv dle, Morton
Wood s nnn Ya le Co ll ege R o~1d s 60 il c r es tillable . 15
pa sture. r est ltmber N rce 3 BR ra nc h home, e" t m
krlchen , storm doo r s and w rnd ows K yq('f" Creek
Sc t1oo ls, 6 mrles frnm cr ty

s:.)Q . 700
J be droom r anc h home neM Rro G rand e
LM qr com brn a t ron k rtchen rtrnrnq room L eve l lot
w 1th ff'n Cf'd bilck yMd 1 car gnraqc
i l8 ,000 ME I GS COUNTY - 3 bedroom double wrdc
wrlh fulllhlsc mcn l 7. ba lll s Larqe lot

COLONIAL HOME loca t ed wi lhrn Ph mi les from
Ga llipoli s Owner will ei ther rent or se ll. 3
bedroom s, 1 111 ba th s, l arge family room . c ity
water .
WELL BUILT BRICK home loca ted in Ga ll ipol is
city . Property ca n be used for residentia l or com ·
merc ial purposes Own er wi lt help fin ance to
qualified person ... Ca ll tor more rnfor ma t ron .

LOTS - OWNER FINANCING - 3' 1 l ot s 1n c rt y
Exce ll ent nerghborh ood $2S,OOO F1nance wttti
SS. OOO d own , balrmce at l4°o f or 15 Y C&lt;'~rs Monthly
paymen t $266 .35 .

ONLY $5,000 DOWN
Bala nce a! 17°o , 70 year
lf'rrn . S7'20 77 mon thl y pav ment 3 bed r oom hom(' on
1
1 ; l ots tn Vrllaqe of C h es h~ re Hom e ha s vtnyl
srdrnQ , fo r ce d arr Q&lt;l S furna ce 1 cu ga rage $25,000

J BEDROOM HOME si tuat ed near c it y
timit s ... large garden area .. we lt kept property , c i·
ly water . Prr ced i n 40s .

CHILLI CO THE ROAD - S13,000
Three room s
and ba th co ttage in exce ll en t c ondition Ha s a lum .
srding and l arge storaqe burldinq Conve n1 ent
loca t• on .

3 BR , f ormal drn 1ng,
SUBURBAN TWO STORY
lnrq e lrvtnq roo m , super wood deck
very nr ce
area tor f amily Kyqer Cr ek Schoo l s. $41 ,000 .

+

UPPER RIVER RD .
2 stor y, 4 bedr oom, large
lot ... 3·car garage ... Owner inter es ted m trad rng for
tarm .... Call f or m ore inf ormation .
RENTAL S: 2 apts , one up, one down, r ent for
S175.00 and $125.00, adults only , no pets

Real Estate - General

RF NTAL HOU SE: Prne Str ee t

Reel Eatate - General

f\ro~

cr · (!. uc tr oncer
Lt F r

1NSURAN Cr
478 ~eco nd Ave
(.111 446·055 2 .tlnytrm('
BMR 411 - 3 bedroom hom e 3 miles f rom c ity
Owner w ill consider fi nancing Situated on l ar ge f! a l
to"t. vrn'(l srding &amp; na tur a l ga s hea t . Carpor t wrth
stor age a r ea . Ca ll tor del arts!
BMR 412 Older hom e loc ated rn
Thurman Contarns 7 room s and ba th , 2 ftr epla ces,
prof essionall y .n statled wood burne r , for ced air f uel
furn ace. Outsrd e fea tures a ga r age and i! screened,
summer kit chen with bUd! in gri ll Ca ll for ap
pointment
BMR 139- OWN ER FINANCING! Two story hom e
on Second Ave ., 3 or 4 bed room s REDUCED~ Be t
ter see th is on('

POMEROY

BMR 402F - CHE CK ON THIS ONE - 37 acres
w ith 1401 lb tobacco base , 30x30 barn Ca ll today !
BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION! - Two sl ory
home prese ntl y being used as a duple_
x , coul d _be
easily conve r ted to sr ngle fam i l y . C ~o;ce loc atron
near Washington School Ca l l tor deta1 ls .
BMR 409 - OWNER F IN AN CIN G - Th• s sp Hl
toy er home in c lu des 3 bedr ooms, 2 full ~at hs, large
den w ith fireplac e, heal pump . See tht s full y car
peted home now. Located in Crown C1ty!
BMR 391 - REDUCED! - Owner wan ts i t so ld
nbw ! Mobrl e h om e located on rrver fr ont tot .

.,

EASTERN DISTRICT - Large lot with
2·3 bedr oom 12x60' mobil e home with
add· on rooms. Pa rtly furnished . Neat &amp;
c lea n. $19,500.

.
- A four bedroom house
1 all ~he room yOu need. Large lot
Forced a or heat . $35.000.
·

B-~R

398 - GE T READY FOR SUMME R ' Owner
transferred and must se ll thi s 3 B R ran c h. Cl ose t o
town includes de lu xe 18x36 tnground pool. Ca ll for
an appointment today! ,
BMR 407F - camp· site Pote ntial! 32 acres m / 1wit h
fr bntage on Raccoon Cr . as We ll as fr ontage on
blacktop highway .

1 - Acre Lots - Ridgewood Subdivision
- ~ear Pomeroy, electric and wate r
ava.table start at $3.500 on good
ltlnestone road - no si ngl e wide mobil e
homes.

lO'xSO' MOBILE HOME on two lots two bedrooms. Gas forced air heat.
$9,000.

One Acre Lot -

One acre lots -

MIDDLE
land con ·
. tracllhls oew three
horrie, lull
basement, 2'11 baths, app,rox. 1 acre lot.
900.

POMEROY Two bedroom home
already approved fOr V .A . loan . Good
location. $23,900.

BMR 410 - A -fram e situ ated on a bea utiful wo_
oded
setting , you wi ll l ov e the atmosphere . Owner frnan ·
ci ng tor qualifi ed buyers. L ow 30' s_.

1 - Acre Lots - Nea r Five Points - On
Pav_e d County Road , e lec t r ic and water
ava.table. $5,000 .

IIMR 413FJ - Mini farm located ;us! off lhe Ap·
palachian highway near Ja cksOn . 3 112 acr~s _m / 1
with an olde r two BR hom e, se_vera! ~utburldmgs
lust-right for leisure time or full trme lt vtnQ .

1 - Acre Lots - Dorcas - Electric
water, gas avail abl e. Want $6 000 Fou;
sma ll _lots in Pomeroy , Cond~r Street,
ele~tnc and water , gas sewag
ava•lable. Want $8,500.
e

BMR 414 - 12x60 tilobile home si tuat ed _on a 1 acre
t lot. Includes-furniture , has rea~ pat•O w / cover,'overed front deck, 12x24 garage w1lh storage.

Route 7 Bypass - Could be commerc ial lot -

6.3 Acre Parcel 511,000.

BMR 415 - Just L.istedl Extra nice bi -level, _in·
eludes 3 bedrooms, lg. family room l"ith briCk
fireplace, 18x21 l i ving room , eat-rn k rtchen, !9 ·
IJtility room . and garage. Situated 'On lar ge lot. C•IY
school district. Call lor details!

want $6,000.

County Road 19, el ect"ric available, dri l red water well on site. wanf
.

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(Answer~ MondAy)

Yeslerday·s

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COCOA WIDEST HERMIT
Anawer: Moat duela are rather shor1 affairs because
theyanlyrequlretht s-TWOSECONDS

Jumb6aa: SLANT

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REALTV Inc.
J!i/1 ~ JitiWiica

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

STYLE
ELEGA NCE
A WAY OF
Ll FE - Frr s t lim e on th e mMk et for
l ht s trke new con temporary , J o r 4
B R ' s. 1 bath s. la rge open LR wrt h
fir eplace &amp; bea m ed cetl •nqs, ktlchen
rncludes r an ge, DW &amp; r c frrq , lui!
bcl Se ment , wrap around de c k . Cf'd,tr
srdtnq , 11x24 obove ground poo l
qoraqe, barn &amp; 10 ncres near E urckn
C1t y SChOO l S
LOVF. LY AR l O&lt; &amp; FRAMF RA N ·
CHF R plu s 78 ACRES o l lr:~nct rn
ChPShJ rf' Tow nshtp of fer s l ots of qooc1
l1vrnq l or your qrowrnq fnm rly Homf' rs
tu st l1kc new wrnl 1438 sq f1 ot trvrnq
nrert plu s nn n ttc=~ c he d q,lrMif'
'2
SPilcrous BR "(, , 7 h ilt h ~. 8x7J LR , 10x2 4
krt Chf'n wrlll rc lr rq . dtSp . DW . cloublf'
oven &amp; rnnq c , wnsher &amp; dr yer stoy s rn
lnundrv LnncJ r&lt;; mosrly r ollrn (l nn o; tur f'
l.'lnrl wr th appr ox '2 5 nc r es w onc1NI (n i l
t or npporntm ent
GREE N TOWN SHIP - CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 11 2 acre fnrm hr! S Iron
tage on Sratc Route 588 Fa rrfreld Ce n
t enary Road &amp; Vanco Fa•rfrrlct Rd Ex
cc ll ent for f armrnq or devclo p mcnf
O lder S rm &amp; b &lt;1 th fnrm home . bMn &amp;
s il o rnc tuo ed Owners wrll co nsrder
sc iiJnq sma ller tra c ts of shor t term
fi nancing . ~a ll tor more · ~formr~~r o n .
COU NTR Y, YET CON VEN I E NT Greaf fnmrty home wrlh 3 BR . '2 b&lt;Hh s.
15x27 LR wrth qas firepla ce, lnrqc
modern krfchen wtth ran ~t c. se lf
c leantnQ oven. OW and dr sp , l aundry
rm . wtth wa sher and dry er. pan bnse
mPnt , large c overed patto, q.uaqe and
ove r 6 acres of land at the edge of JOwn
GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m / t,
loca ted souTh of Mcr ce rvdl e, App r ox 20
A til la ble , balan ce woods . lob . bose
Owners wr II help trn ance
S200 PER AC R E - Gr een f re ld Town
shi p , 84 acres M L , app ro x . 10 A bot
tom , 35 A wooded, 3S A s trtpp ed . small
cree l&lt;, exce ll ent hunt 1nq
TOTAL
PRIC E $16,800.
ROOM TO ROAM - ThiS love ly br1ck
ranch offer s tot s of good ltvrng for your
growrng family . 3 BR ' s, 1 1J baths, large
kitc hen &amp; LR , form al dininq rm , 2
fi r eplaces , wood hurning , stove, ce nt
atr, garage, full basement w1 f h f am tly
rm ., bar &amp; l aundry . Located on apor ox
1 acr es on Sta te Route 554 between Par
t er &amp; E no. Prrced to se ll at $59 ,500
BUILDING OR MOB IL E HOME SIT E
- Ap pro x 517 ncres located on the
Grn ham Schoo l Rd, co water , over 300
tt rd frontnqc, Gr een Grnde Sc hool &amp;
Gn llr a Academy H1gh Sc hool SI0 ,900

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABL E Remodeled home in cl udes 5 rm s. and
bath ,
ca rport.
sto ve,
r ef r1 g ,
di shwasher , mobil e home pad . A lm ost
6 ac r es on 588 , 2 mi . from town
$30,000 .
NEAR "CADMUS - Forty ac r es, ap·
pr ox . 111 till ab le a nd 'h woods. old 1
stor y f arm home in need of r epai r s,
b arn , sheds, fronts on 141. Owner
financing ava il abl e at 10% .

L.ot in Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers Plains s•fe. $6,000.

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HlO'x200', water, electric. septic tank on
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BMR 417F -

\II nest
~I' in

Lot In Pomeroy 66'x1~6 - Hlllside_p'l-operty, al_lulilltles · commercial area . 14.300.

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LOG CABIN- Very un ique, old hand
hewn tog beam s, sleepi ng loft, l arge
stone fireplace, modern barn , 14 acres
woods, loca ted in the Wayne N at ional
Forest, 20% down .

GAS STATION &amp; G,IIRAGE - 131 11
fr on t on St a te Rout&amp; 554, c t:;~r n e r tot ,
over 3100 sq ft ., 5 bays, presently used
for iiU to, tr actor &amp; fa rm equipm ent
r epa ~r s, parti al f1 n anc mq available
THE
SETTING 15 SU PE RB
B ea ut1tu11 .8 acre wooded lot o n the 0 J .
White Rd ., 311 f t . lronlage. 12x65 2 BR
m ob il e home W1th ex pand o Pri ced to
se ll at $12,900.
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY shO uld
describe thi s l ovely 3 BR bn ck ra n ~h.
Specia l features are a l a rg e LR &amp; dtn
ing rm ., equipped kitchen, 1111_ baths,
laundry, quality carpet, cent . a1r &amp; an
oversized 2 car garage. Located on U .S.
35 West &amp; shown by appointment .
AFFORDABL-E FARM - 91 4% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - Nice remode led 6 rm .
&amp; bath home, WB firepla ce, stov e,
r~~rlg ., cellar house, 3 sheds, 50 ac res
m / 1, approx. 15 A . c leared, &amp; b~lance
wooded . Loc"ated near Eureka rn the
city school dist . $38,900.

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OAK DRI VE
BELOW MARK E T IN TEREST
Ow r1e r s m oved . mu sl SP II now Onr ol
the arco 's t1 nest nc rqllbu rh oulb Co n
venrenl l o to mos t evcryth1nq ,:me! Px
ce llenl l or c hddren 4 bcctr oo m b1 l ev£'1
rnclud cs 7 1 '
b&lt;11tl , famdy r oom.
firep l ace . drnH1Q r oom . eQurpp('d kr l
chen . de ck. '2 car ONrr1QC and co rn er l ot
$69,900 tmmedrnt e po s~ css r o n

4TH AVE .
JU ST LI STED - ONner s hnv e r eccn
UNUSUAL NEW LI ST IN G
Owner moved to Texas and mu st se ll t l y put,., tot f o work rn to th rs a ttr nc trve J
thcrr residen ce at 628 4th Ave wrth bedr oom brrck rn K C Sc hool DrS 1
r ental unrl on Sth Ave Th e ni ce o lder Nearly 1600 sq II ol lrvrnq ilrf'rl rn
W1ltl for ep la cc ( Bu c &lt;~.
home has 4 bedrooms and rn c tu des c lu deslrvrnq r oom
1
for mal dtnrng, l arge k!lchen , f am ily stov e rn scr t ). 1 J ba th s. Iaroe kr l c hcn ,
e nnd J ac r es
room , 1 bath&lt;&gt; and full ba se m en t Ren uld r rn , Jl ; cnr QilrclQ
0
tat hou se has living rm ., kll c hen , wtlh fenced yard R o assuma ble m to
bedroom, ba th a nd carport Ren t s for P r1 ce drn SO ' s
$100 00 Buy evc rythrnq tor $69 ,500

EVERYTH IN G YOU ' LL N EED
A PR I CE YOU CA N AFFORD
You mus t see a ll ttw ext ra s thr s frn e 3
bed r oo m hom r offN s Locn tf'd 1n c rty
schoo l dis lr rct. th rs ran c /1 !lo s n
bea ulrfut krt chcn w ilh Qu ali ty Crl brn ets.
ra nqe &amp; oven . d1shw.Jshcr &amp; co m
p.lc l or . t rr epla cc rn lrvtn g r oom . ! 11
ba th , lull bclSf'm ent . fam ily r oo m .
qaraqe ,tnd l8x36 rn t~round pool hUCJf'
covered deck ancl J 4 ac Only $53.900

.

we are
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PRICE REDUCEO TO S69,S00 ' BUY
B EL OW REP LACEM ENT CO ST Over
1100 sq ft ov ltv rnq il r ea T hrs all brrc k
r r~nc h e r ott ers 3 BR 's ( milster 1S 16x 22 ) ,
3 baths, 15x24 LR wilh frrepla cc. 13x'25
! amrly rm. 1orm at arnrnq rm . qa 11ey
kd c t1 en mclud cs double oven s. c ornrng
t ype cou n ter top r anqe , DW &amp; dr sp . qns
hea t , cen t ntr , M i re f&lt;1n &amp; m ucll m or e.
Loc ated '" tow n on Spruc e St Ex
tensron Call Rilnny Bl ac kburn t or N
pe r so nal sh owrnq

\ 1,000 DOWN PAYMEN T on l hrS Ohro
R •vc r v~ew property Ap pr ox B clcres
wooded la nd on Rou te 7 and 5 mr souTh
of tow n Owner wrll fr nnnce b&lt;li Ci nce n t
10°o

HUNTER S PARADISE - 48 acre s m / 1
on Rrtc coon Cree k near Ewr nqto n, ap
prox 10 A . t il lable, bal ance wood s, 1' ,
st ory log co llaq e, ce llar hou se, 11x l 5
m etal buddrnq, cx tr rt n1 ce 14x70 2 BR, 2
ba th mobile 11 ome A ll thr s to r ltle
askinq pric e of S39, 400

MUST SELL T HI S MONTH to se llle
est a te. Tht s very n1 c e br rc k ranch of
fer s over 1900 sq ft of mod ern l ivt nQ
P L U S an overs ized '2 c nr gn r aqP
Fea tur es ar e 3 BR. 1' J bath s, LR , large
k rt c hen &amp; d1nrng area w 1th buil t i n
range , oven, DW &amp; disp., l 5x27 famrly
rm . wi th f i re p l ace, cent a~r . ce ntral
vilcuum &amp; a tarqc flc1t ot near Rodney
$59,500

ASSUME 811°'o LOAN - L ove ly ranch
a t t he edq e of town is pnced to se ll at
S49 ,900 F ea tur es ar e 3 BR . I '' ba th s,
lar ge LR w!lh WB fir epla ce. moder n
kit c hen &amp; drning area. lnunrJry rm ..
qarage &amp; oa s hea t . Ca ll tor ap
porn tm en t

BEEF CA TTL E CO UNTRY
1J)
acres m / 1, m os tly c l en n hrll pils tur e,
qood f ences, 1' ; story h om e, IMQe
barn. lob ba se, front s on J r oads neM
Mud soc k . Prt ce r edu c ed to $6 4,000
GENTLEMA N'S FARM - 33 c1C r es m / 1
on State Rout e 160 ncar North Ga llra
H• gh Sr hool. Mostly clean r oll!n q
qra ss land, s tock pond, 3 BR ran c t1type
hom e w1th fut I ba eme nt, good barn out
of town owne r s. says SELL .

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WALNUT TOWN SHIP
Beet. hay &amp;
grain f arm 80 a cr es, m / 1, approx 35 A
good cropl and. 10 A woods , ba lance
pa st ure, good f ences. 9 rm / bnlh, home
was bu rtt rn 1872 &amp; ha s been partially
remodeled, 50x50 ca t tl e bar n w rtt1 con
cre te floor. tar qe sil o wrth nuto.
unl oade r , sevcri'll sheds, lnrq c pond,
sprinq s, s tan d1n q crop s go to new
owne r

HUNTIN GTON TOWNSHIP
176
acres m / 1 vaca nt lan d , front s on Ra e
coon Creek &amp; th e Tom G len Rd Appro)(
31 till ab l e &amp; the balan c e wooded Und er
$400 per acre .

BES T BUY IN T OWN - Sty li sh 2 story
hom e was built tn 1894 an d must be seen
to appr ecia te L ar ge open f oyer and
sta1rway , LR, dtnrn g rm ., parlor. com·
pl ete ly eq uipped mod ern k1tc t1 en, 4
BRs, 2111 bath s, new srd1ng , garage,
nea r schools, shoppr ng , etc

RODNEY CORA ROAD - Approx . 24
acres woodland, l ocated 3 mi fr om
Rodney,
coun t y wa ter ava il ab le.
$12,000 .

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE
20% down - Campsites in the W ayne
Nationa l Forest . 5 to 8 acre tracts
wooded land, good hunting. Pri ces start
at $3,500.

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INQUIRE ABOUT OU.R·.FREE
REFERRAL SERVICE
.. .

BMil 416 - Want a nice 3 BR 'ancti style home with
a top of the ground pool, including a possible 8.50%
mortgaQe assumption, If so, ca tl now.

Happy Hollow, Rutland . Want $3,500.

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Prlntanswerhere :

'j
A

640 DEENIE DR
A ttra c t•v e &lt;l
bed r oom br \ev C' I tn ,1 ve ry qood ncrq t1
borh ood al o nq R t 3S Over 2. 000 s q It
ot lrv rnq Mea rn clu dcs o larqc fom il v
room w / woodbur ncr. '2 11 bntt1 s. rqu rp
pcd kit c hen (IO(lClS o1 Cilbrncb t, drn rn Q
r oom . 7 c or QMiiCJC plus 18xJ6 rn
qrnuno pool rn prrvill f' brlC ior.y rlr o
Pro r f'rl .n,~o,n·~

STROUT~

Tht s tine hom e has 4 bedrooms and_IS
tpca ted c lose t o town . You wil l hav ~ a lar ge _lot With
a country atmosphere and hav e all the c1 ty con·
venipnces . Call now !

1-:-27 Acre . Parcels Nea r Harriso nVIlle, electrr c and water ava ilabl e . Start
at $2,000, on paved Stat e Route .

SYRACUSE - Price redu ced on thi s
three bedroom ranch hom e "with full
basement, attac hed garage . A l so, bien·
ded low inter ested loan availab le ! What
mor e c~n you ask lor. Only $39,900.

Now arrange the drded teners to
foon the aurpriae anawer, u SYQ·
gested by the above cartoon.

Reel Estate - General

B~R 389 -

•

OWNER WILL LAND CONTRACT Thi s 4·5 bedroom hom e for fami ly li v ing
or coul d be dupl ex, with renta l rn co me.
B ea utiful wood work,
a nd six
fireplaces. Asking $45,000 .

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wood Rea lt y, Inc.
32 Locu st St.. GallrpOI IS
446· 1066

A FARM OF your own wi th an energy
efficrent three bedroom home. Fully in ·
su lat ed, F .0 . forced a ir, a custom mad e
wood burner . New l y r emodeled - ni ce .
Approx . 71 acres of wood l and and
pasture . Breath taking view of th river .
$55.000.

t3ETAIS

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THE SMALL FARM you 've alwa ys wanted On l y 8
mtles fr om town , Kyger Cree k Schoo l s 2 bedroom
hom e, I yr old furn ace , s tor m w 1ndows. Betrn. other
oufbldQ Prr ce $32,000

Real Estate - General

MIDDLEPORT - GRAVEL HILL -- 4
5 bedr oom home. full in sul ated, garden
space, st orage shed $26,900 .

NOI A eAt::&gt;
IH IN6 10 DO
WHEN IN COU ~

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155 ACRES - S79,500 - Only 6 mrl es from crt y 90
acres p as tur e , r est trmbe r. qood ba rn 1n c r ty sc hool
dts f rr c t Good rnves tm ent

RENTAL HOU SE: Rodney I t S D $750 00

V I EW OF THE RIVER A four
bedroom hom e in exce ll ent cond i tion on
large lot . JI ! J b~ th s, W .B .F .P ., full
ba se m en t $32,000.

LAIWHE

TWENTY -SEV EN ACRES - Mostly leve l. good
produc rng land 3 bedroom home ha s two sun por ·
ches, wood and coa t burnrng stove, new furn ace,
bath and wa t er sys tem . A luminum S1d 1ng . Barn
plus oth er ou t bldg Rura l water Loca ted 1 us t off Rt
160 $54.000
.

A FR I ENDLY AIR
Cl ean srmpt e lin es, h ip roof,
shullcre d wrndows, sheltered entry a ll com brne to
mak e l h• s hom e more than ju st a 3 bedr oo m
r anch Sp ac rou s com b rna tton fam ily r oom , krf che9
Doubl e wrndows rn l rv rng room . Ceramic til ed
bMh s All tru: woodwork IS s tai ned and varnr shed .
Nf'nr c dy Low rn tere s tlonn as:&gt;umptron $49,500

NEW LI ST IN G - RACINE - A one
f loor plan thr ee bedroom home, wi th
cenTral air
N ew gas fu rnace, l!J
basement wr th utilit y Front and side
porches. Two ca r garage . Doub le lot.
Neal as a pin . $29,900.

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Ap t for rent 1n M 1ddlepor t .
Newly remode led G round
fl oor leve l 991 3590

Reel Eatate - General
RIO GRANDE - S3 0,000 ·- Withrn wa lking distance
o f R10 Gr ande Co l leg e Good 1nve s1 m ent f or co ll ege
st udent, buy in stea d of pay .ng r ent Ni ce 2 BR . l'h
ba t hs, f ormat din1n g Wrltiamson f or c ed air fur·
nace . Ga rnge Garden space

NUFQE

Modern 2 bd room Town
Hou se Apt . in Tupper s
Plarns area . N o pet s Call
304 48 5 S285

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RANNY BlACI&lt;HURN

one of Gallia County•s
acres. This line farm
, oJxcellent·
· old farm

446-0008
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Ju st 1rs l ed
I N COME PROPER TY
1t1rs ter n ft c opportunrt y t hat 1nc l uc1es a
3 bedroom house. 1 bedroom house of
tr ee bldq The otlr cr rs 14x'2 4 t lrni Silect
nr cf' ) , nnd ~orts bi"l ltl &amp; sl ora qe room . th e
mrlrn to ouse no s 3 IJeUr ooms &amp; rn qood
cond The oth er ~lOUSf' tws bedr oom. krl
ellen , lrv• n q room &amp; bcl l h ancl rS pr esf'n
1\ y rf'n l ed C.t n buy nil tor 'io3B ,50U nno
owner w rll 11nnn cf' ot ll 0 o Loco ted on
V 1nf' St

W ILL
OWN E RS MUS T SE LL
LI ST E N TO OFF ERS
An ,ttlr,tc t rv('
crda r honw tl1r1 1
m,1ny QU c1l1 ! y
i f'N iur f' &lt;, Anfif•r so n W1nc!ow&lt;; cx t r,l rn
(,u l ~l t oon pac l&lt;. nqf' t ,) o; mu ch ,,~. 14
on
U 'il1nq!
Ar ms t r onq &lt;;Hfllll!. 130 yr
wMr ('ln l y J Also rnclu(!f'&lt;., &lt;1 cl l'lu•t • k rt
chen wrth c1PPiirln cpo;. 3 IJI '&lt; lr nornc, / lull
br1 ths. (lrnrnq room /.1' rrvrnc1 r nom .
Pil lr O. co un1y Sf'V.t ' r ,1r1rt rnoro ' Prr(l'd
rl l $ 4? .000 rln cl ,lllXP'lU '&gt; l nr oJ! r'l" N C' r~r
Rodn ry rn Crt y Sr hnnl D r&lt;, l

r,,, . ,

Buy; thr S 3 1Jedroom ma ont
i41,600
lr('e ( olum sr d tn q t r,l Cil wrlll ,., l ull
baseme nt 1n c dy ~c hnot drc.t Ownf'r&lt;&gt;
have lr rlns tcrred clnd must sell now
lmm ed1rll e p osSPS ~ r o n . cQurpppcJ krl
c t1 er1. Q(ll itQC, bit Sf'm (' n t ro ulcl f'cl Sd y bC'
hn1 shed 8. nrcP Sllf' y,t r ct 3 milc':o I r om
town

HOU SE &amp; S ACRES - OLD RT JS
Pre tt y 5 rlCH' tr .1ct nrar Rro G r ,1nrtf'
Could be d rvrdC'd 1n t n 1Judd rn q l ot &lt;; or
used os cro p or p ~ls t url' l nclu rtf' 5 J
LARGE R I VERV I EW BR I CK
bedr oo m ran ch wo th lar or f rrf'pln c0 .
E NERGY EFF I CI ENT RANCH
One of t he n tc es t you ' ll see on Lower Rt rur al aler and avrtd ct bl c, 2 ou tburl cl rnqs
7 wr t h a terrrfi c vtew &lt;l bedrooms. 2 rnc lud rnQ small bMn S39.000
bath s, f amil y r oom . f rr epla ce, equ~pped
k 1tc hen, form al drnrnq, ba se m en t , 1 ca r 640 OEE NI E OR .
A tlr ac t rve 4 1
Qaraqe, cx tr ct rn sulatron (6 " 1n wnll st. bedroom br leve l rn n vr ry good ncrqh
tr rple wrndow s. hJ Qhes t el ec t tJrll S65. borhood n long Rt 35
cr 7.000 sq II
andownerwrllfrnan ce at l/ 0 'o S79 .900
ot lrvrn q ar cn rncludrs ,1 lnrqe l nm dy
1
OWNER W I LL F INAN CE
Wr t h less room w / woodhttrnN . / • l1&lt;1 lhs.. f'QlJrp
pcd k ll chen (load&lt;; of crtbrnf'ISt . clrn rnq
than 20% down paym ent and 11q,o tn
room. 7 car qclr &lt;1 0f' pp l us 18x36 111
teres ! . 168 acre farm off Rt 554 . Ap
prox 20 25 acre crop bala nce rn pa sture qroun d poo l rn prrv,ll (' b.J cky,lrd
Prr cc d rn 60 '5
and woods Los of prne (red &amp; wh rtcl
barn. plu s mod ern1 zed 3 bedr oom home
1:1 3 ACRES - VPry prl'lly IOCrltr on JU'l t 7
60' s .
m il es north ot Rro Gra nde Lots ot
WOODS MILL RO - VA Ac qurr ed
p1nes. some trm1Jcr rf'port rrt E xcc llcnl
prop er ty
$ 1700 down p.wmenl
for hor ses, somC' crop &amp; po sturl· lnnd
Anyon£' cnn buy 3 bedroom rrln Ch wr th
Good burldrnq lois S.:i /.500 Cl!y sc hoo l ':o
lull
bnse m cn•
FamJiy
room

o. .

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w / fr rep l a&lt;f'. r qurppcd k. rtchen &amp; 1 1
SPR IN G VALLEY ES TAT ES
,1( rf' S32. 900
MAPL E DR I VE
A
CRE
F
.ARM
NEW
L
I
ST
l
N
G
IN
100
Top Qu alrty br rck rone11 buil t wr t n 111e
RUTLAND - Procluc l rv C' tarm •n cor
best of mo terrals You have to sec to
por n tt on hrnrt s ol Ru t lond Ouclhly 11i1Y apprecr ale th e T L C bu il der too k
&amp; pi!slu 'e N1th qood qra s.s cover . np
whrle burldtnQ H ns 3 bedrooms. drnrnq
pr ox 45 '" woods. SO' x56 ' bM n. 14' x 40
room . frr epla ce, 2 IJa ths. full bnse
shed .. n qood repnrr LMW' rd fr on trtQf' m ~ nL screened por c h. equ1ped k 1l
on Rt 124 &amp; Free qns nvarl il tJi r lor
chen. 2 car garage f1nc1 beau l rf ul yard
house ( llil'l qos wf' ll l The hr storrc hnm f'
Make us an off er
11.1s tO room s. d bf'droorns , 7 hr ept ;KC'C.
&amp; Qclf"ilQP Cnll l or rn ore rnl o SR5. 000
91, 0 0 ASS UMPTION
Vf'ry &lt;11f t c1C1rvf'
t1om e wrll1 exc f'llr nt lrncHK rnq T C' ~ m..., 3
MART IN DRI VE - JU ST LI STED
or 4 bf'Cif OO Hl trr IC'Vf'l IOC&lt;l !C' d off R I 35
Love ly bn ck 11ome ovcrlookr nQ R t 35 HtlS l' ' bolh s, \.\OOCI!Jur 1H"r . &lt;l1 n rn c1
ncar H M C 3 bedr ooms. i ' J bn lh s. full roorn. equ,pped kr l cht' n, I e M C!M c1Qf' &amp;
bil se ment. f amily r oo r1 w / wooctburne r . crn lrr1 1,) rr $59,500
wrlf' approv ed k 1tche11, n,11 oa s. crnt
arr , ove r s rzed 7. car qor c1qe &amp; ovf'r 1 J
JU ST Lt ~TF. D - 6)11&lt; RI '-. T1 DR I V F
acrC' rn n quat•ty ner qhborh ooll p , 1ced
Ownf' r m ust Sf' II 1/lr&lt;; mnc., t c1! !r ,1( l 1v" l
10 ; ell $59 .900
brr r k all RT 35 1nctuc1r'" J qooct &lt;&gt; lied
brr1r nomc., t,t mriY r oom fr r !'D irKf' Wrf f'
2ND AVE &amp; M I LL CREEK
rs th e
rtpprovr&lt; 1 t' Qur ppP(l k ri C11 f'll ) b,l H1S.
toca tr on of lhr S rf'mode led 3 brdr oom
ond nf-.1rly 1500 ~ Q It o! 11 v 1n O Mrn
brr ck 1nc lud cs.a lullba sernen l (c l ennJ.
Also ,nclu(ICS 2 c,H u ,l t" ,)qf ' &amp; !ar qr li'ln
nill . qr~ s neot . car por1 , l enccd yard
rlSC i'lpe d ynrc1 P o'\Srl11f'9°o ,1&lt;,&lt;;umpt ron
Only $22.000
LO CAT ION
LO C AT ION
OWNER S MUST SE LL
W ILL
LOCATION
TIH S onr r&lt;; 11 , blocks to
LI ST E N TO OFFERS - An attr ac tr ve
crly pnrk Well kf'pt J hC'Ci r oom nomf'
ce dar hom e ttl al has many qua trl y
w 1o 1 b,t srmC&gt;nl. rno dr r n h0at1nQ
fea tur es· Ander son wrndow s. C )&lt;lr~ . rn
system. and lnrrw tM ck yMd 7 cnr
sut atr on package (as much as 14 rn
QM aQe Pf'ff' cl tor ,1ny SrH' l .tmdy
ce il in o l. Arm stronq Sldtng, (30 yr
warran ty ! Al so rncl udes a deluxe k• l
chen wi th applran ces , 3 bedrooms . '2 tull
LOW INT EREST ASSUMPTON
5 1
vr ol d, J bedroom home wrth over 1500
baTh s, drn1ng room. 24' ltv1n q r oo m .
sq It of livrng Fully equ1pped k.r tcl'e n,
pnti o, coun ty sewer and mor e PriC ed
famtly ro om . 2 bath s, cent arr. plu s 10
ol $41,000 and a nx rou s tor oli N Near
acresoll and (a li cl ear I l6x36 barn and
Rodney 1n Ci t y Sc hool D• st
large rd . fron tag e 1 7 rnrl e otl R t 160
JUST LISTED
539.000.
TODAY ' S BE ST BUY Owners rnovecl
OWNER PURCHASED NEW HOME
to P a Anxrous for •mm ed 1a le sal e 0nd
Must se ll thi s c harm ing Cape Cod I
have pri ce d horne accor drngl y Over
bl ock fr om H .M C. Very ni ce ty ar
ranged 4 bedroom with co untr y krt
1100 sq If . of llvrnq ar ea ha s a IMge
fami l y room w / hr epla ce, 2 bath s. w rf c
chen , formal dining, 2 baths, full ba ~e
appr ove d
kd c hen .
n rrf'
St Zed
ment and l arge garage. Love ly ~ ~
bedrooms, 2 car qar age and land
ground sw imming pool w/ ~cr.eened tn
1
sca ped 111 ac. yard
9 1° o Loa n
lounge. tf you need low fuel bi ll s a nd 4
bedroo m s see thi s one. Nat . ga s, c rty
Assumptron . $61.000
water and sewe r . City sc hool s.
RURAL SE TTIN G- CLOSE TO TOWN
Ni ce well maintained and r ede c or a ted
1 bedroom hom e 2 m i les fr om tow n
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Wi ftt le:ss
Ha s an eq u 1pped k•t chen , full base
than 20% down payment and 11 o/o •n
me nt, fami l y r oom , woodbur ner , elec t
terest . 168 acre f arm off Rt . 55 4. A p
hea t (low billsJ. large i'lttach ed cor ·
prox 20 25 ac. crop balanc e In pa s ~ure
port, detached gar age, sO m e furniture
and ~oods L ots of pine (red &amp; whrte),
inc lu ded . 1.1 acres w / trurt 8. shc1d e
barn, plus modernized 3 bedroom
trees plu s garden area . $39 , 500 .
,ho.Tte . 60's .

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JUST LIST ED - Bri ck &amp; fram e ri'lnCh
on Rt 14 1 ju st 1 mrtes wes t ot tow n . 3
bed ro~ms, fir eplac e. eat-In kit chen, full
nasement . r ec room, famrly room,
qara ge, deck &amp; fenced ~ack yard on
nt'a rl y &amp; acre . Good loc atron.
IN TOWN - Priv ate loca t ion on thr ~
older well kept 3 bedroo~, 2 sl orv
home . Has eq uipped kttch en, 2
fireplaces, family room • l'h bath,
beauty shop, nat. gas heat. 2 car
garage. 16x32 in-groun~ pool , all
sl 1uated on approx. 1 ac . 60s.

HOME&amp;3A CRE S - NEW LI STIN G
Pic turesque se tttn Q Of"' Jld 160 nc ar Por
ter . 10 yr . old. 2 bedroom home wr t h
gari'lge, full in sut atr on &amp; therm o w1n
dows . Has pond , qood qardcn arc~ .
shop, plus an o ld f arm house the~t r ou l d
be remode led .
113 2ND AVE . - Large redecorated 4 or
bedroom home in qua l it y ne•g h ·
borhood. Has 2 fireplaces. fami l y r m .,
dining rm ., arc hed doorw(1ys, bay wi n ·
dows, 10" insulation , 11/:l
bath ,
ba'sement, nat . gas heat plu s mu c h
more. 60' s.

s

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--------------------·--·
..

\1

�Pa
44

54

Apclr tm c nt
for Rrn t

Apifr ! m{'f11 ·

r r ll ' rr ·r·r ,

requrred ) OJ ()/'-, ht:IO

rwo hr • (!r('()rn
un
turnrsrlecl On r· twrlr onm r· t

nn

i rcre ncy 304 6/5

rwo bf'dr oom ~•rarlmf'n l
rn H f'nc!No.;on . S 150 ppr

montll , 304 675 19 77
45

M 1sc. Mcrc hand• ce

Pla st tc SP pl tC ranks Str11e
rlnc1 rounty ,l pprovcd 1.000
q,1 1 1,1n1t.. . pr•(l' $3 40 Other
'&gt;I If''&gt; . n &lt;., tocK. 11~1ul 1n your
Pt c kup tru c k Call 614 286
~930.
JM k sn n . Oh
RON
[VANS E N1 ER PRtSES
Str onq hut tfl (tlf'SI S 175 . 6 fl
p1(!l t( lrl l) lf'': &gt; 'i&gt;4) . 4 II porch
SWill CIS $35 A I WOOd Shop,
101 Co urt St . Ga l lipOh5 or
U t i I 446 7572

lrq rlt

ROOMS

nncl
np t .

llOU '&gt;f' k('('prn q

PMk Ccn t rill Ho t er
Sl ceprnq room Sl /S utdrtres
pd
R,1n qr
~lnd
rel r rQNnl or Srnqle maiC'
(&lt;'Ill 446 4416 n it er 7PM

Sp,lce l orRe nl

4b

COU NTRY MOBtLE Horne
Pnr k . R out (' Jl N or t h of
P"mc r oy lrV (If' lot s C111
99'} 7479
t. arQC' tra ilf' r 101\ t o r r f'n t

rn Mrddleporl C.l ll Q9] 7 101
or 99? 1319 r~ll f'r SPM

Wilnted to Rent

47

PR OFE SS IONAL
ctros rrcs allrclCirve

Indy

r oo m
wl!h a ccess to bath , I nrqht
each week Wrrte Box P6 .
0
o PI Ptensclnl Rcq rs ter .
700 Milrn S t . PI Pte nsnnt .

wv 15550

Ct·ntr,lt ,,,r co nclil•oner 75
F oru p tc kpu tru c k Ca tl379

1707
For sal e 11 H P rtdtnQ l~wn
rnow('r . 3 yr old , 1n good
cond ii •Oil Celli 446 6322
E ar ly fimNtC&lt;tn sola . arm
c ha1r , &amp; SWIVPI rocker
GootJ co n e! SC' rlr s ') I ru It
dH'S I 'ype tr rt' lf'r Cr1ll 446

7736
351 M,lqnum (JUn clrld 1977
Chevy 4X4 Sf'f' el l l OS CNi ilr
or Crlll4.ol6 8591 CIIJI'r SPM

Wurtl1llf'r SpHW I P•clno.
SR75 00
K r ot'11l pr
co u c h
( l1k C'
nrw 1
$?75 00
Upll OISIC'rC'd rllrl&lt;r , SBS Co l
tee &amp; C'nd tn btes Cnll 4.:16

3157
For salf' ' O icf Fn 1r banks
Morr1s stattonary f'nqt ne. 7
1' / HP . aoodco nd Call446
134.0 rl ll f'r 5

Hou se h old Goods
SWA I N

AUCTION FUR N ITURE &amp;
PAW N SHOP 67 OltVE' S t ,
Gallrpolr s New sof a beds
$250, u sed so f a beds $100.
r ec lrn crs $80. bunk beds
S100 . bunk re
maltr C'sses
sao . mapl e roc ker s $49 .
mnple drnf&gt;ll set s fr om '!&gt;115
tn S 175 , bedr oo m sulles
Sl50. J fX
lrv rn {l room
'-.U des $199 , 7 ~ C
hvr nQ
r·nom sur t c~ $140 , lo ve '&gt; Pills

S7D, owl
wnshcrs

1 ~1 mp s

$2 5 . rrnqcr
$75
clrvers.

&lt;; f've r al

r p frr t.H' f cllors.

ulrlr ly

rcl l)r nf' I S

rne01nnrcs
t oo l s.
beds.
&lt;.,dvr&gt;r slonc . IV .s, w ood
hur n( 'rs . s tero ·s ilnd lots
mo re Ope n IOilm to 5pm ,
4463 159

c.OQO
U SED
AP
PLIA N C ES
w.1 ~ twr s.

drvr-rs.

rrfrror r rllor s.

f ilf1Cll'S

S k i'l ( IQ S

Ap

plrnncc &lt;&gt;. Upp pr R rvN Rd

bf'srdf' S tone Crest Molf'l
446 7398

LA YNE ' S FUR N ITURE
":&gt;nta . ctv11r . r oc kf' r. ot
toman . 3 tnbl es. $500 Solo.
char r

and

$275

IOV(' S C'rll.

So f as and Cllatrs pr1 ccd
I rom $785 to $!95 T i!bles,
$38 ann up to $109 Htdc a
bcds,$3 40, QUPl.'l l ~lie, $380 .
Rccl •ners. $175 to 5295,
Lcl mps from $18 to S65 5
pc &lt;1 t nctt c~ fr om $79 . to
$385 7 pc ' $189 rlnd up
Woocf tnbff' w!lh •I c hrltr s,
$719 up to ~J95 0P Sk $ 110
H u tches, $300 and $375.
map le or
p i ne
f1nt sh
Bf'droom SUt iC S
Boo:;se lt
Cherry . $795
Bunk bed
complete Wt lh mA ttr esses.
$150 and up to $350 C 1p
to1n ' s b eds . $27 5 co mpl e te
Bil bY beds . $99 Mclllrcsses
or box spr 1ngs. full or lwtn ,
\56 ' ftrm . $68 clncl $78
Quef'n "&gt;C' I S. 'i195
.:1 dr
c tlCSIS. $.:17 BNI fra mes.
$/0 and $25 . 10 Qun
Gu n
c Cibtncl s. $350.
dtnc tt c
c h.=~tr s $20 clnd SLS Gas or
e tectr •c rnnqe s. $295 Or
th opedtC SUPN f trm, $95 ,
b?lbY matrC SSC' S. $2 5 &amp; $35,
bed frame s S70 . $75 . &amp; $30
Used Furnllur c bookcase .
5 p c dtnctt SC" I . 3 L 1v1nQ
room su 1tC R,1 n qcs nncl
TV's J mil e!:&gt; out Bu l ,w tll c
Rd Open 9am to 7pm Man
thru Fr1 , 9am to Spm , Sat
446 0317

RAY ' S

U SE D

AMF Edge tenn1s ra c que t,

FUR

NITURE Kt!chcn C&lt;tbtnel
$65. round wood breakfost
se t $85, c hes t $45, dressc&gt;r
MO. utiltly ta bl e $ 10, bar
stool $400 . co ll ec tt On of sa il
&amp; pe pper shak ers $2 00 ea .
c hurn dated 1907 $45. •,tone
,ars. dishe s Ca ll 367 0637

NORTH
H-0
+AKJ7S
YQIOH 2

••

)3))

+J 2

6 H 70 I S 6 ply tru ck ltrcs
Lt k f' new F(1 c tory General
Mot or s.
AM FM
dtqdal
clock rild! O 7.:12 315.:1 or 992
7467 el fiN 5 p m
Ant.que s Furn dur c:, l.'lm
ps , tar s.
Duncan
Ftfe
T abtc:
fit\o applta nces
othf'r furnilurf' (1 n d m1sc
99/ /05 1
Tw o b l uf' f o r m~1 t &lt;., , one St H'
7 8 Ollf' S• /f' 9 10 . worn on
It' (,l i t 3046l530•1R nf l f'r J

PM
197 5 C.1&lt;.,f' .t 'JO . riO!N
trnc tor . 1.800 llrs , very
qood cond . $\4 ,900 Cntt
.!46 4537

JUST RECEIVED
A complete line of
shrubber y , tr ees
and rose bu sh es.
See us for th e
low est prices in
town .

AND A GOOD
USEDSHP
JOHN DEERE
TRACTOR - $700

Q,., _ POMEROY
~LANDMARK

uo~ .

614 -992-2182

EAST

••

Bu tldm g Su ppli es

• Q 10 8 5

• J 8s

YK75

Butld1nq mater1ats b loc k .
br1 c k . sewer pipes, w1n
clows. ftnlels, etc Cla ud e
W1ntcr5, R10 Grande, 0 .
Catl745 5121

+110i7HS

+H

+Q 1096
SOI!rll

•eu

•u

tAQJ

Pets for Sa l e'

.K174 '

DRAGONW'Y ND
CAT
TERY
KE NNE L. AKC

Vulnerable: Beth
Dealer: South

C tlow
puppte S,
C FA
H 1r"lcl l r1Ya n . Pers1an and
S•rl tnC' 5L' k1t! Cns Call 446
38.14 n it er ~ p m

H ILLC REST

KENNEL

West

Nortll

Eul

S..~

It

I+

p..,

I.

INT

2+

~

Pus

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pus

BOrlrdtllQ rl ll breed s. c te(1n
.ndoo r ou tdoor ln cdtiiCS
fit&lt;.,() fiKC
Reg
Dober
m,1ns Cc!ll446 7795

Openlnelead: t1 o

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soatag

BoMdtnQ and qr oo m1n q
A KC
Gordon
se tt ers.
E nql1 5h Cocker Span1el5 .

South's decision to bid
no-trump was a
mi&amp;bly good one. Four
spades would bave wound up
at least one Irick in tbe soup.
By dint of a good play, plus
three

GROOMING

Cell i Judy Tayl or

at 367

1770

trump borne.
West made tbo normal
openin1 lead of the 10 of ·
dlamolidl. South won wltb
tho queen. Tho"' W"'' no reason not to falle-card,
altbol!lh tbon wu lllUe
hope tliat It would fool West.
South played bla ace and
six of boarta and Wool made
the mlatake of pllytnetow.
II wu a mlatake. He could
be certain that South would
play blm for the klnl.
South did just !hat. He
bopped up with dummy's
queen and lbon proceeded to
make tbo key play of the
band. He cubed oue of
dummy's blah spades before
leadinea lhfrd heart.
West wu In with the kin&amp;
and wu cau&amp;ht In an early
end-play.
A club lead would ""t up
South's kine. A diamond leaa
would be up to South's acejack and South bad carefully
played one spade.
'!'be contract wu a lucky
one Indeed. II bad been
reached because North bad
made a~t overbid wbeu
be Jwn
to three hearts
and Sou bad made wlnDID&amp;
decisions in both blddin&amp; and .
play.

L...----------""1------------l

R~1bbt!5,

CU QC' 5
ond
I C'f'dC'rS CCIII 2&lt;15 56 14 or
2.15 55 97
anyltme
on
weC&gt;kends and a fter 5: 30
wcC'kdays
Gcn ti C' pony, S 125 Cal l 256

56

Pet s for Sa le

Real Estate -

HOBSTETIER REALTY

991 7473
p ups,

r egis ter ed No Chec k s, 30 4
895 3958

Real Estate -

Geor&amp;e S. Hobsttt• k
Brt*er
OFFICE 741·1003

AKC

63 15

_&amp; y~9_et~~le s

General

NF w LI STING - Older f nrm home on 10 acres. has
nf'w &lt;'~c1d tll on !hill c nn I)C' more lt v tnQ space or rxrra
.n(l&gt; ll1f' npr~rtmf'nl . I Cclr qcl r clC!f'. OC'l rn . &lt;~ncJ 001cr
('H,ti)UI Ifllll (I S !-'r . v.ll f' rlnct pen cc ful Own('r will h(' l p
11n(1ncf' quilllhN1 hUVN $7,000 down ilnd 10°o tn
Tf' rf' "&gt;l on hnlan cf' As k •no S36 .500

MUS T ~E LL - Altn0\1 ,1 CJ•veowoy Rf'dU Cf'd rt(l cl ln
I r f\ m ~ 17.000 10 S 10 .500 F 1ncl nC tnQ ilV€ltlrt b tr
1n Rrl Ctnc, 0 11 OwnN will hel p

3 f3F.DROOM HR I CK HOMF - L 1vtnq room ll.=lS
wooc111urn1nq ftrcpla cr. 11 &lt; ba l h, hardwood ll oorc; ..
wf'tl (On&lt;., lrur lrd &lt;"net tfl".UiillPd As k tnQ S35 .000
3 BEDROOM HOME - 11 7 mtlc5 out of Mtddlf'port
on 2 ilcrf'S Rf'nlnl tncomf' fr om tr ader on proper t y
,11"&gt;0 All lilt"&gt; for S32.000
T HI S ON E H AS CLOUT - 4 beaul1ful bedrooms. 3
tult bi!ltl'::&gt;, UoutJil' ca r qnr&lt;'IQf'. ca rpe ted thr ouqhout.
lo ve ly sC' tl ,nq on f'x tr n lnrqe lo t 1n Syr ac usr LMqr
nry bn5emrn l to r rxtr r1 ttv tnq space or f amily r oom .
i\&lt;",kH1(j ~67 , 500

CA LL US TO BUY OR SELL
N.1n cy J as per s- Ass ociate
PH . 843 2075

304 881 1207 .

2432 .
59

NEW LISTING - EX ·
CELLENT CORNER
LOCATION .

$35,000 .
NEW LISTING- Nea r
Rutland , 16 ac r es with
mtneral s, hou se in need
of repair , very private .

On ly $8,000
MIDDLEPORT -Cozy
conveni ent home wit hin
wa lkin g di stance
to
s hopp ing
Partially
r emod eled . Has four
bedroom s, li vi ng room ,
family room. big kit ·
c hen. some furniture

includ ed at S16,000.
FARM
EXTRA
NICE 48 acres mi t w1 th
miner al s. Love l y four
b edroom , 5ptit l eve l
home, thi 5 home ha s
many ame niti es. Also
good barn, impl ement
bldg . and
p a rtially
fen ced . Call for more
d et ail s.
Cheryll cflll c y, Ass oc.
t ' hon e 747 -3111
\. f' lm ,l NI C in ~ ~ y , fi 5SOC.
I' honE' 747 309/

Ae1l E1tata -

Real Estate - General

For Sa l e or Trade

A lo t o t dif f erent part 5 for
350 or 400 eng1nes A lso pa r
ts for 74 Impala 1n terior
pe rf ec t . 742 3063
Fo r sa te Used brt c K. door s
'ex l e rt or i nt erio r '
with
fram es hardware. oak
stair s, g l assed oak mantle,
wa t e r
heate r ,
water
press ur e pump mot or, stee l
bea m s, st or age cab 1ne t s, 10
speed bike , 3 speed btke.
w rou ght 1r on love seal.
assor ted too ts 992 625.:1 .

6744
GE washer $65 .. Kenmo r e
dryer $65 .. Kenmor e d r ye r
$50, May lag dryer $65 ..
May tag washer $85 74.2

tresses or B ox spr ing5, full
ortwin ,$58 . Used fu rn1 tur e
5 pc dinett set. 7 p c d1nett
set, studi o couch, l iving
r oo m
5Ui t e.
c ompl e te
bed room suite, bunk beds,
g lass front bookcase . Open

9

AM ·6PM

M o nd ay

Wedne sday ·Frid ay, 9AM
SPM
Tu es daY Thursday

Saturday or call 675· 1371

ONE portabl e G E dish ·
washer,

$40 .

good

con -

dition. phone 304-675:4616 .
ce , TV, Radio

- - .. ~'!ll !£'!!!!!!...-

-

RCA So lid State 100 Con·
sole. Cou l d be fixed or used

for parts. 446·4113 .
C.B. radio , 23 channel ·
Draco SSil deluxe. S15.00,
phone 304~lt58 · 1042 .

See d &amp; Fertiliz er

BULK

BLE N DED

Aqr 1c u1tural
f ertilizer
nel1vered &amp; sp r ead or
deliver ed &amp; dumped or
ptcked up a t plant . B ien
d1ng se r vice hour s 8 t o .:1 ,
Mond ay t hru Fnday , other
hours request on spreader
buggy rentals . A comp le te
Independen t bu si nes . Fa rm
E qu 1pmen 1 ser1vce, C l1f
ford W
Snyder owne r ,
Jclckson , OH.186 498 3

1975 Opel Sport5wagon.
good run n ing cond, rebu11t
engi ne Pri ce $1. 750 Ca l l
24.5·iil59 1.

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION
CAN HELP YOU
BUILO YOUI DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.

Or tr ade 1967 Ply mouth
Bnrrocuda con v ., 318 small
block eng ine, qood tires
and body . Ca ll 446 ·4085 .

1976 Gra nd Ptix, P S, PB , &amp;
01r, 65,000 mi tes, ve r y good

cond Ca ll 388 8769
197 1 vw good co nd .. $600
Call 367 0507

PH .

1969 Pont•ac Bonnevil le,
full y eq uipped, goOd cond .,

1976 Chev stati on wagon.
P S, PB . a 1r , c ru1se . good
cond Ca ll 446 3345. pri ce

$ 1.800 00 .

HOME

-

LIKE

NEW -

3

LAKESIDE HOME pri ced at $28,000. Home
ha s 1 bed r ooms. main bath . ltvinQ room.
uf i l 1f y room , and ntc e bi g l aw n w ith c hain
l tnk fence L1 ve yea r r ourtd or summ er fun
•n t he sun .
11 937

Tobbacco se tter , J pt hook

Call 156 6744 .
1967

J Dl0 10

dozer

ACREAGE - 2 acres . more or less . Ni ce
place tor your new hou se or mobile home .
County wa t er avai lab le .
/1 961
VACANT LAND - Three ac r e building site.
Two ac r es c lea r , approx. one wooded .
Own er will help finan ce. Li sting pri ce $3,000 .

*Phyllis Loveday , Phone 446·2230
*Joan Boggs, Phone 446·3294

W JLOWAT ER
Cou nlr ¥ Roc~
Tltu n. Fn.·Sill Sun
May ll 14 lS 16
CROSSO VE R S
Dnnll &amp; Drown All nognts
rnun.· Fn. Sil l Su n

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

$3500 . Phone 304 675·1034
a ft er 5

plow . Ca ll446 7322.
63

MAINTENANCE
FREE HOM E IN

MEIG S COUNT Y
3.15ACRE S MorL

Livestock

F or Sa l e Ba by turk~y s,
pheasa n ts &amp; du c k s Ca ll

388·9038
Reg .
Quarter
11or sf'
yea rftn g gelding, excellen
show prospec t , shown su e
cess full y a t halt er Dan
Beam: Ga l lipo l iS. 61.:1446

0 183 .
Stud Service. Amer1can
Sadd l e bred. cxc . blood
l•ne5 Ca ll2 56 6461
For sa te Milk goat . good
mi lk prod uce r . 175 A l so 2
mo bi ll y r eal peL $25 . Call

367 0624 .
Reg 15 ter ed a nd grayed hor
ses. exce ll ent .:l· H proj ec t
Eng li stl and western 5ad
di es
every th 1nq
tmagi n ab le 1n horse equip·
men t and supp ltC'S, al so
r idinq lessons and fr ail
rides and h orse tra i n ing .
Hoof H ol low 6 14·698 3290

General

P OND .
8
r oom
r e m o deled
country
hom e bcau t1fulf y liln
dSCilPE'd. illl 3 25 ~lCrf'S
mowed
Grlraqc Wttll
concre l f'
dr•V f'Wily.
24 ' x?7' l ilmtly room w iltl
ftr cplacf' Lorqf' b loc k
storCIQf' butldtnQ Frutt
trC' PS
Brf' n
rrdu c rcl
ovpr $ 17 ,000 'f OU lllU 'i l
&lt;&gt;C'P lht s (Ountry ho me
Phonr n ow for rln rlp
potntmf'nt
P 507

Wrll

GALLIPOLIS
Ctl y convcn1cnces n ea r
t h1S 1mmac ulate ho m e,
OICf'IY
lilnd SC ilDed ,
larqe l 1v 1nq room. 4
bedrooms,
7 ba th s,
family
r oom,
I ro n
porch , hn •shcd
ful
basemen t . 2 car ae,reae •
wdn
opener,
s t ee l
51dtnq, qas heal , and
a1r cond 1fton Ca ll to
dily
for a
per5onal
5llOWtOQ
+ 464

ATTRACT IVE OLDER HOME
k('p ! , 9 room ~. 5 t)('d roorn s On Stn iC' t-lt Ci hway ,

Clpproxlmil tcly 1700 5Q II l1v1ng sprtcc Conc r e te
blo&lt;k celt nr Wttll frc1m r smokr 11ouse LnrQP tool
shed . t.1 rq c b l ock workshop w.th? c~1 r c arpor t wtth
conc r r l e fl oo r Four tots - over I ilcr e of level land
A llloronly$41.90000
.d5 13

FINO YOUR ROOTS
( E • tr il L ot Ava ilabl e )
Ttw pcrlect ;~tl br• c k h ome t5 riqht her f' 1n Northup
~1 n d ff'il tur es 3 bed r ooms. P ' billhs. 5P&lt;1C tOUS ltvtnq
roo m. cttnlnCI ClrCil. c tlrNy kti che n. ') c etr Qnra qe,
pat 10. p lu s much mar(' Call now &lt;'!net let u s mn ke
yourclrPFimscomc tr ue
p 512

WE LLBUILTANDCOZY
In Mint Co ndition
3 or 4 bedrooms Wt t h l ar qe c lose ts. One bedroom
1S prrfe c t for offi ce or se winq room L tvtnQ rnom,
din•ng r oom. bath a nd ea t 1n k•t c hen with bui ll 1n
c ab1net5 Fron t and back porch e5. full bast-ment
?tnd qarilqe w 1th J o~ acre mor e or tess, in C ity
Sc hools Pr1ced 1n t he m1d 40 's Ca ll today for
detail5 on th e chu mtnQ hom e
fl S19

Rf'ildy to Move? We've got j ust wha t you a r e looking
fo r' Furn •she d or unturn1 shed . G r ea t fo r starting
out or r etirement. Ex t ra n ice 1979 Model Mobile
Home on approx . 11 ac r e leve l lo t w ith c h a1n link
- fence L •k e New . Pr1ced 1n th e low 20's .
11 S18

home, 7 years old with 3 b edrooms, 1 bath,
large k1tchen and family room Extras in
'e tu de ce ntral air , c hain link f ence, a l uminum
si d1nq and ve ry nice l aw n . Ca ll today on thi s
lovely home.
II 107

CHARMING RANCH - Everything in Ti r:)Top condition in thi s 3 bedroom , 11h bath
hom e . Beautiful kitchen &amp; dining room , wood ·
burrTer , new ca rpe t. double c ar garage &amp;
large tot . Poss1ble loan assumption .
f/992

2 LOT S IN CRFE N ACRES
LO!~t1\ S1dcwo tk , 75' x 148'
Lot d'ZJ va cilnt QQ' Frontnqe by 148' dep th Pr1 ced
#334·#333
to s,-.tl
A half a c r e more or less W1lh fruit trees plu s a three
b edroom home , livi n Q room. ktlchen with b ui lf· in
cabi nets, util i t y room, full ba seme nt and 9a r age ,
part1ally conver ted in fo a den. An unfini sh ed room
w ith a heato tator ftrcp l ace . N ice fenced i n yard .
Call for de tail s.
11 492
WOW!
L ook what you can ge t on a land con t rac t a t 9% •.
t erest. Qwner r educ ed the pr1 ce $7,900 and is
anxious to ·se ll. Thi s t!'lree tcdrr...Ai l 5pc. ti C'3:&gt;, air
cond1tioned h om e h as 2 bath s, i1V1:"tg ~ ior agc
bUdding , hea t ed ga rage, aft furniture inc lude c1 .
Everythinq you need in one pur ch tt se . I n c it y sc hool
distn c t
"407

1ACRE2BEDROOM COTTAG E
N ice co mfortabl e hom e with ni ce Iaroe sha de trees ,
concrete fron t porch, lots of fruit trees (apple,
c herry, plum and peac h ), grape a rbor, r as pberry
vines, good garden land , a ll level . In G r een Twp .
Rural water, 2 ca r ga r age. fuel oi l F .A furnil ce.
Ba se m ent, barn approx. 16'x24' . PrirPrl in th e S20's.
~ACRES
·; 491
Within Hi rrin . drive b oowntew .o C.o' l• p OIIS. City
School Sy stem . Ha s hookup tor :mobi le h~m e, Gallia
Rural water, electri c and se pt1 c tank, n•te l•ght on
pol e, 200ft . trontilge on Graham Sc hool Rd . T i mbe r .
Building s ites . Ca ll Now .
11 477

on investment. 2 mobi l e homes rented tor
$ 17 ~. 00 eac h unfurnished . One modern 5 room
house. woodburner, new refrigerator, other
app l iances. Close to Hol zer Medical Center .
Cou nty water . Call tor details.
11966

room, kitchen, bath &amp; utility room. Nice car pet. Carport . Chain link fence surrounds
yard . Concrete drive. City schools. Price in

vacant lots, ni ce siz e building lots w1th all ut ili ti es
there . Lot size 101 .8 by 171 .2. B etter get ' um now .

low 30's.
WOODEll ACREAGE - GREEN TOWN·
SH IP - Approx . 2 acres. Over 900 fl . road

PRICE REDUCED on thi s 110 acre farm in

frontage . County water available . 4 miles

M eigs county. Large r e modeled 4 bedroom
home. 2 new fireplaces . Full ba se ment.
Garage. 2 story barn . Chicken house and feed
room . Pond . Tobacco base . Owner wi ll con-

from Gal lipolis. Pricedal$8,000.

WANT TO BUILD? We ll there is ple nty of
tial basement , rural water . 1 acre level lot,
rOom on this ~lf1 f la t acres . Rural water . Elec - · yard and garden area. Good starter house or
tric. Road frontage . No restrictions .
11986 retirement property .
11116

N921

30 ACRES VACANT LAND - Sec . 8 Raccoon
Twp. 15 acres woods, 15'acres pasture. Finan·
cing avai lable . Listing price is $15,500. S7,750
down. Owner wi l l carry the rest 12~ A. P.R .

.

20 It Ga tor boaf tr ailer
388 97 55 or 446 164.7 ex t 332
Auto Parts
&amp; Acc essories

D 1tfer ent parts for 350 an d
400 Chevy engi ne. Trans ..
ca rb . gas and wa t er pum

.

•

;954

PRIME BUILDING LOTS - 2 flat acres total
I
F latwoods Road in Meigs county.
oe.a u'" " ' homes1surround this land. C~ll tor

#456
CITY SCHOOLS
1
3 bedroom ranch style home. Eat·in kitchen, ful l

C.1rryout8etor Av;ul.lblt'
Drm~

&amp; Drown dur ong B.t nd

Ntg!,ll

cANDLELIGHT INN

~

OWNER WILL FINANC E

~EMODELEOtOUNlRYHOME '
In Oh io Township, set son ·2 acres more o r less. has
alum i num siding, 3 bedroom s, nnd barn . Prurcd

$21 ,900 . See by appoin; ment only .

11473

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

troceries . We now
hAY~
new American
mid&amp; Mopeds in stock.

S395 Plus Tax
4·18 ·1 mo .

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR
Call 8~1 Ward
AI Ward's Keyboard
Visa

4/ H / 11

BOGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE
u.s. Rt . 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-J·If c

1·446-4372

Master Charge

4·9·tfc

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Also Transmission
PH . 992·5682
or 992-7121

Licensed &amp; Bonded
I'H. 992-7201

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 30x24 "

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood butldtngs 24x36.
Insulated Dog Hou ses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt . 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .
Ph . 614-843-2591

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From
the Smallest
Heater Core to the
largest Radiator.
Radiator Specialist

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electric work
•Custom Pol e Bldgs.
•Roofing work
14 Years Experience

SAVE 13.00 WITH
THIS AD

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

•

• Waahers

e Dryers

• Freezers

4-S·Ifc

4 79 I mo

O'Brien Electric
Service
16 YEARS EXP.
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio
247-3534
Free Estimates
no tt c

Small &amp; Large

Pieces

~ - 12 · 1

mo. pd

•Insu l ation
•storm Doors
•stOrm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New Roofing

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
8·20·1fc

-k.

All typH of root
new or repair ou«er ani!
dOWftiPOUfl,

gutter

c~tat~lno ani! pal"tlnt.

All work guarantHCI.
Frtt Eatlmalfl
•uaOilallle Prices
Call Heward

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

94f-2UJ
. 949-2160

4/ 29/1 mo .

3· 11-lfc

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR
If you need it buill
or fixed we can do
it.
742-2328
RUTLAND
4. 29 I mo .

REESE i;tlf
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water· Sewer·E lectric
Ga5 Line· Ditches

Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified

1979 Dodge Omn1 024 , 4 cy t .
.:1 s pd .• fron t wheel drive .
Ca tt hf'Tween 2:00 PM an d

6 00 PM. 4469595.
20

ft . boat tr a der . 1975
D odge Charger, PS, PB.
A C. exce llent cond it i on 388
9755 or 4.:16 1642 ex t .337 .

1976 CHEVY lmpilla , qood
cOQdiltnn. 304 ·675 50 17 .

1970 DA TSUN . $115.. 304

675 1484

Truck '~

lor Sa l e

1972 JEEP Wag onee r As i s
or will se ll tor part s Ph .
.:146 7876 or 446 1500.
For 5a le or tr ade 1976 F ·250
a uto. PS. PB. new p a int,

73

v ans&amp;4W . D.

1978 Jeep Renegade C J 7
Lots of extras, $4,200 . Ca ll

M~t!rcycles

1980 Honda CR250. exc.
c ond .. $950 . Call388 8659 .
1980 Suzuk i r oad bike GS
550. limited edi ti on, exc.

co nd ., 1,600. $1,600 . Ca ll
446 ·0307 or 256 9367 .
H o nd a X R 80 Tomas
m op ed, ea c h $300 . Ca ll 446·

1360.
81 Suzukt 850 GL. full dress,
shaft dr1ve, black , lik e
new . Ca ll7561141 a lter 5 :00

show room co nd
Kept
co vered 1n garage . Ca ll bel·
we~n

2:00PM and 6:00PM.
446·9595.
1981 Yamaha MAXIM 650,
1900 moles . Call992-6130.
Har ley

Sporster .

Davidson ,

14,000

1976.

actual

mil es. Very good cond . 742-

2421.

Cheshire, Oh .

Quick silver tarring, motor

Ph. 367·7S60
1-7· 1 tfc

guards,

highway

pegs,

luggage rack, sissy bar, ex-

1.:=========~ c_e~e~tc~n~il_i~~9~9~2~~
CANDLELIGHT INN

Hom e
I mprov emen l s

ST UCCO PLASTERING
t ex t ured ce iltnq s co m ·
m erc 1al and res1denfial.
tree es t1 mates Call 7$6

1980 CR80 Honda. $400.
Phone 304-615·2034 after 5.

Marcum
Roo f i ng
&amp;
Spout ing. 30 yea r s ex
per ie nce, spec talizing 1n
built up roof. Ca ll 388 9857

Pet Clea nin g fea tur ed by
Haff elt Bros ther s Cu stom
Car pe ts. Fr f':'e es t1mates

Ca ll 446 1107
Fre n ch
Cd y
Painl1nq
rcs 1d en t1 al &amp; co mmercial.
tntenor , ex te r io r , paper
hanqing ,
&amp;
t ex tur ed
cei ltnq s. Ca ll 367 7784. or

367 7160.
Cren tt vc
wood
d ec ks .
pressur 12ed pine. cedar &amp;
redwood . Fr ee es tim ate .

Ca ll 388 97 61

1163 Sec Avf' . Gct11 1po i 1S
4.:16 7833 or 446 1833
MOWREY S Upttuh H·r y Rl
1 Box 114 . PI PIPnsonl , 304

67541 54

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Fun shopping tour

8 Thick slice
HJ' Decays

Mulltn5 Stdtng v1 nyl. a lum ,
s tee l sid tng , qu tt ers &amp;
r ooltng
F r ee es t ima tes

Ca ll 446 · 1402.
Spcc•a l M a r c h and Ap ril
on ly . G ene's Deep Steam
C lea nin g. Scotch Ga urd .
Free es t i mate 992 6309
RON 'S Television Servtce
Spec tal iz •n g 1n Zeni th and
Motorola, Quazar , and
house ca ll s. Phone 576 2398
or 446 ·7454
F &amp; K Tr ee Tr.mmtng,
s tump r em ovaL 675 133 1.

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex
perienced ma son, roofe r ,
carpenter ,
e l ec trician ,
qeneral
repairs
and
remodeling . Phone 304 ·675

1088 or 675 4560.
Water we ll s. Com m ercia l
and Dom es li c. Tes t hole s.
Pumps Sal es a nd Servi ce.

304-895· 3802
ADVANCED

Sea ml ess

Gutter Do ors .
Offering
continuous
guttering,
seamless siding , roofing,
garage
door s,
free

estimates. 614-698·8205.
STARK 'S tree and lawn
service , free fe rtilizer with
annual
care , insured .

Phone30H76·2010
House Painting inside or
out . Reasonable rates. 304·

675·6004 .

Tues.-Lidles Niglltl·2
Weci.-Drlnk and Drown
All you"'" drink 1-2
Ttwr.-Poot tourn.mtnts

ioyment or ready to race,

675·3536. 30-4-675·4603.

very good running , super
sh~pe. plus nj~ny 'new par·

P1tttter Bier
4/ lOi tfc

electric. low mileage, ex-

ce llent condition. $875.00.
Ph . 304-675·2195.
1981 KAWASAKI

KX 250

ts·tyclinder &amp; piston &amp;
ring . Low price 1119'5.00.
After 5 p.m . 304·895·3559.

PAINTING -interior &amp; ex·
terior, dry wall &amp;. textured
ceilings, JO,j-675· 1573.
BUILDING &amp; remodel ing,
carpentry, roofing, plum·
. bing, concrete work. 30~·

675&gt;24&lt;10.

------- - ·-·- - -

68 J&lt;Mson
69 Son of
Jacob

70 Layette item
71 Too bad!

73 Tall

14 Congressional

75 Salad

employees
19 Car of a sort
21 Couple

77 Residence
78 Frolics

22 Black

80 Taut

23 Weaselllke
anlmaJ
24 Skllhld

81 Time period
82 Permitted

person
26 Part of a

gun
28 Genuine
29 lllumlnaled
30 Love god
32 Wander

33 Cookbook
direction

motorcross, good for en·

Suiii.-PIUI,Incl

··-- -

Uphol ster y

PAl NT I NG
1nterior and
ex t e r to r .
plum btn g.
roof,ng , 5o m e remodeltng
20 y r s ex p Ca ll 388 ·9652

HotPIIY Hr. 4·6 Dally
Mon,-Kq Nlgtlll· 2

1976 Kawasaki 400 Street,

SOLUTION

1181

J IMS Pest Control. Call us
anytim e for your termite
problems .
Free
in ·
spections . VA &amp; FHA forms
availab l e. Licensed &amp; in·
sured by Ohio &amp; WV1 All
word done by a qualified &amp;
trained service man. 30.4·

Fri. &amp; ht. Bands

l:.attft'Ot' 5!!'111 Jolla
. "l&gt;H •.tn-2471 ·
,I
~4·~11.~ 1 mo. ,

81

$2.200. Cal l388 8769
1977 CHE VY pick up truc k .
pow er
br akes,
pow er
steer mg . 30.:1 ·675 518 1

f-----------~------------

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car

1980 Kawasaki 440 L TO.

Drlnltl &amp; Drown tD-2
Durlnt Bind Only

·· .

CARS and Trucks. most
metkes and mod e ls und er
$200 00 sold thr ouqh toe a t
qovernm ent sal es Ca ll I
714 569 0141 Ex t . 1855 .for
dt r ectory on how to pur
c hasc

Roush Lane

I ftl OYir

jtWator

Topper for &lt;1 sh ort bed
p1cku p tr uck Call256 646 1

tfc

If you need you r tr a5 1l
hau l ed away, co li HorpN
304 675 S868 brtWf'f'n I PM
and 5 P M Lown mowN
rep~ 1red
87

1 - - - - - - - - - - - ! 1 9 8 0 Honda CX500 cus tom ,

DAILY SPECIALS

-----·- -

JtM S WMcr Servtcf' Cr111
Jtm Lon1cr, 30~ 675 7397

H ARTS Used Ca r s. N ew
Ho vf'n Wc5 f Vt rQ tn ta Over
20 less ex pen s1ve cor5 tn
stock

446-2642

446 -l91S

No Answer 446-2062
Modern stea m cleaning
tor car p et &amp; uphol stery
( tnsu r a ne e work l .
• Scotcguard -JM
• Walls, floor s,
wtndows
• watpr &amp; smoke
da mag e
Indu st r ia l
Co mm erc1al
Residential
Dependable, 8 year s eK p erie nce. we d o care!

Free Estimates

Need some th1 nq hauled
away or so m efhtn q moved?
We'll do 1t Ca ll 446 3159 or
614 286 S740 ol tH 6

Pace Tr ave l Tra il er 20 1 &lt;
X 7 Se lf con t a 1ned . SISOO.
992 990? ask for Linda

Motor Hom e
&amp; Camper s

r

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE

367 0591

1970 M G M1dqet GoOd
co nrt11i on New l1r es. wire
r 1m5, runs good . $1200 992
1036 Man thru Fri 614 247

79

ti c

JONES BOYS WATER
SERV ICE Call 367 7471 or

Now H aultnq llme s tonf' fill
dtr l to p sotl Qrilvf' l Frf'f'
f'Sllmc1tf'S CCIII 367 710 1

1724 7 to 10 p m

152 Thi rd Ave .
6 14-446 -27 I 6

Ge n era l Hauling

1914

PM .

MondiY· Sunday
2 : JO p.m.· :l :JO a.m.

· •sewer
eG11Llnes
• Septic Systems

85

992 1065

74

OPEN

eqqzen

Open Road Mote,.. Home
complete , QOOd co nd . •
moun ted on 1971 Chevy .
c ustom
camper
56,000
mtles, n ew t•res, PS , PB,
CB rad10 Mu s t see to ap
prec tate 614 985 3823

1 - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 4 4 6 0307 or 256 9367 .

Ohio St. Rt. 7
PH . 992-9913

elackllots
' • ~ump Trucks
eLo-Boy
eTrlftcher.

E l ect n ca f
&amp; Refr,g er it iiOn

17 It se ll con t a •ned Cam
per Excellent co nd 843

Rt. 1, Cheshire, Oh .

- . PUlliNS
EXCAVATING

------·
"
. ·-

custom

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Aluminum Siding

1968

Camptng
E qupm en!

Bill's

Nu· Prime replac em ent
w indows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
How met Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum ufilitv
buildings
691 Miller Dr ive

698 2161

34

lteuonable Rates

plumblnp, electric, and
htlllng.

INSULATION
Vinyl&amp;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

For more information-

PH. 614·992-7848

?"

Trencher 5ervtce we d tC!
dit c hes for wa ter . 'Sf'wer .
gas. e lec trt c i tnes et c. rn ll

1977 Datsun B 2 10 2 door
hatchbac k . 5 speed $1 . tOO

Cerpet Installation

ullll'ooms, remodeling,

GALuPoLHrP~o

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Bound

Room Size and Area
Rugs lound

pliences,

CALL COLLECT

P 1c k up

V W bug . Aller 5. 992 27 61.

72

No Sunday Calls

cu.-m kitchens and,,.

446-4782

1966 GMC

78

949· 2860.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
PRICE IS RIGHT

Pomeroy, Oh .

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages "
Call for free siding
estimates, 949·2801 or

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

CLEANED

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

• Dish ·

PARTS and SERVICE

C.,et

NATHAN BIGGS
lS Yrs . Experience

1-I ~======~2=·2~6·:1f:c~

washers

ON

7560 .

Ph.992·2174

eltanges • Refrigerat·

Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
or 992-2282

1978 Corvette Stiv er An
n ivesa ry Ed tt ton all op
tions. tow m1t eage, cxc
cond . Call 367 767 1 or 367

PASQUALE
ELECTRIC

-f------- - - - -

SEWI N G Machtne reprltr &lt;.,,
servtcc . Aut hor1zed Stnqcr
Sa les &amp; Serv1ce SharpC'n
Sc 1sso r s
Fabr1 c Stlop .
Pom eroy 991?784

3 24· tf c

6·15· tf c

• backhoe
•ucavating
*septic svstems
*A water, s.-wer
&amp; eas lines
•dwmp truck
•limestone

3·19·tf c

482

Walk into formal entril nc e with open sta 1r(i1Sf' to
th is lov ely c ompletely rcd ecoratf'd ' homr lolj.1h:-C1
in the city . Within wttl~inq distance t6 s llopptnq
area . 3 bedrooms. 2 fu ll bath s rl nd .Cha'rminq large
kitchen . Spacious livtnq room with woodburni'nq
fireplace . This g rac ious hom e has a naturfl l qa's
FA furnace like new. Immediate possession .
11146
We'rewai tingforyour ca ll .

SUN . 10 A.M. to6 P .M.
Phone 74HS7S

Rt . 1 Cheshire, Ohio

PH. 992-9913
St. Rt . 7

GARAGE

TRUCK SERVICE
47ft . Working Height

Gal l1 p0t1 S 01verstl1ed Con
sf Co . Cu s tom dozer &amp; t__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
backhoe wo rk
Spec1al r
t arm rate s. Ca ll u5 for free
!I'~ IMPROVEMENTS
estima tes J46 .:1.:140

5580

St. Rt . 124 Pomeroy , OH .

Tirt sales&amp; repairs. gas

Excava ting

Lawr ence
S•cJe n5 t r1 c ker
Backtloe 5L'!' II ILL' Call 675

Roger Hysell

AERIAL BUCKET

Backhoe and doz er work
by fhe job or by the
hour . Also lic ensed se p·
tic
ta nk s installed .
Dump
tr uck .
Free
estimates . Ca ll 388 -8623
or 446 ·9459 .
tt c

ps. etc 741 3063

9 AM . to 10 P.M .

&amp;

Onnk &amp; Drown a ll ntghls
MONTH OF JUN E
F r iday And SaturdAy
MARS HAll TE NN E NT
Counlrv R oc ~
NOTE
( rO H OYt'r\, Thun &amp;
Sun . band i liHI\ I JO. e nd ~o
II · JO. Other ntghl i , 10 IO 1

basement . Spacious living room . Owner must Sell.

Priced drastically low. Sl9,900.

FRYE'S PENNZOIL

L enno x Hea ting &amp; Air
Conditioning . All Types
tn sulatton
E l ec trtcat
Wiring .
Call 446 -8515 or &lt;146 ·0445
atter4 : 30p . m .
tf c

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EKCAVATING IN C.

Cor Four ttl and Ptne
Phone 446 3888 or 446 44 77

76

TUES . thru SAT .

CRO SSOIIERS

4,000 l ord d iesel tra ctor
Front end l oader fit s 5. 000
or 4,000 Ford tr ac t or . Fo r d
2 bottom pl ow . New po l a toe

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION

; 938

420·tf c

Salem St.
Rutland, Oh.

May 10·11 · 21·21
CROSSOVERS
Drink &amp; Drown &lt;I ll noghl ~o
Thurs . Frt Sill. Sun
M&lt;1y 17 ·21·1' JO

New Ford 2 r ow co rn plan
ter . never been u sed . Ca ll

THIS ONE IS FOR YOU - 3 bedrooms, living

sider helping with fina ncing .

Ph . 949-2160 or 949 -2322

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

P tumbmg

CARTER'S PL UMBIN G
AND HEATI NG

COMING BANO S
Fri ., Apr . 30, Sat ., May 1

Good return

#970

TOM HOSKir;s

84

qas.

He

&amp; H eati ng

" The muhine et tomorrow ·todayt
Souing Altead N~ture ' s Way
Curtails your hOuse dut.t problemt. .
u .P.5. Ser~ice
Gallipolis 614-446-20'6
Parkersburg, w.v. l04·41s-S4l4
MurdOCh /h . &amp; Lakeview Dr.

*Willis T . Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446~9Sl9

&lt;"

~

82

256·6534.

...
INVESTMENT PROPERTY

s ian do~"

RAINBOW-The AmazincWater Machine

l ·se t of John Deer e 4 bo t ·
tom 16' sem i m ount p low s.
1· H i ll sboro tr i axle goose·
nec k 78' trail er Ca l l 614 ·

,,

V IEW OF THE RIVER
Two st ory, three
bedr oo m s, f am• IY room wi th sliding doors,
qarage, natural gas. 2 to ts. All thi s
ove rl ook tnQ th e Ohio River . N ew l y painted.
Very c lean Ca ll t oday Low $30's .
11 902

• Remodeling

"2-3543 or "2-231•

t'F.ACEFUL AREA

NOT OVER PRICED! Are yo u tired ot
1ook1na a t ove r pr1 ced homes? Then see th1 s
l 1ke new 2 bf'droom ranch . New pa1n1 New
eM pe t
Ca rport . FIat l awn
Immedia te
t1 989
posseSStOn On l y S24 .900

446 ·1080

" Why don't you play
grass like tbe golfers oo

VACUUM SWEEPER EXCHANGE &amp; SERVICE

Fa.!"'!'. ~ q_u t_p ~ ~ nt

RUSTIC HILLS, Meigs Lnun11v
MODULAR

Call446·3896

Authorized Factory Dtller for
Compact, Hoover. Eureka,Regina,
Pan~tO.nnic Vatuum .

WHAT .A BU Y

bedroom , modern in every wa y . •11 b ase m ent.
Utilit y r oom , spnng fed r ese r vo ir on 1.96
acres . You must see to appr ec i ate .
f/959

S~RVICE

And Home Maintenanc e
• Roofing of all tv p es
• Siding

Frank Rose Const . Co .
Remodeling repair , new
co n struction , all tvpes.
Free es tim ates, a ll work
fully
guaranteed .
Residential ,
co m m erc ial. tndu slrial and
mining, el ec tri c work .
BSHA cert . 446-4627 . lf c

lS Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohi o

83

home, 4. BR , ?11 bo fhs, eqU ipped c nt· in kitchen,
tam!ly r oom Wt th f i r eplace, formal living etnd din tnQ room . You won't believe Th1S home unl ess you
see 11 for your se lf M ak e your appoin tm ent tod ay to
walk into the en trance of o~c of th e m ost love l y
homes in th e areil .
., 32,

BEAUT I FU L RURAL SE TTING - 40 acrP S
C~nct
S y c nr a iel b1 lev el home wtlh 3 &lt;l
bed r oom&lt;&gt; . l hrtlll'io , ktt r hcn ond tamtl y room
Mostly woodPd Wllll 2.000 lb tob&lt;t cco base.
q('l c; IC'&lt;t Se. n1 CP qnrdcn M C'cl. rurn! watrr. coal
hou v· .1nd tarqe srpara te aaroqc
Fl 991

Furniture Stripping
and refinishing

$650 Cal l 446 4630.

:&amp;-til'/eS!a C!E -~
61

MILLER
ELECTRIC

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

The Sunday Times·Senlinei- Pag-D·7

Services offered

• Free estimates
• 20 Y rs . experience

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN B£TWEEN

DUTCH COLONIAL
Styl e, beau ty. charm, co mfort - a ll desc ribes th1 s

ROUSH LANE- 4 room house and bath, par·
52

65

w . va .

Business Services

Rabbit , $3,000

Nt CF - C l r fiN
6 r oom hou 5f'. brill'. Cf'llrtr . 1 &lt;;!Or rl(!&lt;' hutl clt nciS. own
waiN sy~ T f'm , ntCf' co unt ry arrn o5phcrf' , n tcc
qr oun(f. IOT3 o l Sllruhbrry , IMQr lf'vf'l Cirl rdf'n orca
onct pn ccd on ty S/9,900 You mus 1 SCf' IIH S one
Ph onf'
P 516

tor spec ial appointment.
45" K tt che n s•nk , can be
see n a t 1605 J eff er son Ave .
Pt. Pl e asant .

1.000 Bushe l s. car corn
Bud Hatfield, 304 675 3308

vw

Real Estate - Genar•l

1352
FLAIR FURNITURE &amp;
DES IG N. Bem co mat

H ay &amp; Gril lO

64

1977

Cal l 614 682 7373 al ter SPM

0. ~ =­

Avac ado Kenmore wa5 her
$ 125 .
avaca do
West1ngho u se d r ye r $1 10,
eac h
ex t ra
nt ce. cuc h
qua r an tee d 256 1207 .
cnesl t ype deep fr eeLe. 20
c u. ft . , exc. co nd . Ca ll 256

REG QUARTER HORSES
Tra1n1n g ,
s how1ng .
breeding , sales &lt;1nd bOM
d1ng . con ta c t Dan Beam.
Ga ll ipol is, .:146 0183
Pol led Here ford herd bull

Swee t pota t oe plant s 7 dif
teren t var tties , Robert W
L ew i s. Rt . 12.:1. Ractne . 8.:13

AutOs for~ Sa le

71

L1v es fock

379 1468 .

S pa cio u s
thr ee
bedroo m
immac ulate
hom e . Lar ge ·livi ng
room , dining room,
sewing
r oom , utility
r oom,
11/ J
baths .

CENTRAL REALTY ·

3 FLAT ACRFS l ifl &lt;lllCf'

General

2 'r' CM old pony 51 1n 111gh .
Ha iler broken . Ex t ra n 1ce .

POODLE

Fruit

(NEWSPAPER Elfi'I:RPIWII: A&amp;Slf.)

I

Rr1bb1IS and CrlQE'S l or Sil i C
CCI II .:146 6632

58

taken care of West's one
escape card wben be bad

BR IARPATC H KENNEL S

POODLE

...

WE&gt;,.

63

ths o ld , 304 675 1076

some slight belp by the
defense, be brought tllreo no-

JOHNSO N boat mot or . 51~
HP . CM body too ts. and
(O ncrp te mtxN
304 576

Pets for Sa le

M ov ing, mu st sell Ar&lt;C.
black and w h ite cocker
spani e l. m ale, $100, 7 men

Smart South scores

304 675 41 15

56

56

BRIDGE

GrlSOi tnC' etnd hea t. nq f uel
Ct1 11 E xcelstor Oil Com
P&lt;l ny 614 992 nos.

C,lll 388 9790

1977 Cttry s lcr Ncwpor1. low
mil ra qr Crlmpf'r 26 '. qood
&lt;; h,lpC' . wtlh Rcf'Sf' hil c ll
W,1tn ut toqs on lllf' stump .
756 1/91

Mercnaruuse
S1

M 1sc. Mcrcha nd• ce

55

Furnrshcd Room s

SL EEPrN G

5·1

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Ma 9, 1982

w. va .

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

The Sunda

oss successor

35 A Fltz~
gerald

37 Halt
39 Type ot
40

soldier
Gasp for
breath
Contended
Withered
Succulent

41
42
44
48 Shade
47 Bellow
.C8 Profound

50 Mollify
52 Downpoor
53 Exclamation
55 Narrow
opening

57 Bel1ofdl
58 Silkworm

59 Tear
60 TantaJum
lymbof

62 Vegas or
Palm as
6-4 Petitions
66 Hebrew
month

Ingredient

84 Coupled

86 Ceremony
87 More
courteous
89 Whale
92 Be of use
95 Garbo
98 Unlock

99 Vertical
support
101 Shred

103 Let fall
104 Youngster
105 Dig for COB I
106 Scale nola
107 Printer's
measure
108 Goddess ot
discord
110 Resort
111 City train

112 Warble

113 College
official
115 Eli.ISIS
117 Hurried
119 Teutonic
deity

120 Otherwise
121 Expelled
124 Ch81f
t26 Coagulate
127 Foolball
kick
128 SCalp
130 Dlstr1ct in
Germany
132 Fellow:
Colloq .
133 Keen

134 Arabian

23 Decree

garment
135 Fallin drops
137 Unruly child
139 Occurrence
140 Regrets
141 Languishes
143 Three· Sp
145 Men 's name
146 Replies
148 Struck out
150 Gossiper
152 Spirited
horses
153 Distribute
154 Country ol
Asia
156 Followed
closely
157 Worms
158 Pinochle
term
159 Sicilian
volcano
160 Nickname
tor Elisabeth

25 M8fl10fan-

DOWN
1 Fissile rock
2 Danger s
3 Cla!lered
4 Silkworm
5 Actual being
6 Romance
lang.
7 Latvian coin
8 Venlilates
9 Peanut

goodie
10 King Lear' s

daughter
11 Follow
orders
12 Rocky hill
13 Tin symbol
14 Shut up
15 Circle part

16 Of Greece
17 Weirder
18 Advanlage
20 Pitcher
parts

dum
27 Mourn
28 Dispatched
31 SoH dnnk
33 Polson
36 GreeK god
38 Pelle!
40 Mideast
bread
41 Vacuum
43 Lampreys
45 Puffs up
46 Clothe5·
maker
47 Hindu
queen
49 Decant
51 Angry
52 Uprising
53 Winglike
54 Nimbus
56 Seesawing
59 Storekeepers
60 use a
stopwatch
6 1 Retired. in a
woy
63 Tasted
65 Luge
67 Insect
69 Tra follower
70 Keglers
72 Barcelona's
locale
74 Article
76 New Eng.
state
77 Collect
79 Pose tor a
portrait
83 Haul with
effort
85 Grumble
86 Ceremony
87 European
88 Gemstone
89 Digraph
90 Most
unusuet
91 Choice part

92 Oevou.ed
9301-

I

94 Near

96 Drink
heavily
97 Armadillo
tOO French
arttcie
102 Tears
105 light rain
109 Prophet
11 2 Slush
113 Eat
114 Small bite
116 Sow
118 Bespatter
t 20 Passes. as

time
121 Gray·
browns
122 City In
Washington
123 Pub game
missile
125 Vibrates

t26 Sings
127 Destert
treats

129 Soil
13 1 Street
shows
132 Pursue
133 Animals
coats
134 Was ill
136 Fuel
138 Late
140 warren
Beatty film
141 Source ot
water
t4 2 Chair
144 Make a llry)
14 7 Tiny
148 Female deer
149 Knotts of TV
15t Cravat
153 Berlin
money.
Abbr .
155 Chile, Arg.,
Uru .. ate

�Pag e- 0 ·8

Middleport

Pom e roy

The sunday Tim es- s e ntin e l

May 9, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Entries sought for Reagan renews call ~AC end~rses
antique car show for school prayer .!?;~~.~~¥~d~~~~:~:::"·:.~,~~~

Business

'arime•-

30.

Ve hicles

will be disp layed
throughout the co rrun uni ty at selected locations on both F ri day a nd
Saturday . Reside nts wishing to
display thcJr ve h1des are as ked to
cmnplete the follow ing form a nd
ma il it to Roge r Davidson , P.O. Box
54. Pomeroy. Ohio.

MIDDLE PORT l'i\ R SUOW

proponents have bee n ur ~i ng a cons titutiona l a mendm ent sincl'.
Co ng ress has r ejected su!'h
measures several times in the past.
Any amendment would req uire
congressiona l approval , as well as
ra tification by 38 states, before it
became pa rt of the U.S. Co nstitution.
Two White House ai des. neither of
whom wanted to be identified, said

WASHI NGTON 1API - President
Reaga n is re newing his call fo r a
constitutiona l amendment to permit
vo lu ntary praye r in public schools,
but he is not yet ready to propose
specific language, White House
aides say.
But by end orsi ng wch an amend1ncn t at a &lt;.:crern ony in the Rosl' Ga rden today - whic h has been
desig nated a na ti onal day of praye r
-

Address .
Phone ....
Veluclel s 1 to be cxhilllled .

Man arrested
following indictment
Gi\I.I.I POI.IS - A Ga llipolis m an
has been lodged 111 Lht' Galli(j County

Jct il on an indi ctment warrant.
Robert L. Lo ng. 25, a Smit he rs
Street resident . w.as t.a kt•n inl n
cu•tod y at 7:40 p.m. Friday, accordwg to tlw e~ rrest record e~ l lht•
jail.
Long was secretly llldlcled by a
Gallia Coun ty grand jury more than
two weeks ago on a theft charge . Tht•
rh(jrgt' was lis ted on the t:trres t ca rd
e1s a second offcnst' felony.
In oth er ma tte rs, the s he nff' s
department inves ti gat ed (j urwve hi de acc ident in Ka na uga Sa tu rday morning re1-i ull ing in lrtlllor injury tu ct passe nge r .
Acco rdin g to tlw re port. the
ve hicl e, dn ven by Duls&lt;J R. Wray,
28, Rt. 2. Vinton, was westbound on
Ga lli polis Twp. Rd. 1014 , nea r F1ft h
Avenu e, at 8:45 a. m. when lht.·
ve hicle reached a dead end.
The ca r was report edl y unab le tu
slop 111 tulle (jfld struck a pile of
(js phctlt, ce1 using moderate dct mage.
Injured was Richard Ray, 21. Ht.
2. Crown City. The report indicated
he did nut require trea tment.
The departm ent also nted a Ht . 2.
Bidwell man in a onc-vehick cras h
tm Ohin554 F'riday ;,jftern oon .
Richard R. Ni bt•J·t, 49. was eas t-

~ngjneers

will

divide winnings
EATONTOW N. N.J . I AP I- Four
computer engineers who went g(j rnbling armed with a secret belling
system are taking the $186 ,000 they
won and doin g wha t mi ght be expected of the mathemati call y m inded : They're di v1 ding it.
The roommates captured three
gambling cnntl!st.s in fi ve weeks, and
narrowly missed add1n g $25,000 to
the put at a Frida y ni ght contes t 111
Atla nti c City .
All fou r haVt' ex t e ns i ve
backgrounds in mathemati cs and
probability .
Bill Weidner. pres ident of the Sa nds Casino in Atla nt1 c City. where the
men added to their pot. sa id he
doesn't objed to whateve r system
they've been us ing .
One of the bunch, Davi d Gatenby,
came in second in Fnday's final
$25,(){)()-round of the Sands World
Champions hip of Cas ino Games, in
whi ch players stak e $5.000 to compete in baccarat. craps , roulette a nd
blackja ck.
The mght before. Gatenby picked
up $31 ,998 winning the bacca rat
divisJUII of the Sands tournament.
Another roommate. Michael Meye r ,
won the craps di vis ion Wednesday
ni~ht. adding close to $80,000 and
beating 117 other gamblers. It was
the second time in his life Meye r had
shot craps.
But Meyer's luck - or sys te m failed him Friday. He lost his stake
in the final round.
Gatenby and Meye r, both 24,
Warling, 29, and John Lertola, 24,
are computer engineers for Bell
Laboratories in Holmdel.

Rabies clinic set
POMEROY - Rabies is a continuing problem throughout Ohio.
The best way to guard against this
dreaded disease is to have your pets
vaccinated against rabies.
'The Meigs County Health Department wiU conduct a clinic at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds, cattle
sale ring, Wednesday, June 2. Hours
will be3p.m. !o6:30p.m.
Dr. Allen Boster, DVM, will be administering the vaccinations. Cost
will be $3 for each animal vac-

cinated.

Dc)gs must be on a leash and other

animals must be confined. The
Health Department urges pet
owners to take advantage of this low
cost service. .
Anyone wishing additional infonnation may call the Meigs County Health Department ai99U626.

•I

bu und at 5. 15 p .11 1. when he rnet a
westbound vc lu de dri v111g left uf
center. Nibert swerved rrg ht to
avoid a collision a nd drive into (j di tc h. Tlw other ve hiclt.• co ntinued on.
the report said .
There was sltght dama ge to
N1bert's vdllcll' and thc dnn·r was
tic keted for nu opera tor's ltcensc.

The dcp(j rl llll'llt JS also prubmg
reported gas a nC bct tkry thef ts frolll
vehicles parked at tiH· Jones Boys of·
fJCt' on J ackson Pth•. The rnc 1de nts
we re repo rted by tht• sln rc's
ma n(jgemt·nt on Fn d&lt;Jy .
Also ja il ed b1 the depa rtm ent
Fridct y wa:-; .Jt'ffrcy Hust·, :H,
lk iC:I wa re, on a munlt'ipal cou rt order .
Pu lt{'l' ;rlso Joukl'd 111tu a

twu-

\'l'hl c le C:ICl'Jdt•rJI on Th1rd Ave nue
nea r Court Street Fnda y afternoon.
The report semi the s hm·el on (j
backh oe bc111g hau lt•d by Frank J .
Smith. 53. Hurrieanl'. W.Va . ca ugh t
thl' driver's stde doo r of a pass in g
..,,,ulhbound a uot dnven by The lma
W Fle rnm g, 75, (;a\ltpnlts. ct ntl
c&lt;:~ u s e d Dilly mutlcrall' damagl' to
Fll'l11Hlg's Vl' hrc\e .
Cited by police F nd ay was Davi d
I. Wa llace. Zl , HI. l. Pomt P leasant .
fttr spt•t•tli ng.

Ohio's sc hool funding prog ra m ."
In the race for the. U.S. Senate
seat. the council g1ves Its support to
incumbent Sen. Howa rd . Metzenba wn in the Democrallc pnmary
a nd to Paul P feifer 111 the
Republica n prima ry.
..
E nd orsed for the poslllon of
Sec retary of State in the Democ ratic
primary was Sherrod Brown. Virgil
Brown was chose n by the committee

Hcogan is fulfillmg a longstan-

Reaga n would not s pe ll out the

E ndorsem ents were made in the

in the Republican prima ry .electi on

About 100 reli gio us leaders. 1neluding the Rev. J erry Fa lwell of th e
Mura l Majorit y, were planning to a ttend the even t.
The Supreme Co UI1 decided in 1962
that orga nized praye r in public
schools was uncon•titutiona l, a nd

langua ge he believes such a n a mendment should contain .
·' We are moving towa rd an endurse m ent of som e speci fic
language," one aide said. addin g
tha t talks were under way now at the
White House and the J usti ce Depart·
me n!.

Democra ti c guberna toria l prima ry
an d in t he Re publi ca n a nd
De mocra ti c pn1na ri cs for the offices
of United States Senator a nd Ohi o
Sec r eta r y of Sta te . Th e e ndo rsc m c nt s res tJlt ed fr om interviews wi th the ca ndidates.
In t he race for the Democra tic
normna ti on for gove rnor, the OEA
EPAC 'Oun cil ~ave it,ppo t t
Lie ute na nt s
R1 chard Celeste.

for Secreta ry of Sate. " All of the
ca ndida tes were selected for endorsem cnt on the basis of their
posi tiOn s on iss ues aff ecting
educati on," commented Luddcke.
'' We are asking our m embe rs a nd all
others interested in the fu ture of
public edu cation l o consider these
endorsements wht n voti ng in their
respective party's primary electi n
on June 8,"shesa id.
She sai d tha t the EPAC council

··our endorsement of Ric hard
Celeste was based primari ly on his

wouldm eet so me timc following the
primary election to cons ider en-

propoS(:jb on restructuring t.a xes a nd

dorsement.s for the Nove m be r elec-

funding Ohio elementa ry and seconda ry schools," Luddeke said. "THe

lion .

d in~ co mm itm en t to co nserva ti ves.

Nallll' . .. .

Assoc iation has endorsed three
Democrats an d t wo Republica ns fo r
statewide offices in the June
pri ma ry election.
The ann ouncem ent was ma de by
OEA President Nancy l.uddeke
fo llow ing a meet ing of th e
assoc ia ti on's Educa tors Political
Action Committee rE PAC 1, whi ch is
made up of teacher representa tives
fro m all a reas of the sta te.

Consti.•tutional amendments f~rmer"
On Ohl.o's November ballot
COLUMBUS. Ohio I API - The
l.egrslature has placed two proposed
state constitut 1ona l amendments on
November ba ll ots, one to rai se sal es
taxes tu finance a passenge r tra in
system and a nother to help home
buye rs borrow money .
The House com pleted legislati ve
al'lion Wednesday on two SenatL4
passed resoluti ons. placing th em on
the ba llot. Gov . Ja mes A. Rhod es'
signature is not required.
Re presenta ti ves eoncurred 74-24
wi t h Se na te cha nges in one meas ure
lett ing voters decide whether to
ra1sc Ohio's 5 pe rcent sa les ta x to 6
pe rcent to pay fur an $8 billi on h1 ghspeed rail passenge r system .
Re p. Hubert J . Bog gs, DJ efferson, sa id non l' of the amendment;; add ed by the upper chamber
ha rmed the reso lutiO n's purpose of
creali ng nt•w jobs and spa rkin g
ct·unomJc redeve lopment.
Re venue from the er.tra sales ta x
would be used to buil d a ra il system
simila
those
a nd,
J apa n.r Itto wou
ld of
lmkEurope
Cleveland
Akron-Ca nt on. Colwnbus. Dayton ,
Spn ngfield, Ha milton-Middletown ,
Clllci nnati .Ynun gstown. Lorain-Ei yn a and Toledo.
The House we nt along 74-23 with
Senate changes in a resolution
plac ing on the ba llot a state fma nclllg plan to hl'lp would-be home
buyers frustra ted by hi gh interest

They would then ma ke the muncy
avct ilable to borrowers at interest
rates expected to be 2 perce nt to 4
perce nt below the prime ra te.
Three similar housing pla ns have
bee n rejected by voters.
The ballot issues were among a
ha ndful of bills on whi ch the House
completed legislati ve ac tio n Wednesday.
Also approved. and se nt to
Rhodes' desk. were measures tha t
would :
-St n• ngthen the powe rs of the
sta te medi ca l boa rd to police the
medi cal professiOn . givi ng it sulr
poe na powe rs.
- Prohibit parkin g on pn va te
property without an owner's conse nt
in violation of posted prohi bi ti ons or
reg ul ations.
- Permanentl y exempt fr om t he
prohi bition on use of decora tive nutdoo r gas lamps any tha t we re connected for use with a reside nce by
Nov. 9, 1978.

s~ove~no~

lice nse suspended 90 days, DWI ;
Kent Varney, Rt. I , Long Bottom,
$300 an d cos ts. 30 days conf1·ne1n e•nt .
20 days suspended , license suspended for 90 days, DWI ; Wa lter A.
Ellis , Rutl a nd , $15 a nd costs, 10 days
confinement suspended, six months
probation, no opera tor 's license;
Louis Louden. Ches hire, $250 and
costs, hunting pri vileges rev oked

through 1982, hunt a nd assist in th e
taking of a wild turkey with gun
during the closed season ; David
Co nn oll y, Pt. P leasant, $250 and
costs, huntin g pri vileges revoked
through 1982, gun forfe ited, shoot
and take a wild t urkey with a gun
durin g the cl osed season ; Keith
Divelbliss. Lancaster , $21 and costs,
speed.
Forfeiting a bond was David L.
Smith, Nobe, W. Va ., $44, speed.

Ijiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~iJ.~~~~~~fi!~i~~-~jjiiiiiiliiiiii

r e~tes.

Shouting louder
MILWAUKEE. Wis. tAP!- Ra
dlo Havana tra nsmits E nglis h ia n·
guage programming on the 1160
frequency, us ing 150,000 wa tts.
which Is three times stron ger !ha n
the largest U.S. commercial clear
channe l stations, reports Jtm UUI ,
presld e nl, News -Sports R a d io
Network.
" At night, the Hava na broad·
casts ca n be picked up In more tha n
25 percent of the U.S.," HUI said .
Cuba has been using radio for the
past two yea rs for broadcasting to
U.S. listeners.

"Tht• houSing industry needs this
reso lution," Re p. Troy Lee Ja mes,
0-Cievcland. tile Chi ef sponso r , sa id .
" Let's get on about the business of
housing in th1s a rea."
The amendment would allow the
Ge neral Assembl y to enact laws
making fina ncing ava ila ble for
bu ymg, building or construction
work on houses.
The state would bor row money for
the program by issuin g tax-fr ee bonds. Proceeds from the bond sales
would be loa ned to finan cial in-

1981 OLDS CUTLASS L.S.

stitutions.

Thi.s lu x ury mid ·s ized s e d a n is e xtra cl e an in s ide and out . Finished in Midnight
Blue with match ing c us tom cloth interior . V·6, air c ond ., c rui se control , AM · FM
radio, wire wh e e l c ove r s and only 18,901 mil es.

1rWia~

!J§ 'B1[,5'?g
ELBERFELDS
Sinc e l864

1978 FORD FUTURA 2 DR.
A utumn Gold ex te ri o r with contrast ing cloth inte rior . Landau top , air cond ., 6
c y linder e ngine, a uto . tran s. On e careful owner . See this specially price d auto
today .

You'!: nt·v •· l bP at d
loss fo 1 p.utn e rs o n thL·
tenn 1s court 'Nlth thrs
W lllllUICJ ,~o mb1nat1 on!

Th e' Pldyo ll s lm•·
gudrdnle•··s yo u'!. look
lrke a pro m the

MONTE CARLO

Two tone blue, cust om cloth in·
ferior , Ra ll ye wheels, am ·fm
st ereo, and much, much m or e.

po l yPs!Pr (·olto n short
sleeve e ng 1neen::.d
strrpe Jersey pullover

MONZA HATCHBACK

GRANADA 2 DR .

Pea rl white with dark blue lan
dau top and matching interior .
Only 39,000 miles, 302 V·B, air
co nd . New Pr emium tir es.

Bamboo Bei ge with camel tan in·
terior , 4-spee d •. 4 cy linder, only
16,000 mil es. a•r cond . Compare
anywhere.

FOR EXCELLENCE - Carroll R. Norris, left,
owner of Carron Norris Dodge In Gallipolis, accepts
the award for exceUence from D.R. Krumboltz, Cincinnati zone manager for Chrysler auto sales. Norris, a
Syracuse resident, was honored for outstanding per·
formance in managing his agency. His award was

·r ,"'

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.,

I will we re deSig ned fo r

' '&gt;'

ac llo n and comfort.
}
I/
The sin pecl-e last IC
'I
.I
waistband and s1de \\.
. ''
vents prov1de freedom" .:::::::- \ .,
and ease of move ment
to make you a standout
on th e co urts.

r: '

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"

Black on black with custom ca r mine cloth interior , air, crui se,
am -fm ster eo. Rallye wheels.
power antenna . Double Sharp.

•,
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· &gt;-if:''

r ·s Jj!f=-

'---

Wagon season is here - 10 pass.
Two-ton e paint, luggage rack,
only 43,275 mi leJ.

Specially Pnced At

RED · RED · RED.

Small V-8, air cond ., am-fm
ca ssette ster eo, Rall ye II wheels
and only 38,395 1ow. low miles.

By LEE MITGANG
AP Education Writer
With students facing the prospect
of rtslng tuitions and decllnlng fed·
era! aid next September, a number
of small liberal a rts schools are
shaJlliY increasing loans a nd offe rlog students novel ways to pay for
their education.
Severad, lncluding Case Western
Reserve University In Cleveland,
offer students a chance to pre-pay
all four years of their schoollng,
wtlh agu11-rantee pf n0 tultionhlkes.
Marly others Mvl! dug deep lnto endowments, even lnto operating
funds, to set up subsidized student .
and parent loan programs.
One schoo!, &amp; Jolt College In Beloit, Wls., has set up a "moral obligation scholarship" fund -built on
the premise that student aid recipIents henceforth are e xpected
"morally," if not legally, to pay
back that aid when they can after
graduation.
The plans are mainly aimed at
middle-class students who no
longer qualify for federal assistance because of President Reagan's student guaranteed loan
cutbacks. Further, tuition increases next year are expected to
average in the 14 to 15 percent
range. This year, private four-year
colleges cost an average of $6,885,
and simUar public universities average $3,873.
"Smaller colleges Uve very close
to the edge, Uke managers of small
businesses. They're comlng up
with creative ways to package tul·
tion that famtlles can afford," says
Virginia Hodgkinson, executive dl·
rector of the National Institute of
Independent Colleges and
Universities.
At least three colleges are offerlog tuition pre-payment plans guaranteelng four years of higher
education with no tuition Increases.
Washington University of St. Louis
pioneered the idea four years ago.
Next September, Case Western and
Marietta College ln Manetta, Ohio
are offering stmUar plans .
A freshman at Washington University could make a lump-sum
payment of $25,000 -four times the
$6,250 annual tuition - in return for
freedom from any further tuition

~

Be sure to see all the other men's and boys' summer
shorts • tank tops · 'shirts - men's and boys' depart·
mentl stfloor,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

1980 GMC lf• TON LONG BED
1979 CHEV. 112 TON CHEYENNE
1978 CHEV, '12 TON 4X4 Sl :.soLO" DO

•

"This is really aimed at parents
who earn $35,000 or $40,1XXl - who
have to pay luU freight," says John

Offers real
estate courses
RIO GRANDE - Continuing
· education courses ln real eslate are
being Offered by Buckeyh Hills
Career Center for those individuals
needing hours to renew their licen-

1978 CHEV. '12 TON 4X4 CUSTOM DELI.IXE '
.1976 CHEV. ~UST()MIZED VAN

.

~..,f?~
-;, •,bl!!!!~

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VENTURA 2 DR.

ST. WAGON

'7699

\

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1977 PONT.

1979 FORD LTD

CUTLASS SUPREME 2 Dr

\&lt;f

Shir t S-XL
Slio rt s 28-40

~r~~

1981 OLDS

'

,.

BIG SELECTION OF LATE MODEL CARS &amp; PICKUPS .

renchtown Car Co
I

Bill Gene Johnson

Terry Hamilton

,"We Apprecl•te · '
. Your lutl_n..."

given on the basis of the agency's sales performance,
facilities, customer service, adminisll'lltion and community service. Norris has been a Dodge deal~r In
Gallipolis for the past II years and has been associated
with Chrysler products in the area for the last 36 years.

Colleges incre~se loans, seek
new ways to pay school tuition

hikes.

wilh lash1on coiiM .
Ten n1 s shoriS of
polyester lcotl o n slretch

-

.1980 CHEV.

1979 FORD

1981 CHEV.

level.
In return

WORTIDNGTON - Blue Shield
has announ ced the start of ADVANCE Pla n, a new program to
streamline claims administration .
provide greater predictabiity to
future health care costs, and make
claims filing simpler for subscribers.
Ohio Medical Indemnity Mutua l
Corp., the Blue Shield Plan
headquartered in Worthington, is
contacting all Ohio physicians,
seekin ~ their in volvement in the
voluntary program . Physicians will
be asked to sign an ADVANCE Plan
agreem ent, and to accept , as
payme nt-in-full , Blue Sh 1e ld 's
Usual , Customary and Reasonable
1UCR) reimbursement for services
covered at teh 100-percent UCR
level.
Cooperating physicians also a ~ ree
not to " balance bill" subscr ibers
unless the Blue Shield r eimbursement is less than the UCR
amount, and, if so, to tiill onl y for the
differen ce between the Blue Shield
payment and the 100-percent UCR

O'Brien ends 16 court cases
POME ROY - Fifteen defendants
we re fined and one other forfeited a
bond in Meigs County Court rece nI
t YF ined by Jud~e Pa trick O'Brien
were Cha rl es Nuckl es, Gallipolis ,
$24 an d costs. speed ; Michael Butche r . Ga llipolis, $25 and costs,
s peed ; Victo r Va nSickl e, Ga llipolis,
$10 e~ nd t'Osts, imprope r parking;
Wilfo rd Rou sh, Pomeroy, a nd Ca rl
Stewart. Pomeroy, $23 a nd costs
each, speed : Ricky Patterson,
Hayden ville, $5 and eosts. hi gh rear
bw.n pcr : Norma n Ha wley, Middl epurt , res titu tion a nd costs, ins uffi cient funds; Kim be rl y Eaton,
Pa rk ersburg, $22 and costs, speed ;
Richa rd Peyton. Uex ter , $20 and
rusts, sto p sign: J ames 1.. Allen, Rt.
1. Portl an d, $350 and costs, 60 days
confinement. 48 days suspended.

May 9, 1982

Blue Shield's ADVANCE
program seeks volunteers

1

MIDDLEPO RT - A show of a ntique and spurts cars of resi dents
will be a feat ure of the Middleport
Cham be r of Cm runerce activ ities
bei ng held in co njuncti on with the
observa nce of Fo ur Sta r Ge neral
James Hartin ger Weekend. May 2&amp;-

~entinet Section ~

Biggs, vice cha ncellor fo r adminls·
!ration and fina nce at Washington
University .
For those without that much
cash, Washington University and
Case Western offer an Installment
loan plan allowing student;; to bor·
row the four-year lump-sum payment from the sc hool, with the
same guarantee of no tuition hikes.
The loan is then repaid monthly,
with lnterest. That means an added
advantage: the Interest payments,
13 percent at Washlngton University, are tax deductible. ·
Washington University also allows students ,up to eight years to
repay the loans. That means Instead of paying a straight $6,250-ayear tuition with no loans, a student
who borrows and pre-pays would
pay $4,992 a year for eight yea rs,
with $2,837 as tax -de du c tible
interest.
Biggs says the university loses no
money under the plan, slnce the
pre-payed tuition Is invested ln
hlgh-lnterest money market funds.
Richly endowed schools like Harvard University have lent money to
middle-class students for years.
But startlng next year, smaller,
Jess a!fluent colleges will be greatly
lncreasing the amount of money
they are lending parents and
youngsters.
But some, lncludlng Jack Pelta·
son, President of the American
Councll of Education, warn that In-

.'

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Dickinson College , In Carlisle,
Pa ., has set up a $10 mtlllon, l().yea r
parent loan fund. Parents can borrow up to $2,500 a year at 13 percent
lnterest, with 10 yEars to repay.
Similarly, Loyola Unive rsity, a
Jesuit institution In New Orleans, Is
establishing a plan to allow students to borrow up to $16,000 for
four academic years, repayable at
14 percent interest in monthly Installments over nine years.

Names mental health
drive chairpersons
COLUMBUS - The following per- cent of the visits to general medical
sons have been named to chair Men- doctors are made by patients who
tal Health BeHringer fund drives in have an emotional rather than a
their communities, announc ed physical basis for their symptoms, "
Albert R. Hanna, president of the . Hanna added.
The Mental Health Association is
Mental Health Association of Ohio.
the
nation's oldest and largest volun·
They are Dori• Zerkle, Cheshire ;
teer organization working to in·
Ruth Evans, Vinton, and Miriam
crease understanding of mental
Douglunan, Crown City
health and to improve treatment and ·
"The BeHringer campaign will
couditions
for those who are men·
take place during May, which is
tally
ill,
according
to Hanna. "Since
Mental Health Month," Hanna said.
the
organization
is
not government
" This year's campaign theme,
funded," he added, " support for its
'Mental Health is for Every ...
work must come from contributions
Body,' stresses the interrelationship
as those collected during the
such
of mental and phyhsical health. AcBellringer
drive."
May
cording to National Institute of Mental Health data, an estimated 60 per-

Lonnie Bush named
Evans district head

COWMBUS Lonnie Bush,
originally of Rio Grande,' has been
promoted to northwestem Ohio and
southern Michigan district mal18ger
ses.
The .courses l!eil!B offered are Ad- wiihin Ute restaurant dlvi.llon of Bob
Vertl8ing in Real l!:llta" and Per- Evans Farms, Inc., lllld Robert S.
sonal D)inamics. AdverUsinl in Real Wood, chief operating 'a llcer of the
Eptate will· be conducted May 24-25 reStalirant division.' · '
from 6-9 p.m, ·PersOnal Dynamics
Bush, 29, is now responsible for
will be! held from 8-f p.m. June Bob Evans Farms Restaurants in
Toledo and Liina and Taylor, Mich.
3;·7,8,l0 and 14:
For fjll'ther lnforrila'!_?R.~call 246- . He WiD report to Rinzy ~ocero, ~one
~ ·0{ stop by the carwr.c:enler lll8llller for the area.
Starting with Bob Evanl Fanns in
Monday t11n!11111 ~.Y from 2-8
P·!I!- and oo Friday 'from I a.m.-4 1974 as manager trainee, Bush moat
recenUy managed the Bob .Evans
ll.m.
'
~l

creased lending from university
assets may lead to long-term
dangers for higher education .
" Colleges are going the way of
the na tion's highways and railroads," he says. "Colleges have
been drawing down on accumula ted reserves , and the result Is
the re aren' t as many books In some
school libraries, and buildings and
othe r capital structures aren't beIng malntatned."
Ga rdner-Webb College , a South·
em Baptist-affiliated schoolln Boll·
lng Springs, N.C., has guaranteed
to Its nearly 1,500 students It will dip
Into Its endowment and operating
funds and get contrlbutlons to replace any aid money lost In the Reagan budget cuts.
Whitman College, a liberal arts
school with about 1,200 students In
Walla Walla, Wash., says It will
make $500,000 available for student
toans out of Its own endowment
funds to make up for federal cuts.

,;.

·!

Farms Restaurant ln Toledo on
Reynolds Road at the Ohio Turnpike. He graduated from Rio Grande
College in 1974 with a bachelor's
degree and from Gallia Academy
High School in 1~0.
Bob Evans Farms Inc. Is a Columbus-based sausage and restaurant
company that operates 80 restaurants throughout the seven:.state area of
Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, West
Virglllia, Kentucky, Indiana and
·llllnoili. Bob Evil118 Farms Sausage
is sold in all or part of 15 states and
the District of Colwnbla.

Sh ield s ubscribt• rs wrll lla vc grea ter
fu r

s ignin g t he
ag reement. coopera tin g phys icians
will receive payment on a weekl y
r ather than the current biweekl y
basis. and all pay ments fo r covered
s~ r~i ces
und er Blu e Shi e ld
m edical/surgical contre~ c~ will be
sent directly to doctors. pa yments
for covered se rvi ces provided by
phys icians not in volved in the ADVAN CE Plan wi ll be se nt onl y to su bscribers.
With th,• ADV ANCE P la n. Blue

assura nct' thi.'l "ie r v H:es I..'On•red at

the 100-per c~J . t Ul' H level will be
paid '" full . Th-·y also w1ll lle le" ill·
vo lvctl Ill the cldims f1h ng prucl'SS
since coopera ting AOV ANCE Plan
physicians will .'!Jlltplct t• anti se nd
cla im forms to Blue Shwld for thelll,
111 most insta nces
The ADV ANCf. Plan docs nu t Jll·
terfc re with the subscriler's chmce
of ph ys 1cian nn r dues rt ir·tedcre 111
the tra dillonal pa1icnt - phys1c1an
rela t ionsh rp.

Named for
achievement
CHESIDRE - The United States
Achievement Academy has listed
Kevin Napier, son· of Christine
Napier, as a 1982 U.S. National
Award winner in speech and drama .
Kevin, who attends Kyger Creek
High School, was nominated for the
award by Kathy Spencer, an English
teacher m speech and drama at

KCHS
His name will appear in the
achievement academy's offi cial
yearbook, published nationally .
The recipient is also the grandson
of Pauline Rife of Cheshire and Mr.
and Mrs. J .L. Napier of Brooksville,
Fla .
SUSAN STANLEY

Susan Stanley gets
photo scholarship
GALUPOUS - E . S. Purrington,
director of Winona School of
Professional Photography, recently
announced that Susan K. Stanley of
Lear Photography, Spring Valley
Plaza has been awarded the 1982
Profe'ssional Photograph e rs of
America natinal Scholarship.
Susan will be participating in a
one-week conference in Las Vegas
designed to update the skills of the
profesSIOnal photographer and
acquaint them with the lates t 1n
material s , equipm e nt.
and

NEACIL CARSEY

techn iques.

Other participants repr esent
almost all states of the union and
most Canadian provinces as well as

Honored by firm

\

a nd 150 loca l, state. anti regiOnal affiliated orga111za tions.
Susa n has been employed by Lea r
Photography fur more than four
yea rs e~s e1ssislant rnan(jge r of the
studio and staff photographer . She is
a graduate of Gallipolis Business
College with assoc ia te deg ree in a cc ountin g a nd bu s 1n ess ad minis tra ti on. She h(js been ct me m -

ber of th e P r uf essSJo nal
Photogra phers of Amenca and
Professional Photogra ph res of Ohi o
for three yea rs. Sus(jll is a (' harter
member of thl' newl y organized
Gallipolis Area J aycee Women and
has been Director of the Gall ia County Jun1or Mi ss Prog ram fur th ree

r e fr es he r

years.

training

fur

th e

profe"ional photographer in such
di verse fi elds as law enforcement,
commercial, portrait, industrial and
illustrative photography. Over
30,000 photographers have attended
cla"es at this fa cility since 1921.

'I

fo r its mo re than 16,000 me m be rs

The conference, featuring some of
th e nation 's be s t known
photog raphers as instructors, is an
of
Prof ess ional
a c ti v it y
Photographers of America, Inc. The
school , which celebrates its 61st anniv ers ar y this year, prov ides

several oversea s countries.

POMEROY - Neacil Carsey,
Nationwide Insurance Agent in
Pomeroy, was recently honored by
the firm at the Lafayette Hotel in
Marietta for achieving status in the
Life Executive Club and the
Millionaire Club.
These awards are given for outstanding life insurance production.
Presentations were made by Les
Diehl, Nationwide vice president.
Mrs. Carsey was also 1981 Life
Agent of the Year in her district,
which comprises a five-county area.

The parent orga ni zation ( PPofA I
is the oldes t and largest a ssociation
of professiona l photog raphers in the
world, with na ti ona l headqu a rt ers in
Des Pl a ins. Il l. It prov id es
t•d uc(jtional se rvict'S a nd sets ste~ n­
dct rds of profcsstona l l&gt;t.' d ormance

.•'(

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In March. 1981. Susa n rece 1ved the
1981 Professiona l Photog raphers of
Ohio Winona Scholarship whi ch s he
used in Jul y to parti cipate in a cia"
of Advan ced Portraiture.

"!

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"

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·'

JOINS STAFF- 'lbree new employeea- from left,
Robin y oang of Point PleaWlt, Sue Price o1 Rio GraDde aDd Colmle Wedge of Point Piaunt- have Joined
the ttaff of Acrot11 the Street 'baintyllag ceater in
Qallipollll. young and Wedge, both 1M graduates of
Point Plea11811t High Sc:llqol, recenUy received

If

coemetology trainiDg and ceriiflcation from the Huntington Sc:bool of Beauty Culture. They have also bad
advanCed tralninC in the field. Price wiD receive her
cosmetolol)' certification from Buckeye Hills Career
Center tbll month. She is presently a senior at Gallla
Academy High Sc:hool.
'I

�Pomeroy

May 9(1982
May 9, 1982

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

Page-E -2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Terminate ban

Gallia program ranked
Tobacco plant beds among top six in state of Ohio
must be kept moist

Agriculture and our community

By Bryson R. Carter

County Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALUPOUS - Tobacco plant
beds need to be kept moist. One of
the major causes of plant bed failure
is lack of water .
Current recommendations are to
keep the soil moist by daily waterng
until the stand is es tablished. We
usually haven't had to water the
beds this often but l think the key
points here IS untrl the stand is
established and I would say daily
watering would almost be necessary
for late sowed beds.
We are talking a bout kee ping the
upper one-half to one inch of soil
moist. If there is no rain then you
would need about 140 gallons of
water for a nine foot by 100 foot bed
and 180 gallons of water for a 12 foot
by 100 foot bed, da ily or every other
day .
Then when the plants reach two to
three inches m height go to larger
less frequent applications of water.
Our standard reconunendation
over the years has been to do a
thorough watering every four to five
days. Part of the reason for this is
fanners are also busy with many
other a ctivities and it is difficult for

them to water plants every day .
Whatever you decide is fine just
keep the soil moist so the plants can
be getting the moisture they need.
One inch of rain on a nine foot by 100
foot is equivalent to 560 gallons of
water : one inch of rain on a 12 foot
by 100 foot bed is equivalent to 750
gallons of water.

Alfalfa weevil IS active here in
Gallia County . I inspected a nice
alfalfa field on Lincoln Pike this
week and found considerable
amount of dama ge. There were two
larvae per stem with \'.! to 3;, of the
leav es showing feeding damage.
If it had been a week or so later I
would say spraying would not be
needed and it would be best to cut
the field for hay . However, the day I
was on the farm was last Wednesday
and the hay just is not ready for har-

vest.
Therefore, I advised the fanner to
spray with one of the many insecticides recommended for alfalfa

weevil.
If you would like to know more
about these sprays come by our office or see your local farm supply
dealer .

County agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY - The cicada are
coming !
This is the year for the 17-year
locust or cicada to invade Meigs
County. F ew rnsects in Ohio create
more excitement and curiosity than
the 17-year cicades when they suddenly appear after 17 years in the
soil.
On a warm day in May, millions of
cicadas, also known as 17-year
locusts, emerge from the s oil as if by
a predetermined signal. They undergo a startling transformation and
fly to nearby trees and shrubs where
females begin their destructive egglaying processes.
They cause serious damage to
grapevines, shade trees, shrubs and
many young fruit trees. Damage to
fruit trees, shade trees and other
landscape plants results from the
egg-laying slits or punctures made
by the female. She literally rips the
twig to deposit her eggs. On young
trees, extensive injury can set back
the normal growth of the tree. The
wounds caused ty the egg slits
provide entry for diseases and other
insects. Numerous egg slits on a
: wig cause it to turn brown and die.
The female lays her eggs with her
knife-like organ called an ovipositor,
which is located near the tip of the
abdomen. She makes a slit or puncture in small twigs and branches and
then deposits eggs in the slits .
Young, freshly hatched cicadas,
called nymphs, drop to the ground,
burrow into the soil and attach themselves to a suitable root where they
sud&lt; sap from the plant. Immature
cicadas feed and develop on the
roots during the 17-year cycle. Affected trees show a lack of
vegetative vigor, a condition
recognized by growers as " tree
decline ."
Mature nymphs emerge from the
underground tunnels where they
have been feeding and developing .
Under some conditions, the cicada
nymphs construct little cones or

GALUPOUS - The Gallia Soil
and Water Conservation District has
been selected in the top six counties
in the State of Ohio for its 1981 conservation program. This is the 35th
annual Goodyear Conservation
Awards program sponsored by the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
Ohio's 88 soil and water districts
were in competition by submitting
an evaluation guide with a complete
report on the district's 1981 conservation program.
The distinctive service judging
committee members selecting this
year's winners were Betty Sekula,
Ohio Soil and Water Conservation
Commission, Youngstown; Don
Loudenslager, executive committee
member on the board of directors at
the Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Conservation Districts and
Marion County Soil and Water Conservation Districts and Marion
County Soil and Water Conservation
District board supervisors; Jeff Van
Loon, Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Soil and
Water Conservation program
specialist, Medina; and Robert
Klumpe, assistant state conservationist with the Soil Conservation Service, Columbus.

The distinctive service judging
committee interviewed each of the
governing boards from the following
competing counties : Champaign,
Gallia, Knox, Lorain, Pickaway, and
Wyandot. The 1981 Gallia supervisors interviewed were: C. A. Duncan, Gary Fallon, Frank Mills Ill,
John L. Payne, and Blaine Taylor.
The newly elected supervisors for
1981 replacing C. A. Duncan and
Gary Fallon are Gary Altizer and
Jim Baughnnan.
This is the first time Gallia Soil
and Water Conservation District has
been selected by the judging committee. Some of the features that
were cited for the selected as one of
the finalists were : support from the
Gallia County Commissioners, local
businesses and the local community,
educational programs in the schools
and the growth of no-till.
Winners will be announced in
August. The state judging committee will select two first place
districts and two second place
districts in Ohio.
First and second place districts
will receive plaques presented at the
Ohio Federation of Soil and Water
Conservation Districts Summer Annual Meeting in Canton. Ohio on

$5,440 TOTAL ERECTED PRICE

IRON HORSE BLDRS.

Homemaker's circle

Quilt show May 13
By Bettie Clark
County Extension Agent
Home Economics
GALUPOLJS - This is just to
remind you not to miss the quilt
show at the Gallipolis Christian
Church on Route 588. We will have
an afternoon and an evening
program on May 13.
The afternoon program will begin
at I :30 and the evening program at
7. The afternoon and evening
programs will be the same. Patsy
Glass will do the program. She will
tell us how to care for our quilts,
such as storing, cleaning and
displaying and even techniques for
repairing damaged quilts.
During the afternoon judges from
the Dairy Barn in Athens will choose
the quilts they want to include in
their show in Athens, June 4 through
June
20. on
TheMay
selections
willselected
be announced
17. Those
will receive instructions on how
their quilts will be picked up by the·

the Brosius family were B. F .
Barlow, N. R. Canaday, and J . V.
Lee.
IT WAS IN 1899 that the Bankrupt
Store moved to the Hayward
building •t Third and State. A few
weeks a; we erroneously reported
that date"" 1901. The building at 462
Second was then known as the Moch
building and was rented out to
various businesses for the next eight
years.
In 1907 the Moch building was
taken over by the Farmers and Merchants Bank which began operations
in Gallipolis that same year. Among
the organizers of this bank were
John Howard, 0. L. Howard, Harvey
Marsh and Ben Barnes, all of whom
were from put of town . Most of these
same men were also involved in the
street car company which also had
offices at 462 Second.
THE HOWARD BROTHERS were
born in Tyler County, West Virginia,
and went to high school in Pen-

Maurice Thomas owns
biggest vocabulary

cheesecloth, mosquito netting, nylon chemical labels specify on which
plants a chemical may be used and
netting and tobacco cloth can be
precautions recommended for that
used to prevent females from laying
chemical's use. Sevin is the
eggs on the trees. Many local stores
Price Includes Tax &amp; Delivery
should be carrying these materials. chemical recommended for cicada
by
the
homeowner.
Tests
control
Put these screens in place before
Many other buildit:~g sizes and options
show that 75 percent of cicadas was
May 25, when egg-laying begins.
available.
dead after four to seven days
When cicadas appear, you'll see
large numbers congregating and · following use of this chemical. Spray
as soon as large numbers of cicadas
hear their droning song. Keep
are congregating and singing but
screens on trees until all adults are
15140 MIDDLEFORK RD.
before they start laying eggs.
dead, about eight weeks.
Keep
in
mind
that
egg-laying
LAURELVILLE,
OHIO 43145
Fit the screens loose enough to
25.
So,
collduct
a
begins
about
May
allow tree growth but with no holes
614-332-9745
continuous watch for cicadas in
or gaps to penni! females to enter
early May, and listen for their
and lay eggs.
droning sounds . .. the tip-off that ~:;;;;~~~~~~:;;;;:;;;;~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;._
Summer pruning of injured limbs
egg-laying is close.
I
removes nymphs from infested site
Again,
this
is
the
year
of
cicada
and eliminates nymphal feeding on
emergence. Prepare now to protect
roots. These_ twigs contain eggs, so
your trees and shrubs. This material
destroy all prunings.
was prepared by Dr. Richard Miller,
Several chemicals will also conExtension Entomologist, Ohio
trol cicada adults. However,
Cooperative Extension Service.

DELUXE 19" push

Dairy Barn staff from the Gallia
County Extension Office.
Quilts will be insured to the insurance value stated on the entry
form from the time they are dropped
off at the Extension Office until they
are picked up by the quilter after the
exhibit closes in June.
Bring your quilts and share the excitement of learning more about our
heritage expresed through this artform. And do come to one of the
programs, whether you have
registered or not. There will be plenty of room for you 1
Entries for the quilt show should
be broug)lt to the Christian Church
on Rt. 588 between 11 a .m . and I p.m.
on May 13. You will need to leave
them on exhibit until after the
evening program.

.
ByJAMFSSANDS
GALUPOUS- The building that
today houses the offices of the Ohio
BellTelephoneat462SecondA~enue
was built in 1892
for use by the
Bankrupt Store
which had, from .
1880 to 1892, been I
located in the
lower half cif
is today the G. C.
Murphy Store. It ·
had then been
SANDS
known as Brosius Dry Goods.
The building at 462 Second Avenue
is a brick lw&lt;&gt;-story that .was
originally 20 feet wide and 100 feet
long and also had a nice basement.
The Bankrupt Store derived its
name from the fact that it bought up
the bankrupt stock and assignments
of other businesses. The store
specialized in boots, shoes, dry
goods, tinware, queensware and
novelties. Others involved in the
Bankrupt Store in its historv besides

Peeps, a Gallipolis .Diary

30' x40' x9'8" CLEARANCE

• Th e Lawn-Boy for the budget mrnded
• 19 .. c ut makes thrs an •deal
tr.mm•ng mower
• Ouret under-the -deck muffler
• Lrghtwe•ght
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~•~!!:~~4 Patented Lawn -Boy s afety
fe a tures

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985-3308

Chester, Oh.

r;~~~~~;;;~~~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;~~~
1

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
words than you can wave the proverGALUPOUS Maurice M. bial stick at!
· Thomas, age 85, lives on White Oak
Road east and south of Porter, and
PEEPS' OLDER son, up from
·he .cwns the biggest vocabulary in Kentucky on a visit to Cheshire,
Gallia County. Peeps sticks his neck asked the old man what you call that
out to make such a claim what with little twisted mark over the n in
Rio Grande College Community Cedeno's name. Peeps didn't know.
College right here in the same coun- · Maurice hummed and hawed when
ty with Maurice and it is loaded with ol' man Peeps asked him, and finally
erudite professors who know more said he'd call back . Call back he
DID' With the word tilde, two
syllables, accent the first syllable,
and it occurs only over Spanish words and names and only over the lettern, quoth Maurice Thomas.

·Americans must
realize problem

ACTUALLY, THERE'S a strong
suspicion that neither Maurice nor
Peeps built up their brilliant
vocabularies in college - the buildup came after graduation. Like
Kevin Kelly, fresher out of college
than either of us, does all kinds of
reading now. currently on Sherlock
Holmes mysteries. As far as Peeps
is concerned, he's run across words

WASHINGTON (AP) - Poet Rod
McKuen, recalling his own experiences as an abused child, says
sexual exploitation of children can
end only when Americans realize the
problem can be happening "next
door and in the next room."
Speaking Thursday at the second
National Conference on Sexual Victimization of Children, McKuen
declared that most national
statistics on the magnitude of the
problem are too low. He suggested
that as many as I million American
children may be sexually abused
this year.
Sexually abused children are "a
defenseless, afraid, misunderstood
segment of society that has no voice
of its own," he said. "The only
means of prevention I can think of is
everybody who cares about anyone
must getinvolved."
McKuen said he was sexually
abused by an aunt and an uncle
when he was 7 years old. Speaking
calmly and with intermittent humor,
McKuen said he also was beaten
repeatedly by a stepfather who had
a drinking problem.
The abuse prompted him to run
away from home periodically,
beginning at age 9, he said. But
McKuen said he never told his
mother or stepfather about the
sexual abuse from his relatives.
McKuen, who said he had never
publicly recounted his experiences!
before, said the public should not be
reluctant to believe that incest and
sexual abuse of children are
widespread.
Child abuse and family violence

he never saw in college, for instance,
gluteus maximus.
GLUTEUS MAX!MUS is the wa y
the Latins referred to that part of the
body which in the old days was urimentionable in mixed company .
Hawkeye used it once on one of the
last two or three days of April in
"M-A-S-H." The dictionary says a
gluteus is merely any of the three
muscles of the buttocks. And if you
parents are so prudish that you don't
want your children hearing or
reading such words, burn your di ctionary'
MAXIMUS means biggest. What
more needs to be said when you combine gluteus and maximus 1
LOOK AT SOME of these other
words which threw ol' Peeps for a
loss when he first got tackled by
them after college:
Saturnine: heavy, gloomy,leaden.
Paradigm: model or pattern 1our
preacher tossed this one at us one
Sunday a year ago). Panache : a
plume of feathers on a helmet. Symbiosis : living together in close union
beneficial to both. Sui generis : in a
class by itself. Anacoluthon : abandonment of one type of grammatical
construction in midsentence in favor
of one inconsonant.

:~~o~ecn~tre~ w~e;efa~~7 ~~~;

6ft.
STEEL
POSTS

During our spring sale, with the Gravely
riding tractor of your choice. you get a free mower.
You can save up to $1220 on the regular package
price. This offer is good on all our riding tractors. All tractors feature our famous
all-gear direct drive for years of dependable performance. Save now. But
., 1 ~-...,,..:--....__
huny, the sale ends soon.

Posts

Barb .
Wire

BCub Wire

$3295

·10%
Discount

On All
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GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Farm
Gates ·,.

~THE ·

OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT SAL,S.
GA~LIPOLIS

JCT. RTS, 7/1, 3S
WEEKDAYS 9-5, SAT. 9-1

. PH. 446-3670

.i

•'

BOSO AGRI~CENTER
Third &amp; Sy~more

POINT PLEASANT - As of
January 1980 all insurance carriers
who sell health policies in West
Virginia were required to offer
coverage for Home Health services
as a benefit.
The~ may be a small additional
cost for this added benefit and may
be worth discussing with your ins urance agent.
Other ways of paying for Home
Health services include Department
of
Welfare ,
vo c ational
rehabilitation, workmen's compensation and medicare.
Why should you use Home Health
services? Home Health services
take into consideration your daily
living habits and environment. They
may reduce the time you would have
to spend in the hospital, or prevent
nursing home stay. They may also
prevent the need to go back to the
hospital.
People can receive safe,
professional health care at home
and thus speed your recovery . This
care may include a registered nurse
and possibly a home health aide.
These two disciplines can help you
learn to become independent more
quickly.
At home patients can adjust the
room temperatures to your comfort.

I(

NEW YORK (AP) - The Girl
·Scouts of Greater New York are
getting a handout- !rom celebrities In the entertainment, poUtlcal,
cultural and sp.:~rts worlds.
1
Through a campaign called
"Give A Hand to the Girl Scouts," .
fiesh-Colored plaster casts are
made of the handprints of prominent women and men and will be·
auctioned oft AprU 27 wtth the proceeds going to the scouts.
Some of more than 100 notables
.who already have lent a hand are
actresses Karen Black, Maureen
·o'Hara, .Sandy Dennis and Polly
Bergen.
.
The "casting call" requires the '
,celebrities to Immerse their. hands
palms down In a wet plaster·con-.
coctlon that dries almost ~

~~~-

!

• The handprints can be displayed ·1
. ,on a table or hq on a wall. The ·

fund-raiSin&amp; project Is llllderwrlt- 1
ten by Dennassage, and the plaster;

technique perfected by Ruth

l

Gall!polis, OH: '

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

katz,•.

a cratts authority, takes only 15 ae- ,
.conds to harden.

LATER THE PHONE company
would take over the entire building
though for periods the bottom floor
.was rented out. We know that in the
1910s the annual poultry show was
held here in what came to be known
as the Exchange Bulding.
The first telephone in Gallipolis
history was built m1878 by Nat Warth and connected• a building at 53
Court with Kerr Drugs (then at
Third and Court) . When Sam Nash,
a customer was asked to try the new
invention, he claimed it was a trick
and that somebody was hiding under
the counter.
GALLIPOLIS' FIRST telephone
company was formed in 1882 and
was known as the Central Union
Telephone Company . By 1898 there
were 30 phones in town. In 1905 there
were still but 100. From 1905 until
1910 Gallipolis had two phone companies and most stores had to have
two different · phones to accommodate customers who were on
separate lines. Companies did not
share lines then.
In 1910 E. L. Coen of Vermillion,
Ohio, merged the two companies into one which became known as the
Gallia Bell Telephone Company .
THE TWO FORMER companies
were the Gallipolis Citizens
Telephone Company and the Home
Telephone Company . In 1910 each
phone company had 400 customers.
So from 1905 to 1910 there had been·
an 800 percent growth rate. It was in
1923 that the Ohio Bell system took
over the Gallia Telephone Company.
Mailing address of James Sands is
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.

Page E-3

You can sleep in your own bed. You
enjoy the privacy of a family or
group residence and contact friends
at your convenience. The Home
Health personnel schedule their
visits as closely around your
schedule as possible.
Anyone having any questions
about eligibility for Home Health
care, please call the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Home Health nurse at 67:&gt;4340, extension 253.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home
Health Agency traveled 2,061 miles
to make 135 visits to 28local residents in the month of March.

POMEROY - On May 12, a
representative from Congressman
Clarence E . Miller's office will conduct an Open Door session from 10
a.m.-12 noon in the Court House in
Pomeroy.
If anyone has any questions concerning the federal government,
please stop by to discuss them with
the representative.

'4/.V ORGANIZE

'2495
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• Jult Add Our $99.95

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Program to Organize

Your calendar and

Appointmenta,

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SChedules and Coate

• Uncompletad "To-Do"
H.ma Automatically
1\wwter To the Neill
Day
• Qulckty Scan tor Dalll
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Produc:ta, Men

Let thla unique aystem help lllllnage your achedule. Enter !Met·
lngs, "to do'a," expenMS, and

more .. they occur. Then review
dellf agenda or MarCh and ,..

trleVe nicOnla by c.tegory end/
or keyword. Add optlonlll
progre11111 for meny other m~~n­

..-ntJobS.

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ftad1e /haek
A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES AND DEALERS

'

FOR SEVEN DECADES the telephone company occupied the lower
c&lt;~rner (west) of Locust Sl. and Second Ave., when· it's been located since

1872. This building was not opened for business until 1893 when the
Bankrupt Store moved in . The telephone company has been associated
with the building sinct• 1910. The Farmers and Merchanl' Bank was here
from 1907 untill912.

GBC's summer session set
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipoli s
who ha ve co mpleted the course to
Business College will start its sum- apply and use that kn owledge on
mer quarter June 28 with da y, practi call y any word processing
evening and weekend classes in
equipment. Students begin by watseveral business areas.
ching a video presentation and then
Insaddition to the usual courses
progress to computers to perform
such as bookkeeping, accounting, basic operation fun ctions.
typing, and shorthand, special emClass space is limited. Interested
phasis will be placed on computer
persons should call the college's adscience courses such as operation, missions offi ce to make a n approgranuning and word processing .
porntment to register for the class.
Leo Blackburn, president of GBC,
Ca II 446-4 36 7.
stated that great interest in computer science is being shown , . - - - - - - - - - - - - throughout the entire county . The
word processing phase is being
adapted to many types of office work
includin~ stenograph y, secretarial ,
and cleri cal.
Word processing transforms ideas
into graphic form for the purpose of
corrununicati·ons. such as the typed
word . Students will be taught
through a self-deve lopment process ·
known as "guided discovery lear-·
ning" that enables those students

Reduce
current taxes
while setting
aside
retirement
money...

.------------------------------'-!
nowJu•t abqut rwryone

un with St.lff Farm'•
lndiwlduai Retlrenwnt

RICK PERDUE

---

Spring Valley Plaza
Phone 446 -4396

"'"-"""-"

.........

A

Hiiii'W ~ ~ IWoool . •......... '

1--------------------------_j~===========­

College of Business Administration

Ohio University
o n of~rma11ue OCII O rl lnSI!Illfl on

The College of Business Administration o f Ohio Uni ve rsity is
currently recruiting !he sixth group for its ve ry su ccessful
weekend Executive MBA Program at its Lancaster Campus
Classes will begin in September, 1982.

48K 2-Dlek Model

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Program

TRS-80 Model III
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Computer

Bual- Information

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SAVE UPT0$1220
SALE ENDS 6/30/82

nsboro, in the oil country. Later the
two settled at Reynoldsville, Pennsylvania, and then Albany, Ohio.
Harvey Marsh was also from Pennsboro and was the man responsible
for having the Kanauga Traction
Company (the street car) organized.
Marsh was also president of the
Kanauga Land and Development
Company which speculated in the
buying of Gallia land in hopes that ·
oil would be discovered thereon .
Barnes was also a West Virginian.
The Fanners and Merchants Bank
prospered fairly well and even
opened a branch in Bidwell known as
the Bidwell Bank in 1910. Ben Barnes was the president; Virgil Martin
the cashier; and Roy Grover the
assistant cashier. Mter eight months it was decided to close the Bidwell Bank and all accounts to
depositors and stockholders were
paid back in full.
THE SAME COULD not be said of
the Farmers and Merchants Bank,
however. Harvey Marsh saw the
handwriting on the wall in 1911 and
got out. The Howards became the
principal owners of the bank and the
street car company. Marsh quietly
told several friends before he went
back to West Virginia : " Some day
that bank will go higher than
Gilroy's kite ." Marsh was right.
Later the Buckeye Building and
Loan Company foreclosed on the
building at 462 Second and paid
$4,925 for it. From about 1910 to the
present the building has been
associated with the telephone company, as for two years the Gallia
Telephone Company rented space
upstairs from the bank.

~~~~·i~;;;~~---:::;;--~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1

generally increase in periods of high
unemployment or other types of ~

frustrationsononeanother,hesaid.

BUY THE TRACTOR, GET
THE MOWER FREE.

Ga,llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

For seven decades phone-firn1 occupied same corner

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

l-15'x9' Sliding Door, 1-3'x6'8" Service Door, 6x6
Pres. Trtd . Timbers, 29 GA. Painted Steel Siding
(choice of 12 colors) with 5-year warranty, 28 GA Gal ·
volume Steel Roofing with 20-year·warranty, 4 Skylites.

Meigs set for 'invasion'

chimneys of earth above the surface
of the soil several weeks before they
emerge . If the nymphs do not construct a cone, it is common to see the
holes they make a few weeks before
emergence.
Hundreds of thousands of nymphs
begin crawling up a tree and shrubs
or other upright objects to complete
their transformation from nymph to
adult. The nymphal skin splits open
and the newly formed adult wiggles
free . At this stage, the adult is soft
and white.
Cicadas remain where they shed
their skins, flexing muscles and
pumping fluids into all veins. They
remain in this transformation period
for 24 hours or longer until the
exoskeleton has hardened and color
formation is complete. Empty nymphal skins may cling to the plant or
drop to the ground.
From morning to night, the male
cicadas fill the air with their
monotonous droning song. The
sound is produced by an organ just
behind the wings.
A knowledge of the seasonal
history of the cicada is critical to the
development of a control program .
This above ground history ... about
three to three and a half months ... is
the period we see and hear the
cicadas. The remainder of their 17year cycle is spent underground.
Adults emerge in Meigs County
from May 15 to July 20, with peak
emergency June 4 to June 20. Egglaying begins about May 25 and last
through July 20. It peaks about June
14 to June 30. Hatching takes place
from July 6 to Aug. 31, with the peak
from July 28 to Aug. II.
To stop the cicada, there are
seveal non-chemical methods of control that homeowners may use. First. delay planting susceptible fruit
and shade trees until mid-July, after
egg-laying is complete. Purchase
plants that have been grown outside
the area of emergency or get plants
that are free of eggs. These may be
balled and burlapped or containergrown plants.
Mechanical screens such as

Aug . 3.
First place districts will receive
an all"fxpense-paid, vacation-study
trip to the Goodyear experimental
farms in Arizona.
Merit Awards will be presented to
members of the 1981 governing
board for first and second place
districts and to those districts' outstanding cooperators during their
annual meeting.
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District's annual meeting
will be Nov. 4.

WASHINGTON (AP) The
Agriculture Department says that
meat from Costa Rica now is eligible
to enter the United States, ending a
six-week ban innposed to prevent entry of dirty meat from the Central
American country.
Donald L. Houston, administrator
of the department's Food Safety and
Inspection Service, said Thursday ·a
team of agency experts looked into
Costa Rica's meat inspection system
and were satisfied that "changes
proposed by the Costa Rican government are adequate to correct
problems" in its inspection system.
"We have received word from
Costa Rican officials that the
stringent new controls have been
fully implemented in these plants,"
Houston said.

Middleport

For details, call 614/594-6289 or
plete the coupon and mail it to:

6141594-5446.

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,College of Business Administration
Copeland Hall, Ohio University
Athens, Ohio 45701

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Please send me Information on the Executive MBA Program.

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Address

Clry

State

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�May9, 1982
Page-E-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio

•

•

public schools have more crowded
cla ss rooms ltwn the natt unal
and the cconorn tcs of
educati on suggPst the situatiOn ma y
gl't wur se

the chief reason fur there be111g
few er stuli L•nts.

Sullie edU L'ato rs bla 111e the tr slate

Colwn bus IS turnt ng out 124; Luna
released 51 teae hers a year ago ami
1s lettmg out SIX more th1s year.
School systen to. ; in Cotumbtana,
Mahoning and Trumbull counties in
the Mahunmg Valley an• lCt ying off
(Jll cstnnaled s :~o te£1c hers this year
on top uf mon· than :mo let go last
yea r. Hamilton 1s not renewing 45
teacher contacts.
Declllllng student enrollment is
nut tht• reei son fur teacher cuts at
Dayton. Bub Wewman , assistant
s upe rintendent
uf
employee
relati ons. attributes layoffs to
reorgam zat1 un a nd f111ant:in g. He
hopes to s &lt;.~ ve Dayton school s $3.5

&lt;tver age,

leg ts la tors. s ay tng lhl'y ha ve not
dO n~ the tr hom e work tll l' l'U ilUinl l'S.
" If W L' wt're in pn vi:tle business ,

we would he tnsol vent, " says Dr.
Jatttes McG latnery, supcnntendent
of Loratn ctt y schools.
McGlcunery estimi:lt cs l.ora in

s&lt;;hols coul d lose $1.6 mill ion .n the
f,;cal yea r sklrtmg July I because of
indcf~rn t c

s lctt c

fJ nan c 1n g .

McG lam er y h(Js lrl VJt cti educa ti on

tea cher rec ruiters frmn other states
to mterviews in his system.
Legislators who daun Ohi o 1s
a bout tu dr own 111 red 111k , ha vt'

;dloted more than $1.7:!4 bdlion for
public edu cati on 111 a bill lli&lt;Jkmg iL"ci
w&lt; l )" throu gh the Ge neral Assembl y.

That compa res to $l.f&gt;81 btl lion spent
on etiucHti un in 1981 , and a projcc tt.•d

$2.136 billion to educatll&gt;n 1111983.
Des pite the lllLTeascs, leg1 slati vl'
a na lys t GiH Y Su1 gletary sa ys
t&gt;du ca tors a rgue they can 't kee p up

w1th inflat1n.
April 30 •·as the deadline fur
public s dwo~l systems to &lt;:td \' ISC
tt&gt;aclll'rs who will not be rehired next

fa ll.
Statewide, an estimated 3,000
t~ac he rs

a re belllg latd off out of a

ci1rrent staff of about 75,000 . At the
s{lme ti me ,

e ~rullm ent

is dropping

Da yton la1d off :!30 teachers;

11HII1on by employee layoffs.
Wtll ia111 1.. Philhs. assistant
supe rintende nt of publi c lllstruction ,
says the pt· rct&gt; nlilgl' of teache rs
stflll'wtde IS going down slightly
fa s ter than cnrullmcnt.

"Oh1o histori cally has fewer
professiOnals per 1,000 pupils than
the rest of the nat ion,·· he sa id.

In the fall of 1979. Phillis said Ohio
had an ave rage of 20.2 pupi ls per
lea r ller whill' the natwnal a verage
was 18.8.
Jll cornpanson with national
ave re~ gc s , we don't ha vt• the same
levcl of 111put. eitlll' r 111 dollars or in
pcrsunne l.' '

Bunny Neff , coordinator of career
services at Youngstown State
Uru versity, said attrittion usually
allows Mahoning Valley systems to
l&lt;lke back some of the teachers who
are layed off.
"We know there will be reabsorbtion but the problems this year
are going to be worse and that
doesn't leave room for the new
teachers coming out of schools," she
said .
Recruiters from Houston, Texas,
swept the slate this past week,
saying they have 2,000 teacher
openings in the greater Houston
area .

McGlamery invited the Houston
rec ruiters to Lorain and said
recruiters from Florida have
already been there once and he expects them to come back.
Sing letary says Ohio is payi ng out
40 percent of this year's slate aid to
ed uca ti on during the first six months
and anticipates paying 6{) percent
during the final six months. While
this helps the slate's cash flow
situat1on , it is causing what
McG lamery refers to as financia l
chaos at the loca l level.
Lima Supterintendent Ea rl
McGovern says he monitors finances in his system closely and said the
problem is very severe.
Another of Ohio's problems cited
by Singleklry stems from property
lax legislation of several years back
which froze the local dollars for
education as property va lues

escalate with inflation.
Jerry Richardson, who runs the
teacher placement office at Bowling
Green State Univers ity , says
educators from the south, southwest

and far west are fl ocking to Ohio to
pick up teachers the state .can't find
jobs for.
Recruiters from Houston worked
in Youngstown and planned stops at
Akron , Lorain, Toledo and Bowling
Green during the week.
Recruiters from the Miami, Fla.,
area have a lready swept through the
state teacher crop once and may
follow-up once teachers where they
stand at home.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla ., sent
recruiters with contracts ready to be
signed.
Others have come, or plan to
come, from Louisiana, Oklahoma,
Arizona and California .

Richardson said one Bowling
Green alumni with 16 years' experience in Ohio is making $17,000 a
year and on an interview trip to the
far west was offered a contract worth $29,000 a year.
Ohio, he adds, " is nea r .he bottom
of the hea p as far as per-pupil expenditures go. There are 40, maybe
45 states that support educatio'\on a
~r-pupil basis more than Ohio.
'Bowling Green is one of the largest
teacher training schools in the state,
but Richardson said that too is suffering. Bowling Green graduated
1,815 teachers in. l972. It expects to
gra du a te 828 this spring .

LONDON. Ohw I AP I - When ills

1'ver1 bet with fellow students that
Ill' c&lt;:~n nrwn school lockers, bike
Jncks or almost anything else they

1-&lt;11·e under lock and key .
Wwmng such beLo..; helps keep hi m
111 bouks r~bout escap ism. his
hJVor ite topic, and about his hero.
Ha rry Houdini, a Hung&lt;:trian once
I~ lied

as a world-famo us escape ar-

!tst. One of Houdini's tri es was
suspt·ded of causing his death tn

1!121i.
.. , also took one locker challenge,..
'fl)·s Johnson, a slender Ill-year-old
."-' n1 or .." l won a $4 pool bet by

cuffs. Till' offtcer oncl' sei:lrched him
in va in fo r hidd en keys or lock picks.
Mark adJJHts only to unusual dcx·
lerit y a mi sa ys that. while freeing
himself from some restraints is
painful , he nev t·r rc s ort ~ to self in·
jury such as dislocating bone joints
to ach1 cve freedom .
Escctping from il stra it jacket, he
sct ys, IS his b1 ggest cht.dl enge and

also can br phys1ca lly pa inful.
espec i &lt;:~ ll y when the an tl restraints
are tied at Iu s waist.
·' It takes 10 to 15 nHnutes and
makes my ann muscles sore,' ' he
said. " Thctt's one reason l don't want
an yonc to watch ."

No one in the local police department has fi gured out how he got out
uf a city jail cell after being chained .

E -5

l!lea ns, tu SL'C an object oul.s 1de Uutl
fll'l d, you have to move your eyes or

turn your head .
ch and rescue helicopters soon may
P1 geuns, Simmons says. have a
look
out
at
the
world,
the
y
"
ha
ve
an
include pigeons and birdseed.
Pigeons, lowly nemeses of outdoor acuity distribution of two and a half visual f1eltl of 70 tu 80 degrees. and
statuary. are being trained to spot degrees of visual field ." That that\ onl y the half therr advantage.
aviators and mariners lost at se~ . It
is a one-of-a-kind Operation called r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~:;::;::;:::.
Project Sea Hunt.
Jim Simmons, the scientist in
charge of the project. admit' the
name is embarrassingly close to
that of an old Lloyd Bridges
television show, but the work bemg
done at the Na val Ocean Systems
Center is no fi ctiti ous adventure. It

LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN, PRE-OWNED

MOBILE HOMES

is desi gned to sa ve lives.

district scholarship team ;
cheerl ead ing, homeCGming attendant, volleyball, baslletball, softball, and track. She also has been included in the spring edition of Who's
Who Among American High SChool
Students.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Thaxton of Bidwell.
She plans to major in education at
Rio Grande.
Stitt has been active In
cheerleading, basketball, Beta Club,
band, Hi-Q team, scholastic team,
and statistician for the baseball
team. She maintained a 3.96 grade
point average in high school and was
named to Who's Who Atnlll&gt;g
American High School Studt!IU'.
She is the daughter 'of Mr: and
Mrs. William Stitt of Gallipolis. She
plans to major In computer
programming at Rio(~rande .
Price has been active in band ,
Bela Club, speech and drama ,
scholarship team, and the Hi-Q
team. He is listed in Who's Who
Among American High School
Students.
He is the .son of Mrs. Fay Price of
Bidwell. He plans to major in com·
puler programming at Rio Grande.
Noble has been active in vocal
groups, publications and athletics.
She is the dalljlhter of Carolyn Smith
of Gallipolis, and Stephen Noble of
Nitro, W. Va. She plans to major in
elementary education at Rio Grande.
Rio Grande College and Community College is an institution of
I ,3 00 s tudents loca t ed in
southeastern Ohio.

western High School, and Stephanie
Noble of Kyger Creek High School.
Adams has been aCtive in the
French Club, the Gallian Editorial
Staff, and the National Honor
Society . Earlier this spring she was
named to Who's Who Among
American High School Students.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James Adams of Gallipolis.
She plans to major in business and
art at Rio Grande.
Thaxton has been active in Bela
Club, the National Honor Society;
student lea dership committee,
superintendent's student advisory
council, senior class president

Youngstown State University.
another teacher training center,
went from a high point of more than
600 graduating teachers 111 1973 to 176
Ill 1982.
Neff, of Youngstown Slate, blames
enrollment, the economy and the
state budget in part for the problems
educators face.
"Schools don't know from month
to month how much money they are
to get from the slate," she said. " If
the Legislature does something in
the next month or so, it may be that
by July or August the school systems
will be able to put back some of the
programs they are dropping."
Lima city schools lost $327,000 in
expected state revenues during the
first four months of the year and
McGovern said the loss could reach
almost $1 million by Dec. 31.

handcuffed and locked up .
Mark makes an early claim to a
degree of professionalism by not
allowing the public to watch most of
his escape feats so no one saw him
shed the shackles and unlock the cell
door.
Johnson, the middle of three
children of a Presbyterian minister,
got interested in escapism after
reading a book about Houdini. He
has since acquired a small library
about the sh owman.

ALL TRADE-INS ON MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
THIS AREA .

Simmons came up with the idea of

KARENSTm

Young 'Houdini' picks locks
a~ lowwlt'c runs !:ihurt. teen-ager
Mar k E . .J ohnson has been known tu
pick up some change CJ t sehoul by
pwk Jng locks.
It 's a leg 1timatc pctstime . He wins

and their visual system IS Cl.tpa b\e nf
high sea rch rates."
Simmons explains : When hulll i:Jns

HONOLULU I API - The equiJ&gt;ment check lis t for Coast Guard sear-

Ohio's crowded classroom Situation worsens ~:~:,st~~~e~an;~~eT~ces~~f~
from 1.901 1n11 110n last fall to an expeeled 1. 864 rni lhun nex t fall. A
lowe r bi rthrate in the rmd 1970s is

Page

Rescue list includes pigeons

RIO GRANDE - Five area
students have been awarded Gallia
Honors Scholarships to Rio Grande
College and Community College.
Rio Grande offers a full-tuition
scholarshi p ea.ch yea r to a
graduating senior in each of the
public high schools in Gallia County .
The scholarship is effective from the
fall quarter of the year of the award
and ends with the spring quarter of
the fourth year.
Recipients of this year'~ scholarships are Ginny Adams of Gallia
Academy High School; Nikki Thaxton of North Gallia High School;

STEPHANIE NOBLE

RANDELL PRICE

NIKKI THAXTON

•

CO LUMBUS. Oh10 1API - Ohio·s

The Sunday Tim es-Sentinel

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

Announce
scholarship
recipients

GrNNY ADAMS

Point Pleasant, W. Va .

using pigeons in sea rch and rescue
missi ons in 1977. He took the idea to

1971 BELMONT 12165
1972 BARON, 11160, CENTRAL AIR
1976 OAKWOOD 11151, lurnished w1th central a11 conditronmg
1967 ELCONA 10150 WITH TIP·OUT IN LIVING ROOM

the Coast Guard, produced
feasibility daw. and the Coast Guard
put up $191,000 tu go ahead with the
project.
FROM FUNTSTONES TO SMURFS - Josepb
Barbera, left, and Wllliam Haooa bave created hundreds of cartoon characters since combining to

produce 11 Tom and Jerry'' in 1938. Their creations in-

clude Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound and Seooby-Duo.
(AP LaserphOto!.

Barbera, Halllla, creations
have charmed thousands
CINCINNATI (AP) - Joseph Barbera, the son of Italian immigrants
and a product of New York City, had
forsaken a career in finance to feed
his ambitions of cartooning.
William Hanna, a New Mexico
native schooled in engineering and
journalism, was looking for a job as
the country struggled through the
Great Depression and its aftermath.
The two came together in
Hollywood , Fla .. in 1937, when they
were hired in the cartoon department of Metr&lt;&gt;-Goldwyn-Mayer
studios. They worked independently
on projects at first. Then, like one of
the storybook endings they would
soon start scripting, fate intervened
and the studio teamed the two men
from opposite sides of the country to
creaie a cartoon.
That was April 1938. They
produced a six-minute animated
cartoon called "Tom and Jerry," a
cat-and-mouse story that caught the
nation's fancy .
Now, 44 years later, the two men
with dissimilar backgrounds can list
more than 2,000 characters that
have charmed audiences in 80 countries under the name of HannaBarbera. They include Ruff and
Reddy. Huckleberry Hound, Quick
Draw McGraw, Yogi Bear, the Flintstones, the Jetsons, Scooby-Doo, the
Smurfs, to name a few.
There have been dramatic
changes during those intervening 44
years- in the television industry, in
animation and in the children who
are prime benefactors of HannaBarbera's labors. But like one of
their enduring cartoon characters,
the team has learned how to roll with
the punches and stay one step ahead
of the game.
"If you look at the old Bugs Bunny

" I'd like to model my life after
him, " the youth said. "He was really
great ; so smart. He was so
ingenious. Some of his feats were so
simple but it was just that no one
would think of them ...

In

an

a ge

of

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ASK ABOUT THESE HOMES AT OUR
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technology , humans have turned to
their feath ered fri end" for one simple reason : birds have better

1973 SHENANDOAH 12160
1970 BUDDY 12151 .

eyesight.

Why pi geons? Why nut hawks, or

$5,500

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KINGSBURY HOME SALES

the storied eagle-eyes themselves ectgles?
" I belieVl' pigeuns are best for a
nwnber of reasons, .. Sirrunons says.
"They're easy to get. cheap to keep .

liDO E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
991 7034

or Tom and Jerry, they were six
minutes or five minutes long and

were basically a chase," Barbera
said during a recent stop in Cincinnati. "Set up·the thing where the
mouse comes out of the hole, and he
goes to get something to eat, and the
cat tries to clobber him and from
then on, it's a ch~se .
" Now you have a plot, you have
relationships - these are all the
dialogue that comes in. You have a
steady change of (network)
executives. So as they change, they
come in with new philosophies. And
someone who has never been in our
business before will be put in charge
of a network, say in one area, and
within two weeks has become an absolute expert.
"These are some of the heartbreaking things you have to go along
with to try to prove you can still do
them. But it's the name of the game.
It really is.
"We have to have more story. We
have to have morals in our stories.
We have to be very careful about
violence, which we've been for 15
years now. And we have to have
good taste. But we do that instinctively, thank goodness. We've
never had any problem with that."
Today, Hanna-Barbera direct a
Hollywood studio that produces both
live-action anc! animated motion pictures and is the world's largest
producer of animated cartoons.
The two men were in Cincinnati
for the dedication of a $2.1 million
Hanna-Barbera Land at Kings
Island amusement park. Hanna Barbera Productions was acquired in
1967 by Taft Broadcasting Co., which
operates the amusement park 20
miles north of Cincinnati.

SAVE MINIMUM

25%

TO

67%

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED! WE HAVE $183,000.00 OF
INVENTORY WE MUST MOVE NOW. NO
REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. YOUR GAIN ...
OUR LOSS.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITA'

esca ping from a gym locker."

Johnson hopes to some day be the
Houdini of modern times. Escapism,

he says, is perfected mainly through
pr"ctice . developing physical dextenty and usi ng logic.
Until he can earn his way with that

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profession, the high school senior

plans to enroll next fall in a techm cal
sd 1ool and learn computer: programmt ng. HC wctnts to become a systems

analyst. With that knowledge in
m111tl, he then wants to enroll at a
st&lt;~te university to stud y acting.
"That will help me get confidence

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Then he hopes to ea rn his keep
with computers until he gets his
Houdini act together.
For now, the high school Houdmi
pracltces escapism "during any free
time I get, if I'm not al my home

/

'397.

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work or playing chess.'·

He is an .. A" student at London
High School where he klkes a full
complement of academic work plus
an independent course of study in
computer science.

LOVE

YOUR OPTICAL CENTER
Whe.n your eye doctor
prescribes glasses or contact
lenses for you, he'll be giving
profe.Sional attention to your
exact point ¢ viewing.
The opti~al center. of the lens is
a tiny point positioned directly in
front or your pupil. This is the
point at which light passes
throll!lh your.eye on its way to the
retina. U the Image is dear, the
retina seilds a clear pictUre to the
brain. Theh you know exactly
wbat you're seeing. But you can't
get. a cl~:image unleas th!! light
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the 1igbt just enough to create a
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P.O. Box 192

. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

-------- ~-·-··---------~------~--------·--·---

TOOLS OF THE TRADE -

Elghlee!'"Ye&amp;Mid Mark E. JobniOD .
relaxes with h4 favorite reading material, a book about Harry Hoadlnl,

with some of the (IB!llpbernalla of escaplllm spread before him, l!Jcludlug
cbains aod a ~ospllal straU jacket piUB a pair II lumdcalfJ. Tbe yalith
waols to emulate Houdini, once billed ali tbe world's greatest eac&amp;pe al'
list. (AP Laserpholo) .
.

'127.
•OTTOMAN '77 •
SEAT '1
•ROCKER

GEORGE W. DAVIS

0 Thx Deductible Fee

karate.

•SOFA
•CHAIR
•2 END TABLE
M·coFFEE TABLE

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He plays percussion instruments
and piano in seven different school
and private bands, went after a role
in the high school senior play. wrote
an article for a math teacher
ma gazine and takes a twice-a-week
course in tae )!won do, a form of
The youth claims no strong interest in athletics other than an occ~ sional pickup football game with
classmates. He has a trophy
showing he was a member of his 7th
grade championship basketball
team .
"His mind is always working,"
said his mother, Ruthanne Johnson.
·:1think he does escapism because of
his logic. He's never gotten into
anything he couldn't get out of. He's
always been like that."
.
Mark continually baffles a local
policeman by escaping from hand·

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and a reason for whatever effect he

had - was the fact he could relate to
them. Hammond said he made no
secret of his past, and often talked
about it to show there was a way out.
He has spoken to high school
groups, Ohio State University
students and youth organizations.
"I teU them, ' You probably have
every right to be angry about the
disparity, the discrimination and
bias. But if you don't channel that
anger, it brings nothing but destructiveness.'
" I tell the story about a couple of
us who went to prison together. One
didn't know how to handle his anger.
One knew he was angry and knew he
had to channel it. One of them is in
the Michigan City penitentiary. The
other is standing before you today .
"I urge them to get involved, to
use the. system available and not
turn to crime."

But he doesn't know why he survived to prosper.
"I can see that some of those kids
!llllke it and some don't. I don't know
what makes the difference. If we
ever find the answer to that, I
suspect we'll be able to solve the
problem."
Intertwined in the problem over
hia coWJcil eligibility are Hammond
the man and Hammond the symbol.
. Hanunond is married with two
teen-age children. He works as a
staff assistant for govenunent affairs at Columbus and Southern Ohio .
Electric Co.
He was appointed to cOW1cil in 1974
after his friend Jimmy Roseboro, for
Hanimond .had served 88
i!ampalgn manager' resigned
l)ecauae of health problems. He has
been re-elected twice.
·
A few newspaper clippings are on
the wall of hia smaU office, but there
t.: nothing preswnptious for a man
who has become·an outspoken symflolln the black community, drawing
1,500 people to a councU meeting to
11QPP0rt him after word spread that
11!1 seat might be lost.

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who lived and died.
They are scenes of dazed men,
women a nd children at various
stages of arrival, processing, forced
separation - and the long lines that
led either to slave labor or the gas
chamber.
These Auschwitz photos do not
show overt brutality or death . But
because of the fear , resignation a nd
despair shown on the faces of those
marching to an WJcertain fate, they
are perhaps more poignant.
Experts say the photos could only
have been taken by a member of the
SS. The photographer has never
been identified.
Two years ago, Lili Jacobs
donated the album to Yad Vashem,
the museum of the Holocaust in
Jerusalem.
"After all those years, it was like a
parting with loved ones," she says
today. "At the same time, it was as
if a great burden had been lifted and
l was very relieved."
A book based on the photos, "The
Auschwitz Album ," was published in
January by Random Hous e,
bringing a surge of international interest in the photographs and the
mystery surrounding them.

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just liberated one of Hitler's Jewish
prisons deep within Germany.
Seventeen-year-old Lili J acob,
starved down to 80 pounds and
delirious from typhus, lay cold and
shivering in a vacated German
barracks.
Groggily sea rching for something
to keep her warm, she opened the
drawer of a nightstand and pulled
out a pajama top. Under it was a
brown -a nd -beige book of
photographs.
Leafing through it then she
realized, incredibly, that some of the
pictures were of herself, her paren·
ts, brothers, rabbi and other doomed
ex-residents of her hometown of
Bilke, Hungary. Except for herself.
all of those she recognized in the
photos had been gassed to death and
cremated at Auschwitz-Birkenau ,
the infamous Nazi death factory in
Poland, some 500 miles from where
the album was found .
" l realized it was a docwnentary
of the daily life of Auschwitz,'' Lili
Jacob says of her discovery.
Containing 185 photographs and
titled "The Resettlement of the
Hungarian Jews." the album was and is - unique in that it is a record
of the living, not the dead.
These pictures are of the
trainloads of new arrivals, entire
families going through the process

'

.

PRICES IN EFFECT THRU
TUESDAY, MAY 11

Associated Press Writer
LONGWOOD, Fla. IAPI- It was
April 1945 and American troops had

growing up there," he said. "Swim-

ming at the public natatorium was a
once-a-month thing, and skating at
the public rink was once a month .
"The Impact of discrimination and
growing up in it was tough. I couldn 't
join any social clubs in school
because of my color. And therewas
the nonnal breaking out again'1
authority."
He said anger turned him to crime
and a break-in at a dry-cleaning
store a few blocks from home. Police
caught him, and Hammond spent
two years at Pendleton Stale Reformatory in Indiana . The experience
was more than a little sobering.
"When I heard the door clang
shut, it scared the hell out of me," he
said. " I also kind of felt I could make
it, despite the record. I didn't consider myself inferior scholastically.
So many people think everything is
against them. "
He was paroled to a Sister in
Cleveland and began building a new
life.
" The potential for turning sour
was there," Hammond said. "But I
was determined l was not going
back to the joint. l was also willing to
work hard.
" I would suspect I did hide my
record in my first job in Cleveland . l
did all kinds of odd jobs - painting,
selling washing machines in the
ghetto at inflated prices."
He prospered, moving to Columbus to attend Ohio State UniverSity
and to begin a life that spWl around
helping other troubled youths who
felt the same rebellion that almost
caused him to throw away a
promising future . He worked at the
Ohio Youth CommissiOn's Training
lristitute of Central Ohio.
Part of his link with the youths -

SALE STARTS
I PM SUNDAY
MAY9

record

COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - City
CoWlcilman Jerry Hammond fell he
had paid his debt to society almost30
years ago.
But now - because of a seldomused Ohio law barring convicted
felons from holding public office he feels he is paying all over again.
Early this year, Hammond
discovered that his council seat was
in jeopardy. Word spread that a
Cleveland counci~nan 's seal was
threatened because he had a felony
conviction, and Hammond, 47, knew
he had the same problem.
He requested a pardon from the
Indiana parole board, which heard
his case April 29 and made a recommendation to Indiana Gov. Robert
Orr. As he awaited Orr's decision,
Hanunond discussed his past in an
interview.
In 1953 at age 18, Hammond, who
is black, said he revolted at rampant
discrimination in his hometown of
South Bend, Ind.
"My last It years of high school
was an atrocity," said the fanner
class president and honor student.
"South Bend was a terrible town to
be black in, at least when I was

Hec:k's

Will Not Be Undersold!

t

i
- I

~

I

"' '

''

I

Lili Jacobs recalls how her life was
so radically changed - first by the
Nazis and then by the discovery of
the brown-and-beige album.
Her mother, father, five brothers
and other relatives were killed at
Auschwitz along with more than one
million Jews. Miss Jacob was
chosen for the camp's work detai ls,
and she survived, barely.
About a year later, the Nazis marched the prisoners to a camp called
Dora about 500 miles away, deep
within Gennany.
On the day the America ns
liberated Dora, Miss Jacob found
the album.
She also found herself - grimfaced, her head shaved, staring out
from the first row of a group of hWldreds of women standing in front of
th~ three-chimneyed kitchen of the
HWJgarian women's camp. The
woman next to her is hiding her face
with her arm.
After the war, Miss Jacob w~nt
back home to HWJgary. The album
was all she carried with her.
In Bilke, "I went to the train
station every day, praying that
someone (of her family) would come
back,'' she says. "No one ever did ."
The album eventually helped her
and her husband, Max Zelmonovic,
emigrate to America .
When till' couple were granted permission to enter this country, they
were so broke they were nearly forced to pass up the opportWlity. But
Miss Jacob remembered the album.
She had often been told it was
valuable.
She and her husband went to the
Jo•wish Musewn in Prague and permitted officials there to copy four of
the photos on glass plates.
With the money they received,
they emigrated to New York with
their infant daughter, Esther. Later,
they moved l!l Miami.
In 1964, LiU tra.veled to Frankfurt
with the album to testify at a war
c:riines trtBI for 22 members of the
SS who had serv~ at Auschwitz.
Blrkenau. One photo was used to
Identify one ~ the. defendants, who
pictured herding some of the
Jews toward the long Unes leading to
the Blrkenau gas chanlbers.

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�May 9, 1982
Pomeroy - Middlepori- Gallipolis, Ohio-Poinl Pleasant, w. Va .

Page-E -8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Foresters
protest
cutbacks

Gift

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~--------------------------I
nw
Dear Opal Mari e,
H i!PPY Mother 's Day
W r lov e you . nnd
10

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qr c iH E:'S t M n m r ver .

thr~nk

~1 1 1

ynu tnr lo v1nq u!&gt;

your

To Joy.

r:~nd
th Nnk
you
t or
evNyl h1n0 you hnve done
t or me W e Jove you
D1an &amp; K e i t h

Short &amp; Swee t We love

va lot s.

__________________________ _
I il l'

To MeL
1 Love you ver y m u ch

Mommy _ Have

a

nice

A 11 9 of us

Reba .
To the grea test Mom ever ,
Thank you t or al way s
bei ng there . I Love you
Stepha n ie

Happy Mother' s Day to
the wor ld ' s gr eatest wi fe
and moth er .
Love
Gary &amp; Kat h y

t
Love
An gi e
t
~--------------------------Judy ,
To a ve r y wonde rful
To m v favorite Mom ,
t mother
The grea te s t mom
,
F or eve rythin g you' ve
M other ' s D ay .

t
t

Happy Mother's D ay .

Love
Bi ll y &amp; Brenda

ever . Th ank you for a lways
be1 ng there. We love you .
Mik e &amp; Sa ndy

done f or me . 1 Jove you .
Chery l (( her Cheri

L--------------------------,----------------------------DeMMom ,
We Love you . Happy
M oth er 's Day
Har old , Goldt e, &amp; Jeff

f
f
f

,,

I'

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T 0 Mom ,
,
Thank s f or al 1 you ve
1
done for us. We ave you
alway s
Harl ey &amp; Rhonda

Faye,
Th e greatest mom
eve r . Tha nk you for al way s
bei ng there . We love you .
Mike &amp; Sa ndy

To M omWolL
We love you ve r y
mu ch . Thank s tor always
be 1 ng th er e when we
needed you .
Love
Delmar &amp; Dean a

Mom,
May the kind of Jov e
you shar e with us keep us
eve r c lose
Lov e
Terressa

To Mom Pec k ,
We love you m or e t han
words ca n say . Thank s for
loving us . H appy Mo ther 's
Day Mom
Love
Dea na &amp; Del mar

~~-~--~-------~--~~--------t
t
t

t

Gr andm a Maxwell a nd
Grandma Sk idm or e,
H appy Mother's Day
We love you .
Lor t &amp; Jer emy Skid m or e

We love you Mom ,
Thank s for l ov ing and
canng
Norm an, Marilyn ,
LaJea n , Jew e l ,
A lli e,
Floranell , F loyd , Fr eddi e,
Eri c Jos hua , Jerry &amp; Kim .

To Deana,
W e love you Mom and
a lway s
wi ll .
H a ppy
Mo ther's Day .
Love
A ngi e &amp; Sarah

Mom ,
·-----------------------~--~----------------------------Mom Layn e ,
Mom,
Happ y Mother's Day Mom
Wheneve r I wand er ,
T a the bes t Mom ever ,
Tha n k
you
tor
ever ylhtnq We love you
Jer t, Jeff ,
Rhonda &amp; Sco tt

w hen
eve r
1
roarn ,
wher eve r you ar C' , wtll
~•lways be hom e !
L o v

e

Gr iff in &amp; Mom Ftnntcum
The two nices t m other s i n
the wor ld
A ll our love,
Marqarel &amp; Ja ck

Look , Mom! No sa lt !
Isn't t ha t a romanttc
thought?
Peeps

Thank s
for
un ·
derstanding and car ing
whe n i t wa s needed the
most
We love you ,
Ca rol &amp; Bill

E n joy your specia l
day, but r em em ber our
love l ast atl yea r round .
You ' re t hree times a :.,r v
l

·' v

e

-------------------------------------------------------To Mom ,
H appy Mother ' s Day I
love you
Ja ckt e L ee Steqall II

G all B

Dear Mo m.
Thank s tor crmnq a nd
putting up wilh us. We l ove

you
Dad &amp; Lt Sd

To th e qr eat est M om eve r ,
We love you and th ank s
for lov 1ng us a l l your lif e
Nat a l• e &amp; Na ri ssa

Dear Mommy ,
Thank you for betn g
the best mother a li ttl e g i r l
co uld hav e.
Love
Brittany

Mom,
You're a wonderful
friend and k now ing you
make s a ll of lif e mor e
bea utiful.
Love
Conni e

Sandy &amp; (tndy

H appy Mother's D ay,
Grandma Ma xwe ll and
Grandma Thoma s. We love
you .
Randy &amp; Becky Thom as

~~---~--------------------------------~-----------------Mommy,
To M om ,
Happy Mother' s Day ,
Mommy ,
D ear es t Mother ,
Thank you l or betng so
und e r s tr~nd i ng throughout
t he year s We love you
M tc haet &amp; M tc he le

W e love you w 1t ll all

our heart s
Thank s tor
bet nq so spec 1al.
Br enda &amp; Audr ey

Happy M other 's D ay,
To be Penny ' B1nk '
Love you
Cha rlt e

To m y m other Mari e
Man ley . I Love you wi th all
my hea rt.
Rose mary

You are a bea utiful and
wonderful per son . Thank s
for your under standing .
Lov e
Mindy Kite

Si ster a nd I love you,
t he tom cat, laddy and dad·
dy they love you to.
Beth &amp; Penn y

------------------------~------------------------------Grandma Rou sh,
H appy Mother 'd Day ,
To the gr ea test M om eve r ,
M om .
To th e bcstes t Mommy
W e love and th ank God
for you both, Rena S &amp;
Norma G .
Love
Emme ll &amp; Cathy

Mom.
E very one cla im s th at thetr
Mom 's the greatest , but
that 's only bec ause they ' v e
never me t mine
L ove
Sa m &amp; June

H app y Mother Day to the
grea tes t m om and grand

ma .
L ove
Ron , Debby, Angie .
Ronald James. Terry &amp;
Penny

ever,
We luv u !
Y our tovnbl e ktd s,
K e v1n &amp; Stephan1 e

Even t houq h you'e r far
aw ay , I wi sh you happtness
on M oth er 's Day
I Lov e you
M ary

Dear M om ,
To t he cr az iest woman
tn th e world We love you .
Chn s, Tine . &amp; Anth on y

appr ec ta t e
We
every t hing you ' ve done for

us

Love ya,
Pat &amp; Ed

M e M a Scotti e,
For giving us yo ur
love, laughter , and support
whenever , eeded our love
wi ll surround you always .
Sa ndi , H ar r y
a nd Girl s

Happy Mother 's D ay M om ,
You' r e th e bes t wi fe
and mother eve r .
Love, Hu ber t ,
Mar t ha and Ga le

Grandrt;la Wooldridge,
well loved by her son,
eig ht grand children, four
qreat·grand childr en. Hap·
py Moth er's Day .

Mom ,
You' r e number one.
We love you very mu ch .

Kathy , Melanie and T.T.

Mom,

Happy Mother's Day .

we Loye you very much .
All our Lov e
Robert. Chris &amp; David

Our dee pes t love and
affection to you on thi s
Spec ial day and a lway s.
Happy Mother 's Day!
Harry, Sa ndi
and Gir ls

Mother ,
We thank God t or a
praying mother.
Robin, Joyce, Nancy,
Donna and George

To Cindy
mom ,

Have

Sa nder s

a

my

Happy

Mother' s Day . I Love you .
Travis Wade Sanders

Thanks for being the
mother you are . We lo ve

you
L au d e rmilt
Kids,
Rick, K ym and Rev a

To Bonnie Conde,

Happy Mother's Day

today and every day . With
Love,
From Your Number
One Daughter .

To the greatest Mom ever ,
Thank for a lways being
there. We love you .
Marsha &amp; Ken

.
.
-~-----------------------------------~-----------------Pauline,
Mother,
To Eve l yn,
To Kim·,
Happy Mother' s Day Mom,
'

H a ppy Moth er' s Day
Hope how soon you and
daddy are mar r ied Love
you lot .
Penny

We Love you . H ave a

Happy Mother's Day .

Your twin daughter s
J an &amp; Jan

You ' r e the sweetes t
mother in the who le world .
Steph anie, Jerry ,
Angl e &amp; Twinkl e

To the most wonderful
mother in theworld . We
love you .

Wendell, Tony,
Jane&amp; Jean

Happy first Mother's
.Day. I Love you very
much.
Love

Happy Mother's Day Mom ,
A ll our love,
Jea n , Ronnie, Susie,
Judy &amp; Famili es

Beau )oshua Miller

---------------------------------~---------------------Happy 50th Birthday to my
Happy First Mother's Day,
Mom,
Nobody ever llild a better
m om ,
Thanks tor always
betng there tor me. I Love

you

Mother,
T oday
wi ll say
something I never sa y of ·
ten e no~ gh . I Lov e you .
Te rri L ee

Vi ki

To the best mom &amp; grand ·
mal around ,
Your loved more th an
you ' ll ever know ,
Love

Sandy, Jenny &amp;Trish

T o M om,
To the greatest m om in
the world . We love you very
much.

Judy &amp;.Jody

Maw Maw,
we · love you so much, it
hurts. espec ially wh en you
spank us.
Love
Zenon &amp; Adam

To my one and only mom ,

Happy Mother's Day!

From

only son

your

one

and

Luther

...

We both

love

you

v~ry

much ..

&amp;forever
Dad &amp;Becky D.

~)}ways

To the Best Mom God Ever
Made,
We love you much,
Rhonda, Cindy,
Brenda, Julie, Alber,la

know I don't always
let you know, butt really do
love you,
Sandy
I

Sorry your rocks will be a
tittle tate,
Wetoveyou.
John &amp;Cpnnie

Daddy,

For all the help you
given us.
Love

Stephanie &amp;Jerry

To Atka Marble,
The best mother in the

World. Happy Mother's
Day ,
Love

Rose, Dot &amp;Jo

.

----------~----------------~-------------------------------~--------~.._.--.-.~-------------~-To Mom,
Mom,
ToDurMom ,
Mom Stantey,
Your

the

greatest

mother ever and we love
you very much.

Subrina, Pebbles,&amp;
Loretta

We all love you alot .
Happy Mother's Day,
Love

Chuck &amp;the kids

Mom Moore,

· Thanks for just being
you! Happy Mother's Day.
Love
All YOUI children

'

Thank you for all !he
hetp and love you have
glvenlous.
We love you,
'Bill &amp;Carol

Pomeroy - Middl epori-Gallipolis, Ohio- Poinl Pleasant, w . Va .

May 9, 1982

J1appy Mother's
anct · !hank you
everything
have
. . f91' us. We love you,
Brenda· &amp; Jackie
Stegall
·

vw

Day
for

done

'
Lee

we love you so very much,
Thanks for being our
Mom.
Karla, Karl Jr,&amp;
Karol

•

,I

I

'

,

1

Arkansas. ~ .. Kansaa, Kentuclcy; Milaiui, Nevada, Oklahoma

and Tenneuee, plus 'Florida's
pailhandle ~ ,of lhe SuwaMee ·
River, and 140 western' counties. of
Texas.

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Men's Lightwe ight. Beige/ Orange s tr ipes.

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MERCHANDISE POLICY

Open Dally, 10-9;
Sunday 1-6

WASHINGTON (APl
Opposition is growing among the
nation's foresters to President
Reagan's plans for major cutbacks
in federal aid to state and private
forestry.
C. W. Moody, Alabama state
forester, says 7 million acres of
America's forest land have been cut
and not replanted. Such acreage is
increasing at a rate of 600,000 acres
a year even with the federa l
reforestation incentives now
provided, Moody says, and Reagan's
cutbacks could just intensify the
problem.
Assistant Agriculture Secretary
John Crowell says tax break,; approved by Congress in the last two
years should fill some of that gap .
" Private landowners have been
given major economic incentives to
engage in forest management (in
1980 legislation ) which provides for
tax credits and depreciation of
reforestation costs," Crowell said.
" In addition, the Economic
Recovery Tax Act of 1981 reduces income and inheritance taxes which
would provide additional incentives
for private forest land-owners," he
said.
" It's too early to tell what impact
that is having, but we are optimistic
it will accomplish some of the things
direct federal payments have in the
past."
Although Crowell asked for $76
million to finance cooperati ve
programs for state and private
forestry, up from this year's $63 .7
million, Reagan recommended only
$47.5 million.
Crowell acknowledged that the
cutbacks will leave private landowners the choice of either paying
more for seedlings on cut-over acres
or not reforesting the land.
Still he says that "$47 million gUt!s
a long way toward cooperative
assistance.''
At the heart of the debate is
Reagan's plan to merge the
Forestry Incentives Program with
the Agricultural Conserva ti on
Program and provide only $56
million for both activities in 1983.
This year, private landowners are
getting $12.5 million in federal costsharing aid for reforestation under
the incentives program and $190
million in soil and water conservation cost-sharing help under
the conservation program.
Moody says mergin g the
programs will mean an effective end
to reforestation incentives. Local
committees of fanners and ranchers
will be deciding how to use the
reduced aid, he says, and they
traditionally have been more interested in short-tenn soil and water
conservation projects than in longtenn reforestation.

The
WASffiNGTON iAPl
Agriculture Department says a new
system for rating states on their cattle brucellosis status will prove
easier and less costly to maintain
than the present system.
Paul Becton, who directs the
brucellosis program for the Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service,
said the new system will go into effect May L It was scheduled for last
Jan. J, but was delayed until further
studies could be completed.
In the past, individual counties
have been rated according to their
brucellosis status, whether they
were "free" of the disease or in
some other stage of controL
Under the new system, Becton
said, the entire state will be rated as
"free" of brucellosis or as Class A, B
or C. He said a state could have a
dual rating where conditions permit
area control of the disease.
Brucellosis - also called Bang's
disease - causes abortion and other
symptoms among cattle.
States "free" of the disease are:
Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine,
Maryland, · Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, North Dakota,
Rhode Island and the U.S. Virgin
Islands. The "free" status indicates
those have been free of the disease
for at least 12 month.s.
Class A siates, in which herd infection rates can he no higher than
0.25 percent, include: Arizo_na, ·
California, Colorado, Idaho, Jllinois, .
Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts, kfinncsota, Montaria, ,Nebra$ka, New
J•·rscy, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Ohio, . Ore·gon, Pen~ '
nsylvahia, Puerto Rico, South ·
Carolina, Soutll Dakota, Utah, ,Ver- '
mont, Vlrginlii, Washington, West
Virjlinia, W~ and Wyom!J)gnl·.
CJ8ss "B 'states,
wherj! ' he
,
' infection rates are between 0.25'· an~·
I
1.5 percent,. incl~; .Aiabima,

The Sund ay Times- Se nlin e i- Paqe E -9

( 130)

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