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.•

GD(: probe •possibility'

Eastern board told to seek tax levy
• (Continued from page I)
be put back on the ballot. Techniques for promoting
the levy were dlscussed with R~Werts emphasizing
that It wUI take lots of people worliing to educate the
voters In the dlsljrtct to get ltpassj!d.
Door-11Hklor contacts were prqxl9ed. Those altflldlng were asked to complete a queitlonnalre and lndl·
cate whether ·they would be wUIIng to get actively
Involved In levy promotion should It be put on the
ballot for the third time.
The question of Increasing the levy from three to
five mills for a-specified period was proposed by one
of the parents who felt that the continuing nature ol
the three mUI levy .mtght have been a factor In Its
!allure.
·
Dorsal Larkins, board president, asked lor a show
of hands on how many thought the levy should be put
back on the ballot and how many would be wUIIng to
go door-to-door or do whatever L, necessazy to get It

passed. A large pereentage raised thilli' hands.
Then the question of what would be reinstated In \he
cuts was raised and dlscus.B at length. The kinder·
garten change was oppt\!ed by several parent• with
children In that progr!Ull, parents with children
bringing home outdated book.• wanted that re1tored
first, whlle those Interested In the various other programs cut~ wanted those put back Into the program.
Board members queo~tloned replied that a declslon on
what would be retnstaeted couldn't be made untll the
fUnds become avallable at which time priorities
would be listed.
The two-hour plus open meeting concluded with
Supt. Roberts calling for those attending to give the
help to get done what has to be done. He said some
decision wUI have to be made by early August If the
operating levy Is to go back on the November ballot. .

Meigs County happenings••.
Attends conference
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene·Holsteln attended the flfth annual summer conference of the
Ohio Recorders Association.
The conference wa, held at Mohican State Park Lodge In PerrysvHie, Ohio from JUne 23-25.
The conterel!ce Included 86 persons, representing 47 Ohio counties.
Participants atlended workshops
and speeches designed to Lntorm
them of Issues and and new techniques concerning recorders.

In Saturday's parade at Rutland.
The loading crew wUI report to the
high school at B:ll a.m. The remainder of the band wUI report to
the starting point at Depot Street at
9:00a.m.

Scolch folll'80me

11e1

The Jaymar Gall Club wUI have a
scotch foursome and a picnic Monday, July 5 at 4 p.m. at the dub.
Meat wUI be furnished Bring a covered dish and table ~-

Reunion set July 31
The NevUie family reunion wUI
be held Saturday, July 31 at Krodell
Park In Point Pleasant, W.Va. The
famlly wUI meet In the. clubhouse.

Talent show set
A taleflt show wUI be held 8 p.m.
Saturday at the Rutland ox roast.
Anyone wishing to participate. In
the show, please call 742-3116.

Velerans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital reported the following admissions
and dl~harges Thursday:
Admissions--Herbert Gilkey,
Middleport; Irene Russell, Middleport. Dlschargeo~--Mona Neal, Kathryn Lehew and Gay Fields.

OSP cheeks mishap

To. end maniages
Two couples rued for dl•solutlons
of miuTiage yesterday In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court. MIchael T. Gard, ReedsvUie, and Jo
Ann Gard, ReedsvUie; Dale Wilfong, ', Thppers Plains, and Robin
W.llfong, Racine. Flllng for divorce
was James D. Wickline, Racine,
from Sbelba Wickline, also of
Racine.

Emergency

rull8

The Meigs County EMS reported
run., Thursday.
At 8: 14 a.m., Pomeroy squad
took Arthur Hoyt from the Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, then on to
Holzer Medical Center; at 7:28
p.m., Racine EMS treated but did
not transport Fritz Buck; Tuppers
Plains squad transported Jack
Lantz from Hawks Road to VMH at
9:15p.m.
three

The GalUa-~elgs post of the Ohio
No paper monday
" Highway Patrol reported a one-i:ar
accident on Meigs County Rod 32'
The Dally Sentinel wW not be
Meets Monday
Thul'llday afternoon, five milea east
publl5hed
Monday In order that emof0hlo7.
ployee~ may observe the July 4 boll·
The Meigs County Fair Board
According to reports, Scott
day. Publication wUI resume as
wUI meet 8 p.m. Monday, July 5 at Pohlmsn, 24, North Olmatead, was
usual on Tuesday.
the fairgrounds.
traveling weal when his car ran off
the right side of he road in a curve
and landed in a ditch.
All Middleport village office&gt; will
Correclion
be closed Monday, July 5, in obPohlmsn complained of injury but
servance of the Independence Day
was not treated, the patrol said. No
The article In Wedne!day' s Sencitations were i:lsued and damage to holiday. Regular bualneas holttll will
tinel Incorrectly Identified Racine
be resumed oo Tuesday, July 6.
the car was light.
vUiage workers, Steve Souders,
Nick Bostick, Cl1rls Bostick and
Jetty Wolfe, as CETA&gt; workers.
They are not with CETA but are
participating In a three week program, administered by the Meigs
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The shuttle astronauts, refreshed
Co. JuvenDe Court through a grant
after
their first good workouts In space and reassured about their
fUnded by the Ohio Dept. of Youth
cargo
doors, were getting a rare chance today tot a closeup view of
ServiCe~, which gives summer em!Ollle uspace garbage."
ployment to youth at mlnlrnum
NASA said Thursday night that Columbia was expected to pa~s
wage for vUiages, townships and
within
7. 7 miles of an abandoned Soviet rocket stage about an hour
school~.
after the astronaut,• wakeup time of 1!40 a.m. EIYI'.
·
The encounter at that distance posed nO danger, and NASA spokesman Brian Welch sald In Houston that If revised calculations showed·
Soek hop set
any threat ol colllslon, the shuttle's orbit would be promptly
changed.
There wlll be a teenage sock hop
July 5 from 9-11 p.m. Deejays lor
the dance, spon.~red by the Ea~t­
ern Athletic Boosters, foiDI be Tim
and Dan Hood.
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 884.
Budgel hearing sel
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 73B7.
J
The lottery reported earnings of $&amp;18.914.50 on the dally game •.The
Racine VUfage Council wUI meet
earnlnl?.'l came on sales of $1,002,173.50, while holders of winning
at 7 p.m. Monday, July 5, at the
tickets ate entitled to share $003,259, lottery officials said.

Astronauts check 'space garbage'

Winning Ohio lottery number

vHlage
hall.a The
for1983wUI
be given
finalbudget
hearing
and be
adopted. The Racine Board of Public AHalrs wUI meet at 6:00 p.m.

has gone."

dlscuued If die eiul wbleb II a requlftme.t 1111' aD
flremet1ID die alllte Ill Oblo. SboWII are, Inial, k,.Tom
Wllemaa, GaWpolla; ~teft Seader, atcbard Oqu,
Jerry WoUe, 81111 illltrilctGr Jeff Danl. See8lld rowBl')'lll WoUe, Trevor ca~ Rldlard L,_. Bac• Mark SlmJIIGII 81111 8eliU Wille, aU Ill Radlle. AIJaeut '
wu Paal Blaao {Missy WoUepboto)

COMPI,ETE TRAINING - 'l'bele lD local vohmteer_llreflPten reeently eempleted a 31 Mllr bailc T
lllld 1 fire tralJilDg CGIII'Ie Ill RaciDe. MJddleport Fire
Cblef, Jeff Dllnt, ~erved as IDitrurtor o1 ~ tGUne
wbkb wu offered lbraugb die Trt.c-ty JVS. Baalc

llreflPtlag aldlls, tecludqaea, lllld fire appuatua wa•

-

'

By .JEFF GQ.&lt;\BMEIER
Tlme&amp;-Sentlnel Slalf
GALLIPObJS .,- TWo area Ohio legLslators threatened to conduct
a joint Senate-House Investigation to disCOver why ~jobs are being
abollshed at the Galllpoll~ Developmental Center.
Sen. Oakley CQlllns, R-Ironton, and Rep. Claire "Buzz" Ball, RAthens, who toured the GDC grounds Friday, said they were concerned the joo aboll,hments are unnecessary an(\ that t.alql8yers'
money Is being wasted.
·
"I have done my utmost to get literally mUUons of dollars t'nlo this
Institution," Collins said. "I.would like to see where all this money

ri;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

Racine firefighters ·-· finalize
plans for weekend .activities
RACINE - In Its final meeting
before the "Fourth of July" the
Racine Volunteer Fire Department
finalized Its plans for the upcoming
holiday weekend.
The Racine volunteers hsve been
busy preparing for the "Fourth of
July" feativiUe~~ which wUI be held
on Sunday this year, ·
Firemen will begLn servng a
chicken barbecue at the fire houae at
II a.m. Sunday morning with a
parade, games, evening eh·
tertalnment, and a fireworks dispLay
scheduled for the remainder of the

day. ·
Individual chicken halves and
complete· dinners will be served
along wllh other refreshments
provided by the firemen's auxiliary
and Racine Emergency Squad. A
wide variety of homemade Ice
cream will also be available.
Racine's Junior Firemen have
also been active in this year's
festlvlUea. They will be selling snocones and popcorn, while also sponsoring games during the ilay.
At thiS point the annual parade has
t&gt;Ver 45 entries with others expected

'

Law creates new type license
A law recently pa,sed by the Ohio
legislature has created a new type
of vendor's licence, according to
Mell?.'l County auditor Howard E.

The license Is not renewable, cannot be transferred and automatically expires at the end of the
period lor which It wa~ L~sued.

to participate.
Tom Wolfe of the RacLne Home
National Bank has donated $100
savings bond8 for the winners of he
float competition Ln both the theme
and non-theme divlaion. Prizes also
wUI be awa!'(led to the . bes~
decorated bicycles entered in the
parade.
The parade will line up at the
Sol,rthern Junior High School grounds st 12:15 then begin promptly at I
p.m. Following the . parade gamea
wllJbe held at the fire house.
A variety show wil be held at
Southern high School at 8 p.m.
featuripg soog, dance, and comedy
·acts. Following the variety show at
10 p.m. the Racine Volunteer Fire
.Department will have a grand
firework.s display. The display will
feature over 60 beautiful shells and
several set pieces.

~ank
The new types L' called a Umlted ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1

ve~c:~~:~orvendorswlthout
a fixed place of business
a
within

ELBERF_
ELns IN POMEROY
,

:ui;~!~:=::r:: SUMMER CLEARAN.CE
obtained at the auditor's offtce or
the Ohio Department of Taxation.

~:n.~~n:as~~~~

TERRIFIC VALUES ON SUMMER
ts!ed:!~s~:;!a=:d~ CLOrJiiNG ' ~OR THE ENTIRE
fAM ILVI.
1n the

specific event with the maximum
period being 17 days.

OWl eharged
A late-night accident yesterday
heavily. damaged a telephone pole
In Pomeroy.
At approximately 11:10 p.m., Ronald Arms, Lo~~g Bottom, rammed
his truck Into a the pole on Ea,t
Main Street, across from Landmark, doing heavy damage to thevehicle. Pomeroy · pollee clte&lt;l
Arms for DWI.

HURRY IN WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD.
SHOP FRIDAY TIL 8
SATURDAY TIL 5

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SIMMON'S SUPER
ONE WEEK ONLY ·

111

OLDSMOBILE CUTlASS CIERAS,

JULY 3 TO JULY 10, 19B2

D

CHEVROLET S-10 TRUCKS IN STOCK~:.=.:~~!.

Will play in parade
The Meil?.'l band wUI participate

Athletic

LE CUTLASS CIERA

(Continued from page I I
participation.
It wa~ also agreed that the board
will award the supplemental contracts one at a time In the season of
the sport. The first to be awar&amp;!"d
wUI be the football supplementary
contract at $2,200 with the amount
to be F.Yable after the se&amp;Son.
In · qther action at last night's
meet!Jig, the resignation fl. James
Page, principal for the past four years. wa, accepted, along with the
resignation of Debbie Weber from
the volleyball coaching position.
Page was hired earUer this week
as principal at North GaUia Hlgh
School In GaJUa County.
The board entered lltto a travel
agreement with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Matsoo whose daughter at-.
tended the State School for the DeBt
1n Columbus. The agreement pro. vldesforelglrtroundtrlpstoCoJwn.
bus at $50 each wjth all, but alqlt
$000 to be relmbuned to the dlstrtct
" by the$te.
Attending bellldes Supt. Roberts
Wt!l'fl IIOatd !JM!IIIben, Dorsel Lar·
ldns pi'elldent; WWiam Buckley, ·.
Jame1 caJdwell; Roeer Gaul, ancl ·
. llenW'd SbrM!rl,lllci Clerk Elolle
' Bpeton, along with abf,lbt 3l parenu
and teachers. ..

.

'

..

Brougham Coupe. Air, cruise, till wheel, padded Londou vinyl roof, tinted glass, ~ccent stripe.
rear window defogger, V -6 g~s engine, AM·FM·Stereo:Cassette. wire wheel covers, slate gray.

Blill and Collins said they wUI meet with oCIIclals ol ODMR and the
governor's office "very soon" to decide y.ihat action can be taken.
· 1f nothing comes of the meeting, an trivestlgatlon will be conducted, they said.
Ball sald they will "very carefUlly weigh the evidence" gathered
during the tour.
·
Sixteen ToUr Faclllty

Sixteen lndlvlduals, Including representatives of GIJC~ local government, the Ohio Department of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities and Interested groups made the tour.
Collins planned the tour after receiving complaints about a state
plan to move 130 clients out ot GDC. In the process, 250 employees
will lose their jobs.

and
persons who toured lhe center 8

GDC TOUR - Rep. Claire "Buzz" Ball, Sen. Oakley Collins
Galllpolls

Developme~~tal Center Superlnlendellt Robert ZlrnJner.

were

among the sixteen
~ Friday. Ball aDd CoDins say

111811

tJie elimination fl. Z50 jobs at

GDC may be UJIIIe008881')'.

ZI·FL

T• .

Wkh poeltlve toggle lode t6
hold .l4-ln. yellow blade
ftrmly. Black mlftiiiQI for

111y reedabllliy. Durable

Cycol..:e cne.

:, MMP326

-~
...

--

' -,:-

'1111 111.11 D

:r- l·ft. ltMI ohennal•

!101111 wlltl . . . cf .....
ntento: 2 utility pngera
and • tool oedcly.
HS-3

.
tntme
-

8 Sections, 62 Pages 35 Cents
Vol. uNo. ~0
Copyrighted t982

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant sunday, July 4, 1982

Truce shattered· as Israeli
forces, PLO · exchange fire .
By The A!lllOCiated Press
Palestinian guerrillas traded artUiery and machine gun fire with
Israeli forces dug In near Beirut alrport Saturday after Israeli armor
closed the mliln crossing polnts to
Yasser Arafat's enclave In Lebanon's capital.
'
1 Lebanese radlo stations said the
exchanges escalated into "raging
artUiery duels" that touched off
several fires around the closed air·
port and at the gates of the Palestinlan refUgee camp of Bourj el
Barajheh. ·
Tite fighting, also o/ported by
witnesses, . shattered a week,old,
U.S.- edlated truce and came 'alter the W:ael!s sealed off west Belrut and blared warnings to civilians
to flee because "Qnly a few hours
are left."
1f the' blockade becomes permanent It wUI stop l)le flow or fuel and
food to Aratat's estimated 8,000
fighters and ·some :;;ro.ooo civilians
for the first lime since the Israelis ·
Invaded Lebanon four weeks ago.
Associated Press photographer
WUllam R. F{oley ~w the Israelis
at the mid-pity museum and the
Galerle Semaan on Beirut's southern Dank, ' the only two offiCial
.crossing points ·on the three-rnUelongGreen Line thl!t separates Ara·fat's enclave from Chrlstlari east
Beirut.

Foley, who was on the Christian las. fly ·r,500 to an undisclosed Arab
side of the line, said all traffic was country and spilt the rest Into two
beLng turned back at the two points. battalions that would stay In LeFoley said that when he 'ap- banon until lsraell and Syrian forproached the museum crossing ces leave. The reported plan also
point In ea,t BeLrut, Lebanese po- called for Israei to pull Its forces
licemen told him the road had been • back from west Beirut.
closed and "tf you want to discilss "We have not reached an agreeIt, talk to the Israelis."
ment 1l!t," Wazzan said in a stateJust beyond the policemen, two ment. "We are halfway toward an
Israeli armored personnel carriers agreement."
were parked at a ga~ollne station
Israel has demanded a total pulalongside the museum road. Foley lout of all PLO !ori:es from Lesaid he asked an Israeli lieutenant banon. In Tel Aviv today Fo!'llign
for permL~slon to go to west BeLrut MLnlster Yltzhak Shamlr relterand the lieutenant told him: all:d that position, saying the guer- ·
"Y:ou're out of luck. We're not let•. · rUias must go to an Arab .~tate "as
tlng anyone In there."
far away' as possible."
At Galerte Semaan, Foley sald.
Interviewed by Israel radio,
the entire width of the dual highway Shamlr also said no substanltve lnwas blocked by large oU drum, formatton had reached Israel In the
with Hebrew writing,' and Israeli past day indlcating a settlement
soldiers and Lebanese Christian was shaping up.
militiamen were not letting· 311Y
Israel Lnvaded Lebanon June6 to
cars across the line.
destroy the PLO's military strucIsraeli jets also dl'opped flares ture north of It§ border. For three
and shattered the sound barrier In . weeks brae!! forces have ringed
the thlnl post-midnight rpock rald Arafat's bunkers In Moslem Ln as many days, keep\llg up the controlled west Beirut, threatening
psychological pressure on Aralat's to crush the guerrillas unless they
men. Guerrilla anti-alrcralt batler- disarm and evacuate peacelully.
les fired at the jets but none was
"Our only reason for belng here
reported hit.
Is to destroy lhe terrorist PLO,"
Actlrig Prime Minister Shafik said Israeli Defense Mlnlster Artel
Wazzan denied a state radio report Sharon at a news conference Frithat he and Aralat had agreed Fri- day Ln east Beirut, controlled by Isday on a plan to disarm the guerrll(Continued on page A3 I

~

Village of Vinton to move
forward with water projects
said. "They'll believe II when they
see II. Of course, we've been talking
about II. for so long."
The project calls for the replacement of several lines throughout
the "vUiage and those extending outside it on Bull Run and Keystone
roads. Brown said with this, lines
which have been flowing to r~l­
dents In one ~rectlon - deadending, as he called It - wUI be
connected, creating a looping effect
to help equall2e pressure.
The lines wUI also he connected
with exL~tlng lines operated by the
Gallla County Rural Water Associ- ·.
S:ro.ooo:
The project call~ tot the construc- alton, Brown explained.
One of the biggest concerns Is retion of \1·new storage tank, dlstrtbuplacement
of the water tank, which
tl()n and transmLsslon lines, a
presently
has
a capacity of 120,000
.m~rlng station, access roads -and
gallons.
The
new one wUI hold
fire hydJ;ants.
·
150,1XXl
gallons
and
wUI be elevated.
Mayor Harold Brown sAid the
has
now
been passed to
The
ball
news tS gratifying, because the
the
engineering
firm
relalned by
nearly' ~ people with taps using
the
vUiage,
John
Davt4
Jane~ and
vjllage water · were beglnnlng to
Associates
of
Columbus.
Brown
doub~wh~ther the project would be
said he hopes
project can be let
re~ornot.
The ARC grant came alter tour out for bld In another two or three
years of applications and negotia- monthS.
"Before this, we had plans with
tions with several agencies, the
options, but it depended on money,
mayor said• ·
so we coulchi't re;Uly firm lip what
"'They're IU&lt;e a lot of people,·; he

By KEVIN KELLY
· 'llmes--Seatlnel Staff
VINTON - A basic assistance
grant wDI allow the vUiage of VInton to proceed with Its plans to expand and Improve water service to 1
Its residents.
The vUiage was awarded $171,000
from the Appalachian Regional
Commission recently . Coupled
with a lovc·-tnterest $160,000 loan
from the Farmers Home Administration, the vUiage has enough to
launch the project, roughly estimated between $250,000 and

the

a.wm:e
Pew•

·Ball, Collins, and some local government officials asked why older
GDC buUdlngs, which will be vacant under lhe state plan, cannot be
renovated to house clients. This would save many jobs, they said.
GDC and-state mental retardation ot!lclals said these buUdlni'
cannot be renovated and argued thai It Ls moo:' humane lo move
cllenls out of Lnstltutions and Into less restrictive group homes.
Rosemary Todd, president of the Ohloj.ssoclatlon for Retarded '
Citizens, said clients should not have lo li've In the old dorm-style
bulldlnl?.'l that Ball and Collins want renovatecj,
"I gel cold chills when I think of people Uv~ In there,''· she said.
"I feel sorry ,for the persons loslng their jobs," Todd continued.
"But the (clients) have Inalienable rtghts, too."
She added, "You can't hold .our people hostage to other people's
jobs."
~·
Ball argued that leaving some buildings empty Is a waste of
money.
eo
"We certainly have to look at the 1wellare of) clients," Ball said.
"Bul we must see that taxpayers' doilars are not wasted. We must
make the belt use of the facilities.
"We appeal to Mr. (Rudy) Magnone (director of I he ODMRI to
make major adJustments In the plans for this Institution,'' Ball said.
Collins continued to fault GDC Officials for the loss of jobs.
"If the money had went Into the right places. we wouldn't have
these problem~." he said.
(Continued on page A3)

:

'.

· ·' Inside

we want.ed to do," he said. "We
made several applications to different agencies and It's taken this long
to get either approved or rejected."
The vUiage started plans for Improvement In 1978 alter a period
one year before when "every time
you turned around, we had water
problems," Brown said.
Filtration IQto the vlllage' s system caused a hoD warnlng from the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency. The situation pushed the
vU!age Into ~pending $15,000 of Its
own money to extend· lines. onto
Keystone.Road, which Brown said
was "temporary and done on ljll
emergency basis."
For the past two years, the vUlage has had an FrnJiA, loan, with 40
years to pay If off. The ARC grant
was the thing which got the project .
moving again, Brown said.
At the same time, VInton is also
one of several Gallla commUnities
making Its way through the federal
t~admUI to fund a new sewage
treatment facUlty. Phase I of thl~
effort, also handled by the Jones
engineering firm, began last
summer when a public meeting
(Continued on page A3)
·

Ex.tended forecast, stat_e weather

today...

,,ri'
rr

RAINED ON THEIR PARADE-Members of
lbe Rutland Garden Club, participating In Rutland's
ladepeodence Day parade Saturday, persevered
I

House committee begins probe

WASIDNGTON (Af) -The FBI
says It ~ been unable so tar to
corroborate allegations that an estlmated three to six con~en
7
~=~=•
may
have been Involved In a sex
Q ded adl • • • • · · V'J"7
scandal with teen-age pages.
........ • .......... A·Z
An the evidence at this time lndlcati!S
"It's not a,wldespread, organ. . . • • • • • • • • • • • · • C4-8
£xtemded f'GI'eCIIIt ·- Monday through
.mUd with a Chance
Ized
problem." FBI spokes~
LMII •· •:· · •· · · •· ·
of showers or tllunderstorms each day. Highs, '/!HI5. Lows, mOstly In the
' fWiel: Young said Saturday of alle...., NaUoaBI. : ...... 1).11 61)!:
·
·
gadonl iliat.membe'rs of COngress
' .
,l pedl ...... ' .· ' ~ ... c-1-5 '
Juive been InVolVed .In ~cit
_ ~ , , , , , , , ; [DJe~ 1.
,Southem Oidcp • Mostly ckl!Jdy today, with W:idely scatterEd •bowers.
sex\aaJ
activity with male and fe,
1.:-....:---··.:..·___
· _.-' High, ~ Cha!tce of 'rain, 3l plircen~.
. .· '
,
•

'
o1
"
. .._ r1 r ••.••
u-- ...,
Moug ...., ve
'
A-5
Afta deaths • • • • • • ' • '
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A--44

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ArGwld nhiA. A low pressure_center In the Midwest moved tGt¥ard the
~
.L_
state, and 11 warm frccli eXtended from this low Into souuen Ohio. Both ,
the front ancf the low pu5bed lntq Ohio Saturday' lrtnglng ShowefS and .
thunderstorms to the entire state. The FQUrth of ·July will Iring some
clearing to eastern Ohlo, but wldl!ly scattered showers wlll'IIDge' rNfif the
rest of the .tate.

~edneiday:

mar

,. "

even lllough the heavy rains "dunpelled" their
oplrit&amp;-Uid tbelr floa&amp;. Rain began about 10 a.m. IIIIi ..
continued throughout the momln1.(8ee addllloaal
photos on page A-4.)
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male youthS hired to come to Wa- know details about allega~ , •
sblngton for monthS at a time to act made_by some pages th8t ceriaia ..
congressmen have participated tn ,.
as messengers.
, ''There's obviously some kind of parties lnvolvLng.cocaJne and JOtiproblem ~th all the smoke out omy with other paa_es.
The House cOmmittee probe ~
there," he said. "But It's far more
smoke than problems. Specific alle- · nounced by ohaLrman LouJa!ltr.i..a.:
gations Involve a number subsll~J!· D-Ohlo, 1s 1n the very etatiY-~
tlally less than six - maybe hal! and no date ha.~ been l!!t for 1111!
panel's first meetJn&amp;.
. ,' .
that."
Mean\ijhlle, Investigators with
Rep. LeoZefen!ttJ. U-N.Y'.,~
the Hou~ ethics co~ have man of the Hou• NII'G!tlca Qlba; •
begun qul!stlonlng those who millht
&lt;ConUnlll!!l on IItie AI) · • ,
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Coniment

and perspective

Truce•..
(Continued from page AI )
rae!' s Lebanese Christian allies. He
gave no Indication bow much
longer he would watt before order·
lng hl5 forces to attack.
The PLO, an umbrella group representing eight gllertilla armies
fighting to reclaim a Palestinian
homel811d on Israeli-held territocy,
ha, enjoyed state-llke status In Lebanon since 19'11, whe!l It was ex- .
pelled from Jordan.
Khalaf said even It Israeli troops
stormed west Belru~ a new genera·
Uon of guerr!Uas would.emerge to
"mercilessly strike" at the Jewish
state, the United States and proWestern Arab governments that
have failed to respond to the PLO's
plight.
"Our overground military. presence might be finished, but an un·
derground era or Palestinian actl~
wlll follow," he said. '."Those of us
who survive the Beirut batUe wW
carry the n.W mbslon on and I am
certain many of us will survive."
The IsraeUs 'earlier thb week
promlsed to give more time tor me-diation efforts by U.S. special envoy Phlllp C. Habib, who has been
conferring ·with Wazzan and other
Lebanese leaders to arrange a
peacetlil solution and avoid the
bloodbath predicted If Israeli
troops storm west Beirut.
Informed sources estimate there
are about 500,000 clvtllans In the
western sector, and that Israel has
more than 9b.OOO trooops In Lebanon, many In the 'Beirut area
along with hundreds of tanks and
heavy artillery.
Israel radio quoted Israeli Chief
of Staff Gen. Raphael Eytan as say·
lng the Invaders were tightening
their encirclement of west Beirut,
blocking supplies of weapons, food
and other aid to the guerrillas.
At the same time Bashlr Gernayal, leader of the Lebanese
Christian forces, accused PLO
commanders of stalling for time In
hopes that International pressure
wW force Israel to quit the siege.
"But this Is dangerous, " Q!.
maya! :;aid ln·a national tel«:VIslon
speech. "For once they should stop
lying because they risk total obliteration ot'(west) Beirut."
At the United Nations, mean·
whlle, France and Egypt asked the
Security Council to debate and take
ac\lon on the Israeli Invasion, and
the Secretary-General's office announced a mission was heading to
Lebanon to SUt:V!!Y the natioJl'S relief and rehabilltation needs.

•

llad day.____________________________J_a_m_es_J_._K_i~-a-tr~~-*
Alb

ADivision of

SCRABBLE, Va. - A little after 6 ·
o'clock 6n a recent Monday mor·
ning, a certain newspaper columnist
wrote in a cheerful frame of mind at
his .modest home in the Blue Ridge
Mountains. After the usual matinal
ablutions, which were completed
without significant mishap, he bent
to lie his shoes. Ashoelace broke.
So the day began. James, for :that
was the fellow's name, at first attempled to tie the broken encfto the
surviving end, but at that hour of the
day he could not remember a square
knot from a granny knot, and there
was not enough lace In any .event. So
. he licked thh surviving end, trying to
make a point on it, and even so, the
licked end would not go through the
necessary eyelet. The remaining
end kept going schmerzle, and' by
the time the shoe could be tied our
subject was quite red in the face and
not nearly so cheerful as he had been
a half-hour before. ·
The groggy columnist glanced
from his bedroom window toward
the vegetable garden. Two rabbits
were at work on the lettuce. One rabbit was as big as a Doberman pin·
scher; he other could have tackled a
St. Bernard. This is a phenomenal
year for rabbits in Rappahannock
County, Va. They are larger,
meaner and more numerous than
ever before . . James opened . a
bedroom window and yelled as
follows :
"Get out of that lettuce, you little

~L-~1 r-T""'EE!!dl~

~v
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 44(H!342

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Cuntrullcr

HOBART Wll.SON JR .
Executi ve Editor
A MEMHER uf Ttw 1\s~ud~:~tt-cll'rt·ss, h1lund
Nrwspa~pt• r Puhlisht·n As.."twilltiun.

Dttlly

Prt~s At;s1wiatiuu

und lht• Am..rkan

'

LETTERS OF OI'I NIO,'I art· "' rlrnmr d . Tht·y li hut~ld bt· lnli lhHII 300 "nrds lun~ . All
lt·l ttrs art• ~ubjrf'l lu t•ditint: a nd must bt' ~ ~ ~ llt'd " 'ith namt'. Hddn•sii and trlrphollt'
nu mbt•r. No uONI~n t"d lt&gt;ltt'rs willbto publi11bt&gt;d. IA'Itt•nl ~ hoold bt• in Jo:II~Ml ll!lllt• , ;~ ddr t'lt!ii lnJI:
iSliUt'S, nnt penwnalitirs.

Bank wars
The same kind of deregulation that has caused fare wars In the air has
brought banking wars on the ground and consumers who want to be
winners must shop carefully for a place to put their money.
Even the once-simple checking account has become complicated these
days, with competing banks a(\d other financial institutions offering everything from toasters to televisions to lure customers.
The consumer affairs divLsion of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.,
wlliCh insures deposits In commercial bank.~. says ILls Important to find
out a bank' s policies about deposits. checks. charges and penallles before
opening an account.
·"Bank policies are not regulated by the FDIC," says an agency newsletter for consumers. "Having a checking account is a privllege, not a right,
and banks can refu se checking account s to customers If they do not comply
Wiln "the banks' policies."
.,.. bank may require specific kinds of identification before It will open an
attount. It may regulre you to·open a savings account as a condiiion of
aceeptlng your' checking deposit . And it may refuse to accept deposits
u!ider a certain amount.
·~nks set their own schedule of fees and charges. Few banks offer
completely tree checking account s anymore. Most require a minimum
balance of several hundred dollars: If the balance drops below the minInium, you race a monthly service charge, plus a w-check fee••
!'lote: There ts an Important dllference between minimum dally balance
and average daily balance. A bank which requires a minimum dally
~ance wUilmpo'l€ a fee the minute your account drops below a fixed
Ieoi'el - even If the balance for most of the month fs well above the
minimum. The averaging method gives you more freedom; it is based on
t~ average amount you have in your account over the entire month.
Ask about your bank's check-cashing policy. Tbe FDIC points out that
mllny banks have strict policies about cashlngordeposltlngcheck.s drawn
Oil other Institutions. A bank also may refuse to cash a check for someone
w~o Is not their customer.
Most bank.s Impose fees for overdrafts, generally from $5 to $10, but
t~re is no limit In most states to the amount they can charge.
Don't be surprised If you deposit a check in your account and are told you
can'! write checks against that money for several days. The length of time
may vary ; the FDIC says that the wait ing period In California; for exampte: ranges from a week to 20 days.
, A bank may change the terms governing ch.{!Cklng accounts at any time
or Increase or add fees providing that the customer gets what the FDIC
calls "appropriate nol.lce." There Is no legal deflnlt.lon of "appropriate
notice: " but In general, the bank wlll post a sign In the lobby and enclose an
~nouncement with monthly statements.
··
• If you do not keep records of your account and you continue to have
evf'rdrafts, the bank may clO'le your account Without notice.

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pan and prepared a small pot of col·
fee. Then he thought of a book he
especially needed (or his work that
day, a slim volwtieof essays by G.K.
Chesterton, and he went )o the "C"
section qf the library to fetch it. The
book was not there. It will not sur·
prise y,pu to learn that while he searched from Boswell through Buckley
through Cekhov through Didioll' and
Dumas, the bacon burned. The cof·
fee failed to cut off automatically.
Outside, the family dog heg~n to
howl. ·
It was now after 7 o'clock, and the
reason the family dog was howling
was, he family dog had encountered
a skunk and·the skunk had won. This
is country living. The Chesterton
was a little blue book, blue-gray,
something like that, with the title in
gold. It might not have been shelved
alphabetically; it might have been
slipped into the section on religion.
But no.
Our · subject's loving spouse,

awakened by the colloquy with the
rabbits, arriVed on the scene. "You
burned the bacon," she obseved."Whoinoved by Chesterton? ~
he demanded. The cOffee was on the
floor: So the day continued.
The famoils colwnnist' went to his
office. His beloved secretary, who is
sometimes adoring but more Qften
not, put the morning mall before
him. ''What stinks?" she delicately
inquired. The family dog was just
outside. "li is a small blue book," he
replied, intent on the larger
prol?lem. The day's letters began
with a fan letter from Texas. "I
seldom read your lousy stuff," this
amiable missive began, and then it
tiecame abusive.
During the course of the morning,
our subject made 28telephone calls.
On II occasion.s, the number was
busy; on five he was put on hold;
three times the senator was in a
meeting; twice a recorded message
informed him (hat only an

ignoramlill would suppose tha this
call could be ~ompleted as dialed.
The Cesterton could not be found in a
section of miscellaneous eSS~~ys .
Thinking that physical exerCise
might improve his disposition,
James took to a nearby tennis court
with his secreary. She beat him 6-4,
6-1, with five service aces.
In the late afternoon a violent
thunderstorm paid a social call. The
electric power went off, thus killing
the water pump, thus killing a
therapeutic bou'rbonnd water.
Through the open bedroom window,
the torrential rain poured upon the
bedliide table, damaging five books
and two magazines. The Chesterton,
a small volume, bol!fld In blue, was
not among them. Tlie rain did not
improve the family dog. James
drank his dinner over melted ice. On ·
Tuesday he awoke, his head aching, .
to perceive that the rabbits were
back. This time they number 14, and
they all wore green berets.

·

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furry vannints! ''

Only he did not say "varmints."
The bigger rabbit, lhll one with the
shoulders of the St. Bernard, turned
his massive head, curled his lip and
sneered. His pal merely snickered.
Then they abandoned the leltuce,
but in a leisurely fashion, went to the
flower garden and seltled down to
work on the delphiniUJTlll instead.
The subject of these observations
adtourned to the kitchen, where he
placed two slices of bacon in a frying

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:..__~~...-.~.-

Haig's resignation ---------~Low~e,;,;;.ll...;,;,W..:.:in.:.;:g~ett
•

Sometimes my crystal ball is so peaceable. A man of enormous·ego,
tiCCIIrate it even amazes me. For in- he managed to alienate prat;ically
stance over a year ago - April 5, everyone who held high office. It
was almost as if he sought quarrels
1981 to be specifie - I prediced that
Alexander Haig would eventually with such notables as Vice President
leave the president's cabinet Bush, Secretary of Defense Caspar
'Weinberger, Security Advisor
because of a clash of personalities.
Sure enough, last week leave he Richard Allen, U.N. Ambassador
did. It was mainly a .clash of per- Jean Kirkpatrck, presidential
sonalities between hiJp and other · assistants Ed Meese, James Baker
members of the family but he gave and others. The quarrels were con·
as his reason that foreign policy dueled publicly and with ·the
course had "shifted its COIIrse. " I greatest amount of publicity
have never been in favor of Haig, or possible. When he proclaimed him·
any other general, being Secretary self s "Vicar" of foreign policy and
of Sate any more tball I am in favor "took control" at the White House
of putting a fox to watch the chicken when Presient Reagan was shot, it
coop or a wolfe to herd tile sheep. was evident to everyone excepl Haig
The Secretary of State shOuld be a that his days at the State Depart·
man dedicated to peace, not war. ment were numbered.
Haig, educated at West Point, was
In spite of his lducation, training
educated for war. From the time he and ego, Haig was comparatively
left high school until he retired s the most liberal of l1e president's
Commander of NASA, all his men. In 'spite of his frequent out·
studies, training and· experience bursts against communism, he ad·
have been toward waging and win· vocaled a reasonable course when
ning armed conflict. It was no sut· dealing with the Soviets as opposed
prise when he took over his duties at to Reagan's often unreasonable
the State Department with a chip on course. He favored working with our
his shoulder.
European allies who favored -the
Haig's 18 months at the State Soviet gas pipeline to Europe while
I
Department were far from

. -

Berry s World
J

Regan favored sanctions against the
use of American equipment and ·.
material for the pipeline. He f.Riored
U.S. encouragement of .Israel in
their war a~a insl the PLO. Casper
Weinberger, Haig's principle antagonist in the Reagan cabinet, was
in civilian life a high official in the
Bechtel Group, Inc., a giant Califor·
nia engineering and construction
company which will .build anything
for any country with cash. Since the
Arab countries pave the ready 'cash
due to the high 'oil prices of OPEC,
Bechtel does much bWiiness in those
countries, esjJecially Saudi Arabia.
Theoretically, when a ;:erson aceepts a cabinet position, are is supposed to lay · aside business and
private interests mind. Apparently,
Weinberger has been unable to do
this as he has constantly been anti·
Israel, especially in the present PLO
struggle going on in Lebanon.
In the same press appearance
during which he announced Haig 's
resignaton, President Reagan announced that his successor would be
George Shultz, a former cabinet of·
fleer in the Nixon administration.

......... . . . C.
.,"'"~

been wth the Bechtel Grdup, serving
as its present al he time of his appointment. The Bechtel Group, with
construction projects going in as
many as 100 countries is a very rich,
very secretive corporation with
enormous influence aroun4 the
world . Whether Shultz, unlike Wein·
berger, will be able to shed his corporate image will be a matter for tile
u.s. Senate to decide at his
ratification hearing beginning July
12.
The question now in everyone's
mind is whether the resignation of
Hai~ increased or dimishes the
threat of. nuclear war which has cast
its shadow over the country the past
year. Dig Haig act as a brake on
Reagan's "limited · nuclear war"
machine? Or was he too pressing the
accelerator? From his public ut·
terances since he took office, it is
hard to tell but I have heard people
claim that in 5pite of being a public
hawk, privately he as a cooing' dove.
Either way, his resigrlation gives the
Reagan administration someone
else to blame when things go wrong.
Every day the.y need a whipping
boy more and more.

Village••.
(Continued from page AI)
was held to discuss sewage prol&gt;lems In the vniage.
"The concentration Ls too big for
such a small area," Brown explained. "The only real questiOn IS,
can we afford what needs' to be

"Ssy, aren't you CONAN, the Bsrbsrlant'

ffoday
•

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ID

history

I

Today is Sunday, July 4, the !85th day of 1982. There are ll!Odays left In
jhe year.
! Toda'y' s highlight In history:
On July 4, 1776, the U.S. Declaration of Independence was signed.
Also on this date:
·
·
'
In 1528, England experienced Its first serious outbreak of the plague.
, In 1946. the Repu bile oft he PhUipplnes was founded after 47 years of rule
by the United States.
t In 1976, an Israeli commando unlt staged a raid on Entebbe airport In
Uganda to rescue 103 hostages.
,• In 19!ll, a heat wave In the southwestern United States stretched Into a
ihJrd week - with the death toll climbing to 105.
: Ten years ago: A telephone ootllne linking North and South Korea wa.,
6pened after the two Koteas signed a pact ca!Ung for an end to the bitter
~tagonlsi1J between them.
Five years ago: Ku Klux Klansmen fought off demonstrators In Colum·
bus, Ohio. when a Klan rally turned Into a brawl
One year ago: The Navy proposed a vast shipbuilding and aircraft
procurement pla.J) allned at meeting President Reagan's goal of attaining
a clear margin ot·naval superiority over the Soirlet Union"before the·endof
thedecade.
.
•
. Today' s birthdays: Actor James Cagney is 78. Twin !!dVIce rolurilnJsts
Ann 4Jtders andAblgaD VanBuren·are64. Actress Eva MarteSalllt Is 58.
Thought for today: The true art of memory Is the art&gt;Gf attefttloD. .,... · .
Samuel JolmsoD. English writer (1709-1784). ·
_
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·• '·
&gt;

Soviet strengths. They teU us a lot
less about Soviet weaknesses " says
Rep. Les Aspin, O.Wis. "E~e~ng
is geared to make it-appear that
there is a huge gap between Soviet
and American weapons, with ours
grossly inferior "
But Aspln , ~hose credentials inelude /last service as a Pentagon
systems analyst and current membership on the House Armed Ser·
vices Committee, has produced
compelling evidence that suggests
that the vaunted Sqviet military ap- ,
paratus is, in fact, a slothful, corrupt
and flawed organization · TJte information co~es fl'(I'Jl a
variety of sourceS, with much of it ·
derived from Soviet emigres . or
defectors with military 'experience
who pow live In this coimtry.
·
Wilen new military conscrt ~s
arrive ai the regiinent with wJch
·
·

they "are to serve for two years, they
are systematically abused by
second-year soldiers who bea~up the
recruits, force them to perform
menial tasks and steal their unifor·
ms and pesonal possessions.
The second-year men, in charge of
ph,l'sical trainin£; regularly resort to
techniques .,epproaching torture. In
one case, a recruit was forced to
exercise until he pulled out all of the
stitches from a recent 'stomach
operation.
Beatings imposed 'as punishment
lead to irreversible phy~lcal
damage, suicides and desertiOns.
New c.onscripts receive rations
barely adequate for ·survival
because most of the food is taken by
officer and older recruits.
89~iet soldiers are paid ony 3
rubles and 80 kopedts per month the equivalent of aboutts- but even

·~

. Vel.

tin_u_ed_trom_,.;_pag_e_Atl

.;..&lt;eon_
·•

MaUaemeat

Ma~e defendlld fa&gt;c•s management and the state plan to
move cJielltq out of the cenlB'.
.
He said' the plan was "not done In a sllpsOOd way."
The older buD~ ·at GDC should not be renovated because the
state does not need any more Institutional facUltieS for the retarded.
Magnone said. Tile only facUlties being built now are group'homes,
he adlled. .
'
Four sueh homes are currently being buQt at GOC and wW be
comple~ In mid-August, according to Goe Superintendent Robert

Zimmerman.
'These wW be privately, not state-owned, and will house 32 client•.
Zimmerman said the owner of the homes, the Parent Volunteer
Association, b under no obligation to hire laid-oft GOC employees,
·but he expects the association wni ~ some.

•

Landf'd.l closed

Trustees to meet

Meigs County landfill will be
Sutton Township Trustee will meet
closed Monday, July 5, In honor of Tuesday, Jlily 6, at 8 .p.m. in the
IndependenCJ!! .DaY.
., Syracuse municipal bulldng.

oFFICII\IB' MEET - Local and 1ta1e oiftclals
clashed FridAy on whether some old buUdlnp allbe
GaD[pnlls Developmental Center can be renovated,
t1ua 1&amp;via1110111e oil he~ jobs slaled to be cut. Tho8e
meetin1 at GDC Friday Included, left to rlghl, Sen.
Oakley Collins; Rep. Claire "BUZ&lt;" Ball; Norm

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those wages are frequenUy stolen by
older conscripts and use to purchase
vodka and drugs.
"Everybody drinks all the time.
Absolutely everybody - all the of.
ficers and all the soldiers. All the
time, " one former Soviet lieutenant
reported. "People drink anything
they can lay their himds on," ad~
a former reserve officer.
Alcohol is extracted from
hydraulic brake fluid, aircraft deicing fluid and anti-freeze. Some
soldiers resort to drinking cologne.
Others smoke hashish and opium
deriJed from plants that grown in·
Soviet Central Asia.
.
Because. one-fifth of all USSR
military personnel are officers - a
ratio 50 percent higher than in the
United Staltls - the Soviet military
establishment is under colllltant
11ressure to produce more officers'

i

Photos

it

from Tawney's
•instantly - no
waiting
•in color
.
•no appointment
necessary
•approved by
State department

:
:.

TAWNEY
STUDIOS

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mlttee, has' offered the ethics panel
help he can provide.
Congressional sources, who requested anonymity, said both [)e.
mocrats and RepubLicans are
subjects of the allegations. They Indicated - but.would not flatly con·
firm- thatsomereportsmentlona
member who, although not part of
the House leadership, has some authority within the Democratic
power structure.
. Young would not discuss specifIcs ol the case. But he said the alle-gation~ ·at this point were
wha~er

DIRTY SNEAKER CONTD!T - Four partielpaata Ia Saturday al·
lel'DOOa'a "dirty aneak~r eoatest", apoasored by the GaWpolil Klwaals
Club, await Judges resalta. II was part of kids aedvltles Ia tbe PubUe
Square, beld Ia ~dOD wllb tbe 17th IIIIIWII : GaiUpoUs River
Recread!la Fesdval. The three-day eelebradoa coaeludea toaay with tbe
anaual Jaycee IDdepeadeace Day parade at 3 p.m.; Freneb Art Coloay
art sbow, heotage [lrogram, magician show, boat aDd ski show, cOUDtry
and weslera music ealertalnmeal aad fireworks dlsplBy. (See B-llor pictures aad s!'Jry oa addld01181 activities I.- Keith WUson photo.

DR . GEORGE W. DAVIS

TIRED EYES
If you're experiencing tired eyes
when you read lor ~ long time or
whlle.dolng close work on tl!e job,
you may need reading glasses.
This happens to a lot of people as
they approach middle-age or pass
the 40-year mark. If the problem i~
In your focusing 'inuscles, that's
natural enough. As most people get
older, their focusing muscles get
weaker. They have trouble
reading.
When you're dining out, do you
have dlt11culty reading the menu?
Or do you feel eye strain when readIng a newspaper or magazine?
,Does any printed matter have to be
held further away from your eyes

ncrmal? Do you have to~qulnt
to read the rtne print?
It's not worth the eye strain or
headaches to put off getting glasses
or contact lenses, If your eyes need
help. Whether you're on the job or
at home, you want to be able to see
and read In comfort, without strain.
An eye examination Is the only
way you can be sure your eyes are
getting aU the help they need.

than

*******

In I he inleresl ot beller vi si on

l. Are you pleased with the new traffic system?

from lh S office of

Yes

George W. Dav!J, O.D.
458Second Ave., Gallipolis

No

Phone4\6-~

Partly
Other.
2. If you checked partly , what do you like and
what bothers you?
3. If you checked yes, what do you like?
4. If you checked "no", tell us your main con cerns. Use the back for additiona 1comments .

a . traffic lights
etc. 1
·'

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less, problem locations,

c. pedestrian safety.

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Ten.I~ c;oncllttoM:
Attendance !?Qlstratlon day of ,.ate;
Property to be sold ... , lt": All dlm..-.li()ftl
end • delcrlj:Hiot1t are Qaltd • upon
Information derived from rtlltbJetourcee
and are ftir Mtver1talng purpotel ontv; NO
,'f'atranty or guarantee Ia exprtlled or

"

, ··

· 141,11~oftvll ~ . Danville.l(flltucky40422 ' · (606) ~:7683
.

'

5. Enforcement dines, uniformity ... too strict, not
strict enough, etc. 1
6. General Comments.

7. What solutions do you see for the problems you
have identified?
·

'
Please return to : Chamber of Commerce
'
P, 0. BOK 465
Gallipolis, Ohio., 45631

-.

•

•

• 1

d. parking (location, adequacy, effect on business etc.)
'

Mort and a 50-ui!H motel linmodlltely ·' a2-aldedfirop-onddiotlnGtl .. atalnod . lmpllld:A'!"ouncemenlldayollllatalte
ld)ac.,t, Aroa pmpa&lt;tlea atao Include : gluo effect lignllng. Altemitlw u - PfOCidtnco. A 125.000 depoalt requlrod
lUting rink" 2 110100., McDonald's, -~ for but~i'ng: branch bank, uvln(»aa 101n, dl.y 01 ute.with bllanca.dueln 30 dayl;
Captain O'a; Rlcn Oli, Pondotoaa, drug olort. dri-tnro llquoratore, retail · ~ltwlllbohekllnncr,owbyLawyoro
w.ndy'sendthllSHvlrBrtdge&amp;hoppng
outlet. mec2ical/dental comp-lex,
Tit~ lnaurance Corp.: PCIIIIIIton with
·~
~
cOnvenienCe grocert or bullf'l... ~fflce. dMd In 30 dllyt; Tax•. to be pro-~
•
~tw t1oc;a1 Y"''·
'
1

Dale WU.On·

Cmore,

b. turn lanes (too narrow, location, etc.)

Plaza. All ulilitles •a~ailable. Improvementt Include a 2,756t. sq. ft. one·etory
Commerce) end con1aini ·IJPProx.imately
building wllh bric\-enciOHd garbage bin
48,000 sq. ft. Lot fronts on Oh6o 7 with · and large 1Pa&gt;led Plfkln~ arM. Interlor:'2
good villblli1y and .:ceu to- htghWIIy. publiC rettrooma. office, dining 1,..,
Property it located in an area of industrial service area, kitchen, w11hroom an.d . 2
and commertlll deveklpment wtth K·
walk·in tracers Decor Ia hlghligh~ by ..

·

OIW lf.CONO AVUU. t - """BE~ - - CIIIIIOClefV

In response to a delegation of Concerned Citizens, a Committee has been
appointed to explore the Traffic &amp;
Parking
problem
in
Downtown
Gallipolis. The Committee is composed
of (6) members - (2) from Chamber
of Commerce, (2) from City Commission (2) from Retail Merchants. They
will evaluate the results and investigate complaints resulting from
alterations in signalization, turn l~nes
and parking in downtown Gallipolis.
.Yo'ur opinions and suggestions are important to our · function. You need not
sign, however, should we have further
questions, your name and phone
number would .be helpful.

-----OPTOM E T R I S T - - - -

Site Ia zoned C--2 '(Highway &amp; Service.

\. ·

.....

GALLIPOLIS TRAFFIC FLOW
AND PARKING SURVEY
1982

bee11authorized by Burger f(ing Corp. to sell at Absolute Auction property located at Gallipolis: Ohio.

;; '

eCOSTUME JEWELRY •GinwARE
•WATCH BANDS eCHINA SETS
•MUCH MORE
ALL AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS

Phone .....................•..............................................•...

~le Wilson &amp; Auociattit in conjunction with AUea Klko &amp; ANOCiatn !Eugene tCiko, Auctloneer and AIenard Klko, Broker) hive

1

CLEARANCE SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

Name .. .... .............. .................... ...... ........ .................. .

July·14, 1982
11:00 A.M.
.
'.
161' Upper River Rd. (Ohio 7)
Galllpolle, Ohio
.
.

I

probe to include allegations that
congressmen solicited sex from fe-male pages.

rp;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
,,

"You've got to take specific allehe said, "but
we're not at a point of seeking Indictments or making arrests."
None of the sources knowledgea·
ble about the case was willing to
mention names or flatly confirm
that any specific member was beIng mentioned .
They also were unwilling to say
that all of the allegations de~ with

ABSOLUTE.
AUCTION .

•

'

gation~ ~rlously,"

···~

•

.

hom osexual activity Involving
male pages. 'Dle Justice Depart·
ment reportediy has broadened Its

''uncorroborated.''

424 Second, Gallipolis

lulldtftt A Locetlon:

Trembly, regional director of the Ohio Department ol
Mental Retardation and Developmental DtsabUIIIee; ·
Chris Morris, Gallipolis city m111181er; Howlll'd B.
Saundeno. president of the Gallipolis City Corrunillo
slon; and Rudy Mangone, director el the ODMR.

from Page Al)
House···-· - - - - - - - - - - - - -(Continued
-'"---

Brown said the vnlage will continue on with the next phase, engineering and construction, despl\e
the uncertainty of government money to help with the project.
"We're going to go ahead,"
Brown noted. "It's up In the air
about how much we'll get."

(..

.... . . -¥

GDC prohe...,__

done?"

Invincible army?_____..;...._....;...__...,R_o_be_rt....;];.........w...:agm:.:..__a_n
WASHINGTON (NEA) -;- ~orale
w1thm the, armed forces IS absym~lly low, akoholism a~ drug
abuse ~r~ chrome .among ~ldiers,
and m1htary eqwpmenl IS eon·
stanlly plagued by design and per·
formance problems.
Those complaints probably sound
famthar, but tn lhts .case .they have
absolutely no rela~~ht~ to . a~y
real or una~~ned deficte.nctes wtthin
the U.S. rruhary establishment. In- •
stead, they are lyptcal of . the
problems regularly encountered in
the !}?VIet Umon; . .
Tliis countty .s ettizens seldom
hear. of the USSR's military short·
commgs because the ·Defense
Depafl!nenl prefers to portray the
Soviet army as a highly tr:tine4,
generous~y flll3nc~, well-i!&lt;Jwpped,
vtrtually ~vtctble Juggernault.
"Amencan generals testifying
before Congress .always tell WI about

Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipOlis, Ohit)-Point Pleasant, w. va.

July 4, 1982

.

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~m~

I

·.
'J

�...
is, Ohio-Point P,leasant,

~

j

W. v-a .

1982

$39,000

.

treasU.:er; Hank Clelaad, dlector; Roger Luckeydoo,
vice president and Jim Sheets, outgoing president and
director. Ray Pickens, new president of the club, was
absent.

By Allodated Pre8l
dieted more of lhe same on
by his office on Friday.
i~ latlon was needed· to encourage
Most
Ohioans
had
toP~
their
M
day
"A
strong
steel
Industry
is
a~othe steel Industry lo modernize and
death.
Anthony Cardillo
~e !hreat of wet weather how- lutely essential 10 a Slrong national upgrade their facilities ; Rhodes
Surviving Is a daughter, Mrs. Ed· July Fourth . activities ·sun~ay
arvundthethreatofralllalthougha ever wasn't' expected to de~r the defense. Wilhout it, we would he also said the federal government
POMEROY --Anthony Cardillo,' win (Martha) Batchelor or Point
meteorollglst
promised periods of nu~ous firewwks displays and
forced to rely on other nations In
must continue its drive to eliminate
Plea~ant;
a
son,
Dr:
Hm:old
M.
16, died late Thursday at his Court
sunshllle,
especially
in
the
southern
.
other
festivities
planned
across
the
times
of
world
crisis,
and
I do not costly government regulations; he
Haynes
of
Forest
Grove,
Ore.;
Street residence In Pomeroy.
po~on of the state.
•
Buckeye State for Sunday.
think I he American people want
also urged adoption of a program to
At 9: 02 a.m. Friday the Pomeroy · seven grandchildren and one greatgran~hlld.
.
unit of the Meigs County Emer- ·
bright
Unfortunately,
suMy dry itweekend
wont be·
most
ttwt
In Marlon • about45mlles north of
Funeral services wiD be held at
1e Ilk t 0
f this holid " Columbus, a huge granite monugency. Medical Service answered a
peop
e see or
ay,
ment honoring Vietnam war vete11 a.m. Monday in the First Presby·
call to the residence. CardiUo, ac·
cautloned meterologlst WiUiam
cheduled to be
terian
Church,
with
Rev.
Mslcobn
cording to acting coronor Dr. John
Randel of the National Weather ra ns was s
C. Mciver ol!lclaUng. Burlal will
dedicated.
.
Ridgeway, had been dead several
Service.
Chpter
105
of
the
Vietnam Vetebe
in
Suncrest
Cemetecy.
Friends
hours with death being attriruted to
Weather experts encountered rans of America _ Flrebase Marcall
WUcoxen
Funeral
Home,
may
natural causes.
Point Pleasant, from 7-9 p.m. . some difflculty Saturday in coming ion -raL'!ed the$9 !mtopayforthe
Born on.Aprll27,1906inConnect~
up with an accurate weekend fore•
today.
t bee
of th
bin tlo f monument through a six-month·
cut, he was thesonoftbelateRocco
ause
e com a n
long public tund ralslng drive.
The body will be taken to the cas
and JosePhine Barden CardiUo.
a warm front stretching act'QSS
Brtg. Gen. Edward J. Power, a:~church
one
hour
prior
to
the
He Is survived by two sons,
Ohio and ..;tn approaching cold sistant ~djulant general of the U.S.
services.
Rocky CardiUo, Connecttcut; and
front
.
"These frontal systems are glv· Air Force. was expected to be
Ani\IOny E. ~. LangsvWe;
among the featured speakers.
Wand~ S. McCray
twO da1,1ghters, Mrs. 4nda Smith.
ing us some Problems," Randel
.
Gov. James Rhodes used the ocLangsville, and Mrs. Wanda
said. This (combination) will be caslon to call for further federal acGardner, Rutland, and eight grandMASON ·- WandaS. McCray, 79,
trtggerlilg some scattered showers tion to help revitalize America's
Office Hours by A_p pointment Only
chUdren. 'Also surviving are three Vienna, W.Va., died Friday in and thunderstorms Sunday. The
tee! Industry
brothers, Alber.!, Franci~ and Le- Camden Clark Hospital, Hunting- high temperatures will he in 'the s ,. think Inde de ce
Is a
1
0
wis Cardillo, and a sister, Carmllla
ton, W.Va.
upper 'ills and low !lls, statewide."
fitting tbne to ~;rm::d C::gress
Gallo, all of CoMecticut
Born July 19, 1902, at Mount Alto,
Randel said northern Oh~~ would that unless action is taken to help
Funeral services will be held at 1 she was the daughter of the late get most of the rain with a little the u.s. steel industry, we may be
pm. Tuesday at the Hunter Fun- Jonas and Nora Graham Canter,
and was also preceded In death by
risking our freedom as a nation."
eral Home in Rutland with the Rev.
her
husband,
Kenneth
McCray.
r,::;::::=::::~::::::=:=:====~ry
r-~------------------Uoyd Grbnm officiating. Burial
STORE HOURS:
She attended the United Chris-·
will be In the Salem Center Cemetery. Friends may call at the tun- tlan Church In Vienna.
Surviving Is a daughter, Mrs.
era! home Monday, 2 to 4· and 7 to 9
p.m.
Mike (Eilzabeth) Vesellca of I.etart; a grandchild; two sisters, Or·
~
pba James of Pomeroy and Edith
Freed of Pittsburgh, Pa.; and two
Membership includes the follow·
Mary Haynes
ing services :
brothers, Jonah of CUnton and
1. world Famous Aulomobile
GeorgeofKalamazoo,Mlch.
travel Servic e, Trip· Tik
POINT PLEASANT - Mary
GO TO CH RCH EVERY SUNDAY
Funeral services will be held at 1
Routings.
Haynes, 81, Ill VIand St.. Point
WI ~lll'lftth e R
...
2. Emergenc-y Road Service.
Pleasant, died Frtday night In Plea- p.m. today 'ln tile Foglesong FunJ. Personal Accident In surance.
sant Valley Hospital after a long
era! Home, Ma•on, with the Rev.
4. Bait Bond Prolection.
John Campbell officiating, Burial
5. Reimbursemenl of At
Ulness.
er
forney's Fees.
tery
Ce
Borri Aug. 25, 1900 in Pittsburgh,
will follow In Evergreen me
•
•
Trip
Guarantee.
Juicy
6
Pa.,.,ihe was the daughter of the
1. Motor Travel Magazine .
CUBE
a. ]ravel Agency Services .
late Sbneon and Marya Mozurak.
9. No Fee Trilvelers CheQues .
STEAK
Her parents emigrated frort!Cza·
10. Automobile Insurance
rist, RuSSia in the 188ls, and the
vices.
Reunion July 11
11. Other Personal Services.
deceased and her late husband, W.
1'2. Safety Activities.
Harold Haynes, came to Point
POMEROY ..The annual Biggs
Pleas~! In 1932 and established
75YEARS ....
Haynes Jewelers in Polni Pleasant. reunion will be held July 11 at the
SERVING MILLIONS
She attended the First Presbyter- horne of Nathan Biggs on State
AUTO CLUB
ian Church of Point Plea~ant and Route 124, Pomeroy. There will be
GALLIPOLIS
wa~ active In the family business , a ba•ket dinner at noon and all
360
Second Ave.
friends
and
relatives
of
the
family
until five years ago.
Ga
lis, OH .
are,
Invited
to
attend.·
Two · son~ also preceded her in

POMEROY - A gift to the Meigs
County crippled ChUdren's Society
. in the amount of $39,000 from the
Elsie B. Kimes estate was reported
when the Middleport • Pomeroy
Rotary Club mel Friday night at
Heath United Methodist Church,
Mlddlepor\ . .
Paul Barnett reported on the
project which was headed this year
by John Rice, past Rotary president
Retiring Rotary president, James
Sheets, will become president of the
society next year.
New officers installed by C. E.
Blakeslee were Roger Luckeydoo,
vice president; Vernon Weber,
secretory; Lee McComas, treasurer
and Hank Cleland and Edlsoh
Baker, directors. Ray Pickens, new
president, was unable to attend the
meeting.
Birthdays observed were John
Ridgeway, Roger Luckeydoo and
John Rice.

PAST ROTARY PRESIDENT C. E. Blalleslee, plduncll'ipt, was
the tnstallblg officer at inslallaUon ceremmilea Friday nlgbt. He Is piclured here with the·new vice president, Roger Lucteydoo, left, 8lld James
Sheets, outgolbg president ,

r~a~n!y~p~ar~t~o~f~lh~a~t~."~~~~~~~m~;on~l~to~r~s~te~el~un
~po::'·t;s.::::::,

JOHN A. WADF, M.D., INC.

AND mE RAINS CAME-The weekend weather
Day parade Saturday. Even in the sometbnes heavy
wet things down considerably for parade-goers and
rain, people Uned the streets the view the spectacle.
participants alike during Rutland's Independence .

to the front rooms, but ·she

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

CAL&amp;. (614)-992-2104
or (304)-675-1244

tQP.

USPS;~

A Mullirnt.&gt;d ia Newspa~r
Publ ished ce~c h SWldl:ly, 825 Third
Avenue, by the Ohiu V8Ut!y Publlshln~

at Po111eroy, Ohio. Post Offk't!.

Member : Tile Associatt!d Press. Inland..
Daily Press Association und tht•
Alll l'rican NcwspH pt' r Publishers
A:tsociution, Na ti unul Ad\·t: rti ~ in lo(
R ~ presentl:ltivc. Brunham. 17117 West
Nint• Milt• Rutitl, SLJite 204, ~troll ,

Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Sally Cadle, Pomeroy; Rhonda Reese, Amsterdam;
Matthew Weaver, Rutland.
Discharged: W!liiam Williams,
Robert Foster, Mabel Pauley,
James Meadows, Susie Bess, William Wl•e, Daniel Rairden , Anna
Alley, and Ruby Halliday.

superi or
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SUBSCR IPTION RATES
By Currier or Motor Rbute
Dnc Wl'l&gt;k . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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No sLJbscription:l by nwll pennitted in
luwns where humt.&gt; ca rrier St!rvice ia
liVctihtblt•.
The Sunday Tilnes-&amp;lilincl. will nofhc
n!Spunsible (ur adv:mt't' pcl)'lnt!OI:; madc
lllC;trricrli.

Swu!ay Only
One year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... $31 .28
Si~ mtmlhs

POOLS
WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
SALE
In-ground I&lt; its from $ 1675.00

HOLIDAY POLLS, Inc.
DIDNT ANYONE REMEMBER TO BRING AN UMBREUA?- It
never falls--you forget the umbreDa and It begins to rain. And raiD I did
Saturday-all over Rutland's Independence Day parade. But parade
partidpanls, such as these two sBgblly damp horsemen, didn't let it
ruin their day'. The festivities continued despite the inclem~t weather.

-

Some helpful ioformatio!l from ......

Dll..ES HEARING AID CENTER

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Dally a"d Swldoy
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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lru&gt;ldc Ohlu
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$29.114

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AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE ...

ay w..... a.

• If you are experiencing loss of hearing, it is iniporlant . to seek
rPedical advice. We will be happy t~ refer you to an ear specoahst.

NO APOSTLES TODAY

gospel (Mit. 4: 18·22; 10: 2·4;· Lk. 6: 13·16).

1. - The qualilications for an apostle: For one to have served as an
apostle. he had to be an eye witness of the Lord, accompanying Him
from His baptisrn, witnes5ing His resurrection and ascension,
" Wherefore of these me11 whiczh have companied with us all the time
that th~ ~Qrd Je~us.Y-'ef1t in an~ out among us, Beginning from the bap·

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WAS'789

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I have been helping people like you to
better hearing for thirty-three years, an(!
my competent staff and I will' see to it ..
that· rour questions are a~ered and .
your hearing loss ~orrected to the best of
ryur ability. That is our pledge to you. FOf ··
more information, or for an appointment
, (officeorhome),calltOday:
·

Dn..ESHEARING AID CENTER
(814)58W5'11

P.O.Bodll
ATHENS,OHI045701 ..

I

·IL-July
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Thiulk you~or comiDC to·:·

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)URCIIY Wlat'!ll't
BIIJI~Studyt:M •
wont~•

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5UJI!II&lt;I\' ( ' Wf'fttqg

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the Gentiles" (Acts 22:21). Paul, also, said that he was the last one to
whom the Lord appeared, "And last of att he was seen also of oA. born
outofduetime"(ICor'.15:8). ,
,
'
•
1
3. - F~tse apostles : During the apostolic days, there were false
apostles. Some had entered the church in E;phesus, put they tried them
to see If they we(e ,true or false, "t know·thy works, and thy labour,
a~d thy patience, and how thou canst not:be'ar them which are evil·
and thou hast tried them which say that tbe.y are apostles, and are not'
and hast found them liars•: (Rev. 2o2). How.do you suppose the church
at.£plwsustrled the apostles? By applying the qualificationst Having
ttv:m t9 prove their being eye-witnesses of the Lqrd. W)len, they could'
n!loffer such proof, they knew tf\ey were false and liars!
4, - No opostttS today:· Since Matthias was ·chosen as Judas' sue-'
cesser ancfnumbered among he twelve (lids 1:26). and Paul was the
. last apostle to be chosen as one born out of due season, tllere.are ohly
twetl(e tru"'apostles and thirteen with Pliut. For' one:_ who ctaims to be
a~ apostle and havin.o been chosen since the Lord had cho5en 'the
twelve and Paul, he 'cannot justify sOch claims by God's word'. t db not
care how hohestorsincereone may be who makes such Claims even if
it were rna rigel from heaven, ·he stitlstends condemned in lhe,Sight Of
God. w,.v? BecaiJSI! he Is false and a liar! (Rev. 2o2):

• Product, price and service are ingredients of our success. WE
CARE, and provide products from the world's best-kno,wn manufac-turerS at prices that are reasonable. We are happy to accept
Medicaid, UMWA and other third-party clients.

LIVER

..'·

ascension to preach the gospel to the Gentiles, "For he i5 a chosen
vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, alld kings, end
the children of Israel" (1\Cis 9 : 15), and" t will send lhee far hence unto

• A thirty-day re!urn rrivilcge further inSures your satisfbction, and
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Apostle cor11es from the Greek, meaning, -~' "one sent forth; a
messenger, " and was the name given the twelve whom the Lord had
chosen to train personally, to be His witnesses, and to p'reach the

apostle had to meet these qual,ifications. 'The two men appointed were
Joseph called Barsabbas who was surnamed Justus, and Matthias.
Matthias was the one chosen, and he was chosen· by the Lord, "And
they prayed and said, Thou Lord , which knowestthe hearts of all men,
shew whetHer of these two thou hast chosen" (Acts 1:24).
'
2.- Paul's apostleship: Some question Paul's apostleship, saying
that he was not an eye witness of the Lord, but Paul sets the record
straight by saying, " Am ·l not an apostle? am 1 not free? have t not
seen Jesus Christ our Lord? are DOl ye my work in the Lord? " ( 1 Cor.
9: t) . Paul was called and commissioned directly by Christ after His

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• If a hearing ·aid is indicated, skilled testing, selection and fining
are essential to your success. We do this for you, often in COOpenl;., ..
tion with clinical audiologists.

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!ism of John, unto that same day that he was taken up from us, must

,...._. PIE!

(since 1949)"

Jnt•·~ritv

.'

one be ordained to be a.witness with us of his resurrection" (Acts 1: 21,
22) . These words were spoken by Refer, as they wer.e about to chOose
Judas' successor, to remind them that the one to be chosen as an

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SWIMMING

89¢

Single
Roll

Mi C'hi~Hn. 41107~ .

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

Fri.·Sal 9 am til 10 pm
Prices Good Thru

$24~~-

July 4- July 10

IUSIINGI

. 4 RoH
Pkc.

Company· Multiml'tlia,lnc. ~ond clu:w
posUI.:e pai d HI Gallipolis, Ohlo, 45631.

Enlt&gt;rt_•d as sewnd claR&gt; mailin..: )llllller

JUNCTION RT. 7 &amp;218
Priced Good

M:D

LET PAPER

Mon.·Thurs. 9 am til ·9:30 pm

Wed., July 7, 1982

. Hours: 6:30 AM.-11 P.M.; ·sUNDAY 8AM.-11 P.M.

lunb•q 'timtt · tmtintl

I

MIDDLEPORT-A truck belongIng to Keith Smith, Middleport., was
destroyed by fire Friday night. The
Middleport Fire Department. answered a call to Locust. Street at 9:40
p.m. to extinguish the fire which
started In the motor.

couldn't."

Spe~l~ls

SUMMIT

Truck destroyed

NTODAY
YOU MAYNEED
AI'XJ\ MORROW
TO

July
~

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAl

°

Five children perish in apartment fire
JERSEY CITY, N.J . (AP) - A
pre-dawn fire raced through a
third-floor apartment Frtday, ldlling five chlldr~n from one family
while their parents tried desperately to save them, officials said.
"It doesn't look suspicious, but
we don't know the cause," Chief Robert Shortell of the Fire Prevention
Bureau said of he blaze -In the
apartment of Theodore and Eleanor Garulle.
.
Firefighters said wh~n Garulle,
2'i, and his wife, 26, awoke ·1n !heir
bedroom in the rear of the apartment, the children's adjacent bed·
room and ijle living room were
engulfed in flames .
GaruUe escaped through a kit·
chen window and down a fire escape, whlle his wi!Ei fled through a
doorway and down some 'stairs to a
neighbor's second-floor apartment,
authorities said.
"He came back in but he couldn't
get to the front room," Sl\ori.eU
said. "The mother tried to get back

The sunday Tirn es· Sentinel-Page- A· S

Rain
may
~_!~e,!l)!'lt!!'!.!:!h
!~~!!!!~!~
I

Area.deaths·

gift
given·
. .
to· SOCiety

INSTALLED- Pictured left to'right are several of
the new officel'!l inBialledJit Friday nlght's meetlng of
the Mlddleport·Pomery Rotary Club- Edison Baker,
director; Vernon Weber, secretory; Lee McComas,

li'omerov Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va .

July 4, 1982

•

WAS ...:789

.NoW'$599

WAS 1849 .

..

WE WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY, ..
. .

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JULY 5th FOR TH.E·JULY 4th... W~EKEND
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AJIMOUR

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

Page--;- A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

oint Pleasant,

July 4, 1982'

· possession of marijuana; Randy L. violation. .
The Gallta County Sheriff's DePattet;soo, 23, Rt. 2, Crown City, dJs.
partment
reported Beth Pack, Bidorderly conduct; Darryl L. Swai'IZ,
well,
was
missing a ca•sette tape
Rt. · '1, Pomeroy, open container;
Pii)oer
valued
at $549 Friday
Rocky J . Goodnlte, 23, Point Plea·
evening:
'
sapt, W.Va., speeding; Melissa L.
Walter
Laveday
Jr.,
Rt.
2, BidCochran ,' ~. 31 Portsmouth Road,
well,
told
deputies
he
had
returned
faUure to display valid registration; Odie E . Bush, 00, Lower River from a vacation Thul'llday and
Road, improper passing; Michael someone had reportedly tried, l!ut,
falled to enter hJs house through a
S. Ohlinger, 18, Letart, W.Va., reck·
door. The door was damaged heavless operation; and Cathy Greene,
,'
Uy, according to reports.
24, Rt. -~· GallipoliS, stop light

GAlliPOLIS - City Pollee Inves- mOderate damage when a tractor- the left front quarter panel of Blan- misjudgment, resulting In the
tigated an aggravated assault at trailer truck apparently falled to kenship's car. The truck received accident.
Pollee served a summons for
Haskins Lounge on Second Avenue see the car and hit lt Frtday no damage.
Maxie
E. Robert.~ Jr., 60, Rt. 2, Gal-,
Elaine M. Baker, 72, Lower
at about 8:15 Friday night. A pollee afternoon.
llpolls,
at 2:20 p.m. 'Friday. He Is
According to pollee. reports, River Road, allegedly sideswiped a
Investigator ·round Gerald "Butch"
one
of
several charged with illeHall, Rt. 4, Galllpolls, standing by a · truck driver Roy L. Nolen, 40, Gray· car parked on Third Avenue Friday
gally
operating
a· gambling house
son,
Ky
.,
swung
wide
to
the
left
afternoon, the Ga!Upolls pollee repool IJ!ble In the lounge with blood
and
having
no
valid
liquor license
when he attempted to make a rlgbt · ported. The parked car, registered
coming from hJs head and a large
at
the
Eagles
Lodge
on
State Street.
tum from Second Avenue onto Pine to Thomas J . Smith, Rt. 1, Gallipopuddle of ~ood on the floor, but the
Other
Fl;lday
arrests
made by
Street.
Gene
E.
Blankenship,
23,
lis, received light damage, whUe
alleged assallant could not be found
the
Gallllpolls
pollee
department
,
was
stopped
In
the
right
tumlane
at
B&gt;iker' s car was damaged milder·
immediately following the Incident,
the intersection's traffic signal and ately. According to reportoi, B&gt;iker included ~ndy J . Hanner, 22. Rt.
acccordlng to reports.
the rear wheels of the trailer struck pulled from a driveway and made a 3, Galllpolis, open container and
Hall was taken to Holzer Medical
Center where he received 11·
stitches In hL~ head wound. He was r-----------:-------------------------------:----~---r-------

.; ;.
, I~

Collections later
RACINE-Gle!lll Rizer, ~cine
vUlage street colllJ'Iiliisloner, ad·
vises ·that !rash ·collections In ~­
cine ibis
wW be on Tuesday
and WednesdaY dUe to the JUly 4
holiday.
.

week

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~or

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CGAWPOLIS- Holzer Clinic Ltd.

motion. The picture may be viewed
finalzlng plans for the establlsh- on a TV screen and is recorded on
ent of a new deparlment of Car- both paper and v~o tape.
, ology later this swnmer.
.
The procedure utilizes a sonar
.; Dr. SuzaMe Mize, graduate of the device in conjunction with a com:Medical College of Ohio and a car· puter and involves no rtsk or discom:diologist, will be joining Holzer fort to the patient. The cardiologist
!Clinic With the deparlment expected can closely study and monitor the
movement of the various parts of the
tp begin operations in September,
y: According to Robert E. Daniel, heart to observe its function .
Additonally, the new Department
i!F'inic Administrator, "we are very
'nthused tll'be offering this new ser- of Cardiology will consolidate under
~ice to our patients.
. Dr. Mize's supervision, Holzercs
:• With Dr. Mlze, the clinic will be of· existing inpatient and outpatient
~ering comprehensive cardiology cardiology servies. These services
~rvices with a level ol.expertise not include computerized electrocardiograms (ERGs) in which
presently available in this area ."
f· The major achi evement in the patient's EKG receives both a
~evel~ping this department is computer analysis and in:establishment of echocardlography terpretation by the physician.
An exercise stress EKG capability
~apability. Echocardiography is a
)lew non-invasive computer exists to monitor the heart's per~hnology. Sophisticated electronic fonnance under controlled but inll&lt;juipment is used to m'ake a picture creasing levels of physical stress.
~f the patient's heart while it is in

~

DLB 1250

$36000

$29900

Long-tenn EKG monitoring is
provided by a device worn by the
patient to record heart action for a
12 to 24 hour periOd which has
proven effective in identifying
irregularities that may not appear
during a regular EKG.
Daniel continued, "these comprehensive cardiology services wiU
be made available on referral to
patients of all physicians in this
area."
Dr. Mize is married to Dr. Mark
Walker, a board certified internal
medicine specialist with subspecialty training in hematology and
oncology.
Dr. Walker is the son of Dr. lsom
Walker, long time member of the
Holzer Clinic Medical Staff. Dr.
Mark Walker will also be joining the
Holzer Clinic Deparlment of Internal Medicine this summ~r.

•'

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'Pmergency
squpds have busy day
..,,

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, ; POMEftOY-Slx calls were an!lwered by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
t;riday.
·: At 9:028-Jn, !hePOmejX&gt;Ycunit~
~nded to a call to the Court Street
ltsldence of Tony C3!&lt;ljilo who Walj
d;j!ad on arrival; at 9f 30 a.m the
Middleport unit t:ran8ported Chatles White from his residence to the
ijolzer Medical Center, and atlO: 56
ir.m. the Pomeroy unit took Sally
Gadle from her residence to Veterlns Memorial Hospital.
.
; Matt Mayes was takE:n from the
~meroy minipark to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 3: 04 p.m. by
tile Pomeroy unit, and Jason Dowas treated, but not transnnrt&lt;&gt;rl by members of the
at the Middleport

1

'1'

RVM703

RB747GA

CFF 15CB

$64000

$593 50

$521 50

, .

.

cuse unit to the Holzer Medical
Center.

. COLO\' ·

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of Chiropractice ln Lombard, Ill. He
served in the U.S. Marine Corp6, is
president of the South Central Ohio
Chiropractic Society and has been a
member of the Ohio Academy ri
Science since 11165.
Sarah Winters was elected
secretary. Winters is presently
program director at Gallipolis
Developmental Center where she
has been employed lor eight years.
She received a bachelor's degree
from Rio Grande Coll~e and a
master's degree in special education
from, Ohio University.
Robert Willis was el ected

treasurer. Wlllls is vice president
and head cashier at the First
National Bank of Wellston, where he
has been employed for more than 30
years. He graduated from Dennison
College and is a member of the
Jackson County Fair Board
American Red Cross Board'
WeUstop Rotary Club and lh~
Methodist Church in Jackson.
Newly elected board members include Gerry Moore, who is administrative division manager al
BancOhio, and John Wolf, an agent
with the Prudential Insurance Company of America.

~---------------------­

Monday thru Friday
9 AM lo9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
WN.!O;!NOIII (. 41. ! 1 0fl

IIIN .-,I'()N I IIoi (IW I

446-9510

~yracuse

/ IJ, •tl f f e

SUN.-THURS.

.Potato

Only Rax could build six·delicious meals around
a nubitious potato.

~ ~ with

big, ·fluffy baked poo!tOeS.lxt from the oven And seNe them up six

.
.
• Bacon &amp;: Cheese ... Melted cheddll' cheese saure and real bacon bits.
• Barbecue... HickOJy-SillOked barbecue beef, onion bits and
cheddar cheese sauce.
• Cheese &amp;: Broccoli ...01eddar cheese sauce and

~ways:

naturally wholesome lx'occoli
• Nacho Oteese ... Olili, Nacho cheese, and
a spicy MJPI1
• Beef Stroganoff... Beef, onions,
mushrooms, and SOlD' cream sauce.
• Potato Sjdns ..•Covered with melted
cheddar cheese and real bacon bits. ~-­
Each a delicious,~ meal,
oot just a side dM Use the coupons
for your first two Potato Patch'" meals.

SAVE 50¢
on each.

One Evening Show al8
Sun. Mal One Show at 2 P.M.

r!

TELEVISION

JACKSON- Buckeye Community
~rvlces, a Jacqoo.based agency
which serves persons with mental
retardation ln seven Southestern
Ohio counties, held lis annual board
meeting recently at the
Presbyterian Church First United ln
Jackson.
William Martin was elected
president. Martin is an attorney-at·
law and has practiced ln Jackson
· since July of 1978. Prior to that, he
was with the law finn of Smith and
Schnacker in Dayton, for four years.
Martin graduated from Jackson
High School iii 11165, graduated from
The Ohio State University In 1969,
spent two years In tl}e Army and
graduated from Harvard Law
School in 1974.
Patrick Trimble was elected vice
president. Trimble is a chiropractor
and has practiced in Coalton since
March of 1978. Prior to that, Trimble
was employed by the Deparlment Or
Natural Resources, &lt;Division of
Parks and Recreation·. He attended
Ohio University, graduated from Urbana College in Urbana and
graduated from the National College

llototldAIIIIII

t",~~~~:~~~··t~A;~t1~0~::4~1p.m.Chafrom hJs

perFormance

7

The Sunda

new Department of Cardiology

SORRY-BUCK NIGHT
- DISWIITI~UED

by the Syra-

'

Marriage licenses
CALLIPOLIS - The following
couples flled for marrtage licenses
this past week In Gallla County Probate CouJ::t. '
Warner E. Cox, 36, Rt. 3, Galllpoli~. state employee, and Marllnda
R. Mcintyre, 34, Rt. 3, Galllpoll~.
unemployed.
asP. VanAuker, Zl, Akron,
los
rol consultant, and Tamar
Wiseman, 25, Gallipolis,
un
ed.
Char es A. Casto, 24, GallipoliS,
laborer, and Patrtcla S. Shepherd,
~. cheshire, cashier.
K~th A. Redwine, 61, Galllpoll~.
concrete construction chief, 'and
MUdred A. Merrick, 46, Gallipolis,
cashier.
·
Charles D. Carpenter, 28, Rt. 1,
Galllpolls, di~bled, and Beatrice
L. Phllllps, ~. Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
waitress.
·
Richard D. Martin, 21, GallipoliS,
self-employed, and Sharon L. walter, 22,- Patrtot Star Route, Ohio
Valley Publishing Co. employee.
David M. Woomer, 31, Rt. 1, Bidwell, machine operator, and Dolly
N. Bernstein, 28, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
bank teller.
,
Kevin L. Lemley, 26, Point Pleasant, mechanic, and Anna F. Glb' son, 21, Point Pleasant,
unemployed. .
.
. Cllttord W. Ward, 37, Gallipolis,
painter, and ·MarUyn K. Morgan, .
34, Rt. l, Galllpolis, dietary aide.
Et:·Nard F. Leffingwell, 46, Gahipolis, unemployed, and Betty Loo
Mooney, 46, Gallipolis, housewife.

'

llolzer Clinic Ltd. completes plan

Deputies
.checking·
break-ins
POMEROY- A theft and a breakIng and entering are under Investigation by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.
According to the report, sometime Thursday or early Friday
morning a l5 gallon gas tank and a
~ foot log chain along with a two
Inch Gorman Rupp pump were
stolen !rom the Coal Power Co. site
on the Forest Run Road. Value of
stolen items, reported by Steve Pullins, was $450.
Robert Cooper, Route 1, Long
Bottom, reported he returned from
a F1orlda vacation Friday night to
find hJs residence had been entered
and that several items Including a
portable television set, Homellte
chalnsaw, hunting bows, and huntIng knives had been taken.

. ,

ONE OF A KIN,b - Holzer Clinic's new Echocar- · EKG Techs, JoaiUie Jolmson (left) aDd Carolyn Davit,
•Jllograpby Wilt ls tile ooly one of Its kind lD Ibis area. wlU assist Dr. Mize in performlq cardiology studies.
:·-.
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WLW 3000 B

.

M~in heads Jackson-based agency

Gallipolis police investig3te aggravatCd assaull·incident ·'

then released from the hospital.
MeanwhUe, three persons were
admitted to Holzer Medical Center
. Friday following a two-car aCCIdent at the Intersection of Ohio 160
and Gallja County Road 3, the
Gallla·Melgs pOst of the Ohio Hfgh·
way Patrol reported.
·
Ernest Ward, 75, Rt.1, Ewlngton,
ls being treated for m11lt!ple la&lt;:era·
tions, whUe John E. Park, 32, and
Shirley Park, 46, Rt. 2; Bidwell, are
being treated for a dislocated hlp
and al!ractured thigh bone respectively, according to a hospital spokeswoman . They are ln
satisfactory condition.
The accident occured when Ward
attempted to pull onto Ohio 160
from County Road 3 at 2:45 p.m.
Friday. Ward apparently pulled
Into the path of John Park's car,
and struck lt. Both cars received
heavy damage, and Ward was
cited for failure to yield the right of
way.
·
The patrol reported another In·
jllcy accident at 11:40 p.m. Friday.
Steve Deeter, 24, Jackson Pike,
was south on Ohio 325 when his
pick-up truck went off the left side
of the road and struck a guardrall,
causing the truck to overturn. Damage was heavy.
Deeter was treated and released
from Holzer Medical Center for lacerations. No citations were L~sued
til the accident.. '
A Middleport man's car received

w. va.

I

-+f-at:p..o-i.n

25JM 2837

CF 20EB

RE928

·25 EM 2832

'•

200Q

00

· DIN"ER SERVED 5:30 • 9:00
Monilay.:..Dining Room Closed, Lounge Open
Tuesday-Meat Loaf
W~dnesday - Roast Pork and Dressing
Tllursday-Cabbage Rolls
Friday-Baked Macaroni &amp;Cheese
Satwday-Southern Fried Chicken

~

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FRIDAY
SEAFOOD ·BUFFET

'6.50
KM91ZAM

KT 706FP

$22900

SOUP AND SALAD BAR - Featuring a large ~lection of fresh vegetables and
~2.
fruit jello and homemade salads and Soup of the Day.
,

•

95

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DINNER ENTREES

I

Sparcfielti an.d Mutballs . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . '3.95.

FAN"TAS TIC SAVINGS ON ALL HOTPO,NT. .AND·.GENERAL
ELECTRICAPPCIANCES . . . . . ..
.· ., .
-

CREDIT A V AI'LABL.E
WE SERVICE WHAT WE S~LL • WE Will :NOT BE 'UNDERSOLD.

POMEROY
·

Fresh Pan-Fried Catfish, Turtle Soup, Baked Red
Snapper, Catch of the Day.- Salad Bar-

· t~NDMARK
'

'
.,
. JAf.k 111. ~ARSEY, MGR. .OrivP ? liH,t. ~nd save alai- Fret dellvtry within J5 miles
. ' Yes. WP WAit~ ~' yoill lotal Hilt.pGint Dtaltl
Storf ijOtll) &amp;~lll to 'J ,J(l; ltl·rn C!O!fd 115:00 P.M.
, Srrvuw Mr:::s ftallr~ 'llll~ M'~t~n ·
,.

.'

·

loat Beef~nd Dressin1 ... _. .... . ... . ... 4.25 ·
Grilled Ham Stell ....... ~ .. .. .. .. .. .. 4.25 !
lkoiled Whiie F'rsh .. .. • • .. . • . .... . . . : . 4.95 ·

Fiotl'iP. : ................... .. .. 5.95 :
Rlb-EJt Sluk .... .. ........ ~ ....... 6.95 .

Ntw Yt11lSIIip : ... " .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 7.95

Porttrllotlse . .•••• ·•...• ... ... ·.... ; .1 8.95

Dinner Includes Salad Bar;·
Cl

rLate' Night Snacks
Peel and Eat Shrln:tp

·

Cheesetrayi

SANDWICHES
Gri(led Cheese .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • .. . 9.5'
Hot D!ll with Slute .. .... ....... . : .. ' 1.90

Smoled SIUIIP •• • . • . • . • . . . . • • . • • • • • 1.00
Chicken Silld ·............. ·, • . . .. . • • 1.35
Bltled ltllll . . . . .. .. .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . 1.35
HltiiiAd Ch- . .................. ' 1.50
ifllb. Chudlburter ...••. • ·• • . . . • . • . . • • 1.50
C~rtlr. • • . • . • • . • . . . . . . . • • . • • • 1.&amp;5
Club Sllldwkh ....... ·..... . ...... : • US ,
R•ben ......•... , .... .......•... , l.!K
. llilst Beef&amp; a.- .................. Z.Z5
'

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.1 SAVE 50¢ 1· . SAVE 50¢ 1
On the purchase of your choice of potato from I On the purchase of your choice of potato from I
I the RAX POTATO PATCH!M This offer not the RAX POTATO PATCH!M 'This offer not .
with anl! other discol!nt or coupon. ·1 valid with any other discount or coupon. I
I valid
Sales
where applicaple. Offer
Sales tax charged where applicable. Offer.
good at par11c1patmg Rax Roast Beef 1 good at participating Rax Roast Beef 1
Restaurants only. ·
· ~
II Restaurants
- on!••:, ,• .
.
Couponexj&gt;iresJuly25; 1982~
I
1 Couponexpires.1ul~25 . 1982

m. !
--------.
--------~
1503 Eastern
tax char~e~

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Aven~e .

Gallipolis, Ohio

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.r:::--[1[]
. A-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

"' 4, 1982
July

w. va.

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••••

••• &lt; l&gt;,..

••• ~ :::s ... .

···ao.~

:;p~.~~

..

r1ver

••

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••.
,,:!' ~;"'
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:::~~~
•Q ·=~
···~~?' ...... "'

. . . . . ftliol' ,

1timts- itntintl

Section~
July 4, 1982

Sunda

, . ...

···~~~-"
•••
• ..... -fiiV ••
•• • r:
..., ...
••• ~ g
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- £;:

'82 River Recreation Festival==

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ml2a::z:

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a')

GALUPOLIS - . Although rain dampened more
than just the atmosphere over the weekend, II. d idn't
dampen the spirits of those participating In the l'tth
Annual Galllpolls River Recreation Fest.lval, sponsored by Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, at
the city park .
The three-day event, whic h wUJ conclude tQillght
with a firew'orks display at 10 p.m., has Included a
queen's pageant, art displays, shows by a magician,
performanc;es by area musicians and Kids' Day ac·
tivlt.l~ wl)lch ranged tr.om terrapin races, sack races, wheelllarrow races and a water slide.
The ev~nt !legan Friday evening when the rain held
ort 1on11 enough for the selection of a queen . Crowned
was sarah L. Evans, daughter of Clyde and Rosemrllans, Rio Grantle. She wUI receive a
scholarshiP from McDonald's Restaurant, the contest
spon~o~. But collecting honors Is probably as much a
hobby to Evans as her participation In sports, music
and•academics.
The Gallia Academy High School graduate plans to
attend Stanford University In California with a financial help of a four-year basketbalt grant she received.
She plans to major In engineering, using the degree as
a pre-law course. While in high school, she was
awarded In track, volleyball and basketball, but also
gained accolades for academics. She graduated with
a 4.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale and was
named to Who's Who Among American High School
Students and Society of Distinguished American High
School Students.
·Runner-up In the contest was Beth Gooderham, the
daughter of WU!Iam Gooderham, Crown City. A graduate of Hannan Trace High School, Gooderham was
president of the Beta Club and secretary of student
council. She was also a member of the superintendent's student advisory council and wa~ active on the
newspaper and yearbook staffs In high schooL She
plans to attend Huntington Business College for a
two-year computer science degree, after which she
wants .to attend graduate school.
• 'Barbara Edwards, daughter of Roscoe and Gena
Edward~. Gallipolis, was given the congeniality
award by the 'other queen candidates. The honor Is.
granted on the basis of the girls' overall personality.

;e ~

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1'3

oM
I

I
N

cc

-1'3

:&amp;&lt;
:z-:P

..

..,z
CD ,..,:;aren!;
CD
-A-

ary

'

s:m

At Southwestern High School, she wa• student body
vice president, IL•ted to Who's Who Among American
High School Students and participated In basketball,
volleyb~ chorus and Future Homemakers of America. She tl\ans to major In business at Rio Grande
College and Commmunlty College In the falL
Other candidates for queen were Terti Hennesy,
Joanne Jones, Lynn Marcum Betsey Ellen Stapleton
and Nikki Thaxton.
Candidates attended Individu a l Interviews with
contest judges Earl F unk, . Patricia Funk and Elsie
Wooten on June 2i. and at Friday's pageant, each
contestant wa• asked to an~wer one question on
stage. The judges made their final selections Friday
night.
Saturday marked Kids' Day and drivers al the
Indianapolis 500 could hardly ma tch the enthusiasm
of the more than 'iO boys and girls who raced their pet
terrapins. The kids-, and their parents and friends- r
screamed, cajoled, begged and sometimes cried to
their terrapins In Order to get them moving.
When the smoke cleared, tlle winner of the boys
division was TraviS Ratliff. Gwen Elliot won the girls
diviSion. The event was sponsored by the Lions Club.
Also included In the Kids' Day activities was a
rott on sneaker contest, conducted by the Kiwanis
Club.
Taking first place for having the rottenist sneaker
was Tracy Perry. Candy P erry won in the rotten
sneaker sole competition and Mike Bostic won the
roll en sneaker tongue contest.
In the sack races, sponsored by the Lions Club,
there were five age diviSions for girls. In the division
for 14-15 year olds, Kim Janey won; the 12-13 year
division was won by Bonnie Lou Smith; In the division
for 9-11 year olds, Sara Thomas won; in the division
for D-B year aids, Jennifer Young won, and Jill Roderus took first place In the five year old and you nger
division.
For boys entered In the sack race, there were also
five divisions. Tom Gatewood won first place for 14-15
year olds; Bobby Gray won the 12-13dlvislon; Chris
Harmon won the 9-11 year old division; F.J. Hast well
took the 6-B year division, and Jamie Russell won the
division for those five years old and younger.

•

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Variety highlighted the 1982
River ~reatlon Festival. Saturday was Kids' Day and events
ranged from a rotton sneaker contest and sack races lo terrapin ra·
ces (top right photo) and a show by
Captain· . D magician Ed 'Dunhlll
(lop left photo) . /\dunking machine
(far left photo) provided entertllinment for those with good aim and
even the "1\!nkees" seemed ·to enjoy the event, as Betsy Stapleton
demonstrated, managing a smUe
after being dunked. On Friday ev·
ening; the queen' contest (abovephoto) was held with Sarah L.
Ev11115, right, crowned by the 1981
queen, Christl FeUure, &amp;~~d Allen
White, emcee of tbe contest, Followlllg tll!l -crowning, members of
The Conimunlty Kids (left) perfonned to a taped 11011g, Partlcl·
p011&amp;s ranged In ag11 from nine to
eleven, (Story and photos by JuUe
Brienza, Jeff Grabmeler and Deb
Fox)

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

Page-B -2-The Sunday Ti m es-Sentinel

•

FAC announces festival exhibit w1nners
GALLIPOLIS - Winners of the
French Art Colony River Recrea·
tion Festival Art Exhibit. to be held
In the city park !rom 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. today, have been announced
by Jan Thaler, cll.airperson.
In the professional watercolors
division, first prize went to Paul
Bradford, Athens, for Not CocaCola ; second prize to Margo
Adams, Russell, Ky., for Autumn
Homestead; third pr1ze to Audra
Clark. Catlett~burg, Ky., Vlllage
Gothic, and hOnorable mentions to
Carol Barbour, Huntbtgton, W.Va.,
Spring Garden; Bradford, for
Building; Clark's The ~ Float,
and to Sandy Stephens, Raceland,
J&lt;y., for My Sister Regtna.
For professional oUs and acrylics
first pr1ze was awarded to Phoebe
Carey, Crown City, for the acrylic
Out~lde In; second prize to Lola Rl·
chards, Sprbtgfleld, Va., tor the oU
pabttlng Garden, and honorable
mention to Sandy Stephens tor
Cymbidium, an oil work.
In the division of professional
miscellaneous, Including works
utlllzbtg pastels, gouache, prints
and btk, first prize went to Carey
tor the graphic work Blue Wall; second prize to Patricia Reed, LeSage, W. Va., tor City Slicker,
mixed, and honorable mentions to
Carey, for an untitled graphic, and
Richards for the watercolor and
gouache Sea Life.
First prize In the amateur divIsion for watercolors went to Mary
Lou Raeber, Kenova, W. Va., for
South of Ashland.
In the category of amatuer oils
and acrylics, first prize went to
Martha Willis, Gallipolis, tor the oil
Fair Friends; second pr1ze to MarIta Thompson, Flatwoods, Ky., for
the oil Sandusky Bay- Lovers and
Friends; and honor.able mention,
to Elizabeth Richards, Galllpolls,
for the acrylic Washed In the Blood
of the Lamb, and for Wlllls' Basically A Home, an acrylic.
Also In the amateur division lor
photography, Wtlllam Mlssar took
first pr1ze tor Perspective; second
pr1ze went to Donald Baun, Perrysville, for Watergate Revisited, and
honorable mentions to Guysville
resident Mark Ellcessor's untitled
color photograph and hlscolor ,photograph titled Entrance to Second
Avenue.
Judl?'lng the show, previous to the
outdoor exhibit, were June KUgore,
of Marshall University, Clltf
McCarthy, of Ohio University, and
Gall Evans, or Well~ton's MUton
Bank GaUery.
They decided .11ot to award ribbons bt the high school and elementary school dlvl~lons, agreeing that

young art lst.s ~ hould tif;.encouraged
In future ellorts.
Fifty-two paintings were chosen
for the July exhibit at River by.

Twelve works were selected for
purchase award~ .
This Is the fourteenth year FAC
has participated In the River Re-

Rupisills observe 60th year

creation F~tlvah In· case of rain,
the exhibit wUl be displayed at
Rtverby.

POMEROY- Mr. and Mra. Lee
(Bessie) Rudl•ll. Legion Tel'race,
will celebrate their 60th Wl!&amp;llng

PH. 843-2691

TOMATOES
oGR£EN BEANS !Bunch and:'/1 Runners)
•BELL PEPPERS • CUCUMBERS • SQUASH

Mr. and Mrs. Hall, 25th
- Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
GALLIPOUS - Zion · United
Brethren in Christ Chll[ch..frovid~
the setting for the May T1 wedding ci
Jane Ann Walters, daughter of Mrs.
Eleanor Walteq anll the late Denney Walters, of1ihade, and Darrell
Erwin , son of Mrs. Eve)yn Erwin
and the late Donald Erwin, of T~
Plains.
Mr.· and Mrs. Harry Harrison of
Gallipolis are the grandparents as
the late Mr. and Mrs. James Walters
of Adamsville.
The 6:30p.m. service was held by
Rev. John Elswick, nuptial music
was provided by Ronda Meeks.
A reception followed at the bride's

-~·-ysell

parenis' home.
·. Brenda Erwin, of Pageville, was
honor attendant. Best man was
Phillip Erwin, of Pagevllle, brother
of the groom. Tim Erwin, of Shade,
brother of the groom, was UBher.
The bride, a 1979 graduate of
Alexander high Shcool and Tri·
County Joint Vocatonal School, is
employed by Secllrity Bank, of
Athens.
Erwin attended Athens High
School and is em~loyed by the City
of Athens.
. 1
After a honeymoon to Myrtle
Beach, S.C., the couple resides in
The Plains.

Mr. arid Mrs. Eblin
POMEROY - Janet Mora,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Woodrow
Mora, Route 3, Pomeroy, and Gregory Eblbt, son of Mr. 'and Mrs.
Steve Eblin, Laurel Qttr Road,
Pomeroy, exchanged weddl~
vows on Aprll 17 at the Chester Un\:
ted Methodist Church. Rev. Carl
Hicks and Rev. Richard Thorn~
officiated at the double-ring'
ceremony.
Mrs. Horace Karr, aunt of the
bride, presented a half hour of prenuptial music with Mrs. Dale Ma·
chlr' s solos Including "Endless
, Love," and "We've Only Just
Begun." Durbtg the ceremony she
sang "Saviour Like a Shephard
Lead Us" a~ the couple lighted the
unity candle.
The wedding theme "We've Only
Just Begun" wa• carried out In a
mint green and peach bulletin
board Inside the sanctuary. Nosegays In the wedding colors and the
Inscription "Janet and Greg" comp)eted the board designed by Mrs.
Ruth Erwin.
Guests were registered by the
groom's sl~ter. Becky Eblin, at a
lac~ covered table with a brandy
bowl candle arrangement. Tara
~'acobs,. cousin of the groom, Columbus, distributed the wedding
.programs.
: Two heart-shaped candelabra
tlanked by altar vases .with peach
and mint green carnations and
baby's breath decorated the altar.
Rose and carnation arrangements
.with candles were used on the organ and plano and satin bows
-marked the pews.
'
. · Given In niarrlage by her parents
.and escorted by her father, the
·bride wore a formal' gown of white
'polyester satin. Made by her
.mother, the gown featured a yoke
and sleeves of embossed lace with
hand-sewn seed pearl' on tpe yoke.
The gown flowed Into a lang chapel
train and featured a white satin
sash at the waist with long
streamers.
She wore a white lace mantilla,
also chapel length, borrowed from
her sister, Jackalyn Frost, and carried the hal}dkerchief whlG)l her
mother had carried ather wedding.
He diamond necklace, gtft of the
·groo~, represented her "something .new", and her garter was
blue. he also wore a new penny In
her ~!joe.
·
She carrted a bridal bouquet of .
sUk flowers In peach and white on a
white Bible with long satin streamers tled In lover's knots, made by
her sister , Mrs. Jackalyn Frost.
A&gt; nothf!r sister, Judy, setved as matron of honor. She wore a long
peach floral gown teaturbtg a Wtde
'l'llffle at the neckline, short floattng
sleeves,' and a wide satin sash. The
bridesmaids were Brenda Haggy,
cousin ·Of the groom, Paula Mora,
and Denise l'{lora, slsters--ln-la~ of
the bride. 'fhl!lr gowns were made
Identical to the matron of honor bt
·mint green. All wore floral hairpieces made by the brlt:ki' smother and
carried lace bridal fans with white'
orchid, stephanotis, and greenery
and bows matching their gowns.
Jennifer Mora was fiowergirf;'
and Debra Frost, the rbtg bearer.
they wore Identical gowns In the
peach floral design. Frost created
the ~rlbed heart-shaped pillow
car~ by daughter.
.
.··
Ra · y Sr)lder 5erved,a8)lestinan
for;,hiS cousin. and the ushel's were
De
Gilmore. also a cousin,
David Smith 'and Rex Roy. The

and El-Oabaja marry

POMEROY--Vicky Koste Hysell
The groo~ plans to graduate
and Saleh All E l-Dabaja exchanged from Ohio University In Mf1rch
wedding vows June T/ln a double- ' 1983. He Is a .~tudent In the College
ring ceremony.
of ClvU Engineering.
The bride Is the daugher of Mr.
and Mrs. VIctor Hysell, Racine,
and thee-room L• the son of Mr. and
256-1470
Mrs . ll.ll El -Dabaja, Beruit,
Lebanon.
Mrs. Gene Chaney, sister-of-thebride, was matron of honor and
CROWN CITY, OHIO
Gene Chaney was best man.
Guests Included Dr. and Mrs.
David Hysell, Stephen, James· and
Jennifer, Mrs. John Chaney, and
MON.,WED.-THUR.
Joh!l and Mary Chaney.
7:30
A.M.--4:00P.M.
The reception which foUowed feaTUES.-FRI.
7:30 A.M.-8:00P.M.
tured a three-tiered cake decorated
.CLOSED
SAT. &amp; SUN.
In pink roses and white bells,

r;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:.

R&amp;M Furniture Mfg.
OPEN

the city. park today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. In case of
rain, the exhibit will be shown at Rlverby .

by Mrs.
Chaney.
created
The bride
Is aJohn
graduate
of Rio
Grande College In a BS In mathe. mattes and chemistry. She also
hold• a teaching certificate from

rI ~~========~~
2MonthsJ
Salary Will
Show Your
Future Wife
What The
Future Will Be

ou.

·vACATION

Like.

ON All

SUMMERWEAR
INFANTS TO SIZE 14
OPEN MON .-SAT.
9: 30-5:00

A

~IDDIE SHOPPE

Just call or visit Pomero"
Flower Shop for a beautifully
designed funeral arrangement.
It's a loving . message of
remembrance.

111 W. 2nd

cftCJfl)l)/1(! I) fc 'IC'\ &lt;'I

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Pomeroy, Oh.

424 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.

......'.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"The Way America Sends Love"

THINK OF 'EMAS •••

Ph. 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
or 992-5721
Pomeroy, Oh.
We accept all major credit cards, and we wire
flowers everywhere.

*****************~
~

,..f .

'

FouRrH Of' JULY
SAVIJYGSCEl.EiliiATlblf

ALL KNITS
20%-0F.F
SALE GOOD THRU JULY 11
. WE SHARPEN SCISSORS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES OF MACHINES

,.. ;

,..,*. ..

t*..
~

•i •••

Portland. Ottio

Opeft 9:00 titii:OO

HOMEGROWN PRODUCE

DISCOUNT

,.. .

HA

anniversary at home July 5th. The
couple were married In 1922 and ·
have lived In Pomeroy since 1937.

'ROM POMIROT: TAKI1241AS1

30% '

r

Page-·B-3

•

Come In and Ta(le
Advantage of Our

..••
*.**
f
:

Tl)e Su nd ay Ti!1)es - S~ti nel

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

'

TIME IS HERE! :

~

Pomeroy

July 4, 1982

ER .~JHE FABRIC SHOP

Pome.roy, Ott ~
115 W. 2nd .
Serv.ing Meigs &amp; Gallia co:
As Your Singer Approved ~e;lier

....,**

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*
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'**

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********'**********·***************

NOT
TRASH!
Yea, CRC, one of the wholtv
owned subsidiaries of
Anheuser-Bulch, will Pay You
Colh On The Spot For Ernptv
- Al~mlnum Cans Qf AfrY Kind.

''
CALL TODAY •••• ASK AIOUTOUR

MINI-VACATIONS
.
' . .- '
ALLAH AT AfPOIDAILI PRIQSIIII'
'

Eqrn
.20• tor~pouncl(obout
211) ol alllmlnUnl !ICI'II you recojele.
It's on eosy WO( to edm extra monev for vour
Club. lal(orile chafily or 'f0U1!81:
Tum whal COIAd be lnlllllnto CCIIII and ctecin
up wptle \IOU're deonlng up! ..--

~00~
wore a tan tuxedo with
peach ose bouto~elr~. ' while his
1

.

10:00 AM • 2:00 PM

.

Sponsored bY lllepenhOII Dtmlbuftng Co., tnC:,
~~ kx;al Anhff-·BUICh ~llrlbulor.

"

'- ·

ts were Iii clic;lcolate brown
with peach boutonnieres.
MJ . I Frost, nephew dthe tn!e,
was ~ acolvte.
·
· ·
Mrs. Altona Karr and 11na Jac- .
olll,
andparenb of the couple,
Were In attendance. Rev. Robert
Mfller. Laurel Cliff Church pqlllr,
(!a,llg ''The Lord's Prayer" as tbe
l!llUPle knell'on the proftle ~

•'

Gallipolis Area Jaycees
Burnette Rood 8t 35 Bypass.
Gallipolis, Ohio ··
Every Saturday

allen
tux

. :;;(&amp;:::;:: :
~ 360 Second Awe, _,,._..,.
446-0699 •
8 , Servl...the General Public as well at W Mom~
8

•••
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'

.

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ll!lt:IMII'TMIM

············~·
rt

.

bench. ,,

1

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. •· A. reeeptton
·.., .

.

The bride's table covejed with
white lace cloth featured a fourtiered fountain cake. A cluster ot
white doves, a cathedral topping,
and peach colored roses, completed the cake decor. The cake
was cut with a sllver knife used by
all of the grandchildren of Mrs. AI·
tona Karr on , their wedding day.
Jackalyn Frost served the cake.
Others -assl~tlng were Betty Lou
Dean who also helped with the flowers for the wedding, Opal Eichinger, Nancy Morrl.•ey. Pat Holter.
Ruth Erwin, and Mrs. Mlldred
BlevinS. Music wa• presented by
Ethan Stearns.
The ·bride wor&amp; a red, white and
blue ensemble with a double cymbidium orchid corsage !rom her
bridal bouquet for a honeymoon In
the Bahamas and Florida. The couple now reside on Laurel Cliff Road .
The new Mrs. Eblin graduated
from Ea•tern High School ln 19&amp;!.
Mr. Elbln, a Meigs High School
graduate, ha• been employed at
Krogers In .Pomeroy for nine years .

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Sampson Hall will observe their silver
wedding anniversary with open
house July 11 from 2:30 to 5 p.m. at
First United Presbyterian Church
annex, Second Street, Syracuse.
The Halls were married July 19,
l!l:i7, in the Methodist Church, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Mrs. Hall is the former Jean
Teaford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Teaford, Syracuse. Mr. Hall
is the son of the late Marion Hall and
Lewflurcie Hall Adkins. Mrs. Hall is
employed by Inters!l\te Utilities Gas
Company, Mason, W.Va.
The event is being hosted by Mrs.
Hall's sister, Janice Lawson . All
friends and relatives of the couple
are invited to attend.

More women

STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) Women have made subStantial Inroads Into male-domlnated neld,,
such as service and sales, In the
past 10 years. according to a study
compiled fly a maker of office and
1n 1972,
99.9 percent of all Pitney
postal
equipmefll.

Bowes sales representatives were
men. Today, women compose close
to one-flfth of the sales force.
Setvlce and repairing olllce rna·
chinery was then a solely male
field, but women now account tor 8
ot the force.

rr:=;~~======~

I·

THIS WEEK is your last chance to get

CABBAGE .........Ar]6~POUND
OR

1391

A BUSHEL. PUAH BRING YOUR

OW~N~~~~--------------~

WE BELIEVE OUR SWEET CORN
WILL BE READY EARLY NEXT WEEK,
JULY 4th or 5th.

WATERMELON
lf4, % or WHOLE
HOT or COLD

How soon college!
Will you be ready
when they are?

CANTALOUPE

Life insurance can help.
catt Gartiind M . Davis · 512 second Ave. - - - -

99~

Gallipolis, Oh .

Ph . 446· 8235
Home Ph . l8HHL~

EACH

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

\

Frattrnal Li/• Ins••••«

~~~"~~~·~O~'~'"~'~-~~..~·~~~···~""~·~~~~~·~~;,;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~~~~~~~~~
AND

$AVE

WITH THESE S~'-'~ERTIME $PECIALS

MEMORIAL-

VISIT OUR TANNING BOOTH
20 TANS FOR ONLY

ALL PERMS
20% OFF

Write for free brochures showing memorials in full color
with sizes and pri'ces listed.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC•
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Leo C. Vaughan, Mgr.
:t
Phone 992-2588

W. Main St., Vil)ton, Oh.
James 0 . Bush, Mgr.
Phone 388-8603

$3500

BODY·WRAP

Casual Curls You Can
Give A Brush To, and
Then Forget.

LOSE AT LEAST 61NCHES ON YOUR FIRST WRAP

GREAT FOR SUMMER
THESE SPECIALS ARE GOOD THl!U JUlY 9th
.. TOP OF THE STAIRS FITNESS &amp;BEAUTY STUDIO

1

Overtop of The Dollal General Stoll In

PH. 992-6720

011.

Look What The Rutland Gang Can Do For You!
Look

For
Cooking &amp; Hot Water Tanks Buy A
Sunray Bottle Gas Range. You can
cook cheaper and if your electricity is
6ft you can keep_warm with your Bottle Gas _Range. It does not require
electricity.

Heat Your Home With

L.P. Gas

•

~·

'

~- I
It's much cheaper to install
bottle Gas.. .LESS REPAIRS
'

Heat Your Home, Church, Business Place, Garage,
even Your Dog·House.with Bottle Gas .

..

and buffet diJmi1r
was held fo!low~Jii tbe CeremOIIY lit
Royal ~Qak Recreatloll Bulldln~­
!

.

'.

"•

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..

�Page-8 -4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middlfport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Jut.y 4, 1982

w. Va,.

July 4, 1982

Pomeroy-Middlepo~t-Gallipolis,

The sunday Times-Sentine i-Page-8-5

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .
.

'

Engagements
lOW TIIU SAY.-DAY,
•
JaY 10

lOW THRU SATIIDAY,
JULY 10

Franklin-Meginness
MARION - Mr.and Mrs. James
C. Franklin, of 642 Concorn Ave.,
Mar ion. are a nnounci ng the
e n~agcmenl and approachi ng
marraige of their daughter, Beth, to
Mark Meginness, son ·of Mr . and
Mrs. WilliamS. Meginness Sr., 199
S. Seffner Ave., Marion.
A formal open church wedding is
plaMed for 2: 30p.m. on Aug. 28 at
Trinity Baptist Church, Marion .
The bride-elect graduated in 1980
from Harding High Sehool and Is a
student at Marton Technical
College, where she is studying nursing.
Her fiance graduated in 1978 from
Harding High School, and is employed by General Telephone Company of Ohio.
Franklin is tbe granddaugher of
Wilma Hazlett, of Gallipolis, Vickers
Hazlett, of Portsmouth, and Mrs.
Clay Williams, of Crown City.

Gallia senior
citizens' calendar

"ADJUSTER" CHAIN
Beautiful UK gold-pkJted. diamond-cui
double

MISSES' SOFI KNIT I-SHIRTS
SUPER SPECIAL!
Cool cotton kn its. Short
sleeves. Crew or V-neck.
Summery colors. S,M,l.

2$

FOR

Mooney-Hineman

con•

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REGUlAR ......
GIRLS' 7-14 (S, M, Ll
REGULAR,._"

DEliM
JEAIS

MISSES' iiiEF
Oil. . . PAm

2,...'1. I

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7'1r· 1t

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3PAIRS$1 !3PAIR~2

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screen print designs.

Western and
other popular
slroight leg
styles. Fash ion accents .
Sizes "6 to 16.

etAIIT

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Select.on includes
rotto d , wet styler
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men ' s pocket ond
tape red combs

17% rayon . McJny col-

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perpockoge

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$ I

2

REGULAR

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rendered on a non-

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2$1
I

GALIJPOLIS - The Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library will be at
the foll ow ing places the week of Jul y·
5-9.
Monday - Ewington 1:15-1 :45 ;
Geiger's 2·2:30; Adney Road 2:453:15;'\'inlon P.O. 3:30-4:30; Bidwell
!Hl; Harrisburg6 :1!Hl :30.
Tuesday - Eno 2:3tl-3; Rece 3:05·
3:20; Africa Road 3:W-3 :45; Kyger 1
3:504 :20; Kyger !14 :25-4 :40 ; Roush
Lane 4:45-5 :15 ; Ch~shi re I 6-6 :30;
Cheshire !16 :35-7. ·
Wednesday - Banes 2&gt;15-2:30;
Sm ith 2:45-3 :15 : Myers 3:30-3 :45 :
Mercerville 4-4:30; Burd 4:4tl-5:
Crown City P.O. 5: l:Hl ; Eureka 6:156:45.
Thursday - Walts 2: 15-2:30;
Brick Sehoul Rd . 2:40-2:55; Addaville Elementary 3-3;30; St. Rt. 7
fRoadside Rest) 3: 45-4 ; Georges
Creek 4: 15-5; Bulaville Trailer Court
5: 31).6: Plantz Subdi vision 6: 15-&lt;i :45.

EACH FOR

/~

-

POLYESTU THIEAi

l1 w·~;,::~~: 8

FO)I
REG . 67' EA.

•1

Servic~s

nntice.

discriminatory bct~is .

Gallia bookmobile

SAYI

1 1.17

TEIRY.CUFF
SPOIT.SOCK

$3

FASIIMABLE
PIIIT. FROIT
lEE lOPS

MISSES'

SORRY, NO RAINCHECKS. AT lEAST 72 PER STORE.

CROWN CI'IY - Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin D. Mooney, Crown City,
announce the forthcoming marriage
of the daughter, Shelba Louise, to
Walter Dean, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hineman, Crown City.
Mooney is a 1982 graduate of Hannan Trace High School and employed by Murphy's Mart, Silver
Bridge Plaza. Hineman is a 1977
graduate of Hannan Trace High
School. He is employed at Central
Supply.
The open-church wedding will be
held July 16 at 7:30p.m. at Victory
Baptist Church, Crown City. A
reception will beheld after the
ceremony at the church.

dlOt~"~

nedtloce con be adjusted to wear 3 ways , .. os o

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for the
week of July 1&gt;-9 at the Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
are as follows :
Monday, Jul)\5 - Oose!l.
Tuesday, July 6 - Bible Study, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday, Jul y 7 - Vinton
Nutrition Education. 11 :30 a.m .;
Crown City Mobile Unit, I p.rn .;
Card Games, -3 p.m.; American
Literature Class, I p.m.
;
Thursday, July B - Quilting. 9
a.m.-3 p.m.; Visiting, 9 a.m.-3 p.rn .;
Senior Nutrition Meal, 12 noon ;
Radio Report , 8:50a.m.
Friday, July 9 - Blood Pressure
Check, I p.m.; Art Class. 1-3 p.m.:
Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.; Social
Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will ,.
serve the followin g menus'
Monday - Oosed.
Tuesday - Tuna salall with
cheese anll leaf lettuce, pickled
beets, cabbage slaw, bread pudding,
whea t bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Baked chicken with
gravy. buttered flt'aS, whipped
potatoes, muffin, garnished
apricots, butter, mi lk .
Thursday - Meatloaf, creole
tomatoes. fruit salad. tapioca with
whipflt'd cream. cornbread, butter,
milk.
Friday - Baked salmon with
cheese sauce, baked potato, spinach
with vinegar. dark bread. fresh
fruit, butter, milk .
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
Meals subject to change without

225 yar ds

·

$ .

FoR
o", bi'!Sk. REG. I FOR 1 1

,. ~Coril9"
S.H·AIIhtslwe

COYEIIIS

ASSORTED .
FLASHLICITS

2$3

MACIETIC
. IIIIIOWAID
I 101 CliPS

ROLLS ·

REG: 12. t7 EA.
II" W. xl-YD.IOI.l

REG.
':I.M

s3

Set includes , 2,
4, 6 cup ploslic
bowls with tight
fiHing lids

ss

nME-All®24 MI.
AUTOMATIC TIMER

SUPEISEAL FOOD
SAVEl IOWL SET

$2

fiEC.'J.2J
Cordless, plug 1n

Turm lamp' on /
off 1875 watts

) '\

'

.

THE AGES WITH OUR
101111,110
UIIICHIClS.
AT lUST 14
PO !TOIL

PACK. 4 LOIIILlFE LICII'f IILIS

SPECIALIZED

1

.

'I

CLEANSING AND

.1

PACKAGING Sfi'IICE
"filE IN YUR"

•1

IlCHT LICHT
.REGUlAR

'2.11
.I

YIIYL-COATD
ITIJ..liiiER

s•A•a 1'11lRY

60MI•.ILA.
CASSETTES

18"x41" . ,
.
SIZE
.

REG.
•1.n
.

PKG.
OP • .
3TAPES

'I

11s1 towll!u

EA .

bv~.
PHOTO FI~S

I

Your Cho ice!
Metal fro~ .

Non . glo re
gloss. 5" ( 7"
Of 8" .. 10"

REG. 1 1,"

$1

TIIMP.. lilliE
PI.AYIH .CAIDS

~:.· 3
DECK FOR

$1

3to 2 WIRE
ADAPTER PLU5

1

/

,

WHm OR
COLOIED CHALK

$1 ~;.- -4 $1 -

:~~. FOR
3

EACH

BOX BOXES

Bo.: ol 12. Non · ro ... ,c.

Our service stops light, dirt, dust,

moths ond mildew fro"l aging "'
damaging delfc ote fabrics .

Your gown il scienti fically proc·
eued , tripl e-wr apped in blue
tissue, Maled in a speciof con·
toiner, which is again _ plast\c
sealed, and returne d with beau•y

Halley-Gunn
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Halley, Route 2, Bidwell, announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Barbara, 'to John Gunn, son of Mrs.
Judy Currey, Wilmington, Dela.,
and John C. Gunn, Gardenville, Nev.
The wedding will take place at
11 :30 a.rn. Aug. 28 at Johnson
Memorial United Methodist Church,
Huntington, W. Va.
The bride-elect graduated from
Gallia Academy High School and·
Marshall University. She Is employed by Somerville and Co. In Huntington, W. Va., as a certified public
accountant. •·
Gunn graduated from St. J\,lbans
·High SchoOl and attends Marshill
University. He is a Slil~n for
Allled·Beverage, Inc:, Huntington.

/

p~O~~~EJJ

Johnson
CROWN CJ'IY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Johnson, Crown City, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of the!r
daughter, Mary Ann, to Randy Al}en
Canaday, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll F. Canaday, Crown City.
The open church wedding will tak~
place Aug. 20 at 7:30p.m. at United
Methodist Church, Crown City, with .
Rev. Richard Graham officiating. A
reception will follow after the wed·
ding in the church basement.
The bride-elect is a 1982 graduate
of Hannan Trace high School. Her
fiance is a 1980 graduate of Hannan
Trace High School and is employed
by M.T. Epling Company, Gallipolis.

//IA/i.

/,

.... ...-liT
..,...

IIIDCIIHWS

..

..
CH~R',f

. .~~~GULf~ ~ ·~ ·

:x I " bubbt~
FOR

I!QIIAtNCHICKI-AT
LWT60PHnoa

. A OL
wand,

~

sm ·

rHARG' IT.

. VIIAOI
MASUICARII

liqulcl. I

t,tubo. 2pipoo. ·

UIIYOUI

IT

;

LI'IIA'WAYI11

flnl'ltASn

2$

preserved for oil the years to
comet

'

Ask about thil ideal ltrvice now!

iiAifi!SIUI
. MAIIIIIIAPI ' All fin IIIII

''

IIAII cuna
STRAW TRIVIIS

·2 •1 .fc:t. !'I :.· 2'I :~ 2•1·
•••••
ROLLS

. IIG W.IACH
•

'l.''a .. YD.KM.I.
'

.'II

,

IIAMIJ•®
Al. .IIIM FGIL

ao.

F I

60L
.
.., 4. Got 75' mfr, ...
Ntt. Details in s.t«t.

.

loll ROLLS .

12" • ""' y 4. lloll.

EACH FOR

•

Many styles and colon.

MIIU·'fiiiiiED

G-TJPS®

COI'TMSWAIS

'llfiMM
"...,
.....
SUtr.en.
CARP

tOOl.+
20Z.

2PAK:3

2•3

•.,

Plfl
FOR ·
NO IIAINCHICKS • At
LEAST U PU STOlE

Ohio Valley Laundry
And Drycleaners
Ph. 446-1842
121 State Street, Gallipoli s

Robinson's Laundry
and Drycleanel'!
Ph. 992-5428

...

Second St., Pomeroy

�•
Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OhiO"- Point
Pa

Pleas&lt;~nt,

The Sunday Times-Se nlinel- Page- B·7

W.Va.

The Su

MERC~~~~\
l"oucv
CN r firM
to
ell
1

SUNDAY
1-6

Calendar

MONDAY
10-5

SUNDAY

l11~iefllt

~taM

It - • ho , ,.... 011 ... ,

~.1-1

.lt•ort~H

If 011

~•or ·

'''"a.
... ,, ........,,...,•••. '"""···
6•• OIIJ vrtlo••-" , ....,. w ill I n,.. o
••'" CIMc• o" '""-'' '•• ,.... ...... hon4•••
ton. llofln o• ••• ••~IM• lo,..rlr ~~~-~~t ltt l ro
t. ,...,rcl\o1H ol lh+ .,.,. ,rlu whffto•••
o•olloblo or .,.,u tfll wooo • u,._.roilllo
111uei iiJ ,,.,.. o l o roMflo toiHo totluc tl•ft '"

,.. ~c.

Torch LfM Church honoring
·'·'""'' and Lucy Vineyard's
:&gt;11h ann ivrrsary. 2·4 p.m. Mrs.
Vinp~· ilrd

SlORE -HOURS: .

was a former teacher

in ill&lt;' Tupprrs Plain. area.

.Mon.·Sat 8 am·lO pm

GA LLIPOLIS - An ice cream
soc1al will be held Sunday at First
United Presbyterian Church ~I
State St., from I to 6 ·~.m ..on'the
"d'• Ia wn of e church grounds.
Homemade ice cream, cakes and
pies will be on the menu. Profits
will go toward the Gallia County
Emergency Food Pantry.

Sunday 10 adl-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

WIN·ATRIP
·
FOR TWO TO oil ~00

POMEROY, 0.
.)

'

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JULY 12, 1982

GALLIPOLIS - Paint Creek
Rapttst Church wiU host the !25th
annual union meeting of the
Churches of providence Sunday. ·
The day's sch'edule will include
Sunday school at 9; 15 a.m.,
worhsip at 11 a.m., fe llowship
dinner at 12 :30 a.m. and the uni on
meeting at 2:30 p.m. with Rev.
Vance Watson, pastor of Mt. Carmel BaptiSt Church, Bidwell , and
the choir as guests.

:WAll

'

~

~ .

~

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Got a ~ae O"""'
tlct«tt and collector cara at any participating stOt"e.
You may also receive a free game tiCket and/Df
card lPI•'I'• speclty) by maiNng a seH·
addrtlled, stamped envelope to FabukM Fortune
of Prizes, P.O. Box 26272, Birmingham, AL 35216.
Umit one IK:Iu!l per request one r8(J.Iesl per peraon.
per day. Each request must be maiktc:l separatety.
Simpty punch out the perforated aeclions on !he
game tiCket to reveal four game marker~IO play oo
your coltector card. Some game tickets contain a
matt&lt;eo which allies "YOU QUALIFY FOR GRANO
PAIZE DRAWING .~ II VOU OOI;ain one of these
martters yoo are eligible to enter the Grand Prize
Drawings and the char"q to win one of six trips for
two to Aawaii or $3,000 cash. Two Grand Prize
Drawings will be held. All valid entries recehted by
May 21, 1982 wiU be eligtble for the first drawing on
May 28, 1982. Three Grand Prizta wiM be given
away 11 tnis time. AR valid entries receiVed witt1in 14
days after game end• wil be eUgible for the second
dra-Mng. Three mofe Grand Prizes wiH be awarded
in tnt second drawing.

GALLIPOLIS ~ A p~&gt;ny pull,
sponsored by Buckeye Shoe Benders. will be held at I p.m. Sunday at the Coon Hunters' Club,
Kriner-Sand Hollow R&lt;Jlid. Admission is $1.50 per person.
GALLIPOLIS - Ann Trent's
baton group members, the city
recreatonal baton, will have their
pictures taken immediately '
follow in the July 4th Parade. All
participants are to meet at the
water fountain in the city park for
refreshments and pictures.

POMF:RO Y - There will be a
chickPn dnd rib barbecue at
Eastern High School Monday,
July 5th wil h serving to begin at
11 a.m.
POMEROY - Jaymar Golf
Club will have a scotch foursome
and p1cnic 4 p.m. Monday at the
clubhouse. Bring covered dish.
table service. Meat furni shed.

TUESDAY
POMEI~Y Chamber of Commerce will meet at noon Tues·
day at Veterans · Memorial
Hospital.

•

WEDNESDAY
GALUPOUS - The Gallia
County County Boad of Health
will meet on Wednesday at 9 a.m.
at412Second Ave.. ~

• Shorts And Short Sets
• Shirts And Tonk Tops
• Variety Of Swimsuits
• · Pretty Pinafores And
Summer Dresses In Many Infants', Toddlers' Sizes
Colors And Styles

..
.;:!

·-

.'
•

. ,-

While Faahlon Quantities Last

·,

Clearance Of Summer Fashions

~:

'

GRADE AWHOLE

Chickens......•.......~~
U.S.D.A. CHOICE .

.

.LB

¢

sse
Sate Price

Our Reg. 2.6 7 Ea.

'

Fo~
WITH

r:o i =•=~·''' ifi•l: 1

COUPON

$.

139
Chuck.Roast .........·..

.

Tostltos · Round
Tortilla Chips
Sto n e -ground
co rn . nacho
c heese flav or 8~
oz ' size. Save

...
..
Our Reg. 6.47

BUCKET

Cube

~HOPPED SIRLOIN PATTIES ••••••••••••• !~·.. .1

5 79

I
I
I
WITH COUPON I
·oaclllallng
1
lawn Sprinkler I
'Rainwave' sprink· I

4.97

·'
~

FRENCH CITY WIENERS •••••••••••••••• !~~~~:~·.99~
SUPERIOR LUNCH MEAT•••••••••••

9.99

Our
Reg.
16.44

8.88

(800)

Thermos l11sulated Coolers

Our
Reg .
12.97

Our 3.88

$1 Off

( 801 )

Folding Banana Lounger

12 Qt. double six·packer . Insulated . Person Multi -position, steel fram e,
nat size cooler for picnics, boat trips , outings
strong vinyl tubing , 72x 22x10.
of any .kind .
waters up to
2000-sq . feet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

'.•

.·'
~

(802)

20Lb. Bag
Charcoal

Qui ck -Light ;ng
bri que ts .
SAVE

Our Reg. 46.99

36.88

'

"Swinger II" Smoker
Grill With Hood

t:

Get set for ' sum mer
barbecues with this
heavy gauge steel with
183/•" square grid.

Gallery hours are Tuesday and
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and
Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 5
p.m .
.July 4 - 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.- Fourteenth Annua l Festi val Exhibit in
the city park. Both amateur and
professinnal art work 'Will be
displayed. For further information.
ea ll.lan Timler. cha irperson, at 44618 1~ or 4464425, or FAC Director
Je n Skaggs, 446-3834.
.Jul y 20 - Interdepartmental
Jll t't •! Ill).! at 8 p . lll.
•I
.July 27 - Truste"' meeting' at 8

(

,,

2-daySale.

3.66

Ml'igs Bookmobile schedule for
Tuesday, July 6 - Portland (Post
Office I 2:10.2:40; 'Letart Falls (Effi e's Restaurant) 3: 15-3:30; Racine ·
· tBank i 6:3!Hl: 35, short film will be
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arrives; Syracuse (Pool ) 6:00-8:50,
short film will be shown 15 minutes
after uookrnobile arrives.
Bookmobile schedule ,. for Wednesday, July 7 - Tuppers Plains
(Arbllugl1 ) 7: 25-8: 05 ; Riggscrest Addition 8:20.9, short film will be
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arrives.
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
for free entertarunent and information for people of all ages. We
'· have how-t&lt;Hio-its on everything
from auto repair to dieting, many
paperbacks and acCess to_jill the~
libraries in the area to.ta((f'care of
your informational needs. The book·
mobile 'staff will look forward to
seeing you!
·
· If any .questions, please contact
Louise Hamel, e)\lension librarian.

·

KRAP't

'

.

•.:_CANNED PO~

99'

12 Ol.CAIIS
Limit one Per custom41r
Only at Powell's
· resJ

PORK &amp; BEANS
'150Z.

4/$1

.

PriCe

COTTAGE CHEESE ••••••••••••••• :•• '\ ••·•••• !!~. •1"
DINNIRTIIA T
'
,
POT PI·ES ' . - .' .
.
IOZ. a!il$1

1.33

CO UPON
Aluminum Foil
W ITH

································~······~'

CHICICIN Of THI ~A .
'

}.

•

.lUNA
. uoz. .

UMIT li'I.US(

"

79'.

Limit Cine Per customer .
Good Only at Powell's
12, 19112
Offer

'SU. IAG

In 12"x71' lol

•

PI.AVOIIITI

SUGAR

2.97
l'J'Oi :1:{•111 l•J:I

I
I
I
I

Garden
Hose

SO'x'h" hose .
Long · la s ti nq
SAVE .

1

\

"'ALLIY IILL

SHOWIOAT

'ol\6 PAK

~~a;.39~

'

~'tsuP. ...:........ ~.o:.~. .59
•

.

COUPOO expires
Julys. 1982

Sa te Price

Adjustable wire grid . steel bowl. sli ding tegs.

WITH COUPON
Chill Dog With
French fries
Take a break
ancj treat your·
.self to chili dog
'nfrles!

$ 49 ·GEORGIA PEACHES.·.:•••••••••••••••••••••••
..
Coffee...............~~~ ..
PARKAY MARGARINE •••••••.'•••••••••••• ~ •• 2·/s1

MAXWELL HOUSE

{80J)

Convenient 18·1n. Table·top Grill

.25

Meigs bookmobile
Bookmobile schedule for Meigs
C'•'llnty for Monday, July 5.- No servln due to holiday .

Pac:koge Of 24
'Party• Cups
Disposable plastic c ups Convenient 9-oz si7e .

'

111 .

..

1.99ourReg. 2.96
Mlaaes' Pull·on Shorts
Smart shOrts in a chOice
of colors. sizes. fabrics

Infants' And Toddlers'

....,
J
•f

GALLI POLIS - The July exhibit
at the French Art Colony, First
Avenue, is comprised of the 52 July 4

r

• Tops, Shorts, Short Seta,
Pants For Millet, Glrta
• l·plece Or llklnl Swim·
wear For Mlasea' And
• Rompers, Short Or Sassy
Sets, DresMs For Girts
• Fashion Dreaaes For Miss•
••· Juniors, Full Figure

Fashionable Tube Tops
Polyester/rubber. SOl id
colo rs. stripes. Misses.

..;

Riverby calendar

prize wi nners.

•
•
•
•

.99~1e Price

MONDAY
POMF:ROY - Meigs County
Fnir Board will meet 8 p. m.
Monday, July 5 a t t he
fairgTouncls.

·

'.
.J.

CASH

Women's And Girls'

Scriten•prlnt Tonk Tops
Shorts, Slacks, Jeans
Short·siHVe Shirts
Tonk Tops In Solid
Colors Or Stripes
·· • Choice or Swimsuits
Men's And loys' Sizes

...·~... .
.· .....

Men's And Boys'

•

~~3~ .

.Limit One Per Customer .
GOOd Only llt.P'owell's ·
Offer Expires July 12, 1982

Versatile food
wr.op ... bQke In It,
store In it. Save.

I
I
1
I

I
·I
I
1
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
SLIDE AND MOVIE I
I
PROCESSING
I
Proc•ss 20·exp.
I
.
Slide or .
IMM Movie Film
I
I
Process 36•exp.
I
Slide Film
I
UmiU Rolls
I
Inquire About-Our On·llme Servlc:e 1

"'
FILM DEVELOPING

Save!
OUr Reg.

1.97

. '

1-gc:lllon easoline Can
Metal gasoline can with '
pull-\4) spout for pouring.

'· 1.58~ACK
'

·• Pa.ck Sp~lal
Mt. Dew.
Diet

1.99

Champlonshll)"
Tennis Bolls
Can of 3. Wifh
optic ye llow
color. Save

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1.24
2.08

J\iy5, 1982

�•

I

"

'

'

STORE MANAGER'S
SALE
.

Navratilova has
Wimbledon title

'

.

PRICES IN EFFECT SUNDAY, JULY 4 THRU TUE_SDAY, JULY 6
.

\....

64.88 '29.88

KODAK a~sc

6000 Came
Advanced technology rTu~kes all
tl'le pkture taking dec ls~ns,
Including flash . Fully Jutomatlc
wllh a special ciOH· up selling.
Uses new KOOACOLOR HR
Disc Film .

IKocl;ekl

1-7

Three Piece Six Foot
Picnic Teble Set

MONDAY; JULY 5
10 AM· 6 PM

Enjoy outdoor liv ing at its
best Wifh this J-piece red ·
wood stained picnic table
set. Sturdy, durable con struction . Sold unassembl ·
ed in ci'rton. At least 15

per store.

HARDWARE DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT

1.
9
Heck's Brand 12

· OPEN
SUNDAY, JULY 4

lf.g...!9.99

E~posure

79¢

110 Film

1.79
Heck's Brand 24 Exposure

16 Oz. Kraft

35 MM Film

'·

1.89

Marshmallows

1e49

WITH 3 OZ. FREE

Heck's Brand 20 Exposure
126 Film

48 o:z.
Crisco Oil

16 Oz . bag of Krall Jet · Puffed
marshmallows should be at
every picnic, camping trip or
kept handy in your kitchen.
Free 3 oz . bag with purchase .

Higt1 quality film by JM

Company choose from 110
12 Exp., 110 24 Exp .. 135
(35 MM .) 24 Exp .. CR 126
20 Exp.

Pure ngetable' oil fo.all your
cooking needs. Ideal for lowcholestrol diets.
food Dept.

FOOD OEPT .

Reg. 33.96

22.66

G.E. Portable
AM/FMRadlo
Weather Band

Johnson liS
Century Rod &amp;
Reel Combo

Reg. 29.99

General Eledrlc 40 Channel
C.B. Radio

22.88
Reg. 29.99

ho~

\ohd o,H porch

~ wmq co m e~

rlr.~r

~oly! • reth .l n o

Pt'rt er t tor w.um

Handy pump dispenser con ·

'

tains
cleans ing ,
her·bal
scented nand soap, lotion
. enriched .
·

24.66

Flanders
Gieen MetaW:hair

HARDWARE DEPT

9" Culling IWIIII tor 1m11111 lilt lawns. (;DOIIOI lull
1y111m ptrmtll u!nd100 ITIDII 111\1 b~ limply IIPPIOQ

lummtr on lht grot!M Wi1hbont cord tOMttl•on
IUMI lllow.s ~Uitk, HtUfl llllthmtnt and tllf
IIIIIU ol UllnSIOO Clld AutomatiC linI CUI•Oft .for

proper hn• ltnglh
Hardwar• Dept.

4 $1

16 Oz. Marutt I
Slaw Dreulng

CANS

Ouoc•, l'ol Sy ,

d c l•co o u ~

*
*

6 Oz. Friskies Dr
6 Oz. 9 Lives

desse rt th,11 ~ l(h

.m(l ,l(luiH qo cr,1Jy over .
,,~~nrtr d ll,lvnr \

c n on~c

For tangy delicious slaw that
will go great with any meal.

10 Oz. Heinz 57
Steak Sauce

· Cat Food

I rom

All, the nutriti on your cat needs
with the flavor 1\e'lllove.
Choose from an assort·
ment of fl avor s cats love.

1.09

16 Oz. Velvet
Pound Cake

2·.89

Old t.u hioned ve lvet pouno C.'ll.f
, Pert eel tor ~ nac~ l•m t&gt;. Oe lo cious with
truit or cofl ~ e .

1.19

10 lb. Bag

Sp u~l! 1ip

59C

lnh.11'ncu your m•at to ovorwllllll(n your

tat.tt&gt;ouds . use on &lt;'II mo,,ts and

-

1.37.

Noume lnetMt Shive

wi1112 FREE
Blc Sheven

love.

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CLEVELAND (AP) - The
weather forecast lor Sunday's Budwel'!el' Cleveland 500 calls for
partly cloudy skies, following some
showers In the morning. But It light
showers were to continue Into the
afternoon, they would not keep the
~drivers off the course at Burke
Lakefront Airport.
In the event ot rain, specially
grooved tires are avaUable to drivers of the Incly-type cars In place of
the smooth, dry-weather racing
"sllcks."

3 Piece

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NON-DAIRY CREAMER
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of " doren.

MADRID, Spain (AP) - Poland

expects to wln one for the "man In
the street," while Nortbenllreland
.d reams Its Impossible dreams Sunday In the second round ot the 12th
World CuJ? soccer tournament. '
Poland Is.favored over the Soviet
Union In a showdown for the Group
A qualltylng slot when tile nations
flleel Sunday In Barcelona. Northem Ireland, the only unseeded
team left, Is the underdog' aga!Q,t a
revived French team In a Group D
match In Madrid.

Hurrlcanclle

Cro~nt..rry 11nd Apple! taste bll!nded into
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2.99

ring Airport In Florida, host to the

u Hours of Sebring sports car race.
"But Indy cars l!l'e tighter and
more powerful than sports cars,
which means there will be different
kinds cf. stresses placed on the tires
In· the Cleveland race," he said.
The National Weather Service
said the chance of rain during qualifying rounds today was 70 percent,
diminishing to 40 percent by
tonight.
It heavy rain should force postponement of the race Sunday, It
would be run on Monday.

Connors in finais

No games were scheduled
SatUrday.
France and Polan() each can
move up with a draw; their opponents have to aim for a victory . .
Northern Ireland, which has
done very well to get this tar, can
afford to take ~hances.
Zblgnlew Bonlek, who scored all
the PoliSh goals·In a 3-0victory over
Belgium, told repOrters that the
match especially was Important to
the "man In the street" In Poland.

RAIN-DElAY TRJAUI - Marlo AndreUt reads a racmr ~
Satunlay whDe waiting lor lire start of lime trials lr\ tfl!l Budwelller
Cleveland 11011 to be run Sunday. Satunlay's trials wer~ayed dlie to
heavy rain. ( AP Laserphoto).

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Second-seeded ,Jimmy Connors
rolled to a worlananllke 6-4, 6-3, 6-1
straight-set semifinal victory Saturday over No. U Marlt Edmondson to gain.the final at Wimbledon
for the fifth time In hl~ career.
Connors, whose only victory In •
the championship came against
· Australian Ken Rosewall In 1974,
now faces the winner of the other
semifinal match between defendIng champion John McEnroe and
young Tim Mayotte, the only unseeded player to reach the bracket.

'

Dept

.... 24.9'- '

Seven Shelf Stand
' &gt;

iTier Hanging . .lket
3 nor llootlill ••• it

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lfntilltf - · ·

"Preliminary tests at Burke
Lakefront Airport show the nrnway
surface there to be more abra.~lve
than most of the race tracks at
which we compete,'' said Leo Mehi,
Goodyear's director of racing.
"That means the tires we supply
lor the Cleveland race will require
a tougher nrbber compound than
usual, to resl~t Increased tread
wear.''
Mehl said Goodyear has had experience with building racing tires
for airport courses, such as the Seb-

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The rain tires are never used on
oval tracks such as the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway. However, they
can be used on road courses tracks that require both left and
right turns.
Rain tires have not been used in
an actual race In more than a decade, and they were last used in
qualifying runs two years ago.
The rain tires, Uke the nonnal
racing tires; are manufactured by
the Akron-based Goodyeat Tire &amp;
Rubber Co.
&lt;1&gt;

World Cup play resumes

ewlillbll in rtgul•. m1ntt1~ 1nd·

~Mixing lowl Set

plate, after sbe wrested lbe UUe from Chris Evert
Uoyd, U.S. SDDday. (AP Wirephoto)

R&lt;&amp;2t.N

The chair seat and back.
are heavy 20 lgauge steel
with cur~ed edges. Frame
is oversized l'h" heavy
gauge steel tubi ng. AT
least 15 per store.

w " ' m r r f'VI' nonq ~ At le f!o\ l ?0 prr ~ tore .

DISPLAYS PLATE -: MarUna Navrelllova, U.S.,
boldrr up lbe WfmbledoD Ladles SIDgles Champlomhlp

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'CLEVELAND (AP) - New
York Yankees shortstop Bucky
Dent, after previously hinting that
he may tum down the honor, says
that he will play In the 1982 All-Star
Game It voted to the starting
lineup.
.
"I can't disappoint the people
that voted for me," said Dent on
Frtday after thF! Yankees had defeated the Cleveland Indians 3-1.
Dent, who had a .143 average after Friday's game, has played sparIngly ever since the Yankees
acquired shortstop Roy Smalley
from Minnesota.
'

Reg. 1.29
10.5 OL

RU!Jgecl , hilnd,om ~ portilblc lor good h l l e mng. ~ lodr ru le doo\1
woth ver n oN t u ntnQ. Automflht AC I D( swo !(hong. ~w itcn
,,utom;~tic .. ll y to c ont•nuou l Govt . Weol lh t&gt; r t:ar oo1dc.n11ng o1 nct
Dote~ to FM o r AM with tuning

'

Dent ~ays
he'll play

82¢

27.88

las, earlier won both the U.S. Women's Indoors and
the FamUy Circle Cup.
Martina, In reaching the tiDal of her 19th consecurtve tournament, ha.~ been devastating this year, wln·
nlng 54 'Ill 55 matches. Her only loss came In the title
match or the Avon Champlonshlpg In New York In
March to Sylvia Hanlka.
She also heat Lloyd In the final of the Australian
Open la~t year and won the French Open last month,
defeating Andrea Jaeger 'i-6, 6-1.
NavratUOVa served the opening game at love and
Lloyd Immediately returned the favor. But the delending champion !ailed to win any points on her next
serve and the lelt-hander broke through on Lloyd's
first double-fault of the match for a 3-1 edge.
. She repeated the feat In the sixth game, and
wrapped up the opening set In just 22 minutes.
And when she broke on the opening serve of the
next set, Navratllova appeared to have cut the heart
out of her opponent's game.
But Lloyd, a three-time Wimbledon champion and
a finalist every year since l!ri'l, stlffenend her resL,tance and broke right back In the second game.
She then fought of1 one break point to hold serve In
the third game, only to have NavratUova sUp through
with a break In the tltth.
But the top seed then began to miss her own tlrst
service - the ljnchpln of her game - and Uoyd
began a nrn of four straight games by breaking back
In the sixth to pull even at 3-3. She yielded the tlrst
point on NavratUbva' s service In the eighth game, but
stnrng together the next four points to post a 5-3 lead.
Lloyd then served out the set at love.

WIMDLEOON, England (AP) -Martina NavtatUova, using both strength and guUe, shook off
her serond-aet mistakes to defeat Chris Evert
Lloyd 6-1, 3-6, 6-2 today and capture the women's
tltle In the All·England Tennis Championships at
Wimbledon.
Navratllova, a native of ClllChoslovakla who be-came an American citizen last year, became only the
lOth woman since 1900 to wln the Wimbledon singles
tltle three or more times. She also captured the crown
In 1978and1!179, beating Lloyd In the finals both times.
VIctory came when Lloyd's forehand sailed over
the baseline and Navratllova threw her lll'JIIS sky·
ward to celebrate her triumph.
Sunday's men's final wW send defending champion
John McEnroe against serond·seeded Jimmy Connors: Connors advanced with a worlananllke 6-4, 6-3,
6-1 semifinal victory over No.I1 Mark Edmondson of
Au~la. while McEnroe, the top seed, eliminated
un~ed Tim Mayotte of Springfield, Mass., 6-3,6-1,
6-2.
With her victory, NavratUova also captured a
$500,IXXI bonus and Is only one step away from winning another $500,IXXI.
The Playtex Challenge Is a prtzeof $1 million for the
woman professional tEnnis player who can win four
specified rriajor tournaments In a U-month period on
four different swfaces. U a player wins three of the
four, as Martina has, she receives $500,IXXI.
The tournaments are the U.S. Women's Indoors,
which Is played on carpet; the FamUy Circle Cup,
clay; Wimbledon, grass, and the'l982 U.S. Open, hard
court.
The left-bander, who now makes her home In Dal-

.

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Po:neroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, .Ohio:-tPoint Pleasant, w. va.

P.age-C-2- The Sunday 1imes-Sentinel

'

July 4, 1982

'

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Sutton hurls ·4-1 win ov~r former -mates
By Alisoclaled Press

Oodger Stadium used to bring out
the best In Don Sutton when he was
pitching for the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
·
· Nothing' s changed now that he's
pliching for the Houston Ast~.
:·It's exciting coming back here,"
Sutton said after hurling the Housto~ Ast ros to a 4-1 victory over the
Dodger5 Frlday night with ninth·
Inning relief help from Frank La·
Corte. "The highest and the lowest
moments or my career have been
In this ballpark."
The 37-year-old right-hander was
zeroing In on a shutout, but hls
former teammates spoiled It for
hlm when Ron Cey singled home a
run with one out ln the ·ninth.
That sent Sutton ·to the showers,
amidst an ovation mingled with
some bOOs !rom the Dodger Sla-

dium crowd of 43.364.
a pitch, then came home 011 succes· with two out In the sixth wben he
"I really felt good tn U. eighth · slve stdglesbyRayKnlghtlllldJose singled m a 2-0 delivery,
Inning, but complete games U'e not Cruz.
Swaa, Who did a tour or duty ~
as Important to me a, they Used to
Luls Pujol, hit hiB second bomer ~e MetJ' bullpen whlle trying to
be, " said Sutton, ftndlng no fault · to lead ott the Houston second. The work hiS way back frQm a sore
wlth Manager Bill VlrtiOil'a ·deci- A~ros were blanked untfllht ninth arm, tlnally tired In the seventh
sion to take htrn out "U'nless I when they scored on RBI slllgles by when he was cliil'iled with all toUt
reall:' !eel Uke I am ln command, I Art Howe and Pujols.
PhUadelpllla runs.
don't mind at all tumlng It over to
Sutton evened his career record
Cube 4. Canlnals 3
someone who's !relh. .
·' against his !onnerclubat44, andlt
Ryne Sandberg's grounder
"The ball was really moving tcr was his 249th career victory.
scored Larry ~a from thlnl base
night, I had good location, but I'm
Olanta S.%, Padres 4-1
In the IM!VI!nth Inning. boOsting Chinot going· to lntlmldate or blow
Joe r,forgan's three-run homer cago over St. Louis.
anybody away anymore ,With my. capped a lour-run ninth Inning to
BoWa doubled to lead off tbe sevpitches."
lead San Francisco over San Diego enth ott Dave·LaPotnt, 4-2, moved
Sutton, ~. scattered six hits, In the first game of their double- to third Steve Henderson'uacrlstruck out five and walked two be- header. Terry Kennedy's solo flee bunt and scored under a tag at
fore leaving the game. He gained home run cUmaxed a three-run. homeplateonSandberg'sgrounder
his first vlctoiy since May 21 as La· seventb-lnnlng rally that led San to shortllop Olzle Smith.
Corte earned hls first save.
Diego In the second game. nm LotSt Louis, which tralled ~enterHouston took a 1-0lead In thetlrst tar, 8-2. got thewln With relief help .Ing th.ebottomortllethlrd, ralllEd to.
Inning against VIcente RomO, 0.2. In the ninth from Gary Lucas, who Ue It With stngle runs In the third,
With one out, Terry Puhl wu hit by posted h1, llth save.
fourth and filth Innings,
"I had a chance to redeem myPln&amp;es 6-7, Expoe ~Z
sell," said tbe Padres' ace reliever,
Tony Pena hit a three-run homer
who had given up Morgan's three- and raised his NL-Ieadlng battihg
run homer, In the t1rst gnme. "Be- . average to .343 as he paced Pittssides, I owe one to Lollar, I've come . burgh over Montreal In the tlrst
In before and blown It tor htrn."
game of their doubleheader.
Meta 8, l'lllllle8 4
Pena, who hit a sizzling .4561n the
Craig Swan pitched 5 2-3 Innings month t:l June, homered In his first
or ncrhlt ball, and Moolde Wilson time at bat to spark the Pirates to a
and Rusty Staub each drove In two five-run second lnnlhg off loser
runs to lead New York over Charley Lea, &amp;4.
Plilladelphla.
Dick Davis' three-run homer poSwan, &amp;-3, retired the !lr5t 10 bat· wered Pittsburgh to victory In the
ters before walking Pete Rose with second game as the Pirates 1mone out In the fourth, and Rose proved their wtnnlng streak to !lve
ended Swan's bid for a ncrhltter ·games, their longest or the season.

.

By Aeeodatetl Presa
The Milwaukee Brewers are
busting down so many fences these
days that tans nlay be In almost as
much danger as opposing pitchers.
Cecti Cooper, whose seventhInning grand slam
one or four
MUwaukee homers - accounted
for the final four runs In a 14-~ rout
of the Boston Red Sox Frkllly night, •
was as!cfd U he would pay to see the
Brewers If he W!!l'en' t a player.
"No, I'd be afraid to Ill to the
ballpark," he replied. "I wouldn't
sit tn the bleachers, that's for sure.
.Dldyousee (Boston's)Jimllk:e'out
there II! lett field? On a Qy ball he
started back every time. He knew
where tbey were going," .
The !our home runs pve the
Bl'I'WI!I'II 311n their Jaqt 14 games,
breaking the American League record of291n 14 games set by the 1961
New York Yankees.
MUwaukee's 17-lllt bombard·
ment also Included a pair of twcr
run borners tw Gonnan Thomas, a
twcrrun shot by Ted Slmnll'lrls and
five hils by Robin YOUDt as the
Brewers pulled Within one pme of
the. lint-place Red Sox In the AL
East
'"There's only one explanation
they're all good bitters," lldd Har·
vey Kllf!llll, wllo m8Jlfiii!S the
Brewers. al&lt;;O known of late as Har-·
vey's Watlllanprs. 'T»e never
seen 82lytltlng Jl!re lt. They've been

' flu.
HEADING FOR ROME - Mflwalee's Ted !lim=~ 1e11.a
dlbake from lblrd baR coacllBarry Waraer alter Wltblll ~tire ra !lime
nn off Botton's Mlh Torrez llllrlq lh lint laiDg P'rWIJ ..._ Tile
Brewen went on to defeat Baitoa 1C-5 ud mow to 0111! ....e belllild tbe
league ieadlq Red Sox. (AP Luerpboto)

Braves capture slugfest

By Tilt Associated Preas
the ttr~ pme. Iii the SlleOIId, he
Paul Zuvella'.s two-run homer ln
llad three more
maaatn&amp; to
the ~ttom of the 11th Inning gave
score oae run.
the Richmond Braves a 17-15lnter·
Catcher Craig Stlma'c blasted a
national League baseball victory "three-run home rualn the lxJUomt:l
over the Tidewater Tides.
the ninth illnlng tb treak ·.- 3-3 116!
The Braves' Paul Runge bit a and bOa.rt Chart.ton '-l over
twcr run bomer tn the bottom of the
Rochestl!lr.
ninth Friday night to knot the score
After tralllng 3-lllnce the fourth
at 15-aU and force the extra Innings. Inning, the Charllee gained • lie In
The game started with a grand the seventh when 11ft fleldl!r Ricky
slam by the Tides' Brian Giles In Baker blt hlB flrA home 1'1111 or the
the first. Mike Cubbage hit a threeseason Wtth one runner on.
Rained out!
run homer for the Tides ln the
Jlno Petralll's sacrifice' fly droVI!
Sll&amp;urd·-'8 Met
SYRACUSE •
"~
p
fourth, and ln the sixth Mike Davis In Pete Dempsey with; • a tieLegloe pme agalnlt Lohad a solo shot and Bruce Bochy breaklng run ln the ntnth lllnlng to American
pn - ~ beea•'ll' ol wet
had a two.run blast
lead Syracuse 3-2 over ColUmbus.
_..._
111e leUD 11 h
Joel Perry had a twcrrun homer
Columbu_g scored Its I'UIII In the " ' - !lunllq
IIC &amp;
.. In the fourth and Leo Vargas a
fourth on singles by Steve Balboni ' . ~~ t:'~
Wa:three-run homer In the sixth for the and Don Mattingly,
Braves.
In other IL action, Jim Chris· r-------"'-----------------~
t.enseil had six hits lor four runs as
the Toledo Mud Hen rolled to 12-2
and &gt;-4 victories over the Pawtucket Red Sox.
Toledo's Rick Scofield homered
ln the first game. Christensen had
three hits and drove In three runs In

hi"'

..

tour,
"I'm getting sick o! people asking
me what's wrong With Sandra,"
Stacy said Frlday alter her 73score
lett her ln a big group holdlni down
second place and chasing the Oakville, Ont., native ln the $:nl,lXXl Pe-

..,..._

(LIMIT I QUARTS)

CHESHIRE

=

Buzz Edwards, a

member •al the Bidwell champion
team..wbich captured . the Ohio
Valley LitUe League Tournament
thla week hid a triple In hia learn's
14-1 vidaey over Rio G~ Thursday night. Edwards waa el~ . for
nine In the three day IAJurnament.

"'

lJ

ter Jackson Cla,slc. "She's only
human, just llk.e the rest or us. She's
Jllst not having a great year."
But Post, admittedly having a
problem with her play because or
pressures lrom outside sources, l~
having a great tournament. She's
playing at a level lhat could make
her the first Canadian to win this
Lai!les Professional Golf Assocla·
tlon event since Jocelyne Bourassa
ln 1973, when It was known as the

Eggellng, who had one of nine 118_gles posted Friday, !In!shed with a
12.
t
At 143 were Beverly Klass (11),
defending charr;!"• Jan StepheP·
son (73) and 1976 tournament
winner Donna Caponi (73) .
Jane Blalock, whose 69 matched
Post lor low round o! the day, was
at par 144, with Marlene Floyd'
DeArman C•5), Dot Germain (721
and Sally Little (73) .

wrong with her game when she
carved out a 69 Friday Cor a 36-hole
score o! 139, 5 under par.
Stacy was tied for second at 142
with llrst-round leader Beth Daplel,
Sandra Haynie and Dale Eggellng,
Daniel, who had a 67 Thu!'!lday, was
unable to master the trtcky winds'
that gusted In !rom the southwest at
20 knots and blew to a 75. Haynie,
winner o! her 41st tour title at Rochester la•t weekend, had a I I and

Ca!ladlan Open women's
tournament.
No Canadian has wan the lone
Canadian stop on the women's tour
since It became a major attactlon
- along with the LPGA and U.S.
Open championships
In 1978.
Post, who missed the two previous tournaments and threatened
to pass up this one, too, unless she
could straighten out her swing, left
the impresslon there was UtUe
m

A

doing It for a month, and after a
week every'one said that they
couldn't keep the pace, and they
sure are."
The Brewers' attack made an
easy winner of Bob McClure, who
scattered eight hits. Trailing 4-2 ,In
the thlnllnnmg, Milwaukee ~red
five runs off lose!' Mike Torrez, In·
eluding a game-tying two-run double by Simmons and the first of
Thomas' two homers. Dave Sta·
pleton and Dwight Evans homered
Cor Baston.
IIG)'all1'. An..S
Arn01 Otis drove tn three runs
and Jolm Wathan stole his 26th
base, fourshortolthemajorleague
record for catcher., as KanSas City
sUced tile Angels' lead In die AL
West tol% games. Otis had an RBI
double In the second, while McRae,
the league RBileader With ?o; also
doubled a run across In the eighth. '
Wathlln stole his 26th base of the
season in thefourlhlnnlng. Themajor leape record for catchers ls 30
by Ray Schalk o! tbe 1916 Chicago
White Sox.
"It will be nice to get It and have

z

. lneluduGrent Job1nd
Ctleclllnt Gt 111 Fluid Levels.

•MOTOR TUNE UP
14 Cyl. '22"1 16 c,t. '26") I Cyt. '32")

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BODY SHOP
SPECIALS
PAIIIT CAll ·

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(&amp;if., FliT

WALK ON BY - Luis Pujoll of lbe Houstoa AslroB strides 8CI'OI8
home plate on hiB second-lanlng solo bome run as eatcber Mike Scloltle
of lbe Los Angeles Dodgen lOGb on duriDg Friday's game .at Do«er
Slatllum In Los Angeles. H0111toa alaG walked pastlbe Dodgen, wlnalng
4-1. (AP LaserpboroJ

sbmethlng to remember when I
leave the game," said Wathan. "I'll
be doing It for the catchers of the
world. For years and years we've
had a bad'rap as dumpy guys who
can't run. Maybe I'D give aU
catchers something to be proud of.
But with the emphasis nowadays
on speed, I guarantee It .won't last
as -long as the old one."
Orioles 4, Tigers 1
Eddie Murray and Cal Rlpken
Jr. homered to back the slx-hlt
pitching of Jim Palmer, Tippy
Marttnez and Tim StOddard and
rally Baltimore. The Tigers led '-1
wtth the help of Lance Parrish's
twcriun homer when starter Jack
Morris walked two batters In the
Baltimore !lfth. Murray then hit hiB
11th home run o! the season to til!
the game 44. An tnning later,
Rlpken ~omered ott Pat Underwood Cor the winning run.
,
Raagers 7, A's o
Charlie Hough tired a twcrhltter,
BUly Sample homered on Brian
Kingman's first pitch or the game
to start a 14-hit attack and Lamar
John.&lt;;On drove~ three runs as

Tex~

moved Into fifth place In the
AL West ahead or the stumbling
A's, who have lost 12 of their last 13
home games. Hough did not allow a
hit after the second Inning and only
Rickey Hen~son, · who stole his
't4th base In the thlnl and hiB 75th In
the ninth, advanced beyond ttrst for
Oakland. Larry ·Parrish also her
mered !or Texas.

r;========;;;~
NOW APPEARING

STEVE YATES
BAND
Tuesday thru Saturday
9:00 P.M.: 2. A. •
NO ONE UNDER 21
ADII/IITTED

French Quarter
LoUNGE _&amp;CARRYOUT

e mentary.
. . . ,. ., CLUff
I

•

~~gtves- you -

· FilE ESTIMADS ·

··PAT
HILL FORD, INC.
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2. Accidental death insurance at no .
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3. Discounts at Avis and Hertz car rentals
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5. Access to CHECASH ~ the nationwide
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''locations where yoUr personal chec)t
will be honored without ,c harge ·

6. Subscription to "DollarsPlus" maga- ,
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and discount coupons-delivered
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7. Plus other exciting banking services .
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Ask about your BANCLUB account to- ·
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cars · aank
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Member rotc,
'25'Court S~t

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Spring

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50

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available for most cars.
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Honda. K.wadkl, Yam.fla, Suzuki ·•

Quaker State Motor Oils

OAK BROOK, Ill. (AP) -Tom
WeiskOpf says the Butler National
golf course l~n·t the type of layout
where anyone can run away from
the pack.
He proved It by charging to
within one stroke ol frontrunner
Bob Gllder going Into Saturday's
tlurd round of the Western Open.
GUder' s putter cooled In the
misty, sometimes wtndy conditions
of Friday's second round. He
scored a 1-under-par 71 as some
new pin placements tightened the
course, where 24 players broke par
In the opening round. Sixteen did It
Friday.
Weiskopf uncorked a 67. with four
birdies for a 32 on the back nine and
drew up at the halfway mark ·with
an 8-under 136 to GUder' s 135.
Larry Nelson, the 1979 Western
winner and defending PGA cham·
pion, was at 138 with a 72. and Jim
Booras, who has not won a PGA
tournament, and Kermit Zarley
shared 139 with 73 and 11
rE&gt;Spectlvely.
The cutol! was 149, with 81 players guallfylng for the !lnal 36 holes.
"It wa~ a dll!erent course,"
GUder said, adding that he wa~
"less relj!Xed" than on Thursday.
But his 71 was his sixth successive
subpar round, a streak that
stretches back to his 1!1-under-par
wtn Ill the Westchester Classic.
His iil!i set a course record for 36
holes (three players had held the
record at 136) and hisopealng64set
a stngle-round mark for the 7,007yard layout.
"It's nice to knowy_ou're human,
huh?;, GUder grinned. "An seems
kjnd of large after what I've been
shooting. I came down to earth and
missed some putts. I did more
scrambling = It wasn't an exciting
round.''
Although he missed a couple or
four-foot putts one costing him
an eagle = and others In the 8-tcrlO
foot range that he was making In
·the first round, he did not have a
three-putt green,
•"In the second round of the-u.s.
Open at Pebble Beach, I three. putted !rom 12 feet, and I haven't
· three-putte? since," said GUder,
who has played eight rounds Without taking more than two putts on a

Olla • •cHef all new c., apeca. ol SFICC

ss.OOoFF
KELLY SPRINQFIE.L D
SUPER CHARGERS &amp; PACEMARKS
538

WelskOpl walked off the course In
. ttie second round of the 1976 West.. ern after slamming two tee shots
· Into the lake on No. 10. But he said
' the situation Is different now.
, "I' am In . a position to have a
• chance to win and I'm glad to be
tljere," WeiskOpf said.
·
, · H1s victory ln the LaJet Classic at
· : Abilene, Texas, la,t ·'tall was the,
• Citst time he had won In 3~ years.
· ~ best finish this year was a third
; In the Los Angeles Open and a tie
: lor third at San Diego.
· .
· · ' 'I lett !hi! tour 'for about two
: months - had some personal
: things I had to do," said WeiskOpf.
. : "I had problems but they Wf!!'l'll't
· big ones. I've been reading abput
: them, but none or thos:e reports Is
· : right Golf i, not au my
a,ny
: more.' my prioritieS are 'dltterent
· and my goals are tllfferent.
: "I'll play ·only 19 or :.1 !ouma• ments this year and my nex.t stop ·
· · , ;wm · be, 1n the British Open," he

539

AR78xi3/Pt65 , Reg. '«
Reo. '&lt;3
Pec:emark
Steel Radial Whitewalls
Super Ch•rger• 50, 80, 70 Series
A70•13,

•Double J*f, corda for ttrerfgltl and stabllhy
wtth two flbetfll .. belts
•Outlined whtte

SIZE

tentn

Reg . SALE

"M50xU .. . '77
179

"N50x15 .. .
B60x13 .... •49

E80xt• .... •s.t
G60xU .... '59
l.8(hc.14 .... '67
'4 plr

pol~

SIZE

Reg . SALE

1

72

G60x15 ... t60

174

L60x15 . . . *69
E70K1 4 : . . •50
F70• 14 .... 152

...

41
54

G70xt• ... '54

'82

156

1
1

G70x15 . . .

•u
'64
'411

'47
'41

.

1 51

•2 ply poly cords wltl'l two ltNI Mlta
•5 rib trNd dealgn
Reg.
SIZE
. '50
BR78x13/P185 ..
..... •56
ER78x 141P19!1
..... •58 .
FR78xt&lt;IP205 ..
..... '61
GA78xi4/P215 . .
. '62
ClR18xt5/P215 .
.. '65
HR18x15/P225 ..
1 70
•••
LR78x 15/P235 ..
F.E.T. 1.18-UI

cordi. F.E.T. 1.79 · 4.07

97$

64$
ea.
Non Aooto,tor

2.19 Reg. 3.44

Fram 011 Filters

7~ ea.

Except HP·t, HP·4. Lim t 2

3.19 Reg. 4.44

Aoolotor
Reo. 99'

Fram Air Filters

4

Spark
Plug1
Sate Plugs
Limit 16

••

0

H

•

•

s... ...., '21

113040

3.95

1.77
Reg. 2.95

4.95 Reg. 7.95

alttf rebate
J·Wax
Acrylic Kit
12 oz. soli
paste polish
Sail 5.85
Reg. 8.95

Armor All
Pump Spray
Protectant
8 oz. 110080

40 pc. Sockat Sat
Savo '3t SAE. and Metric
LIFETIME GUARANTEE!

Cat Von
Sport Plug
Gauge . . .. 811'

s. .. 38%1

SaM 05.00
Iliff robatot

Reg. 1.39 1223

25% off

EVEAYDA Y LOW PRICE ON

Reg. 9.95

These IAPCO
Tune Up Parts '

Clymer

Auto
Manuals
Save over '21
Technical data
on the most popular domes tic and Import

from

39.95 .

Remanufactured

cars

Original Equipment Ou11lty

Exomptos:
Tune Up Kits .. . .. 2.2t
Toyota C-3024 , Reg . 2.95
Distributor Caps
I Rotors . . .. .. . .. 2.82
Toyota C-3030, Reg . 3.50
Wire Sets . ~- , .. ~ . 5.98
VW C-145, Reg. 7.95
Spark Plugs . . . ... 4.48
Reg. 5.95

Foreign Auto
Starters or
Alternators

Import 011 Filters
from

2.95

Original Equlpmant Oualltj

Import Air Filters

from

75.95

with exchange

4

New Radiators

For GM, Ford, Chrysler, AMC
and Import cars
R8CIIItor Ho11
ond Br Pau Ho11

axle set (2 wheats)
Relined Br1k1 Shoes
w/exchg., loi most domestic cars,
25,000 miles rated
:
. "
9:.95 axle set (2 wheels)
Original Equipment
Quality DIIC Pads
For most domestic cars,
25,000 mites tated

*24
w/rebultdabte exchg.
llomonulocturod ·
.
s,artitrs or .Alternators

Water Pumps

BOth tor most domestic cars
except Integral and Motorola

For most domestit 4·6 cyl. cars
and all Chevy small block VB

8IVli High 1DrqUI ltlnlf WllltiUIIdable
- ~ ••cllg. lo_r moal Chrysler 1nd

1969· 71

10me Ford ws

'37

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AttematDfl wlrtbulldable exchg .

lor lnttgrtt J. Motorot1 ·except

fliQh amp HO unit•

'

'"""

14.95
wlrebulldabte exchg.
R..-nanufiCtured
18.95

w/rebulldabte exchg .. lor
most 8 cyt. domestic and most
4·6 cyl. imports

Air Conditioning
CornP(8SSOf

.

For moat GM applications only
Freon, Aeg. t4i .•..

.'

·' HOURS: ,
Suil. ' 10- 5

M·F 8:30 • 7
' Sat. .. 8:30 - 6

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

.74.95 :~~hg

• added

: 1n.'17 Western Opens, WeiUDpfs
1best tlnlsh Wlll! second to Tpm Wat- ,
' SOil In 19'14. thellntyear tile tourna; llll!llt wu held at Blltler. · ·
~ "I didn't baVI! a boleY·In these. ' COIId foul!~~ and tilat II unet111n1
,oa tbll coune. ltwu oileor niy lll!!t
rouadtlllr J Willie," WellltDpflald.

oz.

s... 431\1

Motorcroft

For most domestic &amp; Import cars .
Limit 2. Vejil, Dlolll • Turbo
av1lleble ot otlghtly
prtcoo

Reg. 4.95
J.Wax
Car Plate
Wax,,..,

Reg . 1.75
Annor All
Pump Spray
Protectant

Reg. 79'

For most domestic &amp; imftort cars

'

life

.,

41.88 month
~ 47.88 month
All batlerie• w/exchange,

All Sate Oils Limit 12 qta.

green,

BANCLUB®offers you:

40 MONTH

Natlonwlse Maintenance Free
Calcium Batteries

10W30 Motor 011

Weiskopf
second
round
leader

m

moreche~ . . .·. . . . . .

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P:riiWIIb .....lll . . . . 11111 . . &amp;111Mrt .
I'I'W Willi I Wll'wHII...,-., tltJhflervteiWWII

32.88

Natlonwlse

*SPIN BALANCE TIRES ....................&lt;.~~.~.!~~.'.~~~.~!....13"

•ROTAn TIRES,...... ~ ..·...........................,;.:.......... ~ .."............. '&amp;*RE-CHARGE AIR CONDITIOIIER................... :!!~~~~:.~.'=.~~~.:. 121 15
*TRANSMISSIOII FLUID &amp; FILTER CHANGE ................ ,:...............•4515

.66t qt.
84t.qt.
89¢ qt.

I,AP Laserp~olo)

for your money!·

Includes Rtpllctmtnt of 'plrll PlugS , Ad·
,Justment of Clrburttor 1nd Timing.

LITI'LE r.'JORE 'nUS WAY

Western Open aecoad round
leader Bob GUder dlrec:ts a birdie
pull on lbe lblrd bole at Oak
Brook, Dl., Friday. GUder main. lalned his lead ID the tGaraament
despite a strong cllalle.ge from
Tom Weiskopf. GUder abot a 1·
under-par 71 lor a one-shot lead.
=

m

·Contributed iri win

TORONTO (AP) -- Hollis Stacy
offered as good a perspective as
anyone on Sandra PostandtheCan·
adian veteran's sudden decline In
fortunes on the women's pro golf

'

on

m

CLEVELAND (AP ) - The Cleveland Indians on Friday traded ml·
nor leagu e outfielder Larry
Littleton to the Minnesota TwinS for
Infielder Larry Milbourne, the Indians said.
Milbourne hit .216 In 43 games
with the Twins and the New York
Yankees thls season. A seven-year
major league veteran, he was .
traded by the Yankees to the Twins
on May 12 along with two other
players ln exchange for Butch Wynegar and Roger Ertck.son.
Littleton this sea&lt;en has hit .214
with nine homers and 45 runs batted In for Cleveland's Class AAA
affillate In Charleston, W.Va.
He was assigned to, the Twins'
Clas~ AAA afflllate In Toledo.
.
The Indians said they made no
Immediate roster move.

Tim

The

Post holds three stroke-lead
in-Jacks~n Classic
.

Fence busting Brewers continue home run pace

Indians acquire
Milbourne

w. va .

. ••.. . • . ••.

1 ••• •• 1 • • ••• • •

•

.· .

·209 Upper Ri\fer Ad.
"

,.

448-3807
!.

··-~

0

'

\

It'

�...

,

Page- C-4- The Sunday Tim es- s e ntinel

Pomeroy

•

'

Middleporh - Gallipolis, Ohio

Atlanta Braves win another close tilt., · 6-4., end
"You just can't p~t your tln geron
It," said Horner, who drove in two
runs with a single and his 14th homer of Ihe year and third in two
g!ITTles. "Our overall play has been
winning us these ball games."
Horner's slx th-lnnlng homer off
Tom seaver, 4-~. gel the Braves
deadlocked at 4-4 befo re Rafael Ra·
mlrez drove In the winning run with.
a bl oop single to center tha i !ol·
lowed a walk to Chris Chambliss'
and Bruce Benedict' s sacr ifice. Ra·
mlre-l also scored on the play on an

ATLANTA (AP) - Bob Horner
called II " just a typical ga me for us
-a little bit of defense, a little bit of
offense."
Horner supplied most of the of(ense and Claudell Washlngt.o n provlded the key defensive play when
he robbed. Wayne Krenchlcki of a
ninth-Inning"homer .as the A\)anta
Braves trimmed the Cinilnnat i
Reds 6-4 Friday nig ht.

D 0 dgerS OWn

' I

P oint Pleasant, W. Va .

~-

" I didn't pitch very well ," said

Seaver , who wa' chased tn the sJxt h
on the hot, muggy njght after mov·
lng ahead of Bob Gibson into fi fth
place on the all-time st rlkeout list

446·1830

One Day Only!
MONDAY, JULY 5th - 9 to 5

Clevtland

~f~

VCR

l2

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l4

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'Ookl""'

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4

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41 ~

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486

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42 32
t)
l4
41 l6
JJ 40
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21 5i

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California
K.anau City
Chlcooo

GB

.:17J

:w

BA'M'INC 112S at batat: Bonnt'll, Toronto, ..IW; Harrah. Ck!oleland. .!10:

-~

~

1~

,-611

l V..

.!l.'tl.
.429

•4
11 v..
.U 8 1J
&amp;
14 ~

Prt~•Guna

Kansa.~

....

SWicla.Y' • GUI\ftl

Baltfrrore at IRtrdt
New York a t Clevt'land
Sealt le at Chleaao
Toronto 11 Minnesota
floll;lon a t Milwa ukee
Qlllf0m1a al Kansu Cllv
't'eJ!u at Oakland, 1n1 ·

Atla nta

INtELliViSiON

.m

JS
3ti

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-~

t· l 'fJ
l

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.:m

13'-'J

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43

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38

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San F'Tantis«:l

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31\

u

$19995

Hw~m

4, LM

Angpl~

0~

4-J

I

WHISTLER

••
•
~

i

Includes all this:
HEADBOARD · FRAME - DECK · PLAIN RISER · FULL WAVE MATTRESS$
LINER HEATER · FILL &amp; DRAIN · WATER CONDITIONER • PATCH KIT • KING or
QUEEN SIZE.

'79.95
Whistler Z-70 • Mini ·Size
Dual Band Radar Delee·
tor . Emits Visual Flash
or Pulsing Alarm .

:~::

Open
Monday
9 a.m. til 5 p.m.

__

,....----......;;;...;:;.

Special Reduced Prices On New·; In-Stock Homes

_,

EATON
PARK
24x52. Total eteclric, many

:wALDEN

SEVILL

deluxe features, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. c arpe l , house siding
with s hingled roof. Reduced
$1000. De live red and set on
your foundation . Only

24x56, Total e lectric, hutc h,
t:. " natural wood par.2 lin9 , 3
be drooms. 2 baths , deluxe
house features , $2000 rebate or.
tree central air · and washer ·
dryer install e d . Priced at only .

23,495

•24;995

~

MfD-AMERICAN

14x70 with 14 loot Expando,
total e lectric, · 2 bedrooms.
delu xe kitch e n,' complete furnitur e pa c kage : Reduced to

'
14.x70, 2 bedrooms, Total elec tnc. vaulted ceiling , furnished ·
utility room . Reduced to
'

OOUBl rn-.T.KmiM.'dy, San D\eRO. 24:
Montreal. 19: Lo. Smith,

Coast I..Pa,I(UE'.

1'00'111ALL
NaUoul t~ootball Leape
CH ICAGO BEAR.S-Stgnf'd Ricky \'ou112
and Brad W('bb l!nt'backm : Larry D!l
wlctu.•. puoler: and Dan Peftslell . defl"'l·
slvl' lineman . Nam ed E rtan MrCaskt&gt;Y L\ ·
!{i'!fan1 trainer .
NEW ORLEANS SA.INTS-Signl'd Rod-

nt"Y Lew \~. cor'fl("rback .

14,495

VENTURE .

14x60, 2 bedroom : skylight in
kitc hen , furnished . Reduced to ·

14x52 2 bedroom, gas furnace
and range . Fine starter home
Priced reduced to .
·

•11 ,995

1978 NASHUA

3 bedroom, 2 bath, total e le c--tl'ic . Del iVered. Only

.

kite~

3

•9,695

DATE-GYMNASIUM
Sunday, Juty 4- Ciosed-Hotiday
Monday, July 5-Ciosed·s

1979 WI

11,995

5 Yr·.·BuyerProtectiC)n
Plan A¥ailable·

"

.

l

. .

Price includes d~livery and · set
~n your foundation on all new
·.homes.
·
·
·· ·
0

I

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_____ Johnson's : Mo~ile Homes, ·lrzc.
'

2110 EASTERN -AVENuE

',. I

.

New York' s other run came in
the slxt h. Willie Rando lph led off
with a walk, was ..acrlflced to second and took third when Winfield
Oled out. Lou Plnlella singled off
short stop Mike Fischl in's glove to
drive In Randolph.'
"I pitched a real good ga me."
said Cleveland starter Rick Waits.
0·6. " I had'a ll the pitches and used
them all.
"I hOIX' I have the charartPr not

9-5 season in tough Mid-Ohio Conference, 16-21 overall. They won 13
games after the midway mark in the
season, including five straight
league victories to end the season.
" We were pleased wiUt the
progress the team made during the
season," Cook said. "Our returning
players had to adjust to a whole new
system - a whole new coaching
staff and style - and the change

t:ossage ret ired the !inal slx .
Cleveland bait ers to snap the Indians' fu ur-gaml' winn ing streak. and

pick up his 14th saw.
"We haven't been scoring very
much, and that's been our No. 1
problem. since the pitchin g has
lx&gt;rn ge nerally prett y good," •aid
Yankee Manager Gene Michael.
" F: rir kson did a heckuva job for us.
That was one of his best games."

HIGHWAY OIL

events and a combined ~9-ll!l lead at
the end of the fi rst day of
compel Ilion.
Lewis was limed In lO.OOsecondS.
His clocking broke I he meet record
of 10.15 set by Am erican Steve Riddick In 1916.
In the wom en's 100, A~hford ' s
time o! 11.JS shattered the meel record of 11.22 she had est.abllshed In
the 1978 meet at Ber keley, Calli .

:i-i ovrral l.

took time. But after the 1111dway
mark in the season thi ngs began ln
shape up and we were pleased with
the team's overall style of play.
" And we we re pl eased that we
could battle some pretty good team s
on competitive tcnns. We beat
Xav ier, Malon and Cedarvi lle, and
played on eve n terms with West
Virgima State - a nationally competitivcteam."

1188 EASTERN AVE.

NOW HAS DIESEL FUEL AT OUR EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE, WITH TAX REFUND RECEIPT
FOR FARM AND OFF HIGHWAY USE.

OPEN MONDAY
UNTIL 5:00P.M.

STATE FARM

Levrs

INSURANCE

Men's Levi

For insurance can

Heavyweight-Unwashed
·J~ANS

1:

•Straight Leg
•Boot Cut

GROUP OF

DRESS.SHIRTS
REG. 115

NOW

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh .
Phone 446-529(}
Home 446-4518

MEN•s
JEANS·

$1275

Values
To 126

$}388

S TATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES
HOME OFFICES : BLOOMINGTON , ILLINOIS

I

POOl

Closed- Holiday
2: 30·3:30 p.m.·Open Swim
3:30· 4 :30 p:m.· Camp Crestendo

~

1·9 p.m. -Open Recreation

Saturday, Juty 1(}-2·4 p.m.·Open Rec.
Sunday, July 11- 2·4 p.m.· Open Rec.
x- Ciosed for Basketball Camp only.

-

2 :30·3:30 p.m.· Open Swim
3 : 30·4:30 p.m.-Camp Crescendo
6·8 p.m.-Open Swim
8·10 p.m.·Camp Crescendo
2:30 ·3;30 p.m.·Open Swim
3: 30·4 :30 p.m.·Camp Crescendo
6-8 p.m.'Open Swim

8·10 p.m.·Camp Crescendo
2:30 ·3:30 p.m.·Open Swim
3:30 ·4 :30 p.m.·Camp Crescendo ·
6-8 p.m.·Open Swim
8·10 p.m.·Camp Crescendo
2:30 ·4;30 p.m.·Open Swim
H p.m.·Open SWim
2 4 p.m.· Open Rec.
2-4 p.m.· Open Rec.

.'

GAWPOLis
. ., OHIO

1 CONDUIT KNOCKOUT

Switch

Duplex

Ceiling

Receptacle

Socket

Box

79~
SINGLE
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98t

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8 a.m. to 5 p~m.,

PoiQt Pleasant·
Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

~

,•

.

'&gt;f •

312 Siith Street

.

.. ... '
.. ..... .
.
),.

'

·c AROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
' .

: ::
., :-:

.

.;.

Store 'Hours:· Monday-Friday
•
•"

PORCE LAIN

GROUNDED

2" &gt; 3" &gt; 2'1, " DEEP

. ~ • BOOK IJ)UR HOLIDAY TRAVEL WITH AAA BY JULY
®) 15lh AND WE CAN. GUARANTEE YOU THE SUPER
SAVER FARE APPLICABLE ON THE DAY YOU BOOK
: ~.: FOR ,MOST FLIGHTS. TICKETS NEED NOT BE PUR~ &amp;HAS.ED AT TIME OF BOOKINC). CALl;_ TODAY FOR
'i) . DETAILS
AND RESERVATION~ND SAVE ON THIS
1
~
YEAR'S HOLIDAY TR~VEL
.

,
••

WITH PUL L CHAIN B.
GROUNDIN G OUT LET

HEAV Y
DUTY

2 CABLE KNOCKOUTS

'®J

!

.We have ·financing available with 10%
.down and up to 15 years to ·pay on
mObile homes and 20 years on Sec,tionals.

7 ~ Ci ose d · x

Friday,. July 9- Ctosed·x

''

,f

•12,495

to get discouraged . Su re ~ you have
some s leepless nights when you're
mad abou t what you 've done. But
you can't let yoursel f get way down.
I'm not giving up. Some people
might say that a guy who Is ().6 Is a
loser. I think a loser l• a guy who
gives up."
Cleveland's only run ca me In the
bottom of ttw slxth. Alan Bannister
led off with a single and went to
third on Mike Hargrove's one-out
single. After Andre Thornt on
popp&lt;&gt;d out . Von Hay!'S slapped a
run·scorlng single.
Roger Erickson yie lded one ru n
and six hit s in 52·3 in nings and Dave
La Roche, George Frazier and Rich
Goso;age j&gt;rotected the lead. Erickson. acquired from Minn!'Sota on
._!'VIa)· 12. Is J ..J with the Yankees and

®

wishing to play tn the oumament
should mail their entries and fees to
Box 271, Wellstoh, Ohio 45692.
·Golf play begins at 8 a.m. and the
Hospitality Hour at 5:30 p.m. with
the dinner meeting at 6:30 p.m.
Tickets for the dinner meeting may
be purchased locally from : Rhod
Mills, Logan Chamber, Athens
Chamber, Bernard Fultz, Gallipolis
Chamber, Ironton Chamber, Portsmouth Chamber, Gary Cooper,
Rohger Barron, Jackson Chamber,
Elmer Eickelberg, Milton Banking
Company and Tate Cline.

LYNECENTERSCHEOULE
Week of July 4, 1982

e

be droom, •front
fir e pla ce. Delivered only

5

•
WID

19:

TRlPI...ES-Ga mer. Hooslon. 6·: T('mple-

Thursday, July 8- Ciosed

We also have a fine selection of late model
pre-owned homes that are like new!
1978 FESTIVAL

Hou ~t oo .

•

Winfield jumped on Cleveland
~tart er Rick Walts In the flrqf In-

Pa ge- C· S

6·8 p.m .-Open Swim
8·10 p.m .· Camp Crescendo

VENTURE

5

Garner.

too, San Diego, 6: Moreno, Plttsblr¢1. 5:
McCee, SI.Loui!l, :i; SaA, Los Angeles, ~;
Salazar. Sa n Dieao. ~HOME RUNS- Murphy, Atlan.,... 22;
Kln ltfT\an. New York. l i ~ Ca n er. Mon!l'l:'al 16: J .Thompson Pllts bu rRIL 1!1:
BakPf', LO!I An~ t'!l. l !l.
STOLEN BA'iES- LD.Smllh. St.lDYis.
E : Mort'OO. Pl!tsb.l!l&amp;l. J6: Of-rl\ler.
Ptllladl&gt;lphla. ll: Ralnl'S, Montl'f&gt;al . .\ 1:
Sax. Los Al'lf('t'k-5, -XI.

Tuesday , July 6- Ciosed·x

14x 70. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. front
kitc hen with side bay in dinin'g
a r ea. Total electric . 2x6 ex te r ior wall s ·with full insula tion . Reduce d to

lit:

T im es - ~e ntin e l -

O.Smlth. St.Louis, JR: Cedt&gt;no. Cincinnati.
18; Knight, HW 5101\ 18.

- '

SHANNO.N.

.14 x65. 2 be droom, total e lec
tr ie, full front bay window .
de lu xe furnishings. k notty
birc h pa ne l1n g . Redu ced to

St.Loul.&lt;l.

Annual g~lf tournament
to be held on .July 15

Wednesday , July

HAPPY HOUSE

Knight,

Daw~n.

WELLSTON The annual
Southeastern Ohio Regonal Council
Golf Tournament will be held on
Thunday, July 15 at the Fairgreens
Country Club in Jackson County, it
was announced Saturday by Robert
L. (Bob) Evans, president of the
SEORC. Evans said that the tournament will be an open affair. •
Richard Zambell, chief economist
for BancOhio, will be the principal
speaker at the dinner meeting
following the all day tournament.
Zambell will discuss the economy
and present an economic forecast.
Evans stated that individuals

••

TRACK .AND FIELD ·
INDIANAPOLIS (AP I - Carl
Lewis, Evelyn Ashford set meet records In the men' s and women's
1~meter da~ hes and Darrell Robinson establi~hed a 400-mete~
mark in the first day of the 18th dual
track and field meet between lhe
United States and the Soviet Union.
The Soviets, however, held a 5440 edge after 10 men's events, a 4539 advantage after eight women's

St.l..o.lb, .345: T . ~a . PIHsburgh, .:M3;
Oliver, Mo ntrta\1 .322: Francona, Moo·
treal. ..'I'll : Ollillol', New York. J l'i.
RUNS- Lo.Smlt h. St.Louis. 62: Mu.-phy .
Atlanla. ~: . DaWJOn. Monlreal, 5c7;
Ru.J one!i, San Dif'Ko, 51; J .Thompson.
~ ll sburJt;h, 50.
RBI- Murphy. Allanta. ~; OIIVl'r, Montrt'al. !iii: Oark, San Frand !l('(). 5.1
r.J(ennedy. Satt [)k&gt;go. 52; MatthltoNs.
Pttlladelphla. ~: GUl'rrero. Los A n~.
Lot! A n gttl~. 94:

st.ats."

nlng Friday night to hit homer No.
10 over the left ·center fence. He
added his lith home run, off reliever Ed Whitson, to cent er in the
ninth.

Sports briefs...

NATIONAL I..EAGUE
BATTI NG
l U :i ' a t
bat !!!-

H ITS--Sal~ ,

Signed
T om Mol\1. c atcher-outtldder. and l.'\!1\gn!'d h.im to Bradl'nlon Of thl' (',ulf

Snafu • Aatromaah • Boxing
Space Armada • Baaketball
Auto flace • Space RBowllng • F.ootball • Bateball
Skiing • Armour BaHie

00·

Hru~on. 92; J .Ray, Pl tts!:Nrgh, 91 : BIX'k ·
nl'f". qucago, !(); Lo.SmlttL. St.Louis,!{),

BASEBALL

22.95

· RIO GRANDE - Larry Carter, a
f&gt;-11 , 20f&gt;.pound outfielder (rom Thurman, played a key role in the success of the 1982 Rio Grande College
baseball Redmen.
Ca,rter ranked third in the MidOhio Conference with six home runs
and led the Redmen in doubles (6 ),
total bases (50), and runs batted in
(19). He hatted .282.
·
Rio Grande recently wrapped up a

~

Transactions

Mattallntelllvlalon
Muter Control Unit

BASES: R.H en&lt;~erson,

with the California Angel•; this
season.
Steinbrenner was quoted this
week as saying, " Dave Winfield Is
not a superst.ar, In the sense Reggte
J ackson was."
·
Winfield said he would produce
better if Yankee Stadium was al·
lered Ia favor right -handed hitters
instead of left -handers. Jackson
hits left -handed.
"Yankee St.adlum affects producllon,'' Winfield said. " You r 'k
about superst.ar sla ts. Move In " "'
fences there and I'll have superstar

Carter third . in horne runs in MOC play

land. i5: Wa than. Kansas City. ~: LeF"Iore, Chlcagg. 22: Ga rci a. Toronto, 1 ~:
J .C ruz. Seattk'. 19.
Pl'TO{JNG t10 ~bnu : Vu lcovr-h.
MUwaukre, '-l. .150. 3.40; Zahn, C&amp;IUor·
nla , 9-l, :1 ~. lW; Gutl;t}l , N"" York. 8-J,
iTi. Hi : PalmM", Ba lllmon!'. i -l, .iUI.
4.15: Ca ud.Ul, Seattle, ·,.J, .iOO. 2.12; Bar k
E'l' , C1t"Veland. S-4, .R. l.ll: Bums, Chi·
cago, 8-4 ..li6'i . 3.18: Gunt. Kan'la.\ City. S4, .66'i, Ul.
,
STRIKEOUTS: F'.Bann.IS tt'r, Sean le, lOt
Barkw, Clf'Vfl.and. 00: Guidry . Ne w York.
!ll: Rl gheftL Nt"W York. i1: • Edlt'I'S\e)',
Bostoa. "16: Denny, (l('veland, i6.

Clndnnatl nt Atlanta

Na&amp; ..... Leape
PITTSB U RGH
PITT SBURGH-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -OK
Dick, drlyen by Terry Holton, won
.the featured ninth race at Scioto
Downs Friday night to pay $5.40, $3
and $2.40.
Ln second was Trespa,ser's w,
for $4.20 and $3.~. Third was J effs
Slick Andy, for $3.60.
·
The winning time was 2: 001·5.

IiTTS: Harnh. C'Jeoveland, ~ Garda.
Toronto. !r1: ~- Mllwa u ~ . 93:
McRae, Kansas Ory . 93; Younc, Mllwau&amp;. !tl.

""""'·

at
rgh
0\iclij!O a t
Houstm at Los A ngttles
San F rand.tro at San Diego

Newl 6Hour VHS RecOrder with
Search, Still-Frame, Electronic'
Switching Control, Bullt· ln
'Digital Clock with Time-On
Tlme-011.

[ b\sld. OUcaao. tl: brttv~. M Uwi11 ~tt&gt;P.

~ Yr

~nlf'Nll

Pan11onlc PV-1275

...

14Y, .

F'tiU.OOiphlr§~~tll

Set Up-Free ln ·Your Home

'Tbornton.

'l

Pln sbursh &amp;7, Mon rreaJ 3-2
Atlanta 6, ClndMat1 4
NPW York 8. PhU adeolphl a 4

, San F'randsco 8-2. San
Clllcago 4. Sl . Louts J

~0:

CJtow&gt;tand. 6l; COoper. MilWaukee, 61; LU·

STOLEN

ll 3!1
:1)
4!1
M'f !llf:nt Dhillon

Sa«
D,_
l.ol . ._

Rm: McRae-, KaNa, a ry.

"Mr. Steinbrenner said something like I'm not a super st.ar, that I
can't carry a team like Reggie
does. So I've said, 'Go get Reggie."'
Winfield, the Yankees' lett fielder.
said Friday atth clubbing two
home runs In a 3-1 viCtory over the
Cleveland Indians.
J ackSon, a Yankee star !or five
years. signed a free-agenl contract

Mllwau flee-r8: W.WUson. Kansa.~ CITy, 8;
Upshaw, Toronto. 6: Breit, Kan~~as Ctty,
6.
HOME RUNS.G.Thomaa, Mllwaukef-,
21 : Thornton, Oewland. 1~ ()A:IIVIe. MU·
waukl!l', 1!1; Cooper, Mi lwau kee. 17:
Hrbek, MlnnNita, 16.

,'IIATIONAL 1..-E\GUE
EMter.. Dtv--.
WL
Pd. GII
PtlUadl:'lphla
42 34
-~
St . l.ol.ll'l
43 l5
- ~1
-

' .. ~~-~ ~ .. ~.~'

ra h, Of'Yt"\and. fD: Molitor. Mllw• uW ,
!rl: Evu s, Eloi!Qn, ~ Thorntoo. Oeve-land ,2; Walhan , Ka n'AS Clfy. M:; Oltftl,
Kanow Ciry , ~

O
il. '
TRIPI..ES: Herndon, Oetro6t , 8; Yount,

'T'oronto 9. Minnesota 4
Texn 7, Oakland 0

40
:ti

.:126.
RUNS: R.Hendei'IOn, Gakland, 6i ; Hlr·

Ca lifor ni a , 21; Mc Rae, K&amp;M.is Ci ty, 21;
Evans, U.:.ton, :It; Wh it~. Kan\8, City

City 'i, california ~

Montrt'al
PIIT 5bUf'Rh
Neu.r 't' ork

W.Wlls&lt;n, Klnsas Ory, .l!J: McRae,
KaMM Clry . .U&gt;: ~- MUwaukH.

OOUBLES:Cowe-ns. Seattle. 22: Lynn.

New York J, Oeveiantl 1
Balt lmelr't&gt; :i, Drtroll 4
Milwaukee l4. Bocton 5
Seallle a t ChiCIIi:o, ppd., nln

4S
1-'riday• Gama

Scioto results

•

43

Ptt.

Jl

NOR1H RANDALL, Ohio (AP J
David Appleby Jr. rode Cool
Hannah to victory In the featured
eighth race at Thistledown on Friday, touring the stx furlongs in
1:134-5.
The winner returned $21.60. $9.40
and $5.60.
Bunnyoflheyear was second,
paying $6.~ and $4.~. while Klms
Pleasure reiurned $3.80 to show.
In the third race tr11ect.a, the
combination of12-3-5 paid $3,479.40.

5

31

"' ,Jii .

New York

Cl&lt;cooo

PANASONIC

L

44

• .JI
.11

81111/Nn
Del nolO

M_
o nday Onlyl
July 5, l982.
Super Specials

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

w

M1Jw•ulw&amp;

~

241 THIRD AVE.

--

.\IIDIICAN LEAGUE

AMDJGOH LEA&lt;ivE

.......

' CLEVELAND (APl - Dave
Winfield Is not Reggie Jackson, and
has no desire to be. And he'd appm
elate It l! New York Yankees own~
George Steinbrenner would stop
mentioning the two ln the same
breath.

Leaders

a,.~..._.

BOB'S ELECTRONI~S
Upper Rt. 7
Gaiii,,tls, Oh.
. "Across From Silver Bridge Plaza,.

Thistledown results

5

Majors

The Sund ay

Ohio- Point Pl e a sa nl. w. v a.

.Winfield homers twice in Yankee

.Scoreboal-d•••

fence !or It, but when I got back I
with 3. 11~. He had three strtkeouts
"I thought II was gone," Kren- saw the angle was such that I could
in the game and moved ahead or chick! said. "I thought It was going catch It wtth a leap." ·
..
Gii:Eon's 3,111 when he tanned Ra-. to go over his (Washington) head.
Asked what he was thinklr)g at
mln;?Z In the fourth Inning and re- He did exactly what you're supthe crack of the bat. Washlngton
celved a standing ovat-Ion from the posed to do - gel to the fence. " · said, "I was thinking. about elllr3
32,70!1fans.
Washington raced to the fence. innings."
'
" Very nice," Seaver said, "a nice jumped about two feet above the
Dan Driessen keyed the Cincinmoment. " He declined to 'discuss top of the fence for the catch.
nati offense with his ninth homer1n
hi&gt; achievement.
"When I first went back I thOught
the second Inning and a run-sdorlng
Krenchlckl almosl look Seaver it was over," Washington 'Said. single In the fifth, his third hit of the
off the hook in the ninth when he " But I diiln' l have to straln. At ttrst' game.
drilled a Steve Bedrosian pitch to r thought I'd have to reach over the
right with Duane Walker aboard .---------~-------------with his third hit of the game.

errant thro\v by third baseman
.Johnny Bench toward second Ihat
sailed Into the outfield.
[t was the ft rst time ~ ince Aug. 1.
1978. that the Braves had beaten
Seaver. who had downed Atla nta
slx consecutive times, but saw his
career record against It drop to 32-

Pomeroy-Middlepor,t- G~IIipolis,

July 4, 1982

••
JIDX
..
Seaver~

periectrnark . r-----------~------------------~
GALUPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Dodgers picked up two key victories
last week over Addaville and Hannan Trace to run their record to 7-4)
thissea !.
•
Mon ,Y. behind the gutsy pitching
of Bret stic and the hitting of Pual
McKenzie and J eff Haner the
Dodgers defeated Addaville 8-4'.
Bostic went the distance recording
II strikeouts and yielding only three
hits.
McKenzie led the, winners at the
plate going 3-4 and Haher went 2-4.
Thunday the Doders continued
their winning ways by turning back
Hannan Trace, 4-3 . .
~Jeff Haner pitched superbly anll
went the distance, striking out II
batters and giving up only three hits.
Bret Bostic, Mike Bostic Pual
Mckenzie, Dwight Dailey and Nick
Boster, all hit safely for the winners.

July 4, 1V82

• :

:

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-

The Sunday Times-Sentinet-Page-C-7

W.Va.
Pomeroy - Middleport

Page-C -6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

County agent's corner

Field day set July 9
By John C. Rice
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture
Field Day Planned - A field day
on the control of Johnsongrass is
planned for Friday, July 9. The field
day will be at the Joe Thompson
Fann at Cheshire. The field i:;
located at the junction of the
railroad track.s and Route 7. The
demonstration will feature john·
songrass control in soybeans and
corn. There are eight different plots
and 13 different chemicals.
Chemical representative~ and OSU
personnel will be ,present. Times I :30 to 3:30p.m. or 6:30 to8:30 p.m.
Beef Tour - A beef tour is sel for
Saturday, July 10. the Bruce Ebert
farm in Hocking County has been
selected for a beef indw;try program
called "From Seed to Sandwich".
Tours or demonstratons will be conducted from l: 30 to 7:30 p.m. Some
of the top1cs mclude carcass quality,
bull power, heifer replacement,
forage evaluation, no till seedlings,
beef facilities, weed control in corn,
herd health, and several other beef
programs. It should prove to be an
outstanding program.
Dairy Tour Date Set - A dairy
tour is scheduled for Tuesday, July
14. The tour will be at Virgil and
Tom Harrun's, located near Nease
Settlement. The tour will teature
conservation practices, manure
handling, and feeding programs.
Notice of Gypsy Moth Survey The Ohio Department of Agricluture
and U.S. Department of Agriculture
will be conducting a highly intensified survey for the Gypsy Moth.
The Gypsy Moth is one of the most
destructive insect pests now
threatening our forest and ornamental plants in Ohio.
During the past few years, small
infestations have been found
throughout Ohio. Control measures
are in effect for these infested areas.
With this intensified program we
may need to place traps on your
property. The triangle-shaped traps
are baited with a synth.etic sex·
attractant called Disparlure and
placed in trees. The bait is designed
to attract and capture only the adult
male Gypsy Moth, and has no toxic
properties to humans or other
animals.
Staking Your Tomatoes- Tomato
plants produce more wmable fruit
when supported rather than allowed
to sprawl, out on the ground. One
reason is the foliage and fruit are
more likely to be attacked by soilborne disease organisi}IS when in
contact with training the.plants will
save garden space s well, but will
also require more work.
There are several ways to train
tomato plants. An old standby is
staking. Soon after transplanting into the garden, a 6 foot wooden stake
should be pounded until solidly in the
ground. The stake should be placed
close to the plant, being careful not
to injure the plant roots. The earlier
the stake is placed, the fewer roots
that will be damaged. As the plant
grows, remove all suckers and tie
the main stem to the stake. Tie the
plants to the stake 5 or 6 times using
cloth strips or soft string. These
_should be tied in a figur~ so that
the stake is in one loop and the stem
is in the other loop. This will prevent

. the stem ·from rubbing against the
stake and causing injury. plasticcoated wire caqn be used if twisted
tightly around the stake but loosely
around the stem.
Tomato plants can be gr0wn a
double sterruned planting by leaving
the first sucker below the first
flower cluster to develop into a main
stem. All other suckers should be
removed.
Caging is an easier method of
growing tomatoes and may result m
higher yields as well. Becaw;e no
pruning is needed, better fQ!iage
cover results, thus decreasing the incidence of sunscald. A wire cage, 15
Inches in diameter and 30 inches tall,
is placed over the plants while they
are small. Then the plants are left ot
grow unpruned. A. minimwn of 6inch mesh wire is necessary in order
to reach the cage for harvesting the
fruit.
If no training of the plants is done,
a mulch will help keep the fruits off
the ground. However, the weight of
the ripening tomatoes often opens up
the plant, exposing the fruit to unscald.
Home Garden Weed Control - As
the late spring rains have visited
Ohio, gardeners have had some
relief from watering chores. Un·
fortuantely, the weeds are really
coming up fast now that the seeds
have enough moisture to germinate.
Weed control is important for all
··gardeners. Weeds compete with
crops for light, water and nutrients
and can reduce yields. in addition,
insect and disease problems may
develop on weeds and then spread to
the crops.
Generally, there are three
methods of.weed control available to
the home gardener. The first is
cultural or mechanical control consisting of hoeing, tilling or pulling.
This method is the most common
and least expensive. Culural control
is only effective if it is done
regularly. Throughout the growing
season, bare soil should be
cuitivated not only to control weeds,
but also to break up the crust which
often forms on the surface of heavy
soild.
Cultivations should always be
shallow, to prevent damage to crops.
Roots of 'many plants grow close to
the soil surface and spread in all
directions. Deep cultivation also
brings more weed seeds up to germinate and dries out the soil more
rapidly.
Mulching will reduce the weed
population by preventing light from
reaching the seedlings. Mulching is
more effective against aMuaJ weeds
than perennials. Mulches will also
help conserve soil moisture, prevent
sil erosion and compactiona and
reduce fruit rot. Some of the more
corrunon mulching materials in·
elude straw, grass clippings, bark
chips and black plastic filrp.
Chemical weed control is usually
too expensive arid impracticl for the
home gardener. Qf the herbicides
that are labelled for use in
vegetables, ony a few are available
in small packages. No single herbicide can be used against all weeds
in all crops. Also, herbicides may
'carry over' to the next season,
preventing, other crops from being
grown in that soil .

WASHINGTON (AP )- Accord·
log to U.S. Wheat Assoctau:;, a
market development organtza\lon,
the government's 1983 wheat pro·gram may Include some export
credit subsidies In addition to production controls.
The group's latest newsletter
said an export credit "buy-down"
concept already has been Introduced In Congress and would subsidize commercial credit rates on
export financing by up to four per·centage pollits.
"While USDA remains officially
neutral on that legislation, the COD·
cept of buying down as much as live
percentage points on export credits
could very likely be Included in the
1983 program," the report said.
· "The buy-down optiOn coupled
·with a 20 percent (acreage) set·
· aside with no paid diversion (ol
further acres) ~ppears to be the
leading candidate In USDA for the
1983 program."
Under the law, the department
must announce next year's wheat

program by Aug . 1a, and olflclals
have Indicated they hoped to beat
the deadjlne by as much as possible
to give farmers more lead time In
planning their 1!183 crop.

Flower exports
AALSME.ER. The Netherlands
(AP) - . Holland Is · the leading
Dower- and plant-producing nation
ln the world.
Some 40,o:xl people rely on the Industry lor their livelihood, accordIng to the Flower Councll o(
Hollahd.
·
Roses, chrysanthemums and tulIps are by far the best seller. West
Germany ts the largest customer, :
France Is second.
Ninety-eight percent of cut (Jowers find their way to the retailer
through the auction system. By
noon each day, 2'h to 3 million flowers and plants have been tagged
and sold at Aalstneer, the largest of
Holland's 12 flower and plant
markets. Exports a~nt for 80
percent of the $1.25 bllUon Industry.

which required clear labeling about
"ground bone" and the product's
general content.
Industry officials said tbe old
rules cAlled unnecessary attention
to the product and Its ground bone
ln hotdogs, sausage, scrapple,
canned spaghetti with meat sauce
and other processed ltell)S approved lor Its use.
Meat Is salvaged from neckbones, ribs and other hard-to-trim
parts of a slaughtered anlmal'scarcass by grlllatng them up and forelng the mixtUre through selves.
Although most bone Is strained
out, some small particles- about
the size ol table pepper flakes wind up In the final mixture.
The mixture then can be used In
certain meat products as part of
each !tern's meat portion.
Unde.r the new rules, the salvagedmeatwWbecalledMechanl·
cally Separated Beef (or Pork).
The former name was Mechanlcally Processed Beet (or Pork)
Product.
The Ingredient statement on the
package of hotdogs or other prOducts which contain the .o;atvaged

Homemaker's column

Tobacco growers
facing problems

Take ·advantage of summer.

By Bryson R. Carter
County Extension Agent,
Agrjculture and CNRD
GAWPOUS - A good many
tobacco growers have been finding
problems with their tobacco in the
field. I've llad a lot of calls abut this
in the last few days and have looked
at a lot of tobacco plants.
A good many of the problems
seem lo be connected with ailment
such as phosphorous starvation,
organic . matter toxicity, and
sometimes lime deficiency or
manganese toxicity.
The University of Kentucky just
recently issued this news release
concerning these ailments and I am
reproducing il here for your information .
Many tobacco specimens received
by lhe diagnostic laboratllry within
the past week have had leal spotting
symptoms similar to those we ·call
mangan ese
t oxi c ity
and
phosphorous starvation . These
disorders are not caused by a
disease or~anism but are symptoms
usually associated with acid soils,
abnonnal growing conditions, or an
unbalance of plant nutri~nts .
Manganese toxicity ean occur where
an excessive amount of manganese
is taken up by the plant under acid
soil conditions. Affected plants turn
light green to' yellowish between the
larger veins and gradually develop
nwnrous circular dead spots on
older leaves. The plants may
recover and produce a normal crop
or recovery may be incomplete and
both yield and quality may be adversely affected. Phosphorous starvation is the lack of available
phosphorous or the inability of the
plant to utilize it due to soil acidity,
destruction or feeder roots or unfavorable · growing conditions. Af·
fected plants may appear stunted,
turn a yellowish green in the ulder

leaves especially at the tips and sudddenly develop nwnerous dead spots
in these yellowish leaves during the
first few weeks following setting and
sometimes up through late June. As
new roots develop and spread out into the soil, the plants take' up sufficient phosphorous. if it is
available, and symptoms of
phosphorous starvation disappear.
There are no proven control practices to remedy this condition after il
appears in the field . However, in
cases where the pH is well below
that recommended for tobacco
production the additon of 1006-2000 .
lbs. per acre of finely ground
limestone along with incorporation
through cultivation may help.
If you grow fres h produce and are
looking for -ways to market your
crop then there are two opportunities here· in Gallia County
that you may want to check into.
For about three (J) years now the
Gallia County Farmrs Market has
been in operation. Folk.s bring in
their produce on Tuesday, Thursday, Friday or Saturday, and they
are located along the park' front next
to the river. You should talk to Ivan
Fife, Market Manager, for details,
his number is 25&amp;-1291.
Bob Applegate, Manager Df Pic
Pac. tells me they will also open up a
portion fo their parking lot, starting
Thursday, July 8, 4 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
and anyone wishing to sell their
produce may do sQ. Call ll'fr . Applegate at 446-2601 for more details.

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...

Coming EveDIIi
July 8 - Extension Marketing
School, 7:30 at the Senior Citizens
Center.
July 9 - Agronomy Field Day Featuring Johnsongrass Control,
1:30 and
6:30
at the Joe Thompson
Fann
near
Cheshire.

· sAlhiftiAB'/8:flJmJrd · ·.
t12.NIAQI:.000D POII.ADMIUION
ONLY
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Cl:tlna
has bought an additional 100,000
metric tons of U.S. wheat :._ about
3.7 million bushels - lor dellvery
this year, says the Agriculture
Depa.rtment.
Officials said Monday U1e grain
Initially was reported by prtvateexporters as going to "unknown" destinations ,but that the buyer turned

out to be China.
That ratsed to morethan2.85mllllon metrlc"tons ol wheat that China
ha~ bought from the Unke~LStates
for delivery this calendar~ar.
Sales also Include 90,000 ton~ of
corn
A metric ton ts about 2,W5 pounds
and Is equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat
or 39.4 bushels or corn.

.

By Bettie Clark
Gallla County
Exteuloa Agent,
Home.Ecuomlcs
GAWPOUS - Is your menu
repertoire :rtartin~ to seem like the
late night movie reruns on TV?
Usually right about now, our meals
start seem.ing awfully repetitious.
Why not change the situation by
taking advantage of the swnfller
weather and do smnc outdoor
coOking•
The first thing to do is to check
your equipm.ent and supplies. The
grill should be absolutely clean and
rust-free. If you're buying a grill.
think carefully about your needs. A
titnall hibachi or brazier is
conomical and just family-sized;
for entertaining larger groups, a
bigger grill is more appropriate.
If you will be barbecuin~ lrequen·
tly, buy the largest bag of charl'OOI
you can find -,- it's fllOre economical
that way. It's important to start the
season with a fresh supply. Briquets
stored over the winter usually have
absorbed a lot of moisture and don't
burn very well .
For those swl•fller cookouts, think
about having soflle instant-lighting
charcoal nn hand. You can start
such briquets as MalchLi~ht quickly
and easily with only a match and be
.-eady to cook in half the till•&lt;' of
regular charcoal.
Have a caddy handy with all of th•·
"tools of the trade" easily within
reach . These would include a 'tonghandled spatula, a pair of longs, a
st'l of sharp cutting knives, padded
n•itts, wood matches, a spray bottle
.&lt;\f water and smpe baking soda. To
ll'ake dean-ups easier, line the bottom ?f yllur_grill with heavy duly
. alummwn fml. Coat the rack with oil
or a similar non-sticking coaling.
Make sure you sel up the grill in a
· dry and protected area. Since our
weather in changeable, remefl!~r

Cars - Ftreblrds and Camaros -

By BILL VALE
Aaaoclated l're8s Wrtter

..

TOUBS SAWMILL- Buckeye III&amp;CareerCenlet"
. forestry students were afforded an opporiunlty this
year to visit ·tleVeral sawmlll operations throughout

the vocational school's trt-county dlstrlcl A demonstratlon Is made by Bell AJTOwood, above, ai Amiwood's sawmW In Centerville.

Forestry students tour
local sawmill operations
RIO GRANDE- The curriculum

In allow eKtra cooking time for windy or overcast days.'
How can you US4' a barbt!cue to
'"ake tnealtime more interestin~?
It's not only simple, but time-saving.
as well.
As everyone knows, anyt'hing
tastes different - and better when cooked out-&lt;Jf-doors. Ev~n
plain !!ld hamburger has a special
flavor when grilled over the coal11.
To add an extra bit of pizzazz, .just
bt!fore you put on the meat, sprinkle
lhe coa ls with hickory Oavoring or a
handful of your favorite h~rbs.
Old standbys like chicken will get
rave reviews when you marinate the
meal before cookin~. baste as it's
grilling. You can make inexpensive:
and quick marinades from any nwn·
bt!r of ingredients already on your
kitchen shelf: s&lt;•Y SIIUl'e and glflger,.
pineapple juice and honey, apple
cider and garlic, etc. Experifllcnt!
Are the kids balking at
vegetables? Buy a variety of fre~h
produce,' cui into chunks; parJjoil,
siring on skewers and grill: You can
abnosl guarantee they'll 'come Iiack
askin~ for 1110re.
·
Finish off the meal by puiling
fresh , canned or thawed fruit In foil
packets, heating over the coalsaf\d
serving as a luscious topping c\ver
icii creafll. You couldn 'I ask fot
easier elegance.

Clark, manager.
Tom Wallace conducted the tour.
Arrowood Lumber, of Centerville,
Tom Hanes bought logs and con·
forestry program consists primarily hosted a field trip, where the studen- dueled the tour at lndustiral Timber
of logging in the junior year and ts saw Ben Arrowood sawing lumber and Land in Oak Hill. Students saw
sawmill operation in the senior year. on a small manual mill powered by a where several automatic mills had •
Field trips play a key roll in the (ann tractor.
previously been before a fire, and
Arrowood has owned thi:; mill for the portable mill that is presently in
training process for these stud~nts.
These local timber industries about 25 years, and his past includes operation.
Hanes is a graduate of American
provide a broad spectrum of lqgging with horses and crosscut
Timber Institute J (ATI) in Wooster,
marketing and utilizaiton of the saws, also.
Seiling. Lwnber, in Wellston, and the Buckeye Hills Forestry
diversified hardwood and softwood
. timber which is harvested by the bought small low grade logs, by the program . John . Spratt, mill
ton, and showed students their scrag manager, set up the field trip.
!9gging class.
The Mead Corp. in Chillicothe
· · !3oth the sawmill and logging mill and pallet assembly process.
The tour was set up through Otto hosts a tour for Buckeye Hills
~lasses view a wide array of equipstudents each year, where they see
ment, which they will use during Beiting, owner, Bill Davis.
Bluegrass Cooperage, also of wood and chips and delivered for
their careers.
Another vital reason for taking the Wellston, bought the mill's white oak pulping.
Students are allowed to see the
field trips is to allow the potential logs, and showed students the barrel
employers and employees to meet stove making process. Paul Frye, complete paper making process,
each other, and make decisions manager , and Errol Leach, with several tour guides to provide
about future employment. Before assistant manager, conducted the direction and information. This
year, students saw the new
cOmpleting the two year sawmilL- field trip and bought the logs.
logging class, each Buckeye Hills
automated. computer • operated
student ~s had opportwlity to meet
At Conway Lumbering, students paper machine. The tour was set up
and v1s1t dozens of possible em· saw a "shotgun mill" set-up where through Chris JanneY., manager of
p~oyers m our three county school
they buy grade logs. Emit! Conway wood divisio~. Jackson.
McArthur Lumber and Post of
~tnct \hrough field trips, guest ( and Ken Bay made the tour possible.
speakers, banquets, and youth ac·
Crownover Lwnber McArthur McArthur, provided the students'
tivities.
bought some of the mui•s grade log~ only look at pressure treatment.
This year the sawmill • logging and allowed them to see . several They also saw how posts are made,
class delivered many logs and took automatic mills in operation. Jim and viewed one of the few local
nwnerous field trips. These trips in- Sorruners bought the logs and hosted markets for pine. Brian Guthrie,
Larry Murdock and Dick Remey
tluded: Ames Tools in Dexter City, the field trip.
Gress Equipment of Chillicothe of- were all involved in making this trip
near Marie!Ja, where they delivered
ash logs and saw handles made for fered ·a wide display of logging possible.
Merillat Industries of Jack.son is
shovels, hoes; rakes and other hand equipment, including John Deere
t~ls. The tour was conducted by Bill
skidders, bulldozers, and loaders. another annual field trip event. They
viewetl red oak lwnber being
graded, dimensioned, glued, sanded
and finished before it becomes
cabinets. John Brunton and ·Tom
Sollers set up the field trip.
S&amp;J Lumber, of Rio Grande, is
owned and operated by John Smith.
Alan Smith, a Buckeye .Hills
GAU.IPOLIS - Archie Meadows, American Breeders Service
Forestry
student, works at the mill
representative for Gallla County, has been honored for maintaining
with
his
father. This is a new
the highest non-return rate among all ABS representatives In Ohio,
automatic
mill, which just started
according to Jim Wells, ~ district sales manager for Ohio.
sawing
this
year. They buy railroad
"In his 15 months assotiatlon with American Breeders Service,
tie logs from Buckeye Hills.
Meadows has con~l~tently employed the practices and techniques
Snavely Ohio Logging and Chipnecessary for high conception rates, and therefore, this honor Ls not
ping
of Hamden, allowed the class to
surprtslng," Wells said.
see
how
a chipping operation work.s
; , In addition to Insemination service, Meadows also provides herd
in
the
woods,
and the amount of the
, service with semen, nitrogen and suPI!Iles.
equipment investment which a chip'
per necessitates. Charles Snavely
Sr. owns and operated the busines,
and employes three Buckeye Hills
Forestry students: Jim Collins, Art
·Mulhern
and Chuck Snavely.
,
POINT PLEASANT- Dr. William E . Trlest has joined thestaffof
Charles
Waldren, owner of
Plea,ant Valley Hospital as a pathologist.
.Waldron Lumber in Dundas, has
,
Trlest l, coming to PVH from the Gallup Indian Medical Center,
been involved in vocational
'· Gallup, N.M., where he was a c~lnlcal pathologist. He Is a Johns
education
since Buckeye Hills was in
•· Hopkl,ns University graduate, and received a bachelor's degree, and
the
plaMing
stages. He has served
, the Johns Hopkins Unlverslcy.&amp;hool of Medicine, where he received
as
a
forestry
advisory corrunittee
·
his doctoral degree.
field
trip host, log buyer,
member,
Tries! did his Internship and residency In anatomic pathology at
•
and
employer
throughout the
'' the Mallory Institute of Pathology and his clinical pathology residand
continues to do
school's
history,
ency at the Veterans Administration Medical Center In Boston.
so
this
year.
Students
sold grade logs
Trlest was a teaching fellow In pathology at. Boston University
and
saw
their
new
automatic
mill,
• School of Medicine from September 1978 to June 1981, and ha~ been
which replaced the one which bur·
~· teaching at the. University of New Mexico since July 1981.
.
ned last year.
of the Buckeye Hills Career Center

Two grants
'

Business Briefs...

LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles County Museum r·' 'rt has
been awarded two gr;. ...." r.o support training and research In Its
con~atlon center.
A $:Xl,OOJ grant from tbe National
Endowment for the Arts wW $UP:
port the museum's con.~rvator
training prograll). A.tnOOO grant
from tbe Armand Hammer Foun~
dation l~ lor research In paper conservation technique~ .

Meadows honored

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Pathologist joins PVH staff

nLURI

UTILITY BLDG. SPECIAL

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NORWOOD, Ohio (AP) - The
sea ol new cars spreading acros.s
storage lots at the Qeneral Motors
Assembly DiviSion plant here .
means more than good business tor
GM.
It's a slgnolnew economic uteln
southwest Ohio.
Two years ago the Pontiac Firebirds and Chevrolet Camaros were
lined up too. But that wa, because
they wefell't selling.
Jobs dwindled In 1979 as the
slumping economy caught up wlth
thi, blue collar suburb surrounded
by Cincinnati. The 4,00J weekly
paychecks from the plant help
born;t other suburban area~ In
southwest Ohio and northern
Kentucky .
The bottom dropped out In May
l9llO when some !.000 assembly line
workers were lald ott, capping a
series of lesser layotls dating from
November 1!17!1.
The loss of workers' earnings
taxes forced Norwood, a city of
Z7,00J poJllllatlon, Into bankruptcy.
The state auditor took control of
city finances because of a·$5.5 mUllan deficit. Dozens ol city workers
were fired and services were
slashed.
Meanwhlle, GM closed the a~­
sembly dlvl~lon for remodeling. It
expanded assembly lines from two
to four and retooled tor the new F-

with lour, six and eight cylinder
engines.
Most of the cars are sold before
they roll ott the line because customers order model~ wlth specific
equipment at total new car prices
usually ranging from SS.!XXJ to
'$12,00).
· in February. the GMAD plant
called back two shifts, nearly 4,000
workers, and added an overnight
maintenance shift.
"We're working overtime every
day and seve~al Satuidays," sald
Bob Hl\ddlx, president of Loca1674,
United Auto Workers. "Most of the
other 400 have been notified of ·
recall."
Norwood Is also solvent again.
City COuncil ha~ asked Ohio Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson to end the
~al emergency and return the financial reins to city officials.
"We have a new accounting system now," sald Norwood Auditor
Darrell Alexander. "We are ready
to end the fiscal emergency."
Alexander said employee and
service cuts meant the city had to
collect $6 milliOn from earnings
taxes by January 1983 to become
solvent again.
"Our projections," now that
GMAD workers are back, "ls that
we'll collect $6.2 million" from the
tax . "We've already collected
enough to make us solvent again,"
said Alexander.

The new &amp;P9Cial 'l'IOdel. 8conomy-priced
SRT~ rear-ti'181iller from Ariens
offers the Serious Qlldener 1111 this, and

,more:

' • Adluilable height handlebars
recoH start
• S8111li'OP8IIec.! Wheels
• Lug M!e tlrW
Controls
See your Ariehl ttea1er lild the new·
_· 5 hp, SAT!'aQ20 ~ .filter today!
• Easy-pull

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1·- 12'x8' Sliding Door, 1-3'x6'il"' Service Dopr. 29 G,a .
Painted Steel Siding (choice of 9 color!;) with 5 yr .'
Warranty, 28. Ga. Galvanized Steel roofing, with 20 yr.
Warranty, ·4 Skylites.
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Many other
bldg. sizes and options a\lailable.

IRON HORSE BLDRS.
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CH.ESTEJI,OHIO .
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Japanese use skills to :help U.S.
steelmaker out of difficulties
"We're not competitive with during 1981, and It Is forecast to lose
more than S20 mllilon this year unworkers In the rest of the world," he
less
the steel Industry Improves. ·
sited Armea Inc. to learn saki. "We don 't have the faclllties
1,070 workers, or about one
Some
steelmaking. The Japanese re- we should have - we don't have
In
five
hourly
employees at the Mid·
cently returned, but this time they them because the steel Industry Is
dletown
Works,
have been laid Ott,
tried tp help as Armco struggles to not profitable enough to push In·
stay In business.
vestment. Now we're down to the some for more than a year. The
layoffs have doubled Middletown's .
A team ol productivity experts crunch."
Holiday
said
the
plant
must
unemployment rate.
from NippOn Steel of Jl\pan toured
profit
It
It
Is
to
stay
open.
Holiday said demand lor the
make
a
the Middletown plant recently to
"I
have
no
anticipation
of
selling
Mlddltown
Works' prtme product
otter advice on how Armco can Imthat
plant
to
anybody.
We
have
a
-flat
rolled
steel- has never been
prove productivity.
He
predicted
demand will be
lower.
The visit was just one way that commitment to all of our communiArmco Is trying to pull itself out ol ties to make that plant viable," he stagnant for the rest ol the year
troubleS which have led to a first sald. ''I think we recognize that If w1lh "very small" annual Inthat plant goes down, It would have creases expected during . the next
quarter drop In earnings.
a sertous Impact on the economy of few years.
The earnings report, Issued MonTo battle the gloomy future, the
day, showed that the diversified . Middletown."
Works,
together
with
has devised a "comprecompany
Middletown
manufacturer and financial services firm earned $17.7 mllUon, or 26 another Armco steel plant In Ash· hensive survival plan" aimed at encents per share, down a steep 74.6 land, Ky., comprtse Armco's East- couraging workers to contribute
percent from the $69.7 mllUon, or em Steel Dlvlslon, the largest new Ideas for cutting costs and of$1.21 per share that lt earned In the concentration ol assets In the steel fering new solutions to old problems, such as productlvlty and
first quarter of 1981.
ltrm.
Eastern Steel lost $14.5 million energy consumption.
. "Unless there Is a significant turnaround In the economy In the second hall, Armco's earnings for the
.
year will be less than previously ,-----------..,.·---··-·~_.....-.·-·..-(
projected," Chief Executive Offleer Harry Holiday said.
Holiday said the company must
Improve productivity .
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) -

During the 1900s, the Japanese vi·

.---.:....------r--------------..--.-·---------·-··-··-.

THE j .fOLLOWING GALLIPOL;f YOU CAN LEARN
B
FINANCIA_
L INSTITUTIONS WILL f
WORD
i' .B.
E ~LOS.ED MONDAY, JULY 5 f
PROCESSING
~~rr~ ~ohday): •. •
·
· in~ weeks (non credit)
Buckeye Bulldmg &amp;Loan
New Classes begin JulY 8

I

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l~ · Central Trust
1

C&amp;~ Ba~k -.

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.Ga~hpohs Savings &amp;Loan .f
Ofbo Valley Bank ·, J:

"It does help. It 's the major por·
tlon of our Income," Alexander sald
ol the sprawling plant.
Fred Knlppenbe•g, spokesmman for the state auditor, sald N~r­
wood ls one of three Ohlo clUes
ready to end nscal emergencies.
The others are Niles and the VIllage
.or Plymouth. Cleveland, the largest
clty to run out of mony. remains
under fiscal emergency.
"Thls plant Is one of the excepUons, I'd have to say," Haddix said.
noi.lng layo!fs continue In other auto
plants. Ford Is extending furloughs
at lt~ Batavia transmission plant
east ol Cincinnati.
,
"These were always good sellng
can since we started building them
In 1966. It sa re~ quallty car bunt
by experienced people," he sald.
VIsitors noticed that most of the
models are painted dark color~.
Rick Thompson, Pontiac spokesman In Detroit, Mich., 'IBid the
most popular color ls black. Red l~
second.
"Black seems to match the per·
lormance Image that the car gives,
sald Thompson. He said a lot of buy·
ers are women who like the tour
cylinder economy models .
Buyers of the sporty models are
young, he said. They are not al l that
Interested ln economy either.
Thompson said 52 percent of the
cars soldhave eight cylinder
engines.
"It's sort of a throwback," he
sald.

CAMAROS AND FIREBIRDS READY TO ROLL lhe background, as others walt In lines lo bt! taken lo
- Some ollhe hundreds ot new Pontiac Flreblrds and !heir desllnailon. The renewed Interest In the cars Is
Chevrolet Camaros that have rolled off the lines ai responsible (or pulling some 4,000 people back 1o
the General Motors assembly division plant In Nor- , work ai the plant, and lumlng the economy of Norwood, ohio, are aJI-eady loaded onto car carriers In wood around. (AP Laserpholo).

•

Price Includes Tax &amp; Delivery ·

·

Plant .r emodeling injects new life
into southwestern Ohio GM facility

TH.

China buys . more wheat

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Ohio Volley Ionic, Commercial fa lcivlnp lonk, ·Control
Trust Co., and all ~nch llaliltt, 1ro- Ins., O.llla
·Roll•r MJII1, loiO ~grl.:canter, J, D. North Procl~ ·
la•tllle, Outpolt, Thoma• Cloth!.,.., Paul Dllvlft
_,._,.,.., Ohio Vlilley faodla•d, c.rter ·Orocary, an4

meat will show tbe amount of cal- trition InstitUte's dft'ector c1 consucium In the average serving. There mer atfairs, said tbe new rule$ are
violation of federal law governing
will be no rEference to ground bone.
meat and poulti1' Inspection.
Under the old rule, the label had
"It constitutes miSbranding an
to give prominent · display to
Is grossly ' inlslelidtng to consu
"grou~ bone" as well as ShOWing It
mers, .. she said. "It certa1nly merIn the Ingredient statement.
· Donald L. Houston, administra- Its court review, to put ,It mlldiy."
Asked by a reporter It the Institor ctthe department'~Food Safety
tute would !Ue a sultchallenglng the
and Inspection Service, said therenew regulation~. Ms. Haas said
vised regUlation., could result In an
annual net economic gain to consu- "there are good chances" It mlgllt.
The new name ol the salvaged
mers and producers ·of $495 mllllon
meat Is one point, she said. It Ima year and mean up to 640 new jobs.
"Mechanically separated meat plies that It Is all meat - Mechani- often relerred to by Industry as cally Separated Beef, for example
mechanically deboned meat - Is a -Instead of the old label Indicating
significant potential .•ource of It wa~ a "product."
Further, M,. Haas said, the new
wholesome fOQd made possible by
Ingredient
label refers to calcium,
new processing technology," Housnot
powdered
bone as before.
ton said.
The
regulations
- both new and
However, he said tbe salvaged
old
allow
of
maximum
of 0.75
meat has been ''largely .Ignored bepercent
calcium
In
the
salvaged
cause ol regulatory requirements
that are more restrictive than ne- meat before It Is used In other food
products.
·
ces:llli'Y to protect consumers."
But
since
bone
Is about one. The revised regulation, should
fourth
calcium,
that
would trans~ult In more of the salvaged meat
late
Into
a
maximum
ol 3 percent
being used In food products, HousIn
the
salvaged
ground
bone
ton said.
·
product.
·'
Ellen Haas, ,the Community No-

Agriculture and our community

•371700 TOTAL ERECTED.PRICE

FAIR MEMBERSHIPS
ARE.O•N SALE AT:

I

New federal me.at .r~gulations bring .soine relief

•

Wheat program· for '83 to
be announced on August 15

July4, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

WASHINGTON (AP) - New
federal regulations will help boost
the use- ol .~alvaged ·meat containlog small bits ol bone In Proc:tlsed
Item~ such as hotdogs and luncheon
meat,, agricultural otflclals said
last week.
The American Meat ln~titute
· generally applauded the revised
rules, although noting the Industry
did not get all the changes lt had
sought -such as the elimination of
minimum protein standards and
maxlmnm fat llmlts. .
Even so, lt sald, the new regulaUons bring "some Important relief
from llle extraordinarily burdensome rules" whlt h had been In effeet the pa,t lourl years.
Proposals for changing the regu!allons have been under review and
study since they were announced
nearly a year ago.
A con,umer advocate group
called the new regulatlons ;,:ntisleading" and threatened legal actlon to get them changed.
Salvaged meat has been aP.
proved for use since 1978. But the
meat Industry had complained
about the orlginal federal rules.

- -·--- -·

~MISSIONS OFFICE OPEN

-1

T. BURNS

c

I

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i

9 a.m. to

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p.m. Mon., Tues.. Wed. and Fuday

9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursda,.

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·~ Call' 675-1095 For Appointment~
~·
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SPECIALIZING ·IN PEDIATRIC AND
ADOLESCENT MEDICINE IS NOW ACCEPTiNG ~
NEW PATIENTS.
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...
9A.M. to 6 P.M.

Ret. No. 75·0~-047~

DR. GEORGIANNA

~

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~367

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l., .!']~ o!~.

t

__ _: ___.~_:-.~~!_~~~~~-~w... ~.~J
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�is; Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

The Su

Dairy groups
agree ~hanges
are needed
WASHINGTON (AP) - Associated Milk Producers Inc., a giant
d a iry fa rmers coopera tive, Is
claiming that the gover~menl 's
milk support program has helped
da m pen retail ro'ts of dairy products over the past 20 year, .
The Reagan administra tion is
seeklng suootantlve changes In the
da iry support program In order to
he ad off further surpluses and cost~
that plague the $2 bllllon·a·year
program.
Dairy groups, Including AMP! as the cooperative Is known - ac·
knowledge changes are needed, but
they say the administra tion's view
Is too harsh and that other options
should be considered .
In a analysis circulated this week
from Its San Antonio, Texas, head·
quarter s, AMP! says It computed
' from Bureau of Labor statistics
wha t would have happened to prl·
ces of retail dairy products l! they
had risen as much since 1962 as
some other Items:
-"1! mllk priceS had lncrea' ed
as fast as energy costs over the past
20 years, a half gallon of milk would
cost $1.93lnstead of $1.13, or 71 per·
cent more.
-"If butter {)rices had Increased
as fast a' home ownership costs
over the past 20 years, a pound of
butter would cost $3.22 Instead of
$2. 05, or 57 perd-nt more.
-"If lee cream prices had in·
creased a' fast as medical care
co~ts over the past 20 years, a half
gallon of lee cream would cost $3.34
Instead of $2.04, or 64 percent

more."
~

Instead, according to AMP!, productivity gains by farmers have
made dairy products among "out
nation's mo~t effective ln1Jatlon
fighters."
"The milk price support. program ha' played a vital role in
making this . possible," the report
sa id.
"Since its inception In 1949, the
milk price support program has
provided market stability, enabling
dairymen to make tremendous e!fl·
clency gains through Improved
feed rations, artlficlal breeding,
mechanized milk systems and
anlmalhealthcareadvance5. Average mllk production per cow has
more than doubled since 1950."
The cooperative said the productivity gains have enabled family Income to buy "considerable more
mUk and dairy product' today"
than was possible 30 years ago.
"For example, the average
American factory worker could
buy eight quarts of milk with an
hour' s pay In 1950; today that
hour's pay can buy 15 quarts of
milk."
It also said U.S. consumers are
able to choose from the widest. varlf:!ty of dairy products avaUable anywhere In the world.
The cooperative says It has 33,1XXJ
members throughout the Midwest,
South and Southwest who produce
about 12 percent of the nation's
mUk supply.

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PATCO BANKRUPTCY- Wltb tbe Capitol in the
, background, Gary Eads, president of tbe Prole!ISional
• Air Traffic ControUers Organization, talks to reporters

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·;pATCO folds, union seeks
to get back controller jobs
" Absolutely, we can' t turn our remained on the job.
backs
on tha t," Eads .said, acknowl·
James Landry, general counsel
M!loclated Press Writer
edging,
however,
that
he
had
no
tor
the Air Transport As&lt;;OCiatlon.
WASHINGTON (AP) - "It' s
ready
answer
on
how
the
task
the
ai
rline Industry group that has
'over forPATCO; that's behind us, "
might
be
accomplished.
cl
aims
of $33.4 million again st the
said Gary. ~ •. deci!U'Ing the
Union officials said PATCO 's ex· ,.,-illi'ton, said the Industry wUI argue
death of his union 11 months to the ·
ecuUve board decided on Jlquldal' that the trust fund money should go
•day after It plunged Into a suicidal
to creditors. The a'sociatlon cla im'
tlon after a federal appeals coun
'stlike and President Reagan fired
upheld
the
union's
decertl!lcatlon,
the
s ttike cost airlines $33.4 million.
11,500 of Its members.
It
of
any
righttorepresent
A
court Is expected to decide the
stripping
Eads, president of the Profesand
depriving
It
of
union
issue
lat~r this year.
controllers
sional Air Traffic Controllers Or.
dues.
~
The
decl,lon to as k the court to
ganization, pronounced the last
Under
the
law,
a
trustee
wUl
be
oversee
liquidation of PAT-CO's
rites to reporters Friday outside the
named
to
distribute
the
union's
assets
marks
the demise of a small.
federal courthouse where hours bea~sets.
But
there
remains
a
dispute
feisty
union
that
once represented
.fore he flied the union' s bankruptcy
over
how
much
money
wUl
be
given
J6,1XXJ
controller
s
and
threatened to
papers.
claims
ap.
shut
the
nation's
a
irways
down if
to
creditors,
whose
The court' s next step wUJ be to
proach
$40
million,
according
to
their
demands
were
not
met.
name a trustee who wUJ distribute
Eads .
The Reaga,n administra tion has
the union' s assets among creditors.
The
PATCO
president
argued
refused
to allow a ny cont roller who
"It became obvious that It was
that
the
union's
assets
total
only
participated
In the Illegal s trike to
going to be futile for PAT-CO to con"several
hundred
thousand
dolreturn
to
work
unless he could
,tinue to try toexistas a labor organJars"
.and
do
not
Include
about
$4
prove
that
he
st
ayed
off the job be•' lzatlon, and It was going to. be
million
that
Is
In
a
separate
"s
ubcause
of
coercion
or
harassm ent.
Impossible for us to satl'ly the treslstence"
trust
lund.
Mo&lt;e
lhan
JO,OOO
controller
s h~ve
mendous debts that we had ln"The
subsistence
fund,"
Eads
challenged
th
e
ir
dismi
ss al s
. ; curred," Eads said.
"will
be
distributed
to
the
through
civil
serv
ice
channels,
but
said,
.. · But he promised that union leadmembers"
Including
both
I
he
only
a
few
cases
have
been
heard
so
, ers would continue efforts to get
controllers
fired
by
Reagan
aft
er
far
.
, : some of the 11,500 fired controllers
their stlike Aug. 3 and those who
.; their jobs back.

HEAD LEITUCE

pfeaser
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i:

outside U.S. District Court In Washington Friday after
be flied bankruptcy on behalf of PA TCO. ( AP Laserphoto)

By&gt;H. JOSEF HEBERT

ICEBERG .

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' KRAn

MAc. &amp;CHEESE

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SUttNYMOiN
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;GJIADi A·

EXTRA URGE
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recOVLIJ'.

Mllllons of tax payers who have
large medical expenses would lind
their deductions sharply reduced.
Presently, those who Item ize m ay
deduct certain medical expenses
tha t exceed 3 percent of adj usted
gross Income. For example, a
$ll,OOO.!ncome family with $2,1XXJ of
uninsured medical expenses may
deduct $1,100.
The bUI would r aise t he t hreshold
to 10 percent -meaning that same
family could able to dedu ct no med·
leal expense a t all. But the provi·
slon In current law a llow ing a
deduction for ha ll I he medical ins u·
ra nee premium,, up to $150 a year.
would be ret.alned. MOl &gt;' tha n 19.4
million taxpayers claimed med ical
deductions averaging $166 In l98l,
but a s ignificant portion claimed
only the $150 Insurance cost.
Simil arly, 2.6 million couples and
individua ls who deducted $2.75 bll·
lion worth of uninsured cas ualty
losses In 1979would find deduct ions
cut. P resent Jaw requires the lax·
payer to absorb the !lrst $100 of
such a loss before taking a deduc·
lion; the bill would a llow a deduc·

By LEE MITGANG
AP Education Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Wa rning
teac her s they mu st not "fa ll as·
lcep" on the Issue of tuition tax
cr edits, American Federa tion of
Teac hers Presid ent Albe r t
Sha nker opened his union 's six-day
annua l conve nt ion Friday with an
a ttBck on Pres ident Reagan's education policies.
Shanker, addressing som e 3,00J
delegates In the m ain ba llroom of
the New York Hilt on Hotel, also
charged that the Depart ment of
Education, under Reagan, was
peopled by "radicals who seek to
des troy an institution."
He s ingled out the Reagan adm inis tra tion proposal to gran I led ·
er a! tax credit s to pa r ents of
pri vate school children as part icu larly dangerous. Teache" contend
the credit s will hurl public schools.
"Let's not fall asleep on this one,"
he said. "The passage of a tuition
tax credit bill is no more incr edi ble
than everythin g else Reagan has
done."

Th e fe d era ti o n's key no te
.• peaker , Sen. Paul Sar banes, D·
Md .. delivered a similarly a ntiReaga n add r ess a nd d rew
foot-stomping applause with his
jail&lt;; a t Reagan's bud get direc tor.
David Stockman. whom he called
"a young m an who knows the cost
of everything and the value of
nothin g. "
"I want Stockman to get out inf o
a classroom and see what' s going
on," he said.
At a hews conference. federation
official&gt; released a nationwide sur·
vey forecasting 55,500 teacher
layoffs next o;chool year. a 21 per ·
cent rise over 1981-82 when 44,1XXJ
teachers lost their jobs. The union
pred icted ci ties in the Northea'l
and Midwest would be hardest hit .
In Los Angeles, meanwhile, the
archr ival 1.6-mllllon member Na
tiona! Education Association en·
tered the second day of Its a nnual
s ix-day gathering, with the NEA
Polit ical Action Council a pproving
endorsement s of abou t 100 U.S.
House a nd Sena te candidat es. The

Louis Aratarl and Ronald "
Guiles, for charges such a s
murder, robbery and firearms
possession.
The chart also showed the crlmi·
nal charges they avoided by agreeIng to testl!y as witnesses Jor the
government
On the other side of the chart was
a list of the nine defense witnesses
and their occupations, Including a
college student, waitress, pizza
shop owner and truck drlv~.
)'elsky characterized them a' bon·
est citizens and described the govermnent' s witnesses as killers,
llars and thieves.
Yelsky told the jury that Aratarl,
Ferrltto and GuHes "conCocted a
!airy tale" when they said Carabbla Was at the scene of the bomb
slaying of reputed racketeer Daniel

. '•.'

~:. ,Woman

.:'

.

lnst ilutlons.

The withholding change is one of
several a imed at reducing the $95
billion a year In taxes tha t the gover nment estimates II loses be-.
·c ause of under reportlng ollnoome
and similar cheat ing. ·
Th e co mmittee voted to take
away halt the benefit s allowed la't
year under the "safe-harbor" lea~­
lng prog r a m th a t oppone nt s
dubbed corporate welfare. The pr~
vision e n co ura g~ red-Ink companIes to sell to profita ble firms certain
tax break.&lt; they cannot use.

council prev iously had thrown the
union's weight behind 91 ot hercandldates, all but a handful of them
Dem ocrats.
The NEA al ready has raised
near ly $/OO,IXXJ and expect s to dis·
burse $1 million to some 250 to :n&gt;
candida tes for the House and Senate this fall . The 8,1XXJ NE A delegates will hold their first foimal
business se-;slon Sat urday.
The unions plan next week to
adopt a joint resolution opposing
tuition tax credit •.
But Shanker, In hls remarks, of·
fPred little hope tor a thaw In the
bitter relations of the two t e~her
unions. He admitted tha t In the past
year or so, "we had hoped that
given the problems we have ... we
ought to forget about fighting each
other, and unite, formon e organlzalion and fight Ronald Reagan
rat her than each other. "
But he said the NEA's frequent
attacks against the AFL-CJD, to
which the 564,&lt;mmember AFT belongs, have scotched that hope for
now.

Draft resister announces
opposition, may be charged ·

By AlAN L. i\DLER
Associated Pr&lt;Ss Writer
CLEVE LAND (API ~ With his
fa ther standing near by in sup)XIrt ,
Steven Gillis went public Friday.
announcing tha t he had not registered for the military draf t and has
no intention of doing so.
GUlls, 21 , a co llege s tudent in
Richmond, Ind., admitted he took a
. " Danny" Gr eene In October 19i'i.
risk by reading a statem ent critical
of
the United States a nd fl a unting
Federal prosecutors charge that
his
disobedience of Ihe Selecti ve
Carabbia, reputed Cleveland crime
Service registrat ion laws.
boss James T. Licavoli, Anthony D.
''I refu se to register myself as an
Liberatore, John Calandra, Ken·
agent of the U.S. government 's m il·
neth Clarcla and Pasquale .Cister·
it ary madness." Gill is told a new s
nino plotted a number of Illegal
conference.
acts.lncludlngGreene' s munler, to
If charged and convicted of fail."
gain control of organized crime
ing
to register, GUlL' could be sent·
around Cleveland.
to live years In prison and
enced
Earlier Friday, Burt Fulton, at·
fined
up
to $10,1XXJ. The Selective
torney for Calandra, argued' hls
Service
said
52'i ,IXXJ men have not
client was on trial only because "he
wll.h
draft registration.
complied
got caught In a great lhexorable
A
coalition
of
antldraft groups
web, and when you're caught In a
Indictment of a
used
Wednesday's
net like that by ' the government ,
California
college
student
to spur a
they just squeeze."
new round of protests against milFulton said there was no ev iitary registration, which they ~ay
dence of a wtretap of Greene's
wUIIead to a dralt.f!nd ultimately to
phone, other than the testimony of
thLs
count ry's participation In a
Ferritto.
war.
" It is clear that the power s-tha tbe are hell-bent on mob!llzlng
American youth for war, and we
see non· registration as a positive
step toward peace," said John Vadas of the Oeveland Committee
Luken said Miss Fix had worked
Against Registration and the Draft.
In his Washington office' but left
An 18-year-old recent high school
,June 14, 198), to work In Uhe office of
graduate, Vada' said he has about
U.S. Rep. DoUglas Applegate, D30 days before he must decide
Ohio.
'
·1
whether to l'l!gister. ·~I don't know
Cinclnn!ltl pollee arrested her at
what I'm going to do," he said.
a downtown hotel last Wednesday
· Gillis' father Phillip said he has
at the request ci Washington, D.C.,
been aware of his son's feelings
pollee. All extradition hearing Is
about registration for selleral yescheduled Tuesday_
,
She W;jS Charged wiUh burglary . ars. A M~lhodist minister In the
Cleveland suburb of Wlciq!Ue,' the
and unlawfUl entry In Was)llngton
elder GUI1s said he fully backs his
June 26.
·
son's decision.

~ Rackets trial defense slams
!:credibility of witn......
CLEVELAND (AP)- Lawyers
• tor six men charged with scheming
• to control organized crime In north·
-. ern Ohio chipped away at the testimony of witnesses against their
cllepts as the 10-week-old federal
, trial neared lts·.1~nd.
·
Defense attor"neys were to wrap
up tl!elr cloolng arguments Satur·
t day, and the prosecution was to be
given a chance for rebuttal.
"This case liCI'eams out for an acquittal, with all these lies thai have
·, been told to you," said Leonard
Yeisley, attorney for detendarit Ronald Carabbla..
. ·
l Yelsky used his entire closing
statement . Friday to attack the
credibility of the' government's witnesses. He used a detaUed chart to
explain the long prison records of
proteCted witnesses Ray Fer.rttto,

tlon only for losses tha t exceed 10
per cent of Income.
The legislation would doubt~ the
8-cent tax on cigarettes. Starting
next year, the 1-percent tax on
phone service would be doubled,
raised to 3 percent In 191!4 and !rGzen a t 2 percent In 1986.
Most of the nearly 60 mUllen cou·
pies and lnc)lvlduals who receive in·
teres! and dividend' would find the'
government taking a share In adva nce through a new wlthholdiJlg
system. Low-income and elderlY·
recipient s would be exempt from
the 10 percent withholding, as
wo ul d som e s m a ll fin a ncial

Teachers federation chief
blasts _education policies

STEAK .••..•••..••..••L.~: ..•

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LOCALLY OWNED
AND OPERATED.

THURSDAY ONLY
-JULY 8, 1982

GENERIC NO NAME

By JIM LU'DIER
Associated Press ~r
WASHI NGTON (AP) - Over the
obj ections of aU nine Democrats,
the Sena te Flna,nce Committee on
Friday approved the largest tax j.ncrease ever - a catch-all raising
$981i bllllon over the next three
years.
If accepted by the House a nd Senate, 1he bill would double the tax
on cigarettes, triple the ta x on telephone ., ervlce, slas h deduct Ions for
medical expt.tses and uninsured
losses, and take back a blg chunk of
the business tax cu t enacted Ja,t
year. A 10-percent withholding t ax
would be imposed on most Interest
and dividends.
The measure, drafted behind
closed doors by the panel's Republl·
can majorit y and endorsed by the
Reagan administration, was ap.
proved on an 11-9 vote a t 2 a .m. at
the end of a li-hour session.
The bUI would raise an estima ted
$21.1 billion during fl~a l 1983,
which begin s Oct. J. It was w ri tten
In an effort to slas h the federal deficit In hopes such government restraint would lead to a decline In
Inter es t rates and 'pu r econom ic

WE GLADLY
REDEEM FEDERAl
FOOD STAMPS

Special

WASHINGTON (AP) - Wheat
farmers In three more states have
been certl!led as partlclpatlng In
the Agriculture Department's
acreage-reduction program.
Offflclals also said Friday that
corn farmers In three states have
certified participation, becoming
the first to take In the gralns portion
of the acreage program.
The Jat~t wheat figures raised
certified compliance to 21.9 million
acres, 39.3 percent of the crop's
base of 55.8 million acres In 31
states.
Under the program, farmers are
required to reduce their 1982 wheat
acreage 15 percent to qualify for
pnce supports and related benefits.
The cutback under the feed grains
part of the program must be 10
percent
The most recent wheat cerJaatlons Included :
. ~ ·
Nebraska. certified compliance
on 1.81 mlll1on acres or 56.6 percent
of tl)e state's wheat base ot 3.2 mll- ·
Uon acres; Utah, 136,456 acres or
45.8 percent of the base of 297,918
acres; and Washington, 1.88mlllloil
acres or 59:6 percent of the base or }
3.1o mllllon acres.
The first certlfied corn partlclpa- ·
tlon Included:
Oregon, 3,247 acres or 6.92. per·e ent of the state's base of 46,947
acre~; Utah, 4,376 acres or 10.8 percent of'the base of 40,347 acres; and
Washington, l8,~l8acres or7.8pereent·of the blise ct.;J%i,209 acres~·

Senate Finance Committee
okays largest tax increase

SUPER MARKET-OPE" DAllY
85 Vine Street
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"tYe Resene'the Rigfil to ljinft Quantity"

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farmers are
certified

ational

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WILL BE.OPEN
·Phone -446-9593 A.M. TIL 10 P.M.
DAILY

.... ...
f •

held for "humorous thing''

:' ; CINCINNATI (AP) -A 26-yearJohn DIPucclo, assistant U.Scat.
: , ptdwomanwholsfort)lel'emplwee
tomey, said during Thursday's
of U S Rep Thomas Lllken D- · bond 'h earing before U;S. Magis~; Plllo." ~ beln~ held ln ,jallln ~.of trate J. Vincent Aug that Miss Fix
:, ')lond-on a charge of threatening the
wrote to Luken that shewOiildshoot
•l pmgressman.
,
·.him In the genitalS unless he reU.S. DlstrtctJudlleCariB Rubin
hired her.
.~
' on Friday onlered Lisa ~'ll'lx
She said at the Friday hearing
•·p1ArUngt.on. Va, held In Jall In Ueu
that the letter was a joke.
. ; 1 .of$25,00lbondonlheUireatc~UU"ge. · •.• . "It was ~humorous thing lle1
Rubin said he revoked a Tburs- 1 tween us. Tdm has a weird sense of
' clay federal court order' releuing ' humor.AIIybodylooklngatthenote
.
Miss Flic wit!Qat bilnct becau!lll! or .could ~ It was not for real,' • Miss
~
threat
Fix told Rubin. ,

1¥,

;f

.,,

' h.....
I.

·. I

DRAFT RESISTER - Steven Glllls, 21, of WlcklUie, OhiO, applauda
anotlier speaker at a news ronlerence Friday In Cleveland whereGIIII
announced he had not registered lor the mUttary draft In deftanceoftlle
law. GUlls Joined about 'lll other draft pnlteltol"llln a mardi outlllde tile•
'
federal court buDding In Cleveland after his anDouncemeai. (AP :
LaserP,boto) . .

•

. . ' - .:

�'
Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipQiis, Ohio-t ' oint Pleasant,

Page-D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va.

July 4, 1982
July4\ 1982

••

Cincinnati on Friday. The newer Mississippi Queen
won the race . that began 12 days earlier at New
Orleans, La.

Race rekindles rivertown mood
CINCINNATI (API - Several
hundred people lined the banks of
the Ohio River as the Delta Queen
and Mississippi Queen steamed up
the river, their calliopes singing.
It was advertised a• a great river
race, and it rekindled an old, river
town feeling Friday as the two
white slster ships finished the last
seven miles of a 1,1ii9-mlle race that
began 12 days earlier on the Mlsslsslppl River at New Orleans.
The boaLs entered the Ohio River
at Calro, Ill.
The sight of the race reminded
cab driver Bill Mentel, 66, of the
good fares he made from lhcomtng
Delta Queen travelers years ago.
The riverboat cooks would sneak
out breakl~t to the cabbies for a
dollar each, Mentel said.
The Delta Queen and the Mississippi Queen, the nation's only remaining overnight,
passenger-carrying steamooats,
moved Into their home port Friday.
But the speed made one tow boat
captain scoff at the race.
"This ain't no race," said the
man, who refused to Identify him-

self. "Look at their wake. We're
making bigger swells than they
are. This ain't no race. It they were
wound up, that water would be
coming off the top of the paddlewheel. There'd be eight-foot waves
... I've seen It before."
Large waves, though, would
damage barges and recreational
boats tied up on shore, he said.
The newer, bigger Mississippi
Queen was first under the Suspension Bridge connecting Cincinnati
and Covlngioll, Ky., a span which
has had thousands of steamboats
pass under It since It was bull! for
Yankee troops marching to Dixie
during the Civil War at a time when
Cincinnati was the nation's steamboat capital.
"We are first and l~t a city of the
river," said Mayor David Mann,
who welcomed the some 200 Delta
Queen and &lt;100 ML'5lssippi Queen
passengers to Cincinnati. "Each
time the Delta Queen comes home,
a piece of our history returns to us."
Old pictures show 20 or more
steamboats lined up at Cincinnati's
riverfront, loading pork, soap or
other ~roducts to be shipped to New

Orleans. Those glory days of river
travel ended shortly after the Civll
War, when the raUroad moved
westward and Chicago became the
hog butcher and crossroads of the
nation .
·
"This Is a great day for Cincinnati, the Queen City of America,"
said Stanley Thune, chairman of
the Delta Queen Steamboat Co., referring to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's designation of the city In an
~2poem.
·
"We have three queens here the Delta Queen, Mississippi Queen
and Helen Hayes, queen of the.
American theater," he said.
Miss Hayes wa~ a passenger and
Judge of the race, B~~d Mann declared the day "Helen Hayes Day"
In Cincinnati.
"I hope this (steamboat tradi·
Uon) continues a long time," Miss
Hayes said. "I'm deeply in love
with the Delta Queen."
The city's celebration of Its river
roots continued throughout the day
with various activities that ended
when the boats left Cincinnati early
In the evening.

Despite .law, fireworks still ·sell
By The ASIIOCiated Press
Most types of fireworks are illegal In Ohio, but roadside dealers
sidestep the ban by using a loophole
In the law that allows wholesale or
retail sales for direct shipment aut
of the state.
At least a half-dozen merchants •
are selling fireworkers, including
the illegal type, In stores and semi·
trailers around the state, Including
just a few hundred feet north of the
Michigan-Ohio border.
"It's a problem In that these
(Michigan locations) are the places
where people are getting most of
their fireworks," said Toledo Deputy Police Chief Richard McAtee.
"Availa bility Is causing the
problem."
All that Is required Is that the
buyer show an out-of-state driver' s
license and sign a form agreeing
that the fireworkers wlll be transported out of Michigan. he added.
Clermont County officials, In
southern Ohio, meanwhlle, delayed
a court. hearing Friday against fireworks business owner James RUey
untilafter the July Fourth weekend.
County law enforcement officers
raided Riley's home In late June
and seized fireworks .and a truck.
Common Pleas Judge Louis J.
Schwartz iatere Issued a court
order blocking the Riley and hl•
wife,. Wanda, from PQ'sesslng or

selling fireworks unless they have a
permit from the fire chief or sheriff
or unless they send the fireworks
out of state.
The Rlieys have contended they
are abiding by state laws bY selling
fireworks only to customers who
take the fireworks out of state.
Rlley was to appear In court Fripay on contempt of court motions
and the county's request for an In·
Junction that would prevent him
from selling fireworks. But the delay allowed Riley to operate his
stand~ along Ohio 1251n time for the
started of the weekend hoilday
period.
Chief MeA tee said Friday that he
expects Toledo officers to get at
leas t 1,000complalntsabout expiod·
lng firecrackers thL• weekend. And
police agencies In other part.s of the
state are expected to receive simllar complaints.
'Law enfo~;eement officials In
both states, however, say nearly all
such complaints wut go unan swered, primarily because of the lm·
possibility of dealing with the
volume of fireworks violations.
The unauthorized use of fireworks carries a maximum penalty
of 30 days in jall and a $250 fine,
according to Toledo Prosecutor
John Madigan. If someone Is physically threatened, the penalty could

go as high as $1,1XXJ and six months
In prison, he said.
The Columbus area has remained relatively free of the roadside retail fireworks stands. Pollee
offlc_lals aren't sure why, but think
the reason Is strict law enforcement, according to Deputy Chief
James L. Rutter.
Franklin County sheriff's deputies were more specific.
"It's contraband," said Detective
Donald Champ. "It's Illegal. It's illegal to sell them.
"It's here In the county, there Is
no question aoout It But I think law
enforcement has stayed on top of it
and will continue to do so."
The Ohio General Assembly l~
considering a blli that would put
fireworks retailers and wholeSalers
out of business.
Sponsored by State Rep. Joseph
J. Vukovich, D-Poland, the bill
would make the wholesale or retail
sale of fireworks a first-degree
misdemeanor.
The Legislature did pass a bill
last year banning the sale of fireworks to anyone who lacked a written permit from a county shi!rlfffor
a display.
But Gov. James Rhodes vetoed
the me~ure, saying the bill would
be both too re;trlctive and not effective enough.

didn'-t specify.
By IAU~ WILKINSON
The acting superintendent,
Associated Press Writer
Jame8
Walker, says, "We would
WEST COLLEGE CORNER,
like
for
him to define what, If any,
Ind. and COLLEGE CORNER,
agencies
In either state h~ authorOhio (AP ) - A gentlemen's agreeIty
over
us."
ment allowed Indiana and Ohio
It Walker could have his way, he
schoolchildren to sit side by side at
would
like to see the school put
the College Corn:!!' school nearly a
uncier
the
Jurisdiction of one state.
century ago.
"Legally,
that's possible, but polBut the agreement has grown
itically
I
doubl
that would !Iappen,"
somewhat ungentlemanly In recent
he
sald.
"Very
frankly, we cannqt
years. So school officials have
.
continue
with
this
kind of cost and
asked a U.S. District Court Judge In
cont'l'nue
oper~tlng."
Dayton, Ohio, to help them with
th~ir dlt!lcult task of trying to operLegal costs and findings against
ate a school under two seL~ of often the school corporation have
contradictory state laws. ·
amounted to about $60,1XXJ In the
A two-story red brick school- la~t two years, he said.
house wa' erected In 1925, and arPhlllp Karl, principal of the Col·
chitects designed the gymna~lum lege Corner school, says, "From
so the stateline runs along the b~­ the parent~' point of view, this Is an
ketball court's center-court line.
Ideal situation. There's no rivalry
The Idea was to show that the resi- between the two sides of town."
dents of the Indiana community,
l)ut Walker says he doesn't think
West•College Corner, and the Ohio the parents tully realize the legal
comr:nunity, College Corner, had problems of running the school
equal' Interests and clout In school under two sets of state laws.
matters.
For examp le, Indiana law
A federal court order in 1964legl- doesn't require students to make up
limized operation of the kinder- days lost during the winter. But
garten through eighth grade school Ohio law allows for only five "ca·
serving this community of about !amity" days. Since College Corner
500 straddling the Indiana-Ohio students missed six days of cJaqs
state line 15 miles sOuth of Rich- this winter, the870hiostudentshad
mond, Ind.
to go an extra day of cl~s whlle the
The school formerly Included 2"i5 Hoosier students got to stay at
high school students, but ninth home.
through 12t.h grade students in Col·
"We had a very difficult time exlege Corner now go to the high plaining it to the parent~. " Walker
school In Uberty, Ind.
said.
Calvin Grissom of Liberty, one of
Since three-fourths of the student
the 12 school board members, says body comes from Indiana, t.eachers
the court order declared that a Joint receive three-fourths of their salary
school for Indiana and Ohio child- from Indiana and one-fourth from
ren would openite _under a combi- Ohio. But other problems aren't
nation of- Indiana and Ohio laws. dispensed with a~ neatly.
The students are not separated In
Under Ohio law, a school corpothe school by state residency.
ration doesn't have to give a reason
Board members were Instructed for deciding not to rehire a nonto decide which states' laws were tenured teacher for the next school
the strictest on a certain Issue and year, Walker '!llys. Indiana law,
follow those.
though, requires a "meaningful disBut strictest fo r whom?
cussion" between the two parties.
Teachers or students or admlnls·
Walker clalr;ns school officials
tra tors? Grissom said the judge
had one of these meaningful discus·

•
•
Athen,s News' clianges -.i mage, gains
.prestige

slons with a teacher, but the Il¥11ana Education Employment
Relatio~s Board disagree;.
The school corporation Is seekiDg
a perinanent InJunction against the
board.
The Indiana State Teachers As5(/Clatlon tued a complaint on behalf of the teacher whose oontract
w~ not renewed after the ~lll
school year. The Employment Relations Board then ruled ttie school
corporation must give her back
pay, said school board member
Calvin Grissom. The board also
wants teachers pald for soow days
that were made up In 1910-81.. ·
So many lawyers are now In~
volved In the school's legal problems that Grissom says he cannot
remember all of their names.
"At l~t count, there were 10 law
firms Involved," says the Hocisll!i
farmer and aerial crop duslet-. "It
seems Uke It takes six months to get .
everybody to understalld how we
function."
Grissom says the legal hassleli
are costing taxpayers more to educate chlldren at College Corner
than It wouidcostatother schools In
Union County, Ind.
"It I lived In College Corner I
would fight to keep the local school,
but economically there Is' no advantage to keeplllg the school open,'' he
says.
Inez Umlng, a 1929 graduate of
the College Corner school that then
l{lcluded a senior high school, says
she ·would hate to see the College
Corner school closed.
The school handed outl,4'i6dlpl&lt;&gt;
mas from the first graduation In
189'! to the la~t senior class In 1972
and means a lot to local residents,
says Mrs. Liming, who Is active In
alumni affalrs.
(
The Union County, Ind., resident
'!llYS all of her children and some of
her 1!1'andchlldren were graduated
from the schooL
"''d hate to see Ute' old alma
mater go. It would be Uke part of us
dying," she said.

ATilENS, Ohio (AP) - The
"Dope Wizard,", the "Skinny·
Dippers Guide" and "Slum Landlord of the Month" have
disappeared from the pages of the
Athens News.
Founded In :tm by latter-day
campus radical, the underground
newspaper Is trying to go legit!·
mate. Publisher Bruce Mitchell, 28,
now wears a necktie to work.
The News was one among
hundreds of unde{ground newspapers that sprang up across the country between the mld-1960s and the
1970s. Many died after only a few
l"ues, A few have survived.
One national authority on the un derground press, Alexander Cockburn of New York's Village -Voice.
said about 15 to 20 underground
papers have continued to publish
and many have tried to broaden
their focus.

a

They spent a week on the Salyut-7
space station, conducting joint
medical, biological and astrophysical experiments.
On the Columbia, recordings of
college fraternity songs provided
the wakeup music today, but the
a•tronauts did not recognize them.
They were In good humor and enJoyed some light-hearted exchanges with capsule
communicator Brewster Shaw.
The recordings were provided bY
the Delta Tau Delta and Delta Chi
fraternities at Auburn University,
from which both astronauts
graduated.
"Those recordings come from a
long way back; we hope you recognize them," said Shaw.
"I'm trying to find an answer to
that," Mattingly replled.
Shaw said several pages of flight
plan messages had been radioed
overn~t to the spacecraft's

CBS, ABC plan
Columbia coverage
Here are the three '"l'Jor television networks' plans for Sunday's
landing of lbe spaee shuttle Columbia. AU times are.EIYI':
CBS will start Uve ooverage
around noon.
ABC wW broadca&lt;~t the JaOdlng
from ·noon 10 12: 15 p.m., President Reagan and the astronauts
12:45 p.m. to 1 p.m., and Reagan's
speech from 1:45 p.m. to 2:05p.m.

from

NBC spokesman Curtis Block
said Friday night that network had
no plans for Uve coverage. ,

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

56 Pets for Sa le

&amp; Auction
9· Wanted to Buy

57·Musc ia l instruments
5R·Fruits&amp; Vegetabl es
59· For Sa le or Tracte

Issues of the News for 25 cen 1s on
street comers of the small southeastern Ohio city, home of Ohio
University. There were few takers,
and he eventually began giving the
paper away . It remains free.
Now, tb\' Siatllsworklngtowlden
the News' share or attention In a
three-paper town.
News reporter Katie Foley won
an award as a friend of the arts for
her continued coverage of Dairybarn events, a cultural center. And
the News claims to have uncovered
theft In office allegations against a
township truMee.
The publl~her of the dally and
Sunday Athens Messenger, G.
Kenner Bush, said the News Ls
geared primarily toward the campus population of about 14,500.
"If you look at the advertlslng In
it , It 's pr!martly student-oriented.
When the university closes up, they
go down to once a week." Bush
said .
The Post, the Ohio University
ca mpus dally, has los t advertising
revenue to the News, business man-ager Klrstlll Sheets said. A switch
in national advertising account
agents cost The Post about 20 percent of those revenues to the News,
she said.
Advert !Sillj fortunes for the
News are looking up, said business
manager Dan Eickholt, 27, a part owner of the News along with Mit chell and Mls.' Sands.

61 Farm Equiprlient
63 L ives toc k- .
64 Hay&amp;; Grain
65·Seed&amp; Fertilizer

that on Monday, July 5th,
1982. at 10 :00 a .m. a public

Ohio, to sell for cash the

(7)2,

3

6,_7, 8, 9, ll1tc

following col lateral :

1978 Ford, 2 Dr., Mfr.'s
serial no . 8E9JT226246,
Fairmont. Mtr . No .
3T226246
,
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company ,
Pomeroy , Oh io, reserves
the right to bid at this sale,
and to withdraw the above
vehicle pr ior to sale. Fur·

!her. The Farmers Bank

and Saving ~ Company
reserves the r.ght to reject

any or all bids submitted .

Further, vehicles are
sold in the condition the y
are in with no expressed or
implied warranties given .
(7)

1, 2, 4 3tc

Publi~~oti~e ___

the Syracuse home Utilities
Company,
Inc.,
the
operations of its purchaed

Adjustment

Clause

.and related matters. This
hear:ing i"s scheduJed . to

begin al t0 :\)0 a.m: on 1
Thursday , August S, 1982.
at tl],e Offices of the Com·
miss'\on, 375 South High
St.. Columbus, Ohio 43215._.
All

interested

persons

will be given an ' t&gt;p·
portunity to be heard. Fur·
ther information may be

I

-

NOTICE OF
f'UBLIC HEARING
The City Commission
will hold a public hearing

on Tuesday . July 6. 1982. a!

and

sewing

machine repair, parts, and
Pick up and
supplies
delivery, Davi s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mite up

Georges Creek Rd.
446·0294 ..

Call

8: 00 p .m . in Commission

Chambers,

518

Second

Avenue , for rPview of th e
1983 estimated tax budget.
Budqets are now on f i le in
the auditor 's office . r"he
1983 esti mated tax budget
does include anticipated
receipts and expenditures
of federal r evenue sharing
funds .
June28,July4

Control

hunger and lose

weight with New Shape
D iet

Plan

and

Hydrex

Water Pills. Fruth Phar·
macy .

BALLOONS FOR ALL ocCASIONS Say Happy Bir ·
thday. I Love You, It' s a
Boy or Girl, Get Well ··
Anything you wish in a dif ·
ferent way . Deliver to
hosPital, homes for almost
any occasion . Balloons &amp;

Co. Call446·4313.
Card of Thanks
To my many . relatives 'Shooting Match every Sat.
and friends. Thanks lor the 7PM. Sun. 1:00 PM at
prayers, cards, telephone Robert Burns home on
calls and those that came Harrisburg · Ada msv i lie
to visit me . I af)preclated Rd. Call614·245·5449.
them very much. Howar.d
K. Parker.
Golf Lessons . John
Teaford. Chester, Ohio.
. In Memoriam
2~-~~===:.....­
1n Memory of my

beloved Mother, Evelyn
Whaley, who passed away
seven years ago July 3,

1975. Sadly missed by Jo
Ann, Leonard, and Bill
Scarbrough.

Professional

Electrolysis

Center. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referats, by ap·
pointment only . 304·675·
6234.
Giveaway
ANY PERSOt~ who' has
anything to give away and
d.oes not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In thiS
column. There will be no
charge 10 the advertiser.

\

IN MEMORY OF •
:
'
AUDREY L·, (Camp'HtANK YOU
belli DROSOS
·T he ' family
ol
She
left home one
WIL lAM
(Bitt)
bright summer day tor
BVRNI;TTE would tike
a· vacation
where·
to th,ank fr-iends,
death's
call
came
her
relatives, neighbors lor '
way July 3, 1918. ·
tljeir foOd, flower• and
acts of sympethy .. A
Her life was filled with
special tlllnks 1o·
love for an, and our
t.c.u., 2 East, 5th ·
Hves can never be the
Floor, Ill ·in Holler
same without her. She
~edlcot Center, Your
wu the sunshine ot our
tlloughtfulnass
and
f1111lty . We will always
::-;:yen will never be
gotten. Also special · cheriah the sweet
rnemonesolher.
... nils tO ·'REv. RObert .
tatvln, R~v. J11mes
We mlsh ond love you
Keller, ·Mn. Janet Dunso much, Audrey. '
c,s, organist, •nd
Tom&amp; Laura
pellbeann.
and l'amily

,.

•

Klttens to, good home . ca 11
446·41 73. '. '
.

1

~_!_v~a_w~y

Lost and_Found

6

Blac.k &amp; brown m a le
Shepard, approx . 5 mos.

Old 614·742 ·2981.

LOST :

Part

7

Beegle

&amp;
Shepard. Approximate l y 15
vear.s old . Answers to Poo.
Lost in Rutland. 614·742·

Mulberry· Trees 304·675·
5349.

2942 . Reward $100.

Part Doberman puppy 304·

FOUND : Male German
Shepard. Has collar , about

675·2041.

3 months old .

BEAGLE PUPS Call 446·
9525.
2 tiger grey kittens, titter

trained. Prefer they go
together . Call446 ·3897.

LOST : Chester -Tuppers
Plains water dept. ar ea .

St. Bernard Dog . 614-985·
3563 .
B•g

Red

temale

dog .

possible coonhound . Phone

PUPPIES, Australian Blve 304·675·2948 .
· Heet er mother. Call 675·
2178.
Yard Sale
Ya rd Sa le 498 Oak Dr.,
Spring Valley. 9:00AM to?
KITTEN, 8weeksold, litter Sat. JulyJ.
trained. Coll446·0467 .
YARD SALE . Tuesday .
ONE cat and A kittens. Call July 6 only . Bittersweet
Dr. Firs! right off of
446·2642
Bulaville Rd ., 9 to4 .
KITTENS to a good home.
Call675·7677 .

6
Lost and Found
FOUND Male white dog
with brown co llar. Rt . 7,
near Raccoon Bridg.e. Call

614·256·1525.

7

Jst Time Yard Sa le July 7,

9. 133 Garfield Ave .,
Ga llipol is. 9 to 5. Jig saw,
tables. miscelleanous.

Gallia County
Are.1 Code 614

Mason Co ., wv
Area Code304

Mc•gs County
Area Code 614

675- Pt. Pleasant

992- Middleport

446- Gallipolis367 - Cheshire
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256- Guyan Dist.
643 - Arabia Dis f.
379 - Walnut

458- Leon

Pomeroy
985- C.hester

576-A ppte Crove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Letart

343- l"orlland
247-Letart Fall s
949- Racinc

937-Buflalo

742-Rulland
667- Coolville
0 nf' &lt;l•lY !OSPr li on

un 10 l'; Word !-.
Up to I) wo rds

Thr cf" ' '·W ,n&lt;:.•·n .on

Up to 15 words .. .Six day

insertion ..

53 0\J
.. S4 00
..... $7 DO

Puppies 10 wks. old ,
HealthY &amp;. wormed. Call
61&lt; -~56 - tS()S.

PUBLIC AUCTION
!REAL ESTATE ONLY)

JULY 17, 1982-11:30 A.M.
You·r chance

t~

buy " very nice ranch style home

featuring two large bedrooms

!15~15

each). 18x20

living room, kitchen with very nice cabinets, Corn·
ing t~ range, eye level oven, disposal, dishwasher

and bar separating dining area. utilitY area, fore·
ed air natur.al gas heat with central air. This love·
ty home Is being offered with a reserve bid.
However, the reserve Is much less than replace·
ment cost. Terms: Sl,OOO cash or certified check

day of sale · with balance due at closing not later.
than August 17, 1982. Ta~es to be pr.o·rated to day .
of closing. Sold with conflrrl)ation of sellers.
Make your financial arrangements and come to
. the sate. Property can be inspected by calling ,
"Bud" McGhee' Real Estate and Auction Co. at
-4-46·0552: Property will also be open one hour prior
,
to the sate . To be sold on premises.

•OWNERS: Jeffery Zerkte-Jyl Beaver

· S1le condllded IIY:

· ATTENTtdN HOMEb\AkERS .
MERRt ·M.AC n•ecl• several

"Bud" McGhee Rftal Estate and AuctiOn Co~

Supc:i"vlsen 11'1 thl&amp; n••· P.arty ·

pt.n upe_rience necnwr'fl . Car
_,nCI pttone nteclecl. Glfb, toys,
home dtcor. No InVestment,
d,livf!r,y, cbllectint . Al&amp;o hirlnt
Oemo.M traton . Call Ire•
1·1ot-SS:HtJ7 .

'

Yard Sale

YARD SALE . July l thru 5.
Glassware , ant i Qu e s ,
western books, furn iture,
1973 Dodge Van and lots
more. One and a half miles
above Hender son WV on

Rt.35 10amtill?.
Yard Sa le Clothes. baby
items &amp; misc . 127 Garfield,
Ave. lues lhru Friday . 10

tillS.

7

Yard Sale

Yard Sale

7

5 family : Mon .· Tues. July Yard Sale . July 3 4·5.
5,6. HousehOld, ch ildrens, Walter Brown residence, 1
men &amp; ween's complete mile south of Reedsv i lle on
wardrobe . 9·5. Mulberry Rt . 124. End fables, coflec
Heights, Pomeroy .

810 S. Second. Middleport .
July 2 thru 10 . Bedd ing,
linens. dishes, furniture ,
appliances, Silverstone,
toy s, tool~. jewelry , pots,
pans, kn ives. misc. Come
See!

table , books,
drapes ,
c lothing, all siz es, ya rd
goods, toys and much
more. "'

2 family, 632 Grant st ..
Middleport.
Clothing ,
jewelry, pots &amp; pans, misc .

July 6 &amp;. 7. 9·5.

'

•REGISTERED
NURSES
THE HUNTINGTON
HOSPITAL, INC.
.IS NOW INTERVIEWING RN's FOR

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

4

I

•.

Announcements

SWEEPER

Public Notice

.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·

1Sonny J

Love Dad. Mom .

Secretary

4.

ot

Folmer birthday, July 4 .
He would have been 47 .

By · David M. Polk .

sa le wil l be held. at 105

Union Avenue, Pomeroy,

1n memory

attained by co ntacting th e
Com mission .
The Public Utilities
Commission of Oh io

following telephone exchanges.

( Average 4 w c.rd s per line)

4 ___

PUBLIC NOTICE

Cfhssified pages cover the

81 Home I mprovemcnts
81 Plumbinq &amp; Heat 1ng
83 Exc avating
84 E lec r tc al &amp; Refn qe r fl t• on
85 Gener a l Haul• ng
86·M . H R e p e~i r
at, upnol ster y

62 Want ed to buy

PUblic Notice

Notiq• is hereby given

'

&amp; bl estHER

ttl ·Houses for Rent
42 ·Mobile Homes tOr Rent
43 ·Farms for Rent
44 Apartment for Ren t
45·Furn ished Room s
46·Space for rent
47 ·Wanted to Rent
48·EQuipment for Rent
49·For Lease

t2·Situat ion Wanted
13 Insurance
14· Business Traini ng
15·Schoots Instruction
16 Radio, TV &amp; C~ Repair
17 ·M IScettan eous
18 ·Wanted To do

~ .

·Set"IEes

Farm supplies

Reetals
ll Help Wanted

~

~ · ··· · ····

71 Autos for Sa le
n Truck s tor Sa le
73 V a ns &amp; 4WO
74 Motorc yc les
75 Boa ts &amp; Motors
76 Auto Part s &amp; ACCC'SSOr •eS
77 A uto Repair
78 Camping EQuipmen1

52 ·CB , TV &amp; Radio Equipment
SJ ·Anliques 54· Misc . Merchandise
55· Build i ng Supplies

Jl ·Hom es lor Sal e
32·Mobi_le Hom es for Sal e
33 Farms for Sate
34· Business Bui ldi nqs
35 Lots &amp; Acre age
J6· Real Estate wanted

8 Public Sate

Gas

.

51 Hou sehold Goods

5 Happy Ads

. 6 Lost and Found
7·YardSa Je (pc:~id lni'ldvanct- l

mission of Ohio has set for

W~TIIEJR WAYTOFOOTIW.LSEASON
- Fwi' worten seal their way.IIP, 1M min at Oblo

...._ . '

21 Business Qpportun 1 1 ~
'}') Money to Loan
23· Profession ill Scr v •ces

1·Card of Thank s (prt ld in c'ldv i'l nce )
2 CMd ol Tt1ank s (Pa id m rtdvi'ln ce i
3 Announcem ents
4·Gi veaway

teleprinter.
"Oh, didn't we tell you the teleprinter broke last night?" asked
Mattingly.
" Well, enJoy your day then,"
Shaw retorted.
"No, I'm kidding; we got 'em,"
Columbia's commander confessed.
Hartsfield, noting that -the messages fUied about 10 feet of paper,
joked that the flight might have to
be "terminated early because we
ran out of teleprinter paper."
On Friday, a second heater falled
In the power generation system,
but official~ said there was no cause
for alarm because there are surplus metl)ods of making the system
work.
Before retiring for the night, Mattingly put In a plea with l'disslon
Control for some extra time today
for homecoming preparations.
He asked officials to keep thj!
flight plan bare bones and "I'Tllnlll1lze anything that doesn't have to be
done so we can try to get our spacecraft tidied up and start heavlly
thinking aboU\ wbatweare golngto
do on entry day."
AU loose articles aboard the
spacecraft have to be lock€~~ away
or tied down for the plunge trom
orbit and return to Earth's gravity,
Columbia b to land at Edwams
Air Foree Base to an Ind~
Day welcome from President ~a­
gan. Reagan will deliver a space
policy speech, but Its content Is
likely to disappoint o!flclnls of the
AJr Force and the National Aeronautics and Space Admll\lstratlon.
A White · House official, who
asked not to be Identified, said Reagan would s\OP short of endorsing a
permanent space station or a fifth
space shuttle.

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

r laanelal

- " " ' ' ' ' ' u ... -oooo ... oor

public hearing Case No. 82·
769·GA·GCR to review the
gas cost recovery rates of

seven-

first 18 months of publication gradually have been replaced bY lnves·
tlgative reporting, arts coverage
and local news.
"We wanted the paper to survive," says Miss Sands. "Every
day back then, the paper could fold
In an hour. We were going to make
. the paper survive . Getting It more
legitimate was one way to do it."
Mitchell says modification of the
paper's name from the Athens "A "
News (the "A" was for alternative)
to the Athens News was part otthe
evolutionary procc.s.
"Certainly the paper 's changed .
But It's been a gradual thing. It
never got fo a point where we said,
'Let's cut all this •tuff." ' Mitche ll
said.
Cockburn, the VIUage Voice's
media critic, noted that most.of the
nation's underground new&lt;Jpapers
emerged with opposition to the
VIetnam War. As the war wound
down, many of the papers went out
of business.
"Many of these kinds of papers
started up In the 1970s with all the
energy slut! and now some week·
lies are coming out because of the
(nuclear weapons) freeze . Maybe
one of them wUI catch on, " Cockbum said.
"Some of the papers have gone
more into covering city coundl and
things Ute mainline papers don't
do," he added.
Mitchell hawked the f~t few

446-2342
PHONE 992-2156
675-1333

·C ontrollers ponder lottery contract
By ROBERT E. MILLER
June 22. It denied the Lottery Com- '' votes.
Associated Press Writer
' Board President George Lord,
mission's requesttorenew, without
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The asking for rompetltive bids, its
who voted to grant the commlsstate Controlling Board may be present contract with General In·
slon's request, could not be reached
asked next week to reconsider Its struments Corp, of Hunt Yalley,
Friday. He sets the agenda.
Ue-vote refusal &gt;to allow the ,L-ottery · Md.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, RCommission to reneW, without
Another company wants to bid on
Clncinnat~ and Rep. Cliff Skeen, D·
competitive bids, Its present com- what for GIC would be a two-year,
Akron, also voted to grant the
puter service contract.
$24 million contract. Lobbying on
comrrilsslon's request to renew.
No formal request has surfaced, behalf of both firms has been
but word late Friday of a tempor- heavy, with the board scheduled to
Sens. Paul E. Glllmor, R-Port
ary change In board membership meet on Tuesday.
·Clinton, and Wllllam F. Bowen, Draised the jlosslblllty In some
Rlffe said no one ~ approached
Cincinnati, voted to require comquarters.
him about the Issue In any way.
petltive bids, along with ReP.House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
,
( Robert E. Nel2ley, R-Laura.
'
Jr., D-New Boston, said he will
Shoemaker was absent when the
Lottery DIJ:ector Edwin C. Tayname a July replacement for Rep.
earller vote was taken, but he Is lor sought continuation with GIC In
Myrl H . Shoemaker, D well known for hl~ opposition to all part because its 1,~ lOttery termiBoumevllle.
facets of the lottery and It was gen-. nals would otherw)se have to be reThe speaker said hew~ doing so
erally agreed that his . presence placed. He said $Nl million In
at the request of Shoemaker, the
would not have changed the lottery revenuE!liaouki be lost by the
Democratic candidate for lieu ten·
outcome.
, state In the phasmg out of GIC's
ant governor. Riffe said Sho;
Rlffe said he has not yet made a contract due to lost sales and the
emaker wants time ort before the
final decls.,n as to whc:n he will con:verakJn to a new !!)(stem:
fall election campaign.
appoint to serve In Shoemaker's'
The otber company Control
Slloemaker.'s seat on the
s~~-- Th.~t person, however, appar: Dlj-ta Corp.,ot New York' City, dismember Controlling Board will be en"'¥ will ~ast the dECiding vote If putes the PI'million llg\Jre and concritical If the panel should ~n­
the matter Is reopened and the tends It InclUdes expenseS that
slder the 3-3 tie vote on the contract· other m~mhers do not change their would be tacurred anyway,

"When we sued the city, by God,
we got respectability right away
Before that, we might have had
trouble being taken seriously,"
Ml~ Sands said.
A probe of sub-standard housing
In the city led to the lawsuit, which
sought. release ot housing Inspection record,. Miss Sands recently
won a First Amendment award
from the Playboy Foundation for
the story.
"I was Just naive enough: I didn't
really follow any ·r ules," she said.
" I was scared. I knew I was stepping on a lot of people's toes. I didn't
know how many."

Tom Esiocker, a lawyer generfl.llY regarded as Athen•' "people's
attorney," says he risked other le-gal business to represent the News.
The newspaper weathered what
'Miss Sands said was an adverti•lng
boycott during the monthS before It
"We couldn't sell ads with the won the case.
The News since has found the i&lt;&gt;Dope Wizard In our paper," •ays
editor Melody Sands, an Ohio Uni- gal system works ooth ways. It Is
versity journalism graduate who defendant In a suit flied by former
Athens County Sheriff Paul Brown,
put her life sa,vtngs of $1,!500 Into the
who claims the News libeled hlm In
News three years ago. "So we went
stories published during his r&lt;&gt;to stories that bummed out the
electlon campaign.
•
town. We did a btg ·one on ~bllng
That
case
Is
pending
in Athens
that embarrassed a lot of people."
Common
Pleas
Court.
County
But it was the newspaper's 1!ro
The housing case represented a
lawsuit against the city that won
In the evolution of the
milestone
resPfiCt and a niche In theestabll~h- ~
coverage of drugs, sex
News.
The
ment for the twice-weekly
and rock-n-roll that dominated the
publication.

GETI'ING RESPECTABLE - Bruce Mitchell, the 28-year-old
publisher of the Athens (Ohio) News, says be wean a Ue to work these
day snow that the former underground paper has "gone legitimate". (AP
Laserpholo I

Columbia prepares for .landing
By HOWARD BENEDICI'
AP Aerospace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL , Fla. (API
- Columbia's flight control systems were thoroughly checked today and given a "clean bill of
health" to guide the space shuttle
and Its two astronauts back to
Earth and a presidential reception
on Sqnday.
Astronauts Ken Mattingly and
Henry Hartsfield tested flaps,
rudders, hydraulics and ot her
Items critical for re-entry, and
flight director Harold Drau·ghon reported: "They detected absolutely
no failures."
Draughon said excellent. weather
Is predicted for the landing at Ed·
wards Air Force Base, Calif.. at
12:10 a.m. EDT, with Columbia set
to attempt'its first touchdown OnJ l
concrete runway.
The night director said that with
one day to go on shuttle Flight 4,
"it's been the cleanest flight we've
had to date. The vehicle Is really
clean."
The astronauts also were checkIng the ship's safety, engine and
navigation systems to make sure
they'ree ready to bring them home.
And they began packing up a
week' s worth of "mess," putting
Columbia is ·ship-shape order ..
Meanwhile, two Soviet co.•mona.uts who have been aboard their
Salyut-'i space station since May 14
continue to orbit the Earth.
On Friday, the first Western European to fly In space, Jean-Loup
Chretien, a 43-year-old French test
pilot, returned to Earth. Two other
cosmonauts, who along with Chretien were launched atop a Soviet
rocket June 2, also returned
Friday.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-3

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

Border school confused· on laws

QUEEN OF mE RIVERS
The Mlsol.ssippi
Queen leads the Delta Queen as the nation's only overnight passenger steamboats pull Into their home ~rt of

'

428 Second AVe., Gilllpotls, Ohio 45431
Phone (614)446-GSS2
.
I,
,
AuctiOIIW: Myron L. "Buct!:"11-1cGhee
Licensed . in O~io a.nd West llirglnla
Property toCited on Roush une ]ust off State
Route-7. Blut home on' the left. ~

.S PECIAL
WEEKEN-D
SCHEDULING WORK 2 12-HR.
WEEKEND SHIFTS, RECEIVE PAY FOR
40 HRS.

Contact: Judith Ashe
Director·of Personnel
8 a.m. to 4:30 p:.m~
Mol\day:· thru Friday
'

(304) _ 526-9~31.
.,1

•

•

-

~

... .
~

�I

Oheo- Potnt Pleasant, W

Po me
7

31

Yolrd S.lle

Mon July 5 lues July 6
453 Grant St Mtddl eport
95
Woodr ow Fortn ey Bashan
Keno Rd Jul y 5 6 7 9 8
B g Yar d Sal e July 1st thru
5th 10 ! til I 1 up Rf 35
Hender son Clothes fur
n1ture
g lass war e
an
t1qu es avon bottl es 1973
DOdge v an

F I RST 1 me yard sale 1907
Ann 1ston
urn nght at
V It age P1zza Monday and
Tuesday 9 6 Toys mfants
thru adul ts clothtng (boys
Donmoor) stroller h gh
cha r etc
YARD sale
al
week
Ferry
by
Gal l po l iS
Powell s Barber Shop
8

Publ c Sa le
&amp; Auction

R ck
Pearson
Ex
penenced AUCTIONEER
Estates anttQues farm
household L censed Oh o
WV Buymg ant ques 304
773 5785 773 9185
Auct1on every Fn n1ght at
the Hctrtford Commun ty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Cons gments of new and
used merchandiSe always
welcome
R1 c hard
Reynolds Au cfiOneer 175
3069
EMMA Bell Au ct1 on Ser
v ce Sa le each Tuesday 7
p m Mt Alto accepftng
consignments Tuesday 10
a m
until sa l e t1m e
Buymg and selling es ta tes
Free estate appra tsa l 304
428 8177

9

Buy ng Gold
S l v er
Ptat1num old co~ns scrap
nngs &amp; silverwa r e Dally
quotes ava l ab le
A lso
co ~n s &amp; com supplies for
sa le Spnn g Val ley Trad ng
Co Spr ng Valley P laza
446 8025 or 446 8026

-------We pay cash for late mode l
clean used car s
Frenchtown Car Co
B II Gene Johnson
446 0069

BEDS IRON BRASS old
furn1ture
go l d
s l ver
dol lars wood ce boxes
stone Jars an t iques etc
Complete
households
Wr te M D M ller Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760
Go ld
s11 ver
sterl1ng
1ewelry r ngs old co1ns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop Mtddleport 992
3476
OLD FURNITURE beds
1ron brass or wood K1t
chen cubbards of all types
Tables round or squar e
Wood ce boxes Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
com pl ete household Go ld
silver old money pocket
watches ch a ns nngs and
etc I nd1an Art 1f acts of all
types Also buy ng baseba 1
cards Osby M art1 n 992
6370
Wanted Stand ng T mber
Ca ll 614 991 5050 or 614 992
5833

t

s su1 tab le for chur ch
s good cond t on Phone
4 675 2885 or 675 6878

11

Help Wanted

DISP LAY M ERC HANOI S
lNG Expand ng must be
able to sta r! mmed1a tely
Beca use of ou r un que ex
pan s on program we are
h r ng n th e Ga lllpol s
Pomeroy area
1 Start! ng salary of Sl 000
month
ba S;e d on per
form ance for those who
qual f y
2
We
offer
pa d
hosp11a 11zat on and prof t
sha nng
3 No layoffs no strtk es
4 Management pos t ons
ava il abl e
Htgh school educat on
and car requ1 red
for conf dental nterv1ew
cal l July 2 or 5 between 10
and 4 446 2096

s

------

PositiOn Ava1 ab le
n
depe ntdent L1v1n g Worker
Htgh school d ploma In
ter ested and knowledge
about persons w th mental
refa rdat1on/ developmental
dtsabtlittes Must have own
tr8.nsportat1on
F 1Ve ( 5)
references requ r ed Con
tact
Loren D Phelps
Supertntendent (61 4') 367
0102. Gallia county Board
of MR / DD P 0 Box 14
CheShtre Oh 45620
Fa shton
Consultants
needed 1n your area tog ve
skm analys s tests and
teach cosmetiC appt ca tton
Tratrtlng provtded Wr te
Jewel Development En
terprlses P 0 Box 1109
Portsmouth 0 45662

I
•

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv 1ces for f re nsurance
coverage m Ga ll/a County
for almost a century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
ava1 l able to meet '"
d1v 1dua1 needs
Contact
Nea l Insuranc e Agency
agent Phone 446 1694

Po51flon Avatlable
In
structor Bachelors degree
Ablt! to meet Ohto Depart
ment of Educalton MSPR
certlflcalton requirements
or be wiltong to obtoln Con
tact
Lort!n D
PhelPS
Superintend""! (6 U) 367
0102 Gallla county Board
Of MR/DD P 0 Box 14
Cheshire Oh 45620

by Larry Wrlghl

----4_! __ For Leas! _ _

51

House~kt Goo_!fs

54

MISe Merc~ ndlce

S4

For Lease
The Stiver
Dollar Club Henderson
Phone 304675 1080

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Moving awoy Sale Tra~lor
Sofa chair 1 rocker ot bush hog b l ~de molding
toman 3 tables (extra John Deere rld1rtg mowf!l" .S
MerebanEIIse
heavv by Frontier) $685
112 HP fuel oil tank, pgp
Sofa chair and ioveseat
12 X 60 Mobile Home E x
machine one double Wiele
$275 Sofas and chairs refrigerator one antique
celient Corld t on Jer cho
pnced from S285 to $795 dining room suite Betwl!en
Road Phone 304 675 6)76 or
51
Household Goods
Tab les S38 and up to $109
675 1972
Porter
Cheshire oo .5S4.
4 chatrs &amp; sofa
Call Htde a beds $340
queen
anyttme before 3 a'!P after size $380 Recliners $175 Sale F rl sat &amp; sun Call
61 4 367 7869
FOR sale or tr ade 3
7 446 0884
to $295 Lamps from $18 to
bedroom hou se all elec
S65 5 pc dinettes from $79
frl c 2 h acr e ground rura l
G E REFR IGERATOR 3 to.S385 7 pc $189 and up Taking orders for antique
water 13J ft frontag e I h
solid oak reproduction tur
yr., Old 2 door gold $125
WOOd table w tth • chairs
m les oul Crab Creek Rd
mture Claw foot r011nc1
Like
new
Call
446
7037
af
$219
up
to
$495
Desk
$110
Call af ter 11 00 p m 304
table 48 $250 corner ~ up
ter 5pm
Hutches $300 and $375
675 3329
board $300 curved glass
maple or pme fm sh
Bassett ch na $275 wash stondwlftt
WHI RLPOOL apartm ent Bedroom suttes
32
Mob1le Homes
Cherry
$795
Bunk
b•d mirror &amp; bowl &amp; pttcner In
SIZe washer $90
GE
eluded S75
Plus more
for Sa le _ __
con'lp
lete
wtlh
mattresses
washer extra ntce SllO
wholesale to the pubnc:,
$250
and
up
to
$395
Cap
Maytag coppertone dryer
TRI ST AT E MOBILE
Call446 3759
$100
A ll guaranteed 30 latn s beds $275 comp lete
HOMES
U SED MOB IL E
$99
Mattresses
Baby
beds
day s
Call 256 1207
HOMES CAR S T RUCKS
or box springs, full or twin
Truck camper sleeps 6
anytim e
CHECK
GALLIPO L S
S58 ftrm $68 and $78
will sell cheap 70 Oliver
OUR PRICE S CA L L 446
Queen sets $195 4 dr
tractor 46 model extra
7571
USED CARPET Ntce like c hests $42 5 dr chests
gOOd shape 1 DOdge Van 74
new 12 X 18 plus hall rust $54 Bed frames S20 and model 1 king wOOd or CDaf
CLEAN USE D MOBILE
and brown and orange
$15 10 gun Gun cabinets burner warm morning woo
HOMES
KES SEL S
lhtck sculptured $125 Ca ll $350 d nette chatrs $20
burner Ca II 614 256 6569
MOB IL E
Q UALITY
446 3257
and $25 Gas or electric
HOME SALE S 4 M l
ranges
$325
B a by 3 older 10 II wall dtsplay
matresses
$25
&amp;
$35
bed cases with sliding glass and
3
solid
maple
tables
n1ce
WES
T GALLI
POLl S R T I.
I~;::=;:;::=:::;:::;;:::;:=~-=====::==:-:-"'
35
PHONE
446 3868
2 end frames $20, $25 &amp; SJO Used doors at top drawer and
qua l ty exc cond
41
Houses for Rent
42 - - Mobtle Homes
bookcase
and one coffee table If Furn1ture
cabinets at bottom Clarks
for Rent
ranges and TV s 3 m iles Jewelry Store 446 2691
1980 W ndsor l4x70 new Homes for Rent Lease or
new $475 All three $135
out Bulavtlle Rd Open 9am
Land contract 1n town or Two bedroom
co nd Delux e k tchen large
mob le ca ll446 3257
to 7pm Mon thru Frl 9am
1 v ng room &amp; bath 2 country
Call
Strou t home n1 ce yar s phone 304
ADDITIONAL DISCOIJN
IOSpm Sat
Rea lty 446 0008
675 3885
bedrm H dden ut I room
K INGWAY ltv ng room
T'
LIM I TED
T IM'E
379 23 10
446
0322
44
Aparlmenf
su1te
Brtght gold rust
--------ONLY' THE BIG NEW
for Rent
green stripe exc cond
1971 V nedale Call 446 7427 3 bdr house gOOd locallon
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY
2 bdr apt HUD excepted
$200 Call446 7885
before lOAM or after 7PM
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN
54
A One Real Estates Carol F urn1shed apartment 1
LUDE DECK FENCE
bdr
$195
utili
es
pd
Yeager Realtor Call 304
Sears Kenmore wnnger FILTER A ND WAR RAN
66 gal hot water heater
1970 12x60 Buddy mob le 675 5104 or 675 5386
ad ults
607 2nd Ave
ARE
NOW
washer $100
Maytag TY
nome Ca ll betweens and9
Ga i l lpolts Call 446 4416 af electrtc Call 446 2642
AVAILABLE FOR ONLY
automattc wash er $65 614
Call 446 1213
fer 7PM
House
120 3rd
Ave
$999
INSTALLATION
742 2352
Sears 30 etectnc range
Gal l pols 2 bdr gas heat
AND
FINANCING
1980 BAYV I EW DELUXE
dep req The W1 seman Unfrun1shed 2 bdrm aprt self ng c lean tng ov en
AVAILABLE
FIRST
wh1te
t1mer
two
years
old
8
000
BTU
wmdow
a
r
con
centra l atr f1replace gar
tn Crown Ctly Call 614 256
Agency 446 3643
COME FIRST SERVE
$250
Ca
l
l
446
8161
dtltoner
Phone
614
992
den tub underp lnntng Wtlh
6520
CALL 1 800 624 8511 Oll!o
5877
or wtlhout appliances Ca ll
1 800 642 3053 wv
Myrtl e
Beach
resort
446 6211 or 388 9916
loca ted sou th of Myrtle Furntsh 1 rooms and bath
For sa le Speed Queen
CALL Robert Harper
Brand new clean no pets adu lts only
dryer good cond1t1on Call d1str butor of Meadow Amana 19 000 BTU A/ C 22
Beach SC
12x65 Gregory 2 bedroom
Dep requtred Call 446
tuxur1ous condom1n un
773 5346
Statnless steel FTesh Products 304 675 volt hookup 1 yr old $400
Atr cond un t porch gas ocean front for rent by day 1519
drum avacado green
Ca ll446 8161
1293
hea t Lot a lso avai lable
or week 2 bdr 2 bath s
614992 6093
2 TWO BDR apartment n 1 GE auto S90 1 Whtrlpool
completely furnished
Ceram c Greenware sale 3
poo ls tennts cour ts &amp; 24 hr
Crown C tv $175 Call 256
auto SllO late mode l GE miles out Jencho Road
1971 Elcona 2 bedroom
secu nt y Cal l 6U 367 0480 6495
$120 All wa sher recon
SHIPMENT JUST
Po1nt P leasant
Some
tra ler 12x60 Furn shed or
or 446 3426 after 6PM
dtlloned and tn mtnt shape
t erns reduced 50 per cent
ARRIVED
unfurntshed 614 992 2909
446 8181
FURNISHED deluxe apar
Dealers welcome Phone
Furmshed 41 rooms and tment centra l atr and heat
HOMEUTE
304 675 2039
bath Ractne OhtO 614 949
Mobile Home for sale 1974
One or two adults only Cal BEMCO mattresses or box
~IDL &amp; STRING
2619
Hill cres t
2 bedroom
446 0338
sprmgs full or twm $58 6 Ram Gol f clubs 3 through
$4 500 614 992 3917
Ptece Naugahyde heavy 9 and p lchtng wedge ex
ST 20 ST 80
2 bedroom house N ce &amp; Sr apartment 2 baths
wood llv1ng room su te
ST 40 ST 100
c lean Some carpet Full furn adu lts only no pets $695 P illow arm sofa &amp; eel lent condition 304 675
USED MOBILE HOME
5856
ST bO ST 200
ba s ement
Depos t
576 27 11
wa t er patd $100 dep $200 chatr $375 Roll top desk
re f ere nces 614 992 3090
STOP TODAY
dark &amp; light $189 Bunk
rent Ca ll446 3587
beds
complete
1nclude Ftve 100 Ft tobac co beds
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
mattress $199 Complete Morgan Woodlawn Farm
MOde rn 3 bedroom house 5 Large 1 room &amp; bath ef
L censed &amp; •nsured Ca ll
water
bed shop wtlh 10 Pltny 304 675 1286
miles
back
New
Haven
304 576 2711
f c1ency apartment Mostly
E.alt Main St
References and depos t fvrn shed $100 a month bedroom sUi tes on d1spl ay
~
Pomeroy Oh1 o
starltng pr ce $299 up to Two electn c hosp1tal beds
requ red Phone 304 882 PIUS dep 614 992 5692
72 MOBILE home 14x70
$2500 B g daddy cock fa tl &amp; with mattresses SSO each
...,._ . 614-992-2181
2686
8x10 ex pando 3 bedrooms
end tabl es sso Wall A Way Phone 304 773 5873
Crown Haven S7300 on
3 room furn apt for rent
recltners $169 and up La
42
Mobile Homes
rented lot 304 675 5762
$250 a month
nclud ng Z Boy reel ners 1n stock
Reat E11ato - General
for Rent
Over 1 000 cer am1c molds
utll1f1es l nqutre at Me1gs USED FURNITURE 5 pc
&amp; 7 pc dtnell sets stud to k Ins and suppltes 614 742
Mob1le Home Eureka 1 1nn 10 Pomeroy
34
Bu st ness Butld ngS
couch &amp; cha1r bedroom 2925or614 742 2085
Bdr turn nverfront lot
Small Bar Busmess for sa le ref &amp; depostt Adults $100 2 bedroom turntshed apt
sutte Hollywood sty le bunk
n Pomeroy 614 991 9905
beds glass fron t book
mo 1 643 2644
Utll1t1 es mcluded No pets
New HB Sm ti h Com
cases Flatr Furn1ture &amp; mere al coal f1red bo ler &amp;
$205 plus depos t Mtd
Des1gn Gallipolis Ferry stoker
dleport 614 992 7177
Lots &amp; Acreage
sttll c r ated
Clean 12x60 2 bdr
WV Open 9 6 Phone 304 3 300 000 BTU s per hour
home
Furn
conven
ent
2 lots F rst lot ts 3 trailer
675 1371
Stoker handles 200 lbs coa l
a r
YOUR HOME
space tra ler park Second good neighborhood
per hour
f needed All
cond
sec
dep
r
eq
Call
af
lot s 200x200 Located tn
pumps
gauges
el
ec
tnca
l
MAPLE
double
bed
fer 5 446 8558
Mercerv lie 446 4684
bedroom su1te chest and ~ o«itnng equ tpm ent Call
614 245 9181
dresser exc cond $150
1
1 acr e on 160 S4 soo
Large glass p1cture w n
assu mable loan Call 614
APART M ENTS
mobile dow Call304 675 4338
1975 Case 450
dozer
388 8437
homes
houses
Pt
t ractor 1 800 hrs
very
Pleasant and Ga llipoliS
good cond $14 900 Call
SWA IN
Atr
cond
adults
only
no
614
446
822
1
or
614
245
9484
25 acres bottom land
446 453l
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
Bea utiful nverv ew
wooded area good locar on pets
PAWN SHOP 62 01 ve St
------- -1n
Kanauga
Depos1t
on 325 Sell cheap Call6 14
APARTMENT
tn
Pt
Gal11po l s 9x12 linoleum
requ red Call446 1602
388 8437
Pleasant 614 446 8221
rug $22 3 p ece l1v ng room
•
Real E11ate - Genarol
su 1tes couch love sea t
FURNISHED mobtl e home
chatr
$199
2
p1ece
1
1v
mg
TWO acre lots 150 It road
MAR SHALL Students One
'"c t v Central a r One or bl ock f r om Student Cen ter
room su tes from $140 up
frontag e
c ty
water
two adults only Call 446
love seats from S70 up
behtnd 84 Lumber ca l l 304
1 2 and 3 bedroom apart
0338
675 6873 675 36 18
rnents
available
Al l maple d1net sets from S99
to Sl99 wall huggers $100
ut1llt1es pa1d J 1m Tat
N E W LISTING - located 1n Syracuse Th1s homt
2 bedroom trader Real terson 304 776 8345 after rec l m ers
$80
maple
LARGE nver lot on Rt 2 at n ce adults on ly Brown s
has an extra large lot and 5 poss1ble bedrooms The
rockers
S49
bedroom
4
OOp
m
GlenwoOd Good well &amp; sep
Tratier Par k M ner sv tlle
dmmg room and k t chen are spac 1ous k tchen 1s
su 1tes $150 vanety of table
t c system cheap 304 576
fully equ 1pped 1n clud ng diShwasher Ask 11"\q
614 992 3324
l
am
ps
marble
top
stands
2866
Three room furn1 shed $30 and up twtn and full
$32 000
apartment adu lts no pets
box sprm gs &amp; mattress
2 bedroom tr a ler Bottle
122 acres farm modern gas cook ng &amp; heat ng $140 Pont Pleasan t Phone 304
OUI ET STREET clean ne ghborhood 2 bedroom
(new) $100 several ut lily
trailer equ pped k1tchen spac1ous hv1ng room now
house Mason County WV 6 per month plus depostl 614 675 2453
cabmets k tchen cab1net s
outbV1Id1ngs plenty water
rentsforS200 Ask ng$12 000
wood
&amp;
m
etal
baby
beds
949 2461
mtnera l r ghts
Tnbble
SMALL furntshed apar t
c hests of drawers $25 to
Road 304 458 1820 or 937
NEW LI ST I"'G - Close to Route 7 out of
m ent references 304 675
$60 3 way r ee l ners $100
THREE bedroom I ra ler 1365
1375
dleport J bedroom newer home on 2 acres ~~-•-"
gas &amp; e l ectn~ ranges
w1th 2 car garage k•tchen
tratler also Ask ng $35 000
refngerators wash stands
turntsned $250 a month
bunk beds comp lete w1th
Two acres black top road
and $200 de pos t! Call after 45
MU ST SE LL - L etart OH large I v ng room w1th
bunk es $170
severa l
corner Gr eer Road Phone 8 p m 304 576 2682
f replace F nam:mg ava table Ask1ng S10 500
dressers
hall
trees
beds
304 675 1198
Rooms w1th cookmg cab l e
brass hea d board beds S35
atr $40 a week 304 773
3 FLAT ACRES - In Ra c tne Ohto Owner Wtll help
b ookcases
smoke rs
5651
f nance Ask ng Sl6 500
Hoover spm dry washer
wnnger t ype washers hut
FurniShed Room
$115
3 BEdROOM BRICK HOM E - L v tng room ha(
ch coa I &amp; wood hea ters
utt ltltes pad 919 2nd ave
woodburn1ng ftreplace llh bath hardwood flooMi
televiSIOns fans new tools
Gall polls
S1ngle m ale of all k tnd s vanetv of
well constructed and nsu lated ASktng $35 000
sha r e bath Call446 4416 at
Silverst one cookware Ca ll
ter7PM
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
446 3159
Nancy Jaspers-Assoctate
PH
46
Space for Rent
GOOD
USED
AP
located at Por ter Ohto on SSI1 ')'atch for stgn s
PLIANCES
washers
COUNTRY MOBI LE Home dryers
refr ge r a.t or s
Park Route 33 North of ran,ges
Roof Eauta - General
Skaggs
Ap
L v ng room su 1te bedroom su1te r efrigerator
Pomeroy
Large
lots
Call
washer dryer sewmg mach ne end tab les
p tances Upper R ver Rd
992 7479
numerous c ha1rs 2 beds cots lamps d1shes baby
bestde Stone Crest Motel
bed Olsen rug approximatel y 12x 12 &amp; other rugs
446 7398
Sma ll
trailer spaces
ant 1que B ble 3 Me Guffy readers numerous other
books Bookcases gmt mtll clay flower pots clay
Mason 304 773 5651
t le 1970 Ford Fa1rlane Numerous household &amp;
Rul Eltoto - General
other 1tems
Chartes Stsson Admtnt strator
49
For Lease
ELIAS W SISSON ESTATE
HOBSTETIER REALTY
For lease 2 bdr cedar ran
Terms of Sale Cash or check w1 ., 10
GeoiJI S llo!Jsltofll It /
ch
b ea utiful
stone
Auctioneer Note Items are all 10 very good &amp; clean ..
Broler
f1rep lace
wrap around
condttton
PRICE REDUCEO - A spit entry three bedrOOIYT
dt!ck
lovely
6
acre
setting
PHON£
7412003
home wtlh
baths familY room full base,nent
TOMMY JOE STEWART-AUCTIONEER
near Green Sc~ool Call
garage on appx one acre land Reduced to $.45 900
Galltpolts Oh - 446 9760 - 446 1222
INVEST Mulberr y
Wise m an Agency 446 3643
Owner ftnanctng available
Avenue
4 ~edroom
home wtfh l'h baths
ASSUME THE LOAN - On fhts two bedroom home
gas \ furn ace A lso 4
wtlh
'h acre lot tn Rutland Wtfh S6 130 down 28'11
room
garage
apt
Buy
32 - -Mobile Homes
v~ar
term at 13% tnterest
payments at
both lor on ly $30 000
for S::
a;;le__ _
$337 00/month on a remammg balance of $26 870 62
ANTIQUITY N ce
for a total prtce of S33 000
s tart e r
home
2
bedrooms
bath s
LAND CONTRACT- Bea t the htgh nterest raTeS
basement new wtnng
Lowest
Take advantage of SPECIAL FINANCING AND
With 10% owoer fl nanclng on l hts neat three
fuel
011
furnace
1
car
Prices
LOW PRICES as builder dramaltcally reduces
bedroom one floor plan home m Pomeroy on large
garage and back yard
h1S mventory Payments on th1s contemporary
lot wtlh garage W lh $4 000 down and $286 78/ month
Ever
Sells
for
$11
500
00
home can be AS LOW AS $400 PER MONTH or
for ten year term tor a total pr ce of $25 700
FARM48
acres
w
th
On
'
pay off the mortgage tn lUSt 5 years and SAVE
minerals Approx
14
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLJ,.ARS
SYRACUSE Three bedroom hom e newlY.
tillable 25 pasture 7
remodeled on double lot F-Ully lnsutated 1\Ssume
wOOded
5
vr
old
home
' MANY METHODS OF FINANCING
loan wltn S5 293 down at lOV&gt;% tnlerest for 27 years
with 4 bedrooms 2
AVAILABLE
$213 00/month paymen1 for a total pr-tce of $25 000
baths
equipped
kttchen
' DEEP CASH DISCOUNTS
3 story barn and a 3
' BELOW MARKET INTEREST RATES
FARM - LONG BOTTOM - Apprx 71 acres
tractor equipment shed
From
wOOded acreage with newly remode led three
PRICE
REDUCED'
t
FARMING OR MINERALS - Take advantage of
bedroom home new vmyl stding msulated New
$9,995 00
Call tOdaY
both on lhts 150 acre farm '" Metgs Co 45 1o so
two car garage ASktng $55 000 or owner Wtll seH
RIVERFIIONT
acres of tillable ground with balance 1n pasture
house garage and small acreage sepa•ate
Owner
wttl
help
with
and wOOds Older 2 story 4 bedroom farm house
financing
Lovely
wtlh garage barn and outbutld ngs has all
,
REALTOR~
colonial 2 story double
mmerals o I gas Lease Wtll transfer to lucky
HenryE Cleland Jr Gill
992 6191
porches
overtook1ng
new buyer ownerts anxtous for sale
'
Oottu~ Turner
9925nver
4 bedrooms
With 2 locations
Jean Trussell
1
949 2660
dlntng room and Ulthtv
Rl 93 North
Office
'
992 2259
Look
at
!IHs
one
an&lt;\
Jackson, Ohio'
ma~e on offer
216 3752
or
Cheryl Lemtey, Assoc
Phone 1 593 5571
Corn•r
2ncl
&amp;
VIand
Phone742 3171
Btll Cholds- 992-5571
Pt Pleasant
va
Velma Ntcln,ky Assoc
675 4424
Phone 742 3092
'

15

Schools tnstr uchon

Karate the ulttmate tn self
defence all pr vate lessons
Men women a. children
Instruct ton thru black bell
A l so available Kara t e
un forms puchlng and
k1c;kl ng bags and protec
t1ve eQ u pment
Je rry
Lowe r y &amp; As soc at es
Kara t e Stud 1o
143
Bur l ngton Rd
Jackson
Dh Ca ll 614 286 3074

18

wanted to Do

Lawn Mow ng no yard to
b1g or small Rei able and
dependable Fo1 est mate
call 446 3159 after aPM 256
1967
Trash col lectton &amp; haul ng
Ca l l446 4480
In s de &amp; ou ts de pant ng
f r ee es t mates Call 440
9499
Inter or &amp; ex tenor pa1n
t1ng
Reasonab le rates
Call for free est mate 446
4173
lns1de Outs de pamt1ng
Home remodeling repatr
and plumb ng reasonabl e
Phone 304 882 2987
BABYSITTING
n my
home
Monday Fnday
6 00 am 6 00 p m Cal l
New Haven 304 882 2449
HOUSECLEANING and all
types of sew ng phone 304
882 2554 or 304 895 3439

Fld3AEial
11

POMEROY LANDMARK

Bustness
Opportunity

G .. _

DEALERS wanted fo r
revelutlonary househo ld
f r e ex t ngu1shers Operate
your own busmess &amp;
rece1ve unllm ted 1ncome
For details ca ll Ed Raha ll
at 304 253 3320
22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home 30 year ftxed
rate WVa &amp; Oh o Leader
Mortgage 77 E State Sf
Athens Oh 6145923051
23

HomesforSale

142 acre farm good house
and barn s Ca ll 446 2599

Attract ve 4 bedroom bt
leve l walk1ng d1stance to
Holzer Hosp tal F1rst t1me
offered Call446 0025

3 bdr home 3 m11es fr om
c1ty on Rt 141 carpet new
v1nyl s d ng nat gas FA
furnance btrch ca b1nets
several closets 2 out
bulidtngs Call446 3897
3 bedroom bnck 16 yea r
1h
baths
old hom e
ftrepla ce
ga r age
basement One acre F rst
t1 me offered for sa le
Bulavtlle Road Ca ll 614
245 9210 or 614 992 3905

5 rooms and bath ult illy
room large patio garage
and work shop Total elec
tn c well nsulated and
easy to heat Complelly
remodled $39 500 614 742
2211 or after 5 614 742 2201
Close to sc hool
Good
locatiOn
2 bedroom
Harnsonvllle
928 4417

O'BRIEN-CROW
REALTY ·
WE WANT TO LIST

446-3021

Protess1onal
Serv1ces

C&amp;L Bookkeep ng
Bookkeeping a. ta x serv1ce
for all types of busmesses
Carol Nea l
446 3862

31

&gt;

house 1n
$6 500 61 4

3 bedroom house tn
Pomeroy
V nyl S1d10g
f1replace
n1ce locat1on
Pnced to sel l $24 000 614
992 7446
Super 1ocat1on close to
Metgs Htgh school
3
bd room brick front ran
ch l'h bath s Fully car
peted Full ba sem ent w1th
family r oom
Farage
utI tty and work shop Over
1 acre llsktng $49 500 Hob
ste tter Rea lty for 1n
format on 614 742 3092
2 bedroom 1 39 ac res 4
m les from Ravenswood
bndge
Pnced on 1n
spec! on 614 247 3561
Bnck 3 bedroom Pnced
rtght Do own decorallrtg
and save more Bulav1t1e
Rd 614 245 9210 or 614 992
3905
Assuntable 7'1&lt; percent
loan 4 bedroom 2 fu 11
baths all electric 75xlOO
corner tor 1 304 882 2319
HOUSE Mt!adowbrook Ad
dtlion 3 bedrooms family
room with ftreplace cen
tral air basement phon..
30-4675 15.42

.

2 bedroom home Phone
304 67$ 3675 after PM

s

'

437 /z 2nd
Gallipolis
Steven Holmes, Assoc.
388 9762 Evenmgs

CENTRAL

ESTATE SALE

56

•

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow
pupptes
CFA
H1malayan Pers1an and
Stamese ktltens Call 446
3844 after 4 p m

57

HILLCREST KE,NNEL
Boardtng all breeds clean
1ndoor outdoor je-ed.ittes
Also AKC Reg Dober
m ans Cai l446 7795

Ste1r1way Plano Upright
gOOd condition excellent
soundtng board S600 In
c ludtng bench Phone 304
675 1348

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor at 614 367
7220

SP t NET Console Ptano
Bargain wanted Respon
s ble party to take over tow
monthly payments on
Sptnelptano Can be seen
locally
Write
Credtt
Manager
P0
Box 33
Friedens PA 15541

Son a s Profess1onal Dog
Groommg Cail 614 388 8547
and ask for Santa

BOXER
l'h years old
regiStered female 304 882
2449

--------- -

,

-..

61

'

'

NEW LISTING - NEW MODERN TRt LEVEL
Lots &amp; lots of c loset space! 3 bdrms 21;, baths
t v•ty rm v1ew of the r v er lg lot c t y school d1st
Pr ced n the60 s
SS DOLL AR FOR DOLLAR SS
One of the best home value .. we ve had to offer
Owner f nanCing Pnce d[\tt~ i - n 70 s 1 Beaultful
home formal dtntno 0~~\J n v &amp; ltvtng roo m Wtfh
w b f repl ace Fam "cJ' \fill;,
man level Large
r ec room &amp; w b ' JI"&gt; 'Oce Pool 18 x36 Lan
dscaped ground s n ct pal!o area &amp; gas gr II Gas
heat &amp; ce ntral a r Very low utll t1es 1 A must tosee 1
TIP TOP SHAP E '
Ju st a tile prett er t haoc~' many Modern 3 4
bedroom br ck hom• c'i)Ut" vmg &amp; ~ n ng room
Large k !chen Full \1:" """ Large 2 c ar garage
Workshop &amp; barn S \~'~•"\!~ d ac res more or less
of landscaped groun .,) Spr ng w II be breathless
here Owner w II he pf nance 10% tnt Rate
6 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Good nome s te and well 800 lb tobacco base Some
t•mber Owner w II sel l on l and contract - 10% 1nt
rate Low down payment
LOAN ASSUMPTtO• Dl0' •% INT RATE
3 2 ACREs - New 1\l'i)UC£: ary br ck &amp; cedar ran
ch Wllh a m tll on&lt;
QQ\) Quality bU II home
Excellent tocat10n
~e cou ld you want n ll
home Pr ce Reduced

$4,

TIME FOR A CHANGE• STOP PAYING RENT
w th tn on ly $2 500 down payment you can buy lhts
beaut ful 3 bedr oom bn ck ranch S1 tt nq on 3 acres
of scen1 c woodland Ntce pond all f enced Only 9%
tnt Rate You cant beat a deatl1ke th1s one 1 South
western School D str ct Pnced m the 50s
544 T HIRD AVE
You don t want to sp end lot s on f1 x 1ng ? Then thiS
lovely older home s for you Complete new k1tchen
&amp; eat ar ea Fo rmal d n n g &amp; hv1 ng roo m Family
room w 11h woodburne r 3 bedrooms new v nyl
sid ng &amp; storm w 1n dows Completely m sulated Full
basement S1ng le car garage

Real Eaute - General

1976 Gravely tractor elec
start w1th rotary mower
cu lttvator plows &amp; sulky
exc cond $1 350 Call 446
4149

'

Far111 Equipment

6J

6_! __Farm Equ_!llmen!__

'

-·~

•

SUMMER SHOWDOWN
Jividen s Farm Equtpmenl
446-1675
Long tractors
Vermeer
balers &amp; hay equtpment
b ale movers
wagons
rotary till ers disc, post
diOger &amp; drivers seedt!rs
rotary cutters
blade$
gates &amp; front end loader
And set! us to get your parts
cpmplete service!
US E D EQUIP
I H Hydr o 70 2000 Ford 550
Oliver 70 Ol iver MF -65&gt;
rotary tiller disc plows
cultlvotors JD manure
spreader Ford 501 mower
We buy used equip

NEW Holland haybtne &amp;
baler
hay rake Kelly
backhoe box blade E x
cellenl condition ca ll 304
895 3503 304 697 2527

Reg1stered and grade hor

ses excellent 4 H project
English and western sad
dies
everyth1n g
1mag1nable 1n horse equ p
ment and suppt1es also
r d1ng lessons and tra 1
r des and horse tra n1ng
Ruth Reev es Hoof Hollow
614 698 3290

WOOD

REAL~

INC.

446-1066
Russell D Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446 4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph 446-0971
Mose -canterbury, Associate 446-3408

10·00 A.M.

ANI Eauto -

General

R
VIRGIL 8 SR
216 E 2nd 51

Oritu"2l SELLING YOUR HOUSE
~ERNH~ In~ IS NUMBER 1WITH US.
•

We're the Neighborhood professionals® When
you hst With our CENTURY 21"' office, you'll get ex·
pert advtce on every, aspect of selling your house on
today' s market We 11 show you how to cope wtth htgh
mterest rates Explam alternative fmancmg, like
seller fmancmg Show your house to Its best ad·
vantage Our Netgbborhood ProfessiOnals gtve the
type of service you expect from us

Phone

1-(614)-992-3325
NEW LISTING 3
acres of woods w1lh
T P
water on hard
road 10 Rae ne School
Dtstnct lor lust S5 000
NEW LISTING - l4x6S
KtrkwOOd mobtle nome
and 2 lots Central atr
hellt n1ce equ1pped k1t
chen chain link fenced
yard 2 car garage
shop
N1ce for only
$32 500
CHEAPI E 6 room
frame bath gas heat
stove
refr gerator
carpet1ng and vtew of
r iver Asktng $16 000
CHEAPI E
3
bedrooms gas furnace
carpetmg new w1nng
basement near stores
Jus!Sl7 500
28 ACR ES GOOd
plac e f or ch ldren 3
bath
full
bedrooms
ba sement wtth garage
Oh o Power and gOOd
f1nan c1 n g
Ask ng
$25 000
HORSE FARM - Lots
of good grass wOOds
and fences 2 bedroom
home
l arge modern
bath T P water fur
nace and carpet1 no
$42500 BUT ?
CHEAPIE -Almost an
acre 2 bedrooms bath
full basement and new
ty
pamted
1ns1de
$17 500
2 HOUS ES- Baths Cl
ty water
gas heat
storms
n1ce
l arge
yard nea r stores 1n
Ra eme Only S37 500
COMPLET E IT - w tll
reduce tne pnce of th s
one under r enova t1on 1f
taken soon
LOVELY - 3 b ed r oom
hom e w1th 2 rental s
Has hot water hea t 2
full llatns full base
ment n1ce ca rpet ng
and neat as a p n Ask
mg only $65 000
BUILDING SITES We have several l USt
drop nand see
WILL TRA DE Or
take mob1le home on
or sell th s 11 room
home w1th 2 rentals for
$25 000
WE
ADVERTISE
YOUR PLACE 5 or 6
TIMES A MONTH

NEW LISTING FOR THE CHOOSY
FAMILY -A love affatr 1s 1nev tabl e
when you se e th1s c lassy br ck ranch
Unbeltevabl e k ! chen spa c tous t am ly
room w th I replac e l4x28 m as ter
bedroom 3 baths 2 2 ca r gar ages
man1 cured l awn and so muc h m or e
.. 45

- WE OFFER YOU
THE BEST - 9 acre estate Spnng fed
stocked pond 3 bedroom brt ck 3 h
baths large walk 1n closers Foyer
I v ng room t am ly room k tchen ba r
form al d n n g
br ea k fa st nook
ba se ment 2400 SQ ft Gr een Townsh1p
; ! 4!

NO I NTEREST - LAND CONTRACT
LOCATION GREAT for com mer c1at - Owner 1S w II ng to f nance th s 41
bus1nes s Grand older house w th ac r e fa rm w th r ea sona ble down
sec ond story conve r ted to an apart payment w th NO INTERE ST 2 stor y 3
ment L ve 1n lower level and rent up oedroom home Larg e barn Ce llar
per level out Wtl take mobtl e hom e and Shed and ch1cken hou se Toba cc o ba se
sma ll acreage non sal e
,¥ 122 Pn ced at $40 000
N141
IF 't'OU LIKE room to breathe tak e a
look at th iS 9 acres compl ete wtth sepltc
tank and rural wa ter Barn Stocked
pond Wov en w re f enced Fronta ge on
State Route 160
#143

2 , ACRES located atong Route 7
Pnced so low you ca n t aff ord t o pass t
wl47
up Call lor deta Is

WHAT A BUY
L oa n assumptton
ma kes th s n ce hom e even n ce r 3
bedroom lovely k tchen basem ent and
2 ca r garage Ex ira clean Located bet
wee n sh opp ng cenfQ¥ and Gav n Pl ant
~993

START E R HOME OR IN VESTMENT
1 1 stor y 3 bed room pl enty of
stor age newl y rem odel ed ge~ra g e Lots
PRICE REDUCED on th s 11 0 ac r e ot tr ees PoSSible spec al f nan c nq
farm
n M e1g s County
La r ge
1948
remodeled 4 bedroom hom e 2 new
f repl aces Fu I basement Ga r age 2 ST OP DREAMING -They d d You
story barn Ch c ken house and f eed ca n Smartl y dec or a ted 3 bedr ooms 1
room Pond Tobacco base Owner w II bat h double w de 1900 sq ft Ex tr a n
con s der he p ng w th f nanc n g
.lf938 sulat on package Set on perm anent
lounda t on v nyl S1d1ng La rge r olling
lawn Rural wa ter Appr ox '1 m te s
BEEF CATTLE FARM - May never from Rodney
11 115
buy cheaper 169 acres more or less
Modern farm home centra l hea t r un FANTASTIC PRICE and so much
n ng water 2 barn s tobacco ba se 30
home Qual ty bu It 3 bed roo ms 2 '
acres t1 tabl e pasture woods w a ter bath
s Complete w t h appl ances n
Blacktop road Walnut Twp
*120 c lud ng wa sher and dryer F ull I n shed
ba se ment F1 re p ace ce ntral a r L ow
LAND CONTRACT
30 x 48 m e tal ut It es Attra ct ve landsc ap ng R o
bu ld ng w th small 2 r oo m apartment Grand e ar ei!
11123
I acre of groun d and has mob le home
hookup Located8 m le from th e park
PRICE RE DUCED and ow ner w II do
;971
the f nanc ng on th s well ma nta ned
mob•l e home and P4 acres
J
NEVER GI VE U P cause hereS the bedroom s d nmg room fam ly roo m
hom e you re took1 ng lor 1 h stor y 3 covered pat o gara ge Cell ar N ce ga r
bedroom hom e 2 acr es Larg e gara ge den area
1995
and workshed Cellar M ob l e home
w119 COTTAGE HOME loca ted n t he c ty 4
hookup Kyg er cree k Sc hool s
room s and ba h down 2 r oom s n a t c
1128
n need of repa 1rs
A DR E AM COME TRUE+ Th s f am ly
s ze home has all th e tou ches Over 4500
sq It of llv ng space plu s 2 ca r qa r age ATTRACT I VE BUY -Ge t away from
tall w th th ~ 7 roll ng acres Good s te
4 bedrooms 3 baths 2 It replaces cen
tr al a•r 16x36 n ground pool 40 ac r es tor bu ldmg or mob le home Large
Only 8 miles from town
,¥1 17 barn sept c tank rura l water Pr1ced
to sell

+

Sue Murphy Helen and
Bruce Teaford
All
Realtors
Af1er Hrs
992 3615 or 992 3325

Housing
Headquarters

R.C.S. REAL ESTATE CO.

w

LOOK IN G FOR PRI VACY
W E WOULD LIKE TO SHOW ~OU THIS ON E
Wooded se tt ng at Charola s HIlls over oak ng th e ,.
lak e Step 1n to th e ent ry on the secon d leve l and
v ew the bea ut ful atr um I rom t he level below Th s
contem po rar y un que des gn sa decor ator s drea m
come t rue ndoor poo l off ce we i equ pped k tchc n
w th bu It m food stand ex tr a l ar ge 1 v ng room
mported 1 le floor graces th e spac ous tam ly room
2 1 r epl aces 2 1 bllth s balco ny on fro nt ol bo t h
6evels Ca ll for a personal show ng and I nd out the
m an y deta Is too num er ous to ment on n t h1s ad
#53 1
3 85 ACRE 5 OR 18
In Gr een Twp c lose to Gall pol s f ar m home
Sc r eened n f ront por ch gl assed n back por ch Per
m as tones d1ny ch cken house 2 stor age bldgs L ots
of shrubber y and tr ees Pr ce d to sel l Sec th s
love ly land and country hom e
#534
IN GALLIPOL I S WALK TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
6 rooms J bedroom s fu ll ba se ment n ce large front
porc h No upkeep V nyl s d ng Na tur a gas fur
nace n1ce large shade tr eeSc low trtxes Home you
WSJO
should check on
ATTR A C T V [
OLOER
HOM E
We 1 kept 9 room s 5 bedroom s On Stat e Hi ghway
approx mately 1700 sq It
v nq space Concr etf"
bloc k ce llar w th f ra me smokehouse L a ge tool
shed l arqe block work shop w th 2 ca r ca rporT w th
conc rete fl oor F our lot s - over I acre ol level land
All for only $41 900 00
K513

own
n1ce
ar en
on e
WS 16

WHAT A BU Y
Read y to move? We ve got ust w hat you ar e took
ng for Fu n shed or unfurn shed Great for star
t ng out or r et r em ent E xtr a n1 ce 1979 Model
Mob le Home on approx 7 acr e lev el lot w th
c ha n Ink fence L ke new Pr ce d n the low 'lOs ,.S18
1 LOT S IN GREEN ACRF 5
Lot# ?I S de wa lk 75 xl48
L ot #23 Va canT99 Frontage by 148 depth Pr ce d lo
se II
#334 #333
1 ACRE 2 BEOROOM COTTAG E
(, r'LA~H• Fun for the k ds and mom and dad
Mrt stpr su tc has ts own dec k ovc r look1nq t f' poo l
Pcrlrc t tor sunbMh nq or amant c r. vc n nq s ns dr
thnrr s ~ work f"ff c en! k tel f" n t h.::u f r Ml rrc; 11
bu It n drsk snark bnr r~ n d i1ppl r1nrc~ I Vf'
brrtrooms 3 lu I b r~ l s fil Tl y ro om w tt f n nl n r
ilnd b ~r lor mrel cl n nr rtnrl v n 1 room c; w 1
~ hM e d I r ep l r~rc a nd pr vatc terra e
? ;,
M;) r
prof ess nna t c'l n d sfil n nq r~crf'i'l&lt;l €' i"' Vil lil b r Ovrr
s100 O&lt;JO C :"! I or nppo rnmrnts

NOTICE.

ESTATES, INC.

GOOD HOUSE 5ENS£
RE TIREMENT OR START E R HOME
Com fort abl e nea t home w t h lar ge l v ng r oom
ea r 1n k lchen With bu If n cab net s storage room
bilth and carport Ver y conve n•enlloca t on Ca ll lor
furt her deta Is
NS3l

DU TCH COLONIA l
Styl e bea uty charm comfort - all desc r be th s
home 4 BR 2 7 ba ths equ pped ea r 1n k tchen
fam ly r oom w1fh firepl ace form al I vmg and d n
ng room YOu won t bel eve th s home unl ess you
see t for yourself Make your appo ntmeot today
to wa lk nto the ent rance of one of th e most lovely
,.322
homes n th e area

Real Eauto - Generol

u,

D&amp;W

BEAUTIFUL SETT I NG
BEAUTIFUL HOME
r acr e plus - 8 rooms plu s lull basement 2 full
11 ng or om
bathf. w1th showers TdiTI y room
d n ng room n ce stepsaver k tchen 3 or 4 Br Len
nox heat pump also coa l and woodbvrner furnace
N ce land sc aped yard All of lhts for onl y $53 900
Needs small amount of wor k to f1 n sh th s NE W
HOM E
1532

NIC E- CLEAN
6 room hoiJ SC ba th ce llar 2 storage bu ld ngs
wat er sy5 1em n ce countr y a tmospt er e
around lots of shrubber y large leve l garden
and pr ccd an y $29 900 You mu st see th s
Phone

PH.992 2259

MOBILE
HOMES

C 1y conven ences near
th s mmac ul ate home
n ce ty l andscaped ar ge
1 v ng
r oo m
4
bed r ooms
'} ba th s
lam y r oom
lr on t
por ch
t n1 shed fu l l
basemen t 2 car ga r age
w t h opene r
s tee l
s d ng gas heat and a r
cond ton Ca l loday for
a pe r onal show ng

councr el e dr vew ay 24 x27 l am y room w th
ftr ep ace L ar qe bl oc k stor aqe bu ld ng Fru t trees
Been r educed ov er $17 000 YOu musr see ttl s coun
try home Phone now for an appo ntment
WS07

POMEROY, OHIO

New14'Wide

WOW Ul 900 00
WOW 9% own er f n an
c ng WO W 3 BR 2
baths
ce ntr a l a tr
garag e
s tor ag~
bulld1ng all furn tur e
nc luded 5 m1nutes t o
downtown Ga 1 p ol s
C ty Sc hool s
Large
level lot
1/407

MEIGS COUNTY 3 2l ACRE S M or L
POND Broom remodeled country hom e beaut fully
landsc::t ped all 3 25 acr es r:nowed Ga r age w th

608 E. MAIN

BUILDERS YARD SALE

REG QUARTER HORSE S Jer sey cow with ca lf $550
Cai l 614 379 2574
Tra n1ng
show1ng
bree d1ng sa les and boar
d ng Contact Dan Beam
~4 -~!Y~ Gra1n
Galllpol s 446 0183
w anted t o cut and bal e hay
tor per centage of ha y Call
446 !381
Jumbo Bob Whtle Quail
eggs also ava tabl e La Bon
te s Qua il Farm 6 14 985 Hay Sl 25 ba le n t eld 304
675 2254 or 304 675 1302
4345

Reel Eatltl - General

CANADAY
REALTY

SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1982

L1vestock

- -L,vestock

Reel Eatete - Generel

FRE F PARK lNG•

·-

Ttmes Sentenei- P

a.

Mustcat
Instruments

RHI Eaute - Gonerol

The s

..... ........
. __
........
....
, , ... .
.. .... . .. ...

Pets for Sale

2

a.

-

Mise Merchandlce

Plasltc Septic Tanks Stole
and county approved 1 ooo PINE RIDGE COLLIES
gal tank price Sl40 Other AKC Registered Collie
sizes In stock haul In your ~4j{. i of
cau 6U 256 1267 or
ptckup truck Call 614 286 t •
5930 Jackson Oh RON
EVANS ENTERPR ISES
Grooming servlcH for
pets Will clip English
Sheep dogs poodles &amp;
RATLIFF S POOL CEN
T E R Poolssale supplies &amp; Schnauzer s Reasonable
Installation 403 2nd Ave ( For appt 614 992 7342
Ga ll ipolis Oh Cal l 446
6579
In ground Ablove AKC Registered Pari black
ground
&amp; whtle r"Cker Spaniel
SIS ftrm
J poodle pups
614 992 7102
55
Buttdeng Supplies
From July 6 16 for Humane
But dtng materials block
Society Service ca ll 992
br1ck sewer p1pes wtn 3994 1f no answer 992 5834
dows lintels etc Claude
Winters R lo Grande 0
POODLE
pups
AKC
Call614 245 5121
registered No Checks 304
895 3958
56
Pets for Sale

--- ----

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old fur
n1ture and An t ques of all
ktnds ca ll Kennet h Swatn
446 3159 or 256 1967 n th e
even ngs

KIT N CARLYLE "

F ve room house bath
f replace In town $11 000
Phone 304 675 56 52

W II do babysllhng
home 614 992 5801

13

Homes for Sa le

•

V~

t1 l LA \ I l l F P0AD - SI2S 000 - Pr
r h
In
137 nc cs Frontnqr on Bul ;w I r N&lt;nr on
w oods 11 nd Y ale Co /lr qe Roads 60 ~cn·s J llr~ hl r 15

s 1tes
ATTRACTIVE 2 BEDRM home situated on 11
acres of land within the village Of VInton full
basement f a furnace w b ftreplact! tiled ktlchen
detached 2 car garage Buy'' all for $43 500 00
LOOKING FOR A beaUitfUI4 Dedrm homewtlhten
nts court? We ca n gtve you all that plus 38 acres and
many many amenet1es Call for more 1nf0
HANDYMAN S SPECI}IL Locatt!d on 4th Ave and
ready for your hammer SlO 000 00
2 LOTS for mobtle home en Plants Sub Dlv
lank and rural water Buy both for $5 900 00

septtc

COMMERCIAL BUILDING In VInton
dtsplay r.oom down 2 apts up S32 000 00

Large

COMMERCIAL
BUtLOtNG
n
downtown
Galhpoils 23 xl60 1 apt upstarrs Minimum 1
year tease or buy for S65 000 00
Wood Realtv Inc
32 Locus!'! G 'fhpolis
446 lOU

Pl'Si ur e r PST t mber N cr 3 BR ro nrh homr cat n
kllct rn storm door !; and w ndow s K y&lt; r Crcr k
School s 6 m 11cs from c tv
f l 'v F.:

SUPER FAMILY ROOM has stone fireplace
beamed ceiling lots of wmdow s overlook ng a very
pretty backyard Formal living and dtnlrtg rooms 3
bedrooms car~ted Very nice netghborhOd near
Ctty $.47,700 JUST LISTED'
l SHAPED RANCH Brick cedar and stucco 3
bet;lrooms 2 fUll bjlthS f soU&gt;?.?m Wtlh fireplace
Allached 2 car garage L&lt;
""n

'"•*

MEIGS COUNTY- 3 bedroom double Wt de
wtth full basement nice kitchen and dlnmg area 2
full baths

J26 750- 3 bedroom ranch home near Rio Grande
Fully carpeted fenced backyard ont! car attached
garage Large kitchen utility

'OOf'

ACRE e;

-

~YGfR

( Pff~

/ Pi I

Rr m octr led 3 br droom frilme tlomc Eq u pprc
n k tc hc n 24x36 barn ct cken housr 1100
tobac co ba se B ~ a ut ful locat on S38 900

er~ T
r~n r

$2 7 000 - W II bu y a nearly new J bedroom rnnct
nome full y carpeted Carport On over i'ln il CH '
K yqcr Creek Sc hr&gt;ots Call soon tor appo ntm ent

JUST LlSTEO t - M ot le hOmt! park tn Kyger ,
Creek area Stx untts all presently rented Ex
eel lent onw~sl mt!nl propery S60 000
LAND CONTRACT - 2 ~ea r old cedar ranc h
beauhful country surroundongs 3 bedrooms family
room wtth wOOdburn! no E'~n\oil' gt! kitchen has
snack bar rang
nul and curlatns
Move In condll
1
WITH $4 900 JOWN
PAYMENT
BALANCE at 12'h% l&lt;yger Creek
Schools

s••l:
"'""-vp '""

ce lar ge shade r ecs
conc rete front porch l ot s ot ruT trees (appl e
c herry plu m and peachl gra pe or bor r r~spbcr r y
v nes good garden l and all lev el In G reen Twp
Rural w ater 2 car gar age fu el o I F A furn ace
Basement barn appro x 16 x2 4 Pr ced n he $20 s
N ce comfortable hom e w th n

.d491

8ACRES
10 nr(n dnve to down to .... n Gall po l o; c tv
sc hool syst em Has hookup for m ob e hom e G ~I n
Rural Water elec tnc and sept c tank nile 1 qh T on
pol e 200 II frontage on Graham School Rd T mbcr
Bu ld1ng s1tes Call now
11477

w th n

•

SPRING VALLEY SUROI VI 510N
Vacant lots n1ce s1ze bu ld nQ lots w h r~ ll ut 1 t cs
there Lots ze 101 8 by 171 2 Better qc t um now
#4l 6
OWN ER WILL F IN ANU
Walk 1nto forrh at entr anc e w th oo en s t r~ rcase To
thi s lovely comple tely redecorated home located
m cttV W1 th1n w alkmg d1stance to shopp ng area 3
bedrooms 2 full b ath s and charm1ng large k tchen
Spac1ous llvmg room w1th woodburn ng f replace
Thts gractous home has a natural gas FA furnace
like new lmmed1ate possess on We re wa1t ng for
yourcail
wt46
REMOOELEOCOUNTRYHOME
In Oh10 Townsh1p sets on 2 acres more ot less ht'l s
atummum StdtnQ I 3 bedroom s and barn Pnced
$21 900 Set! by appotnlment only
w41J

�.. ,, .

. ..

'·

The Su nda

Tomes - Sentonel

Autos for Sale

71

1965 Chev rolet Malibu
super sport, conv , new top,
ttres. 65 ,000 mtles. 283 auto,
lair cond Ca ll 614-388·9342

( rtll 446 092 4

128 sedan, 40,000
"ld· ·~. S800 71 SuperB , 383
nt~Ci
1 of 500, S650 Ca l l 1973 PI NTO, SlOO or woll
' lA 369 1 or 446 7365
se ll for part s Ca ll 379 213e
7 J 1 ~~ 1

1966 ( hl'VY Cap rt statton
V11qnn
39o motor , tatr
r on(.l
rnake otte r Ca ll 446
I\9 J

nlJJ
unrl

1 &lt;lr

Sk ylark good

$450 or bes t offer

L r~ll-116

6615 or 446 1780

1977 Monte Carlo 65,000
1n 1 , n• ce. $2, 495
1977
Grc~n d d .J 7 rlr , a uto, 6 cy l,
79,000 m ' $1.900 1964 Cor
va tr Georc11a ca r, ex bOdy
&amp; mec h co nd , 51,000 mt,
$1,600 1978 F 250 Ranger
XL T. 4 wd, AC, 4 spd.,
$3,800 1976 Gran Tonne
AC 77.000 mo, VGC. $1,650
1979 Chcv 4 WD, SWB, PU,
36.000 m1 , exc
cond ,
$5,500 E urell A uto Sales,
R t 160 &amp; 554, 614 388 9754 or
home 614 388 8769

Carlo, good
cond rnany other opttons,
$900 Cil ll614 379 2729
197&lt;1

Monte

n

For sale 72 L aM ens Pan
tiac bodY good cond , no
71 VW Faslback S200 Cash reasonable offer refused
· Call446·42e9
Sale, 614 3ee el33

II

Jumblot GUILE

r

OlliE IS 151!!11115
I"'IN"I'L1!!6eL.V l"lfAIIJI&lt;
WI-II!N Sl"'eAI&lt;IN6
"THIS WAY.

~~!ss7~eTJng ~~~,c~~.:;

( " ' - i Monday)

4 speed, new fronl
tires. a.c., am·fm ·8 track
stereo. Phone 614·843·4945
8-f_te_r_l_p_._m__- .________

ANNOY

1977 Buock Regal, exc
cond V·6, auto. p s , p b ,
a c., oth er ex tras, one
owner 614-992 5e34

76' Ford pickup super cab,
360 engine, auto tran·
smlsslon, air conditioner,
$1,000 or best offer. Call
614·669·5023.

MORBID LAGOON

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven west Virginia Over
20 less expensive cars In
stock .

1

v e,

tVE, RIO GRANDE - 9%
MORTGAGE - Feasl your eyes on thos
lovely Cape Cod brick home &amp; you will
wan t tt for sur e BeauttfUI decoratmg, 4
bedrom•. 2 full &amp; 2 half bath s, famoly
room, delu xe kitchen w lt li bar. full
basement, ftrep lace th at heats en ttre
house &amp; 2 car garage. Sttuated on cor
ner lot 60's

==

OM~S FOR RI!'NT~- iEASE; LEASE W

I NTEREST FREE LOAN - OWner Woll carry woth
no tnter es t wt th down payment or Land Contract at
12° 0 tn ter es t Two stor y Colontal In town, beauftful
A 1149
entry forma l dtn tng, bn ck pat to
LOT IN RODNEY - Se t up l or 2 mobote home pads,
pahos. wa ter &amp; septtc tank, bo th spaces rented,
good mvestm ent property
108.5

*

OUT STANDING BUY Frame home wtth
nl urn tnum Stdtn g. 2 bedrooms, bath, located tn
oown On ly 58,500
I ooes

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Nella Smith, Assoc. 388-8649
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
John Fuller, Realtor, 245-9473

Sroker Auct1on ee r
LIF E
INSURANC E
428 Second Av e.
Ca ll446·0552 Anyttm e
BMR' 412 - Older home located tn Thurman Con
l cl! ns 7 r ooms and bath, 2 fire pl aces, profeSSIOnally
tn sl all l'd woodb urner , forced a tr fuel f urnace Out
std€' l eatures a garage and a sc r eened, summer ktf
chen wtth bud ! tn gnll Ca ll fo r appotn tm en t

BMR 399 - GREA T LOCATION! - Two story
horne pr se nlly bctng used as a duplex Could be
&lt;'astly convPrled to stng le family Chotce loca t1on
nertr Wil Sh tnq ton Sc hool Call f or details
Th ts ftne home ha s 4 bedroom s and 1S
IOUl tcd close to town You Will have a la rge lot wt th
~, co untry atn1osphere and have all the c tty con
vrntences Co li now •
BMR 389 -

BMR 398 - GET READY FOR SUMMER• Owner tr ansf er red and must se ll th ts J B R r anch
CI05C to town 1ncludes deluxe 18x36 tn gr ound pool
c nil for an ii PPOtntmenf today
107F - Ca rnpstfe Poten t tal 32 acres rn / 1 wtth
fro nt.H1e on Raccoon Cr as we ll as frontage on
blilcktop h•qllway
MB~

OMR 4 10- A frame sttuatec;t on a beaut1ful wood ed
&lt;;r tttnCI You w tl love me atmosphere Owner ftnan

ctno for qu al1f1ed buyer s Low 30s.

RMR 413FJ - M1n1 farm located 1ust off the Ap
palclChtan H tghwa y near 1a sckson 31!? acres m/ 1
wtth i'l n older two BR home Sj: veral outbul ldtngs
1us t ngtlt l or let sure t1 meor full t1m e lt v .ng
BMR 414 - 12)(60 mobt le home sttuated on a 1 acre
plus lot Inc ludes fur n1 ture, has rear patto w tth
rovP r , covere d front deck , 12x24 ga rag e Wtth
&lt;;torilqC'

BMR 4 15 Ex tra nt ce b t level. tn cl udes 3
hcd r ooms IQ tamtly room w1fh bnck fireplac e,
18x7 1 1t v1 ng roo m, ea t tn kitche n, lg utt l ity room,
and qara qe Sttuated on large lot C1ty school
l)dts tn c t Call l or deta il s
Wan t a n•rj;&gt;., "' - r anch style home wtth
Jdong a possoble e.so%
mortgage assurT 1\
, , ::.o, cal l now
BM R 416 -

a oop of th e gro otOUCE.O

B MR 417F - we arc off enng one of Gallta county's
ftnes t farms. Con stst.ng of 218 acres Tht S fine farm
1S ,n qood produc t ton .110 acres cropland, excellent
pasture, and lot s of butldtngs Also a fine old farm
home Cal l now for more details

BMR 418 - Bnck .a nd frame situated on 5 acres. Includes 1 B R s, 2 baths .,:~; ·ucf.O room woth flrepli!ce
and wood burner, lg n~
~ ... n. d1n1ng r.oom and
deluxe kt tchen . Ca ll tor details.

0

BMR 419 - New L isting - Lovely 4 bedroom home
on Ga llopolo s 2 full baths, den, lorma l dlnong rm .
Call for comp lete dela ols.
NEW LISTING- BMR 420F - This line home is
only three yea r s old. It features 1400 sq. ft . of living
space, w oth 3 lar ge bedrooms, l lf2 baths, large living
room and a lovely kitch~n wllh dining area, full
basement Priced at only S60,000. Oh, yes. I am ~ure
your will enooY the 24acres of land it sits on
BMR 402F - Check on this one - 37 acres wtth
1401 lb. tobacco base, 30x30 barn. NOW available
on land contract at 10% Interest, Call for del ails,
Po11ible Loan Assump·
3 B R ranch on Ig. flat
SJ!i,OI:\1!. Better call on this one tOday!

ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would
say that t h1s spr awl tng brick tri leve l•s
one of the mcesf countrv homes vou've
ever seen Th1 s beauty l!:t sttuated on 41f1
acres of land about 31f2 m i les from Rod·
ncy Why not l et your fam tly en joy 5
BR s, 3 bat hs, large ltvtng and dtning
r oom. co mplete kttchen, famtly room
wllh stone ftreplace and 2 car garaqe
Be the ftr st to see thiS one

STATE ROUTE 588 - Wooded home
stte s. 6 acres m/ L water tap and sep
ft c tank tnstal led Ask1ng $19,500.
51.500 down , 6% on th e bal ance

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLERemodeled home includes S rms . and
batrh, carport. stove, refng , dish·
washer, mobtle home pad, almost 6
acre son 588. 2 mo I rom town $30,000.

RIO GRAND E - Corner l ot , ~ zoned
commerctal. 1.40x156, all util tt tes
ava il ab le
Ready fo r your new
bust ness
LOG CABIN - Very unoque, old hand
hewn log beams, sleeptng loft , large
stone fireplac e. modern barn , 14 acres
woods . loca ted 1n th e Wayne Nat tonal
Forest, 20% down
GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE - 131 It
fr ont on State Route 55.4, co rner lot,
over 3100 sq It , s bay s, presently used
for au to, tr actor &amp; farm equtpment
repatrs. part tal ftnant tn g available
THE SETTING IS SUPERB
Beaut1fu11 8 acre wooded l~on the 0 J
Whol e Rd . 311 It front age, 12x65 2 BR
mobtle home wtth expando Priced to
sell atSl2,900
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should
descnbe th iS lovel y 3 BR brtck ranch
Special features are a large LR &amp; dtn·
mg rm , equtpped kitchen, l 1h baths,
laundry. quality carpet, cent: a1r &amp; an
overs tzed 2 car garage Located on U.S
35 West &amp; shown bY appointment.
;
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 176,
ac res m / 1 va ca nt land, fronts on Rae
coon creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd Approx
31 ttl I able &amp; the balance wooded. Under
$400 per acre

.

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Stylosh 2 story
home was but It 1n 1894 and must be seen
to apprecta te Large open foyer and
sta trwav. LR, d1n1ng rm , parlor, com·
pletely equ tpped modern kttchen, 4
BRs. 2111 baths, new sidtng, garage,
nea r schools, shopp tng, etc .

~ODNEY 'CI)RA

ROAD - Appro• 24
acres woodland , located 3 mt from
Rqdney, county water available
$12,000
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% down - Camps1tes 1n the W'lyne
Natoonal Forest 5 to 8 acre tracts
wooded land, good hunt1ng Prtces start
at $3,500
AFFORDABLE FARMLOAN
ASSUMPTION - Nice remodeled 6 rm .
&amp; bath home, WB foreplace, stove,
refng, cellar house, 3 sheds, SO acres
m/ 1, approx 15 A cleared, &amp; balance
wooded. Located near Eureka tn the
· c otv school,dost $38,900

PRICE REDUCED TO $69,5001 BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST. Over
2100 sq It of living area . Thos all brick
rancher offers 3 BR ' s (master Is 16x221,
3 baths, 15x24 LR with fireplace , llx25
famtly rm ., formal dini ng rm ., galley
kttchen tncludes double ovens. corning
type counter top range, DW &amp; disp., gas
heat, ce nt a1r, attic fan &amp; much more.
Located tn town on Spruce St Ex·
tenston €all Ranny Blackburn for a
per sonal showtng
51,000 DOWN PAYMENT on this Ohoo
Rtver V•ew property ApproJI:. 8 acres
wooded land on Route 7 and 5 mt south
of town Owner wtll ftnance balance at
10%
HUNTERS PARADISE- 48 acres m/ 1
on Raccoon Creek near EWII'igton, ap
pro• 10 A. to liable, balance WOOC$, 1'1&gt;
story log collage, cellar house. 12x15
meta l butldtng , extra ntce 14x70 2 BR, 2
bath mobtl e home All fh1s for the
asking pr,ce of S39,400.
ASSUME 81!2% LOAN- Lovely ranch
al the edqe of town os oroced lo sell at
S49.900 Fealures are 3 BR, 1'1:! balhs,
large LR woth WBfrrep lace, modern
kitchen &amp; d1ning area, JCKJndry rm .,
garage and gas heat Cal f tor ap·
potntment
.,.__
BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY
llf
acres m/ 1, mostly c lean hill pasture.
good fences, 1112 story home, large
barn, tob. base, fronts on 3 roads near
Mud sock Proced reduced to $64,000

GENTLEMAN'S FARM -33 acres m/1
on State Route 160 near North Ga llt a
Ho gh School Mostly clean rollong
grassland, stock pond, 3 BR ranch type
home woth full basement, gooc barn
Out of town owners says SELL.
WALNU'r TOWNSHIP- Beef, hay &amp;
gralh farm . eo acres, m/ 1, appro•.l5 A
gooc cropland, 10 A. woOds, balance
pasture, gooc fences. 9 rm:Jbath , home
was built in 1872 &amp; has been partia)ly
remOdeled, 50x50 cattle barn woth con·
crete f loor, )arge si lo with auto
unloader , ieveral sheds. large pond,
springs, standtng crops go to new

owner.

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN
BUILDING OR f¥\OBILE HOME SITE
CHER plus 78 ACRES of land on - Approx 5'12 acres located on the
Cheshtre Townshtp offers lots- of ~ good Graham School Rd., co water, over 300 •
l tvtng for your growmg family Home is ft rd fronlage, Green Grade School &amp;
just loke new wllh 1438 sq ft of living Gal loa Academy High S~ hool. $10,900.
area plus an attached garage. 2
spacoous BR' s, 2 baths. 8x27 LR, 1Dx24
kitchen w oth refrog., dlsp., DW, double GUY AN TOWNSHIP- 108 acres m/f,
oven &amp; range , washer &amp; dryer. stays 10 located soulh of •Mercervllle. Approx. 211
l'aundry Land is mostly rolling pasture A. tillable, balance woocs, tob. base.
land woth approx. 25 acres wooded. Call Owners will help finance :
for appoi ntment
GRE-EN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 11 2 acre farm has Iron· $200 PER ACRE - Greenfield TOwn·
tage on Stal e Route 58e. Fairfield Cen· ship, 84 .acres M •L., approx. 10 A, bot,
tenary Road &amp; Vanco Falrlleld Rd. Ex· tom,lS A wooced, 35 A. stripped, small
ce llent for farming or development
creek. excellent hunting, TOTAL.
Older 5 rm . &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp; PRICE $16,800.
solo lnc!wjed. Owners will consider
sell ing spjaller lracts of short term
finan~ln~ ~all for m ore Information.
COUNTRY, YET CONVENiENT Greal family home wlt h l BR, 2 baths, ·
15x27 L R with gas· fireplace, large
modern kitchen with range, se lf·
cleanong oven, OW and dlsp., laundry
rm. with washer and dryer. part basement. large covered patto. garage and
over 6 acres of land at the edge of town.

•

New

start

!!~e~i~~!~~~~eling

Utility Buildings

•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Rooling Work
14 Years E:•perience
Greg Roush

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

640 DEENIE DR. Attractive 4
bedroom bi-l evel in a very good neigh·
borhood along Rt 35. over 2,000 sq . 11.
of l tvtng ar~a tncludes a large fami lY
room w/woodburner, 2lfl ba1hs, equip
ped kitch.!n (loads of catlinets), d10mg
room , 2 ca r garage plus 18x36 in·
ground pool .n pnvate backyard .
Pr 1ced tn 60's
PANORAMI C VIEW-6 SAC
9% ASSUMPTION - A v ery attrac
t 1ve se ttmg wtth an unmittched vtew of
Rto Grand e w tt h 6'h ac A lov ely 3 vr
old cu•tom bull 4 bedroo m home has
full basem ent, 2 woodburners, family
room , 1 full &amp; 2 half baths, '2 car garaqe
2 5 ilcres of tand could be so ld tn lots
Colifor mor ~ ,nfo ·
REDUCE 0 TO 540,000 Owners
moved to Oklahoma and must sell
Alum stded 3 bedroom r anch loca t ed 3
m1!es from town on Rt 141 across from
Green Grade Sc hool House has full
basem ent th at co uld be ftntshed, equ tp
ped kttch en &amp; garage 1mmed 1ate
possess• Cln
HOUSE &amp; S ACRES- OLD RT, 35 Pretty 5 acre lract near Rio Grande
Cou ld be diVIdP,..~"\D •uildtng lots or
used as crop l ~ ...lfe. Inc ludes 3
bedroom ranch wi th large fireplace,
rura l ater and available, 2 outbUi tdmgs
including small barn. S39,qo&lt;i
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Woth less
· than 20% down payment and 11% on·
teres! 16e acre larm off Rt. 554. Approx 20·25 acre crop balance 1n pasture
and woods. Los of pine (red &amp; whole),
barn. plus modernized 3 bedroomhome.
60's
100 ACRE FARM - NEW LISTING IN
RUTLAND - Productive farm in cor·
Poration If mots ol Rutland . Qual ity hay
&amp; pastu "e with gOOC grass cover, approx. 45 ac woods, 50'x56' barn, 14'X40'
shed, in good repair . Large rd frontage
on Rt. 124 &amp; Free gas availab le for
house (has gas well). The historic home
,has tO rooms. 4 bedrooms, 2 II rep Iaces
&amp; garage. Call for more info $85,000
MARTIN DRIVE- JUST LISTEDLovely brick home overlooking Rt. 35
near H.M C 3 bedrooms, l Y&gt; baths, lu ll
basement, family room w/ woodburner,
,wffe approved kotchen, nat. gas. cent.
air, oversiz~d 2 car garage &amp; over V2
acre on a quality neoghborhOQd. Prlcecj
to sell S59,900.
•
2ND AVE &amp; MILL CREEK - is the .
location of this remodeled 3 bedroom
brick. Includes a full basement (clean I,
nat. gas heat, carporl, fenced yard.
Only S2~.ooo

S53,Soo - ·erick and frame ranct\
on Rt .. 141 tust 2 miles west of lown. 3

MAI&lt;E US AN OFFER -83 ACRES Very pretty location just 2 m11es north
of Rio Grande. L ~nln , nes, some ttm ·
ber reported. l ~'i'm'nt for horses~
some crop_ &amp; pasture l and. &lt;;ooc
" oo
· • ·-. 30's.
building iots. 11·Y sch
15 ~
~KRISTI DRIVE - Owner must
sell this most altractive brock off Rt.
~- Include~ 3 gOOC sired. bedrooms,
familY room, flreelace( wne approved
equipped kitchen, Tbatt\s, and nearly
1500 sq. It. of living area. Also ln--.
CiudeS 2·car garage &amp; large landacaped yarn Pn&lt;~lblH~ assumption.
jiCRES.,..
-Gel
your hamnner
and put
lhll 2
repair. 4
small
(10x18')

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph, 614·143·2591

or

Aluminum

SIDING

BJSSELL
SIDING CO.
" Beautiful, custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or •
949-2860 .
No Sunday Calls
3·1Hie

6·21 1 mo

. MIUER
ELECTR1C
SERVICE

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complett &amp;utter work,
complete remodeiin&amp;.
roofin&amp; of all types.
Worked in home area 20

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Resldential
&amp; Commercial

yeal'l.

WE POOL
TOGETHER
• stc:unless Steel
• F1berglass
• Vtnyt L tners

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
1· 304·773-564
c. L. K ttch en

Free estimates
Call 843-3322
5-12·2 mo

Caii742-319S

.

lXI

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

tof

I
I
1
1
I

BASEMENTSj
PATIOS , .
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELD
985-4464

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail of all ages
avatlable up to 8 Weeks
tn any quantifY
Eggs Also Avaolabte
Ctell LaBonle
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, OH .
45343
614·985·4345
612411 mo

6 1.4 1 mo

I
I

lll!NO AVE. - Largeredecorated4or· ·
5
bedroom home in quality neigh·
borhOOd Has 2 fireplaces, famoly rm
dlnmo rm.~,arched doorways, bay
dows, 10
Insulation, 1'12 balh•• .
basement, nat. gas heat ·Plus much
more. 4l)'s
2•5 ACRES - Located near Roo Grand·el
off Rl. 32 $ Has 28'x48' basemen• and··
sublloorong finished You can build the
rest Cit~ School Dost. •oo.600.
•
INCOME PROPERTY - Home, oflicel
&amp; rental house Owner anxious to sell
d 11 r
an w o rnance at ll% and lakeland on
trade~own payment, The home has
3 bed roo _s, bath (could be 2'1 1lov. rm
&amp; k ol
. Basement of house os on
street vel and os used for' office &amp;
slorage . ( Noce ly decorated With 'h
.
bath I The rental house has bed•oom
ltv rm ., k ttchen combo &amp; batn. Prl.!i!d
to sell at $38.500 and located in tnu•n
WOODED PRIVACY- CONVENIENT
LOCATION - A v ery picturesq' ue set·
t ong ·oust m onutes from town
• on ~I 5e8. 3
bedroom Dutch bo·level woth 2Vi baths,
family room, 2 extra rooms in lower
level . (can be whatever you need!.
equipped kitchen, 2 car garage, large
wrap·around deck &amp; nearly l'h acres
with lots ottrees $67,900
•
"Ruii·A· i. . SETTING CLOSE TO

: PULLINS
.EXCAVATING

I
wiri:

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

- Dozers

- Backhoes
- Dump Ttucks
- to-Boy
-Trencher
-water
- Sewer
-Gas Ltnes
-Septoc Systems

I

I
I
I

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

AUTO&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992·5682

or 992-7121

Large or Small Jobs
PH. 992· 2478
6 27·1 mo Pd

M~ s on ,

W Va

6 20 1 mo

7J

3·24·tlc

NOW OPEN

COLEMAN'S
GARAGE

Corner Main &amp; S. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT
•All Minor &amp; Major
Auto &amp; Ttuck Repau
•Free-Estimates

•Reasonable Rates
Open 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
· Mon. lhru Sat.
PH 992-7762
Jack Coleman 6 21
&amp;Tim Roush 1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

. C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

TV Repair
&amp;Service

Cuslom klt&lt;hens and appliances. • cu'Stom
~throoms, remOdeling, •
plumbing, electrl&lt;, ancr
heating.

Call 992-6259

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

1\

~76 Sycamore Sl

Middleport; Ohio

. I

I

'
.I

I'.

8·20-lfc

6 27·1 mo.

tltif

• . GAN'S
ALIGNMENT

.REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

&amp; ELECTRONIC
SPIN WHEEL

BALA NCE
. iur Fronf:Eild

Water-Sewe,..Eitc:t~l&lt;

Service

Dependable.
guar ·
anllled WOrk. 9 yrs. E•·
pef(ence.

·

SIHN, Rutllnd, Oh. •
For Appt. 74Ht57
7-1-1 mo.

ttG7U
.IT
1l&amp;'ll
.AQIG87

EAST

•11

•nl

4QJ16S

441

•Qu

tl

tQIIU

SOOTH

Licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201

·

Gas Lllle'Dltches
Water Line Hoolt·ups •
SeptlcT•nks
County Certlflld
Roulllt Lane

' .. c::~=~;,C:·

1&gt;7·11fc

CANDLELIGHT INN
51. Rt. 7-Between Mid·
dleport &amp; Che.. ire, Oh.
PROUDLY PRESENTS
Tues - L~diiU Night 1·1 31)
Weds - •.certry ora It
N19hll 2 JO

MARSHALL TEN•

1975 AMC Jeep 54,000
mites Melal top, roll bar
$2 ,300. 614 742·259A 4 wheel
drive

We 9l.adlv announc:e tttat eull
n•tM ' of tM Band we offer
drlnll and drown. Some dnnks 1
rtcluc.ed duri"' bind.

our Hn MGn.·Frl.1t00·2: JO:
sat. &amp; Sun. 4·2·)0 Carry Out
Beer •nd WI" A't'allable at
Minimum Prices-Tile Lowest.
•
PHONE H2·H13
1·11 mo

-

Pau

1974 Kawasawko 400, gooc
cond, only 3,000 miles, call
614·256 1786 after 5
1971 Husaguaba 400 Enduro
dirt
ke Call446·0276
1976 b oHonda
with farong
19,000 miles. $400. 614-992
5673
197e Tomos Moped for $225
call304·675-4359
1975 HONDA 250 Enduro,
excellent condrtoon . $325
304 675 4210

7S

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1974 STA RCRAFT tro · hUII
ski boat, 125 Ev tnrude
engine, exc cond Call 446
0276 18' Mark Twa1n tri hau l
boat. walk thru windshoeld ,
canopy, 188 HP Mercruiser
onboard outboard motor.
f1ft tratler, exc
cond ,
$3,500. Call446·4042

120 HP Inboard outboard
Mercury Cruise , Dorsett
Boat woth traoler, 304-675
6286
1978 BAJA, me 150 HP
Mercury motor Tennessee
trailer SSOO and take over
payments
304 675 3137
anytime
Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

FORD 4 spd trans for 360
truck Call446·0276
1976 1 ton Chevy Rear end
4.56 gear ratoo, 197e· l ton
Chevy rear end 4.10 gear
ratio. 614 843 4945 after 7
pm

77

Camping
Equopment

1979 17' Wilderness cam
ping tra1ler New cond
Tamden axe ls, self con
ta1ned, carefree awnmg.
Reese hotch S4.500 614· 992
2363.

79

PUI

"'

Pau

By Oowald Jacoby
ud Alaa Soota&amp;
Today's hand took place In
a blgh-atake rubber brld&amp;e
pme Soulh wu a fairly
&amp;ood player who couldered
blmlell to be an erpert.
Well wu an expert wbo
liked to talte fairly Wild
cllaDees 1n the blddlna.
Nortb and SCiulb were
uliDC Jaroby ~ufer bids

I

Campers

with electric &amp; gas rei.,
sleeps e. $1.500. Call 614
379-2430

1976 23' Coachman motor
home, new cond. Call 614
256· 1267.

Sgt"IERS
Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call614·256·
1le2.
PAINTING · lnteroor and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call 614·388·

9652.

1-.:....--------.,......j Masonary

work, L.ogue
Contracting,
Rt .
1,
Ewlngton. Call 6!~·388·

9939.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthen Custom
car~. Free estllnates.
Call446·2107.
'

Fra nk Rose Canst: Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction, a~l types
Free es ttm ates, all work
tully
guarant,ed
Re std entla1,
·com ·
mereta!, 1ndustnal and
mtnmg, electric work.
BSHA Cert 446: 4627 . lf c

Furniture Stripping
and relinishing

Hence, North's three-diamond response and South's
three-heart reply .
At Uolo point, West stuck
In an UIIJOund three-opade
bid . Had he been doubled he
would have been set two or
maybe three tricks, but
North wen\ to four hearts
and It Will up \o West to
lead.
He played the queen of
clubs. South won with the
a"". Then he played the king
of hearts followed by the
jock to dwnmy'a a"" After
lllat he led dummy's nine of
clubs and lei It ride to West's
jaok
Now West went mto the
reoo1111ructlon of a SOulh
band that would , allow a
defense to beat the contract
He finally figured oul
South's exaet holding woth
only 20 high card poml9
lnaleid of the 21 or 22 he
should have held.
Then West cashed his ace
of spades and led the kmg of
diamonds South could dos·
oard all dummy's dlarr.onds
on blAck card.J. Unfortunately for Soulh, East ruffed the
first high club and took the
setting Irick wllh th~ dla ·

35 Court St.
Gallipolis, Oh1o
Call446·3896
446-)080
ti C

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47ft. Wor ktng He1ght
PASQUALE
ELEC TRIC
1S'l Thtrd Av e
614·44 6 2716
ti c

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
Lenno x Hea ttng &amp; Aar
Condtttontng All Types.
1n su laf1on E lectn cal
Wtnng
Ca ll 446 BSH or 446 0445
alter 4:30p .m .
ff c

,:.~ I__MPROVEMENTS

L

Bill's

ADVANCED
CLEAN IN G SERVI CE
446 -391 s
No Answer 446· 2062
Moder n tteam cl eantng
for ca rp et &amp; upholstery
( tn surance work )
• Scotcguard·JM
• Walls, floors,
wtndow s
• Water &amp; ~ mok e
damage
lndustna t
Comm erc1a l

r

Nu· Pr1me replacement
Windows
Storm wtndow s &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; v1nyl

siding

Howmet Patio Covers
How met screen room s
Mobile home awnings

Aluminum utility

Restdenfta~

buildings
691 Miller Dr&lt;ve
446· 2642
Free Estimates

mond queen
Soutll could have made

the contract by almply ruff-

Dependable, 8 year s ex·
penence . We do care!
lie

In&amp; out two low clubs, bu\ as
staled earlier South wu not
too lood a player.
fi'DSI'AI'D oam:aPRISI:...,.. I

SOLUTION

81
Home
_ ~ _!_r:rl__e!:_o~eme'!!_s_ . _
Marcum
Roo f tn g
8.
Spouttng. 30 years ex
perience. spec ta li ztn g tn
buoll up roof Call 614 3ee
9622 or 614 3e8·9e57

French Ctty Patntmg
residential &amp; commerc tal ,
interior, ex terior , paper
hanomg ,
&amp;
textured
ceo lings. Call 614 367·77e4
or 614·367 7160

Need someth1n g hauled
away or some th tng moved'
We' ll do ot Call 446 3159 or
614 256 1967 after 6
Now Hauling ltmes ton e f1ll
dtrt·top soil gr avel Free
esttmates
Call 614 367
7101

J IM S Wa ter Serv1ce Call
Jom Lanoer, 304 67 5 7397
87 - ~

CHRIST I AN 'S
CON
STRUCTION
Co n• tr ,
roof.ng , stdtng, spouttng ,
fencing , paintlng, repa1rs &amp;
c leanong
446 2000, ca ll
before e and after 5 30

Upholstery

OLYMPIC STAIN
In
stock only , Sll DO per
gallon 1;'1 Pleasant Paonl
and Wallpaper, front of lhe
Post Office on Matn St

-

~-

TRISTATE
UP HOL STERY SHOP
1 163 Sec Ave , Gal hpolos
446 7833 or 446 18JJ
MOWREY S Uphol stery Rt
1 Bo)C 124, Pt Pleasant. 304
675 4154

c &amp; R Paont Center
Profess1onal
pamters .
commerctal and restden
tial. insured 41 Court St ,
Gallipolis, 440 9~58 . no an
swer4,1758

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Trldel for
money

e Reat estate

Gene 's Steam Carpet
Clean Scotch Gaurd Free
estimates·sprtng spectals
Gene Smoth, 992 6309
RON'S Telev tSIOn Ser vtce
Special tZ1ng tn Zentth and
Motorola , Quazar . and
house ca lis Phone 576 239e
or 446·2454
F &amp; K Tree Tn mm tng,
stump removal 67 5 1331
Rl NGLES'S SERVI CE ex
perienced mason, roof er ,
carpenter . eJectrtc1an.
general r e patr s and
remodeling Phone 304 675
2088 or 675 4560
Water wells Commerc tal
and Domesttc Test holes
Pumps Sa les and Servtce
304·895-3802
ADVANCED
Sea ml ess
Gutter Doors
Offerong
c ontinuous
~HJttenng ,
seamless Sldtng, rooftng,
garage
doors ,
fr ee
estomates, 614 698 e205
STARKS Tree Tnmmong
and Lawn Servtce Shrubs
tro mmed Phone 304 576
2010
BUILDING, remode long,
carpentry, roofmg, plum
btng, concrete work. 304
675· 2440.

Motor Home

8ft . shde m truck camper,
exc. cond., fully equipped
Call614·3e8·e801 .

81

4'

Auto Repa•r

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work Professional custom
palnt work on motorcycles
Auto Trom Center, 446·196e
78

Puo

Openln1lead otQ

1979 Ford Bronco, 40,000
miles, new tires. $5,400
Phone 304 773·Se26

Motorcycles

st

c;.

7e JEE;P Renegade, 24,000
miles, S3800. firm . 304-675
362e

74

!NT

Pau

1973 Chevy Blazer with
37 ,000 mi. Radio, a c, p.s..
p.b. , avlo .• lint glass. 10 in
rally wheel s with 10 x 15
Land trac tires. $1 ,700 614
992· 7539.

••r•·l

Fn . &amp; St1t
LONE WOLF 10.1

..

6091

Thurs. -PoeM Toutn 1·1· 30
Fn. &amp; Sat. LIVE BANOS
(Drink &amp; OrCM"n u&lt;:h,mght )

THIS MONTH'S sANDS
Wed. &amp; Thun,

.A 110 I
Vulnerable North-South
Dealer: Soulh
Wat
Nonlo llatt soo..

72 Blazer A wheel drive,
gooc body &amp; engine, V·8,
PB, PS, Sl.SOO Call615·256·

14 foot Mustang trailer,
seoo . electric brakes. gas,
refngerator, 12 volt and
gas lights Phone (3041 ee2
2972.

* ba&lt;khoe
• excavating
*septic systems
• Awa1er, sewer
&amp; ga• lines
•dump truck
•limestone
_

3· 29· tfc

HARRISON'S

•'

.Alii Ill

Vans &amp; 4 W. O.

-----------lf-----------+---------~-11976 Tee la id down camper

TOWN - Nice well maintaoned and
redecorated 2 bedroom home 2 mtles
from town. Has an equipped kl\&lt;hen,
lull basement, family room, woolJ,
burner, elect. he.O (low bolls!. large at·
tached carport, detached garage, some
furniture included. 1 2 acres w/ fru•t &amp;
Shade trees plus garden area; ,S39,500

!·WI

.I(Jel

~:::::::::::::3·:/:·lf:c~~:::::::::::::::::t~::::::::~::::::~ 76

I

FINISH IT. YOURSELF ~ 3,li&gt;edroom
home situated on over 1 acre n~af,Th4r·
man. 5 rooms a(ld bath with 2 l'j&gt;Oms un·
finished. Also InclUdes 12X24 cabin.
Only$12,600.
',
VA ACQUIRED PROPERTY- 128,500
- Located In rural setting
Mi ll Road t~O,S 3 pedroom ho"\e offer&amp;
famll"( room. flrepla~e. equipped . ~11chen, full basement and over 'h ac~
y1rd. S1AOO - n payment
yrs,
fltllnclno.
•
NEW LtSTINC.
HOME·- For
• verv clean
In
Haa 2

CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
Pac-Man Party Packs
and Cake Available

Ph. 949·2160 or 949·2322
4-20 tfc

Free Estimates
4 2D·tlc

21

PH. 992-2063

TOM HOSKINS

247-3534

I
I

====~base
.

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·lO·tfc

-

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
e Siding
e Remodeling
• Free estimates
e 20 Yrs experience

EXP.
•Res1dentoat
•Commercial
•Industrial
~acine, Ohio

I
I
I
I
I

»

992·7583
992 2282

Ph .

16 YEARS

1

j '
en woocs

V. C. YOUNG Ill

:'

I

c·

-f'tumbfoaad
altctricM !!Oil
(FIN lstlmatnl

:::::::6:·:15=·=tf~c=~======:':':' ~~'~t~~~~~~~~~~
DABBLE
O'Brien Electric OHIOVAUEY
SHOP
Service
ROOFING
Pomeroy, OH.

RE O'UC E 0 TO SS9,SOO - Definolely
of today's best market buvs. Over 1700
sq ft of ltvtng area .nc lud es 3 k 1ng· ·
stzed bedrooms, la rae famtly room
w/ ftr eplace. 2 bathS, ntce large k1tchen
&amp; d1 nmq area, 2 car ga rage, foy er &amp; 1h
acn"' yard 1n c •tY schOO! d1 St Assuma ble
91'?0.0 mortqaqe
RENTAl F'RO PERTY Locilted l
;.cross from E urC'ka Dam fh1 s propert y
hilS ;t 2 or 3 bed room home wtth new
roof and a 1961 R tC hMdson 2 bedroom,
10x41 rnob tl c horne tn qood condttton
Also hc:t s Px trc:t rnobtle home hook up,
ce llar &amp; stori\QC' btdQ House r ents t $225
rno M obile at $200 rno C1ty schools
Only 529.900
NEWONMAR KE T
lOT HOM E - lO.e ACRE S - Thos os an
il ttr ;~c ttv c 11f1 story 8 yr old loq home
wo l h 3 bedrooms, forepl ace, equoppedl
k•tchf'n, Ph b;tt h, full basement &amp; wood
l ur nilce Wooded 10 acres In a quoet l
prc:trrful set t tnq Only S39,900 and
flwnN w tll ltnance With $6,000 down
payrnenl
•
IN TOWN - Pnvate loca tton on thts
older we lt kept 3 bedroom ,· 2 story
home
Has equtpped kttchen.
flrf' pl ;~ccs, famtly room , l l/2 bath,
nal gas heat , 2 car garage, 16x32 in
ground pool , al l s1tuated on appfOX. 1
ac 60's
,
'
LOCATION
LOCATION LOCATION - Thts one tS l'h blocks
c tty park . Well kept J bedroom home
w1th basement, mode rn heattng
svstem, and large back yard 2 car
garage Perfect for any soze famil y
LOW INTEREST ASSUMPTON - ,
yr old , 3 bedroom home w1th over 1.500
sq ft of lt Vt nQ Fully e qut~JJed k ttchen,
lamoly room,.2 baths, cent. aor, plus 10
acr es of land (all c lear) 16x36 barn andl
larqe rd frontage '12 mtle off Rt 160
S~ 9 · 000
HOME &amp; 2 ACRES - Pi cturesque set·
tong ort old 160 nea\ Porter 10 yr old, 21
bedroom borne wtth garage, full 1n.
sul atton &amp; th ermo wtndow s Has pond,
good oar.den a rea. shop, plu s an old
farm house that cold be rem odeled.

bedrooms. fJr,i&gt;place, eat· on kitchen. full
basement, rec. room. , fam•IY room,
garage, dec!&lt; &amp;' fenced back yard on
nearl y &amp; acre. Gooc locatoon.

::!f.-=.rltti """

nuCONSH!~~CT-~~~

Sires from 4 to 6 and all
wooc buildings 24•36.
Insulated Dog Houses

OWNER PURCHASED NEW HOME
Must sell this charming Cape Cod 1
block from H.M . C. Very nicely ar·
ranged 4 b edroom with country kot·
chen, formal dinin~"~n1' 'laths, full ba~e
ment and 1;,,&lt;'"\.u Je. Lovely ·~·
ground swim' ~ pool w/~c reened tn
lounge II you need low fuel bills and 4
bedroom s see this one. Nat gas. city
water and sewer. City ·~-~ools .
EVERYTHING YOU'LL NEED
AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD
You must see all the extras this ttne 3
bedroom home olfers Localed on city
school diSfrtct, this ranch h~s a
beautiful kitchen with aual1ty cabtnets,
range and oven, dishwasher and com·
pactor. fireplace in living room, l'h
balh full basement. famoly room .
gara'ge and 18X36 in ground pol, huge
covered deck and"' ac Only $53,900.

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949-2293
or 949·2417
3·3-tfn

'A4iloril'lnd rtlll0dolin1

e Wuhers
e Dishwashers
.•
e Ranges e Relr1oerators
e Dryers e Freerers
PARTS and SERVICE
4·5-tlc

BUILDINGS
Sizes
from 30X24"

:

NOIITII

U. ·.,
' Rl. SO Eut
Guysville, Ohio
Authorlltd John Deere,
New Holland, ~ush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·tfc

ds,
foundallons,
rtc:lamatlon.

Vinyl

COLONIAL HOME - 40 ACRE SET·
TtNG - And proced at only $65 1000 Thos
1S a lovely A bedroom 5 yr Old home
Wi th it beaUti fUl VtCW and qutet
sec luded se tttnQ ThiS homC has equ•P
pcd k1t chen. ftreplilce . 2 baths ,
h,;sr.rnent, dtntnQ room. offtce or
cten,woodburmn &lt;l furn ace plus 30x50
·r'lela l bc:trn, 10 ;~cr es of cr op , balAnce •n
woods Call for appotntmen t

., .

SALES &amp;SERVICE

vice, water, stwtr, pon-

~A=LL=ST=.EE=L~~=
. RO=U=SH==~======~I
&amp;

475 KATHY OR. - Attractive new
listing just off Rt. 35 near hospilal,
shopping. theatre, etc. Brick ranch with
3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen, dining
room, 1112 bath, nat. gas, cent. air, new
carpel, 2 car garage and large llat
yard. $59,500.

BOGGS

atr·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

APPLIANCE

Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph . 992-2174
2·26· tlc

2' ' ACRES- 1 MILE FROM HMCVery nice 3 bedroom brick in Charolais
Hills Thos brick ranch offers over 1650
sq ft . of living tn a quality neigh·
borhood . Has lamoly room with wooc·
burner, equipped kitchen, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, heat pump, 2 car garage and
over 2 acres yard. $69,900

~ck hoe

YOUNG'S

KEN'S

Radiator Spectaltst
NATHAN BIGGS
3S Y rs Experience

PTION TO BUY OR -LAND CONTRACT. TWOI
NO THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT
PER MONTH.

LARIAT DRIVE lNG AVAILABLE story, 15x21 LR , formal "'''""''
ba sement w tth 14x27 famt
e d tn k notty P•n e, 2 fin, oi.,ce!S.,
rear screened tn porch, garage and
100x300 lot Can be .bought woth or
w1thout furntture Askt ng $59 ,500 wt th
24%
., , down and 12% on the balance

''CUl'OUT
FOR F'UTURE USE "

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

8V2% ASSUMPTION ;- Very attractive
home with excellent financing terms. 3
or 4 bedroom tri -level located off Rt. 35.
Has 11!2 baths, woodburner, dintng
room , equipped kitchen, 2 car garage &amp;
central a or. $59,500.

South ie in too deep

''J
tAll

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From 1he Smallest
Heater Core to the
L•argest Radiator .

Reat Ellate - General

!!/II~ ,~~nunica

NICE TO COME HOME TO - Nice brick &amp; frame
r anch wtfh 3 bedrooms, family room wtth fireplace,
bQrtu ttfu l ca rpet , '1 ca r garage
11495

-

Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992·277'1 •
·4·1 mo.
OAI&lt; DRIVE '
BELOW MARKET INTEREST
Owners moved, m ust sell now. One of
the area's ftn es t ne1ahbOrhOOd$ Con
ven•ent to most cvery th t n~ and ex
cellent for children 4 bedroom bt level
,ncludes 2•12 bath, famt ly r6om ,
f1replace , dtn tn q room, equtpped ~1t
chen. deck , 2
oaraQe and corner lot

Dorer &amp;

•SEAT COVERS
•VINYL TOPS
•CONVERTIBLE TOPS
•CARPETS
•A Complele l!ine ot
Automobile Uphol•tery
7-1 ·1 mo. pd .

•New roofing

$69,900
1972 Chevy pickup $300 00,
1974 Ford Gran Torino
ssoo .oo. Call 304 576·2174 af·
ter 5:30p.m .

302 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-6506

•Siorm Doors
•Storm Windows
•ReplliCeinent
Windows

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
.

0 ·7

Services·offered

BRIDGE

. C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
-AND •
CONSTRUCTION

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

•Insulation

PHONE 446-3643

72 Chevy 1/ 2 lon pickup,
PS, PB, auto., reasonable.
Call61088·9367

STROUT. REALTV Inc.

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

J•m CK"'•"· .e.noc:••M· ..... ,... Ewe

Tr.uck 'sfor Sale

I I l I I I )

~--------~------Th_l_•_m_•_'',''.a_l~
___•_o_•_'__
• wo_•_•_o_u_•-__li_N_IN·G~

•

J&amp;LBLOWN
INSUlATION
VIIIYllo

lk• w.,em•n. Broto.,., u•· lrt6 E:ve

T h e Sunday T om es - Sentrne i - Page-

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

Business· services

1976 Ford F250, automatic,
P s Runs gooc . 388·9342.

Prtntllll3werllenJ· (

Y••l.ld.y

4, 1982

ALUMINUM SIDING

!,-,,.,.=...,._,-..,

1980 vw Rabbot, 2 dr , hat
chback , .t spd ., a1r cond ,
AM FM cassette, rear wm
dow defroster, new rad 1a l
tir es, one owner, new cond
Call446-1l515 anyt ome

July
'•

..

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

1979 Fireblrd, automatic, 5
new- Radials, Am·FM. Call
atter6 P.M . 304-675 -7599.

PUBLIC
SALE
The
followtng described veh tcle
w oll be offered for Public
Sa l e at
Smt th · Butck ·
Ponttac, Inc Gall tpol ls, Oh
on July 19,1982 at 10 30 AM
Terms of sa le ts cash tn
hand at tom e of sa te. Writ
ten bids may be submitted 11_!~~~~'#~--r-,
to GMAC at 318 Main It
Str ee t ,
Be lpre , Ohio
GMAC r eserv"' to right to IL.._J~,a_-'-,c,...a_.J..._J
w othdraw thi s vehicle from
the sa le. 1978 Buick Regal,
Serial K 4J47A8H2490el, Ac ·
count N 099·0904· 2513e
GEN E RAL MOTORS AC ·
CEPTANCE
COR
PORATION

-

WISEMAN
.

72
Mustang,
6 cyl. ,
automatic, new tires, e)( ·
ce llent mecMnicai con·
dillon. cheap, 304·576·2866.

Unacrlmbte theae four JUI"'Otn,
ontltner to each aqu1r1, 10 form
fOlK ordinary wordt

1982

J

~!_O! f~r_S..!.!!_~

71

197.'&gt; Monte Cu lo $1.000

w .~a.

Pomeroy- Moddleport- Gall

82

Plumbong
&amp; Healing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Ptne
Phone 446 3ee8 or 446 4477
83

Excavatong

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work
Special
farm rates. Call us for free
eshcnates . 446·4440
. For water lines, sewer
l ines, sepllc tanks or leaky
basements call Hayman ·
The Hoeman. 614·992-26le.
,JAR Conslrucllon Co Dol·
cher, backhoe, and dozer .
Footers. gas lines. water
lines, Rutland, Ohio. 614·
742·2903.
Lawrence SideJ'Istricker
Backhoe Service. !=al r 675551j0.
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Mlchlne repairs.
service. Authorlred Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scl!ssors, Fabric Shop,
Po!Tleroy. 992·22,84.
as

General Hauling

JONES, BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Caii6U·36HA71
or 614-367-0:591.

"lobe"
88 Nagattve
prefix

89 Country of

mllp

Alia ·

10 Sllln of
healing
14 Halle
19 FOidl
21 Young

70 Nacl&lt;plooe
71 Century
plant
73 Saga
75Showeda
chlllr
77 lolando off
Iret and
78 Crown
80LOOM

8llmon
22 Comfort
23 HOld back

24 Shobblef
28 Wile ole
lord
28 Eating area
29511,_
coin
30 Mulk:al
Instrument
32 Stage
whl-

33
34
35
37
39

Clualfy
Greek letter
AbOUnd
Planet
Ship's
curved

planking
40 Haapo
2 word a
41 Hike
42 Bongo
44 Drenches
48 Slender
47 Fruit bowl
IIem
4l! Holt
50 Gave

52 South African Dutch

53 Romance
lang
55 Civil Injury
57 Teutonic
deity

58 Fate
59 Fomnllly
preciM
60tJnllol

weight:

-

Abb&lt;
82 100,000
B4Pedaldlglla

taPortol

gown•

81 Superlative
ending
82 Cloofng
MCUrely
84 Hare
88Cenl0&lt;
87 Dinner
COUIN

e91nlet
92 Inquired
95 Tips the hat
98 S-llhaped
molding
99 Kind ot tee
101 CertaJn cells
103 Cry
104 Deface
105Soup
tngredl8flt
106YI!MI, In
Madrid
107 Greek letter
108 Within·
COmb form
110 Old Por-

ploco

128 Prollted
130 Poema
132 Time gone
by
133 Chotfenge
134 MOham·
mod In-

leader
135 Smack
137 fnqulrea
139 Hardwood tree
1411 Danllh
Island

141 Frock
143 let It 1tand

145 Stroh
141! Saluroted
148 Individuals
150 Hermll
152 Rarely
153 Coat or a
kind
1S4 Back ot

1e To tho side
17 Bug Of a
oort

1e Move
furtively
20Appeer
23 Gosatp

158 Closer
157 Ancten1

chariot
158 Cook slowty
159 Bridge
180 Top While
Hoose aide
DOWN
1 European
herring

25 Peruse

27W88hed
llllhlly

9e Percetva by
touch

28 Fate

97 Ftreplace
pall
100 Scale note
102 Walk

3 I Let lall
33 Skidded
36 Jen·a pal

38 Certain
40 Turidllh

105 Spokan
109 Mhnure
112 Animal' s

standard
41 l lona or

coat

Tillers

43 Debatable
45 MOKICan
shawl
4e Boutiques
47 Ache

49 Urge on
52 Bartered

53 Narrow
board
5-4 Sanskrit
dlaiec1
56 Vut tract or
land
59 Chief
executive
60 Bank

-4 Latvian coin
5 Mhl

bu"nesa
61 loud aoond
83 Rougher
85 Coal dust
67 Ed's need s
69 Pronoun

coin
111 McMahon of

8 PlatMulmo

70 More

TY
112 Bird ot 113 Warbled
115Scolonooe
117 Narrate
1 19 USMA grlld
120EdlbloNO&lt;I
12t EMtem

7 Once

tugueee

Eutopeln
124 Dodt
12tRench

.......

127 At IIIIo

2 RaiiiOCI tho
oplrit
3 Mlollvel

Abbr

around
track

8 Region
9 Locka of
holr

tO Shabby
11 Crete
12 a-t ol
burden
t 3 Exlat
14 Coin
18 Hod a bile

~-.....

succinct
72 Wipe OUI
74 Siberian
river
7e Near
77 Permit
79 Actor

Villoda
83 Sum up
85 Shotternd
88 Simple
87 Cupola
88 Mild

113 Certain
11-4 River tn

India
118 Dines

118 Castor's
mother
120 Dry
0
measures
121 Courageous
person
122 Causes

123 Tidings
125 Breathe

126-llghlly
127 Difficult
129 Tropical
trult
131 Emulates
Ertc Hekien
132 Out of date
133 Judge
13~ Dart
138 Gullllko bird
138 Ctlblc me ter
1411 Foouess
141 Erue
142 Break
suddenly
144 Abound

14 7 Dutch town

148Veooel
149 Watering
place
, 151 Mlaa Wool
153 Postscript

Abbr
155 Printer 's

expletive

~~~

~

93 Enthualum
94 Knockout
Abbr

51 Din

necl&lt;

89 Artlltclal
language
90Mod
91 Meturlng
92 SnMe

~~~--

�_f!9_~

0 ·8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

GALLIA COUNTV !.!tM~: rs urt! a pp&lt;tr.·nllv not
~u in J,! !1.1 rca L·h l hl'lr llhJl'I'IJV t: uf a nt·w 18-hult·
cha m pi un ~ h ip t:uur-;c und at -cnul!•ntt• •nt ;tl f{u\1 ncy. At least nut tlu ~ y r~r . f u ~&lt;:~r lt' m j.! problems
httvl' l:H USt'd lht• pr uj~r t tu bt· abamlunL'tf and
!hOSt&gt; whu ('Uil \ ri bUh'll hll \' t' ha d l ht.'lf JI I U il ~}'

certainly no dishonor attached: We
tried, but a depression intervened so
that the fellers wif the dough simply
didn't want to part with a large
qua ntity of it.

•

DEB FOX TOOK the picture of
Rodney's post office in the act of
closing for all time, and that photo
and story rated the Associated
Press. You say she isn't big enough
to take AP photos' Look again Deb did it, the only Gallipolis
newsperson so to do'

n~f Wldt•tJ.

GIVE HONOKto the young man
who thought up the idea. It would
have been one step forward for
Gallia County, _a nd as it i~ . there is

KEVIN KELLY is another staff
member of the Times-Sentinel who
takes newspictures . Indefatigabl e,
this ex-New Yorker goes nwnerous
places fast w1th his newspaper's
camera, covers a long and boring
meeting in such a manner that it's
almost inte restm ~.
LARRY C. EWING has added a
dignity one expecw from a mature
di.sciple of the Fourth Estate and has
some seniority on the other
young'n's. He can do anything.

JIM MARRINER, on the left, Is
the Investigator for the Gallla
County shertff's offlce. In the ·
middle Is John Riddle, operations
supervisor for the C&amp;O railway.
The reporter Is KeviQ Kelly for
the Times-Sentinel. The trio was
at the scene of R nine-car
derailing hack of Mabelene Drive
June 15. Tjle derailing wrc up 200
feet of track.

DALE ROTHGEB ha s the
grueling news editor chores for the
entire trio of newspaper in the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company_ He
covered the Chuck Stohart roasttoast at Middleport; Stohart is now
ihe football coach at the University
of Utah. He coached the Blue Devils
of Gallipolis, and it was his team in
1960 which received the highest encomiwn in a conversation the other
day. Some guys talking with him
said that the 1960 Blue Devils were
the best in Gallipolis history .
HOBE WJL.WN is the boss, rising
from printer's devil of 35 years ago
to the executive editor's job today.
Hobe guides the work and talents of
everybody else in the editorial room,
and the result plainly shows _ 01'
Hobe has more the feel of a
newspaperman lhat anyone else,
and the knowledge to back it up '

10 cases end, six continued
GALLIPOLIS -:- Ten cases were
terminated and six contlnued Friday In Gallipolis MuniclJlal Court.
Michael C. Chrl&lt;tian, 20. Huntington, W.Va., charged DWI, no
operator's license, reckless opera. Uon and fleeing a pollee officer,
pleaded not guilty to all charges. He
was released on $2,000 recognizance bond and pretrials have been
set on or aboul July 12.
Charged wllh carrylng a concealed weapon , Oils A. Shipley, 22,
Rt. 1, Thurman, pleaded not guilty.
HL&lt; bond was continued and pretrial wa~ set for July 12. Al ~o
charged with DWI. Shipley's bOnd
was continued.
Danny Morris. Rt. l. Crown City,
charged with carrying a concealed
weapon, pleaded no! guilty and was
relea~ed on Sl.!XXI recognizance
bond. Pretrial was set for July 12.
Charged wllh non~upport, Larry
Hartshorn. Gallipolis, was released
on $5,000 recognizance bond. No
trial date was set.

July 4, 1982

w. va .

James A. Bloomer, 39, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, charged with DWI, case continued to July 12.
Charged with speeding, Roger D.
Wllllams, 25, Rt. 2, Crown City,
pleaded not gullty, with trial set lor
July 12.
Bobby G. Back, 48, GaUipolls,
charged with lallure to stop lor a
stop sign, forfeited $40 bond.
Charged with !allure to display
valid regl~tration and forfeiting $8i
bond was James S. Robinson, 35,
GaUl polls.
Forfettlng bond for speeding
were:

Phillip G. Daniels. 33, Proctorvllle, $l!; Michael F. GuUford, 28,
Plant City, Fla., $38; Harry L.
Pfeiffer, 47, Columbus, $38; Jerry
K. Goble, 25, Rt. 4, Oak Hill, $39.
Douglas M. Benford, 31, HiddenIte, N.C.. $41; James H. Busch. 50,
Seeley Lake, Moil., $42; Timothy
L. Wright, 19, Rt. 1, Crown City,
$44; Bruce w. Willis. 28, Ironton,

By JAMES SANDS
an electric annunci11tor in 1885.
Railroad . In time Cushman ,became the Park Central from Cushmap a11,d
Special correspondent
IN 188f COLONEL and Mrs."'J .C. an engineer on the Hocking Valley. associates and for more than 60
GALUPOLIS - In 1880 S. M. Morris took over the Park Central In 1895 Cushman got into the hotel years the Amold family lias had conBrandyberry and John Hampton and ran it untlll89'1. It is interesting business first in Middleport and trol of the business. In that time the
bought _the property that now holds that through many of these same II later Hillsboro. Under the Cushmans park Central has unde'¥one se.veral
the Park Central Hotel for $4,000 years, the Morrises. also operated the Park Central was recognized as other changes and additions.
James Sands' address Is Box 92,
from Ch a rle s
the Riverview Hotel at First and ·Gallipolis' finest hotel.
Regnier. Located
State. The improvement the
·· '
In 1919 the Arnold family bought Cll"rksburg, Ohio 43115.
on this property
Morrises made was to make the
'
were an old rniU
.dining room one of Gallipolis' finest.
and a house. In
They installed a special upstairs en1880 Brandy berry
trance to the dining room that was to
and Hampton had
be used only by the women so they
parts of the house
could make a "gi'imdentrance". and the old Neal
SANDS
' The ~ext proprietors were Nat and
mill torn down _
Dud Bryan. Under the Bryans a
Ironically , the house was built in plate glass front was installed as
1833 by Marine Brandyberry's well as a tile floor level with ~he
father for Christopher Ruby. Henry street and a new brick kitchen. In
Brandyberry fell off the roof of the 1897the Park Central was heated by ,
Ruby house and almost lost his life. steam, lighted by electricity and had
The Neal mill on this site was moved the best in water service. The finest
to Fourth and State and later to of Brussels carpet was used in the
Fourth and Vine. Parts of the Vine hallways and in the lobby.
DURING -THE BRYANS' tenure,
Street mill (which was later owned
by the Bell and Shaw families) is they had a young clerk by the name
still contained within the present of 0.0. Mcinlyure who was often
day North Produce building _
seen entertoining the traveling
Originally the Brandyberry· - . salesmen who patronized the P.,ark
Hampton building at Second and CentraL Odd was an exceptional
State was designed as a rooming bicyclist. On one occasion, however,
house with 48 rooms. By 1883 when Odd gave a demonstration of hypthe building was finally completed it notism and "put under" one of the
was decided to change to the hotel Park Centr~l's regular customers.
business and hence the name Park When Odd snapped his fingers to
Central Hotel was given. It is the "bring the man back", the subjet
only hotel built in the 19th century was still "out of it"_ Odd poured
that has retained the same name water, whiskey and several other
throughout its history. .
things on the man before the subject
AT VARIOUS TIMES the Park "carne to".
COMPLETED AS a: botelln 1883 the Park Centn!l hotel abw serv~·as
Central has also housed businesses
In 1907 Walter Cushman and a cora
rooming
house from 1881 lo 1883. Part of the building is a house lhat
in iw first floor. In 1883 Martin poration purchased the Park Central
dates
to
1833
and the Neal mill of about the same date. S. M. Brondybtrry :,_
McHale operated a grocery here, from the Bryans. Cushman had at
and
John
Hampton
buill the Park Central incorporating these lwu.
Mrs. -Holloway had a millinery shop; other times also operted a stable and
buildings, stal11ng In 1881.
and Or. Alcorn had his offices here.
a steam bus company in Gallipolis.
In 1885 the proprietor J. W. Worley ,..Cushman's genealogy is interesting
boasted that he had " the best as Walter's ancestor Robert Cushlocation of any hotel" and that his man was one of two men (the other
hotel ''was well vemilated and sup- was John carver) who chartered the
plies every want". The Park Central Mayflower which brought the
even had its own cab service that Pilgrims from Holland to the New
picked people up at the river depot World.
or at the train depot. That same year
"wALTER CUSHMAN was born in
Worley had beautiful wall paper put 1859 in Winthrop, Maine, but spent 12
in every room as well as $5,000 of years of his childhood in Illinois.
new furnishings_ The Park Central Cushman came to Gallipolis in 1880
was Gallipolis' first hotel to install to lay track for the Hocking Valley

•
. A gu_ide to area programming,
activi.tie. and ~ntl,
July 4 through 10

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY
HAVEA$AFf
HOLIDAY WEEKEND

Marietta resident
heads GOP committee
LANCASTER - Members of the
lOth Congressional District
Republican Committee met recently
at Shaw's Restaurant in Lancaster
for a reorganization dinner following
the June Primary elections. Chosen
unanimously to serve two-year terms were John F. Greacen, Marietta,
Chairman; Jay W. Dupler, Sugar
Grove, Vice Chainnan; Margaret
Matheny, Lancaster, Secretary and
Mrs: Connie Hemphill, Gallipolis,
Treasurer.
Virgil E. Brown, Republican candidate for Secretary of State ad, dressed the fifty members present
outlining the various duties of that
office.
·
The lOth District Committee is a
campaign arm of the Republican

1
I
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I

FROM SLIDES

A

No limit to the number
of atldel or 10 the number
cil prlnta per Ill~.

v

ATHENS. Ohio (AP ) - The special prosecutor in the trial of Athens
Townshlp trustee Claire BaU Sr.
says he will decide within two
weeks whether to seek a retrial_
Prosecutor David Bosley commented after a jury Thursday was
unable lo reac h a decision In !he
case. Ball was being tried on a !hell
in office charge.
The ju ry delivera ted more than
seven hours Wednesday and Thu rsday over conflicling testimony re-

ELBERFELDS IN

Ex ph-.
7-3 1- 82

EROY
PASTOR

DAVID.WHITE
and the
CONGREGATION

listings

oft~e

TV Mailbag
Page2

CALVARY
PENTECOSTAL
CHURCH
WARMLY WELCOME YOU TO JOIN THEM IN

SPECIAL REVIVAL SERVICES

Soap World
Page5

JULY 4 THRU 11--7:30 P.M. NIGHTLY
we will be celebrating our "Freedom to Worship" in
the liberty of the Holy Spirit as Rev. Michael Mecca,
from Charleston, .west Virginia, ministers to us. come
worship with us and let God supply your needs. Our·
church is located B miles south of Gallipolis on Clay
Chapel Rd. Follow signs off Rt. 7. For more informa·
tion call446·7649.

,."

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ESPN. Ustings
Page9

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to area entertainment
Includes complete

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WE WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY, JULY 5th
IN OBSERVANCE OF INDEPENDENCE DAY

Party comprising the Central Committee Chairman, Executive Commitll!e Chairman arid County Chairwoman of each of the eleven counties in the district as well as the state
central committeeman and committeewoman from the lOth District.
Others include members of the
Ohio General Assembly serving
counties within the district as well as
appellate judges am! . lOth District
Coagressman ClarenCe E. Miller.
The lOth District, recently
reoutlined by the decennial
redistr.icting, comprises all {)f
Muskingum, Morgan, Perry, Fairfield, Meigs, Gallia and Lawrence
counties and pam of Licking, Guernsey, Washington and Athens counties.

,------------COLOR P.RINTS

5
A

$90.

Retrial decision slated next week

Farmer's market
offered at
Gallipolis store

Point Pleasant,

Arnold family ·has owned Park Central sine~ 1.919

Grand design for golf links
at Rodney has not yet won
GALUPOLIS - The grand de~ig n
for a golf links centered at Rodney
has not yet won. but it took another
newSpaper to let us know about it.
Ed Clark. who for decades has conducted "Sun Spow" in the upper lefthand colwnn of the front page of the
Jackson Journal-Herald, told the
spocW world about U1e fai lure th us:

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

Area Events
Page 15
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Hanna•J;Iarbera Land•.. page 8

• .IUL¥4111
USEDUI

Seroing _G;allill, Meigs and Mason Counties

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.....•

GALUPOUS - "A free service
for our local farmers' '
That's what Bob Applegate,
manager of the Gallipolis Pic-Pac
Supermarket said Saturday, announcing a farmer 's market will be
open to local farm ers each Thursday
the remainder of the swnmer_
The markel will be located on a
section of Pic-Pac's parking·lot from
4 until 9 p.m. ·
•
The supermarket will furnish
paper hags for the produce, Applegate said.
There will be no charge to the farmers, fie added.

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1975 DODGE DART, 6CYL.
'

'

Brown with gold cloth. interior. Full vinyl top, air cond . /al/to .' trans ~ , power
steering, AM·radi.o, with -48,600, actual miles.
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town.-·car
Cll.
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ttu••luo, -

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811 Gene Jotw. ., .:... Tlfl'l

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1640 Eastern All., Gatlipells
. - 44101161

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Q.OIID MONDAY, JULY I; IN O...IVANCI Of INDI"NDINCI DAY ··
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