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                  <text>12-The

Ohio

Sentinel

AbouL ••

Fair· races will begin . Wednesday
Horse harness racing is scheduled
once a ~ ain this year at the Meigs
County Fair. with heats to be run
W~'llnesday, Thursday and Friday,
beginning at 2 p.m. daily.
Wednesday's racin~ action inclUdes ·a tw.rycar-old filly pace, a
thrct~yl'a r-nld trot, a two-year-old

pace, and a thret.~ycar-old filly trot.
Thursday will include a two-year-old
trot, a thrL't."-year-old pace, a twoyear-old filly trot, while Friday has
a thret"year-old filly pace, a trot for
non-winnt~ rs of $3,000 in 1981, and the
Ohillco pace, for non-winners of
$1~.000 lifcthne as of January 1, 1981.&lt;

. . . . .
.
(Continued from page I)
Each classif1callon IS d!vlded mto . thatshouldhavesta edatGDC the
races and heats dcpendm~ on the loy
ld
Y
'
'
t
·
d
th
•
•
nts
emp
ee
sa
·
f
nwn~r o en ncs, an
c eve
Ill a related matter several GDC
will be run under USTA rules.
•
Several local owncm and drivem . officials were In•Columbus Thurs.
' te in the day to appeal citAtions the develop, • , , t •d t pa'rticlpa
mental center received In
arc cKpec c 0
racin~ .
December.
GDC was cited by the &lt;kcupatlonal Health and Safety Administration for falling to take measures
to prevent outbreaks It amebic hlstolytlca. Hlstolytlca Is an lnfectloil
of the Intestines which emplOyees
arreara~e. two years probation and
and clients at Institutions are suscosts.
ceptible to.
Forfcitin~ bonds were Michael ft..
Heck, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, DWI, $370.50;
GDC otflclals appealed the cltPatricia A. Hindy, Pomeroy, no atlolis because theY claimed the Inoperators license, $60.50; Linda D.. spection which led to the charge;
Beaver, Rt. 3, Racine, speed, $50.50; waa prejudicial and was not conPaul D. Evans, Rt. 1, Portl11nd, no . dueled according to medically aceye protection on cycle, $47.56, no cepted procedures.
cycle endorse]Tlent, $47.56; Robert
. An ,otrtctal 'flth the Ohio DepartR. Musser, lancaster, ·expired ment Qf .lndulltrlal Relations, who
operators license, $45.50; Richard participated In Thuraday' s hearBaker, Pomeroy, reckless Ing,, said;tt may be a week before a
l'llllilg·ts .made on the appeal.
operation, $400.

Co.llege. preview.:,c~,7

•• A-4
Inside••~

Judge fines 15, six forfeit bond
Fifteen defendants were fined and
six others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
wt•re Dustin Dorin, whitehall,
speed, $24 and costs; Jerry Rach,
Rc'fdsvllle, spt.-ed, $26 and costs;
Lemuel Harden, Addison, failed to
display valid license plates, $10 and
costs; Jacob Roush, Pomeroy,
speed, $26 and costs; Rita L. Harmon, Rutland, no valid license
plates, $10 and costs; Terry Napper,
langsville, overload, $358 and costs;
Clifford Whittin gton , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, expired registration, $30
and costs; Robert E. Davis,
Syracuse, illegal parking, $20 and
costs; Charles R. Geary, Mid-

dlcport, no operators license or
cycle endorsement, $7:i and costs,
one year probation.
'
Ricky T. Miller, Rt. 2, Racine, no
operators license, $7~ and costs, six
months probation; John B. Cooper,
Wilkesvllle, left of center, $50 and
costs; Timothy H. Pratt, Guysville,
eKpired registration, $Ia and costs;
Michael Todd Musser, Pomeroy,
DWI, $200 and costs, three days confinement, license suspended 30 days,
criminal damaging, 15 days confinement, costs, six months
probation; Ruth Pearson, Pomeroy,
obstructing official business, $150
and costs, one year probation;
Michael Capehart, Bradner, Ohio,
non-support, $30 per month on

Negotiations••• __.:.;:(.c;:;on; ; :tin: :;~;: ed:.:;fro.;.;m; Jea: : g~Z:e.:.,1_ _
Israell ~IIP!Ipers quoted Begin
Beirut today that the PLO had 'told
U.S. presldentlal envoy Philip C. as saying he stW waa.confldent the
Habib there are 7,100 PLO fighters PLO evacuation would begin next
that must be evacuated from the week.
Israelis ~arned that the
war-ravaged Lebanese capital:
Habib also has a breakdow!l of ceas4!-ttre "c!epends on mutuality."
how many guerrillas wW go to each But Radio Israel aald Begin and his
Arab host country, "but I don't . Cabinet decided to take. no action
have this treakdown," HUal told re- that might endanger the diplomatic
porters. Estimates of the PLO process which the fourth successive day It devastating Israeli bomstrength In Beirut had ranged from
6,1m to 9,1nl and Israel has de- bardment brought to a halt.
Because of the bombing, Lebamanded an accurate count.
Lebanese Prime Minister Shafik nese olflclals suspended Habib's
Wazzall, a key Intermediary In evacuation negotiations, In which
Habib's peace effort, was lm· they aciiiB Intermediaries with the
pressed by the speed and tlrmness PLO. White House spokesman
with which Reagan won the cease- Larry Speakes said Reagan emfire, and Is expected to resume the phasized to Begin that Habib's et·
tl\lks he suspended Thuraday, sour- forts had been halted ".)Vhen they·
were at lhl! point of success."
ces close to Wazzan said.

.''
f

· "DOG DAYS" OF SuMMER - SmaD boys and dop bave alwiQ'S
been Ideal companions and, In the IMI IIUIIIIIIfl' da.Ys before ICbool
be&amp;lns, their thne speut toae(her becomi!B !Jbori, Cal')' BelziiiC. POIMroy, amd Yvooae, hl8 p-eat·clane,looldng rather Ike a Nonnan Rocllwell palatlng of Ufe In small town, America. recently look adYIIIAie ill
of the mlcUuguat weather to lake a t4-alk ~ dowll Mala Skeet.
Yvonne llllrlendly by nature and 8lopped often to lnlroduoe ~to

MILLER MOBU UNIT TO BE AT THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIRTenth District Congressman Clareace Muter wUI have a mobUe unit at
the Meigs County Fair from Aug. 17to !Ito &amp;IIIIIHt area resident&amp; with any
federally related problems they may have. The Congressman wUI also
conduct a public opinion poll on natlunallssues !rum the mobile unit and
tnviles lOth District falrgoers to stop by and give their views.

Hospital news

Squads to share fair duties
Area emergency squads and personnel will be taking turns next week
on the Meigs County Fairl(rounds, in
case of any medical problems at the
five day event begiMing TUesday.
Racine will begin the week during
the day Tuesday, while the Tuppers
Plains squad will be present during
that evenin~ . Wednesday, Mid-

d1eport will be on the ·grounds, and
Pomefby will be on duty Thursday.
Rutland will stand by Friday, during
the day, followed )ly Tuppem Plains
again Friday night.
Finally, Syracuse will take care of
Saturday, with Tuppem Plains
wrapping things up Saturday night.

Education main concem of
Meigs Conservation District
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) held its
annual planning meeting Wednesday morninl(.
Robert First showed slides of
problems and of conservation work
done in the county.
Ideas and comments were
discussed lor work on the 1983 annual work plan.

Koblentz; Treasurer Geor~e
Collins; Jim Rush, Program
Specialist ODNR Division of Soil and
Water Conservation; Jackson;
Huss; SWCD Supervisors Roy
Miller, David Gloeckner, Tom
Thiess, Thereon Johnson; SCS
District Conservationist Robert First, and Opal Dyer, office secretary,
MeigsSWCD.

Veterans Memorial Hospital reported several admlssklns and discharges Thursday.
Admissions-Henry Wells,
Pomeroy; Allen Humphreys,
Pomeroy; Martha Roush, Rutland; Beverly McGlothin, Racine.
Discharges-Gina Fleming,
Emma Hayman, Ida White, Ruby
Halliday.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCIIARGI!ll AUG, lll
PhyUis Brjltton, Dorothy Brennon. Frederick Burdette, Patricia
Canada; Maxine Canter, Eric Carter, Hobert Costen, Luther End!colt, Mrs. Mark Haffelt and
daughter, Robert Hemby, Mrs. Donald HOI and son, Teresa Ktnnlard,
Gladys Martin, vera Mason, Me-

James Waugh and daughter, Ethel
Wells, Quentin WUldns, Green
Wolford.
8IRTBS
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow RIchards, daughter, Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Salser, son.
Mldl,lleport. '

Squad has two calls

B)\ KEVIN KElLY
11PB-Sentlnel Staff

FILLED
WITH HELIUM
9" and 11" LATEX BALLOONS AND
18" MY~R BALLOONS FEATURING
•The Smurfs •Strawberry Shortcake

Plus GET WELL and

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MYLAR
We can add that "SPECIAL TOUCH'' to a
floral arrangement with balloons.

CALL AND ORDER YOURS.~ ••

Two runs were reported overnlghtThursdaybytheMelgsEmergency Medical Sen~tce.
At 10:11 a.m., Tuppers Plains
unit picked up Tom Burroughs and
took him to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Parkerburg; at 9:47 p.m., Pomeroy transported WWiam Morris
from the RainboW Inn to Veterans

.

' Your"ExtraTouch"

~ Flo~ist-Since1957
l52

-

E. Main, Pomeroy

FLO liST
•

Ph.H2·2644

Your FTD FIOr151

;. •

..;,

·' R,I

&amp;c-P

tng

it 11inht
lQU :ill\' • ..,._~

Iissa Nance, Mary Nottingham, Mt- ..~M~em~o~rlal~H~osp~i~t8!~.~-;_--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
chael O'Brien, Velme Pendleton.
WWiam Ringgold, Evelyn Rollins,
Naaman Stapleton, Caley
Summers, Arehle Swartz, Sandra
Taylor, . Pearl Warman, Mrs,

The main
concerns
l&gt;ducating
adults and
children inwere
soil r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;:~::::;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;:;;l1
and water conserVation, erosion control, and savin~ soil.
Dan Huss , Private Lands
Biologist, Ohio Department of
Any complaints or problems ·of any nature
Natural Resources said he would be
regarding Hwer line construction In the
glad to do a wildlife plan for anyone
VIllages of Syracuse and Racine should be sub~
in the county who wanted one.
First reported the Comprehensive
mltted In writing to:
Soil Survey of Meigs County is
The Sewer District
scheduled to begin in 1984. He also
P. 0. Box 201
reported that the expansion ap- .
Racine, Ohio 4Sn1
plication for Buckeye Hills Resource
Conservation and . Development
No later tha" Au ust 20, 19b.
Project (RC&amp;D) which will include

NOTICE

Meigs County is now in Washington t;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;~~;;;;;;;l1
forfinal approval.
.
Armand Jackson, Service
Forester, Ohio Department of
.
'
Natural Resources, went over the
requirements for getting taxes
reducL'Il by declaring it forest land.
Attending were Conunissioners
Henry Wells, Rich Jones and David

ELBE.RfELDS IN POMEROY
WEEKEN' D SALE PRI:CES
ON •.

Rep. Ball to attend
Meifp County Fair
PO~ROY - State Rep. Claire
"Buzz" BaD·announced today he will •
have a public service headquarters
at this year's l'deigs County Fair.
Visitors at the five-day event wiD
1
have an opportunity to voi~ their .
Gil atale ilsues by voting In a
pUbliC oplnlGII poll being conducted
· by the legiJlator. Literature on state
government wiD allo be available. .
Re~t!ve Ball will b1J on
ha(ld thi'ou8hoit the fair to talk with
iret~ rellldel* en llleir views and
. problelllll Jn'l!llvll!l ltate govern-

vtm

ment.

-LADIES' SUMMER HANDBAGS
-MEN'S JEANS and CORDUROYS
-GI~LS' FALL TO.PS
-WOMEN'S SUMMER SlEEPWEAR
-BOYS' JEANS and CORDUORYS
-JUNIOR FALL BLOUSES
.;.WOMEN'S UNIFORMS
-UVING ROOM SUITES
·
.;..MEN'S and BOYS' HANES UNDERWEAR ,.

n" 5
ELBERFELDs IN POMERO~

SHOP FRIDAY TIU I, SATURDAY

,, No. 26

.:co~vrlghltd 1982

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

: : GALLIPOLIS :.... Authorization
for an inland waterways omnibus
blli - w111ch IncludeS the proposed
~ mUilon 'renovation of the Galli~Is Locks and Dam.- faces a ''leglslattve Frankenstein" In
t:;iingress, according to one
'o!J!erver.
. . Two weeks of testimony before
the Hou!l@ Water Resources subcOrnmtttee on this omnibus bill
eitde!l recently. While support for
the dam's renovation was loud and
long, the posslbtllty C1l the new dam
emerging Intact or being discarded

rtlfil81ns.

. ' ·~ against the dam reno.
vatlon 18 tile the old "pork-barrel"
specter, ~Clh historically means

·~tavlaor~dlsatrtppclsrop.rlatlon b~.
w

Pbll Strawn,' an admlplstratlve
;assistant to ·Rep. Clarence Millet,

making an August or September
R.Qhio, said the dam may be
vote
doubtful.
thought of being In this cateaory beIf It passes the authorization
cause It iiffects Miller's district.
to the Senate,
Among the 10 othei' Ohio proJElC!s stage,I the biD li0!!5
.
whicl1
Is
presently
In
a
conservative
tecommended' for authoriZatiOn by
mood,
and
from ihere
spending
the U.S. Army Coi'Jl6 ot Engineers
onto
President
Reagan,
whose ad·
·
Is fiood control tor the LotJan and
ministration
Is
calllngforausterlty.
NelsonvDie areas, also In Miller's
It adds up to three or four "real
dlstrtct.
.
unknowns," In Strawn's opinion.
Procedure In the federal tread"This Is not unusual, and Galllpo.
mOl calls tor the omnibus bill torelis
Isn't being singled out," Strawn
celve authorization from Congress
before any or the proJects can be said. "It's more a victim of theclr·
cumstances around it."
funded. It's hoped by Strawn and
Since the corps of engineers' Hunseveral other congressmen the bill
may get out a1. committee and onto tlnglon district completed a touryear study of Gallipolis In :198l,
the House fioor tor a vote by the end
~upport for renovating the 45-yearof the summer. , .
old
facility baa been ~g•.par"My analogy for It Is !Ike telling a
kid he can go to the movlell and not
tlculal'ly trom tile bar~,1 ~ and
giving 111m 8J)y money to _do ,it," . cbeJnlcal lndua!r1e5 wht~h,, ba:v!'
CQD!erided with numerous Clelays
,SU:awn iald.
" • · ·.
The committee, however, Is also . and navlg~tlonal accidents at Gallipolis ror years.
considering a disaster reuet act and
(Continued on Page A-4)
· revision of \he clean wlater act, ·

' By .JEFF GRAB~
.
'11mee Se..lnel Staff
GA!LQ'OUS - State mental retardation officials
have deVeloped a 'pial) to jnvestlgate. allegations
brought NaJnst the Galilpolls Developmental Center
Sdllllnlst1lltlon.
.
' ' ,Rudy Magnone; director C1l the Ohio Department of
.¥ental ~dation and Developmental Dlsabtlltles,
tOld GDC employees In a letter delivered to them
· Friday tliat a committee wiU be set up to review their
·complaints:
The committee wW be made up of one representative each of Magnone's olflce, the Department of
Administrative Services and one of the area
legtslatorL
· This committee will present its findings and recommendations to an "9bjectlve, Independent review
board," ~·s ~said.
.He said'the tbree members . the review board wW

not be otfldals of the ODMR or "anyone Involved" In
the GDC controversy. The members wiD be appi'O\l'ed
by Sen. Oakley CoDtns, R-Ironton, and Rep. Claire
"Buzz" Ball, R-Athens.
. Mapone said the board wUI preaent a final set of
recommendations to him and he wUI decide wbat
action to take.
1be .letter sent to employees, which was signed by
Magnone and •GOC superintendent Robert Zimmerman, iald "this approach wUI allow for the fairest and
most Impartial hearing and resolution of employee

concerns.''
The letter states that the coriunlttee "wW also review the job abolishment process and make recommendations ror ctiange If deemed appropriate."
In an lnten~iew Saturday, Magnone said "the broad
base of representation" on the committee and the ·
review board "guarantees" the employees a fair

l;

·uey on."

'71' CIIEYIOUT . 10' OLDSMOBILE
CAIIARO
DELTA 81 ROYM.E
..tilt whlet,'l21'
4
dr,, A-C, erviN, AMAM-FM

FM .._,wire wiiHIS,
split ...... cloth Intrior, low miles.

'7f MERCURY
COUUR 11·7

'IIO'HVIOL£T
IMPALA

t.oall-, red, A-C,
cruiM control, AM-FM
· sterto, low miles, NoM
Nlcerl

4 dr., A-e, · -~~ ·v-e.
remote mlrNr, wire
wiiHI C0¥11'1, c~"l"
~trol. vltlyl ,..,,

'5595 '

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

'7f .POITIK
LeMMS
A-C. PS, Pl. cloth lnt ,,
,_dllroshr.

'll' VOLISWMEI
U881T .

-·

• clr•• l"iii-Nd cllltllnt..
,..., 111ft llflr, llcll 1·

·'5995

Ohio River,
lA Blated lor renovation - U authorization for the
proJect llllf&amp;nted by .Congress first.

hearing. Any problems that are found wUI be cor·
reeled, he added.
The process wUI be completed by Sept. 23 so it wUI
not Interfere with appeals llied by employees whose
Jobs have already been abolished, Magnone said.
In addition, this process wW only be used to investl·
gate allegations COMected with the most recent
abollshments.
In the future, employees with complaints will have
to use the normal chain of command, Magnone said.
Although employees have said the chain of corn·
mand has not worked in the past, Magnone said "this
process wW resolve those problems.
"There Is no way administratively we can continue
Ulre this," he said. "We have to get back on track."
Magnone' said he had not heard of the committee
which some employees had Independently formed
Thursday to collect complaints. However, he said the
committee formed by the ODMR "will be the only

:A nnual car show attracts 135 entries
dating from the ·~s through the
Tlmi!B Sentinel Staff
present from all over the region.
·- GAU.JPOLIS- Flor soine, car · Theentrteswerejudgedln32dlftercol!ect1nc Is a handy way to make ent categories.
=~~bu~tt for others It's more an· Though coll,ectlng and showing
hobby, tt not an may be a bit expensive, Mary Anne
Ley of Marietta said, "Everybody
has somelhtng theY spend their mo-

SAVE '79' OLDS. CUTLASS "CALAIS" $AVE

defed one ol the woni bottlenecks

'

IIJ lULIE BRIENZA

..,_.,..m•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pfuns developed to probe GDC allegations

1

ci'uiM Clllllrol,
windows, wlllt.Int.

10 Sections, 76 Pages JS Cents

Sunday, August lS, 1982

Locks and dam proj.ect
plagued by pork barrel
:specter, says observer

Cremeans releases monthly .figures
and costs, and speeding. There was
one arrest each for intoxication, improper transportation of firearms,
failure tQ transfer l(cense . plates,
open flask, reckless q&gt;eration,
mipor pcurchasing, no driving
privileges, driving Ul)der suspeO:
sion, no lighted headlights, assault,
trespassing at the marl~. resisting
arrest and trespassing.
Parking meter collections arnownted to ~28 ard ali cruer mileal(e for
the month totaled 2,827.

' Vol.

pa~~serll-by.

the

Ali'IOng the 61 arrests rnade. by the
Middleport Police Department in
July, 21 persons were charged with
disorderly manner and 13 others
were charged with driving while ·intoxicated, according to the monthly
report of Police Chief J.J.
Cremeans.
Of their total, four persons were
charged with public iodecency and
there were two arrests each for
driving without a license, expired
license tags, failure to pay old fines

•·
tnttJ

'

Her husband, John, drove Ills
1978 Corvette Turbo model to Gallipolis and left his remaining three
Con~ettes at home In the garage.
He Invested $2l,lnl In the car,
which he said was "about $2l,lm
too much." But he added, "You buy
and sell, buy and sell, and make a
little on eaCh one."

newest on show, the park front was
not without the Model T' s and '50s·
era Chevys.
Roy and Maurita MUier of Pomeroy drove along the river this mornIng. ,h f th~r '27 Studebaker,
complete with Mohair upholstery
and an original bood ornament In
the shape of Atalanta, the Greek
goddess of speed.
"It's a nice !)obby If you like to
work,'' Roy said. He's been "workIng" for 25 or 00 years and' baa nine
cars In various stages of
restoration.
Along with the old and new were
the rarities.
Larry D1Qar of Columbus bought
his '29 Ford panel delivery truck
,112 years ago for $6,000. After tossIng on,a few coats of paint, beating
out some of the dents and getting
the engine to cooperate, the truckone of five left In the United
· States-Is now worth $22,oo0.
. ••rn let ' my bride sell It when 1
die," he said with a laugh, when
ulred If he'd ev« give It up.
~ of the entrants were trom
HUDtlngton, W.Va., and the area.
.'lbecO.IIPOIISOI'~the show, the Ole'
car Club, contributed about 15 cars
Ill' the mech•nJCal mecca .
DurtDa' the tint two years, the
. - WU beld It the Gallla County
~. bilt the fl'IOVe to the
part frallt bu helped bring In more
pert~Mp~nts, aid show chairman
DaVId McCoy, U1q tile perk atJ!I!IIIIIbere .......
List
year lllout·lOOeuaWII't!regilta ed

tile,__

,lbr

. .'

mechanism recognized and supported" to present
employee allegations.
Magnone also said he Is unsure If he wUI comply
with a request by some employees that he release tbe
results of an Investigation of GDC conduc-ted by the
Department of Admini,Stratlve Sen~tces in late June.
He said he wUI ask Collins and Ball If the report
could be released to the employees now. The report
will eventually be made public, he added.
Employees also requested a copy of GDC's table of
organization, which Magnone said Is available to any
employee in the GDC personnel office.
Magnone said he does not know tr the newly-formed
commlttee wW uncover any wrongdoing at GDC.
"Maybe some problems have been blown out of
proportion. Maybe there are some real problems," he
said. "I'm sure tr there are (problems), our process
wtll discover and correct them. "

Panel trims food
•
stamp program tn
budget negotiations
The Republican-controlled Senate
By CLIFF HAAS
has endorsed a plan to llmlt annual
AIIIOCia&amp;ed l'rellll Wrtter
cost-of-llving Increases for federal
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
military and civilian retirees to 4
gresslonal budget negotla tors,
percent a year through 1985. Such a
drafting a package aimed at saving
plan would affect an estimated
$12 bUllor., have agreed to trim the
three million people and save an
food stamp program but are stUI at
estimated $5 bfillon through 1985.
odds over a plan to cut federal pen·
l'tep. WUilam D. Ford, 0 -Mich.,
slon costs.
The conferees from the House chairman of the House Post Office
and ClvU Service Committee, resand Senate had hoped to complete
work Friday on the cuts mandated · Isted a series of Senate offers that
would have the effect of capping the
by the budget blueprint .Congress
cost.of-llvlng Increases.
adopted earlier this year.
· · But they abandoned those efforts
Ford offered a pension package
that achieves about half the $5 bll·
untU1 jMonday when a tentative
agreement to trim federal pension lion savings contemplated In theSecosts by $4 bWion fell apart. At the nate plan. That was rejected .by
same time, si!parate negotiations Senate negotiators.
After several hours of private neon cuts In da!I'Y piice supports also
gotiations, Ford and Senate Repubwere postponed untn Monday.
The tun House ·and Senate wDI lican Whip Ted Stevens or Alaska
have to ratify the compromises reached agreement on a plan that
would sa:ve about $4.1 bllllon by
drafted by the negotiators.
On the food stamp program, ne- freezlrig cost·of-Uving adjustm~nts
gotiatorS said their plan would save tor more than I mWion military
$2 billion Qver three years by hold- and ctvUlan reti):ees under 62, while:
In&amp; tncreues In benefits each year ·retaining the ·tun adjustment 'tor"
:
,:
to slightly below the rate of those over 62.
· But almost as soon as the agroo.'
lnllatlon.
Democratic aides said the provi- mi!nt waa announced, It fell apart•
sion would reduce future, benefits because Stevens was unable to get
for a family of tour with no othel; the support of his Senate colleagues
·and administratiOn alficlals.
Income by about S2.5il a month.
• 'l1le negOtiators wW trY again
' Meuwblle, the ~ for federal pensions snageed the panel. Monday.
'

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Comlnentary · and pe.rspe((ttve

"I

August 15, 1982

'

August 15,

•

Good intentions~====~==~======-~==~
·
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A Division of

~m~ ,......,_,'---rl ,..,....,c:llf='
~v

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio
16141 44'-2342

Ill Court St., Pnm1•roy. Ohio
16141992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

.,.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pub Iish&lt;-r-Conlroller

HOBART WILSON JR
Executi\'e Ed1 tor

A ,\ 1t: MRF.R of Ttw As!itH'illll'd l'n·s~. lnhtnd Du!ly J•rr!ls As.•mt'lntinn 1111d lht• Anwrh·an
Nr"llpilpt'r Publlsht•n. Assuc·iatlun.
LI!.TTER.~ Of OJ'JNION lift' ..-·c·lc·unh'd . Tht&gt;y ,;h1mld tw lt'Kt~ th1111 300 vmrrl11 llmK. All
ll'lhn: Hn' ~&lt;&amp;~hjc·d to t'(litln~ot and musl bt• llil(ntd wUh namt!, addrt&gt;»H and lt'lt&gt;phunr
numtwr. Nnttrulil(llt'd lt'lh•rs Y~illlw puhlisht•d. Lt-ILrrK 11h~t\Jid bt•ln l(tHid llslt•, wddrt!'ti!llnK
· lt~Kuc•s , nul p.•rtittrLIIIilit•s.

Goals not achieved
·by words alone
For a proposition of such minimal merit that kicked around so long
generating so little enthusiasm among so many political professionals, the
:balanced budget amendment appears suddenly to have acquired the
momentwn of an inevitability.
.
Mind you, it's not that the idea itself is so off target. Fiscal responsibility in
~ilblic affairs is greatly to be desired. But so are minimizing loss of life in
e~rthquakes and avoiding abuse of alcohol.
The point is that these worthy social goals are not achieved through mere
' w'ords, even if enshrined in !lasic law.
·· ;Writing off Senate approval of the amendment proposal as political
"hypocrisy, a cynical election-year maneuver to blunt negative public reaction to ballooning bud~ct deficits, is too easy. What is happening is more
complex and more demeaning to the democratic process than that.
··" While, public support for the principle of budget balancing is
: irnquestionably broad,. public comprehension of what it involves is not. The
pudget makers may be doing a poor job but there is no way that they can be
. compelled to guess right every time on economic uncertainties that
. ultimately shape a budget, That is what this proposal would attempt to do.
· Much of the public may lack the legislative expertise to comprehend this,
but its elected representatives in the Senate preswnably know better. A
. aipajority, however, has responded to public sentiment by abdicating its
r~sponsibility to act in the best interests of the public. That is what the vote
reflects, not the real convictions of most of the senators who contributed to
' i(

1

' · . It is one of those occasions when democracy's flaws triwnph over its vir. tues, and the democratic process throws a rod. Is there any1lne who really
· believes that a body that could be pressured into this vote cannot later be
: }lressured into taking_advantage of the proposed amendment's mile-wide
.· loopholes when expedtency calls? As 11 certamly wtll- agam and agam and
'again.
. Loopholes are a major objection but far from the only one. As Veront
.Royster, editor-emeritus of the Wall Street Journal observes, the amend"ment's intent and language depart from the procedural character of the
·original Constitution and most of the existing amendments. It would man·
date what to do, not how to do it.
In the process it is specific without being really binding, stopping just
, • short of scheduling congressional lunch breaks during budget debates. And
too wordy. Its six sectiops are not much briefer. than the original constitution's entire Article III, estabishing the federal judiciary.
It exemplifies one of the great dangers in constitution writing. Again
borrowin~ from Royster, it is all too easy "to be caught up in the emotions of
the time about what needs to be done and find ourselves afterward unwisely
locked into a rigid constitutional vise."
·
.. There is no need to look far for bad examples. State constitutions provide
many. They run· to overlong, overprecise docwnents that weld a governmental structure to a particular era. Their limitations often can be dealt
with only through rewriting, repeatedly.
In contrast, the federal Constitution has proved a jewel of brevity and
adaptability. Its light can only be diminished by this legislative miscarri11ge.
There are mutterings that opponents in the less-receptive House may seek
to bury the amendment in committee. That would be a mistake. Having gotten this far, it should go the entire congressinal route.
•
Passage would mark only the end of the beginning of the enactment
process. State legislatures may have second thoughts when they consider
what the amendment, if strictly respected, could do to their awn federally
. nourished budgets.
"
Momentwn in these affairs has a way of petering out.
There was a time, remember, when the ERA looked'inevitable.

WASHINGTON - The proposed proposed to limit the rate of increase
l'Onstitutional amendment to compel In annual receipts, but the formula
by which this would be fixed is a fora balanced federal budget offers a
rc ~ rcttable but . fainiliar com- ' mula composed of algebra ·and
bination often seen on Capitol Hill. moonbearns.
1 •
The Congress and the president,
The resolution is a mishmash of
says this amendment, shall ensure
~ood intentions and bad law.
Since the days of John Randolph of that actual outlays do not exceed a
Roanoke, who defined pay-as-you-go statement of propos•.od outlays, but
as "the philosopher's tone" of wise there iB no way ui\der moon or sun
government, almost everyone has that this provision could be enproclaimed the virtlles of a balanced forced. It is generally forgotten, but
·budget. This is the ideal. There is we already have a law to this idennothing wrong with the Ideal. The . tical effect. Under Section 7 of
problernlies only with members of Public •Law · 95435, adopted in Qc.
Congress who have despoiled it and Iober 1978, It Is specifically provided
with the people who have voted these that, "Beginning with Fiscal Year
members into office. Barring 1981, the total budget outlays of the
periods of true national emergency, federal government shall not exceed
of course our government should its receipts." this already is a part li
the supreme law of the land, and no
spend no more than it lakes it.
There is much to be said, also, for one has paid a particle of attention to
the argwnent that the only way to it.
Extended analysis would be a .
restrain our irresponsible
lawmakers, who have spent us into a
trillion-dollar debt, is to deny them
the money in the firSt place. The
theory is that they can't spend what ~
they don't have. II is supposod that
· \
the constitutional amendment would
I)
provide precisely such a restraint.
~
At the very least, the amendment
~""'"'~
would raise a symbol that honorable
men could repair to.
But for the past 10 years, we have
heard some of these same argwnents about the ill-fated ERA amendment. II would have provided that
"equality of rights under the •law"
shall not be abridged on account of
sex. The ERA never would have accomplished what its proponents
believed it would have accompllsh,ed; and the notion that constitutional amendments are "symbols' is ·a notion that ought to be
abandoned.
The resolution adopted by the
Senate on Aug. 4 is flawed in a dozen
ways. It undertakes to write
statutory law into the Constitution,
and this always is a bad business. In
Section 2 of the amendment, it is

'

Major clouds on
WASffiNGTON ~Like most of us,
Congress is curious about the future.
So the lawmakers conunisioned the
government's top experts in various
fields to assess the current state of
the union and forecast what's likely
to happen in the years ahead.
The reault is a 34$-page volume
with a ponderous title: "Strategic
Issues: Historical Experience, Institutional Structures and Conceptual ••ramework." It hasn't been
published yet, but my associate Jack
Mitchel) saw an advance copy.
Most of the experts' predictions
are ~loomy; some are surprising . .
Here are a few ~limpses into the
crystal ball:
:
-The effort by U.S. and European
industry to switch from ~as to coal
may have some unpleasant, if not to
say devastating side effects from the
·carbon dioxide that burning coal
produces: "Atmospheric Ol2 could
double by the year 2050, which in
turn could lead to an increase in
global surface temperatures; a
rapid melting of the iellcaps, and a

profitless exercise. The political and
parliamentary situation In the
House suggests that the amendment
is dead for this session. Uke T. S.
Eliot's famous patient, the Senate's
amendment now lies ethe~ized upon
a table. It is slLoeplng in the House
subcommittee on monopolies and
corrunercial law. This is Chairman "'
Peter Rodino's personal operating ·
room, and Dr. Rodino is a skilled
operator.
.
It is conceivable, though barely
conceivable, that the chairman
could set aside his own opposition to
the amendment and in the name of
democracy let the resolution move
toward noor consideration. The
alternative is for the resolution to be
bombed out of Its unlikely abode by a
petition for dischar~e. Such •
petition require~ 218 signatures, and
these will be hard to come by.

rise in the sea level which could
cover the coastal cities of the United
States."
-"Our nation's public facilities
are aging to the point that, "in some
areas, they are wearing out faster
than they.are being replaced." The
repair bill could come to a
staggerinl{ $700 billion just for the
rest of this . decade, the analysts
warn. New York City alone "must
spend over $40 million in the 1980s to
service and repair its public works
facilities."
-The s~perhighway network is
crumbling, even before it has been
completed. "Over 8,000 miles of the
Interstate Hi~hway System apd 13 ·
percent of its bridges are now
beyond their designed service life ·
and must be rebuilt."
The report was prepared lor the
House Energy and Conunerce Committee, and concentrated on subjects within the COITU)1ittee's purview. In some areas, the experts laid
out the problem witho11t hazarding a
guess as to future developments.

·S•tppose the .21,8 si~natures were
obta;ned. Stiven lel(islatlve days
must \~en elapse. A .resolut"on thus
press-ganged then may be called up
on tre noor, but only on the second
or fourth Mondays of ·each month.
Au~. 16 is out: the House will be in
recess on Au,;. 30; Sept. 13 is ,a
possibility, but only II the sevei'Hiay
reqirement has lll&lt;en mel; Sept. 'l1 is
Yom ,Kippur, ~Vhen n9body's home;
the·Congress is expect~ to adjour;n
well before Oct. 11, whtch.happens
also to be Columbus Day.
.
If we want balanced budgets, t~e
answer lies not in the straw fetters !If
this amendment, but in th~ election
of responsible representatives. The
whole House and a thin!' of tl)e
Senate will be up ~or election in .
November. If the deltclts get worse,
let us blame them- rut let IL'I blame
ourselves too.

; ...........

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WM1,1NG fOR ~AN

That was tlie case with the report's
appraisal of the U.S. economy as a
whole.
"The unaru;wcrcd question," the
report states, "is whether the
economie1performance of the 1970s
and early 1980s is merely bad luck or
a temporary aberration of an otherwise healthy economy; or is \he
United States, and perhaps the
glove, in .the midst of a profound
structural transfonnation ... ?"
The country's leaders must come
to grips with the cold hard fact that
the United States has already lost its
once-overwhelming
industrial
dominance, the report warns. They
must take more seriously what the
study ·terms "global economic in·
terdependence."
America's lead in industrial
production is eroding rapidly in a
nwnber of ' important fi elds, the
report points out. To illustrate the
dramatic chan~e that has taken
place, the report . cites a 13-year
period in which "imports of iron and
steel increased by 313 percent, aqtos .

Jack Anderson
by 341 percent, machinery by 501
percent and chemicals by 5011 percent" Clearly, the day is long gone
when the U.S. economy produced
everything the country needed with
plenty left over to sell to the.rest 9f
the world.
An evidence of encroac!Jlnent
from abroad, the report notes that
multinational companies tend increasingly to locate their offices outside the United States; more U.S.
patents are being granted to foreign
companies, and the percentage of
products developed and marketed in
the United States 'has dropped
drastically during the pa~t
generation.
In what may constitute· a
breakthrough for a government
report, "Stratel(ic Issues" does not
suggest thai the nation's problerns
can all be solved by the _government.
In fact, it candidly acknowledges
that "ten years ago !(Overnment was
widely viewed as an instrument to
solve problems; today government
is widely viewed as the problem."

\

Berry's World
f

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co

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"I'm working on an Idea for leasing fresh air
and water/"

·,- Today .in history
· . On this date:
.
:• · In ~784. the !lrst Russian colony In Alaska was foullded on Kodiak Islarid.
' Ill 1900, China's Boxer Rebellion ended.
' In 1917, China declared war on Germany and Austria at the start of
' . World War I.
.. ,
· In 1973, the U.s. bOmbing of Cambodia came to a halt, marking the
· . ottlclal end to 12 years of American combat activity In Indochina.
Ten years ago: An East German alrUner cruhe&lt;!, In a suburb of East
Berlin, k1lllng 156 passengers and crew members.
Five years &amp;go! Israel granted Inhabitants of the occupied West Bank
• and Gaza Strlp the same rights u residents of the State of IsraeL .
One year aao: Pope john PaUl n wu [II'OpOIIIICt!d "dln!cally ieco·'vered" and returned to the Vatican fro!!'~ Ida __. 1tay at a R.an!lt
' bolpltai fo11owiDI im afiempt 011 hll .llfe three months earlier.
• •
, Today' I IJirtllda1S: Jockey Robyn Smith Ia 38. Bueball pltdler Mark
.f'tdrych Is 28.
.

The meter
Iq all the fuss al&gt;out the energy
shortage no one has men.tioned the
meter reader. When I say the meter
reader, I mean the person . who
comes to your house to read your
electric meter.
For years no one had paid any attention to him. He would ring your
doorbell and yell, "Meter reader
here to read your meter! ", and
you'd let him in and he would disappear, and when he returnd, you'd
shout at him rudely, "Shut the door
when you leave! "
But now he has bi!come the most
important , person ' in the lives of
manyofus.
,
Just the other day we · were all
eating dinner when the doorbell
rang. My son answered the ring, and •
came into the dining room, his face
white. "It's the meter reader. He
wants to read ourt meter.I'
··
My wife said, "HC~f did he ever.
find W!?"
,'
"Be calm, everYbodY,". f warned.
"Pretend nothing has happened. Ask
him to come into the dining room."
The guy came into the dining room

, NEW YORK (NEA) - J!;ver since
Richard 'Nixon inaugurated U.S.
relations with Red China in. 1971,
Peking h!ts enjoyed almost uniformity favorable treatment by the
American media and our intelll'Ctual community generally.
And why not? American liberals
'worked Ion!( and hard for U.S.
recognition of the Comunist re~ime,
' and it would have been askln~ too
· much of hwnan nature to eXJ!&lt;.'CI
them to find it 'Obnoxious, however
·strenuously they had insislt.&gt;d that
recqgnition would not necessarily
'· approval.
' imply
· ~. all d11ring the 1970s successive
U.S. administrations, leading
American journalists and en: lerprising buslne!lsmen fawned first
· over Mao (in his final and probably
· craziest stage l and then over his
ilisgusting widow and finally over
the clique that overthrew her and
has all but repudiated him .
"Mainland China became the trendy
place for the globe-trotting set to
visit, and you are lucky indeed if you
made it through the '70s without
being forced to watch some acquaintance's color slides or home movies
ol T-ien-an men Square and the
.GreatWall.
i ,To bear such gullil,lle visitors ta"lk,
Conununist China was ,Practically

reade.a::r========.~=~t=B=uc:;::=~UXJ;;:;;::;=id

carrying ~is roilte.. book: "Where's to somebody's house and look at his all rig~t. dear. The rn;m Is only doing
his job." ·
;·
the meter?" he asked.
electric meter," she said.
"What kind .of person woul!l sneak
"Would you !ik~ 19 have dinner?" I · "WeiJ.,_ if you feel , that way, we'll
asked.
I
jwit shut off your electricity," he into somebody's home and inform.iln
them as to llow much eleclrieity thily
"Nope. I've bet:n offered dinner in replied.
•
every house I've been to today. I'm
"It's all ril!hl, Mother. The man 'had used?" she said.
"Hush, he'll hear you and add- a
stuffed. Just tell me where your · has not come to do us harm,'' I said.
meter !sand I'll be out of here."
"I'm sum he won't take advanta~e couple of hundred kilowatts jW!t Cor
"You don't want to go into our· of a family that is probably eating its spite." ·
,
'
"I can take him, Old,'' my ~
basement," my wif~ said. "It's so last meal unleSii our food stamps
said. "Let me use karate on him."•
messy. We'll tell you anything you ~e through."
"Will you all shut up! 1He's got AI! ·
want to know."
"COuld you please direct me to
over
a barrel. Electric meters nev.er
"I have to check your meter," he your meter?"
said.
' I took him to the cellar stairs. lie "
lllPn came up lfhiStlinJI, !
"I checked it yesterday," I , 'rhe.n I said, "Be gentle with us.I Be
"Give
't to us straight," I said.
assured him. "It'sworking.fine."·
good to us."
·
,
·':IIiavetoreadit.".
.
· ' "Where have I heard · that ·•we can tak~ it."
"You used 1,5QO kilowatts o( elec"l'll .send my son to read it,". 1.- befcire?"themanaskt!d.
said. "He's great at reading me~. ·
"Barbara · Walters said it' to tricity this rnonth," he replil'd. :
My wife abnost colla~.
.•
Here,haveaglallsofwine."
President carter on her show," J
I blanehed. "Does the ell'Cttlc
"I'm sorry, bUt I have to read it said. .
.
' '
· ·
myseU. It will onlytall!e a minute."
"Oh,' yeah," he chuckled, and he company have to kn!lw?"
"Yup," ~ replied, wr!tf~ on ins·
"Do you have a search :wturant?" went dowlistairs.
,
my wife asked.
The family all waited in the kit· route book. "I'll see you next mOnth," he said cht.ot.'l'fully.,
:
He looked IIW'pl'ised. "I doo't need "chen.
a search warrant to read your
"Why. Is he taking so long?" my . My wife .:azed at him. "I just pray
meter." ·
wife asked pervO\ISly, as she twisted your mother never finds out Wilt
you do for a livin~.''
•
"I,t1'1nk you had better check lhe the dish \OWel.
Constitution. You can'tjuat barge InI put my around around her. "It's
/
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The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Pag-A.3

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A

Paradise: Not only was everybody Time JNtgazine's first resident
happier than in the dark a~cs before l'Orrcspnd~nt in Pekin~. In the wor· 1
Liberation !1949), but China's entire ds of John FrBllllr, hii118CH • fonner
population (minus, after 1976, four) Peking correspondentfor the Toron.simply adored their CoJTUnunist to Globe and Mall: "It Is unlikely
bosses.. And there weren't even any that any study of China and the
flies!
Chinese Conuntinity Party will
To be sure, as Ire decade wore on · present a ~leaker, picture ... If his
an occasional discordant note bur- conclusions are unremittingly harsh
ped out of'the lute. I saw about 1978 - and I ·can't think of a sin~le
in the Asian Wall Stl'\!et Journal positive thing he has written aliout
(published in Hon~ Kon~) a mention institutional conununism In Chinaof a great rat one liusinessman had they 'are also a necessary antidote to
discovered sitt\ll~ in the middle rl the fluff that has bOOn served up."
his Peking hotel room. And just last
Equally ~rsh Is the v~rdict of Fox
year a friend told me that In Pekin~. Butterfield, first head· of the New
in October 1980, "even before they York Times' bureau In Peking. He
turned on In November the little coal calls his book "China: Alive in the
stoves they use for heating,'' the Bitter Sea,'' and when you have read
pollution was so bad he couldn't see his sensitive account of the often
across a city street.
desperate lives of the Chinese he
But only within th~ past few mon- met and befriended (he speaks the
ths, thanks to two big new books by language), you will know just what
American reporters freshly back he means.
.from the People's Republic, have
Savor these lines: "Almost every
alert stay-at-homes been able to Chinese I got to know during my 20
learn what life there is really like. months in Peking had a tale of
As you probably suspected if you political persecution ... From their
have ever studied communist on the stories it seemed as if a whole
hoof, it is stultifying, intimidating, ~eneration of Chinese (and 850
degrading and dull.
million of China's 1 billion people
"From the Center of the Earth: have been born since 1949) had
~e Search for the Truth about known nothing but arbitrary acChina" is by Richard Bernstein, cusations, violent swinl!ll in the
political line, unjustified arrests,
tofture and imprisonment. Few
Chinese I knew fell free from the
WASHINGTON (NEAl - Another dustry while .simultaneously im- engineering representatives" selecfear of physical or psychological
conunercial airliner has crashed, posing aild enforcing strin~ent ted by the agency to perform in.
spections, approve work done by the
abuse and a pervasive sense of in:killing. scores of people aboard the safety standards on that industry.
The
problems
posed
by
those
conmanufacturer and check on the
justice." ·
plane, another round ol handmeting
Roals
become
apparent
at
manufacturer's quality-control stanRead that to your liberal Uncle
wringing has begun and another
Hennan the next time he starts getfederal investigation is WJder way to the initial stage of civil aviation, dards - but the people delegat~ to
when an airframe manufacturer perlonn those crucial tasks are ernand the not so, Northeasterners and ling teary-eyed about the situation In
determine the 118use of the accident.
Southwesterners all chew in about Chile.
The progression of events produces a new passenger plane that ployeesofthernanufacturer.
':
In May 1970, the OOlO's cargothe same proportions.
Make no mistake: "The Bernstein
following airline disasters- the fir- requires FAA "type certification" Still, he aims only to capture a and Butterfield books are aimed
st dramatic news accounts, the grief the agency's assurance that the air- _door latch failed durin~ a prespeciality segment, not to become squarely at the solar plexus li
visited upon the victims' rela,tives craft is airworthy and safe for com- certification static test of the plan~ .
Engineers for a McDonnell Doug\115
the marketleader.
American opinion on the subject of
and the somber proclamations of mercial use ..
Although·the Federal Aviation Act subcontractor wrote an inteflllll
The leader agrees with most of Red China, and they are bound to
concern from ~overmnent officials
this. In Chicago, the Wrigley people have a powerful impact:
- has become a contemporary specifically: a~thorizcs pubic memo questioning the design and thhearings du)-ing the certification ~~~rlty of the door-latch mechanlSJO
, say their research puts the chewing . No longer, for one thing, will quite ritual.
population at haH of all Americans so many American tourists make it
There is, however, an important process, no~ one such hearing has - rut the FAA never found out abOut
the problem.
and add a few details to the profile of' all the way to Peking and back with element of that ritual that generally ever been scheduled for the FAA.
Instead,
the
age'nc)'
treats
aircraft
If the doors of the pl11nc's car~o
the gwn conswner. The most typical their ideological blinkers still firmly has remained hidden from public
certification
as
a
Rrivate
matter
betcompartment
failed to la{ch
is a female in the 18-34 age range, in place: It's wonderful what people view - the scandalous pattern of
ween
it!&lt;etf
and
the
manufacturer.
properly,
they
would
pop open In
with teen-agers of both genders also can see when others have already inaction, in!!ensitivity and delay
strong. There is a tilt toward fruit noticed it.
within the federal agency primarily Morover, It has. structured the flight alter the cabin was
process ·in a manner that allows the pressurized, causin~ the floor of the
flavors among the young, toward
And the next time Den~ HsiaD- responsible for air safety.
mint among the mature. (Stimerol's ping visits this country, we can hope
The Federal Aviation Ad- rnanufact.urcr to improperly in- passenger cabin to collapse. That, in
navor? Stone won't tell, even a non- for some better description "of him ministration has never resolved the nuem:e.- if pot dominate and con· turn, could damage or sever control
Chewer. "Try ··t."l
lines stretching from the cockpit to
· herent m
· the 1958law that trol- the entire procedure.
than "cute." With a little luck, we conn·tct m
The · FAA, ." .for example, relics the tail.
While acknowledging that Stone may ever realize we are holding created the agency and tnanda(ed it
has an off-beat idea, Wrigley doubts hands with a ~an~ of marauders.
to promote the civil aviation In- heavily upon "designat ed
that it will sell much gwn fn the 200 .----------------------------7--;------------------~­
stick per capita Arneridm market.
In the Wrigley view, chewing gwn is
not•~e, l\luff of st8tus but a part of
An\ericana.' It is the .11.uintessential
democratic product and thel't!are-no.
plans to · introduce a competing
brand at a higher price.
Which is not about to deter Stone.
Back in White Plains, he is
•
preparing to go national after
several months of highly successfUl
test marketing in the New York area
- "the kind of market where you
make these images first, you kgow."
The Image is also getting some help
from spot sales Jat the Knoxville
World's Fair, not to mention warm
weather reportage such as this.
While Stone and Big Gwn may be
agreed that they have no problem
with each other, what about outside
competition?. What if the Japanese
discover the $1.5 billion American
market?
Neither has . considered the
possibility, but sees no reason to
worry.

Air-safety.:__fl_a_w_.s____R_ob_e_rt_~_a_lte_rs

'Don Graff
If you're primed for some
definitive words here on budget
balancjng amendments, Soviet
- grain safes or steel and pipeline
disputes with the European allies,
forget it.
We're taking a break from all that
'today to discuss chewing gwn .
There Is no particular point to what
follows on the subject, but stick with
us anyway. (Sorry.)
Back to gwn, it is not just any g\U11
~ut a prestige product imported
from Europe by a White Plains,
N.Y., entrepreneur, Michael Stone,
who believes it is jUst what
Americans ~ well, half of us maybe
.- haven't known we really wanted.
It is made in Denmark, called
Stimerol and being introduced here
' at a price about twice that of U.S.
brands.
' What lllllkes Stone think that he
can sell Americans, who taught the
' world how to chew, a foreign product
.at a premiwn price? The same thing
that sells Perrier, Guccis and Mercedes Benz.
· '· Status.
· Ills a "chewing gum lor the rich,"
· iiB Stone's upscale .advertising campaign in publications such as the
New Yorker lnfonns. He's also using
TV. and subway posters.
"We're reaching everybody,"
Stone quickly explainll. It's status
for the mass market. .
'
"People are very hip out there.
When we're talking about a gwn lor
' the rich, what we're reallY talking
about is people who like to fee1: good
-aboUI themselves. It's becoming the
· least expensive status symbol. It's
' image."
The market for his budget slall\8
symbol is vast, according to Stone.
Two out of three adult Americans
chew gum on a regular basis and the
habit cuts across all demographiC
, lines. Young and old, the affluent

While you're reading.this,
Congress is aboUt to vote
on an idea ~that is
simply dUmb.

And as usual,
it will cost you. money!
.·

On July 23, the Senate passed H.R. 4961, the Tax Equity
and Fiscal Responsibility Act of1982. Included as a part of
this overall Tax bill was a provision that would require a 10%
withholding of taxes on all interest and dividends. This
withholding is to take place at the source, so 10% of all
interest and dividends you earn will go right 10 the
government before you even see it.

effect, we'll . all be grvrng the government a great big
interesdree· loan! MeanNhile, those who rely on their
interest and dividends 10 help make ends meet, will suffer.

What can we do
aboutiU

'

What in the world are

The

(

w. Va.

A status chew
'

·u.s. horizon

Middleport c,,,llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

.~ China persp:L-:-e_c_ti_·v_e_
· __w_uL_iam_A._R_us_h____er

19~1

James]. Kilpatric~

A~

Pomeroy

P.ag-A-2

they doingJ

ENT. CO., INC,
Pleue send:. me Free Bookleis showing
memorl•ls printed in full color.
· kindly have· an aulhorlzed Logan Monu·
ment Co. representallve call at my home.
1 Please sent me detai}s aboui .Mausoleums
without obligalions.

·Apparently, the government thinks the IRS Isn 't doing its
job. So it wants the private sector - all businesses and
corporations that pay interest and dividends - to collect ·
taxes for It. That's a bad idea: What's worse, it will take from
you 10% of your interest and dividend income .. In most
cases, that's much more than you'll owe at tax time. In

This 10% Withholding idea is a bad one. For a lot of
reasons. ·It's been presented to Congress several times over
the last few years and was soundly rejected. Nothing has
' change~ to make it a good idea now. Surprisingly though, it
just may get passed this lime unle.ss enough taxpayers make
some .noise~ Here's how you can do it:
If you agree that the 10% withholding idea is dumb, sign
and forward the enclosed coupon to your representatives in
Congress
·
·
"
Clarence E. Miller
212 So. Broad St., Lancaster, Oh. 43130
· or Phone614·654·5149
~----·.....,

I,
1

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NAM~· ········•············ · ···•···· ···

1

..·

· It

·i_s

!_ill:"temely important that you illllllediat~· ly

contact your U.S. Senators and Congressmen.
'

• . .2!'• t l'l'l;~~...-: .. •. &lt;I

•

CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY · ·
COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINtiS BANK
OHIO VALLEY BANK
··
BUCIEYE BUILDIIIG &amp; LOAN 00•
GAIIIPOUS SAVIIGS &amp; LOAN CO.

I
I
I
I1

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•

I

I think the 10% withholding of interest and dividends 1
is. a bad i9e~, and should not be a part of H. R. 4961. 1

..,_
~~
Cl•r

1111e

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J

�Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

t omeroy - ·ModdleJJOr! - C allopolis, Ohoo-

~ · oinl

Pleasant, W.Va.

~~eather~.--------------~~--~
The nation's weather '
By 'lbe AMocla&amp;ed PreaS
Intense thunderstorms hovered over parts of eastern Colorado,
whlle storms poured rain over central Arkansas and parts of Ariz·
ona and New Mexico early Saturday.
It was cloudy In ~ Pacific Northwest with showers falling In
eastern Washington state and northern Idaho. Rain also fell In
Maine. Clouds spread over Missouri and Into !lie upper Mississippi
Valley. Dense fog formed near Lake Superior. Clouds also were over
the southern lialf of the Plateau region, and there were a few showers over Utah and Nevada.
'

The forecast tO~ late Saturday called for widely scattered showers
and thunderstorms ·from the southern Atlantic Coast through the
lower Mississippi Valley and the mid-Missouri Valley to New MexIco and Arlzooa.
•
Showers and thunderstorms were In store for the lower Missouri
Valley, Florida and southern Georgia. SCattered showers were forecast for Maine, and from the northern Pacific Coast to western
Montana.

~~~~~~~W~a~rm~~

,
••
WEATHER FORECAST- Showen are expeded for parts of the

Pacific Northwest, lhe Northern Plaloa, the Great Lakes region aod Ohio
VaUey, part of the Gulf Coast aDd Florida for Su.aday, aecordlog to the
Natloual Weather Service. (AP Laserpbolol.
•

Sunny skies over Ohio

Suony sides were to be over the southern Plains, California, the
Great Balin, the Ohio Valley and the middle Atlantic Coast.
Partly sunny conditions were forecast for elsewhere In the nation.
Temperatures around the nation Saturday ranged from 471n AI·
pena, Mich., and Bradford and Phllipsburg, Pa., to 88 In Phoenix,
Ariz,

By 'lbe AMOdaled Press
The high pressure wW remain nearly stationary through Sunday
morning then move to the Atlantic Coast Sunday evening. Skies wDl
be mostly sunny Sunday, and mostly clea, Sunday night. High
temperatures Sunday will be 78-85, and with lows from S!Hi2.

Federal task force reports on acid .r~in
lakes and damages vegetation In
By ROBERT L. SHAFFER
woodland forests.
A.Modated Press Writer
"Our position 1s that the (Rea·
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two years after It was established by Con- gan) administration must proceed
gress, a federal task force has with this research, but we know
Issued a plan tor attacking theprob- enOUjlh to start to regulate," she
said.
lem of acid rain.
Accusing the administration of
· 'The.plan, released recently, caDs
for further research to f111 major dragging Its feet on acid rain, she
gaps In Information about the said. "All that more research Is goIng to do Is tell liS It's a real serious
causes and effects of acid rain.
Elizabeth Barratt-Brown of the problem."
The task force was estabUShed
Natural Rl!sou~ Defense Counsel said that organization has no under the Acid PrecipitatiOn Act of
quarrel with the task force but 1981, with orders to develop a 10thinks enough 1s known already year research program. The ad·
about the problem to start action ministration says It Intends to
against poUuters believed to be re- complete the research much
sooner. It budgeted $18 mllllon for
sponsible for acid rain.
',Envtronmentallsts charge that acid 'rain research this year com·
sulfur dioxide and other pollutants pared to $13 million In fiscal 1981
frmn smokestacks In the Industrial and m million In 19ll), '
The plan outlined by the task
Mldw.est - particularly the Ohio
River Basin - are responsible for force, which Is made up of repreacid rain In the Adirondack Moun- sentatives of a dozen federal agenta'Jns, northeastern states and east- cies, Including EPA, follows the
administration position, focusing
ern provinces of Canada.
They charge that the acidity In on the lack of scientific basis for
rainfall and snow kll1s flsh In the action and raising questions about

"cost eltectlveness" of remedies.
The task force said research 1s
needed to show how much of a reduction In acid rain can be achieved
by "attainable reductions" In manmade emissions; In which regions
should emissions be reduced; how
much of the acid rain In Canada
comes from the United States and
vice versa.
It raised questions about the lm·
pact on lakes of pollulants from
sources other than acid rain and the
cost of possible other methods of
1'1!\(lvlng "dead" lakes.
The task 'force noted that there
have been only sporadic and scattered efforts at monitoring acid
rain and called for setting up anationally coordinated monitoring
program.
Meanwhlle1 the Congress . remains divided on what to do, If anything, about acid rain.
~ bUI pushed by New EngtMd
states that would have the effect of
forcing sharp reductions In sulfur
dioxide emissions In midwestern
uWitles has cleared the Senate En·

vtronment Commltlee.
However, even If passed by the
Senate, that leglslaUOn 1s expected
to have a tough time In the House.
A House committee has been bat·
lUng for months over a Clean A1r
bill which environmentalists elalm
would actually worsen the acid rain
problem by permitting Increased
sulfur dloxlde.emlsslons.

The corps eventually recommended what It caDs Plan B- cal·
ling !or a new l,m.foot main lock
and 600-foot auxllfllry lock be bull!
or! the dam's West Vlrglnli. sidetoJeplace the present fro foot main
Joek and 360-foot auxWary lock
wiitch were bunt In the mld-19»1
with steamboat traffic In mind.
' "The feeling has been, as Galllpous goes, so goes ·the entire Ohio Val·
ley," Stmwn observed.
:•1 think there's widespread sup.
port for this blll," said Rep. Mlck
Staton, R-W.Va., whose dlsbict In·
eludes Mason County. "I testified
before the subcommittee, and they
certalnly are aware of the problem
on the Ohio. It's Uke Lock 26 on the
Mississippi, which was considered
a great bottleneck unW It was
cleared up. Now Galllpolls Is the
bottleneck, and there's a general
sentiment to get It cleared up."
Staton said It was "hard to pin

Ohio . candi~a\e~
hurl challenges

Back (0
1

Ice
before rice

]ames ·E. Altho/, .Ph. D

The lire of yo11r tovJ
finds in full expression
in the·dlamond you blly.
We invite you to share
in the joy of mali.ins1
your diamond teJectio'n
from Colwnbill's Desi1n-'

PSYCHOLOGIST
IN THE FORMATION OF
I

er's CoUeaion -

Whitney, Altho/ &amp; Whitney

a push by the Reagan admlnlstra·
down" when the bUI would go to a
tlon to Increase the waterways us-·
House vote.
Miller's omce has been puBhlng ers' fuel tax to help pay for these
for the bill and Gallipolis' renovaprojects. The tax Is !Jelng fought by
the barge Industry, which feels It
tion for economic reasons-the lm·
pact delays and accidents have had
would limit their ablllty to compete
on river commerce and Industry- · against trucking, rall and a1r
transportation. .
~
and envlronmentaUy, partiCIIJarly
after a '1.919 barge accident In which : "I don't think It (the taxi Is any
detriment at all to the proj'ect," I
the ·dam almost lost Its pool.
"That bar&amp;e only had coal, but . Staton said. "The Issue rt user fees
haa1been bandied abou! for •years.
what If It had been chloriDe?"
Strawn asked. '
The two should really ,stand alone. "
Strawn said that despl~ all,the
Strawn said that unW 19'l8, when
testimony heard by the subcOmmitthe users' tax was llnpo6ed, the
barge Industry was VIrtually untee on various projects, su'pport for
taxed.whlle trucking and rall trans!,he dam was strong.
"Gallipolis has almost beCome ~rtatlon h~ been for years.
the vogue," he said "I can name
"I can see their argument, but
It's our responslblllty to make Galli·
you 15 congressloruil leaders who
think It's the number OJ!'! project on pons happen," he commented.
the Ohio River. It has gained a Jot of
The renovation project ts stUI unattention, but It faces a legislative dergoing departmerltal review and
Frankenstein."
·
Is presently on the the secretary of
the !ll'lllY' s desk.

.

A PRIVATE illNIC OFFERING A FUll RANGE OF
COUNSEliNG AND PSYQIOLOGICAL SERVICES
417112 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 4S631

JOUft

for the loolcin1 in our
store. Prices stan ~t only
$150.
1

(3lu!!!£!a
\

.

Tawney·: ' · ·: ,
Jewelers,

•

By Appointment Only
Phone: (614~998

H~ll's

,Beat of the Bend

By The A_.l•led Pre.
· ter Issuing the challenge to debate
u.s. Ret&gt;. Bob Shamanslly, [). tO h1s Rep:ubllcan opponent laat
t'
Columbus, has challenged State week.
"This Is too Important an electiOn
Sen. John Kaslch, R·Westerville to
to be decided by who can buy the ·
tell voters Where he stands 011 PresIdent Reagan's tax Increase most advertising," Branstool said
"The public has a right to be fu1Jf '
proposal.
lntormed abOut the lssui!s that face'
"... I am sure he has gtven this
some thought," Shamanslly said us and about•the candidates' vlewr ·
and convictiOns on these lsaues." '
Friday.
Speck ~ted 'the challenge,'
Kaslch has challenged Sha·
manslly for the 12th U.S. District bllt quallfl_ed • agreemeDt by ac- 1
cusing "elements" bl Bninatool's1'
seat.
Shamanslly charged that Rea- campaign of epgaglng 'In "Cilrty :
gan riow Is calling for the biggeSt campaign tactics" and ~~&amp;yil)g tha(
this would have q&gt; be llrliUillt Under .
tax Inc!: ease In history. ·
"I question whethel' Mr. Kaslch control.
Dr!lJIStool, wbo,lndlcalj!d the ac, :
Is planning abandon President Reagan - whose very suggested he cu5atlons may be reported to t1lll .
parroted a year ago - as he aban· Ohio Elections CommlssiOIJ, callec! .
dolled Gov. (James) Rhodes," the the charges " absurd and
unfounded."
congressman said.
u.s. Commerce Secretary MalSharnanslly pointed out that
Rhodes had to call for higher taxes com Baldrige said • If Congress ·
to balance Ohio's budget and doesn't pass President Reagan's
claimed that Kaslch' s voting re- proposed tax Increase. Interest'
cord shows he falled to support the rates wDl edge upWard agalh.
I 1
governor In balancing that budget
AsfarasReagan'sproposai,Sha- ..-------~--­
manslly said he believes lt would be
better to cancel· or postpone the
scheduled 1983 tax cui Instead of
Instituting a new tax boost.
In other political news, State Sen. ·
Sam Speck of Crooksvllle and Sta·
teRep. Eugene Branstciol of Utica
have tentatively agreed to meet
each other In a 'series rt debates In
· each otthe counntles that make up
the new 32st Senaie District.
·
Branstool, a Democrat, sent a let·

WIWAM R. WHITNEY, Ph. D.
, and JEAN ,H. WHITNEY, M.S. .
ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THEIR
ASSOCIATION WITH

(Continued from page AI)

r•ome'l-o y- Mtd dl&lt;1 port -

August 15, 19•2

r-----""7-------------:----1

I

Locks and dam•.•

•

424 Second

t'f============:;:=======::::!::::::::::::;:::====::;

By BOB JIOEFUCH '•
'Wonder where the llllllrjler went?
Me, too.
• .· '
Since I just lcive to
the rnUlmUm,
let me remlod
that the
of schools
new year ill jut
ai'OWid the corner.
flrtt
' The
di,Urlct · to beglp
will be Eaatem
BOB
with teachers to
on Aug. 23 just think, that's next·Monday - and
st'uden•·to~on.tug.Zt.
"!
tbe
Teachers · of
Meigs Local
District will ~ on Aug. 2S and
Students
• ' .. wU1 report for classes on
,.ag.
Last..... to start will be Southern
district with wchers meeting
there to be oo
. 30 and the first
day a( c~ on ug. 31.
By~ way,I!OITleOne will be at the
P()!Del'Oy El~tary School Office

thia week fr91Jl'8:30 a.m.-noon and
fr01n 1-3:30 p:Jh. to handle any late
kindergarten, tegistrations . as well
Sf registraliQ¥ of new students.

FOLLOW THE LEADER

Pome'foy-Middlepoi't ,~
team In
the Bush League Book, an account of
minor league •b ueball from 1877 to
the'present. The team waa listed as a
part of the Mobntaln States Leilgue,
aass o, which was disbanded on .
July a, 1937. Hyou can enlighten Eddie, he'd Uke to hear from you. His
·phone 1s ~-

911

1

~Upton, son of Wayne W. and

ElilabethUpton,53437EdepRd. ln
the Reedsville area, 18 having a
great sununer as liD exchange
stuilent·ln Japan.
~ will be staying with three
fanuli es '"'·
""" summer an d a1readY
has been With' two of them at
Sakaiminato,ln the prefix ofTotorl.
The third family he will be with
reside
on an
offbethewith
coast
of
Hiroshima
andisland
he will
them
· until ~ug. 211. He will join other exchange students at Osaka going to
Tokyo and flying from there to San
Francisco and then back to ,Meillli
County.
·

t' l ca~.wt.

w.

va.

"Shoot, a Jot of tllem are my
AIIOd•ted ..r.. Writer
· 'age," Fogle, 42, said. "All the trouFRISCO, Colo. (AP) - Here are ble, that was l5 years agQ."
the }Jell's Angels, watchlnglnteritly
The FBI disagrees. Ear!lei' this
as forest rangers show.them how to year, omclals said the Hell's An·
lay out a campsite.
gels, which luis grown to more than
Here are more Hell's Angels, 4,000 hardcore members since be' tooling a camper sedately down the lng founded In 1950 by dlsUlusloned
main street In search of a nice fam• World War II veterans, is the Jarg,
Uy motel. AndherearemoreHell's est and most dangerous of the na· Angels, polltely refusing more
tlon' s 600 motorcycle gangs.
beer, tipping· the waitress generThe FBI described the Aogels as
au sly and heading rtf for a Jazy 'af. organized crime on two wheels, In·
ternoon of trout fishing.
volved In murder, drug dealing, ex·
Thenotorlousmotorcyclegang's tortlon, prostitution and
lOth annual summer gathering be- 'fxlrnography In California, Negan quietly Saturday In this RockY braska, the Carolinas, Ohio, FlorMountain ski r~rt, where the blk· Ida. Oregon and elSewhere.
ers are seen as welcome visitors by
One motel owner said he fs afraid
restaurateUrs· and motel owners the Hell's Angels wW keep other
eager far the off-season bUsln,ess.
tourists away, but he nonetheless
During the lo-day "Hell's Ai1gels rented rooms to several. And a few
USA Run," the bl,kers ar,l! expected people - certainly not the owners
to spend more than $25,1nl.
- said the three saloons .Jn town
''They're very polite, average shOilld close whlle the Angels are
people," Mayor Doug Jones said at here.
h1s woodworking shop. "And we
Bob Cook, manager ot Smokin'
hope they spend a lot of money."
Willie's, said the bar-restaurant al·
Hell's Angels organizers said ready has been paid $10,000 ta feed

The sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

the ' run: eggs, French toast and are probably some people doing
sausage each' t;nornlng, and things that are Ulegal."
chicken, spaghetti, ribs, steak or r.;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
trout on various evenings. Plus the
salad bar and Wlllie's biscuits, of
course.
"They're a lot easier to walt on
than the regular tourist," Cindy
Benway, the head waitress, said.
''They're not as picky. Theytlpreal
well, and they're real polite."
In keeping with their code of sltOLITAIRE
lence, few Angels here would talk to
reporters or allow their photos to be
taken.Lastyear,threeJournallsts
were assaulted by Angels angry at
press coverage or a run In North
Carojlna.
"We just want privacy on our vacation, llke anyone else," said Angelo Alioto, 35, a Hell's Angel from
Richmond, Calif., who headed the
GOLD WEDDING
two dozen blker.s who arrived here
BANDS
early last week to set up the
95 '
campground.
As low As
Alioto, who said he owns a constructlon business, denied that the
Hell's Angels are anything more
than a sQclal club. "Although, like

..

Y4CARAT

·-

'395 :,::·

'39

TAWNEY JEWELERS

The recent typhoon which hit
Japan brought quite a downpour to
Osakii, Scott reported in his recent
phone call home. However, he is
having a great time. Scott is being
sponsored by the Park~rsburg Uons
Club, of which h1s father is a mer&amp;
)ler. Scott wiD be a junior at Eastern
High this fall.

STORE HOURS:

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

L----=~~~~:;;~~·~CLO~SED SUNDAYS

.jor

to

; ~~'!'~~~" ~t
1

an
' :«~Plglnal driwlng 'publl4hed by'
: ::Ripley IIIM!wi'1¥ the town alolll! tl)e
: , ~er and the .u.tJng With Ripley
the town has no cross
&lt;rnl'identall~, the' drawing from the
••efriy. l930s notes also that the
~~tion,,was 4,294. It is now lesa
1
:.,than 3,000. Charlie Russell 1s the 'iJI.
' dividual who sentlthe clipping along.
: Thanks, Charlie, Jots at us are iJI.
• teresled ln it.
·
'
•
: ·1
Schneider Boggs, former
: resident now livlng In .A~con, tirlues to be creative. A tale
ar·
, tlst, Jean is now st dying
: pKctography at Ohio Unlve;cr and
• recently took part In
Kodak
: pllotogrsphy contest condu
by a
: Cihctnnatinewspaper.
, ~ean won twice out of the six
: w~ ol c:ampetltiOII ~ her wort
• hliB now beel1 lll!nt on for the final
: j~lng. Good lqck, Jean. Jean ill a
daughter of Charlotte Schneider
1
, W'olfe, Middleport.
: ..

:·=

Ohio.. couple found dead

•

. SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) ~ Ufe for a Galena, Ohio, coup)e
; ~lnamurder-sulcldeendedln
a.car with ll2 money, an empty gas
tank and bankruptcy papers In the
glove compartment, authorities
said.
.
Investigator Gary Biggs of the
Bexar County medical examiner's
.omce. ldentlfled the victims Satur·
day as Antonio C. Garza, 53, and his
wife, Kay C. Garza, believed to be
In hl!r 40s.
Garza apparently k11led his wife
before turning the gun on himself

Friday, authorities said.
Poll~ said the couple was discoveredslumpedonthetrantseatota
car along with a hlgh·callber rifle.
ThemanhadanotedatedJune28
In his pocket, Investigators said.
"I have gone as tar as I can go
with our lives. My wHe, Kay, and I
are hard-working people that have
been reduced to beggars almost,"
read the note, according to Biggs.
"We came to San Antonio to
work, not to die, but Reagan economlcs has nothing trickling down
to us," the note said.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t

) . -~
. 1\f reminderbe . to.take care

:

' 'rJ.' your c'ourtbouse business this
wiek so as to avoid Thursday af·
·!efn9M when offit.'t!ll' will, be clll&amp;ed
IIQthat employes~ attend the anmlatcountyfair. ' ·

GET STARTED

..'Eddie Guinther,

IN

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fonner ·Meigs
nisident who DO\'!' Jivea In Galllpolla
ts; curious aboUt a listing of a

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Includes Men's T&amp;ir1s, Briefs, Boxers. Big and Tails, Pocket fs and
Boys' Briefs and T-Shirts.
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FIRESIDE

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·· to miss, It's Hanes underwear. Now's th.e
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j$39500

Upper IL 7'

I .

..

r;lOO:An:gel:s~tw~o~m~e~als~a~da~y~d~u~rln~g~~an~y~o~rg~an~lza~tlo~n.~·=·~he~sa~ld~,="t~he~r~e:!:J~~~4~2~4~S~e~ca~n~d~A~v~e;.~~~-

they expect 200 to :nl club
members from a dozen states, plus
girlfriends, wives and children.
Most of them are camping at the
l
· lU. 9,000-foot elevation In Officer's
_ 1Foriner~~Jiddl~port .resident, Ross
Gulch, a pristine U.S.· Forest Ser·
vice campground.
wille1 o , · eel his 93rd birthday
:fth a
at'Uie home of his sonTl!e Hell's Angels - with their
· , law , daugh~r, Jim and Mood
chains and low-slung, growling .
·Siluders Pensacola, Fla. recently.
Harley Davidson cycles, winged·
~ - ry alert and active- also
skull
emblem and black leather
,ricently underwent two major
Bil1 Clark, Rock Springs area j kets
hardly be lstak
·oj,erati at a Florida hospital and resident who underwent a triple
ac
- ,can
m
en
iS,dolng eU.
heart bypass operation recently at for clergymen, and Jocal author!·
&lt;
__
St. Mary's HospltaJ In Huntington, Is . ties have made sure they're pre~ ~ 2li' years or so, mer&amp; home and doing well.
pared In case trouble breaks out
. "l'rs or t Drew Webster Post 39,
Bill ~ppreciates the kindnesses
Summit County Sheriff Bob Far. ~rica• ' agion ha
rked t and prayers of residents during this rls said he Is bringing In 100 officers
,. • ve wo
a
frdm neighboring pollee and she·, Meil!J County Fair parklJ!g cars ordeal. Bill returned to the hospital
and aphhhls year will carry out the Friday for an examiqatlon by his riff's departments to patrol with his
J)fJect.
,
cardiologist and on Aug. 23 makes own 22 deputies. The additional of1
An a~l is being made for mer&amp; another trip to Huntington confer fleers are bringing extra guns, amtJrs.toCO!ItactPaulCasciatiJ92..3173 with his surgeon. Meantime, he's munition, hartdcuffs and tear gas.
o. Lennie , Jewell at 992-2113f, walking some two. milt;~ a day as a And Gov. Richard Lamm has
nqtifying either when they can work. part of his recupe.ration.'
promised assistance, If necessary,.
Help is desperately needed to again
from the State Patrol.
•af!compljsh the task.
And the Meigs Fair gels underway
Ben Fogle, who runs the office
;The
fair starts Tuesday so a
'th
ua1
·
b the M ·
supply
store and heads the
rsgular post meeting on that date WI ann
services Y
etllli
of Commerce, remarked
Chamber
w!U be held, Monday evening. The County Ministerial Association at
that
the
Angels have mellowed
"P\)st must supply workers for some the grandstand at 7:30p.m. Monday.
since
the
1900s
when they beai up
; ,:US manhoura dllrlng the.five days of A youth choir formed for the service
ute fair.
·
by Meigs vocal mllSic Instructor, Ed . anti-war protesters, terrorized
,, _ _
Hljrkless, will provide the music.
small towris and stabbed a Rolling
. " :rill sure many· of you over the So- we'll s.ee you a,t .the fair and, Stones fan to d~ath at an Altamont,
Calif., concert.
y~an tlave ,heatd · the . atory•.'that ··' of course, you Ube~ling!
· .POmeroy waa 1lllted with Ripley's
•

Jean

I I

-e-

Ohio- l '&lt;lont

Angels 'USA Run' welcomed by citizens

B~ TJMonrY HARFER

8..l
~' hool AD'AID•
J:

(, ,,lhpoli~.

,

�.
Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-sentinet

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

1

Area· deaths·
Norma W. McCBI1y
MIDDLEPORT - Norma W.
McCarty, 77.~S. FifthAve.,Mid·
dleport, died Saturday morning In
Holzer Medical Cenll!r.
She was preceded In death by her
parents, Luke and Martha Simpson, and by her husband, Ray D.
McCarty. In her earller years, she
attended a Baptist church In
Louisa, Ky.
Surviving Is a sister, Mrs. Marie
Pugh of Middleport; three broth·
ers. Z.K. of Point Pleasant, Rance
ol Webster, Fla., and Ora ol Middleport; and several nieces and
nephews.
GravestdeservlceswW beheld at
I p.m. Tuesday In Gravel Hill
Cemetery, wtth the Rev. Chester
Lemley otflcialing. There will be no
calling hours.
Funeral armngements are being
handled by Ewing Funeral Home.

August 15. 1982'

Point Pleasant, w. Va .

w~

.Memorial set for Japanese

hension by other ASian countries
By KAY TATEIIW
Star Advent Christian Churcllln Le-\eeodllted Preee Writer
. and some Japapese that the nation
tart and was a member ot the
TOKYO (AP) - Japan observes .may slowlY be reverting to Its war·
church's Ladles Aid SOciety.
Surviving are two sons, WUilam the 37th anniversary of the end of time past.
Tfui occasiOn Is dedicated to
Wentzell of Letart and Don Shields World War II Sunday amid appreof Henderson. and.tour grandchUd·
.
.
ren, four great-grandchUdren and a
Thur~day
stepgrandcllUd.
Slle was also preceded In death
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri.State Red Cross Bloodmobile wiD be at
by three husbands, Cllarles Ryan,
Grace United Metllodlst Cllurcll from noon-6 ,p.m. Thursday.
WUilam Wentzell and Alon Shields. ·
All Pl't!Spectlve dOnors are urged to gtve blood due In a crltlcal
shortage
In blood supplies In local. hospitals, according to Thelma
Funeral services will be held at 2
Shaver, GaUia County bloodmobile chairman.
p.m. today In the Guiding Star Ad·
vent Christian Church, with the
Rev. James Looney ol!lclatlng.
Burtal wiD be In Evergreen CemPOMEROY - Jolynn Boster, Democratic candidate tor state
terY. Letart.
representative of the new 94th Ohio House district, wW be at the
Funeral arrangements are by
Melgs County Fair on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenlnp ·
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason.
this week.
Boster wW be on hand to talk to Meigs citizens and other visitors to
the fair to listen to their Ideas and concerns about state government. ·.
W.E. Williams Jr.

Bloodmobile visit

Boster at Meigs fair

s.u rrender

tho!e wbo died servtpg their country during the war and to pray tor
world peace.
A govenunent-lpDnsored memortal Sl!l"\'ke tor 2.5 rnl1llOn war
dead was planned at TOkYo's NipponBudokan; Martlai~Hall,!lttended by Crown prjnce Aldhlto
8lld Prtnceaa Mlchl!w and Prime
Minister Zenko Suzuki.
Also Invited were otber leaders
and JllOl'e than ~('JOO members of
tamUles wbo lost kin ill the war,
which ended on Aug.l4, 1945 with a
Japanese surrender after the Unl·
ted StaleS dropped atomla bombll
on Hlrc8hlma and Nagasaki.
'!be anniversary cornea at a time
when other Asians are den&lt;Nnclng
·
of !sed J
J apan ......_
...,..ause rev
a~
high-school textbookS which they

.. '·

...~--~ $1~
·~- -

mlU

presae4 tears that J~
Ia·
r1am Is resurfaclni after nearly
tour decades.
For ~ tlrat time IInce the surrender ceremoDie&amp; began ~ years
ago, Emp!r'OI' Hlrohito did not plan
to ~ti!. :I,1Ie 81-year old emperOr has beeli l'eCII~attngtrun a
Cold at blst lllimiiler vills ill Nasu
northotToltYoalnceFrlday, the gO-

venunent ~- Empress N.agako.

'$, a1ao plariDed to stay away since
she Is stBl ~verlng trom a hlp
Injury.
Other IIE!I"Vfts were also scheduled In 'r1 states nationwide.

Steve Yates
Is Back

Tuesd~y t~r~
Saturday

.

French Quarter.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

GALLIPOLIS - City pollee In·
vestlgated two thetis which occurred Friday and Saturday.
Clarence Shupe slild a person
stOle several items from the garage
of hls Klneon Street residence be- ·
tween 3:00 and 4 p.m. Friday.
A snow tire, motor on and tood
items.from a freezer wete taken, he
said. The garage door WI!S apparently open when the theft occurred.
Pollee later arrested a subject
who had several of the missing
items In Ills possession, but Shupe
decided not to press charges.
At 1: 50 a.m. Saturday, an officer
on routine patrol saw two men car·
rylng an extension ladder on Madison Avenue. Upon seeing the
officer, the subjects threW the
tadder down and lied.
Pollee believe the ladder was
stolen. One suspect was later

C&amp;ll&amp;'ht and is expected to be
charged.
Pollee cited seven peraons tor
speeding Frtday:
Belynda K. Layni\,18, Galllpolla;
Ronald D. Wright, 33, Galltpolls;
Edgar L. Atkins Jr., 23, Gallipolis;
Robin L. Stinson, 18, 131dwell; Bllly
G. Spires, 45, LanpvWe, Ohlo; Sa·
muel J . Juniper Jr., 20, Pt. Pleasant; Rita S. Bevan, 21, Crown City. ·
Also cited by pollee were:
Robert L. Green, 24. GaUipolill,
running a stop stan; Paul Dlngeas,
50, Gallipolis, tanu~ to yield;
Roger G. Meadows, 32, GaUip.llls,
possession ~ marijuana; Terry N.
Waugh, 24, Crown City, open container; Judith L. Thompson, 34,
Gallipolis, disorderly conduct;
Glen E. Kingery, '¥7, GalllpoJ!s,
DWI; Michael E. Pope, 23, VInton.

E-

r...-cn-1275

finished.

Four tractor cias~ debut at 7
p.m. Saturday, beglimlng with a
6,1nJ.pound stock, followed by a ·
5,&lt;ro-pound modified tractor, B,&lt;ropound field stock, and 7,&lt;ro-pound
modltled tmctor.
Entry fee Is again $10, 8lld the
evening's co'"lined purae will be,
$.1,622. Entries wm be a~ until the class Is over.
Rules may be obtained by sponsoring clubs.
'!be Blgtoot truck will be displayed by BobChaDdler of Midwest
Four Wheel Drive Center, Ibc., beginning at 3 P.JII· and lasting UDtll
the end ot the.day's events, both oa
Friday and Saturday. (Related
pboto on C-8).
In dtller eventl at tldl ......
~~ · tatr, locid
depiji ba rh Will~~~.,
: Clltbe~.TbePuniBo.tdepm1·
llll!llt will be Cll balldlol'tlle dlmrill-

are

•

•

I.

.

90

• 3-'- _,.Ina • a.lh-ln Dlgltll

...........

'

'

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theft.

. '11.7t
T-120

IMPERIAL·
.

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.

• 08/AHL.PAiwll(:ll

[WIJihlntln T...WIJ Ridios; Atlt.nn.&amp; Acq

ill

\

UPPER RT.7

Edwar'd Taber, the fund's p'rea~
dent, ~ In 11 midyear repokto

~

GALLIPOLIS,OH. 45632

'

'!be stock market has obvloosly
been rio belletlclarf'ot the filgl)t to

..•

ended· Friday showed the New
York Stock Exchan~ composite
Index down .15 at 59.54, and the
American Stock Exchange market

value Index orr 7.45 at 237.54.
Big Board volume averaged 44.72
mUllon shares a day, against M.ID
mUIJon the week before.

Local
Briefs:·
.

'

Hitching Post blaze undetermined
POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar said Satunlay
the cause of the fire that destroyed the Hitching Post (formerly the
TaU Timbers) on Ohio 7 Friday morning Is stW undetermined. Dam·
ages has been estimated at ~.lnl.
·
Legar said Inv;estlgation as to the cause ol the fire has .been turned
over to the state fire marshal's omce.
Owner of the eStablishment Is Everett L. Crow Jr., Rt. 1, Reedsville. Chester Fire DePartment also assisted In t!ghtlng the blaze
with Pomeroy and Middleport.

.Resignation accepted by board
POMEROY - The resignation of George Perry from the Meigs
County Board of Education was accepted during the board's recent
·
August meeting. Perry had been on the board lor 32 years.
Harold Roush was appointed as board delegate to the November
- meeting of the Olllo School Boards Association.
In other matterS, ll,."•IUty Insurance tor board employees was
. purchased from Rep\lbllc._.;'ranklln Insurance Co., and driver certlllcalel were Issued to the following school bus drivers:
Macy Rose, Paul Baer and WWJam Hannum, Eastern Local;
Donald~ David Chase, Teresa Cremeens, Leta HaU, Laum
l{iu-rtson, Jua'nl!ll Lambert, Ida Mae Martin, Gloria Oller, WllUam
Smith, Jean Wood, Meigs Local.
WW!am Downie, Wenden Ervin, NeDle Romaine Frederick. Kat·
hleen Morris. Aaron Sayre, Dan Smith, Ernest Spencer, Southern
Local; Patricia Pape, Carleton School.

Swimming pool safe
SYRACUSE - Rumors spinal menangltls and encephalitis can be
Contracted by swimming In the London pool at Syracuse are falser
according to Paige Cleek, the pool's manager.
Cleek salcl she contacted the Meigs County Health Department,
and the county health nurse said those disease can't be spread by
swimming ill the pool.
Those diseases are spread by mosquitoes, tile nurse reported.
Spinal menangltls Isn't contagl6us.

Free cardinc clinic planned
POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Department's tree cardiac clinic wW be held from 9 a.m.-noon TUesday. Dr. Dan Hosler,

head of pediatric cardiology at ChUdren's Hospital In Columbus, wUI
be the attending physician.
·
Questions may be referred to the department at 992-6626.

rose 31'{1, to 788.ftl In the
past . Wllek, attel- ~ more
· than 46 points 11Vf!t the two previous
"

Other readings

·.

to/ tb,e

.week

Man dies .in · ~ax robbery attem.p t· .·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - PoUce said Saturday iha't a 25-year-old
Columbus ~has been charged
with attempted aggravated
munler and aggravated robbery In
a rop~~ery at a last food restaurant
thiit lett one man dead 8lld another
Injured.
·
The char&amp;ll§ were tiled early Sat·
unlay against .\nthony W. Black of
the city's west side:
Killed was Paul Jackson Spafford, 21, Columbus, said Sgt. Cut·
ford Davis of the Columbus PoUce
Department. ·The wounded man
was Identified as Dennis Hay, 57,
also of Columbus.
Davis said the robber who fied
shot Hay In the upper left leg after
an argument broke out during the
robbery attempt. Hay was taken to
Doctors Hospltl!l West. where he
was listed In talr condition, Davis'
said.
Spafford was shot by pollee atter
he fired a shotgun blast at the three
officers who had been staking out
the Rax after reeelvlng an anonym·
ous tip that It would be robbedJDa·
v1s said.
I ·
1be robbery attempt started at
aboul 10:15 p.m., Davis said. and
there were about 15 people In the
restaurant at the time.
The would-be robbers ordered
the customers to put their money
and valuables on the fioor, then lie
face down on the floor, Davis said
He said Spafford opened fire with
hls sllotgun when he saw the offlc-

)

ers draw their revolvers. That was
after Hay had been shot, he said.
The restaurant was sprayed with
gunttre. Several wlndowsweresllot
out at the restaurant and at a
nearby apartment buUdlng In the
west side of the city.'

"The robber that was kUied, he
jumped over the counter and went
back to the office and pulled the
phone off the wall and told me to
open up thereglsterandgetthemoney out," sald Mike Murphy, 21,
who was working a cash register.

Leak forces
•••
evaeuatton
BROOKFIELD,' Ohio
•.

•

(AP) - A
leaklngllnelettlngott clouds of nat·
uml gas ·forced abQut 00 tamD!es
from their homes for nearly two
·hours, !lreflghters said.
Resldj!nts· along a two-mile
stretch by the line were evacuated
by llre!ll:llters at about 8 p.m. Fri·
day after' passer-by spotted the
leak from an undergroundllne, offici&amp;ts said. .

a

'

safecy
,falUn&amp;
to Its lowest levels In ~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;::;::;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
more than
two years before staging 1

·w~
· - " •• .I

• F'tutl-ln Mio_;piAOII

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

Credit requirements,"

dustriall

, I

• lq'!'kll Cllntrol

our stringent

a rally on ~·•
'!be Dow ,JO!Mjl a\'j!l'age of 00 lp-

•E_ocy_e

8 HourVHS Tape

...

shareliolders.

'

AUGU8T RCIAUI

tton derby at 7 p.m. Tuesday, and .
Racine's !lrerru!n wW cover the
truck puB at 7:00 p.m. Friday.
Middleport wW llnlsh up the
jVetk·at 6 p.m. Satunlay with the

1

'

'

I'

Many small Investors appear to
have picked money-market fuile!l,
especially those with PQ!1follos of
Treasury billa, as ii place to ride out
·
thestorm.
Assets of the money funds halie
beell llfowlng at a rate of 'better
than $3 bll1loll a week lately, &amp;nil at
~ report had reached $220 billion.
-~ managers. ·of the money
funds ~ are also putting
an lilcreased stress Ollll&amp;fetY· The
T. Rowe Price Prime I~Reserve
Fund, tor example, satd' II had
dropped more than 25 companies
8lld other organlzalilms from Its list·
of approved Investments· since the
start of the year. ·
• "()( the 20 largest llankB In the
country, only stx currently 'meet

=
:

JUStA GRIAr VALUI .''·,
I

•

.. wrs

I"

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MaHallntalllvfalon ·
Maatar Conlrot Unit ·

I

' J

""

Sensational savings·
on a h'-'ge se~ectlon .
of Armsttbng.tloorsl ·

Clod! with Tlmt Onllllf-. lkllll-ln
UHF lnd VHF l - •
lwtllft.
lngOc&gt;ntroll

'\

By,{)BET CURRIER
'
Af'Bgefaesa WrMer
.,_ , NE~ YORK (AP) _- sStety has
.become. one of the m&lt;lSt saleable
, c;ommodltles on WaU Street as the
' .reces~n &lt;!rap olt.
'
. _ Wlth.eacb new,announcement In
fi!C8lt. ~ of a bank with loan
Problems or 11 small Investment
tlrm.li hooble, anab-sts say, Investors' s'e&amp;-ch tor a secure harbor toc
their tnoiley has picked up
mome11tum.
The latest jolt came Thursday,
.. when L9mbard-WaU IDe. and a sub$ sldlary, traders In the money
~ markets, tiled a petition IJ11der
~ Olapteq 11 of the .federal bankruptcy~- Among Its creditors,
Lombard-WaU listed Chase Manhattan Bank of New York, the naJ;Ion's third largest.
; · '!be ·fDDOUncement touched off
:, heavy truylng .of short-term Treas• · tpy ~. ~arded by many Inves11!1 a lo!itcal sate haven because
of the special credit standing of the
• •feclera'!lovellunent.
•' The demand pushed yields of
~
~ =-ose.U.
~ secu
, ritiesdow!lb);J!alt a
'
·, point In .Thursday1s
tradlili
. Since tate June, In~ ~ ~~~ on T·billa bve taJlen
·, almlls; .rout' points.• or aboiit 00

,..

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llegln.___Jract~~~r!pu~U~------:--~~~~~~~~~~P~H~.~44~6~
-4~5~17~~~~~~··~~~~
r

Three puUing classes wW
competing at 7:00p.m. Friday for a
purse ol $1,345. The classes are
four-wheel drive modified truck,
5,500 pounds; stock tractor, 9,('i00
pounds; and four-wheel drive modi·
fled truck, &amp;,500 pounds.
There ls a 10 entry fee and entries
wW be accepted untO the class Is ·

·•. I

"

Truck-tractor pulls
Meigs fair ·h ighlight
POMEROY -Two evenings of
tractor and truck pulling are In
store for Meigs County falrgoers at
the fairgrounds Friday and
Saturday.

IJOW!'I - The ~ Ohio Hotel Jn MJdcll4!fori, reporiedlj oace al&amp;opover point for Ohio Rtver travel,. en. ~pp~~~IIIIIJ, wiB be raZed. Pllri ol a waD on &amp;he
· · UIJIN!I' lillie All &amp;he ~ has collapeed, expoelos

__,_,
..-.
- or :t !f'

$uper
Speclols
•••••
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··.

.Police chec·k 2 thefts

.

POMEROY- Seventy-five names Pomeroy; Maxine Hoffman, Pomeroy; Franklin D. Gheen·, 332 ·
were ·drawn for pouible petit and Poineroy; · 'Pa\ T. Holier, Rt. ~. Grart St., Middleport; Dorothy
grand jury duty Friday morning at Pomeroy; James W. Newbern Jr., CUhdollar, Reedsville; Harold A.
the office of , lhe clerk of courts. . Village Manor, Apt. 6, Mlddl,eport; Sedgwick, Tup~rs Plains; Donna
Namea draWn for pcliiSible petit•jury Fred E. Smith, Rt. 1, Racine; M. Tillis, 304 Hamilton, Mi~dlepc)rt;
dutywere:
EIJzabethL.Smith,fleedlville; Pen- Juanita Conde, 171 S. 3rd, Mid·
-'
.
ny E. Mullen, 509 S. 2nd, Middleport; dieport.
. ~ar Qualls, 100 Kerr .. St., . EIJzabeth Clay, !Jlng Bottom;
Name~~ drawn for possible grand
Pomeroy; Conllance Rae English, William C. Cook, Kingsbwj Rd.,
38096 Hemlock Rt., P~~~~ero7; Frant Pomeroy; Pauline Eynon, 46280 jurywere:
"
carol Pierce Sr., Rutland; Alan.L.
Wells, !Jlng~l ~redC&amp;IesJr., Morning Star Rt., Racine; Ethel
Brick St., RuUand; ilarold Ric;e, Rife, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; Thelma L. Harris, Rt. -3, Pomeroy; Celeste
Rutland; Mildred L. Wen, Miner- Henden1011, Rt. 2, Coolville; Lester Coals, 588 Lincoln St., Middleport;
svllle; Betty Newlun Anderson, .Roush, . Racine; Ruth Tillis, Mae Young, Pomeroy; Ada Nease,
Reedsville; Jane Harris, Pomeroy; Rutland; Charles Asa Bradbury, 244 Pomeroy; Roger E. Hill, Racine;
Jeffrey Dllcher, Rt. 2, Alba_ny; S. 2nd, Middleport; David A. Shade, Hilda Davis, Racine; M!irgare! ·
Dorothy Baker, 363 S. 5th St., Mjd- Box 354, R.D. 3, Albany; Kenneth Spencer, Pomeroy; Lisa C. Smith,
dleport; Janet Bolin, Box 36, Davis, Rutland; Mark Moore, Texas Middleport; Betty J..evacy, Box 112,
Rutland; Freda M, ~nter, Rd., Pomeory; Edna L. Evans, 1086 Chesler; Alberta K. Schultz, ·43771
Pomeroy; 'Cynthia Jean Ritchie, Vine St., Middleport; Bernice Cherry Ridge Rd., POmeroy; FranTuppers Plains; Bobby Rathburn, Wilford, Middleport; Rae Gwidz- cis A. Benedum, 400A Success Rd.,
Rt. 1, Box 181, Rutland; . Roger F. dowsky, 371 N. 3rd, Middleport; Reedsville; Freda Mae Smith,lU. 3,
Dillard, 107 Laurel St., Pomeroy; Robert Gary Holter, Holler Rd., Box 200, Albany; RobertS. ·Parker,
Roger K. Marcinko, Tuppers Plains; · R.D., Long Bottom; Nancy Burns, 611 S. 2nd, Middleport; Jose
Sherman BIIBklrk, 7V1 Uncoln St., Pomeroy; &lt;(harles A. Sargent, Delgato, ~ Hamilton .St., Mid·
Middleport; Stella ~th, Long Bot- Coolville; Roberta A. Ridenour, Rt. dleport ; Susan H. Fox,. Rt. 4,
tom; George W. arner, Rt. 4, 3, Pomeroy; David Timm, Rt. 2, Pomeroy ; Robert L. Williamson,
Pomeroy; Stephen K. Williams, Pomeroy; WiUiam M. Weaver, 642 36505 Cremeans Rd., Rutland ; Allie
New Lima ·Road, Rutland; Deppie Mill St., Middleport; Charles D. M. Simon, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Carl Lee,
K. Brown, Box 252, Rutland: Carr, Rt. 2, Box 167, Coolville; !Jln~ Bottom; Alva Coats, MinerHoward Eng~, 120 Kerr St.·. Donald Combs, Texas Rd., sville.

:a-::,

GALLIPOLIS - Three people sured ~lear c11s~.
were cited by the Ohio Higbway PaIn a vtrtwil fEPE!&amp;t of this accJ.
trol In separate accldellts near Gal- dent, and eastboulll veblcle driven
Upolls Friday.
by Elizabeth C. Tu~, 56; Colum·
The patrol's Gallla-Melgs post re- bus, was unable to stop In tlme on
ported Emmett W. Church, 79, Eu- U.S. 35 at 8:45 p.rlll, and colllcled
reka Star Route, was tiCketed tor with the rear' of a tlar driven by
Improper turn following a tWo-car Marla F. Palrush, 17, Jackson.
collision at thelnteraectlon of0hlo7
Pakush llild also~ In !rat1111d U.S. 35 at 12:25 Jl.m.
tic at the time ~ the lilcldent, the
Arocordlng to the report, Church patrol said. DaJnaae waa moderate
was southbound In the through lane to 'l'ul'ller'. vehicle and ljlabt to tile
when he made a right turn Into a Pakush car, and 'I;U~ was cited
private drive and struck a vehicle tor aslllll'l!d clar distance.
driven by Linda L. Preston, 28, Rt. r----------,~
1, GaUlpolls, which was In the right
turn lane, preparing to turn onto 35.
Damage wassUgbt to bOtllautoa,
the report said.
·'
'
Susan E. Blland, 28, Patriot Star
Route, was slightly InJured when
her vehicle struck a stopped car·
driVen by Anita C. Eplin, 46, Rt. 1,
WDlow Wood, on Ohio 588.
Botb vehicles luld been eastbound at 3: 45 p.m. when Eplin
stopped tor oncomtng' tratrlc. BJ.
land was unable to atop In time and
struck the'rear of EpUn' s vehicle,
.
causing moderate damage to her
car and aUght to Eplln' s.
Btland wasn't treated tor ber In·
jury, and troopers cited her tor as·

QE2 returns ·
for cruises

Court draws. 75 for jury duties
.

clalri)wbltewaihthecounW•wardlrle cfuelty-8lld 11Gf81110111.

Patrol cites three

SYRACUSE- Word has been received ol the Aug. 12 death t:1. W.E .
WUilams Jr., n, Augusta, Maine,
wllo died after an extended Ulness.
George G. Saxtoh
Born Sept. 10, 190f, In Melp
County, son of the late W.E. and
ALBANY - George G. Saxton,
Bertha Stewart WllUams, he was a
62, North Lewisburg, Ohio, died
1923 Pomeroy High School graduFriday morning In University Hosate and worked In the aviation In·
pital, Columbus.
dustey untU hls retirement In 19'19.
Born May 18, 19ID, In Dexll!r, son
Surviving Is hls wUe, Etla Edof thelateGeorgeW. and Mary Ann
wards WWJams; three sons, BID of
Thomas Saxton, he was a World
MinersvUle, Jim of Rochester,
War II veteran andstall!employeP..
N.Y., and Tom of Auguata; two
Surviving Is hls wife, Wanda J . daughters, Nancy of Augusta and
Rile Saxton; three sons, Gary and
Ruthann of Bangor, Maine; eight
Tim, both of North Lewisburg, and
grandclllldren; two sisters, ElizaDave of West Llberll(; two daugh- beth S. Roberts of Ostrander, and
ters, Connie Blount of MarysvWe - Charlotte Ann McGorvan ot St
and Debbie McKenzie of North LeLouis, Mo.; and several nieces and
wisburg; six grandclllldren and a
nephews.
stepgrandchUd; a sister, Marie
He was also preceded In death by
Smltll of Hamden; two haU-slsters,
a sister and a grandclllld.
Carrie Townsend.ofv,.'Ukesville and
Funeral arrangements are pend· Elizabeth Canode ol Albany; and a
Ing, with burial In Augusta.
half-brother, Stanley Pllllllps ol
Logan.
He was also preceded In death by
a half-brother.
Funeral services wW be held at 1
p.m. Monday In the Blgony-Jordan
: Funeral Home, Albany, with the
SOUTHAMPTON, England
Rev. OUn Harvey of1lcialing. Bur(AP) Cheering vacationers
Ial wW be In Castor Cemetery, near
Point Roek, Ohio. Frlentls may cau jammed decks of the refttted. reat the funeral borne from 2-4 p.m. painted Queen Elizabeth 2 Saturday .. the posh Uner left on Its first
today.
cnllse since returning from a perilous journey transpcjrllngtroope lor
Betty ~hield8
the Falkl.arul Islands conflict.
Thousands of wen-wishers onMASON - Betty Jane McGraw
Shields, 90, Letart, died Friday In shore waved and dozens of small
pleasure craft bobbed beside the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Feb. 25, 1892, In Apple the gleaming gray67,&lt;ro-ton!Uxury
ship as It steamed out of this south
Grove, Olllo, daugllter of. the late
Henry L. and Sarah Roush
England Pl'rt on a llve-day Atlantic
McGraw, she attended Guiding
croaslng to New York.
1'

Times-sentinel-

W. Vii.

URGENT.LY NEEDED OIL AND GAS LEASES

To lulflllluture..Cirttllng prOPms write or Cilll and be sure to Include
property location and acreage tllat Is available lor lease. Also those
that have oil and gaslea~s that are due to expire within one year.

'.

,000

$1

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UNIVERSAL PET-ROLEUM CO.
DENVER YOH~245--5508

C~LL

Travel Insurance ·
Wheri You Purchase Your
Airline Ticket From Your

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oNTifiMOvl.

'

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i- 11011£.HEATIIII
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*. .

EQUI~EfiT .

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TRAVEL AGENCY
And This Insurance Covers You In Your Private Passenger tar
Traveling To And From The Airport
ALSO ••• If You Relit~ Car After Flying To'Your Destination You Have This
'100,000
It Even Applies When You Trani
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Tours

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.· Page-:-A-B-The Sundav TimE,~-!~!i.'!:

August 15)_1912

-·.,

· .~otary hears
probate judge ·

lheriver

MIDDLERORT _. J1Dbert Buck
Me!p County probate Judge, wa,;
t)le guest speaker at the Friday
nlpt meetlilg of the Mlddlepo~·
Pomeroy Rotary held at Heath U~l­
ted Methodist Churclt, Middleport.
Buck spoke on juvenUe criminal
violations, child abuge and thejll!n·
eral dulles of his olllce. FoUoivlng
his speech a question and answer
period was held. ·
Presldent.Ray Pickens, who presided, reported that a golf match
wiD be held wlih the Lions Club on
Thursday, Aug. 26, at 6 p.m. at Jay

SeCtion@
.,

The Loxley Way
/

Teaching from 'within

Mar Golf Course.

The two clubs wUI meet following
the match with a potluck dinner to
be served. following events. 1be
Thursday nJght meeting wUI take
the place of the regular Friday
nlpt meeting of the Rotary. Rotary Anns are Invited to attend.
Pickens also announced that the
district governor wUI visit the local
club on Sept. 10.
Celebrating birthdays were Ha·
rold Hubbard, Tom Reed, and Jim
Sheets.
A new member of the Rotary Is ·
George Hackett Jr., and guest was
Tom Anderson; Dinner was served
by the ladles or the church.

Fair entries up
POMEROY .,;, Open class entries
In t~H1 Meigs County Fair are up
approximately 500 from last year,
according to Muriel Bradford, fair
board secretary. '·
. The number of exhibits. In the
open classes had dropped steadily
since 1917, but this year, new Inter·
est brought the total number t1 entries to 2,161, s)le said.
The classes, . ·along with the
number of registered entries are:
Draft horses, 16; diitcy cattle,19;
beef cattle, 38; sheep, 29; ladles'
lead, five; potiitJy, .six; farm crops,
370; llower show, Wednesday, 295;
IIower show,,Friday, 321; painting,
59; photography, 160; grange,
three; domestic arts, 394; baking
and ~anntng. 446.
AU exhibits wm remain In place
on the fairgroundS unt114 p.m. next
Saturday.

T

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'

Fair prices set
POMEROY - Melllll County
Fair membei-shlp tickets are stUI a
good deal at ~ covering dallY ad·
mission to the fair, grands\811d
events, and tree parklilg. They are
available-at many area buiiD!l'lell.
The
general admission
chargoed at the'gate, beglnn1ilg at 9
a.m. dally, also Includes unllmlteil
rides. The midway, presented by
Bates Brothers Amusements, Win·
tersvWe, wUI be open Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday;
2·5 and G-11 p.m., and Saturday,
noon-5 and 6-11 p.m.
Holders of membership, 4-H and
season tickets can enjoy the midway for an additional $2 dally, payable at the ride,ottJce.
Chtldren under 1 year of age are
admitted ~ at the gates.

s~udged and rumpled fishing hat
of Its Instigator. The children work
hard In the morning and get to play
all atiernoon liS ruthless pirates on
the alluring lake, or among the fer!)clous lions and bears of the entlc·
lng, vlniH!Dtangled woods.
"I . hated school," remem\ll!rs
Mrs. Loxley, who has written two
chUdren's books. "I thought all
teachers were stupid. I was a
farmer all my life."
But when the oldest of her and
O.B.'s four children was a senior In
high school, she enrolled In Miami
University, Oxford, Ohio, to hecom., exactly what she thought she
would never be.
She had completed the standard
four years of college work In five
· years and graduated In 1962. She
and O.B. survived two house ftres
In six months-one which des·
troyed both manuscripts of her
children's books plus a 46-year-old
, five-piece oak bedroom suit. They
endured together the extended period of time when they did not know
the whereabouts of one daughter,
~- ·
AS a contriblitfOn \0 chljl!ren, she and five years ago, O.B. was, In·
speilt portions of the last 12
jured severely In a motorcycle acci&lt;Bumm,ers conduCting her own day dent ·and still suffers the
backlashes.
{camo-tl~e· Loxley waY,.
"Just as long as you have the
.. Her camp1 wh!Ch was held dur·
the month of July, Is different physical stamina....'' she says, retypical summer camps but llectlvely. "Each day takes care of
npt because of better equipment. Its own."
So when It comes to the bottom
more counselors or wealthy kids.
' . "It's the caring," Mrs. Loxley line, It's people that matter most·to
says, resting at The Shire In a ber.
But each morning she reserves a
straight-backed clll~W after a day of
camp. "We st()p and take care of little time for herself, God and
things right when they happen. sometimes her fishing pole. She
Everyone Is allowed Ito say they rises at 5 or 6 a.m. and enters an
have a probii!!Jl. Then we talk about hour-long world where time Is mea·
how to deal with lt."
sured In fishing worms: two WOJ:ITIS
The kids who attend the Cl!mp to the hour and then It's time to.
have been recommended by start the day.
teachers In the Jackson school sys"I'm thlnfdng all the time. You
tem. But ·most of the 6- tO 14-year· have to,"_shesays, ••to save steps.''
olds don't have serious atructlons or
"It's so hard to find those kind of
,extreme)f deviant behavior, al- people who are wUIIng to give up
though ·~e has what Mrs. Loxley their summers," Sandy says. "It's
&amp;J "gangster tendencies." nice to rome here because of the
cliltd ~ have some sort of kind of person Kathryn Is. She has
problerft, though, either In academ- so much patience."
IC!! or In iloclall21ng or both.
Mrs. Loxley Is a firm believer In
Unlike !JIOSt day camps, the,Lox- work and preaches a philosophy of
ley cainp&lt;stresses academics but In
stlck-to-lt-lveness. She Is a prolific
a ll)ixllfled version of the class- letter writer-and she drives a
room. With an emphas~ on math magic bus.
jllld reading skills, all campers
Like the · 10-year-old big blue
work lit their llWn leyel, reinforcing · van-complete with noisy mutller,
what they alreaclY know rather 250,000 mlles on the odometer, and
than leariJing,new concepts.
a robweb or two on the outsJde
"WI!. try to make It (teaching) mirrors-she also manages not to
come from the Inside out," says break clown.
Sandy Hunter, ofGaWpolls, whoasHer firm hands guide ''the magic
~lsted Mrs. LOxley this year. "It's 'bus" along the 50-mtle round-trip
done with sincerely.",
route as she delivers the campers
And the result Is lmpiVVed self- to their doorsteps each evening.
esteem for the kids. At least that's The Children, packed Into the sate
how It'ssuppr;lsed to .work and W!uand spacious con11nes of the steel
ally does, according to Mrs. Loxley. machine, are just as rambunctious
"We ltave to let them 'know It's t11ete u If stUI playing In the lake or
tun," •l!e addi. ",Everyone baa to mud swamps at The Shire.
have something to look for'ward
AS Mrs. Lmdey talks ~.al!,nly
to."
,
.from thedrlver'sseat about her life
Bu!Mrs: Loxley and Sandy Hun- and hei' family, her watchful eye
ter are only two 11·the guiding for- shares the responsibility t1 the
ces at this c~. In tact, nine juntor ~rvlilg highway ahead and the
educatllts"-the older ldds...:.OO most Children In her rear-view mirror.
oflbe teacbtng.
' .
.
ODe minute she describes the depresalon
she felt oVer the ashen me~' Loxley hils .set upjlearnlng
centers thi'ouahout the Woods morll!ll left irun the tireS, and, as '
' where each juldor educator Js.lre- euUy Ia lbe turns the '{an's overIP9ftllble for aboUt~~ sized ..-m&amp; wheel, she calls to a •
There. 8IIIOIW the blrdl, !reel and . COIIlPIItnlar camper, "You cannot
- tl1ckllq creetl.'math I!QllauOns feel that good ,men yoo'relhatdlshec:or•te a~ more
and 'grulrtled. You'D aet lndlgestloi.." '
readlna aillcmrleDta. a trifle leli , E)'l8 backoalberoad,lbesays,
clraldfuL. I
'
.
' . "I'm·lltlll trying to reach my :llelllth.
, It leeinlllke a paradise IChool, WbeD I'm In my wbeelclm!r, I'm
ID tuclled iway uilder tbe lllgbtly. really aolD&amp; to aet 1tartecl/' '

hey are ordlnaty kids In an or·
dlnary sort Clf· world, but
they've been touched by Loxley
magic. It's not the kind of magic
that makes dry, oval crackers taste
buttery; or the kind that sends
1 thick, Oriental carpets floating upward against the strong will of .
gravity.
Mrs. Kathryn Loxley, maker of
the magic, may even deny such' a
mystique exists at The ShJre-,a
ID-acre farm near Jackson that
she and her husband, O.B., share.
But even this nearly retired
grade-school teacher wUI admit the
chUdren slle has reached In past years have changed-If only a bitfor the better because of her
home-styled recipe for teaching
them right from wrong.
. During the school year she Is a
teacher at Kinnison Elementary
SchQolln Jackson.
· Durtng a chosen time each
, though, sl)e,Is a teacher,
arc!, flshermim, dlsclpllnardrlver, CB!Jlp ~unselor-

.

•3

•

Squads make 5 runs
POMEROY - ,Five emergency
runs were !Jlade by local units Frl·
day, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reported.
At l2:08a.m., 1\utland was called
tot Ida White, who was taken· to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 7 a.m. for Pomeroy
fireman Melvin \(anMeter Jr., who
·was taken to Veterans Memorial t-;,;o;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;:::;:;.
Hospital.
Pomeroy was called again at 3: 18
p.m. for Lisa Brown. who was
taken to Veterans; Tupper PJainj
at 6:25 p.m .. for Barbara Carvey,
who was treated' and not transported; and Middleport at 11:44
p.m. for Mike Dorst, who was taken
to Veterans.

'Vlf

.......-.......
"o
!'lN
.

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..
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Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS - Ida White, Ru·
'uand; Melanie Walte.rs,
Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Henry Wells,
Mae Ketchka, Edison Hart, Law·
renee Scarberry Jr.

Reunion set
• RACINE - The Batley reunion
wW ~ held today at the Sllrlne
Park In Racine. A piCniC IUIICII wW
be served at IXXID. AU relaUviS and
guests are Invited to attend.

-&lt;

&amp;earaiJie

Skatin8 off
~t!I'LAND

1

-

Due to the Melli
'.' CountyFalrtlletewlllbenolkattna
Rutland Civic Calter 1111 AUI-17,
'IIJid 11111dance ~ Friday, Aut· 2J.

't

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,•.,.

'·

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·(

'A lot of kids don't get the chance
to suffer the consequences of their actions.
Now is the time to back them.'
- Kathryn Loxley
Kathryn Loxley pilots the pontoon boat (above left)
for the ldcb at her speclal day camp where academics
are Interspersed with play. She makes all the necessary preparations for the noon meal (above) while
her assistant, Sandy Hunter of Gallipolis (left) helps a
camper In one of the 10 less:than-ronventlonal clas•
rooms. Soclaltzlng among ))E&lt;!I'!I (below) Is one aim
stressed at Mrs. Loxley's month-long camp, near
Jackson.

Stories and photos by JULIE BRIENZA

�Ohio-Point P

Pomeroy - ·MIC!CIIcport- -G.111ipolis, Ohio- f' olnt Plea~nt,

August'J,1982'

-.

J?ickens recoversJro~

•·"'IJr

'

"

'

.

=:I'IW)'

even

.

.~~

'-

surgery

.SAN FRANCISCO (AF') ....Y&lt;;baracter actor Slim Pickens who under·

lpf alnbl ~. fXP!CIIilolll~~(foo{tiJe ~pltal
.•

""::: a .._, !1!1 Pl'N 1111111 ~

'f"!·w• """"'tine~ ~tile ~r:yfthe!NJ'I!!I!!Qn't

ra::e::.~·~~·~ru-N• .

minutes..

.

.

.

tllld~·~~ent

Tile 63-)'W-014 •*r wi!O"~ed 111 ~ WjS~ w4l\ 101!111 a
f!Ve.lloQr ~ 'l'\lelday ,ay·the Met!Jcal Cell!Ill' ct ttieUniversity of
~omla campus here. His ramuy has ~eel to annoilnoe whether
Ole tumor was malignant. ;' , , · .

'

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I

v

Clf:ARANCE

.... .

~Au·

·HOtlbAvPotiri~~:O{I

Quite an experience

.-'.
•

Ear piercing
POMEROY- Gettlngyourears
pierced Is a big undertaking at any
age, but when you're only tllree,lt's
momentous. Bethany Roush recently visited Clark's Jewelry
.store, hOping to come away with

NEW EARRINGS -Carehilly touching her new ell~'&gt;
rings, Bethany gave a
tentative smDe, rather IDJsure ,about the whole thing.
Her next words, after looking
thoughtfuDy out the door stiD
examining her earrings,
were, "Can we go eat?"

pliancf )'O'J

wan

~tng lrom
lniirll.tnlf1(t'

on )'OUf s..ws

~·
N¥r ro *"Y lbouC ~ It·
use. And. ~ 911 ., IIIV'IU.II

rlOI'""'

chc&lt;ll-vp • '(OJ'

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446-2902

Sean Service

o,.n Polly 10-·
Sunclay 1·6

1

Cash, ~~~ives' .~}~is,~issed

.

HENDERSON'vn.LE, Tl!llll. (APj - !Uice he bellevEII there WIUI
"substantial r.u!t on both ,Jides," a Judge says 'he's dlslnissed all
charges In a lftelee betweell)elatlves ct country music singer Johnny
Cash and a former flreflgll1ir during a fire at a Cash home.
Johnny Jones, a lawyer acting as a Sumner County general session
Judge, said Frlday'hethrewootthe chargesmed by the families at Reba
Hancock, 'Cash'e sister, and, James Hamilton.
Witnesses to the July 'l1 ire at Mrs. Hancock's home, which was
owned by Caan; said members of the fam!Hes started arguing and
tlghtlng whlle·flreflgJiters tried to extinguish the blaze.
Tim Hancock, Mrs. }fancock's ~year-old son, was charged with
as9$ult and llattery after be allegedly trted to punch an emergency
medical teclmlclan. He was-~eased on $'lliO bond. The Hancocks ftled
counterchari!I!IJ at aggravajed assault against Hamllton and his niece,
Jeanine.
.
.. · .
The fire destJ;OYed the ~· valued at $00,000.

Shoe Cafe

Bee

ll~ every lld"ttr·
stOCk on our she+tn. II an

Ou1 tum lflltntioo •s to

Used ~em

lfl

K1Yir11HCI lltm IS r10! l~llllblt tor put·
cha1a due to any unlorauen raaaon.
K mart wiH 11tue 1 Aatn Chec~ on requetl
tQ! lht ,merch&amp;ndiH (001!1 •tern or raason·
able ltmtty ausnhiV) to bii)UI'ChiMCIII Ihl

11'- pnce

...menevw ava~Able or w;t ...
you a comparable qual•ly ~em al a c:ornpa·

ratM redut1on 1n pnce

(302

Gees split for• 18 months

Our . Reg . 1.97

4 .gI.

Our Reg. 1.28

.

.

6.17

6-pr. Pllg. Men'• Crew Socks
Cotton/stretch nylon.Cushion foot.

/I

I. Manaq~ yo~Jr money.

Anti -perspirant
spr ay deodorant .
4 oz .

68C

(303)

Zippered VInyl
Pillow Protector
Fits standard 21~27"
bed pillow. Dvrable
vinyl. easy-on zipper
Sale Price

2.27

.

R

Soft &amp; Drl

OurReg. 88¢

680

'

'·:..~

1.77

2 Pockets

ti:Ea
Pkg.
Choice Of Handy Portfolios
Econo-pa ck with 4 or 5 folios

After breakfng through In the 19Ws with a number of melodic ballads,
the group changed Its style In the late 19'10s e.nd produced a series at
disco hits.
~

Once you know ·all the things our Trust Division does
for people, you're going to be pleasantly surprised. But
your- family three ways.
basically,
. it can ~elp you and
.

(301)

88

.OurReg.(JOO)

LONDON (AP)- The Bee Gees, theBrltlShpopgroupthatprovlded
the music for the movie ''llt.furday Night Fever,"ls splitting up for 18
months, Barry Glbb, eldest cl. the ti1o's three brothers, said Thursday;
"We felt It was about Ume," said Glbb, 35, before boarding a Florida·
bound jetUner at London's Heathrow Airport "I am going to make a '
solo album and so Is Robin and we won't appear as a group again unto
1984."
'''The Bee Gel!$- Barry lllil'twlns Maurtce and Robin- have topped
the charts COIIIilstently ort'l:4lth sides at tilt! AtlantiC for more than two
decades.

Story and photos
by Sallyanne Holtz,
'llmes-Sentlnel Staff Writer

Maxey

Greene, Davis

Her ~~~Qid lt\18bai)4, . ~ ~troQOTII!l'l', .~ qot been ~ f&lt;~ra
rnlPJoq yet, "nie)' are tbe IMIQO!Id utrulaut couple IO 111(ll'l')', tile first
~ fUle• MdQp11!14 !toWN. t,, a~ .

NEW CASTJ.,E UPON 1'YNE, England (AR) -Amy carter, the
14-year-old daUahter of fori'ner President Carter, arrived In this nor·
theast Englaiid city Thursday on a two-week exchange visit as part at
the Friendship force program ller father tbunded In 1971.
Amy, a page In the U.S. Senate, wlli stay with NewcaStle Friendship
Force chairman Tony Coates, his wife, Jenny, and daughters Charlotte
and 4-year-old Amy, who b'named after the ex-president's daughter.
Fr!endshlp Force was launched In l9T7 when Atlantla, Ga .. and New·
castle, Englanjl, ellhcnaged. "ambassadors." The International good·
wlli proJect grew out at a prbl\'am conceived In 1973 by Carter, then the
Georgia goveriior, and his Wlie.

hlllp your·fandly, lalk •o thll Dhio:Valli!Y Bank.
·Our Trust Division can 'du all this and more.~

service at today's prk:es

..
A

M

A visit tO' England

300 SeconclAve.
Gallipolis, OH.

Because·you'd like a friend_who can give you
good advice, probably save.you money, and really

MAINTENANCE
AGREEMENTS
let you bUy tomorrow's
\111m • MMII:f'Nf'Ct ~

--

adorned lobes. Bethany's mother,
Marla, said the ear piercing was a
reward for throwing her beloved
"blankey" away. "It's all she
talked about," saki. Mrs. Rousll.
Teresa Courtney did the plerclnJ.

Donald Maxey, Tuppers Plains, announces
Greene Sr., Racine, announces the the ~ngagement and approaching
forthcoming marriage of her marrrage ?f her daughter, Catherine .
daughter, Edna, to David E. Davis, · Ann, to MIChael K. Al!m, son of Mr.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis, and Mrs ..Be~rd Agm, Zanesville.
Rutland.
The weddmg wtll be held on Sept. 11
The bride-elect Is a 1980 graduate at 6 p.m. at Dawes Arboretwn,
ofSoutllern fijgh •SChool. Her fi~UJce Newark. ~n '\he event of ram, the
gradusted from Melga High Sc~ool ceremony will be hela at Trinity
In 1980 a~ 1$ employed by Qard l!;vangellc•l Lutheran Church,
DrUIIng;Mjll Greene 111 employed at ! ~nesvll)e. Areception will follow at
Nel~Qn's Pnlg Store. · ·
the Qusllty Inn, ZanesviUo.
The ~n wmdlng wiU be held OP The bride-elect Is a 1976 graduate
Aug. 28 at 4:30 p.m. at the home of of Eastern High SChool, a~d a 1980
the ,groom, Larkin Street, RuUand. graduate. of O~io University. The
Areception will be held following the prospective bn~groom IS a 1976
ceremony.
,
graduate of. Zanesville High School
and IS employed with United Parcel
axey-, gm
I ' Service,
Zanesville, and D.A.
, POlltEROY - Mn. fl~~la~ CoulsQn Co., Roseville.

abd

I

.

HOUSrorf (4J&gt;) ~ sall)l.
ll ~l'ler·!e~ for t'le
seventh flight ot the space *'ttle,
I;Oieflue Steve Hawley have
Uecl the !!Sin&gt;-~,
;
.l
The two ~nw~ 1n tllewmer-~~·•!lometowqoJSallna,
Kan., on J~ 24, \ll,lt ~ Pll1," "Wt.IU!lll'l-t (o ~ ll biJ tt!ll! of It
·
,
••
We on)y .told a fey( fr!endl.' 1 •

k.l'w.e

SWIMMING
POOLS
WAREHOUS~

.

As~ronau~ coll~~s ~arry , . , .. .' ·. . •

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

I

T he 5ulld a.Y Ti mc$·S e ntir, e l- Pa3~· B - 3

va .

Greene-Davis
POMEROY - Mrs.

··Sunday/People

MA\'BE I SJIOULD :R£.
CONSIDER! - naddni
only w11n 111e sun
pierced her ear, IW"·..Y·. a
wanted lbe aecoad ear to
matclllbe lint,
thaa•&amp;fa
she dkta't look too !lUte abou&amp;
lbe wbOie tNDg for a couple of

w.

(304)

Protector For
Twin MaHress

2.27

Zips-on to keep mattress fresh a nd
, ~ clean. VInyl. 39~75" .

Men'a T·ehlrt With Kodel"
Kodel" polyester I cotton.

••. (305) Full Size, 54x75" ..... 2.97
· (306) Queen Size, 60x80" 3.57

Chest pocket; s611d colors.

Misses' Classic Tees
Newest colors. styles.
Polyester I cotton. more.

...

~he&gt; 1M

Starting right now, we can help you take better care .of
your money. Preserve it, protect it, minimize taxes . See
. that it brings you a good return. Expl~re investment
opportunities not available to yo11 as an individual.

2. s~~u~ YOUr ~S(~te,

'499

95

.

When ·an estate is settle'd, · the proceeds ·from the
insurance, property and· investments often total more
than was 'expected. Enough so tha~ ~ith proper management your family's future·!s secure. If they,need help
we're here to provide it.
,
,.
.
'

~s all th~s . free? Of course' not. .But:.it's su~prisingly
mexp~nstve

and usually more than pays f9r itself with
t~e sa~ngs it p~ovides. And the peace ~f. mind it provtdes 1s a barg;u~ at any price. ·
·
,
'
·. '
.
,
~· L"Con Saun'ders, 'our Trust Officer, wilJ be pleased ,to'
gtve you all the details. Sq t~ to leott, 1a banker with ·
years of expenence. You'Jl be glad you did.
\

\

'
Reg.$89.95

'

-' .

• 7% qt. dlap018ble·tilig

• 24000 Ri'M Ouai!Stip
M~tor/.fen evstem ;; .

• Big 4-lnch canister •
wheels
I
• HandY topside
twitch · .
··• Dual-edte cleenl~ ~:

.&gt;"

}~

.

'

•' •
. Delli)[

.- ~~~~:.~--------------~.n::-~~~,~··11
2

..
•• ::t ...
"

'HOOVE.R

1.24

1.38
WITH COUPON

Per Roll

2.08

Per Roll

From Your

PRINTS
SLIDES
1or

1.14

3 Days Only!

..
8
1•I

(307)

Pko.
Tasty Packaged Cookies
Choose 13-oz.' Pecan Sand-\
ies• or 12-oz.' Chips De lu~e• .
"Nelwt.

~---"· '".

24

PRINTS

36-exp. Slides

ChHI Dog And Friel
Tasty chill dog In bul\
served with French fries.

SAVE

ADDITIONAL

Or From Your

1

Our 3.57

2.88&amp;

Crack
Crevice

CONVERftBLE
Oprilht w1.th

Our 3.97

Our3 .64

3.27

2.88
OFF I
13 oz.

16 QZ .

Spray .

(308)

(310)

Headlghi~.
•,,f~

_y-

(312)

'Full-tlllle
....
edge .oleenlng ·,,... · t124.ts

14-poaltlon
·
cerpet Hlector.
•

1

.,...

Our 2.83

,.. "

•.;,I'

( Y'' ,·.

·2.44

•

. OUr Reg. 7.88

5.97'·

••
I,

.!6995
,,
~f'~'r

.,, ....
.

SALE

'''.

MANY OTHER MODELS TO CHOOSE .ROM

.
..

20-exp. slide film or 8mm
&amp;. Super 8mm movie lilm

Poi1able-Canlltlr Vacuum

'

INGELS FURNITU~E
and.JEWELRY

Kodachrome·
Or
Ektachrome·

HOOVER~ SPIRIT

'I

·a. Guide your family.'.
.

NOW!

THE. NEW

Nobody wants to die but we aU wilL someday. And
estate taxes ·can really hurt your family, unless you're
properly pr,epared. We'll work with your lawyer to see
that you arc prepared - to minimize what the govern"
ment takes .and maximize what your family gets. And
we 'U hand!~ !Ill the details.

ONLY

·~

·llalldrl'ootJlunlp
Feqlures preaure gauge.
.For tires. toys and more..

.lnoectStrlp
Kills flies,
Our

. 1.48

' itoach·r.=c....- -

Kills Roache~ fast.

mosquitos,
other small
flying insects.

Krnort•
Sale PriCe

less Factory
Rebate
vourNetcost

AHer Factory

Rebate

n
2

•

.

.

Pkg.

Alkaline laHerle1
Package of 2. "C' or "D"
~lze.

alkollne batteries..

�August 15, 1982

f'cimeroy-Middleport-G.lllioolis, Ohio-P oint Pleasant, W.Va ..

Pomeroy-M iddlcport-G &lt;~IIipolis, Ohio.- f'oint Pleasant,

Mr. and Mrs. Noland

..

-'

•

Mr. and Mrs. SChaefer

POMEROY - Lisa Whitiock and was held in the church annex. The
Charles Otis Noland Jr. , exchanged bride's table held a three-tiered cake
wedding v1lws at Syracuse decorated with daisies with accents
presbyterian Church on July 25. of blue, flanked by candles and blue
Rev. Wanda Johnson perfonned the daisies. Hostesses were Karen
aoubiNing ceremony.
Bellamy, Montgomery, W. Va. ;
• The bride is the daughter of Mr. Darlene Davis, Deepwater, W. Va.,
and Mrs. William Whitlock of aunts of the bride, and Linda HubSyracuse and the groom is the son of bard, a famtly fri end.
Coral Noland and the late Charles
Attendin~ the wedding from out of
Otis Noland of St. Joseph, Missouri .
state were the mother of the groom,
· Mrs. Kate Bachner, organist, Mrs. Coral Noland, his grand·
presented nuptial music.
.. - mother, Mrs. Erma Bennett, a
. Given in marriage by her parents sister, Nancy Noland, St. Joseph,
and escorted to the altar by hen Mo .. and an aunt, Peggy Kernes,
lather, the bride wore a floor-length Topeka, Kansas.
j:!own of eyelet with matching picAlso attending were the bride's
lure hal adorned with veil and a bow grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth
ul the back. She married a bouquet Phillips, Smithers, W. Va. ; aunl:i
ilf silk flowers in pastel colors laced and uncles, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
~ith Jove knots. Matching bouquets
Bellamy and Joe, Montgomery, W.
were carried by her attendants, Jen- Va.; and Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Davis,
nifer McK inny, Middleport, sister of Chad and Kelly, Deepwater, W. Va.
UU! bride, and Nancy Noland, St.
The bride is a 1979 ~raduate of
:Joseph, Missouri, sister of the Southern Hi~h School. The ~room
~room .
graduated from Dekalb High School
• : Jeffrey McKinny, brother-in-law in Dekalb, Mo., and is presently ser~ bride, was bes man.
ving in the U. S. Navy stationed at
The bride's dress, hat and Mayport, Fla. aboard the USS Patbouquet, along with the flowers of terson .
the wedding party membe"', were
The couple will make their home
aJI designed and made for the bride in Jacksonville, Fla. until October
by her friend, Ardath Hill, Jackson- when they will move to Maine where
.YiJic, Fla.
the ship will be going into drydock
: A reception honoring the couple for repairs.

POMEROY- Christine Kay Fry,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Fry, and Ricky Wayne Scha~fer, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Coy Niiz, were
married on July 10 at I p.m. at
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene.

.

r

.. YOUR HOMETOWN
SUPERMARKETS"

..

&amp;

CROSS
CHROME
PEN
AND
PENCIL
SET '

The ceremony was perfonned by
Rev. Clyde V. Henderson. Music was
presented by Joe Brockert, brotherin-law of the groom.
Due to the illness of the bride's.
father, the bride was escorted to the
altar by Russell Nitz, brother of the
grooni, and there was given in
marriage by her parents.
Attending the bride as maid of
honor was Darlene Dunn. Thmnas
Danner served as best man.
The bride is a 1980 graduate It
Meigs High School and attended the
Southern Ohio Skills Center in
Jackson~ The ~room, also a 1900
graduate of Meigs, is employed at
the Royal Crown Bottling Co: and is
in the Point Pleasant National
Guard.

Mr. and Mrs. Sickels

GALLIPOLIS - Jennifer Lee wtth sllver sllk ascots. The groom
Perkins and Daniel Bruce Sickels was dressed as the ushers except
were marrted June 13 at Grace Unl· his tuxedo was talled.
ted Methodist Church In a doubleRlngbearer was Ian Morrison, of
ring, formal ceremony of!lclated Gallipolis. Flowerglrl was Tommy
by Rev. James Frazier. ·
Helm, nelce of the groom, of Well·
The bride Is the daugh~r of Ro- ston. Her dress was made of white
bert and Beverly Perkins, Route 3, voUe over orchid voDe ;with cum·
Gallipolis, and the groom the son of merbund made of an orchid flower
Pat and Marlin James, Route 2, print volle. It was fashioned wtth a
Gallipolis.
rounded neckline ruffled wtthchan·
Re~ '13.94
Organ music was provided .by tilly lace, short puffy sleeves Wtth
Boll poinl ptn ond ptnCH Ill.
Hayden Uoyd accompanied by sol- cuffs, a fitted bodice With a natural
•1502CHen onlr .... ...... . ... $6.91
oist LISA Roush.
waistline with a lull skirt and unThe bride's gown was made of derskirt wtth billowing ruffles. The
A rucl'plion was held following the
white satin with an overlay of point mid-call-length dress was worn
ceremony in th" church fellowship
de esprit lace and trimmed with with white leotards and ballet
room.
chantilly lace. The fioor·length · sUppers.
The couplt• resides in Middleport.
dress was fashioned .with a VlctoFollowing the ceremony, a recei&gt;"
· 424 Second Ave.
l'ian necklbje, flited bodice with a
tlon was held at the churcjl. Ann
natural waistline and lull sheer Sickels registered guestS. The
sleeves with forearm cuffs fastened bride's table was decorated wlthW,
with white satin buttons. A lull ruf. acs and a tour-tiered wedding cake.
fie encircled the bottom of thE! dress
The couple took a wedding trtp to
and train. The waist was accented Avon, N.C.
with a white satin cummerbund
Both are graduates of Galla
forming a large bow In back where Academy High School and the
It was fastened by buttons from the bride Is a graduate of Rio Grande
Here's one of the late at styles
neckline to the waistline.
·
College. She Is a dental assistant for
Brown
from Frye. It comes from more
Maid of · honor was Caron Dr. Harry Nehus. The groom Is a
th•n 100 jean ofbenchcnftinj
Broughman, of Columbus. Brides· salesman at The Bastille.
Burgandy ·II~xpenence.
Knowi"'th••ld•trles
part or how Fry~ keeps comma
maids were Cindy Robinson, cousin rr:::~;;~====--=11
up with fresh new styles. Yet
of the bride, of Mount Joy, Pa.;
eventbouahoura~tlmaycblnae
onr the yean, our OUII'itv 11&gt;d
Lisa Sickels, sister of the groom,
eraf11"'4!'•hip :.::.=::::.=:~:=::::-~
Gallipolis; Kelly Allen, Gallipolis,
'To'
.
The best "
and Rory Smith, of Gallipolis.
The bridesmaids' mid-calf11
length dresses were made of orchid
\
volle and lined wlthwhitevolle. The
300' Second Ave.
trtm was ot chantilly lace and the
Laf1ayet:te Mall
dresses had a VIctorian e1Jllar of
chantllly lace, which Itself was
0.
laced with orchid satin rtbbons,
short puffed sleeves with cuffs, natural waistlines accented with cummerbund of white volle forming a
bow In back. Three rows of lace
were applled vertically to the bodl·
Wih you be ready
ces and encircled the dresses above
when they are?
the· hemlines. They wore white
Mr. and Mrs. Goble
strappy sandals. The maid of heLife Insurance can help.
GALUPOUS - . Mandy Dailey
Best man was Greg Eutsler. nor's dress was like the brides,
Call Garland M. Davis
became the bride of Rob Goble on Ushers were Marc Sheets and Scott maids', but It was a subtle shade
512 second Ave,·
May 29 at First Baptist Church. She Tyree.
' Gallipolis, Oh.
lighter with a cummerbund o! or·
.
Ph. 446-1235 .
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Areception was held in the church chid volle.
.
.
.Home.Ph.
318-9691, ..
_
James L. Dailey and he is the son of with Libby Wiseman and Jill Collier
Mike Sickels, brother of the
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Goble.
as hostesses. Joyce Hill and Judy groom, was best man and ushers . MODERN WOODMEN
. Rev. Joseph Godwin performed Ram ell re~ istered guests and were Todd Johnson, Dave Dodson,
OF AMERICA
the candlelight ceremony. Mrs. Neil assisted at the reception.
FraltrNAI Li/tt l11umutrt
E.V. Clarke and Mark Allen, all of
"""'• Offiu• - lock hlaNi, lllinoh
Sanders was organist, Anne Fischer
A home reception at the Daileys Gallipolis.
was pianist, and Steffi Ros:i Purcell
followed
the were
churchgiven
reception.
was soloist.
Showers
by Patty 1~=~Th~ey~w~o~re~~~~~tuxedoes~~,b===,.,.,:.===-----..J
: The bride was escorted by her Patrick, Joyce Hill and Judy
:Cather. Her gown was organza with a Ramell, Libby Wiseman, Patty
•·heer yoke adorned with cameo in- Patrick and Bonnie Patrick,
I
oert bishop sleeves. The scalloped . Dorothy Haskins and Clirol H.
-panelled cathedral-length train was Wedge, and Henny Evans and
f
. :Chantilly )ace. Her wide-brimmed Marlene Houck.
;chantilly laced hat was accented
Mrs. Goble attends Marshall
'With seed pearls and silk roses with University graduate school and is ·
:illusion fingertip streamers.
employed by IBM. Mr. Goble at\
: Maid of honor was Jane Dailey, tends Marshall University College of
·sister of the bride. Bridesmaids Science and is studying pre·
:were Rita Goble
sister of dentistry.
:the
and

r:

Tawney
Jewelers

Th.e

w.~flr Shoe Cafe

How soon college!

SUPER SAVINGS SALE

·:: SAVE UP TO ,

REMNANTS

50%

ON AWIDE
SELECTION OF
. FABRICS

'

·~

Good Sal~ Qf ,fJII ~cs ·
•

Stop by· our shop and pick up your Grand·
parents Day Coloring Page. Color i.t and return
if to us 1 On Sept. 11, 5 ~inners will be ce,osen
and an arrangement Will be sent to the grandparents ot your choice.
·

•

G1 lw!S 4 'Day,$emdaf,S~p· ' hriZ

AJEIO••r.••ana .....

l

'

·Shop
No¥w ,,;,.
hclc-to-School '"brla
, .
.
'
l

OHlce Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614) 992•2104 ·
(304) 675-1244

•

SfNCER
:..-=:"'

•

;r.::,.,

THE FABRIC SHOP
' 111 W. 2tld

iroo••ov. OH.

............ ' . . . Co.

Aa Ycu ,...., AppioL!Iil D r't

••

...

Budget
Pleaser
Special

.

'

I

89

$

, ..

r~

Round Steak
STEAK

•

Maket3tups

: 1 pound ground beef
. 1 medium-sized onion, chopped, or
1tablespoon instant minced onion
; B-ounce can tomato sauce
• 1 teaspoon -chill powder, more if
desired
: 112 teaspoon salt
• 1. Place ground beef and onion in a
skillet. Break meat apart and cook
Wltll meal browns and onions are

ion.

. 2. Add sauce and seasonings. Sim-

•

FLAMERE~

GRAPES

$~PERMAN

Pe~nut

Butter 1s oz. JAR
SMUC:KER'S

GRAPE.JELLY

. ~!nation improves with aging
RVenl houn.
.
: ·The~oll l'tCipe Ia from a
a.r new p-OJ«t called Fit It
~
• Tbln111d'lieb Ia fuU of

IIIII mlllea a good lunch or .
lliht 111111*'. Combined with a boWl
Of~ a 11M of milk and a piece of
~ It'• poeatl
f
' TAII'Y'ft!NA TREAT .
•t.uce wbalewt.l bread
-..; I tMI•• eanned tulleor other
!!~*In

a...slib
. 1 la'a'Jit••..,_.

· rlta..UIP lft~llllllato
Jtt'' U ~•dMIIPdlillluce
..

99¢

29
480Z. $179
JAR

NECTARINES

MELODY

ouis ·

BOZ.'
CTN.

39---¢.

,,.....

'•

SpeciGI :
HAWTHORNE
MELODY
.
~f"''f"".... .

4 $] 00

POUND

,_,&lt;:;~.,

BAG

$

49 OZ. BOX

ARMOU_~ 3c OFF LABEL

4· ~99¢

PQnED MEAT 3oz. cAN

_,

R

JOY DISH
Ll UID

.·special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

WAGNER LQ-CAL

CORONET

·-

¢

Tide
Detergent
-- ··oz. CAN

•

r.

Budget·
Pleaser
Special ·

15c OFF LABEL

&gt;

$}79

Head
Lettuce
CARROTS

Armour
.Treet

-·

. POUND
PKG.

SLICED BACON

·--

LB.

lfrea-ktast ·.54 oz
Diiok
BTL •

Elbo · ~f
Macaroni ·

ELCONA

TENDER. CRUNCHY
.

Budget '
Pleaser

SKINNER'S

FRYER PARTS

ICEBERG

~"-LIF.PRN.!A

LB.

U. 5. NO. 1 MIXED

U.S. NO.1

99

$ 49

Ground
'thuck

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

~

EXTRA
LEAN

Pleaser
Special

·Budget
Sp~clal

• Ccmblne ingredlenta and add salt
PI pepper to tute. I lhint lhla com-

LB.

·

Pleaser.

1-.,

. ·a9·~

I

One of my favorite sandWiches
Cunbines cheese and pimentos.

• 112 to 1cup of ma)'0111181se

120Z.
PKG.

.All Purpose . ,t .
20 LB. \i)
Potatoes BAG

Bananas

.

LB.

39e . FRANKIES

lB.

GOLDEN
RIPE

Budget
Pleaser
special

$ 39
9
LB. $2°

Budget
Pleaser
Special

~r siowly about 10 minutes.

When I was a little girl, my fariill.y
went on a lot of picnics in ~ Rocky
Mountains of Colorado. These sandwiches always were a part of our
picnics. Everytime I eat one, I can
· remember sitting 011 a picnic' table
beSide a mountain stream~
•
MyDad'ae"-e
~
Smlwlebel
: ·2small jars pimentos~ chopped
~ 1 lb. sharp cheese, shredded or

Charcoal
Steak.

$229

LB.

mix

• or
: make your own taco meat mixture
(recipefoUows) ·
·
cheese, shredded
iomatoes, chopped
lettuce, shredded
onions (optional)
taco sauce
Prepare pizza crust mix as directed. Grease a g~&gt; x 13" pan and pat
.the crust·into the pan. Bake at 375
degrees for about 15 minutes or until
the crust is partially set.
Brown hamburger. Drain. Add the
taco meat seasoning mix and
prepare according to package directions. When cooking of the seasoned
meat is completed, place the meat
.on top of the crust. Bake until the
crust is completely baked, about 15
minulell more. Take the'pizza out of
'the oven and sprinkle cheese,
tomatoes, lettuce and onions on top.
Cut into squares and serve with taco
sauce, if desired.
Homemade Ground Beef
Filling
.
(For taeos, ete.)

USDA CHOICE

LB.

BEEF
TacoPiwl
: 1 pizza crust mix
· lib. hamburger
: and
: ~ package taco meat seasoning

Budget
Pfeaser
Sped a I

Budget
Pleaser
Special

USDA CHOICE
FULL CUT
BONE-IN

.~

I

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL AllERGIST
•

%Price

20%·OFF on Floor Model
Singer Sewi"g Machines
and Cabinets·.

. JOHN A. WADE, ·M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPIJAL

LOCALLY OWNED
AND OPERATED.

'1147

ITTOOK A
HUNOREDYFARS
1'0 MAKETiiiSBOOT.

or

'•

SanclWiches: ·They can be anything you want

Weddings

'

The s unday Times·Sentinei- Pa!!e-B·S'
&lt;

What's cookin'?

'

w. va.

12 OZ. BTL.

GEO.~I~~

Toilet Tissue

•

4 ROLL PAK

LAND-O-LAKES

·- .. .
MARGARINE
'

,,.,..,
'

POUND&amp;-9¢·
PKG.

..

Budget

,..

__

SpeciGI ·
ic)y Ai. CREST

2% Milk

SCOT TOWELS ·

Budget

,,., ,

PleGser

SpeciGI

Spec_IGI

BROUGHTON
PlEM. qu~ALIJY

Ice Cream

- Sa-nlia
InStant Coffee
8 OZ. JAR

69
.
'

69¢

JUMBO ROLL

Pleaser
~edGI

1

FI'IK""

�l

B-6- The Sunday Times -Se ntinel

~Community

Po

Cal ·

li s Ohio-:Point

SUNDAY

•r•
!
••

While Mrs ..Hazel McCallum wW
observe her 90th birthday In a quiet
wayWednesday, !rlendsareasklng
that she be remembered with
cards.
Just mall them to
Minersville.
---Eleanor Thomas of the Meigs Senlor Citizens Center reports that
over $500 has been received In donalions to a memorial fund for the late
Clarence J. Struble, first president
of the Council here as well as the
Regional Council.
Since Struble was such a staunch
supporter of the senior volunteer
program at the Center, Mrs. ThG-

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Mr. and Mrs. Sheets, 50th
MERCERVILLE - Lewis and
Bessie (Barry) Sheets were united
in marriage Aug. 19, 1932 in L·onton
by Rev. J. Sampson.
Mr. Sheets retired January 1982
after serving 24 years as Guyan
township clerk, 12 years as a trustee,
assistant .superintendent of Gallia
County Highway Department, and a
purchasing agent and a sanitation
director for Gallia County or a total
of 30 years of service.
Mrs. Sheets retired fr om
Gallipolis Developmental Center
and Gallia County Council on Aging
with a total of 30 years of service.

They reside in Mercerville and at·
tend and are members of Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church.
They· have two sons, Jimmie
Sheets, Mercerville, and Donald
Sheets, Spring Valley, Magnolia
Drive, Bidwell. They have five gran·
dchildren - four granddaughters
and one grandson.
On Sunday, Aug. 22, from 2 to 4
p.m. their home will be opened to
relatives, neighbors and friends to
celebrate \heir 50 years together.
Their address is Crown City, Route
I. They request gifts be omitted.

November, Knight goes , on the
Bench In January, and that leaves
her with an office ready for fulltime practice.
--REMEMBERYoothNtghtatthe
fair is Wednesday In the show ring
on the hW.
Thls is the time when ll'om.the
hund!'eda of young people partici·

mas plans to propose that themGHe'shomenowbulwWberesum·
ney be used for recognition plaques
lng school at Marietta 1n another
with the names of dece~sed volun- week. His brother, Greg, new 10
teers. There are about 75 afready.
Texas for a short visit before the
IncldentaUy, she also tells us that two returned borne. Greg, lnclden·
Meigs County was corninended at tally, wUJ be a treslunan at Ohio
theOhloStateFairforthequalttyof University this fall.
crafts which were dlsplayed and
----sold there.
While waiting out the results of
TheCentermadeabout$350over her Bar, JennUer Lohse Sheets Is
cost from the crafts sold.
----_continuln~someworkwithlocalat·
Dan Thomas, a petroleum eng1- torneys. She will later this month,
neerlng major at Marietta College, however, be moving l!lto the oftlce
has spent the summer tn the of Attorney Charles Knight as an
mighty state of Texas getting his asslstantto hlm. Jennlfershouldrefeet wet in oil, so to speak.
ceive notification about her Bar In

ByKATIECROW
Times-Sentinel Staff Writer
If you haven't been to Kings Island
and are planning to go let me give
you a piece of advice.
First of all, do
not go on a
weekend. It is
complete disaster. There are lines
for lines. It is
nothing to wait an
hour to get on a .
ride.
To get a morsel of food or a big
orange pop, it is nigh to impossible.
Even youngsters get discouraged.
In my · humble opinion, Kings
Island doesn't offer any more enjoyment than Cedar Point; it is just
larger.
Personally, I would rather visit
Cedar Point or the Columbus Zoo or,
better yet, just take a picnic lunch
and visit a state facility, sue~ as
Lake Hope or Forked Run. You
would have just as much fun and
would definitely get away from the
many, many people who visit
amusement parks, all on the same
day it seems.
Come to think about it, you would
have more fun in your own back
yard. And just think - you wouldn't .
have to worry where the kids are
and restroom facilities would not be
a problem.
Oh, well, 100 years from now, who
cares?

patlllglnyOUthllfOUpti,.OIItstandlng boy 8J1d .glrl !rom ~- • IIOOU!S,
and FFA and FHA wm~.~~
recognition and largl!.""""""". It 8
their, time, a real hi~ of ~
yearswor~--- ·;.:
•
Hot and · dzy is tlfci'~ torecast.
bigger and better is ~ predictlon. ... so let's see you at 'the Melia
County Fair!
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TIMB~

ROOM RFSTAURANT . · ·~
:
Sl':f~INQ C:OM"Irl ~_. ; . I
.t
LUNCHES &amp; DINNERS:··
:I ·
t
11 a.m. ~· 2 p.m.
5 p.m •• 9:30 p.M..
I
t Sund., Dinners 12 noon • 8 p.m. Closed Tuitdays ·:
tt HAPPY
. HOUR • 3100 p.m. • s..- •'~·
t

Katie's korner
that you dom't see on a day to day
basis. In fact, a lot of those you meet
you only meet once a year, at the
Fair.
The Fair program sounds great
and I hope the grounds are over·
flowing with young and old alike.

t
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"LOCATED.BESIDE THE. OOIRTMNEI" ·t

Point Piiasant t

:

FOR THE LOW
PRICE OF

'28500

Propane Is Plentiful
Propane Is Perfect
for Grain Dryers.

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: POMEROY - · ~ookmobile
: schedule· in Meigs County is brought
by the Meigs County Public Library
: under contract with the Ohio Valley
-Area Libraries.
. , Bookmobile schedule for Monday,
• Aug. 16 - Carpenter (Laura's

While you're readi~g this,
Congress is about to vote
on an idea that is
simply dumb.

'

Friday, Aug. 20, beginning at8 p.m.
: Held in conjunction with the
'• Parade of the Hilts conununity
~ festival and authorized by the
~ Lieutenant Governor's Office, this is
·: a major old-tim~ muaic event In the
lltate, at1racting musicians from
{ Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky and
' eJsewbere.
• Persons wanting information
~ regarding the event may write Ohio

-~·

: Clarification
't

GALLIPOLIS - The first vaccine
' clinic rl. Gallla County Health
f Department will begin Monday,
•·~ Aug.18.

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1Riverby

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effect, we'll ali be giviog the government a great bi!
interest-free loanl MeanNhile, those who rely on their
intere5t and dividends to help make ends IJleet, will suffer ..

It is e~remely important that you immediately
contact your u..s. Senators and Congress~~en.

.if

·

This 10% Withholding 'Idea is a bad one. For a lot'
reasons. it's been' presented to Consress several times 0¥1!f,
. the last few years, and was ~ rejected. Nothing ~ .
1
changed to make it a good idea'now .. Surprlsingly thou~.lt
just may get passed this time unless eno11gh taxp;~yers mikt
; some noise, Here's how' you can llo it:
•
,:;• ·
II you agr~ that the 10% 1fithhol4ing idea is dumb,!Sitn
and forward theendosed coupon to your representatives in
Congres~ (or better yet. ci!ll.' \
· \.
Clartlfce
Mliltr . ·
212 So. BI'OIId St., Lallcaster, Oh.~3130
, . ,
""Phone UH54·5149

e.·

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Your Community Owned a..k

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1 think ihe 1~ withholding of interest and dtvldenii
is a bad idea, and 1hould not be 1 p,lrt of H. R..49&amp;1.:&gt;

I

anvsq

State Championship Old-Time Fiddlers' Contest, ().0 Violet HollenbaiJI!h, 187 Shepperd Street, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764.

MIDDLEPORT - - Middleport
Church of the Nazarene has announced that vacation Bible school
will be held Aug. 16-20 at the church,
580 Beech St., Middleport. CJasses
will be held from 9:1&gt;11:45 a.m. under the direction of Mrs: Broome
and is entitled "Jesus and Me." The
daily schedule provides fun times of
crafts as well as learning ex·
periences with the Bible. According
to Mrs. Broome, the goal of this sum·
mer's VBS is to help children from
pre-school age through young teens
develop a spiritual ,dimension of
their lives. Further information may
be obtained by calling ~289 .

calendar

GALLIPOLIS - The August ex· and Saturday and Sunday !rom 1 to
hlblt at the French Art Colony, 5ll 5p.m.
Coming events are as follows:
Ftrst Ave., Is comprised ot 20 oil
Aug. 17 - Interdepartmental
patnttngS and charcoal, Ink, grameeting
at 8 p.m.
phlte and pencil drawlnl!l;l by Cliff
Aug.
24
- Trustees meeting at 8
Mc;CarthY, ·Of Ohio UniVersity In
p.m.
Athens. ·
Sept. 25 - Oktoberfest beginning
Gallecy hours are Tuesday and ,
at7:
:rl p.m.
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

S·IDI.NG
.

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.Get ~ FREE Esti~at~ ~rom
Us Or You Will PAY Too
. , I
Much

~----. -: ~------------- .-.; '(

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What can we do
about itl

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Apparl!lltly, the government thinkTthe IRS isn't doing its ·
job. So it wants the private sector • ail business~ and
corporations ,that pay interest anct dividends - to collect
taxes for it. That's a bad ide~. What's worse, it wliltake from
you 10% of your interest and dividend income. in most .
cases, that's much more than yQu'll owe at tax time. In

l . c.. . .

the re~ular tlleetinM of Drew
Webster -post 39, American
Lel(ion, will be held at 8 p.m.
Monday instead of Tuesday. Post ·
rn~mbers' are url(ed to call In and
report the times they can wort at '
the county fair parkin~ cant. Call
Casci, 992-3173 or Jewell, 911271134. Help is url(ently needed and
members are asked to notify
easel and ' Jewell of their
availability at once.

MERCERVILLE - Vacation
BiNe school will be held at Mer·
cerville Baptist chureh fran 7 to
9 p.m. Mqnday through Friday.

RIO GRANDE - "The POlen·
tial of Spreading Type Alfalfa in
Pasture Situations" will be
presented Tuesday by Darrel
McKenzie of Northup King, John
Underwood, area extension
agronomist, and Ed Stowers,
dairy man. It will begin at noon
with a lunch at Buckeye Hills
Cafeteria followed by a slide
presentation then a trip to the Ed
Slower~· farm, on S.R 325. There
will be a demonstration of an
eight foot Moore uni-driil. Lunch
reservations arc not required but
those attending should call
Bryson R Carter at 446-7007,
Glenn Graham, 24:N334, or
Vaughn Taylor, 245-5815.

/

MEIGS High Class of 1m· will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the of·
· fice of David Krawsczyn,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

BIDWElL - A potluck picnic
for Bidwell SUmmer Baseball
League team members and their
fiJIIIIJes will be held at 6 p.m.
Mllllday at 0.0. Mcintyre Park.
Members shoUld take their
unlfonna. For more Information

RACINE - Plll'l!llts wbo wUI
have chlldren ·m Southern ltln·
dergarten should plan to meet
Monday, Aug. 16, at 7:00p.m.
Any child not registered may be
so at this time. Parents 9hould
bring birth certificates and Immunization records.

Council of RID Grande wW meet
M~y at 7 p.m. In the Mayor's
Court of the village wUdlng. Discussion wUI Include blrlng of a
marllhlll and a proposl'd fire
bUDding.

contact a team coach.
RIO GRANDE- 'llt.e VIllage

-

TUESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - A workshop
for French City Garden Cub
members will be held at 2 p.m.
Monday at the Grace Bradbury

GAWPOUS - Lafayette
White Sllz:(ne's annual family picnic will be held Tuesday beginning !" 1:30 p.m. at Kanauga

RIO GRANDE -The VUlage
Council of Rio Grande wUI meet
Tuesday at7 p.m.ln the Mayor's

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serve the following menus:
Monday - Sausage patties com
pudding, green beans, bread,
rnelonororange,milk.
Tuesday - El!l! salad with cheese
and lettuce, pickled beets, cabbage
slaw, wheat bread, butter, bread
pudding, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken with gravy,
buttered peas, whipped potatoes,
muffin, butter, garnished apricots,

butter,

milk.
Thursday
Meatloaf, creo e
I
tomatoes, assorted fruit :'~'lad, corhbread, butter, tap1oca wtth whtpped
~·milk.
.
Fnday . - Baked salmon . wtth
cheese sauce, balled potato, spmach
with vinegar, dark bread, butter,
fresh fruit, milk.
.
Choice of beverage serve'!! w1th
eat meal .

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(Post Office), 2 : 1~2 : 40 p.m.; Letart
Falls (Effie's Restaurant), 3:1$-3:50
p.m.; Racine (Bank), 4:35-6:35 p.m.
Short film will be shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives; Syracuse
&lt;Pool), 6:5(hl):50 p.m. Short film will
be shown 15 minutes after bo!Jk·

&amp;rv1ces rcnder.cd nn a nonbas1s.

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mobile arrives.
Wednesday, Aug. 18 - Tuppers
Plains (Arbaugh), 7:2:HI:OS p.m.;
Riggscrest Addition, B::&gt;.M p.m.
Short film will be shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives.

l

BOYS &amp; STUDENT

LEVI'$®
HAVE ARRIVED!

I

places the week of Aug. 16-20.
Monday - Ewington 1:1f&gt;.U5;

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NELSONVILLE- The Ohio State

'

What in the wortd are
they doinsl

VINTON - Bible school will
bel!ln Moilday ani! run through
Aug. 10 at FeiiOWIIhlp Chapel
from 1:30 to 8:30p.m. There will
be a Bible school program on
Aug. 22 at 7 p,m. For Information
call381.,..

MONDAY ·.
Due. to the MeillS County Fair,

Bossard bookmobile schedule.

.

· Regto
• na1 h,appentngs
•

1 Championship Old-Time Fiddlers'
t Contest will be held at Nelsonville on

And ·as us~al,
it will cost you money!.

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'$465

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, ' The Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
•Library will be at the following
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folks

·"'":.#.

DOW jDit

Store), 3:1().3:40 p.m.; Dexter
(Church) , 4:11).4:40 p.m.; Danville
(Church), 5::1»-5:45 a.m.; Rutland
(First National Bank), 6:30-8 p.m.;
Short film will be shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives .
Tuesday, Aug. 17 - Portland

~Gallia ·County

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r~.The~~g~ood~~pa~rt~a~bo~u~t~th~e~f~a~lr~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~;;~~~;;~~;;;;;;~~~~~

Model CTA14CB

Wednesday, Aug. 18 - Vinton
p.m.
Nutrition
Education, 11:30 a.m.;
Card Games, J.,'J p.m.; American
Literature Class, 1 p.m.
'
Thursday, Aug. 19 - County Coonell Meeting, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 20 - Art Class, !.,'l
p.m.; Craft Mini-course, l.,'l p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will

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Saunders.

~Meigs County's area bookmobile schedule

·-

On July 23, the Senate passed H.R. 4961, the Tax Equity
and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 191!2· Included as a p;1rt of
this overall Tax bill was a provision that would require a 10%
withholding of taxes on ali interi!St and dividends. This
withholding is to take place at the .source, so 10% of ail
interest and dividends ·you earn will go right to the
governme.nt before you even see it.

GALLIPOLIS - " Joy of
Sewing" will be presented by
buDding.
Gallipolia Area Christian
WEDNESDAY
Women's Club Tuesday at a noon
EUREKA _ A revival wU be
luncheon at the Holiday Inn.
held at Eureka United Christian
Presentations will be given by
Church beginning at 1: 30 p.m.
members of Joann Fabrics staff,
Wednesday and continuing
through Saturday. Rev. Trun¥m
Carlene Greene and Emily
Basinger, speaker, of ParkerJohnson wUI be speaker and
sburg, W. Va. Reservations are
there will be singing provided by
required . Cancellations should be
the Sisson Family.
in by Monday at 6 p.m. to,________.__ _ _......
Caroline Casey, 446-2638, or
Jessie Payne, 245-5216.

residence. Those attending
should take a Cjllltainer and
flowers.

I

2

, Monday, Aug. 16 - Ceramics
' Class, 9:30-12 noon; Vinton Site
: Exercises, 11 ;30 a.m.; Chorus, 1-3
· p.m.
' Tuesday, Aug. 17- Bible Study, I·

'

&amp;il 13.6 Cu. ft. capacity &amp;if
Cycle defrost which defrosts
the fresh food compartment
automatically Iii 2 Produce
crispers 11 Portable egg rack
9 2 Easy-Release"''.ice trays
Ill Freezer door shelf' Iii
Energy-Saver switch.

Rev. Jake
Ji'ry will speak at Big Four Church, Hannan Trace Road, with the
Green Family singers on Sunday.

GALUPOUS - Activities for the
' week of Aug, 1&amp;-20 at the Senior
: Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
: are as follows:

WeD, we have more fun coming up
- the Meigs County Fair.
For most of you readers it will be .
fun, fun, fun. But for the staff-of the
Daily Sentinel it means work, work,
work.
however, is that

~CERVILLE-

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Propane Is Clean
Propane Is Versatile
• Normal LP ·Gas Tank Installation
•Rent Free Tank ,
•300 Gallons Of LP Gas

MERCERVILLE Rev.
Ralph Workman will be guest
speaker .at Providence Baptist
Church, Teens Run Road, on Sunday at7 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Olt::ey Chapel
Church wUl hold !M!I'Vices at 7
pin. Sunday. with Pastor ,Dave

Court ofthevWage building. DIScussion wUI Include hiring of a
mar~hal and a proposed fire

roadside park.

Gallia County Senior Citizens Center calendar of events

·· A True ShQrt Story:

Special Qffer For Alimited Time:

GALLIPOUS - A Gospel ser·
vice wiD be presented at Faith
Temple Church, one mile from
town on S.R. 141 at Meadowbrook
subdivision, at 7 p.m. Sunday.
The public is invited to attend.

Calendar

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AUGUST SPECIAL

HAZEL COMMUNITY Chureh
will hold a hotnc'l'Oriifii~ Sunday
with Harmony to sin~ and Floyd
Bo~ard to speak. Morninl( service, 9:30 a.rn.; basket dinner at
noon; progra1n at 1:30 p.m. Edsel
Hart, pastor, invites the public.

HEATH United Methodist
Church of Middleport will hold its
annual picnic at Royal Oak Park
Sunday. Those attending are to
, arrive early in the afternoon for
activities and eating will take
place at 6 p.m. Those attending
are to take their own table service and a basket of eovered
' dishes. All vacation Bible school
students are especdially invited
and the event is open to the
public. There will be games.
• •
POMEROY United Methodist
; · Church will observe Chrisbnas in
, August on Sunday, Aug. 15. A
.

11IE ~ER R~M ,. t

Rt. 62 North

RUTLAND - Hymn sing Sun\laY ··at I p.m. at the Rutland
' r;:r~ill Baptl~1 Church, potluck
dinner at noon. Pastor ponald
-Karr invites singers and the
public to attend.

PORTLAND McElroy
reunion Sunday at noon at Portland Park.

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Appearing at the Fair will be
"Sylvia," a country-western
vocalist, at 8:30p.m. 911 Wednesday
rather than 8 p.m. Sylvia promises
to be an outstanding attraction.
She will be preceded by Eddie
· andcomedlan.

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SPECIAL PRICES ON lEUL BEVERAGES·-~.
.FREE SNACKS .
.
Game Room Open All Day

t

Chrisbnas ln&gt;e del'OraiL'tt with
· Chrismons, will be the hil(hlight
of the Christmas theme .
Chrisrnons are gold a~d white
religious symbols, Both the chur·
ch school at 9:15 a.m. and
worhsip service at 10 :30 a.rn .•will
carry out the emphasis on Christ·
mas. A fellowship carry-in dinner
will be held at 6 p.m. followed by
congregational singing of Christmas carols. The public is invited
to attend.

POMEROY - The annual picnic- 'at the ladles Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
be held at 6 p.m. Sunday at the
home of Bill and Carrie Kenm~dy ,
Route 35, Pomeroy. Those at·
tendinl( are to take a coveml
'dish. Meat will be furnished .
, ' Anyone needing transportation is
to call992-5074.
.

jR=--.-et--:ir--=-- em
- ent, birthday and a Meigs Fair invitatiop·::
cake baked by Karen Sloan was
also lavishly decorated, and bal·
loons were everywhere.
A nice gesture from a nice
community!
-----

r imes-sentinei-Page-8-7

W.Va .

corner

~ By CIIARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff Writer
'
• POMEROY - When BUI Rad: ford hung up his postal bag for the·
; last time at Pomeroy Post Office
and retreated to
hls tree farm, or
whatever It Is he
has out there In
the Rock Springs
comm unit y, he
was In for a surpriSe - a surprise party with
nearly a hundred or his friends and
neighbors there.
It took place at the home o!longtime friends Harold and Hel en
Blackston, who diverted the Radfords with an evening drive before
returning to the party scehe.
Greeting Radford, retired after
30 years at the Pomeroy Post Qf.
fl ee, was a hugh sign carrylngout a
mailman's motif created by Roger
and Mary Gilmore. The retirement

·1 ~e Su ndily

r •omcroy - M oddlcport- G.lllop!olis, Ohoo- t •nont I'ICo1 5ol lll, W. V ii .

August 15, 1982

VINYL IS FINAL

50 Yr. Warr.ty.Satlsflcticil ~

Geiger's 2-2:30; Ailney Road 2:453:15; Vinton P.O. 3:30-4:30; Bidwell
&gt;6; Harrisburg6:1&gt;6:00.
Tuesday- Eno 2:»3; Rece 3:~
3:20; Africa Road 3:»3:45; Kyger I
3:50-4:20; Kyger ll 4:z.4:40; Roush
Lane 4:45-5:15; Cheshire I 6-6:30;
Cheshire ll 6:3:).7.
Wednesday - Banes 2:1$-2:00;
Smith 2:~:15; Myers 3:»3:45;
Mercervtlle +4:30; Burd 4:40-5;

Crown City P.O. 5: 1&gt;6; Eureka 6:156:45.
Thursday - Watts 2:1&gt;2:30;
Brick School Rd. 2:40-2:55; Addaville Elemenary 3-3:30; St. Rt. 7
(Roadside Rest) 3:45-4; Georges
Creek4:1S.S; BulavilleTrailcrCourt
5:~; Plants Subdivision 6: 1&gt;6:45.
Friday- Kerr 3-3:30; Buck Ridge
4-6:05! Jay .Dr. 5:15-6:45; Bob McConnick 6-6.15.

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AMESSAGUROM THE 81BLE...

WHAT ABOUT lHE CHURCH?
William II. Kuglln

111'1355

1.- "1 would like to knaw if you or any of the church of Christ
denomination preach the same gospel the aposles 'reached? "
In answering this question, I would like to point oullhat the church
of Christ is not a denomination. The word "denomination" is dPscr ip·
five of the act of denominating, that is, dividing into parts, units or
classes, and classifying them by name. The t:hurch is the spiritual
body of €hr. 1st on earth, therefore, it is not a part, unit or a class (frac·
lionl of the bOdy Of Christ Dut the wiiOte, complete or tulness of Christ,
"And hath put all things under his feel, and gave him to be the head
over all things to the church, Whictl is his body, the tutness of him that
filteth all in all" fEph. 1:22,231 . ,
As Christ had 011e physico I body while upon the earth, He has put
one spiritual body on earth, "There is Ofle body" (Eph. 4 :4), therefore,
there is but "one (hurctt." Christ is tfle tte.-d of the church, its only
source of authority , "And he is the nead of the bOdy, tne church" cCol.
1: 18) . The church being Christ's bride, wears His name, "The chur·
ches of Christ salute I'OU" CRm. 16: 16) . The "one church" had its
beginning on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2) . It teaches, worship, and
works according to His divllll!commancts. This is the church of which I
am a member, and a proclalmer Of ftis word, the gospel. We " rightly
divide" the scripture, permlltlno the scriptures to lea&lt;;to correctly,
directly, and accurately, :the only way to stand approved or pass
GOd's test, is to abide by what He says!
The church of C:hrlsl does 110t preach any other QOSPCI ca different
gospel) than which the apostles preached. If it did, if would nof be the
true church. The church being the pillar (support) and ground (foun·
dation) of the truth must preserve the true gospel in word Odoclrone,
and deed or practice. "Buill ! tarry tong, that thou mayest know how
thou oughtesl to behave thyself in the noun ot ·God, which is the chur·
ch of. the living GOd, the P!l!ar and ground bl the truth" 1I Tim. 3: 15) .
'l'h~ scripture that reveals the gospel or truth unto us is GOd's in·
terprtter tor us, therefore, we do not turn to it to justify our doctrine,
: but to leacb the doctrine Of,lhe Lord. The scripture Is Of no private in·
, terprelatlon, "Knowing this first, that no propheo:y of the scripture Is
of any private interpretation. -For the f)rgpheo:y came not in old time
· by the will of man : ·but holy men of GOd spake as•they were moved by
. the Holy Ghosr• (II Pet. 1:20, 21 l. The scrltllure being ot no private in·
terpretatlon, men need to lay asldethelr pr~onceived Ideas, thoughts,
and gpinions, keeping the word unmixed from these Impurities. When
this is done, the word Of God will be understood!

'12999

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For Free Bible c;orr~spondenre C;;.,rse Wrile..t

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52-fn. J·speed reversible ceiling
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71 •

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CUT
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•19•

�CLEARANCE·
SPECIALS

WHILE OUANIITI.IS

LAST~

Orioles end four
-game
losing
spell
.

·Sale Starts I:00 p.m.
Sunday August 15.

.

REG. '3.99

We Reserve The Rig~t To Umii Quantities All
Sales Final No Exchanges or Refunds Sony No
Rain Cllecks.

$4.00

Boy•
VInyl Jacket
REG. 'IJI

Sizes M, ·L, XL

Boy• Bib Overall•

CLOTHING DEPT.

Cotton denim 011eralls are designed lor good
look and long wear . Slzes ,4 to 7.

30 only

2
$3.00

Sizes 8 · 16. 16 only

FOR

REG. 116.99

$7.00

3FoR$2·.oo

loys Better Lightweight
Jacket
.
Uned nylon jackets are just ri1ht
Fall weather. Sizes 8 . 18.

REG. TO
Boys 2 Piece ·
Short S.t1

Agreat way to look and 1"1
at play or leisure activities .
Tank top and short sets
feature assorted sport
prints.
.

· Boy1 Knit Tank Topt
Comfortable knit lank tops are fun In the sun
and classy In their styling ,

SillS 4 • 7, 8 • 16.

Sizes 4 • 7 and 8 • 18.

CLOTHING DEPT.

s&amp;.OO

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REG.
Men1 Dre11 Sh
Mens Short
Sleeve Weltern percent
Durable press, 100
cotton 1n solid
Sport Shirt
colors and white. Fullcut. Sleeve . lenglh
Authenlc western sport
shirts In Lurex plaid
with fancy western
yoke. S, M, L, XL.

·sto.oo

50% 0FF

REG. 119.99

HECK'S REG. PRICE

Ladles
Skirt U,ts
Re&amp;! &amp; Split Skirt

.

medium or long. Neck
sizes uv, to 17. Special
purchase
these
tailored ohlrls won 't last
long!

Ladle• Skirts

Sizes 7 • 15, 8 . 16.

CLOTHING DEPT.

\

'J

CLOTHING DEPT. •

l&amp;.oo·

'3.5016
. '12.00

$3.00

Arrow Mens
Dress Shlr.ts

Tropical weight In
pleated and spill styles.
All new, bright colors.
Sizes 5-13 and 6-16.

CLOTHING DEPT.

1$3.00'

[REG. 15.99
Ladles
REG. TO '23.99
Lcnlles Fashion 'Maternity Tops
Dreues

REG. '6.99

Durable press, 100
percent colton In
colors and white. Full cut. Sleeve length
medium or long. Neck
sizes 14'/2 to 17. Special
purcha se .. . these
tailored shirts won't last
long I

Asst. StJies. Sizes
5·13,8-1-8.
CLOTHING

sa.oo

crew neck styling .
Assorted colors. Sizes
S, M,L,XL. At Ieos! 72
per store.

.
'3.50
Ladles '

Sleepwear

Choose
from
fashionable poly-cotton
In waltz or long length
gowns. Assorted styles
lnolzesS,M,L or~2to4.

an aosorlment of plaids
In regular and long
lengths . Assorted
colors.

$1.19
REG. 13.28
100 oz.
lora teem
Outperforms dry bleach In
all temperatures. Specially
formulated for warm
weather washing .

REG. 11.49
10.5 oz. Soft10ap
Ll'q.u ld Soap ·~
Liquid softsoap li Ideal tor
kitchen or bath. Pump
dispenser Is convenient and
easy to use.

50% oFF
·REG. TO 19.99

Summer meetings could be
'turning point' ·for bas.eball
By JOHN !'IEUION
AP Spqrta Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- This week's summer meet·
lngs could prove a "turning point for major league
baseball," and a straw poU of owners shows that
Comrnllsloner Bowie Kuhn may not make the
corner.
The re-election of Kulm and a status report on res·
tructuJ1ng of 'the game's hierarchy are two of the
Issues 1111 the agenda when owners convene tl)elr annual summer meeting this Wednesday In San Diego.
Three· National Le&amp;g~~e teams - the New York
'Mets, St ·Louis Cardinals and Houston Astros called 011 their league's owners to meet one day earlier to discuss the possible ouster r1 Kuhn, who needs
• a ·t~~ree:quarters majOrity from each league to be
re-elected.
.
Four dissenting votes In the National League or live
In the American would block Kulm's bid. for a third
term • commissioner. Kuhn's second seven-year
term eiplres on Aug. 1, 1983, but he must be notlpled
of hluotatus at least six months In advance.
One llf three teams - Chicago; Atlanta or Clncln·
nat! ..:. 'Is expected to give the NL enough muscle to
oust
There appeared to be little stiff opposition, how·
ever, Ia the Amerli:aa League, w11lch, Ironically, led
the drl'le for his ouster In 1975when Kuhn came up for
•re-eleclloD the first 'time.
•
"YOII've got td remember, there's a difference In
tile Atl)lrlcan League," Cleveland IndianS President
Gabe Paul said when contacted by telephone. "The

Dressy. yet casual
polyester pants .
Assorted solid colors.
Sizes B to 18.

Danville
Sheets
prints oniJ

·

'

'

.

generally favorable In the American League."
Texas Rangers' owner Eddie Chiles said he

\ $1 • .

SteubenvWe, although Jlmltlng
C!nclniJatl to four hits, was forced
to use four pitchers during the
game because of an Amerlcan Legion rule which prohibits a pitcher
from hurling more than-12 Innings
In three calendar days.
anctnnati took a HI let!Ci In the
baU~ent.
. Pitcher Joe Robertson, who fifth Inning, bUt Steubenvlle came
came oa Ill relief In the ninth. was . back Wtth two runs In the seventh to
. credited with the win. Bill Beattie go ahead, 2-1.
Steubenvllie rellef pitcher Beat·
was tagged with the loss.

ss.oo,

tie retired the first three batten he
faced In the eight Inning and stnlek
out the first batter ~ t~ 'ninth liefore walking three straight batters
to load the bases.
Bernie Mettenberger, In re11e1 of
Beattie, faced White who siiJIII!d
the second pltchoot of the parklnd
gave Cincinnati the champloll~Mp.
· •The vlctory·pve ClnclnDatl a 369 record. SteubenvWe finished the
sellSOn at 45-11.

.REG.

.REG. 11.19

2.29 Pq.

Hefty 25 ct•.Compartment
Trays
Package of 25 compartment trays made of
heavy soak proof foam plastic. Large 12" x 9
1-16" size. At least 102 pkgs. per store.

Pq. of 2

Pk,. of ·2 T•blecl,oths
Cont!lilll two white emboased table cl~.
MHaur11 3' ~" x 6'6". At lees! 96 per lklre.

This self-prOpelled ' 22 ~·
mower Is lust the ticket lor
beautiful lavm with out all
that pulling •1111 lugging.
FH!u1'81 1~ gauge 1'"1
fully baffled houllng. quiCk
htlgllt adJustment and 1
CIDIWIIIIII'It CX1ntnll PINI.

•' ___r--\...-- .-r- '~

I

..

"I enjoy going out and meeting people and mingling. But If you do It every nlght, It gets to be tiring."
It was a busy orr-season In other ways. Anderson
finally took his bar examination, which he had to
postpone last winter to play In Super Bowl XVI. And
he finally found some time to evaluate his
mlngton College•.
Quarterbaell Ken Anderson, who wears the performance.
"During the seasol'• you're so busy that you don't
number,ls besieged for autographs when he leaves
time to sit and reflect.'' Anderson said. .
have
the field. Not too long agt), the cries were for Ander·
"I
had
a good year.l'll take a lot more ju st like it . 11
sen' s scalp Instead of his signature.
was
a
good
year because I played with good people
Alter leaving the first regular-season game last
·
around
me.
When you're winning, the quarterback
year to a sour chorus, the 33-year-ol~ Anderson came
stands
out
probably
more than he should."
back to record bls finest season and lead the Bengals
his
12th
pro season, Anderson said he's
Entering
to their first Super Bowl as the jeers turned to cheers.
harder
to
get
Into shape to counteract tbe
worked
It just reinforced bls beUef that the quarterback gets
effects
·~
itgtng.
·
mcire ~ the attention than he deserves.
"I
started
working
out
and
throWing ear ller this
"I didn't learn anything I didn't already know.
year
than
I
ever
have,"
Anderson
said. " I lifted
When you're wlnoJng, the quarterback Is a real good
weights
three
times
a
week
and
watched
films. The
guy," ADder1011 said. "When you're losing, you're
mental
aspect
Is
really
as
Important
as
the
physical ·
not
"I learned that a long time ago. Because or that, I part.''
Anderson
' thinks there's plenty of room for the of·
Jearned aot·to fake myself too seriOUsly, not to get too
fense
to
Improve.
.
caught up because things can Cluuige overnight."
"We've
got
to
Improve,
to
expand
our
offense,
:
FOr evilllllce, fake An!lfm!ID's off·III!BSOD. .1\fter ·
make It a little more multiple," Anderson said. "As •
passing for 3,'/M yards and 29!ollchdowns laat llei!SOD
Forrest
(Gregg, head coach) says, you never stand •
to win Molt Valw!bJe·Piayer bonors, Ander100 found
stW
In
football.
You either get better or worse.
:
himself fiooded with requests for speaking
appearances:. .
~. • "We're going to have to get better. Teams have .
"It hasn't bel!!! so bad, beca\lie I've Jlml~ what I seen what we've done for a year, and they're going to •
;
trted to do," bit said. ''I did about one per weeltJ still make adjustments.
year
was
the
first
time
we
used
a
lot~
option
•
"Last
did more !hiD I Wll1lted to do.
·•
rwtes (In the passing game) . We can get better."

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
WILMINGTON, Ohio (API - No. 14 jerseys are
popular 8JilOI1I the hundreds of youngsters who show
up for the Cincinnati Bengals' dally workOuts at WU·

-.;s:.-:::0/
I

$2~00 .REG. 14.49
.

SUPER BOWL JOE BACK IN ACliON - World Halden' defensive end Dave Browalng coven during
Cbamploo San Francllco 49en' quarterback Joe Moo- the tint quarter Saturday afternoon at Candlestick
tana lets olf a pass to teammate Dwight Clark as Park. (AP Laserphoto).

'No. 14' popular in Bengals' camp

56 only

Murray 22" ·Self
Propelled
l,.awn Mower

was

.

Douglas gardening tools
feature 'hardwood
handles and heavy
metal teeth and blades.
An ldee1, 1ool for gardining.

CAsEs· '2.99

Ms. Vowtow Is a member ot the
VIetnam Veterans of Akron, a
group whose members are volun·
leering their time for the race.
Frank Sims, a member of the
group who witnessed the accident,
said Ms. Vowiow' s action prevented the young driver, Teddy
Keaton of Greensboro, N.C., from
Injury and prevented his car from
being damaged.

uncommitted on how to vote, while Paul said tile'
Indians "position has bel!!! 'that we're satlslled with
the commissioner."
Of tile other American League teams responding to
the poll, Boston, Detroit, Kansas City, Chicago and
Minnesota generally favored the rell!ntlon of Kuhn.
Seattle Mariners President Dan.O'Brlen said he felt
Kuhn had done "a very good job Wider difficult clr·
cumstances," but he was not sure how principal
~ George Argyros would vote.
Owner George Steinbrenner of the New York Y ankees has vasclllated, but bls most recent comments
have supported Kuhn.
Executives from MUwaukeE', Baltimore, Toronto,
california and Oakland were either unavailable for
comment or declined to respond Iii the poll.
In the National League, the Cubs and Reds said
they remained uncommitted, while Braves owner
Ted TUrner said he was not yet ready to disclose his
decision. The Reds have been a strong anti-Kulm
force Ia the National League In past years, and part·
owner WW!am Williams Is a good bet to supply -a
fourth 1vote against Kuhn.
The •National ·League clubs eXJIECie!l to vote for
retenlliiJI ot Kuhn were Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, lpe
Angelell and San Dlest&gt;-TheAlj'wasunabletocontact
executives from M01,1treal or san Francisco.

REG. '9.77
Douglas
Bow Bake

TWIN SIZE FLAT &amp; FinED
FULL, FLAT &amp; FinED '3.99
R•l· '6.99

factory condltlion and stable,
complaining of leg and arm
Injuries.
Derby Oeneral Manager Wayne
Alley said the accident Is the first
serious mishap In several years at
the race.
"I can 't remem~r anything like
this at all for years here," Alley
said. "We've been very lucky
actually."

dl!f~eaee Is ihat the National ieague (with 12
teams) needs only the four votes, whereas with 14
teams, we would need five. J think the climate Is

i\THENS, Ohio (AP) - Center·
fielder Jim White slammed a
baseB-Iollded hOme run In the bot·
tom of tile ninth Sa\urdllY to 11ft cuiCtnnatl Blllde tO a. i&gt;-2 victory over
SteubenvDle In the chaptpions)llp
game·Or tbe Arilerlcan Legion base-

Ladl• Pant•

·R•I·.

ll&lt;lyals 1, Tigers 0

DETROIT (AP) - Reliever
Dave Toblk' s bases-loaded walk to
Greg Pryor In the ninth Inning
forced In the game's only run as the
Kansas City Royals beat the Detroll Tigers HI Saturday.

Dan Petry, 12·7, held Kansas City ·
to five hits and struck out the first
two hitters In the ninth, but Steve
Hammond singled and after Petry
threw 10 straight balls In pitching to
Frank White. John Wathan and
Pryor, Toblk relieved him.
Toblk went to a 3-2 count before
Issuing an oulslde pitch that forced
In the deciding run.
The win went to Larry Gura,l4·8,
who yielded just seven hits, walked
two, and struck ou t five In throwing
bls seventh complete game and
third shutout of the season.

Budde Post wins state crown

·.

1

36 only

home'nm agalDit tbe s.lllmore Orioles Salunlay at

Bolton'• Fenway Fair. Bllllmore woo Ia 10 tmtap

CLOTHING DEP'I'.

1

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Darlene
Vowtow, a volunteer at the 45th an·
nual All-American Soap Box Derby
at Akron's Derby Do~ was In·
jured Saturday as she tried tostopa
competitor's car In the runway
area.
Ms. Vowtrrl/' was taken to the
emergency room at Akron City
Hospltal,,where spokeswoman DorothY Bo!p!S said she was In satJs.

(AP Llllerplloto I.

'

'3~oo
AND

REG. '29.88
REG. 13.99
Men•
Mens Boseball Sport Coats
Shirt
Special purchase of
men's better quality
Classic 'I• sleeve and
sport coats. Select from

DEWEY'S DRIVE - Boston Red Sox Jim Rlee,
left, COIIIJ'8tulates Dwight Evaas on hll lint IDaiDg

,uhn.

Choose trom aSIOI'ted
styles In poly·colton or
poly.knll. Sizes 8-18 or
S,M,L.

for a forceou t at second, threw the
ball Into center field for an error as
the runners advanced to second
and third.
Tippy Martinez, 7-6, pitched the
final two Innings In relief of starter
Jim Palmer for the win. Martinez
retired all six men he faced.

Woman hurt at derby

14.49

REG. TO 12.49

to;-cool

$4.00
TO '9.99

BOSTON (AP) - Joe Nolan's
baSeS-loaded sacrifice fly In the top
of the 10th Inning drove In Eddie
MUI'l11Y )V!th the go-ahead run and
Rich Dauer followed with a two-run
single as Baltimore defeated the
Boston Red Sox i&gt;-2 Saturday, snapping the Orioles' four·garne loslrig
streak.
Reliever Mark Clear, 9-5, had
pitched hitless baU for 32·3 Innings
before Mumy led off the 10th with
a single. John Lowenstein then
bunted the baU back to Clear In a
sacrifice attempt, but Clear, trying

'

'

Lawn Mowet lla4•

S.TeAtllllt,lllllals

IIUUSio~lUII!

\J

.'
...,._..,.~-----,--------,j----· -

.,

I' ,

•

•

�.
Page- C-2- The

Times-Sentinel

~·

'

.

'

.

,

.-

Gal

·Pastore ignores .news media
.
after brilliant 3-0 victory
'

By JOE KAY

me good pitches to hit. I just didn't
hit them. It was not a matter of him
CINCINNATI CAP) - Houston's being overpowering."
Ray KniKht said that right-hander
Pastore, who wa:; demoted to the
Frank Pastore wasn't unhittable bullpen for a hrief time earlier this
Friday night. What Pastore had to Si!f~SOn and later went on the
say after his £ive-hit shutout was un- disabled list with a finger injury,
printable.
tossed his first shutout since
Pastore directed a profanity at blanking the San Francisco Giants
reporters after the Cincinnati Reds' on April 9, his first outing of the
3-0 victory over the Astros Friday season.
night, telling them he wasn't happy
"He had 'good control," said Reds
with their coverage of the Reds, who Manager Russ Nixon.
have the worst record in the
"He got the ball over the plate and
National League this season.
had something on it. He struck out
'Very simply, guys, you've been ... eight, and It was mostly on fastballs.
the last three months. Now you ex"It's really encouraging to ·have
peel me to talk to you guys after him pitch like that. He needed
you've been stabbing us," Pastore something like that."
said iri the Reds' clubhous~. "I talk
Two of the five hits off Pastore
to you guys and you rriisquote me. I were by Dickie Than, who extended
have nothing to say."
his hitting streak to 21 games, matPastore, 6-9, struggling through ching Philadelphia's Pete Rose for
his second losing season in a row, tops in the National League this
pitched his second shutout of the season. Thon tied Lee May for third
season and third complete game. He longest streak in Houston history.
struck out eight without walking a Art Howe hit In 23 straight games
batter, and allowed only one Astro to last season to set the team record.
reach second base.
"I'm just trying to help the team
"I think I got myself out," said every time I play," Thon said. "I've
Astro .first baseman Ray Knight, been getting base hits."
who went O.for-4 against his former
Than led off the game with a
teammates.
single, but Pastore retired the next
"He wasn't unhittable. He gave 14 batters in a row before singles by

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

DOVER, England (AP) -Jason
)?!poly, an 11-year-old Denver
Schoolboy, abandoned his ef!ort to
become the youngest person tb

~y gives

'

APSports Writer

,.

• August 15, 1982

UJl effort

swim the English Channel Satul'-

day after 8\2 hours In the

I.

The Sunday Times-Sentlnei-Page-C·3

Coast Guard and the Channel
Swlnunlna Association had re&lt;;;uard station here Nld Plpoly
Jason entered the, water at Sha- . ceived encouraging messqes of
gave up wllell IIX ~ froril his
hls progress. After ftve hours In the
kespeare Beach here at 7: 55 a.m.
objective, Cape Grll Na, France,
water, he was nearly halfway
. and gave up j11st before 4:00p.m.,
21 miles tram here.
.
acrou. After seven, he was only
the inessage said.
el&amp;ht miles from
Grls Nez.
Prior to his

accompanying

Tony Scott and Luis Pujols with two
out in the fifth. Thon singled in the
sixth but was erased on a
doubleplay, and Alan Ashby had a
pinch-hit single in the eighth.
The Reds scored a pair of runs in .
the second off Joe Niekro,ll-9. John- .
ny Bench hit a leadoff infield single,
took second on a sacrifice and
scored on Ron Oester' s looped
double to left. Alex Trevino singled
to center to score Oester.
Cincinnati loaded the bases in the
sixth on a pair of singles and a walk.
Bench drove home the run with a
sacrifice Oy.

to the Coast

boy abandoned his attempt.

L
E

HERSHEY , Pa. (AP) - In the
!lrst round of the Lady Keystone
Open Golf Tournament this
summer, defending champion
JoAnne Carner shot a four-ovl!rpar 76 and blamed It on her shoes.
"I wa:; expecting wet weather
and I wore my old shoes for comfort," she said.
Carner changed to her new shoes
for the second round and shot a sizzling 68, ~our under par. However,
the poor start forced her touttle for
a tie for eighth place by the time the
tourney ended.

second basemao, Larry Mllbourae, CIIUidn't get tbe
!brow to flnl base In time to lljlle)ch Raqen' Bucty
Dent's single. (AP Laserphoto).
.
.

,.
MEET BlJZZ AT THE
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
State Representative 811%2 Ball will be on-hand throughout
the Meigs County Fair. Area residents with
questions or problems involving state government are urged
to visic with the lawmaker at the &amp;.ir.

before enterlni the water. "I hope
to make It ·to France In 12 to 15
hours. It's really a very exciting
day and I feel In Up-top fonn."

HIA
- ----.
'

..00~~

\

PHOOEY ON YOU - Second bue 11111j1ire Joe
West e:rpres~e~ diipleatnu-e wUb tile cbaDeqe ol bJIJ
call at seeond base by Heaston Astroe' maila11er Bob
U111s, ceilter, and third bue coach Don Lepperhlurlng
tile alxtb tnnlnc ol a game agalnat tbe Ctnclnllllll Reds,

Fr!cllly nlgbt In CIDctnnall. West called Allrol'

buerunner Dlclde Thoa out at aecoad oa a double play
baU bll by teammate Terry Pub!. The Reds We!ll OD to
wtn3-0. (AP La~~erphoto).

,,

\

Indians drop 8-7 battle to Rangers.
•

•

~GTON,

Teus (AP) said Stein, who was sent in despite
When Bill Stein comes to bat for the the fact that tlhe .Ranger due to bat
Texas Rangers, rival club&amp; don't get was John Grubb, a left-handed hitter
too COI\cemed. Unless It's a pinch- who was 3-fot:--'1 with two doubles, a
hitting situation, thatls.
run and two RB!s.
The 3$-year-old _utility infielder,
Te...xas manager. DatTell Johnson
who set a league record last season 11ent In Stein when Cleveland
by hitting safely in seven straight manager Dave Garcia replaced
appearances as a pinch-hitter, right-hander.DanSpillner, 8-7.
struck agall) Friday night to spa,rk
"Stein pinch-hitting was easy.
the Rangers 14'· an 8-7 victory over Nothing Stefn does pinch-hitting surthe Cleveland Indians.
prises me," Johnson said.
Only a .226 hitter for the 1year,
"I know if he brought the leftStein answered a ninth-inning swn- hander and Grubb wa:; up, I was
mons and responded with a bases- goi~g in," Stein said. "I just went up
loaded, (jl-()-run double off left- there to swing at the first thing that
handed reliever Ed Glynn, giving looked good. He Started me up and in
him eight RB!s and 11 hits In 32 pin- with a fast ball and .the next pitch
chhlts at bat, a .344 averag'e.
was up, but he got It over tl1e plate."
That set the stage fOf' Dave
Andre Thornton's three-run homer
H~eUer's sacrifice fly, scortug andtwodoubleshadgiven.Cieveland
George Wright from third with the starter Rick Sutcliffe a 7-2 edge. But
winnl~g run.
.
Texas rallied for six hits and six
"I don' know how to e~tplain It,"

I

runs off Sutcliffe ~nd three other
relievers , over the final three
frames.
Cleveland took a 3-0 lead in the first, on Thornton's 28th homer, and
Rick Manning's solo shot In lhe sixth
raised Cleveland's lead . to 4-1.
Doubles by Grubb and Larry
Parrish cutthe lead to4-2.
Texas starter Frank Tanana .left
the game in the seventh, but Thprn-ton and pinch-hitter Ron Hassey hit
RBI doubles to spark a three-run
rally off Texas reliever Denny Darwin.
Grubb doubled in two runs In the
seventh and Parrish hit a solo homer .
in the eighth to cut the lead'to 7-5 to
set up the dramatic finish.
Darwin, 8-4i, got the win, while Dan
Spillner, who took over for Sutcliffe
in the seventh, got the toss, dropping
totl-7.

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Gallia
Academy's head football coach Tom
Korab announced· Saturday there
will be a "Meet the Staff Night,"
Monday, Aug. 16, at $ p.m. in the
high schoolauditoriwn.
Parents or all football players
(varsity, freshman and junior high)
are invited to attend.
Parents will be Introduced to the

Junior High
entire football staff, a presentation
To Report
of the football programs will be
All
pros~tive
Junior High footgiven and time provided for a
question and answer period from the ball (seventh and eighth grade) candidates should report dressed in
parents.
Coach Korab stressed that he felt shorts and t-shirts for physical conthis was an important meeting for . diti,oning Monday, Aug. 16,5 p.m. at
,
all parents to gain an "Insight" into Memorial Field.
1
The Junior High squadll are being
GAHS football program and
coached QY David Lyons ~ Robert
phi,losophy.
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Portsmouth nine eliminated
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Steuben- Steubenville pitcher Rodney James
ville, aided by a series of Por· scattered five hits the remainder of
tsmouth miscues, scored 11 runs in the game.
.
one inning en route to a 13-3 victory .' Both Steubenville and Portsmouth
in the American Legion baseball won Friday morning games.
tournament.
Bra!! Walke hurled a seven-hitter
The victory Friday placed to lead Portsmouth past WorSteubenvllle, 4MO, into Saturday's thington, 8-3.
finals against Cincinnati Budde, 35Animal farm
9.
Billy Beattie and Rick Haysler
PORTI.AND,Ore. (AP) -Olthe
each powtded (w()-run doubles in the eight teams which played In the Gl·
fifth inning of Friday's game during ustl Basketball Tournament !or
Steubenville's big inning. But women last winter, five had animal
Steubenville · was aided by four rdcknames.
walks issued by Portsmouth pitThere were the California Goldeli
ching and two Portsmouth errors.
· Bears, the Louisiana State Tigers,
Brad Walke's three-run triple in the Oregon Ducks, the Oregon Slate
the second inning had put Por· Beavers and the Washington State
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'"Thls Is the day I have been w'llt·
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�TheSu

~Je~on coac~

NFL players ignore threats;
Bengals lose 22-20·de~ision
By WlLLlAM R. BARNARD
Sports Writer
National FootbaU League owners
can expect more symbolic handshakes between opposing players
as the eldtibition season continues,
union official Ed Garvey says.
Ignoring threats of a minimum
$100 fine, NFL players met at midfield foi- pregame handshakes at two
preseason games Friday night,
hoping - to demonstrate solidarity
against management.
"Before virtually every game,
there will be a handshake," said
Garvey, the NFL Players
Association executive director.
Garvey called the threat of fines
•'unlawful. Players have right to tills
activity. "
On Friday night, the Kansas City
Chiefs and Cincinnati Bengal:!
rushed to the middle of the field to
shake hands after the national anthem at Arrowhead Stadium. The St.
Louis Cardinals and Seattle
Seahawks later did the same thing at
tilt Klng-clome.
·
The attention given that "highfi~" and hand slaps on the field
b\!fore the games may have over$l,dowed the results, which saw
K811111111 City beat Cincinnati 26-20
and SeaWe defeat St. Louis 1~.
:similar handshakes were ex·
ching~ Thursday nlght before the
HQ'uston OUen ~ed the New
OJ:Ieans Saints 22-20.
:Despite booing from the crowds,
some of the players raised their arrri$ and clenched fists.
:At Seatile, uniformed players
w.ure joined on the field by several
injUred players In street clothes.
Sejlltle quarterback Jim ·Zorn and
wide receiver Steve Largent, who
have said · they won't Join in any
players' strike, also were among the
handshakers.
.Zorn said he didn't decide to take
pal1 in the handihaktng demonst~ting until Thursday night at a
players' meeting.
"I was seeing players pulling
to~ether and I felt like I wanted to be
a part cf that togetherness," Zorn
said. "I am willing to pay the con-

to

sequences. This doesn't have wouldbefined.
anything to do with my stand on the
"The meeting had nothing to do
strike. This won't sway my mind on with football," said Jeff Van Note, a
that matter."
vice president of the union and a
Seattle Coach Jack Patera said Falcons player.
Thursday he would fine each player
" And It has nothing to do with the
half of one regular-season game's Atlanta Falcons. This is an NFL
salary, which in Zom's case would meeting and ri~ht now It Is the subbe about$15,000.
ject of collective bargaining
Jack Donlan, executive director of agreement and there is , no
the NFL Management Council, . bargaining agreement. "
called the hand-shaking dis11i1ys
NFLPA President Gene Upshaw,
"precedent-setting. ·There is a a guard with the Raiders, said the
provision against fraternization management council's warning
before a game. It's in the con- about fines for shaking hands before
stilution and bylaws of the league."
e~bit!on games " I:! in marked conDonlan, who attended the Seattle trast to almost every professtonal
game, added, "It comlllJ under the sport In America. The handshake
heading cf 'no big deal.' But my between opponents has become an
feeling is that this all belongs on the important part cf the opening lip in
bargaining table."
basketball, the meeting of boxers in
Garvey said the union would file a the center of the ring, and In all
complaint with the National Labor other sports where sportsmanship
Relations Board because of the and respect for your opponent 15 lm- ·
management council's action ad- portant in the game.
vising NFL teams to fine players.
"We Intend to continue this
Jim Miller, spokesman for the gesture cf respect for other players
council, said the pJa¥ers face a in the NFL and to show solldarity'for
minimwn fine of UOO for par· our union.''
'
ticipating in any formal union
In ·a national television game
demonstration at exhibition games.
Saturday, the. Raiders were at San
In Friday night's games, Nick Francisco. Last night, it was the
Lowery kicked four field goal:! and New York Jets at Green Bay, Buf·
Bill Kenney threw two touchdown · falo at Dallas, Minnesota at Atlanta,
passes to CarlO$ Carson as the Cleveland at Detroit, Deliver at the
Chiefs defeated the defending Loa Angeles Rams, the New York
American Conference champion Giants at Baltimore, Philadelphia at
Bengals.
Tampa Bay, IIIKj Pittsbargb vs. New
Lowery was perfect on four field England at Knoxv!lle, Tenn.
goal attempts of 24, 27, 46 and 36 yar·
On Monday night, Chicago visits
ds while Kenney opened his San Diego.
preseason battle with Steve Fuller
Several highly touted rookies were
for the starting quarterback job by to make their NFL debuts Saturday,
tossing scoring passes of 5 and .21 ncludlng tp pick Kenneth Sims of
yardstoCarson.
New England and Hel:!rnan Trophy
Zom completed eight of 10 passes winner Marcus Allen cf the Raiders.
for 140 yards In the first half of Seat• Also debuting In the NFL wiU be
tle'svictoryoverSt. Louis, Including Cleveland linebacker Tom
a 41-yard TD to Paul Jones. Dan · COusineau, the first pick in t!w 1979
Doomlvk got the Seahawks' other draft who spurned Buffalo and
score with a 1·yard plunge.
played the last three seasons ,with
Meanwhile, ·the Atlanta Falcons Montreal of the Canadian Football

,.
'
'
Edwu'dl !Jnu1bt " ·

BENGAL ON HIS HEELS - KaiiSIIJ City ·Cidefs' exldbltloD . pme ID Kalllu Clly.
rullllln« back Cw1111 Bledloe (31) trlett to brea1t away Bledloe den after 1 tw~yanl-gabt oalbe',paila play. ,
,
, .from ClnciDDRtl Beupls' def-lve eud 'Eddie J!:d. I AP J,uerphoto),
warda (below) In the Reond quarter elf'rld.y algid's '

Steelers
name ex-Kent mentor offensive assistant
•
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - Tile PittsbUrgh Steelers Friday announced
the hiring of former Kent State footpall Coach Ron Blackledge as an of.
fenslve aasistant.

Blackledge, father of Penn State ·
q111rterbact Todd •Blackledge, had
been hired to replace offensive line
coach Rollie Dotsch.
Unconfirmed reports said Dotsch

Stellions of the new United States Football League.
:
1
But when asked In a telpe In: .
terview Friday about Ills career ·
plans, Dotsch said, "I hl\ve a CCNr ·

,:e

Motorcraft·Oil

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Golf ~outs Tue$day

"Af:e II 1M pip Mlh

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GALLIPOLIS - Individuals
wishing lo try out for the 1982 Gallla
Academy High School golf team
should meet 11t the clubhOil.le at 9
a,m. Tuesday according to Jim
Milhoan, golf ~cb. ' ·
: .

J'lan tourhament

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ped third-seeded Hank ?fister 7~. 64.
Top-seeded Sandy Mayer downed
David Siegler 6-1, 6-7,, Wand seventh-seeded Tbn Wilkison bested Andy
Koblberg Hi, 6-1.
In quarterfinal doubles action, the
top-seeded team of Amaya and
?fister defeated unseeded Brad
!}uan and Warren Maher, both of
Australia, 6-4, 8-1 and Larry
Vtefankl aod Van't Hof downed
Siegler and VInce Van Patten 6-1, 62.
In semifinals doubles play, Matt
Mitchell and Craig Wlttus defeated
second--seedeO 1t{ayer and Terry
Moor, 7~, U, 6-1.
·
GOLF
wEATHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP)
- nm Norrll fired a7-uilder-par 14
to Increase his.letld to three strokes
after ,~ I'OUilda Ill play In the
PJO,OQO; Sanuny Davis Jr. Greater
Hartford Open.
Norrll, who held a ~ lead
after the apening I'Otllld, had a 31bole totat of 12'1, 16 under
'l'hltt
IJCOI'e aet a two-round record for lbe .
8,534-yard Wethenfteld Country
Club coune 8lld u.d lbe low 3f.bDie
toll) a~~ IIIII ,...... PGA tour.
JERICHO, N.Y. . (AP) - Beth
· DlulleJ flrecl 1 +andllr'IJII' • for a
twHotlnd 1*1 of ~ 8lld 1 . 11v.
stroke Ietld In 1be .
WIU

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For Rollale 011..-

scheduled Thursday, Aug. 26, on
Mernorlal Field.
This was announced Saturday by
Blue Devil BoosterS•Club president
Dave Tawney.
.
·
- It was also announce!l GAHS will
have. three home scrinunages this
year. The first is Saturday, Au~. 21,
against Fairland, sterling at 10 a.m.
Second practice ,tl!t is Au~. 25, at 6
p.m. against. defendin~ Class AA
Stat~ Champion Nel:!otiviile-York.
Final scrimmage is Saturdliy, Aug.
28, a~ainst Belpre, at 10 a.n\
Tom Jones reported on the .
pro~ress of the reserve seat sale for
the Blue Devils' five home games
thisfall.
·
The boolters will tl'leet every
•Tuesday durin~ the l:oming weeks,
beginning a~ 7 p.m. in the GAHS
Library Ann~x.
Sixteen attended last week's first
meetino
cfthe newschoolyear.
'
~ ,..,
.,.

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Salt Plugs Limil8

night set. August 26

. GALIJPOUS - • Meet the Team"
activities for tbt; 1982 Gallia
Abtdeniy High School Blue Devils,
COI!ches, managers, cheerleadl!rs
and marching band is tentativ,ely

.
TENNIS
:roRONTO (AP) - Second-seeded
Jimmy Connors swept filllow
Arilerican Uoyd Bourne 6-4, 6-2 to
adVance to the semifinal:! of the
Player'S International tennis champlonshlp.
Top-seeded John McEnroe
defested No. 15 Henri Leconte of
France; 7-41, 6-2 and Vitas Gerulaitis
beat. Steve Denton to win .7~. W.
In the other early quarter-final
mttch, two-time defending champif!!!, lvan Lend! of Czechoslovakia,
the No. 3 seed, blasted No. II Shlomo
GllcUtein of Israel 6-4, 6-2. Lend!
wlj1 face , ~tiler tflP*eded John
McEnroe cf tbe U.S., or No. 15 Henri
Lj!Conte .I ll France in a semifinal
mttchSaturday.
,ATLANTA (AP) ~ .Chris Everett
Ljlyd defeated Yvonne Vermaak of
AtlatrallaW,6-1inthetldrdrounclof
~ $JOO;ol0 Atlanta Women's Tennja
Classic.
·
Mary Lou Platek, the No. 4 Seed,
defeated Wendy White 6-2, 1-4 in
anuther third tound match. Susan
, MUcarln, who defeated D1ani1e
FrOmholtz W, W, . 6-2, pJayecl
quallfltr ~ Gilbert in Saturday's
other -.nWnai match.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Unseelled
ScCJtt DIVis uplll!t ~ VIctor AmaJa 6-4, 6-4 in quarterfinal
sing!a play In tbe Western :rennil
OIIUtd. In IIIOther sln&amp;lea Ujllet, .
e~ Robeli Van"J HQf lop.
'
'

By The AIISOCiated Press
The Columbus Clippers exploded
for 15 hits In a 13-5 International

The Chiefs had seven nms In the ::
first tnntng. Bob Nandtn, Beamon
and Dav.e Baker all collected three
hits for Syracuse.
In other IL actlop, Bob Porter
drove tn three runs to help the Rich·
mond Braves to an 11-5victory over ·
1
the Pawtucket Red Sox.
Porter drove tn a pair with a stn·
gle tn the Braves' five-run fifth In·
n)ngand then knocked tn another tn '
the eighth.
·
Matt Slnatro hit a bases-empty · ·
homer for the Braves tn the sixth, "
his eighth of the year. Jim WUson "
had a solo homer In the ninth for
Pawtucket. It was his fourth.
Mark Fldrych, who was the •·
American League rookie o! the · ; ·
year with the Detroit Tigers In 1976, ·: ·•
took the loss. dropping him to 4-7.
The Tidewater Tides scored ·, ·
three runs In tile sixth Inning to de- ' · 1
feat the Toledo Mud Hens 7-4.
'·

55c

~t · team

Sports briefs...

'·

'

· ATLANTA(AP)-CaichDanny freshman season and second last mostofthatbeforebelngslowedby noseguardJerald BayllsandllneLeague baseball victory over tile
FordofCiemsonllnowslt'sdlftlcult . yeu-.
a mld-aeasonanklelnjury.
backer Greg Ke)ley head the deRochester Red Wings.
to succesillloY defllnd coliegl! footSince going to the wishbone ofFord must make wholesale tense · under new Coach J im • The victory Friday night was the
ball's national c~piODahlp.
. felll!e, Bryant hal-steered Alabama changeoi ·l in a depleted o!fl!nJive Carmody, who assumed command 12th straight at home and 17th In the
"It took ua from tbe time this pro- to eight SEC titles In the last 11 ye- line, but '¥ ~ defense 1n January when Bobby Collins
lastl9 games for the league-leading
gram was bOtn untll 1981 to win It, ars, tying GeOrgia•tpr the title last should be strOOg aJaln and Homer move to Southern Methodist.
Clippers.
but, I can't say It Is iJnpolsble," year. The Crimson Tide wW add a Jordan gjves staiJility at quarter·
Bobby Bowden must !tnd a new
Don Mattingly paced Columbus
said ~&lt;JI'd: . ~~veryone tboucbt It new wrinkle to the offense this back,returnlnl!forhisthlrdseason quarterback as Florida State rewith lour hits, includlnghlseighth
was i~111e for II' to win li a year,goingtothel enddoublewing as a starter.
·
builds, South Carolina expects
homer of the year. Andre Robertfirst time, l!jlt we did."
to take advantqe of quart~ck
Bobby Ross replaced Claiborne some Improvement under new
son and Tucker AShford combined
lb!peatil!t as Q&amp;tloiial champs Walter Lewis' passing to Wide re- as the coach at Maryland, which Is Coach Richard Bell and VIrginia for four hits and five RBis.
hliSbei!n~ne~OIII)IelghtttmEs ce1ver1 Je11e Ben~ and Joey expected to battle North 'Carotlna Tech, led by taUback Cyrus LawJamie Werly, 9-8. went the dlstn 46 years~d ~expect the ng. · Jones. 'nl!l move 8Jso Is expected to Stete fpr third In the ACG. Another renee, could !ashton an impressive
tance for the victory. Tom Rowe,
ers to lulll
tnpk. Qut the Atlan- help I'UI1IIIng back UMie Patr.lek. ·new: coaCh 1n tbe ACC Is GeOrge record.
().1, took the loss.
tic Coas( Contetmce w1II offer a
"I !mow that it sounds' a little Wel:!h, who left Navy for the strugAfter winning six of Its last seven
Dan Logan hit a two-run homer
legltimate contedder-ColcbDick crazy to abandon ,somethllli that lllini program at VlrRinla.
games last year, Tulane looks !or
for Rochester.
Crum's1 N~otlna Tar Heels, iiu 1:Jeei1 as good to ul u the wishMiami must replace 13 starters, carryover momentum. Southwest·
In another high-scoring game,
featurtpg oae
tbe hation's top bone has, but that's not n!al1y the but Jim Kelly Is back to direct the
ern Louisiana dropped out of the
Charlie Beamon slugged his sevrunnlng
Kelvin Bryant.
.case," Bryant said. "What we're . offense after passing !or2,«l3yardS Division I·AA Southland Conferenth home run of the year. helping
North Carolina and C!e11110n are • doing 11 adding the 1, not abandon- and 14 touchdowns. Collier triggers ence to remain In the top category
the Syracuse Chiefs coast to an 11-6
solidly entrei\Cbed as the top two lllg'tbe wishbone."
Southet'n Mississippi's offense and as an Independent.
victory over the Charleston
teams In tbe f.CC, and loom as the
At Georgia, Walker w111 be operChar lies.
Jeague's,OII)y threatt to crack the · atlng~a veteran line, but the . - - - - - . . __ _..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
T&lt;!P :II ralllllngs. /
question for the Bulldop Is how
The ~tbeuteril Conference,
glftecl but lneXperlenced quarterwhich claimed thnli! national titles
back Jolm Lastinger performs,
In succesiiO" be,fore Clemsim fOlie
F1orlda1 which has never won the
to the top, m~ be geared for SEC titje, retufi!S :n starters from
a,not.her/ Alal&gt;it, a-Georgia title •.last year's team, Including quarter·
llgllt. bill sev
others loom iiS
backWaynePeacewofk!ngbehtnd
chiinenPrs - primarily Florida,· an Intact starting line.
and poealbly A11bum and MlaslsMississippi State, an awesome
sippi State.
I
defensive machtoe last year, wW
The battle tor supremacy among have to rely more on its offense atthe South's llf Dlylslon I-A ~ ter lostng All-America Unebacker
pendents sbOOld feature Miami at
Johnle Cooks and All-SEC tackle
A11er Mfg. Rebate
Florida, whleh faces a tough scheGlen ColllnJ. Junior Jobn Bond wW
dule, and So\lthern Mtsslsslpp~ led
start at quarterback ror the third
MotOfCraft Oil Filter
by Reigle Collier, tbe olily quarteryear, and split end Glen Young and
back tn NCAA history to gatn 1~ taUback Michael Haddix give the
:(ards both/rushing and passing tn
Bullcloi!S two soUd threats.
the same ~a.S6n.
Coach Pat Dye begins his second
Tl;le most decorated lndlvjdual:! season at Auburn, expecting
Lenl.SG
In ljC)U\hern football return to build another strong defensive team and
Your Cost.2.75
on lrrlpresslve records - two-ttme facing a schedule In which the TlgAil-Amerlca running back Her- ers leave the state.only twice.
551 PorQf,
IOW·41
schel Walker at Geolllia and AlabaMOst of the other teams In tbe
AlterMit.loloote
IJIA'S Paul "'Bear'' Bljrant, who
SECexpecttoshowsomelmproveWhH v... "'rtQft.
completed the 19111. season at tl)e top ment, especially Louisiana State,
! .......... ....,
~the ali-t~ list ot !»Bchtog ~
but don't tljNre to challenge for an
~· 315, ol)e more than Amos
upper first-diviSIOn berth. Jerry
Alonzo Sta~
.
Claiborne Is the only new coach In
Walker, tlie 222-~nd junior, al· , the SEC, taking over at Kentucky,
l'l!lldy holdS the 'NCAA I1lshlng re- . Despite a knee Injury that forced
Qt • •:::.
coJ;ds for 11 frel1unan and a . him to miss four games, North ea,
spplionoore, hll\llng, amasaed 3,507 rolina' s Bryant scored 18 touch·
WhenYauluy
In two seasdns. He holds 15 downs and Ill~ ,for 1,015 yards.
~Quortl
sc I, eight SEC and six NCM re- The Tar Heel:! al:!o have an excel, . Waikl!r llnlshed third In the ' lent quarterback In Rod · Elkins, ·
10-W·.., - Limit I 2
He1Sman 'I,'rophy ~ votlng after his who passed for 994 yards last year,
:~

, : PAYING THE PRICE - St. Loull Cardinali' I'1!JIDing back Willard
Harrell, {39),_pulllltls bead down as he Is tickled by Seattle Selbawb'
sle\'e Cordle aDd Keuy Easley {0), Ia the tint bllf Ill their e:dllbltloa
~atloaal Football League pme ID the ltlnl-dome Friday Dight. (AP
Llserpboto).

I

I

ggc

•

_....,;....-..........._

•

-:-------- ----=============--- :

,.-Lea_:gue~---------....:~B~u~t~a~te:_am~
· ~s_;po~k~es:!ma!!!!n~d~e_cl,!!in~ed:__;w~as~l~ea~vm~
· ~g~the~~St~ee~lers..!!!!'.!afte~r~f~our~_:_tr~act~
wt~'th~the~Pi~
- ttaburgb~~~,9teele~
-~~ra-.'-:', ·
, comment on
that seasons to
coach the Birmingham
He· ~dec!lned
further
C0111Jl1Cnt.

boycottedwithanNFLannual
meeting
official:!security
Friday
in a solidarity stance and Coach
Leeman Bennett said the players

tepe8t;

says it's not impossible
bui realb:es charlces are slim

Clippers· collect 15 hits in ~·.
13-5 victory ~ver Rochester .;'

Ctbintt

t K&amp; 200J

•o

49.88

�•

er

1·omero

eugust 15, 1982

1- (,.llli

The Mustangs finished 10.1 and
tOok the fifth slot In the final Associated Press poll.
Texas came on strong, once Robert Brewer was Inserted Into the
Uneup at quarterback, and de. : feated Alabama In the Cotton Bowl.
The LonghOrns were voted the No.2
team In the final AP baUotlng.
• • Arkansas lost to North Caronna
: in the Gator Bow~ Texas A&amp;M
: oowned Oklalloma State In the In·
'· dependence Bowl, and Houston lost
: to Oklahoma In the Sun Bowl.
•; SMU lost a coach - Ron Meyer
. · went to the New England Patriots
• · of the National FootbaU League ; ~d eight suirters.

But the Mustangs gained Bobby
CoUins of Southern Mls~lssippl as
coach and retained 14 starters, In·
eluding an AU-SWC backfield that
has two 1,000-yard gainers.
SMU has again drawn the favorIte's tag.
"SMU should be exceUent, and
Texas A&amp;M shOuldn' t be far behind," said Arkansas Coach Lou
Holtz.
"llll&lt;e SMU," said Texas Christian Coach F.A. Dry.
Rice Coach Ray Alborn put what
Is expected to be another wild race
Into perspective.
"On paper, thetopfourteamsappear to be Arkansas, SM\1, A&amp;M
and Houston, but don't bet money
on It," sald Alborn, who has upset
the forecasting charls each year
with his Owls.
' Ertc Dickerson was on 1be AP·
second-team AU·Amertca llst and
was SWC Offensive Player of the
Year. Craig James, who shared
taUback duties with him. also
gained over l,llXl yards and was
AU-SWC.
. Lance Mcilhenny, the all-league

quarterback, returns for his junior
season.
There's a new regime at Texas
A&amp;M headed by Jackie SherrUI,
who left Pittsburgh for an attractive money. package. The Aggles
return nine otfen81ve and eight def·
enslve starters from the team that
trounced Oklal)oma State.
· SherrtU has the. runners In Earnest Jackson, Johnny Hector and
Thomas Sanders and the passer In
Gary Hu!&gt;lak.
Arkansas has an experienced
team, but the fate of the Razorbacks hinges on hOw well defensive
lineman Bllly Ray Smith recovered
from hepatitis over the summer.
Bayk&gt;r loses wondrous Walter
Abercrombie from the backfield.
but the Bears could surprtse with 16
returning starters.
Talented quarterback Lionel WUson heads nine offensive starters at
Houston. but coach BW Yeoman
needs proven performance at run'ntng back before the Cougars
threaten for the title.
Texas Christian, Rice and Texas
Tech are longshots at best.

•
·
'
•
'
aS
·00
Y
~JOe
ffiaJOr
I
h
·

•

..::

E8St

college fOOtball .teams
By The AllllOCiated PreM
With the demotion of Colgate,
Holy Cross and the eight Ivy
, League schools to Division I- AA,
• the East Is left with only nllle "rna• jor" major-college football teams.
• Alpl)abetlc81ly, they are Army,
: Boston College, Navy, Penn State,
Pitt, Rutgers, Syracuse, Temple
and West VIrginia.
IHhey were a fonnal conference,
they undoubtedly would be known
as Penn State, Pitt and the Seven
~ Dwarfs. Penn State has finished In
• the Top Ten 11 times In the .last 14
years, whUe Pitt has made It five
times In six years, Including a na·
· ttona1 championship In 1976.
.: But there are signs of Improve: ment In the rest of the pack, fore:- most at West VIrginia, which

pounded Florida In the Peach Bowl
last December to complete a 9-3
campaign.
.
At the end of the 1981 season;
many quarters ratEd Penn State
thebestteamlnthecountry,thanks
toa48-14routo1PittlntheregUiar·
season finale and a 26-10 thumping

for
a 1G-2record
andthe
a No.3
national
of Southern
ca(tn
!&gt;"testa
Bowl
ranking.

,

The Nlttany Lions hope the momentum carries Into 1982, althOugh
Coach Joe Paterno describes his
outlook as "cautious." Penn State
returns 11 starters, but must put
together a tiew offensive line.
The Lions have fine sldllln quar·
terback Todd Blackledie. running
backs Curt Warner and Jon WWI·
ams, light !!lid Mike McCloskey

and wide receivers Kenny Jackson.

Kevin Baugh and Gregg Garrtt;y.
The defense has good speed, but
Paterno Is worried because It Isn't
an overpowering, pbyslqilly lntlm~
dattngunlt. Thesecondarycouldbe
exceptional with safety Mark Roblnson and cornerback Roger Jack·
outstanding
punter
son.
The kicking
game Ralph
returns
Glacomarro.
Pitt put together three consecu·
tlve 11-1 years under Jackie Siler·
rUI, but Texas A&amp;M made him a
mUUonalre and Pitt's new head
man Is Serafino "Foge" Fazio,
ShetrUI's defensive cootdlnator.
With 18 starters returning, the
Panthers wW be among the na·
tion's preseasoo eljte, but the first
thrEe games.

P omeroy

---~--

' ..

•;,/~exas ·Longhorns must rely on,newco~ers
.

.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -Texas, whiJ:h (!lllowed 'Its seniors to a
No.2 tanking laB! year, must rely on neweomers to remain among
the nation's major-coUege football powers this season.

Akers.said thatfour defensive ends - "our strongest position" Wid 6-foot-6, 253-pound tackle John Haines are set on defense. But, he
added, "We iiave questiOn marks at the other places."

.' Coacll ~ ~rs !l&amp;ld liOOd~ to 15 senior starters, 12 of whom
were c)rafted by the pros, lncludlrig top chOice Kenneth Sims, a
lw!)-tlme All-Ametlca defensive \&amp;ckle,
Although Akers does not argue with forecasters who pick Arkan·
sas, Southern. Methodist, Texas A&amp;M and Houston as probably the
top fou~ teams In the Southwest Conference, he feels' "we might
surprtse some people."
"We like to think we've got the kind of guys that believe they're
better than that &amp;ny year. We eJ'pt!!:l to. be ll)Ore ,competitive than
that, .. he said.
.
•
.
.Texas flnlahed second natlonaUy last season after tallying to beat
·Alabama 14-~ In the Cott;on Bowl for a 10.1-1 ~rd.

Akers acknowledged that outside linebacker Jeff Leiding, who Is
shlftln!i :to the J'!llddle, should put Texas "II) good shape there."
Leiding, a 24Q:pound Jqnlor, was fourth on the team In tackles last
year with 107. He also recovered two fumbles and had two pass
Interceptions even though he often was replaced.o,n third down by a
filth defensive back.
End l&lt;1k1 DeAyala was l!tth wlth.91 tackles, and had 14 quarter·
back sacks and pressured the passer 47 times, both tops on the team.
T)le secmtdary wUI be new, but sbol!ldfeature Mossy C&amp;de, Craig
CUrry, Jerry Gran and possibly Robert Smothers.
.
Senior quarterback Robert Brewer, a fonnerwalk-on whO was the
star of the Cotton. Bowl, will operate behind a line that lost four,

four-year lettermen. li!cludlng All·Amerlca tackle Terry Tausch.
Akers said guard Doug Daw!lln and tackle Bryan Millard will
start, hut the other posltl0!19 are unsettled. •
The key to the Offense could be the health of taUbackJohn Walker,
6-1 and~. whO was Texas' third-leading rusher as a sophOmore
with 714 yards and a 4.6-yard average.
Walker Injured his right knee In spring training, and Akers said "It
wW be close as to whether he will be ready."
Walker's absence would remove Texas' backfield speed and probably force the Longhorns to pass more. There seems to be no shor·
tage of receivers.
"We certainly can't afford any lnjurtes. and I don't know of anyone
tlmt can," Akers said.
Raul Allegre, another former walk-on who kicked 15 field goals
and 25 of 26 extra pOints last year, "wW be, and deservedly so,
among the top kickers In the country," Akers said.

Hob)ls ~.named Wa~erly

basl(etball mentor ·
t.

DE.IECTION - Ulllted S~tal'l!!lmplwt IWimmer w~ o.b.e., wGI'hl reeonl belcler t. tile eveal, wu
Rawdy ~ holdl bllllead 6 r flnhhln&amp; lftOIId Ill clefmll!d lly Wett Germa1 Mld.el G~. fte Ulllted
tile - · • • meter freestyle nee, dariJic die World s•ta W.. speded 1a IIIUe 1 •truac allilwflc l'ldle

~~IDGu)'lqali,EellldGrwt' evea~~,batttdlduotDIIten.~lle.(APtae~,•

~~~~.~~n.?!'l.~~ ~~~~~~

men's tennis do the top tour seeds
survive untn the semll1naJJ. That is
the case In the $:m,llXl Players Intematlonal tennis tournament,
however.
More preclctably, Americans
John McEnroe and JimmY Con-

flamboyant behavior.
nors whipped llllleeded Amertcari
8oth top seeded McEnroe, se- Lloyd Bourne S-4, 6-2,
cond seeded Connors were handed
M9Enr0e fat1ed ~tline defen~
warnings and then 'penalty polnta lng champion Ivan Lend! ol Cz.e.
when they clashed wtth umpires en · choslovakla In the '1 semifinals
route · to quarterfinal victories. Saturday whlle. Coruiol'!l played,
McEnroebeatNo.lSseedHenriLe- fourth·seeded VIlas Geiulaltis of
the ~.S.

rr··~~~~========~:==~=~:==~~~~~;;,

•

WAVERf-Y- "I am a very 11appy
No rerominendaflon was given ~o
young man today," said Willie Hob- · the board ori a reserve coach to
bs Thuradaf morning, reflecting. on replace Hobbs, but Roberts said that
the happenings ol the night before he would talke to Hobbs about that
that led hlrJt to the top ofthe Waverly repiacemen.t. Board member Patty
lligli SchoOl basketball program. '
Strickland said that this was an .imAt·the Waverly School's Soard of . portant selection, deciding who
Education meeting Wednesday ' wOuld replace Hobbs as the reserve
night, 1J1e group unanimously selec- coach. ,
,
No other basketball coaching
.ted Hoblis to move up from his reserve and assistant varsit;y .coaching assignments were made at the board
spot to the. ~d varsity coach's job meeting as the school is still searfor the 1982-«l' season.
ching for a replacement to Jack
Hobbs will replace Roger "Gab- Trainer as head girls' coach.
by" Smith, wbo has been the Tigers'
head coach·for the past three years.
Hobbs started his coaching career
Smith has gone bllck to his alma five years ago and'led Waverly East
rfiate.r of Western to liecome acting to a lZ-3 record, his only losses to
principal and the board officially
Eastern. The following year he
cepted his resignation Wednesday moved up to the freshman level and
night.
'
led Waverly to another 12-3 record.
"I am very glad that I've been
Hobbs continued the upward climb
given the opport1J11lly to coach at a and three years ago took over the
great basketball school," said the reserve program, leading Waverly
n'ew coacli. 1'1 hope my team will be to a 16-4 record and an SEOAL resertypical Willie Hobbs' team, hard ve co-ehampionship. His team two
posed and lfl:rappy."
years ago was 13-7 and this past year
i "SuJ!erinteqdent' Dave Roberts 11-9, making his overall record 64-26
. acknowledged that he was very in five years of coaching.
•,)&gt;leased with the board's choice.
He is a 1971 graduate of Waverly
• "Willie has been a very loyal and High School and played on
dedicated supporter of the system," Waverly's state tournament team.
;'said ftoberts , "I wlU give' him all my ·He was a 1976 graduate of Ohio
.~upport." .
University.

ac-

Sinllng Savl~gs On Goocly~ar Tires
For All .Your Driving Needsl
Sale ends Saturday at noon. :

TIEMPO
RADIAL

..

SPECIAl

,

SEE OUR DISPLAY AT '

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.
'

ALL SEASON

..Swinging .Jan claims featured race

It may be all the tire you ' ll ever need
all year round! t-tas smooth -riding
· polyester cord body, double steel

COLUMBUS, ' Ohio (AP) In second was That's My Lady
.swtngtng Jan, driven by Bueford for $8.60 and $3. Third was Trim
' Lunsford, won the· featured ninth Christy for .$2.!ll. '
J ace at Scioto Downs Friday night . The lOth race trtfecta,11J..8.1, paid
to pay $5.W, $3.40 and $2.60.
$2,415.~.
The '1y='s time was .2:01.
A crowd of 5,040 bet $413,604.

. cord belts. Specially compounded
tread rubber for sure grip in any
weather ... wet. dry, hot or co ld.

FREE MOUNTING

. Whitewall
Size
P185175R13
P195/75R 14
P195/75R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R 14
-P225/75R14
P205/75R15
P.215/75R15
P225/75R15
P235/75R15

Fits
BR78-13
BR78· 14
ER78 · 14
FR78 · 14
GR78· 14
HR78 · 14
FR78· 15
GR78 · 15
H R78 ·15
LR78· 1S

Reg .
80 .00
85 .50
92 . 15·
96 .00
98 .00
102.35
97.00
101 .00
104.40
111.75

Blackwall
P155/80R13
Metric
P165/75R13
Metric
P195/75R14 ER78 · 14
P165/80R15
Metric

61.95
68 .25
87.75
74 .10

PlusF . E.T. l.fOto2 .9S

I:YNE eEN'TER SCHEDULE
·
Week of August IS, 1982
ri DATE - GYMNASIUM

r ('

Aug . 19 Closed

·~

~ . Aug .

;•
,"'

"'

6-8 p.m ./Open Recreation
9-10:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo

1-4:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
6·8 p.m./Open Sw im
1: 4:30 p.m./Ca mp Crescendo
6·8 p.m./Open Swim

.

1·4:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
6-8 p.m./Open Swim
1·4: 30 p.m ./Camp Crescendo

6·8 p.m./OJll'n Swim
8:30·10 p.m./Camp Crescendo

20 Closed

WHITEWALL

hydroplaning resistance . tr ead wear

2·4 p.m ./Open Swim

6·9 p.m ./Open Recreation
and Freshman Orientation

Whitewall
Size
P155/80R1J
P175/75R 13
P185/80R 13
P175/75R14
P185/75R 14
P195/75R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R14
P195175R15
P205/75R15
P215/75R15
P225/ 75R15

Everything vou need . in one great
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6·9-p.m ./Open Swim and
Freshmen Orientation

FREE MOUNTING
· Computerized WJieel Balanting

.

":

'

.

e,n•

•

M POLYESTEEL
RADIAL

NO. 446-0622
.
·SILVER BRIDGE
NO. 446-9300
SPRING
VALLEY
•
NO. 446-1399

Whitewall
Size
P155/ 80R13
P175/80R13
P185/80R13
P175/75R14
P185/75R14
P195/75R14
P205/75R 14
P205175R15
P215/75R 14
P225/75R 15

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·

Mon.·Prr.
Sat.·7:01

II'.M,

Reg
78 .40
89 .79
93 . 12
.94,30
98 .69
103.14
104.63
104.22
108.63
112.19

Sale
40.00
47 .00
~11.011

50.00
53.00
58.00
60.00
63.00
65.00
68 .00

Plus F . E .T . of 1.53 tc 2.11 per tire

Best-selling bias ply polyester t ire. w ith six-rib
tread tor great road grip and smooth, thump-tree

.

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...._.....

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Fits
Metric
BR78x13
Metric
BR78x14 .
CR78x14
ER78X14
FR78X14
F R78x15
GR78x14
HR78x15

POWER STREAK II

Stop af our display boOth In ,the co;..merclai tent at the 'M tit$
Collnty Fair to see a demonstraflon o• ~ popular h-.aters,
Receive S20 Off and a FREE 5 gallon Kero-Sun Fuel tan on
orders purchased or l•id awaut tilt .Pair.

VALLEY

49.00
62.00
65 .00
63 .00
70.00
75 .00
78 .00
79.00
76 .00
79 .00
82.00
84 .00

Plus F .E.T . of 1.51 to2 .73pertire

Note!
Rib count and
. sidewall styling vary' with
size. Not all tires look ex·
actly like tire shown.

:rJr·

Sale

Reg .
69 .75
74 .95
91 .35
95. 15
105.35
107.60
109.65
111.95
108 .40
110.75
115.40
119.30

Fits
Metri c
Metric
Metric
BR78xl4
CR78x14
ER78x14
FR78Xl4
GR78x14
ER78x15
FR78xl5
GR78x15
HR78x15

·cu

MAIN BANK PHONE

~

39 .00
44.00
54.00
51.00

POOL

3.99 Per Wheel'

•.
. f(ero·Sun~ knows you don't have money
to burn. All our portable kerosene heaters
are designed for economical, efficient,
clean operatl!).n, wl.th no sm~ke or odor.
They require no electricity or Installation.
Every Kero-Sun Portable Heater Is U.l,.llst(;d.
·
·, ·
And.we have'flve more good ways to re,
duce heating billa. The2mn1 85,•
· ·
Omnl 15,•
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Radiant 36.
'

65 .00
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2-4 p.m ./Open Sw!m

'
All facilit ies in Lvne Center wilr be closed to the publ ic until classes
;,+r.&lt;,.unne on We~nesday , Sept. 8. ·A new schedule will be published at that

Eddie Guinther, ex-Syracuseball
player, subject of news 'article
in Radford ,Virginia News Jqumal

~63 . 00

. . .I .•

;r .

SUSPENDED FIGHTERS- He~vyweJpt !men Clevellad. Berblek, tile C&amp;uadlao beavywelpt,cbamTrevor Berblck, left, IUid Tim WlllitnJICIOII, rlgbl, were pion, lubell out ·at commiAionen for their decision
supended lndefiDI14;ly last week by the Cleveland while Wlthenpoon, shOwn duriDC hearlDg before comBoxiDg CoJIIIDis8lon after each man I!IIJIOUJICed that be mlsal-n, tool die news In a calm f..Won. (AP
would not take part In a ~~t!heduled heavyweight bout in Luerpbotol.
·

lire

Sale
49..00
53.00
56.00
59.00
61.00
64 .00
60.00

A

Aug . 15 2·4 p.m./Open Recreation
~
9-10 p.m./ Camp Crescendo
•.Aug . 16 Cl6sed
6-8 p.m./Open Recreation
.•
..' Aug . 17 Closed
' ·
6·8 p.m./Open Recreatio~
)~
9·10:30 p.m./Camp Crescendo
j.oiAug . Iff Closed
t · 6-8 p.m./Open Recrea)ion

GALI.JPOUS - Eddie Guinther, one of the out· long lead off third and streaked for home as the pitcher
standing Guinther b&amp;seball playen of Syracuse, a let so of the ball. The runner and the ball arrived at
resident of Gallipolis, was the subject of a feature story borne plate at the same Ume and there was a terrific
in The News Journal at Radford, Va.
colllsion .u catcher, ball and runner ceill!ded amOI)g a
Charles E. Fretwell had the following to say about cloud o( dust w~h made It hard to ~ that had hapGuintherandhlscareerlnbaojebpllson'leyearsago:
pened. AIJ .the dilsl began to settle the umpire was
·'
While standing' out in front of the Allegheny a few squattJni over the plate Wtth one thumb outstretched
days ago, I noticed a fellow coming down the street , Indicating the runner was out, ending the game. Gflin.,
waving In my direction, I thought he was waving at . ther came up off the ground with a doUble handful of
someone else unill he came closer and asked me if I the Infield dirt and In hla outrage at the caU,.sprti!yid 11
had a baseball contract for him to sign.
over the ump with a vigorous protest. The wnp stood
ft was at this point I recognized my old friend, Eddie by hla dectslon and Guinther wound up with a few Iii~
• Guinther. Guinther was the playing lilllnager for the suspension · as a result of· hla "over enlhusfutlc''
Radford Rocket professional baseball team In IIN7 and ~at the calL
was one of the finest minor league basebaU p!lyers to · While In Radford, Guinther met 8J1d married the forever perfonn In this area. ·
· . mer VIrginia Elalrie ~ranklln of Pearlsb!lrg. ·She wu a
He began his baSeball career with, Akron in the old • member of the very flrat class of· nurses to be
Class C Mid-Atlantic League in Ohio. Then followed graduated from Radford COmmunity Hllllplt8l'a School
seasons
with Wllliamaon, Logan andA!hland,all In the of Nursing. There were.nlnegradll!ltes In the cJa. and,
•
:., old Class D Mountain State ~gue.lp 11138 while with 'Included llllC1IIg athen!.were ~Wood DeVilbiss and
·!· . Logan he led the league In home runs with 2111, while · Etda Weellallurdw!tollill~velnRadford. .
·
~ . batting 323. In illfl, at Ashland, he hit 349 and set a · ' lncldelitally, the pi'!llclenl Ill the Rldford Rocteta
league record with 15 stolen basel!· In 1110,.again with for the ltf7 llf!lUCII1 WU the late Jqe ,John [!, Splen
, Ashllnd, he hit3208DII had S3 stolen bases.
~r., and ser$3 on~ bolrd 1Jith him Were WWleSim••
Perhap~ one ol the beat remembered rnaments of the pldna, Bob HaD, R. G. Stevena and the late Dr. Andrew
19f7 season OCCIIl'l'l!d In ·the home half ol the ninth In- G'-1 aild lacy Pratt.
:
ning in the local ball park.
'
, FGI' thole Ill t11 wbo ~ with atlempllnl to
-· . WlththeRocketstratlingbyO!jerun,Gutntherledlif J!fOVIde p1af l'lllil bueltalllli'Radfard, lllere are a
' the ninth inning with a l'!'alk, stole aecond llld then stole lot ol ~uant 1111111011e1 ltiCh u finandll 4!1'·
• • third. Alter two Infield p(lpups, for two cull, a weUiit- flalltlll, ~ Oil ...._ player strtbl, etc., bt$
. ·i ting infielder came to bat. Alter a callecl alrlktl. It there wu a11o I IGt of J11euure and we llll4e a Iota&amp;
became o1M0111 that if we 'were to get bad In the pme frlendi wi1b alae lDIII.f 11JU111atlllelel wbo came to try
; ' GuiJitherwould liavetOiteal home.
·
·out ind to play .fGr the Rocket~. Bdidle Gidntber wu
Iii the' pitcher began bill wind-up, Gu1nthei- tool 1 one ol thole line tiiOI.'Iati!Jn. _. It wu p-at to •
•
.
.
.
I.
hjmandblinrlfiiJnce~tn.

-

... ........

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-C-7

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

.

Southwest Conference teams .
.hope ·to repeat 1981 efforts
DALLAS (AP) - In 1981, the
Southwest .Conference produced
the naUon'sNos. 2and5teams,and·
sent four teams to bowl games.
In 198'l, It could be even better
and wilder.
Southern Methodist earned the tl·
tie last year (the only loss was 9-7 to
Texas! but coukln't reap the reward of a Cotton Bowl visit because
of probation.

-..

•

..

·-~o~~~~'O
.,.,.
....., .........

-

,. 11"(..... -

MfiTEWALL '
&amp;IUCKWALL

FREE
• MOUNTING
'!

Blackwall
Size
A78~e13

B78x13
C78X14
D78x14
El8x14
F78x14
G78x14
F78x15
G78x15
H7~1ClS

Reg.
38.00
41.00
45.00
. 47.00

4e.oo

50.00
52.00
52.00
53.00
56.00

'

Whitewall
Size
A78x13
Sale .. B78x13
28.50
C78X14
31.00
D78x14
. 34.00
E78x14
3S.OO
f78x14
36.00 .
G78xl4
38.00
H78x14
39.00 ___ F78xl5
39.00
G78xl5
40.00
H78xl5
42.00
L71x15

Sale
30.00
33.00 •.:
36.00 \
37.00
38.00
40.00 •
41.00
43.00
42 .00
43.00
45.00
49.00

Reg.
40.00
43.00
47 .00
49.00
50.00
53.00
55.00
57.00
54 .00
56.00
59.00
66.00

.

DowN TO EARTH TIJE VALUEs NOW THROUGH AUGUST 21

IMEIGS~.TIRE CENTER

POMEROY, PHIO

99Z·Zl01

.IOIIfl F. FULTZ, MGR.

..
.

••

�•'

Sco re board
Majors

•.WDUG\N I&amp;WJU£

L ,

.!86

...
.. ......
.41. ,
.........."...._
... .• ...,.... .," ..."
.
&amp;2

Balli~

!13

""'""
a...land

Nt'W York

GB

".. .... •1\1'II
.

Ill

.!liT
.513

.

Calllomla
Manus Ctty

o., ...

-""

~aL .322; McCft. St.Louil• .321; Knlghl.
Hwstm. 312: Baker. Lot AnltiK. .1l9;
Lo.srNth. SU..ouil.
RUNS: Lo.SmJth. St.Loull, 91; Mlll'J)Izy.
Atlanta, 81; Schmidt, PtlllaclelpiU, '7';
Dawam, Montlftl, ~; S..dbtrl. Oll-

:m.

w

.431

Texas
MlonfiO!a

SAlTING 1%10 11 billl: ouver, Mon-

1\1
'II

..!1)

~.rtW

Ookl..d

17
.ell ll
:16\1

67
&gt;.I

RBI : Murphy, Atlanta, 8); Ollvfr, Mon79:
IL San FI'IJKilco. 1t Guer·

rero. t..o. Anf!!lel. 74: Hl!ndltJI . St.Loull.

_

73-

Hrrs.: Su, LOI Angelet, 10, J .Ray,

Ntw York 4, Chicqo 3
Min~ 3, Startle 1
-·-~-1

........

PI!Ubiii'Jh. ~; Oltvrr, Moni!J'al, 136;
Buckner, OdcCO, l:D; Knltftl, HOUSIOn,
135.
!lOIIBLES: T....nody, San oteoo. :II;

Tolw l CloYtlancl7 .
Ca1ll&gt;nU ' Oaklancl 0

Kni1Jh1, Houlteft.

I'WwYorkiiCJdcllo

-

Sflttle at MinDetcQ
Toronto at MitwauiiM
C.Utlnla at OUlud

.........

Mor•

; , St. Lout.
I'IIJiadolpllla
"' Monttlll
: Plltlbu!lh
.. Nf!W Yortl
•

-Loo-23.

STOLEN BASD: RIJnet. Mmtreal, 54!;

Mon!no,
Pttttbu.rth. Sl:
Lo.Smlth.
9:.LouiJ, 48; Sax, t..o. Anae8. 41: llfr.

Caltt.ma at o.Jdand lnl
OnlY I - -

--

(.'tdciiO

~

; Lei Aaplet

.. AUinta

n1rr. Ptau._,N., 40.
PrrcHING (lt Drdlklnll :

6t

!10

M
61
Ill

51

~7

:l3

.SD
.526

!W

e

M

.a.

88

.419

a

~

t9

.,...,. DtYw.
liS ~~
82
Ill

!W
57

• HoultOn

51

63
'73

.• '7
....

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.........

-. 1'-'· .err. 2..17:

. . . . .w-""
-121._
.

H~

""' 112;

31!

-

York'
O!Jcoe&gt; •
1J1et0
7, Atlanta 4
AnfM~·

•

8'7; G.'I'JiomM, Mltw•ukee, 82; LuziMid.

----

Olklll0o71.
HITS: ...,.,, 1!10; Qlopa",
MUwa\lleee, 1M; Harrah, Oevt&amp;an4 113:
YCI&amp;I'II, Mllwaullee. 141: MeRle, Kauu
Clly. 111.
OOUBUS: Whllo, Kaneu City. 31;
Yount, MUwtu)lft, 31; L)'M. C&amp;WorrU.
lt, McRM, Ka11N1 Ctty, 29; Colrmw.
Stattie, 2t.
TRIPlES: w.wu-, Kaneu Clly, ll:
Hl!mdon. DltrUt. U; Yould. MllwtuiDet.

...a~

t; Whltatar, Detroit, '7; Mwnphr)', New
York. '7: 8erftuard. OUcaF. '7: tntt.

AnaNt

Houll:on II C'tlcln.MIL !Dt

Only ..... _ , . ,

Transactions

AmerkMLelliH
DETROIT TIGERS-Remowd Riehle
Hebner, nrst bum1u, rrom the active
rOller and put hll contract up for Mle.

of

the

Mr. Inning
"C" scored
three
In the
third
making
it aruns
~2 game.
Big Bend scored two runs In their
half of the third inning. ~ big blow
was along tw&lt;H'III1 home run to deep
centerfield by Brian Decker.
Big Bend scored three runs In the
fifth Inning to go on top for the fint
time Hi. Matt Fisher got things star.
led with a single. J. R. Kitchen
followed fisher's single with Big
Bend's third homer' of the game.
Scott WUson had a RBI single ip this
Inning.
Mr. "C" plated two runs in the six-

KanouCity,7.
HOME RUNS; G .Thomt~, Mllw1uket,
29; Re.JIC.'bcll, CIJibTU. 2'7; Tbori'IOA.
a.v.lond, II; Harrah, CloYNncl. :16; Dr·

NEW YORK YANKEES-P'ilrchued tbe
contnct of L)'M McGlothen, pitcher,

Columbut

th Inning and held Big Bend
League AlJ.Stan made their debut scoreless In thdr half of the Inningin the Welllton 2+team Uttle sending the game into extra innings.
,League Tournament a success by
Big Bend won the game. In the
downing the Mr. "C" team from eil!)lth inning. Jeff Nelson led off the
Clarksburg, Ohio, 8-7, In extra In- inillng by drawing a walk and adnlngs.
vanclng' to .second on a wild pitch. J.
Mr. "C" took a 2-0 lead In the top R. Kitchen ·drew a walk and Brian
Ill the flnt Inning. Michael Bartrum • Decker laced a single down the right
made It a 2-1 game by hitting a home · . field line loading the bases. Scott
run for Big Bend. Big Bend tied the • Williams then broke up the game by
game at 2-21n the second Inning. J. hitting a sacriflcefiytodeepcenter.
R. Kitchen led off the Inning with a
Michael Bartrurn W8B the starting
single, stole ,second, and scored on pitcher for Big Bend and pitched six
Scott Wllliams' double.
innings. Bartrum aUowed eight hits

RBI: McRae. KalllU Qly, fl; 'lbom
ton. O.VMud. tl: Cooper, Mi»waulltt,

Phllldelph&amp;a at Montreal

DitF

WEllSTON -The Big Bend Little

waulcft, .321; Yount, N.Uw1ulaee. Jll.
RQNS: f t . - Oaklond. 13; MoiJ.
ur. Mltwa!Bft, •
twn.h. Ckrvelud,
M; Yount, MUWt\llft, 113; Evul, bton,
81.
.

Ollcqo at NI!W Yqrk, 2

Atlanta 11 San

1pprvldm,ltely

'""' Mllwl-. :N; CeC- Calllor-

lnternatioMI

nla,

Leque and lftlt Butch Hoblon. lnftelder,
to Columbut.
'
No&amp;loMIIA... e
ClNCJNNATI REDS-Plt~eed Eddie MllneyJ...outlleldu, on the dllabled lilt.
Nt.;W YORK METS-Reacttvated 1.. :-.

~-

S'IOLEN BASES: R.Hendenoft, Oak·
IMd. 107; Garda, Toronto, 3&amp;; J.Cna,
SeltUe. », Watban, KAnau City, ali
l.ffllln, OlkJ&amp;O, Z; w.City,

HaUiman, pitcher.

:15.

Roll Bltcldedp utlltant oftfftllve eoaeb.

Prt'CHING (14 Dl!cll.lorlll: VUkovich.
MUwauDe, 13-4, ,'Je. 1U; Bw1w.. QU..
CillO, 13-t, .. . 131; G\LI&amp;'y, New Ycrk. I
U&lt;, .733, 3.81;
Sealllo, »4, .71&lt;,
UJ: Zlhn. caua&gt;rn11. IU, .1118, 178;
......... Dl&lt;n&gt;ll. lU, .1167, 3.29: Giani, .....
111 City.~ Jlt, Ul: Barlor, 0...
lind. ll·7. m. 1.03.
S'I'RDCIX&gt;UTS: F .Binakter, S.attAe,
l«l; ....... Clowl•d. U4; Beoltlo,
SeatUt, 1l!t. ~. Nn- York, U1; Eck·

tbe retirement

....,., -

ea. ..................
.
-~

C.-

MONTREAL
CONCORDESS!pe4
'
Hotea FortuM", wldt receiver, for a h1·
d~ trial and plaee4 Ken Jotulaon., qu.ar-

terback, 011 tbe 10-day llljui'H rHerve
lilt.
No&amp;loiOIPHibiiiiA...e
PITTSBURGH
STEELERSNamed

SAN DIEGO CHARGER5-.Unoulftd
ot Jeff Sl.mora. ll•ebaek«.

tile eDd of tile daya' lair eveate. Willie It WI aol be eompetiJii IB rilday
eveDID8'~ truck pull, II Will be 1layillg 0111be lalrgnJandl fol'lbe eveat,
available lor illlpeeUoa by curl0111 lalrgoen. Bl&amp;foot aouvealn wm be
available as weU from tile truck, wblcb waa featured 1D tile movie "Take
Tbls Job and Shove It.-''

Big ·Ben~ All-Stars open play in Wellston meet .with ·8-7 win

v.,..

KalllU City, ..!11: Harnh. CloYNncl.
.ll2; Corda. .121; Coopor. Mil·

23

6, San Fnndlco 1

Houtton at Cmclnlllll
San FI'IIIIC.'llco at l..ol

feot
apeclall~idppelllnlek, wiD be eDibtled el tile Melp c-ty fi'F by
Bob Claudler al tile Mldwelt Foar Wlleel Drive Cater, IDe. Tbe lntck
will be 011 dllplay IN11•"••1 It I p.m. Jl'rldey ud Selllrdey, lullqliiiUI

8.\TnNG fZIO at bltl); W.Willtln,

l31Ai

St. 1.0011 at PlnllbuJ'Itl, 2

trom

111;

"llllfoot," u

AMDI&lt;AN~QE

Clndnnatl S. Howtcll 0

,1..1»

BIGFOOT AT FAIR -

v~f!IRaot., ~..-..,.

111.
STRD&lt;IXlUTS: Sot• Qndnnall. 19&lt;;
C.rtton. PbilaWphl&amp;. 188; R)'UL flout.

u~

PUtllb.!-rah 7, SL Loull C
Montrtal 3, Phi__,IU 2

S.n

Roten.

1C; D.Roi:UuoR,

... l64l, .IIQ. 183; ,.,._, PIID-,
11·'7, .611, 2.78; Fonctl, St.Lou... 11-'7,
.till, l.s:J; LoUar, s.n Dleao- 11 ·'7, .6U,

11
3
•

.... -1\1

• San Dlilo
• San Fran&lt;llco

:m,

Pltttbul'lh. 1U. .liM. :t,'lti; Cl.rlOil. PtiU.
.......... 1641. .ffl, 3.U; Wtlc~ Lao ,...,_

Pd. GB
.361 -

.5H
.53&lt;
.513

anctnn~u

Montreal, U·S,

UWJVII

W' L

Lo.SmJtll.

n o . PHllbluafl. 6;

a; Pull!, lkwcon.. I.
lllME RUN!&lt; Murplo&lt;, Allanla. II:
KlnlfTWI. New York. • Schmidt, Pltn.
delphll, Z; Hornrr, Att.nta, 23; Guer-

Statt)t at Detroit, (n 1
0Uc.,a II Tftu, In)

N~TION.U.

PI-

DIWICII, MollbH.I,

9..Loul&amp;,

(n)

CkYftud II~ 2
Kansu CH:)' at New York, 2
Blltlmcn at Boetoll. (nl

...

»;

27: Madlodt. Pltbbaf1h, 27: Ollvtr, Moft.
U.el, :16: J ........,_,
:16.
1RIPLD: Thoa. Houlton. 9; McGee.
Stl.G&amp;~. ~ Gam&lt;r, ,.,._ 1: T&lt;mp!01011. San oteoo. 7; J.R.ly, Ptllll&gt;llllh. ~

KaNal Cit), II Dltnit
BI.Jttrr.n M lklltcxl

Oewlan4 at 'feu~,

o...

tn!l~

5. Balttmc:n ~
Detroit Ul, Kanlu Ctty 1
Jb;fotl

'

caco, lJ.

,.,...,..a.,....·"'
Ill

Reagllll pitches
tax hike

NNI'IONAL a..&amp;AOll£

12\1

Ill

. . :•' &gt;

~ders

u

57
II

TonNIIO

ational

..

Nallo_, fttelllf ......,
ST.LOUIS Bl.UES-Sipedl..arry Patey
and Mtkt CromDHn. forwtrd• .
COLLEGE .. . .
LOUISIA.NA STATE- N11med Bob Ke arny U llttant anueuc director .

., n. ·--·~.,...
Mllwaukff
Boll on

g

BOCJIE\'

_
. .....

..........
.

August 15, 1982

f'Omcroy - MiddiCIIOrt- Gallipolis, Ohio-- Point Pleasant, W.Va .

Times - ~entinel

Page-C-8-.The Sundi!V

while striking out. 10 batters, and
walking one. Brian Decker was the
winning pitcher, pitching the last
two innings. Decker allowed one blt,
struck out one, and walked none.
Big Bend had 13 hits in the contest.
Scott Williams led all hitters with
three singles and a double plus blt·
tlng the ganie winning sacrifice fly.
Michael Bartrwn, J. R. Kitchen and
Brian Decker each had a Mmerun
and single. Matt Fisher had two
singles and Brian Tannehill ,lidded a
single.
The Big Bend Little Lea~ue .All·

Stars are compri8ed of boys from
Pomeroy, Middleport, Mason, New
Haven, Rutland, Syracuse, and
Harrisonville. The Big Bend AllStars placed second in the Belpre 1&amp;team lnvilational Uttle League tour·
nament. Tile local teBm's record In
tournament play is five wins and tWo
losses.
.
The next outing for the B g Bend at
Wellston )!las Saturday at I:30 p.m.
Big Bend played the winner of the
Rock Hill n and WeUston Blue
game.

r;;.;;.;;.;;.;;.;;.;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;••··-----;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~~i
Frenchto~n

Car Co. Presents.•••

.

'

The Sharpest·Cars Around
s·t op and .see The Best Used Can
·
lnTown'
·
· ·

By MAUREEN SA.NTJNI .'
A""C'eted Pr-. Wl'ler
WASHINGTON ~AP) - President Reagan Is
spending the weekend at his Marylal1&lt;1 J11()11Jltafntop
retreat where he'R continue his lobbying efforts for •
the $tl8.9 bWion tax Increase bUl by meeting with
congressmen and working on a major speech, aides
say.
·•
'
· The pl'l!llldent left the White House tor Camp
David, Md., on Friday after teUing fei!Orters at an
Impromptu pre'ss br1eflng that reports the biU Is the
biggest laiC lncreall!! In history were "plain.
hogwash."
Deputy press secretary Pete Roussel said about 15
co~men wei'e Invited to meet with Reagan at
~mp David on Sunday as the president tries to con·
vlnce them to approve the measure.hesays is vital for
Ids ecoliomlc recdvery proilram.
During the Past 10 days, Reagan has' met with
'
ne81'Jy :m.Republican
congressmen In lobbying sessions aimed at gaining·their "votes.
j'teagan's direct appeal ,to the uation to support the
tax 111ke wW take place from the Oval otftoe on Monday at 8 p.m. EDT. The speech wW be followed by a
television lidvertlslng blllz, featuring Reagan.
Thirty-second and 60-second television ads will be
shown In more than lOOcltlesaroundthecoun"try. The
ads, paid for by the RepubUcan National Committee,
wW run Tuesday .through Thursday.
.
A $100,ml radio ad campaign promoting the tax
Increase In more than 50 cities around the country
began Thursday.
In one of the television ads, taped this week In the
Old Executive otrloe BuDding, Reagan does not even

mention raising taxes. In the other, he makes only
Veiled references to Increased taxes.
In the JO.lii!COnd spot, Reagan says his economic
recover)- program Is working because Inflation and
Interest rates have come down.
"Now a very Important building block of that program needs to be put In place. That legislation Is
· before Congress now and yoU'c an help our economic
recovery by urging your congressman or woman to
support that bill," lie says.
In the minute-long ad, Reagan does mention taxes,
saying the biU wW "provide needed revenues and at
the same time allow us to cut spending even fUrther
as we seek to mave closer to a balanced budget. And It
plugs some costly leaks In our tax structure."
In his hastDy scheduled appearance In the White
· House brleftng room. Reagan denied that ' he had
threatened polftlcal retaliation against 8I!Y Republ~
can congressmen Who vote against the tax cut.
Tile pl'l!lljdent also called the measure ''!!().percent
taX reform" because It wUl plug loopholes andal Fed·
eratlon ovember ~. after the government lowered
Its discount rate for bank borrowing.
•
Other short-and long-term Interest rates followed
Fiiday after the Federal Reserve lowered the rate on
loans to banks and other financial Institutions to 10.5
percent, 'the lowest level In nearly two year~. It was
the third half·polnt reduction In less than a month.
"Based on the continued easing In the cost of money
to the bank, we believed It appropriate to lower the
prtme rate for our customers," said John R. Torell,
president of Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. of
New.York, the nation's fourth-cents to 2centsa gallon
In gasoline delivered to distributors and dealers.

.

PUSHES
TAX BilL - Pl'esldenl Ronald
Reagan spew to reporters In the press room at the
White HoUBe Friday coneemlng the tax bill be Is sup-

&lt;Candidates Brown, Celeste
ByROBERTE.MJil.ER
.4...,.,,...., Pr-. Writer
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) -This year's candidates
for Ohio governor didn't walt tor a Labor Day cam·
palgn kickoff, as many have done In the pasJ.
, In fact, as Democrat Richard F. Celeste and Re' pubUcan Clarence J. Brown crlss~rosse&lt;hthe state
•last weeK, they sounded as though the Nov. 2 election
'were this week.
! Brown lit IntO Celeste In Columbus In a speech
'before a busln~s group, asserting that the Democrat's election would be bad for busliless. "My oppo; nent wants to raise your taxes," he sBtd.
.
, The Urbafta newspaper publisher also mentioned
. tljat Celeste voted for. a legislative pay raise whUe a .
member of the Ohio House, linplylng that this was
l roof he Is not concerned about· government

spending.
Celeste appeared later In the .daY before the same
group, and then was asked by reporters to respond to
Brown, who has served In congress since 1.965. Refer·
ring to the Republlcan'slong tenure In congress, and
the sad state of the economy, Celeste said Brown may
be "more a part of the problem than the solution."
He brushed aside Brown's comments about taxes.
saying all he Is suggesting at this point Is that loopholes must be closed In Oblo's tax system, with the
results falling where they will on those now enjoying
such loopholes.
"I'm not trying to drive small business from the
state," he said.
CelQ!;te said he does not Intend tD try tD relate
Brown's position on the Issues to the voters "and I
presume he wW not try to speak for me."

•

crtss-cr~ss

The Democrat noted that .the candidates wlll have a
series of debates, beginning In Columbus on Sept. 8
before the Press Club of Ohio. "I'm looking forward
to those occasions, " Celeste said.
But later In the week, Brown jabbed at the former
lieutenant governor again about his stance on taxes.
He said Celeste has stated "on at least two occasiOns"
that If elected, he would raise revenues by Increasing
business taxes and boosting the Individual Income
tax.
Celeste accused Brown of "desperation campaign·
lng In Augu"st."
Despite the accusations and posturing, both candidates showed In their talks before the Ohio Small
Business Coalition that they wUI be talking about
some substantive Issues.
Celeste went Into detall about his plans for public

STATE FARM
1982 Open TenniS Tournament

. INSURANCE

®
This Special Edition hasT· Top, cruise control, tilt whee-l, audio booster. 301 turbo
engine, AM/FM/Cassette with Seek and Scan and many mon!options.
.

DOUILISHARP

.~

.

Entry Form
Please return with fees
All events must have mlnimun of eight (8) players or teams.
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CAROLL . &lt;ii&lt;nwni'N
417 Secolld Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.

Men's Intermediate I )

Pllone4*4290

Men's Singles I )

H-446-4511

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

Men's Doubles I ) Partner .. . . ...... .. ........ . .......... .
Women's Singles I )
women's DOIJbles I ) Partner . .. ... .

Sllll f ........... j:ool......

-

Mixed Doubles I ) Partner .. ....... ·. •...... .. ... , ...... . . .

Olli&lt;.. : _,...,, llhnoil

jut
. of lbe M111e11111 "Green Une" cr01sing. A
eeue-flre deelared 'Ibundey evelllng was holding
Friday Q negoUaUmia CODUuue lor a peaceful soluUon
to the crllls in LebeQclo. ( AP Wirephoto),
.

'JOHNSON &amp;)sON

at .monu·m ent

Rt. 1, Bulaville Gallipolis, OH.

·446 4741

•

'

We are com·plete home
remodeling contractors with
over 25 years eKperience.

'martlal ~w was imposed Dec. 13.
The hlu'd-llne army newspaper Zqlnlerz Wolll06CI
(Soldier ol F'reedoni) lashed out at ,Friday's violence
lq(J saJ,d the government "must be sure that whm It
1lfta m8rtlallaw It wW not have to reimpose It soon

llfterwardS...,,

I

' •'-· =r..
; :,~:_1'111!1111

~

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.

NO ONI'CA.N at WILL DO A,.,.• .,0.
·
OJ ftMO..ING YOUaii01AI

"""' .....

., ,YIL ..... ..,
-.

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•

ovn·44t SHARP LATI MODal IOCHOOSI FROM '.

.

.

· Cgr
· t:AA.
£:' _

. ... . . JoiiiiOII - ,..,.,

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.

Wltni!ilsell said pollee fired water cannon. tear gaslllld (Jares to disperse thousands ol demonstratorS
wboptberedfrldaylnlrootcltheCorrununlstParty ·
~ In Gdansk, the Baltic port city where SoHdar·

1HI HOT NIW CAMMO &amp;-II

'

By The Associated Press
The PLO rejected an Israeli demand for a list of
every Palestinian lighter to he evacuated from west
Beirut, but the Lebanese prime minister said U.S.
Presidential envoy PhUip C. Habib "now has suffl·
clent elements" to wrap up an agreement to end the
Israeli siege of Beirut.
Habib was scheduled to travel to Jerusalem today
following his meeting Friday with his two key Lebanese Intermediaries tD the PLO - President E!Jas
Sarkis and Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan.
A cease-fire arranged by President Reagan on
Thursday to halt Israel's heaviest-ever air attacks on
west Beirut was holding today as the search for vic·
tlms In the rubble of devastated buildings went Into .
the third day. Lebanese pollee said 13 new bodies
were found Friday, raising the death toll of Thurs.
day's ll·hour air attacks to 169.
Lebanese government sources said the Palestine
Liberation Organization also refused Israel's reported demand that It return an Israeli pilot captured
In the early days of the Lebanese Invasions and !he
bodies of ntne Israeli soldiers kllled tn a 1978 Israeli
sweep Into southern Lebanon.
The sources quoted PLOofficlals as saying the pllot
and the nine bodies would only be returned In ex·
change for an undisclosed number of PLO guerrillas
now In Israeli prisons.
Sarkis and Wazzan also rold Habib that Lebanon
'Insists that the evacuation ot PLO guerrillas take
place simultaneously with the arrival of a multlna·
tiona! peacekeeping force.

-Poles. plac~ bouquets

ALUMINUM .

..
If you need to finance any work we can do that and savt~ you enough .
· money to 'take some of the pain out of the Interest you'll pay. .

Ohio

utlllty law reform, In which he would end the auto- ,'
matlc pass through to consumers of certain costs :
borne by the utllltles.
•
He also would establish annual reviews and man· •
agement tests to see that the utllltles were not wast· :
lng the money which the law entitles them tD recover
from consumers.
"This Is the most volatlle area of public policy right :
now," he said.
:
Brown presented a plan that would establiSh a ie- :
search and technology division to help provide ven· •
ture capital to aid In the development of new :
products.
•
The congressman said that If he Is governor. he wm ;
set priorities for services and end those which are not
essential. With Ohio's budget so strained "we have to ·.
realize there are things that we cannot do," he said. .

PLO rejects
Israeli demand

IOf,

Sponsored By.
Syracuse Racquet Club
and Clark's Jewelry Store
There will be a 1982 Open Tennis Tournament Friday, Auo. 20
thrOIJgh Sunday, Aug. 22.
The deadline to enter Is Wednesday, Aug. 18, at 5 p.m.
Each singles player and dOIJbies team will furnish one can of
balls. The winners take the unused can and the losers take the used
can.
Entry fee for singles is S6; doubles S10 per leam. Make checks
payable to: Syracuse Park Fund. Mall to John Bentley, P.p. Box
188, Syracuse, OH 45779.

. I

porting and urging Congress to pass. Reagan feels tbat 1
the biU Is needed to cui "whopping federal deficits." ~
( AP Laserpholo) .

1&amp;40 Elltern.AII., Gallipolis
.
UIGO&amp;t ..

......

lty-bom.
.
Pollee alloused water cannononatiout1,500people
In Wll'llw and 2,mlln Krakow, and !here ~ere­
porta of uaret in the aouthern city ol Wroclaw.

· Pollee llllll!ubl!d volleys ot tear eas and nares and
po::aful blll'lltl of water as the crowd approached the

i1UV

amc..

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.,..,.. cJeovelopmellt, the Rev. Henryk Jan~1111. till Wlllla famlly priest, tllld The AllloclatEd
Pa-..lllat Wallsa ivuuld be JDi;lved to a new Intern'
~
!o IIIII Gdansk home after Aug.~.

eeater;-r

WARBAW - Riot plllce, r!Pt, .0.
weler .... I IQ Iii li pollee WD
Frldey • IIIey foafrllt erwd eltaDI!(II c 19 pl8ee
lloftn ID ·• J(enl 111J11PR II, Wailaw, ID pllllo &amp;Uen
rr- CJIS.'l'V ·mOIIItor ID New York. Ell wbere In
'l'ROliBJ,Il: ~
elODPide ,I

98DCt1

..

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Israel reportedly wants the multinational peacekeeping force to arrive after the departure of a substantial part of the guerrilla army, fearing the PLO
may use the InternatiOnal force as a shield for new
attacks on Israeli troops.
Israel has Increased to 13,ml Its estimate of the ·
armed Palestinians that must be evacualed, accord·
lng to Saeb Salam, Lebanon's Moslem elder states·
man. The Palestine Liberation Organization
previously listed Its Beirut forces at 7.100. but sources
close to the PLO provided new estimates Friday that
agreed with the Israeli total.
Israel did not .comment on the new figures, but
Ca blnet spokesman Dan Merldor said a list of all PLO ·
evacuees' names must be delivered before the eva· :
cuation can begin.
After losing a day In his negotia tlon effort Thursday
beachem Begin said Israel was withholding final approval because of reservations about the proposed
deployment of U.N. observers and a multinational
peacekeeping force . He said his government partlcu·
larly objected to major roles for the United Nations
and France because It considers them hostlle to Is- :
rae! and sympathetic to the PLO.
In a move that appeared to offer room for com.
promise, PLO spokesma,n Jamll Hila! said Israel was
now proposing that the regular Lebanese army be
deployed In Beirut In advance of the 2,o:xl French,
Italian and American peacekeepers.
The army, made up mostly of Christian ofllcefs
and Moslem enlisted men, disintegrated Into a large;
sources say most wlll go to Jordan, Syria, Iraq and ':

�...
is , Ohio- f'oint Plea

August 15, 1982 ,

W.V a .

Maso~ fair's top market lamb

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. POINT PLEASANT - Shoney's
Big Boy of Point Pleasant upped its
own record price paid for a steer at
. · the Mason County Fair livestock
· sale when it purchased Billy Crank's
' grand champion for $3.50 per pound.
The 1,140-pound baby beef brought
in a total of $4,092.60, compared to
last year's grand champion, which
• weighed In at 1,340 pounds and was
: purchased for $3,015 ($2.25 per
· · pound), also by Shoney's.
The previous record price paid
was $3.45 per pound.
The baby beef auction, the last of
: three Uvestock sales held at the fair
Friday night, was the object of
· some excitement when U.S. Senator
Robert Byrd (l).W.Va.) put in an
:appearance and country singer
Brenda Lee, who was the feature
·entertainer at the fair on Friday,
stopped by to start the sale. The
diminutive Mlaa Lee, coached by
auctioneers Lee Johnson and

'

Amherst Industries.
Tommy Joe Stewart, started the
The Crank brother are from
bidding at $3 and when several
Henderson.
minutes had passed without a
Another steer purchased by a
higher bid, she coaxed the audience
local
bank wu resold to benefit the
with a few bars of song and, "BIUy's
Mason
County Fair Queen Contest.
gettln' tired of walkin; come on... "
The
Mason
County Bank oC New
When auctioneer Lee Johnson •
Haven,
which
annuaUy sponsors the
took over, the bidding began in
fair
queen
p~~eant,
paid $1 per
earnest, with the price being raised
pound,
or
$1,1*1,
for
a
1(8).pound
to $3.50 before the gavel was
steer
OIVIIed
by
Shawn
Paugh of
slammed down.
Letart.
The
steer
was
then
resold
David Crank, brother to the
for
9'
1
cents
per
pound,
or
$1,047.«10,
grand champion seDer, sold his
to Hogg and Zuapan.
1200-pound reserve champion steer
Chairpersona ,for the baby beef
for $2.29 per pound, or $2,748, to
sale
were Jack Crank and Sharon
Citizens National Bank of Point
Newberry
and Anne Butler, both
Pleasant The bank then resold the
junior
leaders.
steer for $2.15 per pound, or $2,580,
Ringpersons for last night's
to four local businesses, with the
Uvestock
sale were J.E. Sommer,
proceeds to go toward the CNB Fair
G.C.
"Pete"
Sommer, Jack Crank
Scholarship fund. Buyers that
Sommer.
Pam SlmJ*ins
and
Ed
second time around were Johnson's
and
Bob
Baird
!lei'Ved
as clerb and
Supermarket, City Ice and Fuel,
McCuUoch
and
Rae MitcheU
Norma
Village Insurance and Point
were
in
ch8rge
of
financial
records.
Pleasant Marine, a division of

GALLuP, N.M.' (AP) -

GRAND CHAMPION LAMB - City Ice . . Pllel'l ~

.t

llollby VuMeter'•llf.p ..-1 grand cbamploil ...... Jamb marked th

opea1q of tbe 111! Mucnl Coullty Fair Uvestock sale Friday evealq.
City Iee aDd Fael Jllfd a ftC8rd $8.%1 per pouad, or • tetal of $181.11, ler

tile alllial. Pjdared wt111 Vadleter, from left Ill rlcbt. are Fair Qaeal
Aapla .Bartoll, VIWI Hartley, Art Hartley, bo6 repraentbll City lee
ud Fael, ud '1'nlee llarlley, son of Art and Juet llarlley. (Photo by
Judy Owen.)
•

PITTSBURGH (AP) _,;:A
tractor-trailer-loaded with $100;lm
worth of groceries overturned
alritlg a highway Dllerpass Saturday, spilling potatoes, melons, ~­
rtes and cartons Cl(eggs Into a ptirk
below.
~
Within.an hour after the accldellt,
guests at a nearby hotel, ~s­
by, drlflers and even cab drivers
were tramping through the veceta·
bles and fruit, stufftng undamaged

roy~.

'

' Along )Yith he~ " divorced and

I

rlne Division, served in a regimen·
tal communications unit untU he
was wounded at Salpan and returned to the United States, where
hi! spent more than a year in a.
hospital.
Gorman satd he Is px:oud ot the ,
code, but believes the Japanese .
"would lufve broken It easy" If they
had studied Navajo language
books.
Gorman said association
· ~mbers have i~tlfied about 300
code talkers, whUe the government
says about 400 were involved in the
project, which was classified untU
the late 1900s.
Lee cannon, a executive assl§t·
ant to the Navajo trtbal chairman,
said that mystecy still surrounds
their work, and trtbal otflcals occasionally are contacted by families
ot fonner code talkers who stiU refuse to talk about it.
"They won't talk about It," he
said. "So for years the families of
th~ men ... never knew what they
did."

food into bags and cardboard
bo~.,

tree

"It's'
food falling out ot the
skies," laughed Amy Rauch, 23, ot
subuiban Greentree, whUe she
crammed potatoes and onions into
larae Jl8iler bags. "Just aay It's our
civic duty." '
Miss Rauch and her sister,
Brenda, were driving by when they
spotte4 t1;1e groceries on the groond.
"The ~I'd heard my prayers. I

haven't been able to afford grocerIes since I just got done paying a lot
bills," Brenda Rauch said as she
collected unbroken eggs and ga·
thered bags of carrots.
By noon, however, the crowd had
sweUed to nearly 100 and pollee began ordering people away afteJ' sev·
era! tights broke out.
"As long as evecybody was acting decent, there was no problem.
But when they start acting Uke a

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER- Citizen&amp; National Bank of PoiDt Pleasant paid $2.29, or a total of $2,748,
for David Crank's ~UDd reserve champion steer dlD'Ing tile Mason CoUDty Fair livestock sale Friday night. ·
The &amp;leer was tben donated back for resale with proceeds going toward the CNB Fair Scholarship Fund. John·
son's Supermarket, PoiDt Pleasaat Marine (a division of Amherst Industries), City Ice aad Fuel aad Vllliage huurance boogbtthe steer on resale at $2.15 per pound, or $2,580. Pictured above, left to right, are R.G. Greene, ,
Charles Ryer, ,Bartow Jones, all representing Citizens National Bank, 1!182 Fair Queen Angela Barton, Charles
I.aaham, president of CNB, and Crank. (Photo by Judy Owen.)

·bunch ot animals we had to chase
them," said alate policeman Bert
Failor.

downtown Pittsburgh at 7: 30 a.m.
Saturday, Failor said. The truck,
car rying 29,000 pounds of food,

The refrigerated truck, driven by
John W. Churllk of Richfield, Ohio,
crossed the Fort Pitt Bridge in

,..•

PHONE 446-2342

•

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Or Write Tribune Classified Dept.
82S Third f\ve., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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!HM"Y. fl

-::

,~r, .

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

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rransoartatlen

MtFEbBRdlse

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l·Cord of Thanks (paid in •dvance)
2-Ci'rd of Thanks (paid in c:~dvt'nceJ
J·Announcements

Classified pages cover the

21 · Business Opportunit-y

52-CB, TV &amp; Radio Equ ipment

71 Au tos fo r Sn te
72 Truck s for Sal e

53 -Antiques
54-Misc . M erchand ise
55 -Build ing Supplies

74 Motorcyc l es
75 Boat s &amp; Motor s

51 -Household Goods

72-Money to Loan

23-Professioncll Services

.c-Giveawav

&amp;·Public Sale
&amp;Auction
&lt;i · Wante~ to Buy

76·Au to Parts &amp; A ccessor 1es
77 Auto Repair
78 Ca m pi ng EQUipment

56·Pets fo r Sa le
Jl ·Homestor Sole
32·Mobile Homes for Sal e
JJ. Farms tor Sale

following telephone exchanges.

73 vans&amp; 4 wo

57-Musc iallnstrumen ts
58 -Fruits &amp; Vegetabl es

C.a lll a Co unt y
Are,1 Code 614

· 59 -For Sale or Trade

35· Lots &amp; Acreage
36·Real Estate Wanted

Farm supplies

24S- Rio Grand e

ll ·Help·Wanted
J2.Situa'tlon wanted
13 -t nsurance

-;

Al -Houses for Rent

42·Mobile Homes tor Rent

U ·Business Training

15·Schools Instruction
16·R•dio, TV &amp;CB Repair
17 -Miscellaneous

18-Wanted To do

43 -Farmsfor Rent

44-Apartmenllor Rent
45·Furni$hed Rooms
46· Space for rent
(J.\o'\'anted to Rent
48-Equipmenllor Rent

8\ ·Home I mprovemenls
82 Plumbin g &amp; H ea tin g
83 Excava tin g
84 E lecri cal &amp; Ref riqer,1t ron
85 Ge n er~ l Haul ing
86 M .H . Repair
87 Uphol st er y

61 ·Farm Equipment
62 ·Want ed to buy
63 ·Livestock
64 ·Hay &amp; Grain
65·Seed &amp; Fer tilize r

1J p 1n
\ lJ

II

67S- Pt. Plei1sa nt
458- leon
S76- Appl e Grove
773- Mason
862- New Haven

Pomeroy
90S- Cheste r
341- Portland

247- Letart Fall s

256 - Guyan o 'ist.
643 - Arabia Oist .
379- Walnut

I ll"eSllfJII

Area Code 304

992- Middleport

388-V inton

ser. lees

Mason Co., w v

Meig s Colrnty
A r ea Code 614

446- Gallipoli s
167- Ch es hire

3.4 -Business Building s

•,

89S- l etart

949- Racin e
742- R utland
667- Coolvi ll e

I ~

V\111 r ( l '

I)

V'vu r (J•

937 - Buffalo

nou
.,, 00

Up to I S Wo rd s .. Six day

1nse rt ion .

.... S7.00

(A verage 4 w c;. r ds per line)

49· For Lease

RESERVE OIAMPloN LAMB- Pleuallt VaDey Roepltal pilrchaled Ryu 111ml~1 Ulopllllllll
market lamb fll' ...... or $711, dlrtiC tile fall' Uvetlloc!k allfiiGII Friday nlgllt' Pictured 11Mve, fnlm left te rflltt,
are 1Jt11e Mila . . _ c..ty.At.ee StrNr, llatqaner, Rellert Cuper, eJHDttve dreetar at PVR, Fair Qaeetl
Aqe1a sm., ud uttle Mflter MaNn C.Sty Crall ll'oremu .. (Photo by Juc)y &lt;&gt;-1.)

----,~--···-~
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GRAND CHAMPION HOG - Jimmy Watten. .. Apple Groft
purclwed Darrell Mayes' gralld cllllm,.,. Jllll'ket lilc fer •·• per
pound, or a tot.! oll,l!l for tile 201 p-d aalmal. Tile !lot wu ~MD
resold, with tbe proceeds colac back lo the Flllr, Ill IIIII s.Ies lw
or ~.50. Pictured above, left to right, are Maye1, Wattenoa ... Fair.
Queen Angela Barljln. (Photo by Judy Owen.)
·

•ue.

Is the royal marriage troubled~.
LONDON (AP) - Princess
Anne, only daughter of Queen Eli·
zabeth II,.turns 32 Sunday with the
British p~s debating whether
she's an adorllig wife and mother or
i. rude and jealol!s Womah whose
·.marriage Is In quuble.
· During the' past few months,
Fleet Street's tabloids have been
~ , bot and cold on ¥oe,
whole sharp toogue has made her
Qile,ot Brltaln'sll1Q8t·controversial

by telephone Thursday from his

•
•
•

7-Yard Sale (paid in advanct •)

$?44.

By EDrrR M. LEDERER
AatOCiated ~ Wrlier-

T he Sunday. Times· Sentinei- Page-0; 3

t

5·HappyAdS
6-Lostand Found

POINT PLEASANT - The 1982
. Mason County Fair Market Hog Sale
was one of the best the fair has ever
sel!n with all but one of the 46 hogs
going for $1 or better a pound. In
past years, the $1 price bas held only
.through the first 10 hogs.
Jimmy Watterson of Apple Grove
·paid $5 per pound, just 10 cents
short of the all-time record, for a
206-pound hog owned by Darren
Mayes of Ashton. The hog, which
brought Mayes a total of $1;025, was
resold.to H&amp;S Sales and Service for
•1.10 per pound, or $225.50, with
proceeds reverting bac. to the
Mason County Fair.
Dlon Stephens, Point Pleasant,
·sold the 240-pound reserve champion hog to Yauger Farm Supply of
Southside for $3.10 per pound, or

.

.,

w. va .

Crowd scrambles for spilled food

Watterson buys top market hog

• Three other hogs were plD'chased
and then resold to benefit non-profit
·organizations. Morris Memorial
HOBpital, Milton, purchased a 2flO..
pound hog from Eddie Meadows,
MUton, for $1.10 per pound, or $220,
and resold it to Boso Agri-Center,
GaUipolis, for $1.05 per pound, or
$210, with proceeds going to the
Mason County Farm Museum; The
Farm House of Milton paid U.25, or
$281.25, for a 225-pound hog owned
by Harcy Farris of Fraziers Bottom
and resold It to White-Berry Paint
Store, GalllpoUs, to benefit the
Hallfllln High School Future Far·
mers of America; and Bud Hatfield
bought a 220-pound hog from Bruce
Edmonds of Ashton for $1.10 per
[I!Jund, or $242, and resold it to
WUUamson Pallet, SouthSide, for 95
cents per pound, or $209, with
proceeds going to Bible Broadcast
in Lincoln, Nebraska. .

..

brew

''

Chairpersons ti the lamb ule
were Rodney Wallbrown and Llr1'1
Thomas, junior Ieeder.

~Jo

•

t!letr natlv~!.ianaUage to conbllld he volunteered for the Marines
Japan'smonltorlll&amp;riU.S. mllltarY shortly after the bombing of Pearl
communlcatlonsct~ringWor~~J,·War ff!u'bor.
•II are finally cettlng Amenca's
. Arter the Navajos completed
public praise and thanks.
·. ,
boot camp, they were told of tllelr
O!llclals fl'otll Arizona,
special duty. "We never realtl.ed
MexicO and tile Marine -cii'Ps that they were going to uae our ian·
planned a ceren\Ony here today to guage as a code," Gorman said.
honor the "code talkers," andalioUt ( PhUip Jobnson, the son ot mts70ctthe~to400Navajoswhotook slonarll!s who gx-ew upon thesprapart in the top-secret U.S. mUitary ' '\!~ling ' Navajo reservation that
operation were expected to attend. ,'jspreads from Arlzma · into New
Ia a July 28 pniclamatlon !Sesig· . !Mexico, Is credited ;.vtth proposing
natlng today Ill' .N~ttonal NaftJo · the pi'Op'lllll. But the Navajo MaCode Talkers Day, President ~- : rines .dld much of the work coding
gan sald their work helped "lf.liied , their laft&amp;uage, Gorman said
the Allied vlctocy" In the Pacific.
Sinat Navajo lacks words for
Twenty-nine N•vajo volunl*rs many mJIItary terms, he said, they
who served.will) Marine units ~r- . had to lise substitutes 1ft numbers,
lng the Pacific- campaign oitgl. letters and words.
naled the code talkers, anc:t the
The code talkers were assigned
number of partlclpaats eventually to MaiiDe divisions Parttclpatfng In
rose to the hundreds.
· the c~glls lor such Japaaese
Pac1flc Island bastions as Guadal·
Carl Gorman..73, oneot the~l­ .canal, Salpan, Iwo Jlma and
nal29 and past Pll!Sident ct. thii Na· Tarawa.
vajo Code Talker&amp; Association, lllld
Gonnan, assigned to the 2nd Ma-

Bidding dropped
sharply
foUowlng the auctioning off ol the
grand and reserve cllamplons, but
held at over $1.00 per pound
tlroughout the ale. Six ol the lt
lalilbe, not Including the grand and
reserve champions, went for $2 or
more per pound.

resale.

,':. ·

Indiims who Uled'ScodedveraiQRof · home Iii Window Rock, Ariz., that

The reserve champion lamb,
owned by Ryan Bumgarner ol
Letart, sold to Pleasant Valley
Hospital for $8,50 per pound, or $780
for the 120-pound lnimal.

Shoney's bests own record
price for championship steer

Pomeroy-Middleport- G&lt;~IIipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

•

VanMeter's grand champloa
lamb, which welched In at lOG
pounds, sold lor a total ol ta~M~.Zi.

One lamb W8l purehued and
resold to benefit the Jualor Division
of the MUon CQWIIy Fair. Sblnn'1
Massey-Ferguson piD'ebuell Dou1
VanMeter's 1»-pound lamb tor
.1.75 per pound, or $227.50, ind U..
reaold It to Jack Kauff lor $1.11 per
pound. The junior division of the
lair wiU receive $182 from the

''

Navaj~s p.-aised for war code

POINT PLEASANT - A new
record was set In the Mason County
Fair Market Lamb Sele Friday
evening when City lee and Fuel of
Point Pieuant purchased a 'lamb
owned by Bobby VanMeter of Letart
for $8.25 per pound. That price mora
than doubles the old record of P.•.
per pound, ~ling I~ b,Y$4.15.

:
GRAND CHAMPION STEER - Shoaey's Big Boy of PoiDt Pleuaat parelwed BOJy Crallt's 1148-poaDd
cr-d ebampioa steer at Friday night's Mason COUDty Fair Uvestoek ule for p.st a poad, or a total of $4,11!.10.
Plctored above, left to right, are Richard Early, vice prealdeat of Sboney's; eoaatry slager Breada Lee who
showed ap to starttbe steer ule; Jaalce Early, U.S. Seaator Robert Byrd (0-W.Va. ), aaotller falrvllltor Friday;
Dick Van Goady, manager of lite PoiDt Pleasaat Sboaey's, and Crallk. (Photo by Judy Owen.)

~

' A ugu~t 1s, 198i

goes to Ci.ty Ice .and Fuel .

.

·.....

equaUy controversial aunt, PiinPhiiUps was quoted ihe followlng
cess Margaret, 51,. Anne regularly dayinthetabloldDall,yStarassayflnlshesatthebottomofroyalpopufng the rnarrlaae Is tine but the
larlty poDs.
pressure of farm wclrk at their $l.7
!tumors of trouble in Anne's 9- mlllloo estate, Gatcombe ·Park,
year matrlage to Capt. Mark Phil· was keepiDI 111m at borne.
'
Ups, 3!1, surfaced last Septembe!'
Ia an ut1c1t '11lllrldal, lie COltand have been fueled by bel: 101o . -tive Dlllr Ella• travels during the !lBSt year to !lie''Sunw! n't .IW a~ llmlly,
pal, West Germany, the United
a bulb8Dcl
cbllthn sbe
. States and Canada. ,
pJalaJy llllora, sbe dlamlues loBefore Anne flew to canada last tally the tiiJIIOn tbat ..... aoymonth/ the 4.3 mWJon.clrculatim thin&amp; amlu With. bel' lllllrl'llp."
· News of the World aald In Ita lead, . Buckllllhlm ~ raulb!IY re-,
story: "Rumors· pers11t that the ' flall!l COIIIIIat Cll the prMte llva
marriage !.lin serklus lrol!ble."
cit memberi ot the royal family.

•two

~~-~

Public

PROBATE COURT
OFGALLIA
COUNTY, 0'1410
PUBLICATION t
OF NOTI E
,
Name, Case Number,
Date of He,ring, and Time
are listed:
·
1. Gladys M. McKean,
17,361), September 15, 1982,
tO:OOA.M.
_
2. Nathan Glenn, 16,901 .
September 15, 1982, 10:00
AM
·3. ·Wanda L. Eshenaul, '
17,159, September 15, 1~2,
} 0 ~00,f,;~aret A. Edwards,
17,169, September 15, 1982,
lO:OOA.M.
5. Esther Gertrude
Aitreri, 17:1981 september
15, 1982, 10.00 ,..M.'
6. · George Wallace ,
17,223, September 15, 1982,
!O:OOA.M. ·
7. Lottie Blazer, 17,23!t
1~~~mber· )5, 198~ , . lO:w
8. Vlol.et Teal. 17,2:40, Sep·
!ember 15,1982, !O:OOA.M.
9. Melvla L. Wai'd, 17,279,
September 15, 1982, 10:00
A.M.
10. Joseph Gregory
Swaim, 17,293, September
15, 1982, 10 :00 A.M ..
11 . F. Dale Allensworth,
17,326, September 15, 1982,
lO:OOA.M.
12. Adelbert 0 . Thomas,
17,334, September 15, 1982, .
lO:OOA.M.
•
13. Oscar C. D.Yer aka
· Oscar Oyer, 17,379. Seo·
• tember 15, 1982, 10:00 a.m.
, ·rHOMAS S. MOULTON
Probate J udOe
• Aug. 15
,.

1_ __ .. _Y~ ~ -s~e___

N~ll&lt;e .

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

~........:·:_
·

AnnouncelMIIII

SWEEPER

and · sewing

machine repair, parts. _and

6

callico

kittens .

haired . 614·992·7164.

Long

1
Card of Thanks
supplies.
Pick up and
-Tl)lt- !emily of May Van In· delivery, Dav is Vacuum 10 chi ckens to give away .
Clean!!r, one half mile up Mi xed variety . 614·949·2732.
~ wish to thank trien·
Georges Creek Rd. Call
ds;iand relatives who sent .:146-0294..
,_,.~ fl
~ other
10 chicken s to give away .
""'"'' owers, •·~
doniotion5 during illness FinallY Opening ·Capco. Mixed var iety . 614-949·2732.
arid-death of our loved 'one. Antiques, collectables,
Spf[lal thanks to Dr. used furniture &amp; ap·
VIllanueva, Veterans
C :=_ _i:O$t_a'!_d}~'!.n~:::.=
Memorial Hosp., Pomeroy pliances. Something for Male Boxer dog on Rt. 554
Health care Cnlr., Ewings everyone. 9:JO a.m .·4:30
F9_al home. Rev. Alan p.m. Mon., Wed., Fri. area . Answers to Count .
times by ap- Ph . 367·7553.
Blackwood.
Bradbury Other
pointment.
Buy· Sell· Trade.
nefi!hbors and Linda and 527 Fifth St.,
Ivan Powell FOUND :
Peek·A· Poo.
)~ . The :hlldren.
Res .. Racine, Oh. 614·949· Rock Springs Area . White
.:,·.:.,
' ,_·-·.~~---with black spots, also 6
I wish to thank all of my 248.5.
months old dog, brown with
frltrlds and neighbOrs tor
black face. Aller 6 p.m. 614·
PERMANENT
their kindness ind thought·
992·5225.
HAIR REMOVAL
fullness shown me during Professional
m.v sorrow. Edda ~ - Thom· Center. A.M.A.Electrolysis
approved, LOST : Billfold, tan . 6 miles
.1)1011.
Doctor referals, by ap· north ot Pomeroy, South·
pointment only. 304·675· boun~ lane on Rt . 33. If
Tile family of May Van In-' 62~.
found please mai l to 1972
W1111M! 'IIISh to thank trlen·
Erwin Rd., Port 51. Lucie,
d.,., ~d relallves who sent
Fla. 33452. Keep money,
tOCIII, flowers. and other
send contents.
dollltions during 'illness 4~_ _:G~I~ve~a~w'-'a,_,y_ _
and·death of our lovfll olle.
PERSON who l:las
S~lal thanks to Dr. 1; ••wll&gt;lno to give away and LOST ·Diamond ring, in
Vit)anueva, yeterans
offer or attemptto vicinity of Fruth Phar·
~orlal Hosp .. l'omerov
other thing for macy . Reward. Call 304·
Health-Care Cntr.,' J:wlngs
place an ad in this 675·1074 after 1:00. Will
FU.rat home, Rev. Alan
. There wi 11 be no identify.
Blackwood,
Bradbury
to the advertiser.
nelghbor.s and Linda arid
1 ---~v~a~r~d~Sa~l~e____
Jerry. The Children.
·
7 y~ar old spayed female,
medium size dog. Call «6· Porc'h Sale· Tues. and Wed.
I ttlsh to thank all of n\y 0839.
'17th and 18th.- Clothing,
frllftds and nelgllbors tor
glassware, books. Mila
thllf kindness arid lllougllf.
Davidson, Lincoln Hill·
Set
of
full
size
bed
spr(ngs.
f""""' shoWn 1M during
High St, _.:.
my-row. Ei'dda J. Thom· Call-.·1738.
•Pitf'l•
•'
•I
•
Porch Sale· Tues . and W~ .
1 dOll female part Collie 11th
and lith. Clothing,
Nrf G«man Shephard, 9
glassware,
books: Mila
11'101. Cltd, exc. disposition.
Davidson, Lincoln Hill·
Caii:W6-U76 after 5.
!iigh St.
.,
2 billy kittens. Call «6· Aug . 14th, 1 mile out
4243.
Bulaville Rd. ' Household
items, fis~ln(l equipment,
1 01c1 tnglllh Sheeo dOg, 2 clothes, tools.
NrfGil'l'llln Shej&gt;ard. Call

--

__

...Ill',

S

~..:.._

HappyAds
HAPPY
30TH
BIRTHDAY .
KATI:tY
CHlSLER

_

11

Yard Sa leS mi . down Rt . 7,
Eureka. 9·5, Aug . 1110 18th.
TV 's, beds, cloth es, couc h,
et c .

House M anager needed by
a n•.si~ent ia l ca r e facil~ty
serv 1c1ng mentally retar . ~~~T£1~61111 ded ad ults with behavior
Lt
problems . 3 ye a rs of
pre viou s
r el a ted
e'X ·
perience r equired . Ap plicant s must have deflnitf;"!
leadership ability, working
knowledge of popuHUion
being served and a high

August 16th, Monday . 9. to
4. Jean, clothes, household,
hal l tree, maga1ine ra ck. &amp;

mi sc. Corner of Th ird and
Oli ve St. Ga llipolis, Oh .

energy lev el. Sala ry $15.000

Garage Sale Rock L.i ck Rd.

off 218. Monday &amp; Tuesday,
9 to 8. Clothing, used fur-

per year wit h on q111
r esponsi bility . Mostly af·
ternoon and evening wo'*.
M edi cal and dental In:
s urance is avai lable. If ln·
t er es ted se nd resume to :
Ohio Residential · Se rvi c~s

niture &amp; antiques.
Larg~

4 family Yard Sal e

Tuesday Only , Aug . 17.
Lower Garfield Ext. Extra
nic e clothes. Color ed
g1assware, nick -nac ks,
some too ls, lots of baby
c lothes like new. Rain can·

In c.. P.O. Box
Ga ll ipol is, Oh 45631.

9~6.

eels li I Wednesday, 18th .

a -··· - 'Pilbiic-sate --&amp;Auction

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

11 ___ I:!_':!,P Wan'.l!_d-=-::

AuCtion every Fri. night at

the Hartford community
Center . Truckloads ·Of new
mer"chandise every week.
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome .
Richard

We pay cas h for l ate mode l
clean used cars.
FrenchtOwn Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

446·0069

Gold , s'i lver . sterling ,
jewelry, ri ngs , old coi ns &amp;
currency. E:d Burkett Bar·

Reynolds Auctioneer. 275·
3069.
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476.

- - -- Selling out furniture store

on 3rd . st . in Racine, Ohio.
Everything must go. If you
need furniture see us!!!

OLD FURNITURE, beds,
iron, brass, or wood . Kit·

chen tubbards ot all types.
l:ables, round or square.
· -· -- c - - Wood ice boxes. Old ~s~s
Selllng out furniture store and bookcases. Will buy
on 3rd. st. in Racine, Ohio. complel~&gt; household. Gold,
Everything mus.tgo. If you sliver. old money, P&lt;&gt;&lt;;ket
Bradford Auction Co.

·

need furniture see us! !I

Bradford AucliQn C?.

9
W!nted To Eiuy
Buying Gold, Silver.

watches, chains, rings,

and

etc. Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby . Marlin 992·
6370 .

Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily

.BEOS·IRON, BRASS, old
furniture. gold. .sliver

quotes ~vallable. At~o
coins &amp; coin supplies for
·sale. Sprinq Valley Trading
Co., Spring Valley ' Plaza,
AA6,802S or «6·8026 . •

dollars, wood ice boxes,

s.tone· jars, -antiques, etc. ,
Compl~le
households.
Write ~ M.O. Miller, Rt. 4,
P~meroy, Oh. Or 992· 77~ .

AVO N Nee d extra money ?

POSITION AVA ILAB LE Se t yo ur own hours. Se11
July 29, 1982. Substitute Avon . (Mus t be 1a'or ove d .
school bus driver f or Ca ll now 614 698·7Hl
Guiding Hand School. Must co ll ec t
pass physica l eKamination
and hold current bus driver
I icense for school bu s

operator. ·salary will be
$3.35 per hour . Available

imm ediately . Appli cati on
cari be obtained from Mr .

WA ITRE SS, ma ods. bar·
tenders &amp; c lerks wanted.
Write qualification &amp; phoAe
number to : Job Placemem,

P.0 . Box 102, H e nd e rso~ .
Ratliff, P.O. Box 14, wv
25t06.
Cheshire, Oh 45620, 614·367 ·
0102.
POSIT ION AVAILABL E Experien ced c h ef tOr
July 29, , 1962. Substitute rest aurant . Please send
D~vi(l

--

teacher for Guiding Hand

resum e to Box, P.6 in care
of Pt. Pleasant Register

teaching certicate from the

200 Main St. Poi"t
Pleasa nt, WV . 25550.

School. Must t\ave valid

Department of Education .
Salary will be $35 per
Available

immedi

Appl ication can be
ta ined

from

Mr .

David

DEPEN[/ABLE

Babysli-

ter needed in my horne, day

Ratl iff, P.O. Box 14,
Chesh ire, Oh 45620, 614-367·
0102.

shift. call between 4 anq 10
p.m.. 304-675·5628.
,
·-· --~ ·-- - ····

Men &amp; women. part or full
time . Recruit coal sales
trainees. Help organize

A '{ON

-··

representat i ves

needed for Cra.b Creek Rd.
Redmond Ridge, cOUCtii
·seminar. No exp. nee. 7036 area, Mollstone Rd ·alld
Maynardvillf Pike, Knox- Pliny area. Call colf~t i·
ville, TN, 992' 7265.. ·
304· f1 ·690p.

.... ______

";"""'

____

t

�)

·Pomeroy- M tddleport- Ga II
Sttuat1ons Wi!!~~d

12

------Busmess

area

R efe renc es
ava Iable 614 992 6349

Room and board and car e
for elderly or hand capped

persons 614 992 6022
Room and board and care
for elder l y or hand ca pped
persons 614 992 6022

1)
Insurance
SANDY AND BE AVER In
surance Co has offered
serv ces tor fl e nsura nce
&lt;overa ge n Ga ll a County
for almost a century
Farm home and per sona
property coverages are
ava l abl e to meet
n
d v dual needs Contact
Ka I Burl es on
agen t

Phone 446 292 1

They'll Do It Every T1me

31

W II do babysl tt ng n my
home
ve n M ddleport

Opportunity

Its Ohto-Potnt Pleasant W Va
44

For sale by Church House
on c6rner of Filth ~ nd Ma n
Sis 1n Racine Oh To be
torn down or moved For
more Information call 614
949 2702 after 5 p m or 614
949 2122

44

4 room unfurniShed apt all
carpeted
ultlll es paid
adults only no pels Call
446 3437

M NIATUR E
GOLF
CO URSI?S
Professional
bu lders
Outdoors
n
doors F nanclng $4 900 up
MINI GOLF 202 Brdge
St Jessup PA 18434 717 House tor sa le Reedsville
OhiO $23 000 Good tn
489 8623
vestm ent property 614 423
9514
22
Mon~~ Loan _
REF IN ANCE or purchase Modern 3 bedroom total
your home 30 year f xed elec tr c home w th uttllty
rate WVa 8. Oh o Leader room and one car oarage
s tuated on a large lot Low
Mortgage 77 E State St
nteresl poSSi ble through
Athens Dh 614 592 3051
owner $35 000 742 2047
23

lS, 1982

Elf ency apartments 1st
floor Call 446 0957 729 2hd
Ave Gallipolis
lsi floor furniShed apart
menI adults preferred ref
&amp; dep required Call 631
4th Ave Galltpolls
HUD available 2 bdr
deluxe kitchen furniShed
good location ullliltes par
tially paid 5 rm house for
rent Residential and com
mere at properttes for sate
or lease
A One Real
Estates
Carol Yeager
Realtor Call304 675 5104or
675 5386

Professional

HOU SE Meadowbrool&lt; Ad
d 1 on 3 bedrooms family
C8. L Bookkeeptng
room w tn firepalce cen
B9okkeep1ng &amp; tax serv ce tral air basement phone
for all types of businesses
304 675 1542
Ca rol Neal
446 3862
Servtces

Qn f orms pucnmg and
k ck ng bags and protec
t ve equ pment
J erry
Lowery

Assoc1ates

&amp;

~arate

Studto

143

Burl ngton Rd

Jackson
Oh Ca ll 614 286 3074

An y k nd of art Pa nt ngs
posters s gns wall mura s

Reasonable r at es Contact
Roger Walker 123 Un on
Ave

Pomeroy Oh Phone

614 992 3990
18

In ground concrete pool on

2 acre tot Also has a 3 bdr
a r cond !toned house w tn
full basement
2 WB
f replaces

Would

new

carpet

consider

lower

valued property n trade or
w II f nance w1th I~ down
paymen t and 10% nterest

MODERN 3 bedroom
house Patr ot Star Rt
Gree n
School
Fu l l
basement Call446 30AO

b.awn M ow ng no yard to
b Q or sma I Rei able and
dependab e For es t mate

er 6PM 256

Tr ash coll ec t on &amp; haul ng
Ca ll 446 4480
~a nt ng

nter or ex ter or
&amp; r oof s F ree est mates by
contract on y Ca ll 614 256

1945

room

dm ng room

fully

carpeted Assumable loan
low down payment Call af
ter 5 446 1323
Pr ced redu ced 3 bdr
house 106 2nd Ave
Gall po t s 1 112 baths
mod er n
k tchen
ba semen t
extra

full
lot

3 bedroom fenced yard
walktng distance to
schools shopp ng hospital
netghborhood 7 pet
assumable loan 304 675
4173
3 bdr home full basemen!
for sa le or rent

3 Bedroom home tn Cen

tenarv

n

my

home days only Geor ges

Creek area Prefer 3 yr old
or over c h ld References

Ca l 446 7668

w 1 do house clean ng n
Gat pol s area Ca I before
; p m S3 50 per hr 446 3103

Many

extras

Reduced to $39 500 Ph 446
3897
Pomeroy

N 1ce

locat1on

Carpeted
vmyl Si d ng
I replace Priced to sell
S22 500 614 992 7446
3 bd room
house
1n
Pomeroy NIce locat1on
All carpeted v nyl stdtng
and ftre place Prtced to
sell aiS22 500 614 992 7446

ltreptace walk tn closets
large porch carpeted Cal l
446 4826
GOTTA SEE IT to believe
all lhts and prtce to sell 4
bdr
Colonial
on
large
Hedgewood Dr
country kitchen
living
room dm ng room formal
en tranc e 2 car garage full
basement famtly room 2

wood burning F P
more Call 446 7802

lots

WI LL na ng &amp; f nn sn dry
wall free est mates 30-4
273 288 1

ntee lurniture patio b\Jtl t
on uhl ty room S8 500 614
992 2684 or 614 992 2717
1973 14K70 Grandvtlle has
large rooms plus laundry
room must be moved 30"
882 2820
USED MOBILE
576 2711

HOME

Mobile Homes
for Sale

--

--

TRISTATE MOBILE
HOMES USEb MOBILE
HOMES CARS TRUCKS
GALLI POLIS
CHECK
OUR PRICES CA LL 446
7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES
4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOL S RT
35 PHONE 446 3868

~ --~F~a~r~m~s~fo
~r~S~a~l~e___

1-42 acre farm near R10
Grande house bu ldmgs
m neral

rights

W1th

Attract ve 4 bdr home 1n

ctly full basement famtly
room d nmg •oom fully
carpeted S325 per mo Call
alter 5 446 1323
3 bdr coun(ry home wtlh
fi replace wood stove '"
City school diSirtct S200
plus depos t Call 614 256
9363

PUBLIC AUCTION

25 acres fenced 1980 Wm
dsor mobile nome neat
pump 3 bdr 1260 lb tob
base
Mudsock
area
S26 900 Call446 0844

SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1982
1:00PM
The personal property of Edwm Baker will be sold on

Rt 141 between Cadmus and Waterloo Ohto Gotng
toward Waterloo f1rst road to the left after Mudsock
Road Watch for s1gns

ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS
Drop leaf tabl e v ctrola chest (perfect condlt on)
curved front dresser (perfect cond tlon ) old t me V!c
tor wood and coa l stove {real n ce) small wooden

chest wood wardrobe g ass nand churn stone 1ar ap

pie butter st ~rr e r old lanterns rug beater cast ron
kett e two lamps two upnght c hests

HOUSEHOLD
Electnc dryer metal cab1nets table and 4 chars

ut I ly fabl e fuel o I stove and 275 gal o I tank k tchen
toaster

m xer

sweeper

elec fn c stove

Maytag wr nger washer
MISCELLANEOUS AND OTHER
1970 Chevy mpa a ca r rotollll er New Home! te XL
c ham saw M cCu llough cha 1n saw 510 cham saw Mur

phy Marl self propelled lawn mower (used 1 hour )
new L awn Soy pu sh mower wheel barrow posthole
d1gger w re stretchers gr nder and bench gr nder lof

of electr c motors coa l forks 3 double B ta xe appl 1
ton of coal 2 r cks of wood electr c sktll sa w 3-5 gal
gas cans new socket sets wrench sel s p ne wrenches
3 and 4 nch v ses 2- 15 nch I res on Chevy rtms I- lot
ofusedltres block&amp;tacktewtnnewlOOit ofrope
Other 1tems too numerous to menhon

AUCTIONEER - LONNIE NEAL
614 367 7101
Cash

~

Posthve I 0
Not respons1ble for acc1dents

14x65 1981 Ventura 2 bdr
ex cond $13 000 Call 446
4719 or 614 256 6265
MOBIL\o.. t-&lt;DMES MOVED
L cens~~ nsured Call
304 576 2711
1973 imper al 12x65 car
peted throughout
2
bedrooms 2 baths $5500
404 Locust 51 Henderson

Lots &amp; Acreage

- -=-=====---

112 acre lot on Mt!Chell Rd
rural water c ty school
n ce for but ldlng or trailer
Call446 3933

2 acres Panoram ic top of
the h II v ew of Btg Bend of
Ohio Rlver in Pomeroy
Ult ltltes new 2 car garage
Extras Will cons1der land
contract 614 992 62S•
Two acre lots 150 It road
frontag e
city water
behmd 84 Lumber Call304
675 6873 or 675 3618

1974 Cameron mobile home
14x70 3 bedroom one and
on!!' half baths 3 ton cen
Ira! a r cond 8x15 porch
completely underpenned
10x10
butldtng
Sll 000 Shown by ap
polntment 304 773 5143
1978 14x70 BELLEGLADE
trailer for sale low energy
modular trail e r
3
bedroom 2 baths k1tchen
&amp; living room hOUSehold
appliances washer dryer
d shwasher self defrosttng
r efr igerator stove cen

und 000 Call
Price $13r
~~~~~~C~o~ff~e~e~a~nd:±P:'e:S:e:r:ved======~~ 304
tralized
a r underpennmg
458 1760 I nqu re &amp; can

Special ~
ii~ Antique Auction ~~,(,_
-~

~

'(

~

,~

~ JACKSON AUCTION HOUSE ~
1 Mtle East of Rt 788
Nexllo Dan,.ls Truckmg Co

SATURDAY, AUGUST 21 AT 10 A.M.
Bea ut lui htgh back oak beds many tron beds 30
N T spool cab nets 1--6 drawer walnut spool
cabtnets 5 old ltme wall telephones 3 old time
woOden ~~boxes oak slag glass cabinet wall cupboards other cupboards 4 choiCe oak tables (round
and square) very chOice (oval gla~s) secretary
many serpent ne dressers b g oak organ cho1ce

side board 3 very ntce P e safes many oak stands
oak rockers wr t ng desk 4 old time washstands
cherry barber cab net 16 old wtcker baskets many
old rare clocks S roll top desk press back chatrs
2- 6 h It tall hall trees lone 1S approx 4 It wldj!)
sewjng rockers oval and square trunks Pr1mltlve
cupboards 4 prlmtltve tool boxes wtlh tools 16

galion stone 1ar htghly decorated ( Pemeroy Ohio)
25 stone tars 10 w cker pteces 6 old lime daiSy
chur'lls 2 wooden churns (very old) gnnd stone old
nand toots wooden planes broad axes old rolltng
p ns wooden hobby horse several tin toys 3 car
b de lamps wl clotn hats and old flasks butter
molds old dated 1ars Iron beds wtlh brass cast
tron tea kettle sad rons copper botlers old bells
apple buller kellles old scales dated back to 1867
brass kettles (small and large) tron cotn bank old
time snell bank brass wash boards Old knives ice
tongs lard press sa~sage mill ChoiCe elder press
R R lantern 10 guns collections Items picture
frames 2 leaded glass doors pitcher and bowl set
(very old) 7 II oak mantel wlbeveled mtrror vic
trola w th records antique traps approx 200 pieces
o1 old glassware much old advertisement 12 lam
ps w w II Items 2 oak stde-by side secretaries, 3
Htgh boy chest wlbeveled mtrrors.
we ve been commissioned to sell thiS collection
from 4 estates
~
Lunch w•ll be served
~
COLEMAN BELLAMY
~·
Phone614 2U.2200-61HN 3065 ....
&lt;"
AUCIIOnHr JOhn NOtter...~V'

..,J'

.ft1-J'

«

be seen at next to Bapt st
cnurcn Leon
TWO bedroom
home

Also

...,
mob le

e lec t r~c

'"eplace cau 304 67518-45
12x6S MARLETTE in New

~,:v:.:ih.w:'..o~ abde:;~~s2

51
Effectency Apt One person
only uttlllles and cable
paid Ground floor wtlh two
porches 614 992 5738

Mob1le Homes

42

home needing restorat on
or one already restored M

Evans Call446 2800

Rentals

------

large

llv ng

OFFICE
446-7013

INTEREST
FREE
LOAN Owner will
finance with down
payment at NO tnterest
or sell on Land Contract Good 1'12 story
home located at 2129
Chestnut 51 Gallipolis
Call for details
N1021
OWNERS DESPERAT
E TO SEI;l - May be
purchased for S5 000 or
SlO 000 down payment
or land contract Very
lovely
ranch
3
bedrooms flrepl"e l'h
car garage large lot no
reasonable
ofler
refused
Nella Smith Assoc
311-1649

r

Bob frlftCI ASSOC 1
444-1162
f
John
Reattor4

a

You 11 love thiS 14 acre
farm n toe country wllh a
pond and small barn ThiS 2

Small home near Gall ipolis
wtth garden space for one
prson only Msg number
256 6200 after 9 p m

2 bedroom trailer Real
niCe adults only Browns
Tra ler Park M1nersv1lle

614 992 3324

Large home s tuated on a

Goortt s llobstotlll ,,
llolll
PHONE 7C2 2003

COTTAGE - Approx
2 1• acres Wtlh 3
bedroom cottage A real
peaceful country at
mosphere
3 out
butldtngs apple trees
and grapes Located on
Zuspan Hollow Rd
ASking$15 000 00
ST ROUTE 143 - 3
bedroom

Barnngton

nome Famtly room
Extra
wlwoodburner
niCe kitchen has double
ovens and Island range
Situated on 1 88 acres
Sells for S36 900 00
ACREAGE - Approx
15acres juslolfSI Rl 7
Dug well and Cistern
Older 6 room home
AsklngllO 000 00
SOLID - This 2 story
hOme on St Roull! 124 Is
special 4 bedrooms 2
enclosed porches and 1
bath Located lust off Sl
Route 7 on approx 1/•
acres M nor repairs
could make this a real
show place
Only
125 000 00
Cheryl Lemley, AIIOC
Phone 742-3171
Vilma Nlclnsky Assoc
Phone 742-:1092

For Sale Used Furniture
sola and 3 chairs 256 6265
AIR conditioner
8 000
BTU $125 304 615 5684
USED 2 ptece living room
suite S50 304 576 2213

Jill~~

Maytag wr nger wasner
$100 WhtriP9QI automatiC
washer$85 614 742 2352

-------

RATLIFF S POOL CEN
TER Pools sale supplies &amp;
tnstallalton 403 2nd Ave
Gall polls On Call 446
6579
In ground Ablove
ground

10
Radial Alarm saw
Craftsman Wood lathe
Craftsman 304 576 2644

ADDITIONAL DISCOUN
Tl
LIMITED TIME
ONLY' THE BIG NEW
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN
CLUDE DECK FENCE
FILTER &amp; WARRANTY
ARE NOW AVAILABLE
FOR ONLY $999
IN
STALLATION &amp; FINAN
CING AVAILABLE FIR
ST COME FIRST SERVE
CALL 1 Sll0-62_. 8511 (Ohio)
1 800 642 3053 (WV)
Maytag automat1c washer
$95 GE dryer S90 Both
real n1ce &amp; guaranteed
Call446 8181

- - ===

Used above the ground
swtmmlng pool
24 It
round S75 Call 446 0373

S4 ~..!SE. Meo:!=handic_!_
Wood burntng add on fur
nance Sttll in factory
crate $450 Call 1 614 256
1216

REPOSSESSED SIGN' NO
DOWN PAYMENT! Take
over payments of S59 SO per
month 4 .s flashing arrow
Sign Complete w th new
bulbs &amp; letters Cutlilf
signs Toil free 1 800 551
3070 Ask about RE PO

REPOSSESSED SIGN 111
Nothing down 1 Take over
payments S58 50 monthly 4
x 8 flashmg arrow s1gn
New bulbs tellers Hale
Stgns 1 800 227 1617 Ext
667

'

Reol Estate - General

CENTRAL REALTY
NEW LISTING - Located m Syracuse ThiS home
has an extra large lot and 5 posstble bedrooms The
11\cludtng

dtshwasher

Ask ng

for Rent

3 TRAILERS - Can be used as add ons small
business or construclton office 2 trailers (askt~9
$4501) &amp; $5500) are 10x50 wltl13 rooms each Furnace
&amp; central atr One has 1h bath &amp; hot water healer
The thtrd IS 10x35 (asktng $3500) wtlh 2 rooms fur
nace central a1r v, bath &amp; hot water heater
HOME on approx 2 acres Basham &amp; Eagle R dge
Needs handyman Asktng S25 000
3 FLAT ACRES - In Racme Ohto Owner w II help
ftnance Askmg $16 500

FurniShed 4 rooms &amp; bath
clean no pets adults only
dep r eq Call A46 1519
Small furn shed house for 1
or 2 adults only Call 446
0338

RHI Eotote - Generof

1.=0:,:8:R:IE:N:=
"R:OW=~
"11
REALTY

WE A

W NT TO LIST
HOME

YOU~

446-3021

LARIAT DRIVE - OWNER FINAN
CING AVAILABLE - Lovely 3 BR I
story 15x21 LR formal dlnmg full
basement wllh 14x27 family rm
hniShed tn knotty pme 2 I replaces 42
II rear screened '" porch garage and
100x300 lot Can be bough! Wtlh or
w thout furntture Asktng $59 500 w tn
25% down and 12% on the balance
PRICE REDUCED TO S69 5001 BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST Over
2100 sq 11 of I vmg area Thts all br ck
rancher oilers J.SR s I master s 16x22)
3 baths 14•24 LR w lh fireplace 1Jx25
famtly rm formal d ning rm galley
kitchen mcludes double ovens corntng
type counter top range OW &amp; dlsp gas
heat cent atr attiC fan &amp; much more
Located tn town on Spruce St Ex
tens1on Call Ranny Blackburn for a
personal showmg

RIO GRANDE - corner tot zoned
commerctal
140x156 ali utI tiles
avatlable
Ready for your new

437Yz-2nd
Galhpohs

IStnen Holmes, Assoc
388-9762

busmess

OWNER WILL FINANCE - Great
tamtly home Wtlh 3 Brs 2 baths 15x27
L R wtth gas ftreplace large modern
k1tchen w1th range self tleanmg oven

RNI Eltllte - Generol

Phone
1 (614) 992-3325
RANCH - In the coun
try 42x28 house of 7
rooms l'h baths heat
for cooling or
" ' · .:c- full basement
and

landscaped lot
Ask:Ing $49 900
Fl -On good
road In the coun

School and mail
rp&lt;ne:s. 3 bedrooms oak
large modern ktl
and modern
Natural gas fur
nace with neal bill only
$17 50 a month by lease
Jusl$46 000
OWNER FINANCING
- Carpj!led 6 room all
home

ow and dtsp laundry with washer an
dryer part basement and over 6 acres
of land at the edge of town
GENTLEMAN S FARM - 33 acres mil
on State Route 160 near North Gallia
High School Mostly clean rolling
grassland stock pond 3 BR r ancn type
home w th full basement good barn
out of town owners says SELL

VIRGIL B SR
216 E 2nd Sl

elec

equipped

Form1ca

bath modern ktlchen
large porch and patio
w11h vtew of river and
out of all floods Only
$32 500
FfN19H THIS ONE And save thousands
New chimney for your
wood burner
bath
rural water and over
one atre near Mtd
dleport Asking S23 500
for a quick sal~
COUN'I'RY ACRE Water and electric
available
Rutland
Township $1 000 down
S55 62 per month for s
at 1~ Price

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef hay 8.
gram farm 80 acres mil approx 35 A
gocd cropland 10 A woods balance
pasture good fences 9 rm /b,th nome
was buill In 1872 &amp; has been partially
remOdeled 50x50 cattle barn w tn con
crete floor large Stlo Wtlh auto
unloader several sheds large pond
springs standing crops go to new
owner

BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY 132
acres inostlyclean hill pasture good
fences 11h story nome large barn tob
base fronts on 3 roads near &lt;Mudsock
Prtce reduced to $64 000
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY "Should
descnbe this lovely 3 BR brtck ranch
Spectal features are a large LR 8. din
lng rm equipped ktlchen 1h baths
laundry quality carpet cent a~r &amp; an
oversized 2 car ga.age Located on U S
35 West &amp; shown by appointment

ASSUME 812% LOAN - Lovely ranch
at tne edge of town is priced to sell at
$49 900 Features are 3 BR l'h baths
large LR wtlh WB ftreplace rT).odern
k tchen &amp; dtnlng area laundry rm
garage &amp; gas neat Call tor appomt
ment

PRICE REDUCED$27,000
MAKEUS AN OFFER
1 th nk you would say that thiS
sprawling brick '" level Is one of the

I

Bu ldlng materials block
brick sewer pipes wtn
dows 1ntelS etc Claude
Wmters R1o Grande 0
Call614 245 5121

N E W BEAN PATCH
OPEN P ck Your own
tomatoes S6 00 bu corn
Sl 00 doz Raynor Peach
Orchard

r~~~::~::::::::::::::::;::::::::=:::=:=:::~1
DRAGONWYND
CAT
KENNEL AKC
TERY
CFA
Chow puppies
384• alter 4 p m

keyboards
2623

Call

614 379

Lower

7

Ga ll poliS 446

=-=~~!!!I~~·'·-==
Groom1ng s.erv1ces for
pels YJtll clip EngliSh
Sheep dogs poodles &amp;
Schnauzer s Reasonable
For appl 614 992 7342

•Willis T Leadingham Realtor Ph Home446-fSJ9
• Phyllis Loveday Phone 446 2230
• Joan Boggs Phone 446-JJ94

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

GOOD THINGS TO
EAT CANNIN G PEAC
HES Yel low Freestone
c.a nn ng peacnes now
ava tabl e wh e the supply
lasts BOBS MARKET
Mason W VA 773 5721 open
7 days a week
P ck vour own half runner
beans $5 00 bu and can
n ng tomatoes S3 00 bu
Andrew Cross farm L etart

Falls 8 am noon 614 247
2852 or 992 373~

IN GAlLIPOLIS
WALK TO SHOP
DOWNTOWN
6 roo ms 3 bedrooms

full basement
n ce
larqe front porch No

upkeep

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor al614 367
7220

AKC Regtslered Pood e
pupptes Call446 0857
AKC

Spnnger

Spantels

iver and wh te Shots and
wormed
3 m a les
3

lema les We w II take
depoStts95 each A46 8234
PUPPieS

BUILDERS YARD SALE
Take advantage of SPECIAL FINANCING AND
LOW PRICES as butlder drama! cally reduces
hts tnventory Payments on thiS contemporary
home can be AS LOW AS $400 PER MONTH or
pay off the mortgage n tust 5 years and SAVE
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLAR S

608 E MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

'MANY METHODS OF FINANCING
AVAILABLE
'DEEP CASH DISCOUNTS
' BELOW MARKET INTEREST RATES
PRICE REDUCE - Take advantage of both far
ming and m nerals on this 150 acre farm tn Metgs
Co 45 to 50 acres of hllable ground Wtlh balance tn
pasture and woods Older 2 story 4 bedroom farm
nouse with garage barn and out~utld ngs has all
minerals 011 gas Lease will transfer to lucky new

NEW LISTING - SOUTHERN DISTRICT - One of
the most outstand1ng double

w de hom es manufac

turedl Unusual features throughout
Three
bedrooms masstve I ving room wtth unusual
f replace two baths large ISland bar Wtlh range
a three bedroom cotlge m excellent condtlton for
r ental ncome Ail t h s for $42 500 You should see

NEAR MINES - Three bedroom ranch home on 2 5
acres nsulated storage bu d ng $29 900

NICE STARTER HOME Two bedroom s
basement on 50 x368 lot N ce k tchen Just S17 500
PRICE REDUCED -

Four bedroom home

Ha rdwoOd floor s F r ep ace

n

Ask nq

onl y $25 000
See you at the fa~r

RE AL TORS
Henry E Cleland Jr GR 1
Jean Trussell
Dott e S Turner

Office

992
949
992
992

6191
2660
5692
2259

buyer Owner 1S anxious tor sale

R.C.S. REAL ESTATE CO.
Real Estate - General

Phone 1 593 SS71

Btll Ch1lds- 992 2449

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-10"66
tRussell D Wood, Realtor, Eve Ph 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve Ph. 446.0971
Mose Canterbury, Assoc1ate 446-3408

$200 PER ACRE - Greenfield Town •
ship 84 acres M L approx 10 A bot
tom 35 A w&lt;io&lt;jed 35 A stripped small
creek
excellent hunting
TOTAL
PRICE $16 800

BMR J91- GET READY FOR SUMMER I Owner
transferred and must sell thiS 3 BR ranch Close to
town includes deluxe 18x36 lnground pool Call for
an appointment today'

BMR 414- 12x60 mobile nome situated on a 1 acre
Includes furniture has rear patio wlcover.
covered front deck 12&lt;24 garage wtlh storage

+ 101

IMR 415 Extra nice bl level Includes 3
bedrooms lg family room with brick fireplace
11x21 living room eat In kitchen, lg utility room
and garage Situated on large lot City school
dlslrl~t Call for deta•lsl _
BMR 4"- Wanta ntce~.fiJ'~ftlnch style home Wtth
of the ground p-~\!tng a possible 8 50%
mortgage assumptior 'so call now
~top

BMR 411 - New ltSttng- Brick &amp; frame situated
on5acres tncludes3ofiKIII'CR'Ihs tg famtlv room
with fireplace and llQ!\Ilfl"'lltr lg living •oom
dining room and deluxe kitchen Call for details
~

BMR 41f- N- Listing- lovely 4 bedroom nome
In GalliPolis 2 full baths den formal dining rtn
Clll tor camptete ctetalls
NIIW LliTING - BMR 420F - ThiS fine home is
only lhnle yeera old It feallires 1400 sq ft of living
ljllet. with 31aroe bedrooms 1'12 bathS large living
room lftd , lowly kitchen wfth dining area full

~·=:...::~00::= ,:,vl~t~': sure
Chick on this one - 37 acres with
30X30 bern NOW available
OIIIIIICI CCIIilriCt at lU..lnteresf Call for details
IMR GIF -

1.01 lb fG!IIcCO lillie,

3 811 ranctl
lg. flfi
LoanonAllumpon l h l l - fDIIliVI
~IE~~~i1rJJ: callPoaiibie
tocatld on
Letve LR,2

-·diSh-

1 acre plus -

8 rooms

plus lull basement 2
fu ll
baths
w th
shower s f am l y room
1 v ng
room
d1n ng
room n ce step saver
k tchen 3 or 4 BR Len
nox heat pump also
coa l and wood burner
furn ace
N ce
ian

goes Several natural spr1ngs ~om e fru t trees

Located on Stat e H ghway Pr ced only $30 000 00
N543
694ACRES
VACANT LAND OFF RT 35
Roll ng land - bes de Old U s H ghwav 35 1n an
area that s develop ng fa~t Rt 35 short d stance
West of Ga ll pol s Get I now
1544
LOOK OF LUXURY
E xcc lent des gn n a home that co uld be yours
Sty c pus com fort all comb ned Lu&gt;&lt;u ous ma~l r
bedroom w fh pr vatc bath &amp; walk n close t Eq u p
pcd rust c stye k tchcn w th break fast nook LMrQf'
recr ea t on &amp; fam ly room w th open stone f replac e
plus formill d n nq room &amp; I v nq room Walk out of
cntr c"''ncf' foyer to i"'n except ana l court ya r d Assum
hie oan

GRACIOUS LIVING
IN A COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE

I 525

Truly grac1ous family hv ng can be yours n th 1s
oeau t tul tour bedroom appro&gt;&lt; mately am les from
Gal pol s The k trhen sa qourmet s de ght un
bellevab e d n nq room and tam v room Bu 11 for
the most d scr m nat ng homeowner 20 Acres
Pastureland Horse Stables Another 73 acres
itVI" tab le Mary m any amen 11 es

'542
wow I S39 900 00
WOW 9% owner I nanc ng WOW 3 B R 2 baths
central

a r ga rage storage bu ld ng a I furn ture

ncluded 5 mtnutes to downtown Ga I pols Ctl y
Schools L ar ge level lot

II 401

GOOD HOUSE SENSE
RETIREMENT OR STARTER HOME
Comfortable neat nome wtlh large ilvtn g room
eat n k tchen w th bu It 1n ca b nets 2 bedrooms
storage room bath and carport Very conven en t

locatiOn Ca l for further dela Is

#533

l' Otc lN G FOR PRIVACY.,

WCHJL

LI~ E

I OS ftOWYOUTHI SONF

Wood d sc t nq at (.harola s H li s over look ng th e
1.:'\ke Step nrc th e rnt ry on !he second eve l and
v cw he brr'\ul tul at r um from the level below Th s
con tcmporc"''ry un quC' dC's gn s il decorators dream
omr r ur Indoor pool o ff cc we cqu pped k 1
r n w tt bu I T n food s Nnd f'X tra larqe 11 v nq
r nnm mportrd t lr floor qr~c
P spc ous fa m l y
room 2 f co aces 2 ' baths t
ony on front of
hnrh ve l ~ LCt l for rt personrt show nq and f nd out
t r n ) nyc rtc1 15 too numerous to m en! on nth sad

LIFE
INSURANCE
428 Second Ave
Call446 05S2 Anyllme

BMR 41lFJ - Mini farm located IUS! Off the Appalachian highway near Jackson 312 acres m!J
with an older two BR home several outbuildings
lust rlgnt for lefsure lime or full lime living

n3o

SETTING
BEAUTIFUL HOME

dscaped yard All of th s
for onl y S53 900 Needs
small amount of work to
fnshth s NEWHOME
I 532
39 ACRES IN CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM
Frame • room cottage bath ea t tn kttcnen
Assumable loan Tobacco base 892 lbs Lots of frutt
trees All mtneral roghls go Clay Townsh p Phone
for alii he details
N 545
COUNTRY HOME
&amp;40ACRESM &amp;L
8 Room Country Home -s bedrooms bath shower
some carpet ng drilled well with pump N ce tobac
co barn Two corn crtbs Garage All minera l r ghts

IH

Ron Canaday, ReaHor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 Locust St , Galhpohs, Oh1o

BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION! - Two storv
home presently being us":!ur,lO duplex could be
easily converted to slntl""" r Chotce localton
nearwasnington School ~.all for details'

Sid nQ

snout a check on

NEW LISTING - BARGAIN' Where else can you
1 nd a 1'h story three bedroom nome tn Pomeroy
one bath gas forced a r heat close to shopp ng and
only $12 500 Owner may I nance

Pomeroy -

Vmyl

Natura I Qas furnace
n ce larqe shade trees
low taxes Home you

Elednc heat a r cond carport concrete pat o
cha1n I nk fenc1ng surrounds ent 1re 112 acre lot Also

Real Eatate - General

Roof EIUite - General

BMR 389 - This fine home has 4 bedrooms and 1S
located close to town You will have a large lot wtlh
a country atmosphere and nave all the city con
venlences Call nowl

STYLE
ELEG,r.NCE
,r. WAY OF
LIFE - First tlmt on the market tor
thll like new contemporary 3 or 4
BR's, 2 bit~. large open LR 11111111
flrtPIICe • blamed celllnga, klkhen
tnclvdll range, DW • refrla • full
bllllment, wrap-II'CIUnd click. cadll"
tldlllll. 1~ abOVe ground pool.
llllf'acte, lltrn • 10 acres ,..,. Eureka

organ

with
fun
ma ch1 n e
practally new
Ha s 2

Pers an and
Siamese k liens Call 446

PH 843 2075

Sl8 000- NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD4 bedroom sectional hOme must sell
thiS month to sellle estate Call for Ap
pomtment

THE SETTING IS SUPERB
Beautiful! 8 acre wooded lot on the 0 J
Whole Rd 311 It frbntage 12x6S 2 BR
mobole holl'le With expando Priced to
sell a!S12 900

Cabaret

Batdwtn

H malayan

Real Estate - General

BMR 412 - Older home located tn Thurman Con
talns 7 rooms and bath 2 fireplaces professionally
installed wood burner forced air fuel furnace Out
side features a garage and a screened summer ktl
cnenwllh built In grill Call for appointment

~~::~~~~~:~

Rt

Rver Rd
4807

-----~

56

canntng toma toes $4 00
bu Already ptcked or m ay
p ck your own Raymond
Rowe 614 247 2192

Fruit

Metal sheets for all
building purposes
Flat
porcelian enamel coaled
4x81hru 4 x 12 Pnces S7 00
toS9 60 614 667 3085

--------

Letart

Fresh vege tabl es Open 3 00
to 6 oo daly 2 mtles west
of Galhpol son Rt j.jl Call
446 1080

Broker Auctioneer

over
3100 sq
II 5
tor auto
tractor
repa~rs partial flnanetng

58

Ca I

Wayne Rowe E
Call614 2•7 2704

Cannmg tomatoes $4 00
bu PICk your own 614 843
2495

&amp; V!gelabl~

Nancy Jaspers- Assoc•ate

- LOT FOR SALE Super location 93 It frontage on Route
141 county water available ASktng
$7 000
LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN
CHER plus 78 acres Of land In Cheshire
Twp oilers lots of good living for our
Qrowmg famtiY Home is just like nell(
wtlh 1438 sq It of living ar,a plus an at
!ached garage 2 spacious BRs 2 baths
8x27 LR 10X24 kitchen with retrlg
tltSP OW douqle oven and range
washer and dryer stays In laundry
Land is mostlY rolling pasture land with
approx 25 acres wooded Call fof appomtment

HUNTERS PARADISE - 48 acres mil
on Raccoon Creek near Ewmgton aJ)"
prox 10 A tillable balance woods l'h
story tog collage cellar house 12x15
metal building extra nice 14x70 2 BR :t
bath mobile nome All thil for II
askmg price of S39 AOO
GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE front on Slate Route 554

Used Art ley Clar net e)(

Nat\ ANPMP

Bnng

own conta•ners S~ 00 bu

cel lent cond $80
anytime 614 992 2726

56

CALLUSTOBUYORSELL

CENTENA~Y

City~

Fruth Phar

Canntng tomatoes

Mustcat

Used Artley Clarinet ex
cellen t cond sao Call
anyt me 614 992 2726

~1S1~~
fl!lrt-1 ~ 1
~Nee WiTt\

RENTALS
Brick home for rent in Letart Onto $275 00 a month

land aboul3 1h mtles from ROdney Why
nolle! your famtiY eni0\'5 BRs 3 baths
largo livmg and dlntllg room complete
ktlchen
family room with stone
ftreplace and 2 car garage

AFFORDABLE FA.RM LOAN,
ASSUMP1"10N- Nice remodeled 6 rm
&amp; bltth hOme WB fireplace, JIOYe
refr1g , cellllr hOuse ' shedl. SO acres
,.-._...._........_......~~--.:.,_--:-...;."""1 mil approx. 15 A cleared &amp; balance ,
wooded LO!Caltd near Eureka on the
city school disl S3a 900

RAllY BLACIIUifl 1t
STROUT REM.n 4.-.

Water Ptlls
macy

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - Ltvtng room has
woodburntng fireplace l'h bath hardwood floors
well constructed nad tnsulaled Askmg $35 000

n cest country homes you ve ever seen
Thts beauty Is s luated on 4V• acres of

RECREATION LAND - 25 acres mil
mostly woods fronts on Ltttle Rae
coon Creek &amp; Stale Route 325 near
T"'~" Lake $15 000

01110 RIVER LOTS FOR SAil located 3 msles below &amp;Jib
Dam, ideal fur camplllft
busklina or mali~ • • CIQ

CONTROL hunger and lose
we ght with New Shape
Diet Plan and Hydrex

Trmes Senttnel-Pa

Instruments

SAM
SomerVIlle S
damaged work clolhtng
SSOO dozen
army
camouflage 57 Burdette
Addttion Point Pleasant
675 3334

Registered Walker pups 5
months old S50 614 985
3891

1 10 h p walk behtnd
Gravely Just overhauled
New 30 tn mower $1 000
614 992 2975

57

F rewood SIS a p ckup
you gel 304 576 2010

Reg stered Walker pups 5
months old S50 614 985
3891

HUGE SALE Ant ques
wood bed well bu It cook
stove anltque dresser new
air condlltoner S 000 BTU
tools new gas dryer heavy
duly appliances tron pot
Christmas decor at ons

by Larry Wrlghl

1 5 h p Gravely walk
behind 30 In mower $500
614 992 2975
1 10 n p walk behtnd
Gravely Just overhauled
New 30 in mower Sl 000
614 992 2975

3 house Ira ler axles al'\d
lounge $175 Call458 1997

to menllon 10.6 Go to
L~ngsvtlle co Rd 10 follow
Signs 742 2928

M•sc Merchandlce

197S Case 450 dozer
tractor 1 800 nrs very
good cond S14 900 Call
446 4537

Dining room set 4 chatrs
and table
cushioned
chairs $100 Call 458 1997

camper 1tems to numerous

S FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE yYITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT.
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT
PER MONTH

Plastic Septic Tanks State
and county approved 1 000
gal tank price S340 Other
sizes In stock haul in your
pickup truck Call 614 286
5930 Jackson Oh RON
EVANS ENTERE'RISES

;132 000

carport

HOBSTETrER REALTY

FURNISHED elltetency
apartment utthhes patd
PI Pleasant call 304 895
3450

Like new Captain s bed
complete $200 00 and new
dry Sink SlOO 00 446 1806

54

Apartment

women

Private rooms wtlh com
mon lounge and cooking
areas plus l'h baths
Avatlable before school
openmg Aug !Sore school
tn S450 per mo plus
ultl ties Call614 992 6284 or
992 5732 or 992 7671

RNI Eour. - General

NORTH Myrtle Beach
South Carol na Sand Ptper
Condo $385 00 week Sleeps
8 to 10 pool &amp; tenniS court
one block to beach Call
803 272 5943

~ - Mls.f _M_!rchandi~

J:t nmg room and k1tchen are spac1ous k1tchen 1S

ntee lot n Syracuse Onto
Good netghbor hood w II
accomodate 3 or 4 smgle
smgle

THREE room furmshed
cottage ulililtes furnished
adults no pets 304 675 2812
or 675 1580

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers
dryers
rofrlgerators
range s
Skaggs Ap
pliances Upper River Rd
bestde Stone Crest Motet
446 7398

STROUT. REALTY In

Very mce 2 bdr mobile
home furntshed modern &amp;
clean good localton Call
614 245 5818

3 bdr 2 bath R verfront
ranch 5 miles south of
Gall pol s $250 per mo
Contact Wiseman Real
Estates Agency 446 3643

or

Three room furntshed
apartment adults no pets
Po hi Pleasant Call 304
675 2453

cond gas heat private lot
Call4461409 41o7PM

s

only 2 miles from down
town Pt Pleasant w 11
s gn a year lease al$450 per
montn 304 67;6276

men

Pleasant and GallipoliS
614 446-8221 Or6U 2-45 9484

r

Pomeroy

rent $200 per mo $200
depoSit Call614 367 0242

m
'IEAI.IV!

room

House 1n Crown C1ty for

home

Pt

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive 51
Gallipolis Couch loveseaf
and
chair
$199
bunk
wallhuggers $125
beds wtlh bunkles S170
box spring and mattress
SlOO
Firm
S120
recliners S80
9 x 12
linoleum rugs $22 maple
wringer
rockers $49
washers
refrigerators
dinette sets
cnest
dressers bunk le mattress
$40 Call446 3159

2 bdr beauhfully lur
nished wall to wall carpet

3 room furniShed apt $250
month tncludes uttliltes
lnqu re at Meigs Inn '"

41 __ !louses fol'_R,_,e"'
n,__
t_

RNI EIUir. - Gen.,.l

REALTY

Real Estate
Wanted

bnck

mobile

houses

Household Goods

-----------

#ulfy

Wanted to buy old house n
GallipoliS Wtll conSider

tip outs central air lot
100x100 metal butldmg
304 882 3318
eventngs
weekends

BAIRD &amp; FULlER

Eflectency Apt Suitable
for 1 or 2 people Chesh re
Oh Call304 773 5882

28 acres tobac co allot
ment m nerel nghts no

bedroom

1 8. 2 Oedroom furntshed
apts 614 992 5434 or 992
S914 or 304 882 2566

3 room &amp; bath furn shed
apt new furhllure SlOO 4 1 bedroom apt Newly
bedroom house $275 446 decorated Oarwm area
1615 or 446 1244
614 992 2807

for Rent

36

2 bd room turn Upstatrs
$150 per mo You pay
utllthes I chtld accepted
614 949 2875

or

without I vestock and
equtpment 614 446 2599
3}_

Apartment m VInton clean
and n ce unfurntshed con
ven ent localton Cali 61 •
245 5818

S~ce (or Rent

l'!fleclency Apt Su table
for 1 or 2 people Cheshtre
on CaliJ04 773 5882

APARTMENTS

bulldtngs $8 500 Call 304
675 6851

step stool

992 7177

homes

new refrigerator

stove

Three bedroom nouse in

32

BABYS ITTIN G

Lovely

country selling Call 1 216
734 3734 evenmgs

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
12x60 Buddy mobtle home
Good cond Washer dryer

Sleeping fooll1
S11S
utilities paid Single male
snare bath 9.lt!Second Ave
Gallipolis 4116,4416 alter
7PM

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofa., chair rocker ot
loman l tables &lt;extra
heavy bv Frontier) S685
Sol~ chair and loveseal
S275 Sofas and chairs
priced from 1285 to $895
Tables S38 and up to $125
Hide-a beds $440 and up to
S525
qlleen size S380
Recliners 1175 to $325
Lamps from $18 to S6S 5
pc 111nettes from S79 to
S385 7 pc 1189 and up
Wood table with six chatrs
$395 to $650 Desk 1110
Hutches S300 and S550
maple or pine fin sn
Bedroom suites
Bessell
Bunk bed
Cherry $795
complete With mattresses
S2SO and up to $395 Baby
beds $99 Mattresses or
box springs full or twtn
$58 firm S68 and S78
Qyeen sets 1195 4 dr
chests $42 5 dr chests
S54 Bed frames S20 and
S25 10 gun Gun cabtnets
S350 dinette chairs $20
and S25 Gas or electric
ranges
S325
Baby
malresses $25 I $35 bed
frames'$20 S25 I $30 Used
Furniture
bookcase
ranges chairs end tables
recliners and TV s 3 m les
out Bulavllle Rd Open9am
to7pm Mon thru Frl 9am
to5pm Sat
446 0322

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479

Two bed Apt Mtddleport

Apartments 304 675 5548

Homes for Sale

Attract ve 4 bdr nome n
c l y full basement lam ly

wanted to Do

'" ' 446 3159 at
1967

31

Estate

sl -- Hoiiiehotd Gocids -

2 mobile nome lotS for rent
In Southwestern School
District Call 614 379 2322

Elfeclencv Apt One person
only utilities and cable
paid Groundfloorwllhlwo
porches 614 992 5738

Two bed Apt Mtddleport
$205 mo utilities Inc 614
992 7177

Located 123 Garf eld Ave
Ca l 446 1546

M scellaneous

t7

Real

4s -Fumls~iiooms

46

S20S mo utilittes Inc 614

Is
karate the u t mate n se lf
defence a ll pr vate lessons
4-'\en wome n &amp; ch dren
~ns tn-tct on thru Qack belt
A l so ava lab l e Karate

ONE BEDROOM furn shed
apt carpeted air cond
$200 plus utilities SlOO dep
req no pels or children
Call «6 1788

Ohto- Pomt Pleasant W Vn

*5 31
3 SS ACRES OR 18
In Green Twp cl ose to Gall pols f arm hom e
Scr eened n front porch glassed n back porch

Perm stone Sid ng en cken nouse 2 storage bldgs
Lots of shrubbery and trees Pr ced to se ll See th1 S
lovel y land an d country home

#534

I'

DUTCH COLONIAL
Styl e beauty charm comfort - all descr bes th s
nome 4 BR 2 ' baths equ pped eat n k tche n

lam ty room w tn ltreplace formal I v ng and d n
ng room You won t bel eve th s home unless yC'u
see t for yourself Make your appo ntment today to

walk nto the entrace of one of the most ove ly
homes n the area

EXPENSIVE BUT WORTH
ranch home surrounded by
acres
21h baths formal d nmg family rm wtth ltreplace
Equ,pped kttcnen destaned bv Chandlers 2 car
garage Horse barn Roger Hornsby slatnelss steel
pool Shown by appotntment only
JUST A LITTLE BIG COUNTRY• -

2 LOTS IN GREEN ACRES
Lotll21 S dewalk 75 x148
Lot N 23 Vacant 99 Frontage by 148 depth Pr ced
tosell
11334#333
I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE

Count•y at

N ce comfortable home w th n ce large shade trees

mosphere w th c1ty conven ence 3 bedroom bnck

concrete front porch lots of fru t trees (app le

ranch Attached garage full basement w th large
recreat on room Elf clent ktlchen has Wtl lttt wood
cabmels range adlotnlng family room has
!)replace built m bookcase covered pallo for sum
mer dtmng Nearly an acre lawn Kyger Creek
arora Just m nutes from town $49 000

therry plum and peach) grape arbor ras pberry
v•nes good garden land a ll l eve l I n Gr een Tw p
Rural water 2 car garage fuel o F A furnace

Basement barn appro• 16

INCOME - 3 bedroom home with 2
room and family room p ius 5 unit
park All units presently rented
area You can I lose on thiS onet
,

FITS YOUR BUDGETI - $39 500 Three bedrooms
1'12 bath ranch FamilY room wtlh flrelace At
lached garage city schools few miles from city
"'OOCI rocatlon pr1ce 1ust reduced

quick Nle

owner needs

YOU ,LfKED THIS FARM AT $54 000 you re gomg
to love II at tne new low pnce $49 0001 27 acres
mostly level 3 bedroom home has new furnace
water system and b~lh Coal and wood bumtng
lfoVt Aluminum sldtng Good barn plus other out
buildings Rural water located 1usloff Rl 160
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Brock and block
building
lot on Eastern Ave In Gallipolis
Presently lf1 use as carry out Excellent locatton
c•n 1or showing 14

on.,..,....

soo

GAI,tiPOLIS- 516,000 Two bedroom frame ranch.
eat-In klkhenll" r~ end refrigerator 411'•1.50
lot Goed starter holM Excellenlfor retired couple

x2~

N

NEAR SCHOOLS
SHOPPING - Very nice 4
bedroom home eat n ktlchen snack bar formal
dintng low cost gas heal $47 00 gas budget garden
space A steal ats42 000
HOME PLUS
baths dlnmg
mobtle home
Ky~r Creek
$60000

II 311

Pr ceo n lhe S20 s
4 91

&amp;ACRES
W1th&amp;n 10 mm dnve to downtown Ga l pol s

ATTRACTIVE 2 BEDRM home sitfU.tfeil
acres Of land Wilhm the vtllage of
basement I a furnace w b fireplace
detached 2 car garage Buy ''all for ,..,,,&gt;Uu.uu .
LOOK 1NG FOR' a beautiful 4 bedrm home Wtlh ten
n,s court? We can g1ve you all !hal plus 38 acres and
many many amentlies Cell for.more tnfo
HANDYMAN S SPECIAL Located on 4th Ave and
ready for your hammer $10 000 00
2 LOTS for mobile nome in Plants Sub Dlv
lank and rural water Buy both tor SS 900 00
COMMERCIAL BUILDING In Vinton
display room down 2 apts up S32 000 00
COMMERCIAL,BUIJ.DING In downtown Gallipolis
23 xl~ 1 apt upstairs Minimum 1 year lease or
buy \?r S6S 000 00
Wood RHity, IIIC

:n Locust 51 , Gallipolis
444-lOU

c ty

School System Has hookup l or mob le home Ga ll a
Rural Water electrtc and septiC tank n te light on
pole 200 II frontage on Gr aham School Rd T mber
Building sites Call Now
11477
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots ntce Stze bu ld ng ots w th all ut 1 t es
there Lot Stze 101 8 by 171 2 Better get um now
N4S6
DW,.ER WILL FINANCE
walk tnlo formal entrance wtth open sta~rcase to
lhts lovely completely redecorateo nome located '"
the e~ty Wtthln walking distance to shopping area 3
bedrooms 2 full baths and charmtng large kitchen
Spacious livtng room with woodburnmg I replace
ThiS graetous home has a natural gas F A furnace
1 ke new lmmedtale possession Were watlmg for
your call
N146
REMODELED COUNTRY HOME

tn Ohio Townsh p sets on 2 acres more or less hal
aluminum Stding 3 bedrooms and barn Prtced
$21 900 See by appomlment only
; 473
NEW AD DAILY

�·'

..

.·,·{
Pa g e - 0 -6- The S un

61

Ji

P omeroy - Middl e port- C~ IIipoli s , Ohib-Point Pleasant,

Times- Sent ine l

Lowest
Prices
Ever
On

~q_u ipme nt

Far'!1

61

Montgomery Tr ailer seles
614·669·4145, Farm trai lers.
See you at the Mason Coun·
tyF air .

New .14' Wide
MOBILE
HOMES

EXTRA special pnces on

a ll

SUMMER SHOWDOWN
JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQU IPMENT
~46 - 1 675

Long

tra c tors,

Vermeer

ba lers, &amp; Hay equipment,
ba le movers &amp; f~ede r s,

Ne w Deu tz tr actors.

wago ns, rotary tlller$1039. ,

Numbers 706 1H S-4,150.00,
4506 Oeu tz 460 hous

disc. seeders, rotary cut·
te rs, blades, gates, &amp;

57500.00.

From

Fa_rm ~~u[p~~nt ~

MM

~20

J .D. $1950.00,

c ultiv a tors.

Diese l Andseeust.ogetyourparts
$1750 00. Nl 7 picker $975 . 2 &amp; Com ple te se rvice.
Row IH mounted pickers USED EQUIP :

$9,995.00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
With 1 Locations
Rf . 9J North
Jackson, Ohio

286-]752
or
Corner 2nd &amp; Viand
Pt . Pleasant, W , Va .

J et

Star

$250.00. 3 Gravity boxes,

IH Hydro 70, Ford 2000,

choice 5225.00. Ca ll day or

Ford

Jubi lee,

165

w. Va.

is,

ftjJI}r.\tftfi;}'il ~THATIC-IDWOIIDOAMI
~ ~ ~~ ·
l&gt;yt11nr1Amoidanc1Boi&gt;Loo

6J

lour ordinary wordt .

l

rrJJ

I SEBEO

[X)

Jumbo Bob White Quail.
· Mature

MF ,

Men's We stern sadd le ' Red
Ranger ', in good cond ition,
S$175 . Call61~ · 37 9 2729.

Quail

available .

Ready to turn out. LaBonte
Quail Farm. 61&lt;-985·&lt;345.

I v er,
Lon g 460 4x4
w/ front ·end loader. 185 AC.
spr eader , 501 Ford mower.
We buy used Equipment!

Business
Roger Hysell
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OHi

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Brown laying chickens,
Laying now. AIIO good (o(
butchering. ·suo ea. 614,
9'12·7713.
_, _

'

.

· REPAIR

'A lso Transmission
PH, 992-5682

·~-------.

'

Now 1n1ng1 the drdld leftefl to
torm the ....,... - · .. 1\19'
goatld 1&gt;y the -cartoon.

Ca ll614·256·9363 .
I

675-447&lt;

~A(
Yesterday·s

I Answer:
Jumbles

(MIMro Mondlyl

MINOA TWEET STIGMA CACTUS
An euy way to get on TV-

Ch.r,Ohio
rh. 915-4211 or 115-4312.

DOWIYM WilliAms
• Scottie Smtih
All m1ke' ' nd models
Antenna Installation
calls and shop

.

YOUNG'S
==~ltorwort

-rttroHfoiiOOI

•PRO SHOP

(FrH'Estilhltll

V. C. YOONG Ill
"2·nu or "2-7JU

Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-Hc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

ss Holt-ln-Oness
JOHN TEAFORD
Chester, OH.
7-U -1 mo.

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

garage plus nearly

v,

0

• gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

PH. 992·7201

~

n5&lt;

3·29-ttc

_ ..!...,

SUPER STARTER -

:t! A.

real value
M?82

Tn is neat and

c lea n 2 bedroom home would be
perfect for fir st t ime buyers or
retir ees. Has just be en remodeled and
is convenien tl y loca ted to sc hool s, shop·
N 998
ping, etc. priced in the $20.

COMMERCIA L BUILDING -

3 story

comm er cial
bui l di ng .
Par ti al ly
remode led . Over 6,000 sq . ft . on first
floor . Good retail sa les location .

Nl3&lt;
M ercervill e area,
modern 2 or 3 bed room house, 2 barns,

GOOD

FA RM -

EYE APP EAL - Si t on the ri ve r bank
and en joy the vi ew from the back lawn
ot thi s enchanting log cabin in Mid·

d leport . Only 3 yrs. old . 3 bedrooms '
with loft . Nice landscapi ng. $25,000 .
Possib ility of owner finan ci ng .

SUMMER

N153
and what o

RETREAT

b ~rqai n! Loc ated on Raccoon Creek .
Very clean and well ma intained 1970
12x50 Globemaster M .H. Inc ludes so me
furniture, coun ty water, septic tank and

.S3 acre.

tillabl e acres, some of the bes t . F.ences
are good , 56 acres pasture, 10 acres
woods. Let us show you this farm . N140

1akes to purchase thi s 2 bedroom home.
Alumi num si ding . Storage building . Ap·
prox . an acre . Nice garden area. A neat
clean home.
·
N 105

N98&lt;

U.S. Rt. 50 E1sl
Guysvflle, Ohio
Authorlrtd John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
F.rm Equipment
· Oealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-J.tfc

ACREAGE -

FINANCING!

on

thi s .

sa tisfying we ll kept 3 bedroom hom e.
FA oi l furnace, county water, drilled
well , and dug well. Sta te highway . lac.
land, we ll groomed. Close grade school,
superior country store. $18,000.

N162

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!
OWNER NEEDS TO SELL NOW '
5 bedrooms, 3 bat~s. 4,624 sq. ft . of living space.
Sure you dol And here is a bargath! Main entry,

wooded acr es.
schools.

Rural

water .

kitchens

massi ve stone fireplace in the family room. Rec.
J1 !2

MA

batl)s·. full ' liasement, fam i ly room.
firetJi ace, bart nat. gas, cent. air,
garage, large deck &amp; corner lot. priced

toseH . .
BRt.CK PANCH fN T'OWN - Th is is a
very attr'active J bedroom home in ex·

"09
ACREAGE - 2 acres more or less.
Ni ce plac e for your new hous eor mobile
tlor.1e. County water available.

bedroom or den, 2 car
' . gas heat, cent. air &amp; new
lot. 60' s.
.
.
Arrlic' c - I MILE FROM HMC very.n11:e·J bedroom brick in Charolais

1961
IN VEST ME NT PROPERTY - MOde rn
S room house and 2 two bedroom mobile

&lt;O

09 1
MEIGS COUNTY - Move to. the cou ntry .

Neat

and

clean

small

older

remode led 2 bedroom home. Ni ce big
screened in back porch for e njoyab le

living in a quality neigh ·

bedroom$, kitchen, format dining,
living room. Baement. Garage equipped with furna"tl~ &amp; air condition. Rural

CHARMING RANCH -

Everything in
Tip· top cond ition in thi s 3 bedroom. 1112

bath home. Beautiful kitchen&amp; dining

room, woodburner. new carpe,t. double
car garage &amp; la rge lot. Possible loan
assumption .

#?92
LAND CO NTRACT - Will sell com ·
mercia I metal bldg. with low down ·
payment and low interest rate. Bldg.
JOx'48 metal Var co Pruden . l'''acre of

·'

studded yard. has ) •bedrooms , family

room ! woodbu(ner, rec . room .. new car ·

..d·ons.

YOu'll fall in

lovr with this charminq turn Of the cen-

_

.;.:;

PUPAL SE TTING-CLOSf:;l'

· FREE
ESTIMATES

PH. 992·6011

s

.

TIME FOR A CHANGE I STOP ""Y1NG RENT
With only S2,500 down payment vau can bUy 11111
beautiful 3 bedroom brick ranch. SiHing
3 ecrn
Of scenic woodland. Nice pond, all fenced. Only"'
tnt. Rate. ll'ou can't ~ala deal like thtsonel Southwe!tern School District.
· •

on

Ill ..... ., lie ,wUI be ....
So ...... ~ them
IWIJ. Plow ... - - dum·
TJ wltli till• al dul» uf
. . . . . . . . _ al .......
Ellt ea1 lib 1111 10 now ar
II trick NG. U, llut II II all

... -

..... kill. ...... )lei

tlit-SisiiW'tlbu
wlueletlla.
Ia IWI Ule wwlcl II be
~·le lor a clec!llrer to
Wart 1111 tUI plly! Yeo!
Altfi*ICO llaDMI II llle

!rifle ~ llld 1111 1101 too

Todly'a lwtd II e.DM a
"clou?tle domuny" plroltllm.
,.. "-'1 ~ lUI tile
Dllyen ""' dumb, 11111 tile
llnll &lt;DIIIract ... ......

llloP'al. But ltu 10 ....
illeadl ut ' 'netl1 lour
..... lleDet. If lle ~

eudlr ..,.. e?u)l, phil

my prWJeml

-u,. -

lmn llle ftttlle lraaAitll·

IIDDI of bridle wrllen.
Theoe ..... .... llln*t
llwa,. futllilel r1tllor than

lis

r:..~.:. c~:a::

INCI-!17 IN. DoUie dmll- uti cnii

.

--

u

be 111?1!1
Soatlt wUI be

-

KEN'S
APPUANCE

5f RV IU

,.,

th e Smil llt5t
Hea t er Cor e to the

·

L•rges t Radi•tor.

P01diator Specialist

NATHAN ~ IG C·$
35 Vrs. Ex perience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

• Wuhers

washers

Chevrolet truck, needs
work, S300. 304-882·2052 .

_.,..._PIUII-.)

cellent interior, good con-

1976 l.lilonte Carlo $1,000.
304-675·4173.
1914 Chevy Vega, good condition. 304-615·6719.

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

COLONI~L HOME, - 40 ACRE SETTl ,NG - 'AndpricedatonlyS6S,OOO. This
is a lovely 4 bedroom 5 yr. old home
with a beautiful view and quiet
secluded setting. This home· has equipped _kitchen, fire pl~ce, 2 baths,
basement~ cllning room, office or den,
woq&lt;tbu~n1ng furnac.e plus JOxSO metal
barn, 10 aqes of crop, balance in
WOOds. Call for. appointment.
·
. . ,
.

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Ouail of atl ages
available up to 8 weeks

·I

, il,l •nv qua'ntity.
Matureouail Available

'

basemont, rec . r 00 ,,, fAmily room.
!larage; dtr k &amp; ienccd back yard on
nearly&amp; ac re. Good location.
.
25.1 ACRE~- O~DER HOMI!- Gef
your hammer &amp; paint brush and put
lhts 2 bedrqom horne in OOOd ntpatr. 4
rooms, no beth, several small
:IJ:.d 1f~gs, 24~1N1rn, fie house (l0xlt')
rrep ace. 14«1 tb. toblcco 11111.
~~~~1t26 ~cres (re!nO!eU19AIIO.

1

SON

E·

·A:

:

Ac;QUIIU:.O ,
HOME- For-ohty 120,1110 yau can own .
! very clean ~II kep\2 bed"""" home ·
l n -. Has2 targebecii'OO!IIIf..kltchen, 1
bath, ttvlnv room ·lind full--...ment
.ax215ylrd.
• ,
· .
. .-:&lt;·.;·
IUII.iMIIG ' LOT .• . ~re IIIlo Ill
Gellltllttatft. Penor1tntc ¥fr1w Of 111e •
!IIIII &amp; WIIIIYI. rural WI,., IIVIfllbfe 1
Otlly...._
~·
,
· •
· ·
r'
•

··.--:r:,-

ACHS- 'Ntrwr-ot

'
Nc.rn. '

e Gutters
• Downspouts
e New or Repair
e Painting

home ... 20 ,..~~.
frH estimlln

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph; 992-2791
or949-2263

tall

143-3322
7-16-2 mo. pd.

7·1Htc

DU RACLEAN
by ROBERTS

OHIOVAUEY
ROOFING

Let us (lean your
, 1 rpet or furniture.

*No Soaking
• No Scrubbing
• No Shrinkage
oura~tean gets your
e~rpel
deep down
thoroughlY cleo~ . . .
Home or Busrness
CALL TODAY
For Free Estimate

And Home Maintenance
• Rooflnt of 111 types
• Siding
• RemOdaling
• FrH tslfmalts
• 20 Yrs. oxperltnce

TOM HOSKINS

1-767-3361

Ph. 949· 2160 or 949·2322

speed, power steering,
cru ise control, sun roof,
lape player, other extras,
low m ileage,

~xcellen1

con·

dition, $6,000 firm, 304-675·
5805 .
71 __. .!!:.~£k ' s!or Sa!!_ _
For sate 81 pickup 4x4, ex c.
cond .• Low mileage. Call

446·2106.
1967 Chev . truck 327-400
tubo,

engine.

automatic,

short\.wide bed, · 112 ton.
__ A__
· wheel
______
__
111
1979 DOdge
drive
ton truck. 7,000 miles. top·
per. 6ft. bed . ss.000.614-m7062 alter 6 p.m .

6~5-6130.

1970 Dodge Slant-6 pickup

11---------~~----~-J, ~-30H1=s·=~
f==~~~~==~~======4-~20-~tl~c~~~;~~~~;;~
1&lt;1Fm~.::::::="'
r1
I'

. . S&amp;W, ,
.I"UN.
SMITHING
.U
' _AIID CU~IZING

Ph. 992·7656
. Re-ltue and Re-Finish
resfoek, Parts, Etc.
STUART WAYNE
,
PULLINS .·
CLIPADANDGET20%
OFF · ON RE· BLUING.
OFFER Ell PIRES 1·31·

AU STEEL
·
BUILDINGS

73

'64

Hay. Clover. Alfalfa,
' gOOd
Timothy. Second cut, very
hay. Priced $2.00 bale.

Stresst1rHrom Jb24"

Utility Bulldin•.
r

Sites from 4 Ia 'tnd Ill
woodb&lt;litdings24•36.
lnsullltd·Dotl HOUMS

11614 367
ca
. ·7JSO .
Large round bales hay or
corn for saleS10. toS30. 304·
458·1656 or 304·675·1S.C1 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

71

,~·;~·;;;;~~~~l~=~~~;~~=n 'ttn

~

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE
&gt;Or 1ilyfhin1 etse you:
w1nf to do, lleause I
fivtt 111flth· a carpenter.
His111mels AI Tromm.

742·2328:
Rut11nd, Oh.
7· 15· 1 mo. pd.

Hay,. Grain

fi--..,;.---...,..--.1
CANDWIGHT INN

; Between Cheshire &amp; ~
· • .Middlepol'f, 0~10
. PRESENT$

T•-'-lf&amp;M

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

Alllrirrfll ..............

....

"...
lliS...,._

AIDaftlwlt,_

FrU IILIP.M.·IIPJI.

....... a s -.,....

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

. lllll?i .......

c.., ............
""' l1altl.
Hljl.llUa.a

lllis..ue,..u&amp;a
PHONE'm-ttU
1-1-11110.

Autos for Sale

1978 Sfarcraft 15 ft. tri hull
90 HP Mercury motor Inc .•
·car hitch and trailer, 1 set
skis, . 1 slatom ski, 5 tift
lackels. anchor. 3 gas
tanks, convertible top, new
condition, S3,500. 304·773·
5184
ofler
4 : 30 .

SPECIAL

1331.
RINGLE ' S SE RVICE

mason, rOofing ,
carpenter, etectr ic ian.
genera l repairs and

remOdeling. Call
2088 or 675 - ~560 .

For Sole-19?8 · 17'1' tt.
Wilderness camper. Tandem axles. · Fully self·
contained . Excellent Cond .
$3000. 61&lt;-949-2037 .

30&lt;-895 · 3802 .

17 fl . Utopia Travel
Trailer. Sleeps 6. Self·
contained . Full bath .
$1.400. 61&lt;-985·4335.
17 II. Utopia Travel
Trailer. Sleeps 6. Self·
contained . Full bath .
$1,400. 614-985-4335.
Carport outfit 8 foot bed
complete, best offer . 30&lt;·

675-4373.
79

Motor Home

___ L~.'!'~---- 8 ft. sliding camper, good
cond., ~- Call-446-8668.
Winnabago 5th wheel , 1973
" Chieftain" like new inside
and out, self contained. 304·
675-3283.

11

Home
I mprovelilonts
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
texlur'ed ceil ings com ·
mercia! and residential.
free estimates. Call61&lt;·2561112.

exter i or,

pJurnbing,

rooting; some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call 614-388-

perlence.

specializing

in

buill up roof. Call 614-318·
9622 or 614-388-9157.
N STEEMER (:ar·
pef Cleaning featured by
Hafffll BrOslher$ Cuotom
Carpets. Free esiimates.
Cell ~- 2107.
1

--.,------

1t77r HONDA 5!11 ~: ·
cycle, , _ battery, felrtnv, tiNY bar, 1ua11111
rack, I&lt; racks for elddle
bags. Only S,illlll mllll.
11050....675-5554.

"'l·

1975 KAWASAKI 510 lfnel

CARftENTRY· DOO"S.FL·

lldcffe ~~ap, exmllnt con-

NG,CEILING TILE AND
PAPNTINO. 614·992-27,.

OORIMG,WALL PANEL! ·

0

i..-----·----~-------

'

~~=~~~~~==~

Now Hau soit
l ing·gravel
l imest.one-till
dirt·top
Free
es timates. Ca ll 614·367 ·

~"-IMPROVEMENTS

7101 .

Sea ml ess

f:

J IMS Water SPrvice . Ca t.!
Jim Lanier, 30.4·675·7397 _

PA I NTING interior &amp; ex ·
terior, free es t ima tes. 304 ·

675·1128.
82

35 Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Cal1446·38?6
446·3080 · ttc

We' ll do it. Call ~46 - 3159 or
61&lt;-256·1967 after 6.

estimate&gt;. 614-698·8205 .

87 --·-uphOiSte;y-·-TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Ga l l ipol is
4&lt;6·7833 or ~46 - 1833 .
MOWR EYS Upholster y Rt.
1 Box 12&lt; . P t. Pl easant, 30~

Plumbing

_____ ! ~!_a~i~!J

675 - 415~ .

Bill's

J

Nu-Prlme repl1cemtnt
windows
Storm windows • doon
Aluminum • vinyl
siding
Howmet P1tto Covers ·
Howmtt screen rooms
Mobile home awn1n91
Aluminum utility
buildings
191 Mllttr Drive
446-2642
Fret Eottmatos
0

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pin e

SOLUTION

Gallipolis Diversifi ed Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Specia l
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·4440 .
Lawrenc e Sidenstri c ker
Backhoe 'serive. Call 675 -

5580.
E lectrlca I

&amp;I

_ ~ ~!!!'!9~r~t~~r:

· SEWING Machine r epairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servi ce Sharpen
Scissors. Fabri c Shop,
Pome roy. 992 -2284
85 ~ ~- ~~~r~ t:H~u-~ing.
JONES BOY S WATER
SERV ICE . Cal l 61067· 7•71
or61067·0591 .

I

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
t English
Ulfgnment

8 " The Brave

'

others
71 Transgress
72 Goal
74 Yovng

141 Like: Sut.

36 Painful
37 Trial
39 Journey

142 New Eng.

40 Prepare lor

139 Sea In Asia
140 Bishopric

stal e

utmons

t 1 Stage play

one
21 Ooteala
22 Homtxrroer
topper
23 Specks
24 Change
25 Money ot ·
yore
26 Gambler's

capital
28 Broad
lngredlelll
30 Pitch
32 Cooled lava
33Compua
point
34 Sea eegle
3S Exlot
36 Certain
37 Prefix with

76 AA stop
17 Pintail duck

78 Doom

85 Direc tion
86 Animal coat
88 Lamb 's pen

for one
152 Covered the

· name

89 Holjf on
property

90 Fold
92 Nets
94 End s
98 Delineate

99 Equal
100 -

mountain

60 Spread lor
drying
82CIUIM
&amp;I Bound
07 ln10C1 egg
89MI10 Junior ll1d

Smith.

Inside

15&lt; Think
156

Esklmo·s
home

158 Conducts
159 Shu ts noisily
160 wash lightly

16t Become
aware of

DOWN
1 The ones

103 Slltch
104 USNA

2 Rabbits '

40 Provide with

42 Attempt
43 Repetition
44Ch-t
45 Crimson
47V""'
49 Golt cry
50 Pououes
5 t Enthuataam
S&lt;lllockof
the neck
55 Small
amount
58 Shaded
59 High

a boyl

150 Granny

102 Junctures

105

tupport

t44 Spoken
145 Wand
147 Nudges .
149 Paid notices

sect 01 cycle

money

143 Italian river

79 Sinuous
82 Writing
tablets
84 Happiness

38 Superlative
ondlng

85 Greek letter
IM!By&lt;r

----- - -- --

back t=ord
351 CJ
, ex. cond.,
Mustang
fast- 1976 suzuki 550, rpad bike. ·Masonary work, Logue
radtat· tires, AM· FM tape . Call45!1·1997.
Contracting. · Rt .
1,
c•ss.tte, radio with power
Ewtngfon . Call 614-388amp. Cali458·1~7.
or trade 1979 Harley 993'1.
Davldsoo-drag pipes, lets
Ford Pinto 79; 4 spd., 52,000 of extras. low mileage. 614· CH.RfSTIAN'S CON ·
mites, new tires, runs good. 949·2455 or 992·6110.
· STRUCTIOt.l .
Constr.,
Cali614·24S·S104.
roofing, siding, spouting,
Sate or trade 1979 Harley fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
1910 Toyota Cetica exc. Davidson-drag. pipes, tots cleaning. -«6·2000, call
Clllld. Call after 5, 675-7'911Of extras. fow mi!Nge. 614· before I and after 5:30.
949-2455 or 992·6110.
BINGS CONCRETE CON·
1978 KAWASAI&lt; I o400, 3AIJO STRU(:TION Speclalitlng
miles, S900.00, 167 Lane St. tn concrete driveways, ·
sldewafks., floors, patios,
New Haven, 304·112-:N36.
etc. 11 yr. exp. Caii61A·367·

ditiOn, . . . .3236.

Need som ething hauled
away or someth ing mo ved?

Gutter · Doors. Off er i ng
guttering ,
cont i nouse
seamless siding, roofing ,
garage . ., doors,
free

18 Enamel, for

!~;; ..~~u~::all;,•~s.;:.

Illite, crllll INII'Io ,.,.1119,

304-675·

Water Well s. Commercial
~ nd Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sa tes and Service.

ADVANCED

Furniture Stripping
and refinishing

8S • ~- ~~n ~r~l H~~lii'lg

]

71 - ·--· c ampinl _ __ __
Equipment

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spoullhg. 30 years ex·

1

ex ·

perience~

Complete

9652 .

1974 Yamaha 360 en&lt;tre,
dirt bike. Call458· 1~7 .

Free Estimates
245-9113

tectrtca l

stump removal. Call 675 -

enamel paint jobs from
$300 . SunrO()fs Installed

1'78 CJ·
S Jee1p,
miles,
canvas
op,
top, carpet, good condlflon.
Call-446-1817 alter 6 :00PM.

long wheel base, excellent
condition, Sl3SO.OO. 3114-.!n·
~
· ·
7T . - Motorcyc_ies _-_

CHAIN LINK FENCE

1:-(:: ::_:: AUt~ lf!P"ir:::::_::::

PAINTING · Interior and

2!-~d
.,..r

~~~:~~~o;H~. ;e;;a:tt~l,, ~Y:!:

Boatund

Maron lor Site

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

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,

81_._ ... _!:~c~~"'~'!.2 .

- -- -- - c;-:-:::..,..--67 FORD truck, F 100 half
ton. 64 Ford Falcon slallon·
wagon, 6 cylinder, Call 3114·

162 3rd Ave.

:t~~~alls. calt 576-239a or

1912 Honda 4.50 custom,
1,400 Milt!, like new. Call
-446· 2350.

1979 Dodge 4 wheel drive 'h
ton truck . 7,000 miles, topper, 6 fl. bed . $5,000.614-992·
7062 alter • p.m .

8·11 ·1 mo. pd.

o.· TOWN

-t=-..

Ready to Turn Out

Clell Lat;~onte
36061 Bashan Rd.
&lt;. ~ong
oli.45631

basement, family room, wooctburner;,

SS3,SOO Bntk and frame ranch'
•
·
on .Rt. 141 just 7 miles west of town . 3 '
·
,
bedrOOr&gt;l&gt;, f i r~pi,1Ce . eat· in kitchen. full NEW LISTING :- VA

Vit!JI &amp; Alutninulll
.
Cotnplett ptltll IM,
complete rtiiNJdtli•r.· reof.
inc Ill II IJpls. Wlllbd iR

:•

,

elect., heal (low bills). lar,ge allachj&gt;d ,
carport, detached qarage, ~• ,fur·
niture included. 1.2 acreo wlfruol &amp;
shade trees plus garden area; C9.500. •
'
' ,
• '
·
•• ·
FINISH IT YOURSELF .:..,)' bedroom .
home situated 011 over Ia~ near ThUr·
man. 5 rooms and bath wtfll2 rilllms un -'
finiShed. Also tnctucles 1~ cabin . .
Ontv 112.400.
.,
-• ., ,
.

H. L WRITESEL

Celica, S

Rewiring
Ucenoed Electrician
All WOlf&lt; Guenrntea!

Tele~-~~i~~ ·s ~rv~e. ~;;;~~~~~~;;;;;~~:;::~~~~~~~=~
DENNY ·

dition S1200 or reasonable
ofler. 304·675·20'1'1 alter 4 from S22S. Auto Trim Cen·
p.m .
ter . ~- 1968 .
·1965 Mustang. f"ir shape.
304·675·5162 .

ELECTRIC

Specializing in Zenith and
Motoro la, Quazar . and

Phone &lt;46-3888 or ~46 - 4&lt;77

18' SEA BREEZE ski boat,
lots of extras including
stereo, carpeting &amp; lots of
1977 c;HEVY Vega, 4 cxl. 4 equipment included with
speed, excellenP condllron, tilt trailer, 52,000.00, 30~ ·
no rust. $1650.00, J0&lt;-576· 773-5944.
2866.
1963 Chevy lmpalla, 2 DH,
283 with 92,500 miles. Ex·

RON·S

GAWA
REFRIGERATION
INC.
Seltl &amp; Ropolr
Rheem-Amtne-Ctrrier

Electric Heating

STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn service. Shrubs
trimmed . . Phone 30~· 576·
2010. .

7_,_
4 _ _ M~ctes

1980 DODGE Diplomat
stalionwagon. 304·675·5867 .

• Dish·

• Ranges • Relrigerat·
ors
• Dryers • F reerers
PARTS and SERVI

Pomeroy, Of
Ph. 9?2· 2174
2·2o·tfc

1975 FORD LTD Landau,
new paint, new tires. ru"s
good , $1,000 . AlSO 1970

Call Dennis Harris, 61&lt;-992 ·
7385.

eu at •11 allly

----

Autos for Sate

~1~~~~~~~~:r1 ;::::::::::::~~~~======~~~~~~c_a_u_~·1_~_~

pet, full bath ,&amp; plumbed for 2nd l)ath In Nice well · mainlai ed ar\d
lower level &amp; equipped kitche n. Call for r edecorated 2 bedroom home. 2 miles
appointment. 56, 000 .
from town. Has an equiped kitchen, full .

• 150

3 ACRES near ROdney &amp; Rl. 35. Good
·building sjte, fronts on tWo roa~s. land
1 136
contract. ·

Nl61

located on an attractive 1.2 acre tree

wa te r . $2~.soo·.

KANAUGA $22,000 -; Two bedrooms,
bam. natural gas, county water. Close ·
to shopping center. New carpet, clean
house. One to see.

of lawn .

pos sibi lities in lower level. WOOdburner,
2 car qarage •. ICirQ!J concrete crawl
s pace &amp; 8x9 covered por&lt;lf. Owners
anxious to sell at~.SOO.
·1

tury 2 stQry hom e. Irs locoreU,oo an jm·
nressi ve 1 acre lot with t~•es and
~ as bea utiful oak w
· 'ork , &lt; ·
oedrooms, . family room, dln(ng room
'
' W/I;IUtCt), eQ'rlippCd,~ kitchen, new bath, I
'''"' ·• AsSUMPTION KYC.F.R base mentandmucti,more.OI'II.VS49,500.
CRF.EK SCHOOLS- Brand new listinq Owners will help finance .
;.., . . 1

tal Health Cente r . Possible loan assumption. Priced to sell $32.500.
Nl18
L.(IND CONTRACT - Owner financing
available on this home with 211., acres. 3

land. M. H. hook -up, septic tank, courty
wa rer and app rox. 8 miles from town .
. • .#?72

evenings. Cellar house with stora ge
room above. 2 car garage and 1 118 acr e

VIE::W~l.N~~:~~~l~!.~~~:

Has family room with wOOd ·
equipped kitchen, 3 bedrooms,
2
lieat pump, 2 car garage and
over2 acres yard . S69.?00.

acre ground . Close to hospital and Men·

COMMERCIAL Approx . • acres '
Gree n and Springfield Twp; ~ted
between Rt. 35 and old 35 at Rodi"""
Rural water, la rge tap paid for . NaturaV
gas. Flat Jot. One O.flhe best.
N144
REO UCEDt Owner has reduced the
price ove r $5,000 on this mini far") . 3,
bedroom ranch hOme only s years old.
Over 13 acres. Tobacco base. 20x60
tobacco barn. Approximately 8 mile~
from town. Kyger Creek Schools.
Priced in theS30's.
1962
POSSIBtLtTfES about in this solid
older 2 story home. 7 rooms and blfth .
Large garage plus carport, could ~
used for business. Nice block storage
building. Cellar house and situated oo4
fl a tldts. Wjll sell with 2 lots or 4.
., 151

tion, _ .

brick ranc h offers over 1650 "NTIOUE LOV£RS -

ted, $7SO.OO per month. County water. 1
BEAUTIFU L -RURAL SETTING -

A lovely scenic location en~es
bedroom home in Charotois Hills. HM
baths. family room, fireplace; ~ipped1
kitchen, formal dining, bawment, naf.
ges, cent. air, 2 car gar.ge .and
acres w/ pond . Low interest astlunilp.

and

Remodeling,
new homes,
plumbina, electric, ~dine.

•

. POSSIBLE
MTG.
BEST
cellent condition and loca ted' in a very
good neighborhood near Golf Course . ., 6 .5 acres with
Rio Cenierpolnt
Nev.- _carpeting, · cedar c losets in
lots
off Lake Drive &amp; .
bedroom.s, fireplace, equ ipped kitchen,
Includes
nat. !)as, central air, breezeway, ;ororgardening.
5 bedroom home.
gAr a~ ~ &amp; ltlve!Y landscaped yard. Only
full' bath &amp; ,2 half baths,
ss~.ooo .
•
ca r garillge&amp; mucn more.
10% DOWN PAYMENT
9% ASSUMP~ION- NEw·UloTIN(; ~
OWN~R~TRANSFERR£0
5eile rs will finance the quality 3 or 4
Large I yr. old trHevel s~~u~:~~~~~~
prox . 1 acre in Evergreen:
bed roo m home in Spring Valley Sub·
division. This attractive home offers · including a 14X22 master suilt&gt; w/willk ·
in closet &amp; private both, ·fully equipped
~~h
·
~. family
roorn w/new
kitchen, 2 full br~ths, · seVeral room
heati
equipped kitchen,

homes. good condition. presently ren·

acres and 5 year old bi ·level home wi th
3-.1 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen and ·
family room . Mostly wooded w ith 2.000
lb . tobacco base. gas lease. nice ga rden
area, rural water. coal house and large
separate garage.

1

Exc;ellent -constructed brick. ' home iil
one of the ,area's finest neigHborhood$,

.

bedroom ranch in

· to tho stores, theatre.
etc.
This fine home· has •delu xe kitchen, 2

City

."CUTOUT
FOR f:UTURE USE"

ROOFING

w/ Jarge gleaming candeller. Completely equipped
· kitchen with island Jen·Air grill, bar. Wall-to-wall
room , master bath features a garden tub. 3 car
garage. This home features much more. Like to buy
a lot for your money? Then this home is for you I
Owner will finan.ce!

lluler: East

1980 TOYOTA

huge formal living room , formal dining room

WANT TO BUILD? We ll there is plenty
of room .on this 2'11 fl~t ac res. Rural
N986
HERe IT lSI and waiting for you to
build the home of your choice. 2. 13

OWNER

room, nat. gas hea t. cent ral air.
2 car qara9e &amp; large wooded yard . 1
Year Buyer Protec t ion . $65,000 .

building spot. Sits high and overlooks
the r iver with a beautiful vi ew .
11149

Look ing for terrifi c

N159

dinin ~

3 acres total. A lovely

financ ing terms? Then give us a call
today for more information on this 3
bedroom ranch . Dishwasher, disposal.
Aluminum sid i ng. Basement. 1 acre.

$35,000 .

or &lt;th bed room . 2 baths, deluxe kitchen,

$19.900 iS all it

water . Electric . Road frontage . No
restrictions.

SUP ER DEAL -

~;:::;;:;::;~~~~W,~=~~~g;·~·===m§:.~
r r om

•'

ranch loca ted w ith in walking distance
downtown, schools, · etc . Has 3
bedrooms, family room , fireplace, den

#112

TOP THIS PRICE -

to sell thi s lot located close to town .. 42
ac re. water avai lable. Restri cte d to
hel p protect your property values.

' 7-15-1

COMPLETE
RADIATOR

. ;t$ALES
&amp;SERVICE
/o

of

N172

approx . 1800 lbs. tobacco base, 25

OWNER HAS LEFT ST AT E and needs

Rrnw n '!.

.
:']

payments of S375 mo. Brick &amp; fram e

free siding

at

T.uddrrmy, Co. Rd . 25
nr., r Chester.
i , v. ,,nd p,,dio Rcp.lir
/l l!&gt;o nth~r F lectrnnic
1 ('t·ipmcnt.
, £l rry Arnwn
c'hnicion
~ &lt;Soci,, tc de9rce .1nd
ht cln ss FCC llcenst'.
l' hnne 915·l364 Ave .
nr 985·3133
7 16 1 0

Greg Roush
•
Ph . 992 7583
. or 992·2282

Ute~~~Jd &amp; Bonded

~ter'f; yard.

1 r:c,ltHt

•

•Electric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs .
•Roofing Work
14 Years Experi~nce

• Awater, sewer

room with fireplace, deluxtr .:tit.chen,
large living room, elect. heo..at, 2 car
Owners must sell!

New Homes - ex·
.tensive remodeling

• sapt1c·systems

amcious to for Qu ic k sale'and wi l l f inan ·

$2 000

llllle,lllltubiKito

. . . ._ clliardl ln1m
dilliaJ ... u ..... lei

SERVICE
BARN

CONSTRUCTION

* excav•ting

ce w ith reasonable down payments·and

REDUCE 0 d, bath a nd

"'

tKQIIH
Vu1Der1llle: Neither

7S

•IMckllot

NO tNTE E$T CHARGED
't-EARS -'- Can you beat that! Sellers

size dini ng ·kltch
1 ca r garage. M
and all of thi s in
for YOU!

I ~-~-QIII

78 Hondo mtnoture 50, $200.
Ca11614·'2.S6· 148r

ROAM

unless vou're looking for a 3
bedroom, 2 bath home , pr iced in the
SJO's. Woodburner . llh acr es. Close to
Addav ill e School . Nice flat lawn .

ttl

Cal1614· 256· 93~ .

bed room home, blacktop road ,
well, county tap. loi improved gra ss
acres with str eam runn ing through .
Suita ble for lhe working fami ly fo en·
joy . Close to Vinton.

YOU

+tOT I

1974 Ouster, good work car.

PRICED TO SELL·AT SSf,StO
One of the best (if not the best) buy on ·
today's market. Over 1700 ~q: ft. of
living area in this attractive 3 bedroom
ranch off Rl. 588. Includes lardt.fa mlly

NEW LISTING - THIS AD ISN' T FOR

riff.
.
Plow Ill pia,. Ilia lui lour
~ ... Iii dt!lpted to
. - ... Ill .mnti lntmpl
111ft Ieiiia. .

11001'11

71

, BOGGS

HASTE I ( No time to Waste) - come

....

+HI

011

dl&lt;mMf tied lloudl must

. . . fl

•FIELD TRIPS

SIDING

•"

see thi s ranch wit., ., ... ~ · •ooms, nk·e

.

tllnu•

UIQJIII .

lllo!dbll

IIU 1lltl IIIli IINrtl. Eut
lhlwl I 1lfll!le Gil the lint

IWT

WDT

....

111111)' 1t cui• SIIU SOuth

*GOlf LESSOIIS

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

J&amp;F .
CONTRACTING

Barn, shed Stocked pond. Parti ally
wooded . Owner will finance qual ified
buyer .
1113

... . . ••
••us

IIIIICII 1111*, lltllott&amp;b we

• IUAGES

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME- 5 yr. old split·
level'features ~or 5 BRs, 3 baths, 3Q fl. LR, 2 family
rms., 2 woodburning fireplaces, Jar~ kitchen and
dining area, 2 car garage, one of tne county's nicest
pools (20x50J a nd a tru ly professional landscaped
lot. Located on De bby Drive. Ow~ says sell. .. so
call RAN NY BLACK BURN for a personal showing.
You'll be pleased you did. STROUT RE~ TY 446·
0001.

No W LISTING - FOR THE COUN·
TRY GE NTLEMAN ' S FAMILY - Fan·
til sf ic ·2 bedroom, 2 ba th home on ap·
pr0)(1ma tely 80 acres wi th peace and
qui et. 2 beautiful stone fi r epl aces.

?tift -

WI CII'J S•Uirl TWI,
llooGrtlfr , Oultf, l
-•i•a Eqor..,..t.

eSEATCOVERS
eVJNYL TOPS
e CONVERTIBLE TOPS
eCARPETS
• A Comptete Line of
Automobile Upholstery
8-4-1 mo. pd .

t*frklfwort

t1n1i11

......

It
P•
P•

KLUB

302 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH . 992-6506 .

'MMIIOOI IIIMotiftc

•

KOUNTRY

tAKQJJ

... .

8·13·1 mo. Pd.

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

CARPENTER
SERVICE

~·· .

··

provements.
rQoling
H ome repairs
.
i m&amp;·
painting. Free estirMates .

roalllfelilluallcllll.
· A4 II die - With moat
doilllle ~JDrGblemlthe
lliddlltl .,_., mike too ,

am

I

7·22 ·1 mo. d .

PHONE 446-364~

SIT ON YOUR SET

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE

3·24·tlc

WISEMAN~:
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
'·

I I XX)( I I I XI]

Double 'dummr problem.

( 304) 273-4098

RNI Eltlle - Genenl
Pony 2 yr . old, rideab le.

~~P!_O~~m~l!ts

F'HONE

or99H121

Services offered
~f== ~ij[IT.~~==mr~~~~~~~~l
5 GO.

Hom ~!

81

KIRBY
SWEEPER
PARTS&amp; ·
SERVICE

GARAGE

The s und .. Times· Senti'ne i- P age-0· 7

W . Va.

. I

.

~

Ohio- P oint Plea

Middleport- (&gt;&lt;11

6j- - --.:iYHikk__ _

==-~~'!!. ~.'l.l!!l!ment

u:·: ==Q~stocf=::.

night 304-675-7&lt;21. Siders i•M.a.,;ey Harris Poney, 70
Eq uipment Co. Rt . 35 Hen ·
derson, WV . No reasonable
offer ref used.

198:.

REG. ,Q UARTP HORSES
Super M Farman picker, 2 Training, ,·:.showing ,
row pull type New Idea cor- breeding, SAIH'•and boar·
nptcker, 1 row New Idea ding. contact . D1n Be'llm,
cornplcker, 5000 Ford trac · Gallipolis, -446·0'183.
tor, IHC ' 615 combine, MF
410 - combine both heads.
Reg '
Russ Brother 139 South of Charolols llt!ills
; Polled, fl9rned,J mos. to J
Ja~kson . 6U·286-2731 .
vr. old. Also POittd heifers,
Woodward's 01\lllco F,a rJ
ms. Call6 U· 3~597. . · .

Untcramble -lhtll fOur Jumbtea,
one lert1r to eKh squart, to form

LYRDY

~·

.;~·

grads.
Prohibits

there
relatives

print
41 Have
on one 's

96 Uncanny
97 Colony of
bees
99 Chu ms
101 Glossy

42 Handles

Iabrie
t05 Make
muffins
106 Narrow

43 Decays
44 Musical

opening
107 Llquety

group
46 Teutonic

112 Advantage

deity

113 Challenge

person

48 Simians

49 Fish
leal ures
SO Hastens
5 1 Surfeits
52 WoodworKer's toot
53 Occupant

55 Prevailing
mood

111 Cut

115 Brrsue

., 16 Pari or a
clan
118 Roman road
119 unruffled

Sovereign
states
123 Note or
scale
121

125 Bogs down

56 Fork prong
57 Sends forth

126 Complain:

58 Sand hills

127 New Eng-

61 Soli

lander
129 Part of a

Stang

63 Rests one's

106 Vapor

3 Greek letter
4 Pronoun

t08 Name

5 Worm

109 Sun god
110 Diphthong

6 Pieces of

64 - the line
68 Three·
base hits

111 Seasoning
112 Stained

7 Mysterious
8 Falsehood
9 Behold!
tO Vessel 's

13 1 Period of

70 Besmirched
71 Holy ones

132 Chiefs

114 " - Mlsera·

bles"

116 Tille of
respect

1 t7
1 19
120
122

lmbl l&gt;es
Mint
Verve
Buy back

124 Stalemate

125 Chlmnay
carbon

126 Prove
faithless
128 co~er

129 Walk
131 Short Jackel
132 Coop
dweller

133 Babylonian
hO&lt;O
135 Rap
136 Sin

lumber

curved

planking
11 Daily record
12 Flower
t3 Siamese
coin
1-1 One of the

Ketues

leet

73 Visions
74 Nuisance

75 Scoff
71 Pigpens
76 Market 01 a

type
80 Ache

81 Guido note

83 High. in
music

fl ower

130 Figure ol
speech
lime
134 Born

136 Enthusiasm ·
137 BuH•Io

139 War gOd
140 Stalk
t44 Anc1en1
145 Nahoor

sneep
146 Two -

one

147 Transfix
146 Yellow
ocher

15 Clever

8&lt; Stotage

16 Sheel ot

compart·
ments
t49 Words on
87 Marine snail a French
89 Lllhe
menu
90Beg
151See14
91 Seagoing
Down
vee :'lei
153 NegBtive

glass
17 Pub potable

IS Cell a day
19 Approaches

20 Charac·
terlstlc
21 Decade
29 Jug lugs
31 Oslo coin

92 Coin
93 Proofread·
er's remark

95 B&lt;rlabor

prefix

155 Greek let1er

157Ear1h
god &lt;Sass

r

�...

Page-D-8- The Sunday T1mes-Se ntinel

/

.

..

August 15, 1?8,2

w. v.1.

Pomcroy-Middlcport- G.1 llipolis, Ohio-Point Ple.1sant,

-

•

Push for metnc conversion fades
•

I

of progress," retiring Chairman
Louis T. Polk says In the boarll's

WASHINGTON CAP)- The U.S.
Metric Board Is going out of busl·
ness with a swan song ·that &gt;i\merlcans are confused about whether
their government .wants \hem to
convert from traditional AngloSaxon measures to metncs. ·
"Some still believe the country Is
being forced to convert, whUe others are Impatient with the slowness

flnal~rt.

The board Is being abolished
Sept. XI as an economy

with a letter of thanks from President Reagan for Its 4!1-year job.
"You havesu~ In your objective of educating the American people about the meaning of metric
measurements In everyday life,"
Reagan wrote.
Uke his predecessOrs, · Reagan
realized that few Americans are
comfortable with anything but the
(radltlonal system of mtles, quarts
and pounds and retllsed to promote

Doctor nailed
in drug case

PROBLEM -This deteriorating abandoned depot
In Middleport Is creating problems for village officials and pollee officers through misuse. Officials report It's difficult to keep offenders out of the structure,
but they hope to 'have It boarded up untO some decl-

LORAIN, Ohio (AP) -Dr. Leonard F. Faymore suffered a
wounded ear durlnjt an arrest after
an undercover drug investigation,
ailthorltles said.
Faymore, 47, who waS shot In the
ear and arrested after a high-speed
chase by agents fl'om the Drug Enforcement Administration and the
FBI, was charged wtth possession
of a controlled substance with Intent to distribute, said Michael Agnese, agent In charge of the DEA In
Lorain.
Faymore refused treatment for
his ear Injury. He was scheduled to
be arraigned Monday In U.S ..Dlstrtct Court, Agnese said.
Agnese said agents se~ large
quantities of methaqualone (QuaaIudes) and pentazocine (Talwln).
He would not give detaUs of the
DEA Investigation, but said it had
been going on for a long tln1e.
The Eaton Township clinic and
pharmacy run by Faymore were
closed last fall bY court order. The
9th DIStrict Ohio Court of Appeals
on Friday up~ld a Lorain County
Commorr Pleas Court decision \II
November that closed Faymore's

slon Is made on the buDding's tale. Chesapeake &amp;
Ohio Railroad OWllllthe buDding, aDd policy prohibits
the raUroad from pvlng the buDding to the village.
Mayor Fred H~man Is seeking a price on the buDdIng and the three lois It stands on.

Pay cut rejection leads to layoffs
Five clvUians -three communiLIMA, Ohio (AP) - Pollee and
catlons
operators and two clerksfirefighters In this north central
were among those lald off In the
Ohio community of nearly 54,000 bepollee department.
gan operating Saturday atlessthan
The layoffs reduced the strength
full strength because of a citywide
of
the department to 66, according
layoff of employees.
to
Pollee
Chief Frank Cattlett.
A total of 56 city workers were
Fire
Chief
Richard Webb said
furloughed, Including 15 pollee emSaturday
the
department's
central
ployees and 13 firefighters, as the
station,
located
In
downtown
Lima,
result of the defeat of an Income tax
wlll
remain
opened,
as
usual.
HowIncrease In June.
ever,
the
four
outlying
stations
will
The decision to Institute the
layoffs was made after all three unbe"In
OIJE;ned
an alternating
otheronwords,
whUe theba51S.
east
Ions representing city workers reand
west
slatlons
are
open
at
the
jected an 11.7 percent pay .cut
same
tln1e,
the
south
and
north
des lgned to ward off layoffs and
erase a $225,000 deficit In the gen- ones. will be closed," he said. "The
situation wut be reversed on the Coleral fund .
The layoffs went Into effect Frl· lowing day."
Webb said the department will.
day at midnight for the city's safety
respond
to fire calls as they come
forces and will be effective Monday
ln.
How
subsequent calls wUI be
for the non-uniformed employees.
hanclled
will
up to the chief of duty,
"It's mainly going to cutdown on
he
said.
.
some of the calls we're going to re"We're going to be flying by the
spond to, " Sgt. WUllam Barnes said
seat
of our pants, as tar as priorities
Saturday.
are
concerned,"
he remarked.
"We're handling felony calls or
Webb
added
that
all paramedic
crimes In progress. But on some of
the minor reports, such as aban- calls are being referred to ambudoned vehicles, we cannot respond. lance services.
Jolm Beebe, president of Local
Poeple who have minor reports will
have to come Into the station to fUe 1002 or the American Federation of
Slate. County and Municipal Emthem."
ployees, and Ron Ferguson, pres!·

dent of Local 334 of the
International Assoclcation of Firefighters, agreed Thursday that
their memberships believe they
had done their share In trying to
reducts costs o the city by not requesting a pay rlase this year and
giving up cost-of-living adjustment
payments for 19882.
·
Purchasing and Personnel Dlrector Dale Leppla, the city's chief negotlator, said the Iayotr.s wut runn

measure,

anything but voluntary conversion

POMEROY- Mel arcte, general
manal!er of the Wichita Hilton Inn
~ ' Wichita, Kan., has been
J)I'OIIlilted to vice president of
operations over all emtlng hotel
properties for Iunco, Inc.
c.rentJy IMco · Is operating the
Hilton 1M Eut and Ai.-p0rt Hilton in
Wl~ta, the Casper (Wyo.) Hilton,
the Skyline East Sheraton at Tulaa,
o.Ja. and the Embassy on the Park
In Kansas • aty, Tltree additional
PfOIII!l'Uis 'In Colorado, Texas and
Illinblll, are luider construction or

. the foimer Patricia Blakeslee, and
children Marianne and Mark Circle
reside with him at 1030 Eastern,
Wichita.

'82 Buicks
·and Pontiacs
in Stock
Ready To Go.
I
I
I

I

'

JOJNS.CLINIC STAFF- Dr. M. SlDBDDe Mlzeaud
·Dr. Mark A: Walker, a buba11d Md wife team from
the~ College of Ohlllai Toledo, bavejon,d the

GAWPOIJS - Dr. Mark A.
Walker, a -specialisl in internal
medicine with subspecialty training
in medical helJUitology-oncology,
and his ~e. Dr. M. Suzanne Mize, a .
cardiologist who is board ~rtified in
internal medicine, have joined the
Holzer Clinic.
Walker hegan his duties on Aug. 2
and Mize wtU• start work In Se~
!ember. Walker will function as an
internist iind hematologistoncolot!lst. · fofize's practice will
generaUy be devoted to cardiology,

• Colo- all the way th..-ouglr.
• Embossed fli1i sh.
• Easily in.5talled.

•

~ Color-5

Availab(Q .

Hotiaontal Whit•
10014-ft ....

• How ·to .plans
included.

S759

W' 3 PLY COX PLYWOOD

six months probation.
Charged with failure to pay a
parking violation and forfeiting $25
bond was JoAnn Patterson, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis.
Forfeiting bond lor speeding
were:
Carolyn D. Lawrence, 42, Scott
Depot, W.Va., $39; Richard D.
Polk, 39, Murphysvllle, W.Va., $39;
Arlene K. Rhodes, 50, Mansfield,
$39; Theodore Dodds, 46, Dayton,
$40.

Judith C. Boyd, 38. South Charleston. W.Va .• $41; Susan E. Nelli, 21,
Blacksburg, Va. , $41; Dana E. Daniels, 36, Rt. 2, Crown City, $42;
Constantine D. Stanley, 18, Charleston, W.Va., $42.
Ronald G. Bender, 46, Brookville,
$44; Michael A. Grassl, 27, ReadIng, Pa., $38; Allan B. Estep, 31, Rt.
2, Proctorville, $39; Anthony H.,
Grimes, 24, Eureka Star Route, $14.

-

\

~

&gt;

"''f '

.. , ' !

..

$1 million loss

EXTON, Pa . ..,..Foote Mineral Co. reported a net Joss of $1,004,000
.for the. second quarter of 1982, compared With a n~t profit of
$2$!1,000, or 28 cents per common share, for the same period In 1981..
Sales were $3U inmlon, compared with $52 mllllon In the 1981
,quarter.
.Sbl months' net losaes In 1982 were $1,541,000, compared with a net
pioflt of $4,587,000, or ~7 cents per common sl1are. In the same period
In 1981. Sales were $72 mUllen, compared with $100.2 mUllon In the
1981 period.
E.P. Comer, presldentand chief executive officer, said the lower
earnings we're the result of reduced sales to foundry, steel and
aluminum custo"'ers and curtallment of operations due to reduced ·

effective Aug. 1, for four,to-seven months. Sales requirements durIng ·that period will be supplied by operating Foote's Sllver Peak
faclllty at; milxlmum capacity and bY reducing Inventories.

Marshall instructor retires
HUNTING1'0N, W.V~~o.- Dr. HaroldL. Wllley, a36-year member
of the Marshall University facultY and administrative staff, recently

.retired.

CROSSBUCK
STORM SCReEN DooR

DIMENSION
LUr.'tBEft

• Prehune .

"-l!r\-.
Ill Iii

• White.
• Hardware included

..

3260 or 3~80.

'

LANDSCAPE TI,.BERS
ST.OCHAO! F~NCf.
• b' x

N '

housekeeper.
Ml,hael L. Garrison, 31, Gallipolis, body repairman, and .Barbara
J . Moss , 21, Gallipolis,
unemployed.
Charles L. Christy, 23, Apple
Grove, service station attendant,
and Mary J . Christy, ~. Apple
Grove, unempiQYed. •
Charles R. Walter, 25, Eureka
Star Route, cart)enter, lll1d VIcki L. ·
Mullins, '1:/, Columbus, data processing :Supervls'or.
Leonard R; CoMe!;, 19, Rt 1,
Crown City, f8l'JIIt!!', ,and ,Janlth R.
Thomas, 18, Rt. 1, Crown City,
clerk.
Randy A. Canaday, ~. Crown
City, laborer, ,aild Mary Ami John~. 18, Rt. 2, Crown aty, at home.
Eugene D: Pickens, 59, Galltpc\:
Us, manager,.and OIHe B. Burnette, .
50, Kerr, unempioyl!d.
'

repor~s

sale!!.
In order to maximiZe cash fiOw from Its lithium operations, Foote
Mliteral has closed its. Kings Mountain lithium carbonate ~clllty,

Bennett ends 20 court cases

GALLIPOLIS - The following
people have flied for marriage licenses over the past two weeks In
Gallla County Probate Court.
Eugene E. Borden, 47, Ledyard,
Conn .. retired chef, and Imogene
Armstrong, 43, Gallipolis, clerktypist.
John P. Westfall, 20, Cheshire,
plant operator, and Gloria r .
Amos, 21, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
secretary.
Michael K. Waugh, 181 Rt. 2,
Crown City, construction worker,
and Karen L. Stitt, 18, Rt. 1, Crown
·etty, student.
~
James W. Saunders II, 24, I~­
uapolls, Ind&gt;, air traffic controller,
arid Kimberly L. Settle, :¥), Gallipolis, student.
James H. Sands, !!3, Rt. 2, Crown·
ctly; !abOrer, and Rosemary PhU·
l!DS. 33, Rt. 1, Crown City,

and
are residing
onage
E~emonJ
?r.ve
months,
ani! Erin,
fqur months,
~ ' .,.. t

' ·.i».GG!~ '.
I

Foote

CEMENT 5GAL.

Couples file for marriage

work as a clinical instructor in the
hematology-oncology section of internal medicine at the Medical
CollegeofOhio.
Mize, a na~ve of Cincinnati,
received her bachelor's degree from
Kenyon College in !973 and her M.D:
degree from the University of Cincinnati. Following her postgraduate
trafning, she received a fellowship In
cardi!ll~ at the Medical College of
Ohio in 1~.
Walke'r and Mize are the parents
of two daughters, Je~ca, age 19

·Busine-ss Briefs:.

REAOY-Mtll

GALLIPOLIS- Judge James A.
Bennett has ended ~cases In Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Robert D. Garnes, 20, Gallipolis,
charged with possession of mailjuana, fined $60.
Charged with reckless operation
and forfeiting $75 bond was Susan
A. Drake, :ll, Gallipolis.
Gerald P. Langhorn, 23, Addison.
charged with consumlqg In a motor
vehicle. forfeited $40 bond.
Charged with faUure to yield &lt;~nd
forfeiting $40 bond was Janet S.
Cook, 25, Gallipolis.
Each charged with faUure to display valid registration and forfeitIng $35 bond were James K.
Tomlinson, 28, Rt. 2, Crown City,
and John R. Craft, 19, Gallipolis.
Gerald L. Sowards, ~; Rt. I, Bidwell. charged with no operator's II·
cense, fined $15, six months jaU
sentence suspended and placed on ·

Walker and Mize completed their
training at the Medical College of
Ohio at Toledo. Both are board cer·
tified in internal medicine and
eligible in their respective subspecialty fields.
The son of Dr. and Mrs. Isom c.
Walker of Gallipolis, Walker
received his bachelor's degree from
Marietta CoUege aDd his M.D.
degree from the University of Cincinnali. Following completion of his
poSt-graduate training, he received
a fellpwship in medical hematology-

Ohio from 1~
·
5~~~she~.~will~'~be~do;in~g~so;m~e~~o~nc~o~lo~gy~a~t
~the~M~ed~ic~al~C~o~ll;eg~e~pf~

Probe Candelight Inn break-in

'

~taft ai Rober plnle Lid Walker hllle son of Dr. Uld
Mn, born C. Walker of Gallipolis.

:Husband-wife team to
'jQin ~olzer _Clinic staff

.J

Bend News Briefs:

a· section .

WH.IT£ ' -

· No 100 -Yt" .

• &lt;! 'Pinel·
"Sec~•.

~lVCiassA
No.'192 · S/8" .

.

WUley, who held the rank of professor of education, began )lis

career with · Marshall as a social studies and physical education
teacher at tfle Marshall Laboratory School In 194fi.
In 1951, he becll!lle dean of men at MU, a post he held untO 1900,
when he rej:umed to teaching, He also served !Ill acting dean of
student affairs In 19Ql.
WIUey, who served with the U.S. Air Force In World War II,
earned 'his bachelor's ~'!rom t.1arshall, his master's from
'Co!llmbta Unllrerslty and hlp doctorate In education at the University or Tennessee.
. ...,

R~ach~· vocational agreement ·
RIO GRANDi""" AD 8111'1!einent ilas been reached with the Gallta-

CEILING PANELS

• Au.ilable ., ""'"
popular .,....,

August lS, 1982

arcle became general manager of
the Wichita Hilton East in January
11178. Dluing IJls tenure, the Wichita
Hilton has received nllmerous awards Including the Mobil Four-star
Award five yesrs in a row and
si!Verai gourmet recognitions for
JuCige Riggs restaurant Prior to
1971, Circle was the general
manager of l!toulfer's University
Inn In Col'umbus, Ohio.
In addition to arcle's promotion,
he was awarded the Hotel-Motel
Person of the Yesr distinction by the
Kansas Hotel and Motel Association
(KH&amp;:MA). He was presented with
the Hutson plaque a£ the April 3
meeting In Dodge City, Kan.
The KH&amp;.MA award was initiated
in 1961 and Is awarded annually tthe
innkeeper who has done the most to

upgrade the lnuige of the industry
through his business and community
service.
arcle was elected to the KH&amp;MA
board of directors in 1960. He served
the association as president during
the 1980-81 term and had previously
served as secretary-treasurer and
vice president. He is the current
president of the Wichita Hotel-Motel
Association and is a past niember of
the board of directors for the
American Hotel and Motel
Association. Circle haa also l&gt;een aj&gt;'
pointed by the city council ·as vice
president of the Transient Guest Tax
Committee and has served on the
Convention and Tourism Committee
for the Wichita Area Chamber of
Commerce.

Community mental health staff
honored at recent annual meeting

ALL AT DISCOUNT PRICES

~

·

£~-Meigs resident gets promotion

Clrele Ia the loil of the late Howard
ll!ld.Mary Circle of Racine. His wife,

GALLIPOLIS
EASTERN AVE.
r~throog::h~t:he~e~n~d~o~f~th~e~y~ear~.==~cl:lnlc~an::i:t~P~h:ar~m~·a~cy~.~..__:----j~~~~~======~:~~=~~~~~~~

POMEROY- The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is Investigating the breaking and entering of the Candlelight Inn on Ohio 7
below Hobson.
According to deputies, the buUdlng was entered sometime after
3: XI a.m. Friday by breaking a window In the front of the establishment. Cigarettes, beer and whiskey were reported stolen.
The deparment Is also Investigating the cutting of a barbed wire
fence on the Marcus Guhi property on Welsh Town HUl at MlnersvUie. The Incident occurred sometln1e Thursday evening. The pasture fence was cut in two places.
BID Roush, Portland, reported that an 11-horsepowet.lawnmower
was stolen from the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints, Old
Town Flats, sometln1e around Aug. 7.

~inus-i~ section~

planned.

'

.

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

Ill metrlcs.
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Americans familiar with the
Issue tend to .have strOng opinions,
. and politicians are reluctant to II!'·
tagonlze them.
''Small business supports volu.nIMY conversion actlvltles but will
· vehemently oppose any attempts
bY the federal government or ot)ler
groups to Impose mandatory COfl:
version," said ·ROger E. Travis, a
smaJi.buslnesiman and member of
the Metric Board
But the board got th1s statement
from a university lltJibuquerque,
N.M.:

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

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Jackaon-Villton Jemt Vocational School Dlitrlct p!mlittlngstudents
w!Jo have .~'B busiJ!ess ptogJ:am at~ ~tile pftrtlctpatlng
Vocatlolllll sCIIoola to1'ecelve credJt..a(RioGrande Cq!lele and COmmunity Collelle after demonstrating aalllfactocy' at111 rompetency.
The agreer/lent between tile !-'OIIeaes and tbe JVSD was reached to
avoid u~ dupllcatlolt ~ ~ork lV!len the student en1'0111 at RGC-CC. It will a1iO redu!!e tbe 11111J11!er of credit hours
needed.to achieve I! dep'ee, ~ fllidellt.lrido adVancEd'work.
'lbe agreemE:nt. niade II&gt;' co1Jece 8lld vocatloDal nft!dals, also
requires minimal ~ to ~ts tll!'oul!l the ellmlniltlon of unncessary credit )lours of work.
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A'thens bpnk cbQMe1
qne

na~

ATHEN~-~
of ~tbealll cJ!anpd Ita aame ID'BIInkOilll
~ Sou~ ObJo, -. ~ 1a1t Monday. At tile aame time. the

Sta"

C1t111D1
Bank It Somenet wlllllliii'P wiiiiBuk Olle d. !loll·
- - Ohio, accOOJtna to Ted GrQVer; JlllllldeAt d. tile latter
•-~1.

~~a~~ty.

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GAWPOIJS - The Gallia·
Jacllaon-Meiga Community Mental
Health Center board of directors
hel4 its III!IUal meeting to honor
board members and staff at the
Jolly Lanes In Jackson recently.
New board officers Installed at the
meeting were Charles HoWard of
Jacksoo County, Chairman; Dr.
YvoMe Scally of Meigs County,
Vi~hairman; and lila Buckley,
R.N. of Jackson County, secretary.
Emil Janko of Gallia County contlnues In hill post of treasurer.
Retiring board chairman, the Rev.
William Middleswallth of Meigs
Couilty, waspresentedwithaplaque
for hill six years of service on the
board. He formaUy presented the
board's annual report that describes
operations, program and budgets of
the Community Mental Health Center.
Dr. Bernard F. Niehm, the center
director,· said that becaW!e of "a
strong board and good staff, we have
a good solid financial footing"
deilpite funding source setbacks.
The 100 people in attendance- staff,
~sts and board members r~gnized the contribution of the
aU-volunteer board.
Other board members recognized
fllf•\ thei1', ,Yol~ 1e~lcea were
'GiUia · CowitY,' representBUves Alix
Harder, Robelt Hermesy and James
Howard; Jackson County representatives Myron Davis and John L.
Weber (retiring secretary) and

Meigs County representative Geri
Walton.
The center's personnal ad·
minlstrator, Juanita. Gilliam,
presented staff awards for outstanding achievement: Joyce Bur·
ner of the Children's Residential
Treatment Program received an
award as "an invaluable employee
who cares very deeply about the
residents."
Awards also went to Onnan Hall
of consultation, education and
prevention; Dr. Gordon Halliday;
Phyllis HI binger, personnel
secretary, and Laraine Newsome
and Mary Alice Skidlnore of
Crisisline for their dedicated ser-

Five-year length of service awal'
'ds went to Helen Bailey, Waneta
Bowman, Margie Casto, Patricia
Elkins, Judy Harrison, Phyllis
Hibinger, Dr. Harriet Kaufman,
Nancy Kohlrieser, David Krasner,
Phyllis Mason, JoAnn McGraw, Dr.
Nan Mykel, Niehm, Pam Riffle,
Sharon White, Lygia Williams and
Peg Yankuns.
Aspecial award was presented by
Niehm to Senior Friends Coor·
dinator, Bonnie McLain, for one of
her Impromptu Senior Friends activities.

vice.
Pat Tope, Jackson receptionist,
was presented an award for her
"helpful spirit working on the May is
Mental Health Month Committee, as
a reporter for the staff newsletter
and her invaluable assistance
helping to put the annual dinner
together."
Awards for a year's perfect attendance went to Dan George, Or·
man Hall and Peg Yankuns.
Tile center's first Ill-year length of
service award went to Virginia
Lucas, Jackson receptionist. Also
~ized for,yeaf11 of service were
.. MalColm· Or~baughl' (nine - years l,
Juanita GiUiam and Mona Martin
(eight years), Sandy McFarland
(seven years) and Barb Stephenson
(six years).

MIDDLESWARm

RGC names new staffers, trustee

•
ELAINE BROWN

Brown on
college staff
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GALLIPOLIS - Elaine Brown,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brown, 934 First Ave., Galllpolls,
recently accepted a positiOn as assistant professor In the physical
and health education department
and the coa~h of tile women's vol·
Ieyball and softball teams at Cedar·
vOle College.
A 1973 Gallla Academy High
School &amp;raduate, Brown graduated
from Cedai'vllle In 1m , with a
bachelor's degree, and In 1982 from
tile University of Dayton with a
master's degree. Botb ~ ' In
education.
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In 1m-81 she ~ught physical ed·
ucatlon In grades K-12 at Middletown Chrlstlail School. During the
past school year, she taughi raequetball and tennis at tbe Unlverslty of payton, and last sprjng
coached the women's Softball team
at Cedarville.
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RIO GRANDE -Two staff positions and a new member of the
boai'd of trustees at Rio Grande College and Community College )lave
been announced.
Donna Dixon, Hamden, has been
named as a nursing Instructor. A
Wellston native, she graduated
from Ohio State University with a
bachelor's. degree In nursing In
1971. Since August 1!81, Dixon had
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been emplayed
as a nursing lnstl')lctor at Buckeye Vailey Career
Center near McArthur.
She was previously employed as
supervising nurse at the Vinton
County Health Department, staff
nurse In pediatrics at Medical Center Hospital in Chillicothe and staff
nurse In the surgical area a,t Holzer
M~cal Center.
Dixon Is a graduate of Wellston
High SchooL

Gallipolis resident Ron Adkins
has been named director of financial ald. A 191ll honors graduate of
RGC with a bachelor's degree In
business, Adkins has worked as a
teller-accountant since January
1981 at the Commercial &amp; Savings
Bank In Galllpolls.
He has also completed some
work toward a master's degree at
Ohio State University. Whlle a student at Rio Grande, Adkins was an
officer In the Alpha Delta Epsilon
social fraternity, was active In the
Chi Beta Phi honor fraternity, student publications. the student programming board and as a resident
assistant.
Adkins was listed In "Who's Who
Among American College Students." He·and his wife, Kin1, a student at the college, wUI reside at
Rio Grande.

. The new trustee Is Ned Riegel.
CtrclevUie. A Walnut Twp. native,
he graduated from RGC In 19ffi
with a bachelor's degree. He received his doctor of dental surgery
degree in 1m and his master's degree two years later, both from
Case Western Reserve University.
Currently an orthodonlst In the
ClrclevUie area, Riegel is a
member of the Chi Beto Phi fraternity, the Rio Grande Alumni Association. and Is listed among "Who's
Who of American Universities and
Colleges."
He is a selected member of the
Omachron Kappa Upsllon dental .
fraternity and In 1977 received the
Outstanding Potential and Achievement Award from the Ohio
Academy of General Dentistry.
Reigel and his wtfe, Lela, reside
In CtrclevUie.

Former PVH nursing director
opens medical equipment center

By LEE KAMPMEYER
was her Idea to start the business, lain Medical, Boulder, Colo.
For lhe '11mea 8e Mla&gt;el ,
since s~e has much experience In
The oxygen concentrator, says
POINT PLEASANT - She's the the health care field.
Mike, wUI be delivered within a 6().
Asi~ from her work at PVH, she
healt,htypeandheJJa¥1esbuBiness
mUe radius of the area The maoperations. and service. · Together, did supervisory nursing and chines, he says; filtrate lmpul'itles .
Kathleen Matnhout and her son, worked In public health, starting In In the air giving 98 percent pure
Mike, sell medical equipment and · 1947. From l9W-8l, she was assistoxygen to a patient. The concentraprovide ongoing service through M ant medical director for· j3eckley tor can produce three liters of oxy&amp;: M Medtcal Equipment, 2fiffi (W.Va.) Hospital, Inc. Slle Is also a . gen per minute and has a bubble
Jackson Avf!.
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registered II\U'!Ie. In addition, she Is
humidifier.
· Mrs. Marnhout, fonnerly JIUI'So co-owner of McCreary County FunThe oxygo.1 concentrator also
Guides money .'
11\J director a¢ halpltal admlnls- eral Home In Whitley City, Ky.
has a backup system and three
~
trator at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
As area nianager, . Mnce will alarms which react when power Is
BOGoTA, ColO~ (AP) -An lsownerofthe·newbuslnesawblch . supply, ·del!vei-, provide Instruction shut down, as In the case of a polfer
airline compllter reservation sys.
opened Aug; 2. Her 1011, WhO P!a)'ed on tile equlp1111!11t and do paper- outage .. It Is also portable and can
temllbelngusedtotrlqllfer~
footbell at Pobrt Pleuant ijlg!1 work. He said 24-houl" emergency be hooked up to a generator while
.
orders from ~ ~ of mountalll~bool, II are!' manaaer. :
' service wm be available for lnune- driving.
oua Olkimbla to tile otJier, Ill»" a• ' The medical equljJment theY dlate ripaiJ' and be will vlslt clients
'!'he medical equipment Is avaUaIIWI8gel!l!!llt lnfonnatlon syste1n1
clfer II b'llome-care I!INI!· Oxyu part ~ a monthly follow1lp.
,ble for everyone. Mike says M &amp; M
joul'nal. ~
&amp;ell COQCeDtraton for tiiOie with
"We ~ the llljiC)IInes to will biU for Meillcald patients.
~to M1S Week_ tbe sy._ , ~dlleM~OrCCJII&amp;II!SiedheartfaU·
ll'l8!le SUI'e they're puttln&amp; ~t the
1dQte says he has .a sincere. f~­
tmn d.feri a IUilJ'8IIIee It II!CIII'Ity, ure are avallable. 1\!10; fd'l M hu right output," he said.
lni about putting·what M &amp;: M proYlrtuaJiy tbe 0111)' way In CoiUnbla : whee~ reauJar bedi, .~­
AU . equipment II new and only vides back Into the community.
--d.~~toeasure
eleebic beds and !Jolpltal bed dJ.peMed thriXIgh a phylk:lan's Followlnir high sc~ool, he also
~ ·lh'Mii f1 tile JI10DIY. 1
IIMI!IIarill.
.
Order. ~tal beds 8lld whelll- played football tor CAL Western In
11111 alHIJie, AvlaDca, II tile oa1y
''We ~ tbt ~ and latl!lt dlaln are ~~~&amp;~Piled by Smith and · San Diego, Calif., where he also ·
Ill tile COUptry to l!lw a tbiDI ~ hal aftor!led," u- Devil Of St. Laula, Mo.. and remain- eariled a bachelor's deKr!!e In bual·
«Niiilitil ~ I)'IIIDI.
.IUI'I!I M1'l. Marlllol!l Sbe llld It
- ~ II made' by Moun- neaa administration.

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Au ust 15 1,.2

Pqlnerov-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. \/a.

·.Proper pasture ·ma~agement
p~ys off.in the long run . .
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By KERRY MARTIN
achieved the .-t step ·iii puture
DlllrleiTeetudetu
renbvatlOIII 111 to chooee a· highG.ulaS.OudWa&amp;er
.Pf9ducing plant species that Is
c-mtiGB Dll1rlel
' suited for your area and .fllrllling
GAWPOIJS- In Gllllla County pncticea.
there are approximately •.ooo
Jim Snin,· who Is a local dairy
acres of pel'll1allenl puture. Much fanner, 11 1 good euJI11lle. He uid
of tlila puture has vf!ry low·produc- that he applied p,ooo worth of fer.

tnizer and saved -.ooo on IUs yearly
feed bill. Swain~ uld that a well
1manall!!d. puture II the dleajlest
ny to feed. So in these llmea of
economic crunch, 1 paature
renqvatlona appeara to be a very
economically IIOIIIId investment and
• cheap IOW'I.'!l of feed.
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u;~ev~~
the p~VIt~ · ; . Blook seeking public
theae puturel, the finlt lleP Is to
.

-inp••t o' n ili'Hin p_,.ili'Hm

'ume .and fertilize. If the fertility
"le\lel Is too low re8eedlng with a
¥ • ,..
~a v~ higher quality plant species would
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bea'!Vasteoftlmeandrnoney. .
GAWJ'OUS - Secretary of diversion program and If such a
· To Improve the soil fertnlty level, Agriculture John R. Bloek f8C!e!llly prognna Ia ellabllahed, a ~yment
the flrat thlng1to do Is to have a soli ·Biked the public to CGriiment by Aug. date for the jllvenlon;
test analysis done. This will iridlcate 2B on proVIalona of the 11113 feed • - Offiettlng and CI'OIII cornpl)ance
what nutrients yOUI"soilllare lacking grain ~ram, the detaila of which requlrementa under acreage reduc-.
and give recominendations for lime muat be announced by Nov.15.
lion program;
.
and fertilizer appUcaticin rates to
·Block sal~ he plana to announce
- Methodll for determining 11113 ·
bring the soli up to mulmwn the 11113 feed grain program well In crop a~e bull;
·
production
capacity.
Follow
these
advance
of
the
Nov.
15·
statUtory
Whether
blrley
lhOuld
be inRECEIVES AWARD- The Gallia Soli and Water
npervlaor; Blalln&lt;ne~..;:r_t:~·
Milia
HI,
right,
I~
on
behaU
of
other
board
recomrilerided
rates
completely.
At
deadline.
.
,
cludedforpa~~;
and
Conservation Dlstrid re~eived •econd place In the
mem~n, Jqbuny Pa)'lle, Gary Altizer, Jim Bllughfirst this
seem to be a COfllly
~lock aid the U.S, Department of · - I(
"f~il' IIJclilded 1!1
state for JIB soil and water coDServatlon program
man,
aild
Gary
Fallon,
ltll1supervillor.
The
award
wu
venture,
but
time
will
prove
that
the
Agr!cullure
woul_!:l
like
to
~lve
as
•
the
~~~~
It lhould
during recent ceremonies. The state meeting of the
returns
on
well
managed
paatures
many
commenta
&lt;88
~
.
ao
It
·
be
aempted
·
fi'oill
~
acreage
pret~ented
before
a
P'UI!P
of
more
than
4GI,
repreae~
Ohio Federation of SoU aod Water Dlstrlclll was held In
will
far
outweigh
the
initial
expenae.
will
have
a
brold
range'
a1
public
reduction
program.
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tin«
80
counties
In
Ohio.
Canton. Accepting the award is C. A. Duncan, lelt, 1981
After ~ood soil. fertility hu been opinion about the program: He uid
mock also asked for opinlona on
he will study the public's ·recom- provisions for 1 fllnner-owiled grain
mendations, ·as well as · the m1181 reserve,' commodity ellglbQJty,
current data 01) U.S. and world .crop premiums and dlscoqnta, the
conditions and crop slqlply and establishinent of coimty loan rates
demand before he makes final and all other provillons neceiUry to
decisions.
carry oilt a Joan and purchaae
Specifically, USDA would like to progr&amp;Jp for feed grains.
reCeive comments on:
... Details of .pnJgram optiCIIIII USDA
BY BRYSON R. CARTER
temoon session. Sandwiches and a
-' Loan and purchase prices, Is ·considering are scheduled tO apExtenaloo Agent
light lunch will be served at 12 noon
' target prices and the.• national pear in the July rt, · Federal
Agriculture and CNRD
at Buckeye Hills followed by a
program acreage;
Regiilter.
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Gallla County
program on chemical renoyatlon of
By BETtiE CLARK
without being overly fuasy . . Soft
...;. Whether to establish either an
comments should be llellt to:
GALUPOUS - I want to alert pastures at 1 p.m. Then we'D go to
Eztenalon Agent
blouses worn with jeans and pants acreage reduction or · set-aside Howard C. Willlama, !fh'ector,
our dairy and bee£ cattle fanners of Ed's farm just northeast of Rio
Home
Eeouomlca
are
a change of pace.
program, and, if USDA estabilllhes analysis division, USDA·ASCS,
:an Alfalfa meeting at Buckeye Hills Grande to see fields where this type
reductions
for com1 oats, barley or room 3741-8, P.O. Box 2415,
Career Center, and the Ed Stowers of aUalfa is being l(rown.
GAWPO~Ula ~%cuons for The sportswear acene is also ·sorghum, the
levels of such reduc- Washington, D.C.' :MI013. The com:Fann near Rio Grande, next
We'll also have an opportunity to
back-to-school· wear centers on detailed. Snaps, gronimela, zippers tions;
ments will be available for public inand patches highlight the outdoor
Tuesday, Aug. 17, beginning at 12 see a demonstration of !I Moore Unitsweatsuit
dressing,
feminine
look.
Suspendm
and
piperbag
Provisions
of
governin~
spection
in room 3741. of uspA's
noon.
Drill.
EngliBh
romantic
and
country
girl
waistbands
are
newsy
lia
are
devoted
to
conservation
South
Building
~ regular
acreage
All area farmers interested in
John Underwood, Area Extension
styles,
plus
active
.
sportswear
widened
wailtbandund
yokes.
Plpluse;
busineBi
houri.
growing alfalfa, in particular the Agronomist, and Darrel McKenzie
sep![rates. Throughout, colora are ts are often c1opped, ctnched or cuf·
1- Whether to establish a land
new "spreadinli: type" of aUalfa, are of Northup King, will be the featured
ne~
and
an
integral
part
of
styles
fed
at
the
ankle.
Side
ilu.ts
and
:
invit&lt;&gt;d to attend this Tuesday af· speakers.
deepened jewel Iones for romantlts, roll:up ~uffs In coiltrasting Jlllttems
rustic shades for country looks and coordinate with sklrta. Knickers,
intenae, vivid colorations for sweats· walking sho.rts and split skiJ11 offer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
AS of June 31, FmHA bad -$2U
~nd sportswear. Colors are also used wardrobe variety. Cordbroy, twill, Farmers Home Administration · billion in Joana outatandlng to
m different ways, such as, in blocks sueded and brWihild fabricli are says Ita delinquency Joan .rate con· • 433,307 indiVIdual farm l;lormwers.
for definition .or heathered for sof· , rugged looking. . ·
tlnues to cllmb, meaning that thou· _ Of those, r/;5 pen:ent or. 119,281
Denim Is fOr-ever but the newest lllllldS or ,borrowers
tenlng.
unable to were on the dellnquellcy Uat.
Fleece is ~ the forefront in basic entry Is Hghtwetght. Six-ounce meet paymenta on IChedlile.
In all, the delinquent borrowers
By John c. Rice
several advantages. It provides a sweat styhng and, more lm· denim provides greater drapablllty
OlftclalftiuN.
show thaf nearly
owed paymenta totall,lig $2.93 bll·
County ExteDIIOIJ Agent,
second chance to establish a crop
portanUy, in new shapes, lengtha than its heavier coqsina It Ia one-third of the Joana have been de- · lion. Their ~ FmHA Indebted·
Agriculture
where spring seedings failed or and combinations. Mini flippy and fashioned Into flllliiiCed pralrle skir- · llnquent for three years or bnger.
ness,. however,
was nearly $10.3
1
POMEROY - While you are at- where conditions prevented getting · split skirts are the hasis for newly ts and pinafore rUffled b1uaea and • ·
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bUUon ' •
tending the fair this week, I hooe you the seeding done in the sprlhg.
The F'mHA, as the Agriculture
The.FmHA's figures, which were '
detailed tops featuring geometric shows up in split sklrta jodhpur and
· include in your schedule time to ob- August seeding can follow har:patterns, color bloCking and stripes. jogging pants. Plaids ~ stripes in Department agmcy. calls ltse,lf, Is . provided 'l'buraday at the reqllellt
1
:serve some of the junior fair vesting of a small grain, a meallll of Dolman sleeves, dropped shoulders, new coloratiCIIIII enhance skirts. Knit known as the fedel'al government's
lend~:~'
of'last
resort,
cirertng
credit
of a repoJ'Ier,-shawed that a year
:uvestock or horse shows. Also stroll . double cropping and keeping the soil squared armholes, boilt necks are tqps become more fanciful with
to farmerl wbD caDDOt quBuiy at
earlier the delinquency rate on
~through the Junior Fair Building
protected with a crop. By ~ng in acce~ by Color~· ~ VWiednecklinelandpalllr-.'
banks other commercial blstltlf.
June 00 waa le11 tlian :xl percent
·and see some of the projects our August, most of the weed com- vef'l!iilna are lengthen~ via peplum
1
' Color and teXture are the ~ywor­ lions.· ~all, It provides ~bout
and
that .late payme!lls were $L!B'
11
;youth have made. Then Friday night petition is avoided because few
styllng, fitted long-torao looks and da for fall's aelectlons of PlintYhose
credit
billion. on a total klan l!lllance,of
don't forget the market livestock weeds . germinate a~d cause elongated, over-the-llligh sweat- and tighta. Touted as an affordable pen:ent of the natlon'afarm
,
. . · · ~74 bllllon ,
; sale. Anyone can buy.
problems in late swruner. Delaying
shirts. Sophlsllcated detaila in- way to u{xlite and vary f~ons
&gt;
AUaUa, smooth bromegrass, or- seeding also provides an opportunity eluded higl) cr01IJII sleeves, pinafore both sheers and opaques' · offer~
.
.
: chardgrass and timothy are well to get corrective lime and fertilizer
rufnes, button ruffles, button palette of colcn 1bey ~ from
:adapted to August seeding, ac- applied.
shoulders. Jumpsuits, jodphur Renalllance
1n teal grape,
, •
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The Ia· lion pounclii· of young ~WckeQil,
-cording to Don Myers, Extension
Where forages are August seeded shapes and knickers round out I!Je garnet red, mauve, pa~, cheat· test slaughter figures sbDw that J)l:lmarlly brollers, which showed a
aMronomist of The Ohio State following wheat or oats, plowing or new fleeces.
.
nut and deep gold to subtle pastels, pc\ultcy output Is lricreaslng at 2 percent ~e from a year
University.
several dis~ings are necessary to . Romantic s.tyles and wes~em In- toblac!korolf-whiteforcontraatand about the rate forecast by Agriculearner. · :
· The specialist said that successfUl kill vqlunteer .small grain. Delay fluence contmue. strong. In the grayaas neutrals. ·
Accordlni to a recent outlook ~
ture Department experta.
·: seedings of tall fescue and red clover several days between disking for newest translations they . ~ve
Laces, dots .and 'Stripes gi\te new
port,
total l)ll!8t and pouJtcy suppaays theCrop Reporting
: have been made in Ohio when best control of volunteer small grain moved closer together, borrowrng dimension to sheer nylon pantyhose
lies
lhla
~ are expected •to
Board,' the total live .weight of {lOIII·
; seeded in early August. When and weeds. Volunteer grain can give from ~ the ~ictorlsn fa.ncy and many with contlot-top or girdle-top: try inspected for slaughter waa 1.83 decline ~bollt 3 percent fl'om 1981.
; making sununer seedings, a small serious competition to the new the pratne fashtCIIIII of sprmg. The Treatments include raindrops pin- ' bllllon pamds, up 1 percent from · But all 1#. till! decJlne will occur aa a
· grain crop is not used, he added.
overall effect is a simple softness Stripes and seed-pearl
'
forage stand.
result in the sharp cutback In pork
June 198i
....
' Quick genninatlon and rapid
Make swruner seedings in August with lots of detailing.
. • Textured t~hts
in •natural . The Inspections included 1.47 biJ.
· , seedling growth are necessary to for best success. Also, prepare a . D~ feature small floral pnnts fibtirs and ble!lds SIICh as
: · prevent winter kill of the new weed-free, firm seedbed before plan·nch, soft colors. Darks are often nylon/wooV elastane an&lt;! cot, ~ '
· seedlings, he said. The use of press ting. leveling and firming the seed- m
used as grounds for pr(nts. ton/nylon. AU the sweater .textures
: wheels, which provide good seed-soil bed are Important steps in suc- Pinafores, aprons, eyelet-edged pet· are represented 1rom cables and
. contact, hastens germination. Band cessful stand germination.
Prices are '·
t1coats and pettlpants add charm tc ribs to fisherman knits ,·
~~ ~Plttsbu....;.h, NR
•
seeding on well-prepared, firm seedSheep Referendum - Contact the both the h,lstorically feminine and weaves, cobweb knits and
-1' , . .
••
effective
bed and high levels of fertility ASC'i Office if you do not get a ballot yesteryears country glrlfeellngs.
thru .
f'or longer life The ~P and· i
~ .
Mine Run (Strip)
. promote rapid germination and by :Aug: 20 and have had sheep at
, Sept.l, 1982
Flounced and tiered skirts in cor· Detergent Assoclalton reminds con.4 TON MINIMUM
·· establislunent of swruner seedings.
least 30 consecutive days during duroy are paired WIJh soft, highly sumera to WISh hoaiery 8ftet.each ·
'1''
;: Augusl seeding or forages has 1981.
detailed . blouses. Flounced pet- wearing. Delicate iJheelllbduld be
DELIVER !ED.
'
PRICE
ticoats peek from tweedy coats ski.r· hand washed. Sturdier atyl.. mar be
Pomeroy •••••••• : . •.•.•••.•.•• r.•.••••• :· • $26.00 Ton
~ New
Is. Tweedsaremlxedwithvelvetsm marhine washed on gentle cycle in
Middleport&amp; Racine ...... .... ............ ... $27.00Ton
v.ottoms and tied together with souft wann water. Plilce hollery1 in a
Meigs County .......... .', • .'......... .' .... $28.00 Ton
· WASIDNGTON (AP) - The worm parasite of Uvestock that was blO!JSe5. Shorter shaped jackets in • meah bag before wuhlng to •void
·
'
PH. ft2.~
: AgriCulture Department hOpeS to costing stockmen over $100 mUIIon · tweed or velvet combine with s~ tangling.
·• : . · I ~~~~~===~~~&gt;\:::=:·:
.! ==~;;f;;;~\
: · have a new report within 60 days on a year," Mussman said.
of all types ·- prairies, splits,
White s)'!lthetlc fabrics should be 1·: a cooperative program to eradicate
Thus, he said, the agency wants ' classics, dif'!'dl. and with pants, washed , seJI!Irately from colored
·; screwworrns from Mexico and pre- to get "a. fresh outside view" of the especially kmckers.
clothes becilure they tend to pick. up
, vent their re-entry Into the United U.S.·Mexico joint effort against
Details run the gamut in dresses color eUlly from other Items.
: States.
~ lllouses. Tucks, pleats, piping,
The washer llhould not fle ~as a
screwworrns.
: Officials said the study is being
Screwworms iii the adult fly high-rile . illeeve llhoulder seams, ..hamper for soiled or damp Ia~
.. prepared by a team or scientists stage of development lay eggs in tapered sl~ves, yok!!S, asymmetric Mildew could develop ·oo
: · under the direction or Charles Lin· animal wounds. The eggs deVelop cloew:es, Fuffles, oversize collars making It impol!slble to remov• the
:.· coin, professor emritus at the Uni· Into larvae or maggots which bur- al.'l!,cleanly done to provide Inter~ , odor.
· • ..
. ver'stty or Arkansas, and wunam rovllnto the wound ll!ld feed on the
: G. Eden, professor emeritus at the animal's Uve Oesh, causing serious
• University of Florida.
Injury or death.
: The two scientists directed a slmSeasonal invasions oftbeSOuthw·
~ Oar study of the screwworm eradl·
est by screwwonns from MexiCo,
··, cation program In the along wtth losse$ suffered by Mexj: • southwestern United States in 1974. can producers, led to ~ cooperative
;; Harry Mussman, administrator program to J!!lsh tbe peels deep into
• or t)le department's Animal and southern Mextco. Those efforts .
I
.
; Plant Health Inspection Service, have virtually treed the northern• said the 1974 study resulted In a most Mexican states trom the In•
: number of useful sect and.have eliminated It entirely
; recomrnendations.
In the states of Baja CaJUornla,
• "The soutllwest program eventu· Baja California Sud and !lorloql, of·
: ally treed t~ region of the screw- flclals said.
. ,
·

rna}Wl'

may

Agriculture and our community

r----------------------,.""1

August IS, 1982

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary;

Choices for back
to school girlswear

Delinquent ~te continues to cJinb

County agent's corner

Don't forget livestock sale '
Friday at Meigs County Fair

Denv~~ ·Yoho ·crossed span:
:·:~~~ Remage~ under. gun£ire
:

ByJ.SAMVELPEEPS

., 2.-.Bol 202, GallipoliS, a publlsfled
author whose books are in the public
.l..
!I'bra ry l..tde,
crosseq the span at
I. Remagen under Nazi sniper fire.
.
He,s cIearly hved
to tell about it.

I"""'•

U•· rlwr Into • 1.,~,.
~~.~,.,111111&lt;· by,""
hll1•ry an!l air t-tl\'t•r from Uw I.•UC.t•nl blnk. ~1
k•·r h• u.., Gen11on pllll' ,... \o blow •II lht·
T~-&lt;· •lr ...lvr.~ '"'""''11&lt; U.· !lhh•· ,had

"'1&lt;1•"·

an ~&gt;." ·n Wln'tl 111n1.1 ll~tl:t nf t1yn11mnt· m a~

lidpolioo·~• ..·h. ""'"'·

The river had been ,;ueh a barrier
GEN. PATrON'S fast-moving ar·
for
a thousand ycal'l! or more.
mor and its allies north and south in
France in late 1944 swept the Nazis
WARREN F. SHEETS was there,
out of France and drove them back
as
we've told you more than once
past the Rhine River. The Gennallll
before.
WoUnded in action, Sheets
·. wt re supposed to have destroyed
did
particiP.Bte
in the actual
their bridl(es after them, but
crossinf1
....
He
was
there! Mter his
somebody forli:ot, and the' bridl(e at
ouUit
crossed,
Sheets
was wounded
Rernagan stood long enough for the
when
a
German
88
crash&lt;&gt;d
throu~h
· Americallll to get across.
a roof of a building housin~ the
DENVER YOHO brought back Gallipolitan and other American
with him the . clippi~gs of a soldiers on the east bank. of the
reminiscent news story from the Rhine. Denver Yoho's ·outfit,
Junction Citr. ~!JhSas; Daily Union however, was decorated with the
' an article wtl '@'ilHtlit\!ey Perritt: Presidential Distinguished ,Unit
' His piece 'UJIII' ~~f.t\i 1 reunion of Citation, and in recognition of its
800 veterans of the Ninth Armored valor at the Ludendorff Bridge, the
Division, who dedicated this com- shoulder patch for the Ninth Ar·
memorative plaque on the walkway mored Division carries the bottom
tab: "Rernagen," accordin~ to Har·
near Fort Riley's Cavalry Museum.
vey Perritt.

•:
1

i

Fired ,administrator charged

GEORGETOWN,Ohlo (AP), A man who was recently fired as
' admlnlstrator of Bro\m County
· General Hospital has been charged
. ~th theft in office.
. Edward Roberto had been ad·
mint.trator for 22 years. He was
1 present Thursday wllen the charge
was tued against · him 1n Brown
County Common Pleas Court by
County Prosecutor Ron
.. Dvorachek.
Judie Stanley Purdy, who has
been an acqualrttance or Roberto
for more than 20 years, said he wW
ask the Ohio Supreme Court to appoint the case to another judge.

Dvorachek said Roberto "acquired p~ or control of property" In excess or $1li0 while iii
IJI1bllc omce as admlnls\l'Btor of the
hosP.Ital. He said the sum came
from the $130,305 federal grant
given the Southern Ohio Health
Consortium and from the hospital.
Hospital trustees !Ired Roberto a
week aso. Board members inter·
Viewed earner this week said they
were unaware ct any probe of Roberto When they 8llded hls ,contracl
It convicted, Roberto could face
three to 10 years in prison and a
$5,!XXl fine.

APPROXIMATELY APRIL 1, lM5, tbey took a picture of tbetie
American 10ldlenl, fealur!Dg for readen of tbJa newspaper Denver Yobo,
Rl !, Jlox !liZ, Gallipolla, wbo II aecolld from left among the standing
me11. '1be five atalldlng up ~ CoeteUo, YelK!, Lamb, Jobnsoo, aDd
Gomez. The five ~~e~~tedare McFarrell, Cos, llGie, Smet, Gylog, aDd lying
down In front II Bobrltk. Thll . . tbe flrat aquad, tblrd platoon, Company
B, n armored lafanlry, of tile Dintll armored dlvlalo11. YObo writes that
"we ._d just llarDed aar eloiiJIDg IIIII 118d taken 1 batll and got elean apparel as a preventive measure bec:ailse of body Uce - just enough time
out of combatlor that ~e."
·

Miami frosh scores higher
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Hlgb . The average American College
school ranldngs and college board Test score for this year's freslunan
scores Indicate that freslunen en· Is 24.6, up slightly from 24.5 last
terlng Mlaml University th)s fall year. The national average tor col·
may be better students than last lege freshmen is 19.
The average for Miami fresh·
year's freshman class.
The average lneomlng freshman man taking the Scholastic Aptltlite
was in the top l8 percent ct his high Test was 501 verbal and 558 in
school class, the same as last year. math, compared with 494 verbal
But there are more students who and 56lln math a year ago.
The national SAT averages are
graduated in the top 10 percent of
their classes, according to unlver· 424 verbal and 476 math.
slty records.

farm report due in 60 days

I

'

HOMELITEe.
330 CHain·Saw

.

0

."
c

n

Kindmgarllm
I·:IPnwntary
II igh School
Now accepting tall enrollments! Advanced train ing
designed tor the average child - and vet producing above

Monday thru Friday
9AMto9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

..

average results. Call us and we'll be happy to tell you more
about an educa tional prog ram for your child.

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL .
Fredrick

w. Williams

First Baptist Church/Ohio Valley Christian School
Rox 1l5, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 - 614·446-0374

'A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN"

~·~--~o~v~c~s--------~----------~[~
0

'

·N,I·G Hl ~IFE. AT
. BUCKEYE HILLS CAREER CENTER
I •

.'

.

~-------------------------------------------,

ADULT EDUCATION DIVISION ·

.

what is adult education?
Adult education is a program of courses tor individuals to
upgrade themsel'(eS or prepare tor new jobs .
~

I

Where?
courses may be held wherever adequate facilities exist .
Genera.lly, courses will be held at Buckeye Hills Career Center or
·
Buckeye Valley Career Center.

'
l

For Further Information Call 245-5334

~

REGISTRATION DATES
MONDAY~ AUGUST 16 THROUGH
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,1982

•

•

•'

'i

••
•
'
•••
••'

~

•

Buckeye Hills Career Center
REGISlRA TION FORM

When are classes held?
courses in adult education may be offered anytime sufficient
community interest is evident. Standard courses will be offered
periodically throughout the year as per class schedules.

Name (print) ...
Address ........
0

IP.M.l
DATFS
HOURS . DAYS
'T&amp;TH
6-10
~14-&amp;
32
AccOuntr~ ·,
MW&amp;TII
S-9
~13-82
Adult B¥.' . d ti
'·' M&amp;W
7-8
~13-82
12 '
Aerobic
} ·'
T&amp;TII
&amp;-10
~14-&amp;
40
Auto Body Repa1r
T&amp;TII
6-10
~14-&amp;
40
Auto Mechanics!
MTW&amp;TII
6-10
0&amp;-13-82
54o
Automobile Mechanics
6-10
M.TW&amp;TH
()9,.13-82
540
, Automobile Body Repair
w
7-9
0&amp;-15-&amp;l
Bilsic Cornmunications
1~
J· Ill
M&amp;w
S-10
0&amp;-13-82
Basic Environmental Systenls "•
'
Ma.w·
7..Q
~13-82
40
Baaic Household~ and Improvements
Ta.TH
6-10
09-14--&amp;l
Ill
Bailie Mathe1naticsll~ftlng · ·
T
7-10
~14-&amp;
18
Baaic School Bus Drivers
4:30-6:30 09-14-82
12 · TI&amp;TII
Body Dynamics ·
MTRW&amp;TII
6-10 0&amp;-13-82
540
-Building Trades
.MTWa.TH
6-10
~13-82
540 •
Commercial Heating &amp; Air Conditioning
Ta.TH
·09.14-&amp;
42
'eomputer.Programming · ·
,.
'I'&amp;TH
7-10 1$-14--&amp;!
36
.Creative PhotiJI!raphy.
6-10
• OJ-13-82
MTW.TH
540
Electricity-Electronics

.

0

I

I

0

0

I

••

I

•

I

•

I

••••••

I

0

I

I

I

I

0

•••••••••

0

o

0

0

••••••••••

I

•••

••••

•••••••••••

I

••••

•

••••••••••

•

•

0

I

I

0

I

o

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

o

o

o

I

0

0

o

o

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0

••••••••••

0

I

0

0

0

I

I

0

••••

0

0

Second Choice ... ............. ....... ......... . ... .
CHECKS PAYABLE TO:
Gallia·Jackson·Vinton JVSD
MAIL TO :
Adult Education
Gallia -Jackson-Vinton JVSD
P .O. Box 147 Rio Grande, Ohio 4S674

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

TIME

, ,

0

•••

COURSE: First Choice .............·..... . .................. .

FALL SESSION SCHEDULE
COURsE

0

I

Telephone ..... ........ ....... .............. ........ . ...... .

•.

cl.

..

ENROLL NOW

0

c

446-9510

co:ne

baSkettweeds.

(

MII).SUMMER 1982 at Fort Riley, KaD118a, the war vetera1111 are ~
veiling a plaq11e for the ninth armured division In honor of this ~~quad'•
capturing the bridge at Remagen, Germany, March 7, 1945. Alex Dabru
was the lint man to cross the bridge. Denver Yobo, (second lrom left)
who was between the 15Gth and the 20tlth foot soldier to cross the bridge at
Remagen wrdersnlper fire, i'! wearing a T-shirt.

AN AIPOIN rw Nl

.

HOUSE COA
.: ·L·

...

WAl liN OR (AU lOft

· In.June.

....... Ohio 41771

rum...ln;•~·ln-.1.11-&lt;·G•·tn,.nonl•n•""i.llvn•

are

lol8

•P.0.11ox•1

PERRITI'WROTETHAT-

~. GA4JPOUS - Denver Y9ho, Rt. ,' -llr blowln• alllht• brid••~ 1r,..ln~ lht· Rhill&lt;l

Poultry output increasiJlg.:

Any complal~t1 or problema of any nature
regarcllnt aewer line conatruCtlon In the
VUI.... of ,yi'tlcuae ancl Racine lhoulciH lqlt.mltteclln wrlll"l'to: ·
· ·
The lewer Dlltrlct

•

Homemaker's colum.n . ·

.:Alfalfa meet Tuesday

NOTICE

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point F;'leasant, W.Va.
'

FEES
$32
free
$15
$40
$40
$200
$200
$20
$60

$40

""'

$20
$15
·$200
$200

' J42
$38

$200

COURSE
HOURS
Heating Systems
60
Housekeeping
40
Income Tax Preparation
20
Industrial Building Maintenance
:i40
Industrial Safety (OHSA) Sessions
ARR
Introduction to Electricity
60
Machine Shop Operatiol!lll
60
Machine-Shop Operatiollllll
60
Machine Shop Operator
270
Medical Clerk
100
Nursing Assistant
100
Office Specialist
:i40
Pre-Retirement Planning
211.
Shortlllind I
32
Shorthand II
32
Stationary Engineering
96
SUperVIsion Management
24
Taking Better Photographs
36
TypiJtgi
32
Typing II
32
Waiter-Waitress Training
18
Willa, Trust &amp;Real Estate Planning • .
8
Welding
60·
Welder·Arcf&lt;Oxyacetylene '
100

DAYS
M&amp;W
T&amp;TII
M&amp;W
MTW&amp;TH
T
M&amp;W
T&amp;TH
T&amp;T~

MTW&amp;TII
M&amp;W
T&amp;TH
MTW&amp;TH
T '
M&amp;W

M&amp;W
M&amp;W
T
M&amp;W
T&amp;TH
T&amp;TII
M
M
T&amp;m
MTWI&lt;TH

TIME
(P.M.)
S-10
&amp;-10
7-9
S-10
ARR
&amp;-10
&amp;-10
S-10
S-10
&amp;-10
&amp;-10

DATFS
~13-82

~I of.&amp;
~13-82
~13-82

~I of.&amp;
~13-82
~14-82
~IU2
~13-82
~13-82
~14-&amp;

IHO

~13-82

6-3
6-10
&amp;-10
6-10
7-9
7·10
S-10

~14-&amp;
~13-82

S.JO

S-9
7..Q
&amp;-10
6-10

~13-82
~13-82
~IU2

~13-82
~14-&amp;
~14-&amp;
~13-82
~13-82
~14-&amp;
~13-82

...-.-BY 111ESE F'INANCIAL.

GAWPQLIS SAVINGS · COMMERCIAt AND BUCKEYE BUILDING

AID LOAN , .,

SAVINGS BANK

AND LOAN.

CENTRAL TRUST

OHIO'VALLEY
BANK .

FEES
$60

$40
$20
$200
ARR
$60

too ·
$60

$100
$75 .'
$75
$100
$25
$32
$32

$100
P4
$36

$32
$32

us
uo

$80

�.·

Meese's
role
still
evolving
o.e,_.,EdwiD

Electronic security:
a growth industry
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Newafea&amp;ures WrKer
HICKSVll..LE, N.Y. (AP)-When
a storm rolls In from tHe Atlantic
Ocean and rattles the windows of
sedate Long Island homes, strange
things start happening.
Spotlights Ught up lawns In quiet
suburban nelgborhoods. Bells ring.
Sirens wail, jarring homeowners
from their beds. Within minutes,
special lines to Nassau County pollee precincts Ught up, as many as
300 calls In flve minutes.
All these tocsins and klaxons, In·
stalled to deter burglars, are set off
Instead by wind or rain rattltng
against window alarms. Most are
wired In directly tqa pollee precinct
or a private security service.
In all, Nassau pollee say tlley get
about 1,200 burglar a1arma a
month, 99 percent of t11em falae,
triggered by the weather, or a pet,
or a child or returning vacationers
who walk Into their own electronic
trap. Even a heavy truck coming
down a street can do lt.
1f there Is a growth Industry In
the United States It Is security, es·
peclally electronic security, for
home, office, automobile.
No more the barking dog. To be
sale these days ~ or so say the people anxious to sell you their latest
device - you need a Fortress System, an Electronic Curtain, heat

-·-.......... . . .
~

aJm:.ms go otf.

Devices like that sell lor less than
:$!i00, and Industry sources say It
-stW comprises 80 to 90 percent of
!he market. But many alarm com·
panles are pu.slitng far more elaborate protection.
. The new systems, which can cost
.thousands of dollars, are based on a
:sman box In the house and hooked
'10 either a pollee phone or a compu'ter screen at a private monitoring
station.
For example, Infrared heat sensors can detect movement of any
living creature while residents are
away. They are supposed to he able
to differentiate between a person
and a pet. Smoke alarms can be
wired Into the box to send Instant
notification to a fire department.
· There are tear ga.!i devices to att: ach to valuable objects. There are
: gadgets attached to phones so that
:U an Intruder cuts the phOne line,
lhe central station will be notified
Instantly.
Security consultants · acknowl·
. edge the problems of false alarms,
· but saylt can be overcome by hook: lng Into a private alarm monitoring
· center ata cost of about $25 a
month. These centers call back to
·see It the threat Is real.
Is all this necessary? The alarm
. companies think so.
· "FACI'," says a filer lor a device
: called .,The Bug," .. Someone's
: home Is burglarized every 10 seconds. FACI'. Someone Is robbed
every 75 seconds. FACI'. Some_one's mother; wife or daughter Is.
raped every 9 minuteS. FACI'. If
• you don't call (the manufacturer) It
· could be a crime." ·
: Many policemen think spending
: several thOUsand dollars ID protect
·:your home may be overkill. In Nas·
:sau County, sales of security devl·
:ces zoomed reeently after a gang of
thugs robbed a diner, sexually ab• using and beating victims before
· robbing them.
: Plain burglaries, however, have
· declined -!he rate ror Nassau wu .
2,ll0 tor !he first three months of
this year compared with 2,7571n the
·same ~- of 1981.
.
: "The .~pest pan still be the
· beat," says Ken Synar of the Nas: aau l&gt;ollce.''
: That means locking the windOWS,
dead bolt ~ks on the door,
'Putt~q bll,rs c,m basement windows,
tJr, In an apartmeat, on, windows
. that lead to tire 'eiCapes. It ai8Q
• meaill .maJdna 111ft! ~
: and m8n doll'! pile up outlide when
· yilu 10 away.

using

une put In prlnl what has been whJs.. .
pered arounct Washington for
months: Meese had b~en
"squeezed out" . in a struggle for
power at the White House, accordIng to ''well'Piacec:l sources:·
The problem, says Meese, Is this:
He 'was never first among equals,
he never. tried to be deputy presl·
dent, and he nev~ wanted to be.
"1bat was never an accurate
concept. The news media exaggerated this. Having built up a faille
Impression, some elements felt a
need to tear It down/' he says.
~ realizes, though, that descrlptlollf of his diminished ln11uence are emanating frbm within
the White House. Some staffers
have the long knives out forM~.
ridiculing his absences from Wa·
shin~ and criticizing his man·'

..., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . llle

w..ea.....wr.Nn,ldlwwtll
aMI brl wlllllll ... Willie

.............................
a-.

stORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sato 8 am-10 pm .

. . . .... ..._. _ _ oldie

warll lie perfoioiiid. ul 11ear
tW, IIIIi I All'&amp; ••' II '•ad It•"
11.11 II Ia II* 11.-y alj)je
role oUIIe PI " Pltl ca
'a Ia
the ev~ R•p- Mile

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

u-.

298 SECOND ST.
· POM~Y,

B)'.JAMDG~G

A rteW PNil Writer .
WASHINGfON (AP) - In 1$1,
presidential counselor Edwin
~ m was Washlnetm'ahotlest
~tlcal co~ty. lt'1'88 saill the
CallfOI'!IIa attorney wu America's
unelected deputy president.
Not long agri, !he aucago Trl~

0.

F!RICES IN EFFECT THROUGH AUGUST 21, 1982

;'

UN r mains
haven fo.r males

GRADE A

..... 0
-~

c oo
· -........,,
• ""G
• •

·

lng bythe
American
missionaries,
came
first woman
In Uberlabeto
. earn a Pb.D.
, A third. Is a career diplomat who
forged a pioneering trail for women
In the Belglnn foreign service.
The youngest Is a one-woman dl·
plomatlc act tram !he tiny Island
,state of the Sey~tiejles . ·

$

.USDA CHOICE

49
Cube Steak............ .
.

LB.$

.

FRENCH CITY

W·le··ners •••••••••••••••••

120Z.PKG.

-·, Bananas
.

.

. .

. $
4 LBS.

·············~···

FllVOR.
ITE. ,
.
ZESTA

·Crackers.....•.....
~~~
.

'

.

t t)141('1!

.

CORONET DELTA

w.tll'a Mra. Joaea, Who wears

Toilet fiss·ue~ .... !-~:~G~
''

'\

.3LB. CAN

$629

Limit One Per Customer .
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Exjllres AIIIUif 11, 1912

power Ill recalt ~ Mrs. Joaell'
...... to 1b1 Jndii!!D"UUUberlan
_,...., llatlild beeosublervleat
....... to 1111 to il ruUnr elite

STAI·KI

COFFEE
l&amp;IOZ.

$57?'·

Limit One Per CUstomer
PGwelfl

IDIII 11ae·dress

lmOWn as a
Iappe, ehfuepm Rl".sa revolutkllllry paw1eat that came ID

Ole

'

. .MAXWELL nuu:

; .

of freed

CHUNK TUNA

79*

uoz.3 Plla11t
.: .
(Liiait
Llmff 0111 Per

'•

4 and 5 DRAWER
· CHEST

'4995

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY 2.OR 3 PIECE
·LIVING ROOM SUITE.-SAVE $300 - $600 OR .
MORE, OFF THE SUGGESJED RETAIL PRICE.
.. ·

.

..
'.

7PC.

SETS
BUY A LIVING
SUITE AT '99..5 AND 'UP
AND GET A 3 TABLE SET AND A ZENITH 12" .TV
FREEt. ..
FREE
OFFER GOOD ONLY ON LIVING ROOM SUITE~ IN ~AIN

WbeDshe flnttcameto~ United

'

Eighteen.months Into the admln·
lstratlon, M~'s job has evolved

beat all sales. Don't ·wait, run to Rutland fur·
....--'s _Crazy Dciys Sale. Bargal':'s you won't

equaJ,"sheaa~

iaDia all(l Keuya.

take

Those Grate Boys have done It again; a sale to

•comments Belgian Ambassador
•Eclrnonde Dever. At 62, she Is !he
only woman ambassadqr In her
countrY's foreign service.
' Pausing, she concedes ·a woman
·In her position Is burdened with "a
responslblllty toward other women
·: 1n the sense that you have to be
careNJ not tO make,111istakes, Pecause then people w1l1 say, 'Well,
did that because she Is a
- Wlml80''· - even· It a man would _
bave made the same mistakes."
At 29, Glovlnella Gonthler Is the
)'OIIllleSt chief delegate at U.N.
headquarters and practically the
oo1y diplomat !he Indian Ocean Island state' of the Seychelles has
. posted abroad.
Ms. Gonthle:; whose title Is
charp! d'attalres, finds her male
colleaiiUes here to be "not paternaliltlc but belpful...
"I've ~~~Ways been treated as an
Natloos two~ if11 ~admits,
'lbe w'- ''!Wvl! 8!ld lliKI a lot ID
learn aaxut diplOmacy. I accepted
lbat IDdl'm always rejldy to tutn tomy coleepes ru- help."
~
0( French and ~ descent,
MI. Goatlder wu educated In

'

surviving, not entei;talnlng."
By SHARON DAlEY
So apparently were a good many
For 1be Alloellted 1'.Callfomlails
just a little more than
MALffiU, Calif. (AP) - The
other day I happened. upon a relic of a year agq.
Mace was legallzi!d for civilian
one more California fad - a Mace
use
under ~nse In 1979. That year
cannister.
,
Clark's ascension affected Meese
alm~t 5,000 citizens took tralnlni.
On
occasion
I
bave
found
such
tw.o ways: Meese lost control ol !he
crucial foreign policy staff, an4 the trendy has-beens as a pet rock, a signed up and armed themselva,.
t:Je.dyed shirt and love beads In 198l, spurred by crime reports,
Big Three became a Big Four.
tucked away In drawers, hiding In 96,653 joined the ranks. In 1981, the
Meese has maintained his post- closets. I could never recall how year I took up arms, more than
tlon as coordinator of the Cabinet, they carne Into 11\Y possession, 355,000 obtained permits to cariy
but a source In !he White House much less why. But not so with the Mace. It was the fever year. In 1~
says the jobjusthasn'tarnounted to little leather-sheathed weapon only a lew over 14,000 pennlts were
much.
' crouching Innocently In the back of Issued.
Meese has heen criticized ror be- · my desk.
Needless to say, walking the
lni &lt;Nt of town too much, returning
I clearly remember that cool
too often to Calltornla for speaking night when a neighbor called and streets Is not dramatically safer.
engagements. ~ut his offtce sllys said, "'lbe ladles of the neighbor· Not eyen marginally safer. Not acthat durthg the first six months of hood have gotten together and or- cording to crime statistics, which
1982, he was absent for 73 out rl96l . ganfzed a cookie, tea and Mace like prices always seem to go up,
not down.
working hours, not counting travel party. Would you like to come?"
In any event, crime was very
·
"A what?" I asked.
time with Reagan.
much
on the minds of Californians
"A Mace party," she repeated
"Most of my time 1s spent with with the patience of someone mak- that March of 1981. I accepted the
the president," Meese says. "lslt In Ing her 43rd ,call. "We arranged to Invitation.
A few nights later In this enclave
on every meeting he holds," with have a quallfled Instructor give us
by
the sea I arrived at my neigh·
the exception of some ceremonial the required class so we can each
bar's
house, cookies In one hand
have a license to carry the stuff."
sessions.
and
check
In the other. At the ubl_q·
I knew violent crime against
"People
who say he does not en·
·
ultous
name-tag
table was the tragage In Important activities are women and senior citizens had In·
'
confusing n"""sworthy with lrnpor- creased dramatlcaUy, so I didn't ditional assortment of brownies,
~,tant," says his top aide, deputy question her motivation. But I fool· chocolate chip cookies, chips and
counselor James E. Jenkins. Asked lshiy mentioned 'that I wished It dips. Next to a lovely chocolate
cake sat a box, ominously labeled
to assess Meese's weaknesses, Jen- were a cooking class.
"CN Gas. Caution: Contents Under
"I already know how to cook,"
klns declined, saying "there are
Pressure."
she
snapped.
"I
am
Interested
In
enough people sniping at him who
are ~s to do tha~"

'

me

M
.~rgar1ne............:•.. ,
. .

..

Meese, along with chief' of staff
James A, Baker ill,' deputy staff
chief Michael K. Deaver and na·
tiona! securtty adviser WUllam
Clark, makeupReagan'sBlgFour.
There's no sign that the boas, Ronald Reagan, Is dissatisfied With
Meese.
But some White House staffers
are willing to snipe at Meese- not
lo~~~cllned to
too
much, on his plate.''
.
-"His strength Is not really administration or management. I'm·
not ""'""
critical. Objectively,
~u...
that's not his strong point."
-"If you forced him to go to a
library for six hours, he'd be happy,
and what he'd come out with would
be pretty good work."

f

Rutland Furniture's

women."

.

Sitting In an armchair In his
looking toward the
front lawn or the White House,
Meese said there wu never a rea·
Soli to rahk him above the others In
' '
RonAld Reagan's White House
Inner circle.
"I've never regarded any011e of
us ali being preeminent."

corner omce

·.

_ Their ' female colleagues from
·Belitum and the Seychelles take a
more tolerant view of the United
Nations' men In pin-striped suits.
-; "I never had any dltflcultles,"

'

largely Into thlitoftopdomestlcpol·
agement style.
Icy advller. He Ia described by
~ I hear that, but I can't under·
stand It,:• ~eese said !n an Inter· friends as, the first person Reagan
turns to In a crlsll, but lncreulngly,
view. "I havE~ responslbDity for
· dozens of organizational thlngs·that , those crtses lnvoive foreign policy
- and Meese eave up his foreign
n'lake the government eli and (we)
policy portfolio lutJanuary cMing
don't have problems." He added:
"I thiJ\k !he president' feels It has a reorganization that culminated
\\flth the appointment of Clark.
W!lrked."

Mace: trendy.relic
of forgotten fad

I'r;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~!!j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Seven years Into the United Na·
t1ons Decade for Women, only four
of the 157 diplomatic missions here
•are headed by' women. Small
:wonder tl)at U.S. Ambassador
. Jeane Jonlan Kirkpatrick scores
:!he "pure rank sexism'; of U.N.
·diplomacy. :
..
"She Is VI!I'Y right," says Uberlan AmbasSador Abeodu Bowen
Jones. Mrs. Jones, who earned her
doctorate In worlil historY and African studieS from' Northwestern
University In 1962, does not suffer
male chauvinists Ughtly, feeling as
she does that ''tbe fe.maJe species Is •
· tar ~ than !he male."
· T)di ~ i.!berlan-:Amerlcan com-'
munity of feltllntst spirit was dem·
onstrated during a !'eCellt Security
eouncn debate on the Falklands
COIIfUcl. Both the U.S. an4 Uhertan.
envoys became Incensed when
' Panamanian Folilgn Minister
Jorge .Enrique lllueca assailed
wbat he considered the lntransl·
' genre of British -~ Minister
Margaret Thatcher and attributed
. It to the · "glandular system of

Round Steak...... ~8~~.

BUCKET

·
While she Is reluctant to discuss
her personal life !he Uberlan en·

A au 'ated p._ Writer
UNITED NATIONS (AP)- CaU , voy says she lett a "household oi
t11em "madam" - ar""-tltlelnthe
11ve " In Monrovla. Her .husband,
cu"
diplomatiC' lou
of
the mal
1
Dgl!8
e- Dr. Nyema Jones, a geo oglst and
dominated United Na tlons ..on New former minister of lands and
York's East River
·
mines, "graciously allowed the go.
One Is an Oklahoma wlldcatler's vernment to~ me to New York"
da"""'ter
-'""" Cablnet-rank
..,... who ..-~
- but on condition that her job
and aroused controversy · 1n the make a meaningfUl contribUtion
and not be an "empty assignment,"
.Rea&amp;an Administration.
Another, thanks to e~ly school· she says.

Whole Chicken .. }!~

sensors.
. Moreover, alarm salespeople
stress that just havtng a system Is a
major deterrent. A sign outside
saying "Protected by ... " and potential Intruders, they say, go
elsewhere.
Says Bill Cathers, a member of
·the Nassau County Pollee's Crime
:Reslsiance Unit, "It you live In a
'wealthier area and everyone on
your block has an alarm system,
you'd better have one too."
• Rollins Protective Services of
AtJanta estimates · Its burglar
alarm business Is growing 25 percent a year. A Texas-based company, Network Security Inc.,
reports revenues up 163 percent In
the first quarter cit 1982.
.
The security business has be,come an Institution, settling Into
-such fixtures as the Mid-Island
shopping center here. Amid such
retail outlets as jogging smestores,
jeans stores, a game arcade, two
bookstores and several department
stores sits "Alarmingly Safe and
Sound," featuring home protect: ·~
services.
The Fortress System, like most
others, Is based on a simple principle - sensitive loU on the windows,
!he doors, and any other opening
through which an Intruder may en·
ter a house. Break the tape and

· fhe sunday Times-Sentlnei...:.Page-E -7

Pbmeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

E-6- The

..

SALE PRICE
Retail

$476

$279

Larger Family Size 42" Round Table ex tends to 66" witt) two 12" leaves. Set ncludes
six heavily' brac~ . hardwood mate's ch.a irs.

TABLEL~Mt»
'

.

SALE

HALL
TREE

. BU'Y
1

Gn
1
FREE.

SPECIAL

"l)'Ot\\1fl
- '14 9 ~
While

They
Last

.

.

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

Page-E ·8- The Sunday Times· Sentinel

.

ya.

.

r

Second and Cedar comer· date~ back to 1872· work.

THIS STOREROOM, acroas the street from Grace United Methodist
Church, became controvental In the 18101 when the A. L Betz bar
operated in the store. After a man was killed In the bar Methodists fought
to close Deb down. The building itseH Is 110 yean old and has housed
several grocery stores as weD as a restaurant and J!rlnt shop.

Judge's job 'eggsacting'
COLUMBUS. ' Ohio (AP) White chickens with wings fialllng
and feathers flying might all look
alike to city slickers at Ohio's State
Fair - but poultry judge Glyde
Marsh can pick the winners.
Using a mettcutous eye, a call·
brator and ktect·a-chtcken color
chips, Marsh Is busy measuring
each blrd'sbreasts,scrutlntzingthe
unifonntty of Its feathers and color·
comparing Its beak during . the
fatr' s Junior Fair Meat Class
contest.
Other animals Including horses
and cattle were spotlight~ through
the week just endlilg,
Selecting champion birds and
other winners among the hundreds
of cows, horses, chickens, rabbits,
turkeys and produce and hand·
crafted entries brought to the fair
each year takes no small degree of
expertise.
Meat chickens, for example, are
Judged hangtilg upside down In
groups of six and start out with 100
points each. Marsh looks at about
15 different aspects of each bird,
deducting points for such things as
skin bruises, bent legs and enlarged
joints.
Because birds, Uke humans, are
supposed to have just the right

.

.Letter
does
,
not Impress
.Judge Outcalt

And he checks the pigmentation
In the scales on their legs, their
beak and skin and with his color
chips to make sure they're the right
shade of orange.
Some owners are so picky about
pigmentation, Marsh said, that
they feed their chickens marigold
petals to darken yellow shades to a
more desirable darker orange
color.
,
Produce growers who submit en·
tries to the fair are just as parttcu·
tar - and so are the Judges, said
BW Cook of ClrclevWe, superintendent of the Agriculture and Hor·
ttculture Bulldlng where the entries
are judged.
Cook has seen a lot of judging In
his 32 years as superintendent and

knows the secrets 6f choosing the
best green peppers, the winning
box of hay and the prize ears of

corn.
'The hay entlies might look Uke
Identical plles of dried grass to the
untrained eye, but Cook knows
better.

t•m sure at least half ot tbe prlloft.

tiM!re atre behaving themselves,'' the judge ~ed.
VIctor Carrelli, chief deplity she'
rm, Mid he aJJowu not Jmpreued
' With the letter. "It looks llke~bo

oily,

more or lela, ~ con""" Into

&amp;ina thll, ,IDcludllljJ tbe chapl•ID,"
be said.

off

.

.

UMITED

A ichedule of. areq prograr:nming~
activities and eventl,
·
August 15 thru 21

A guid~ to · area ·eritertainmen·t

TIME .

Includes complete

~~ · ONLY!
5
1
109~ · 254

T

'ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

listings

TV Mailbag
Page 2 ·

Doc Smith Says:
.We have just · traded' for some of
the finest pre-owned cars in the
area. If you are looking for quaiF
.tv, check these! ! !

'81 BUICK ELECTRA CPE.

'80 COUGAR XR-7

Metalic silver With matching dark
blue Landau top. Loaded with all
·Buick accessories. Driven only 6,747'
miles. Showroom condition.

Tu·to'ne black and silver, Landau top,
AM·FM·Cassette, door locks, dri'(en
onl 20,928 miles by a local doctor. Ex·
best.

'

Soap World
Page 5
ESPN Listings
Page 9

'78 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR ;

Burgundy with white top. air cond.,
traded in this week on a new Buick
LeSab~e by · a Meigs County ·senior
citizen. Driven only 31,566 miles. Need
I Say More!

Area Events
·Page 15
''

'Rhythm Mast,e rs•••page _8
'79 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 2 HDTP. · .

'80 VOLKS TUDOR DASHER

I

The interior of this tar is immaculate.
The ash try h.as never been used.
Traded in l:iy a retired Jackson, oh :
COUP.te ~n~ dri
IV .so,.~.,,_!·

19,773 miles. Diesel engi·ne, AM·FM·
Cassette, sun roof, new Electra trade.
Econom
Ius.

'79 OLDS

.
1

Sll

cruise, AM·FM·Cassefte,
new Buick wagon trade and driven
.only 26,002. These Are Hard'To Find.

'1

.recommended against releasing .
Jliln.
"I don't know· what this guy did

ers up

SPiNE

I)SEDCAR

viotator. And the arresting otttcer

kind ot attention. It (the Jetter} !!BY• .
be has been a model Prilloner· Well,

ELBERFELD$ IN~ROMERO~ '
SAVE ON FAMOUS $ERTA

amount of fat, Marsh, a veterlnar·
tan and professor of poultry science
at Ohio State University, feels their
pelvic area to measure the fat
content.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A Com·
mon Pleas Court judge says a letter
signed by 18Jailoltlcers asking the
release of a prisoner might have
hurt th~ prisoner's chances at
leniency.
"I would say, U anything, the let·
ter worked against him," said
Judge Peter Outcalt. "I didn't Ukeil
one bit."
The Rev. William E. Schlesl said
Hamtlton County Jail Inmate Cha·
rles Spates asked him to wlite a
Jetter attesting to his good
· character.
SChlesl said he wrote the letter .
because no one had ever before
given Spates a chance. Spates then
got 18 otltcers to sign the handwlit·
ten document before he presented.
it to Outcalt, who was. to sentence
him Wednesday on the theft
charge.
Outcalt sentenced Spates to 3-15
years In prison lor a March 4 purse
snatching.
"I don't think law enforcement
' personnel should be taking up the
cause of a person who Is In jati for
committing a crime," he said.
The letter describes Spates as "a
falthful and dependable worker,"
and says he Is "sincere and ge. nutne" In wanting to be a Jaw·
abiding citizen. The letter, which
also Is signed by Spates, says he has
had a drug problem since 1974, al·
though he Is now drug-lree, "proba·
bly for the first time In many
years."
•Outcalt said Spates had several
previous arrests for thefts that In·
volved violence and had violated
, proball(&gt;n on a previous charge.
, "What we have here Is a guy that
.lm9cked down an old lady and took
her purse so he could teed his drug
· habit," Outcalt said. "My decision
on the sentence Involved three
• things. He Is Ill least a second-time
feloey \)ffender. He Is a probation

up there (In the JO!U) to warrant this

Second was a "Second Hand Store'1
.
famous "Governor Dana'' steli.mer. cinnali.
By JAMES SANDS
IN 188% BETZ built an ice house run by Isaac Champer. Toward thi
· Swruners was paid~.~ a year (aU
Special Correspendent
where
the Sunday school rooms of 19009 and 19308 the bulldlrlg waa used
in
gold).
On
several'
occasions
he
. GALI.JPOUS - The building at
Grace•
Church
are now localejl and as a grocery store. In '19311 the Ceno
journeyed
back
to
Gallipolis
going
601 Second Ave. (comer of Second
we
are
told
the
hole made here (ice ~rat Grocery was located here. . ;
by
way
of
Panama.
Swnmers
and Cedar 1 was
was
stored
underground
then) was
deli!(hted his old Gallipolis chwns
built in 1872 by
IN 111E EARLY 19508 James A,
so
larjle
thalli
did
not
appear
that it
with tales about how he was carried
Captain James
Johnson
ran the French City
by six natives in a hammock 2o · would ever be fnted in when the ice
Swrune!'ll as a
rnlles across Panama. This was house.was cl~ed down. In l883 Betz Restaurant at 601 Second and even
storeroom. We do
before the Panama Canal. After allded a bllliards table, and the had .a doughnut machine. Johnson .
not know much
specialized in cakes and doughnuts.
many exciting adventures in califor· place was really jwnpihg.
about Jam es
The relationship )letween Betz and In the !~Iter part of the l91i0' and tntq
nia, Summers relurnedto Gallipolis
other than he was
in 1875 and lived here until !896, Grace Church was a strained one but the 1960s the French City PfeiS
a riverboat capthings really "hit the fan" in the Restaurant at 601 ' Second and e'len
when
hedied.
tain, but we do
SANDS
18906
when a man was murdered in had a doughnut machine. Johl'lson
The
building
at
601
Second
was
have some information on his father,
the
Belz
bar. l?urley A. Baker, then specialized in cakes and dOughnuts.
sold
by
Jame~
Summers
in
1880
to
William Shaw Summers, who was
also a riverboat captain, and resided the Betz family, who added that year pastor of Grace, began an Jn the latter part of tbe 196011 and into
an additional six feet to the front and a~l!rel!Sive campaign to run Betz out the 1960s the French City Prea used
near this corner.
The elder Mr. Summers was born turned the building jnto a saloon. of 6usiness. In Baker's four years as the structure. Then followed.periods
in Albemarle County, Va., In 1802 Here one could buy fr.om owner A. L. pastor he was able to do the job and of inactivity here al~h for a tinie·
and moved to the Kanawha River Betz: whiskies, brandies, wines, ·so far as we can tell there was never in the 1970s carter's C. B. Radio wall
about 1817 to become an apprentice beer, ale, ·and soft drinks . . The another bar in this building. Baker · here. There was also a flower ahop in
cooper. Summers would make 20 specialty was Christian Moerlein later became a leader in the Anti· the building 50111etime In the las(
wooden barrels and exchange them beer imported from Rhineland. Ac- Sjlloon ,League which was largely quarter century. So far.. as we car),
lor one barrel of flour. He would then tually it was made by Germans responsible for Prohibition.
·. AI the turn of the century 601 , tell the buildin~.today is un~. "•
exchange the flour for other Items living In Rhineland, a part' of Cillo
1
that he needed. It should be remem- r---------~---------...,.------....---.""""'---:--'1
bered that currency and coins were
. J
in short · supply then, and many
people were forced to barter.
AFTER SOME TIME Summers
worked on keelboats and by 1831 at
the "ripe old age" of 28 he became
captain of his first steamboat. In the
next 40 years Summers captained 25
dHferent boats, including the Hope,
I
Laurel, Davie Crockett, and the Blue
Ridge.
The Blue Ridge ran regularly to
Gall1polls, and hence Summers took
up his residency in the French city.
On January 9, 1848, the Blue Ridge
had just pushed away from the
Gallipolis wharf with a party of
Gallipolis residents who had
organized an, oyster party, when the
boilers blew and the second worSt
steamboat disaster in Gallipolis
history occurred.
ONLY. ONE GALLIPOLIS
EXTRA
resident (Frank Sanns) was killed,
but several from other localities
FIRM
were either killed or injured. Sum- '
mers was the captain that night on
· this boat which was owned by
Gallipolis resident James A. Payne.
. '
After the explosion Payne, Sum- Full
2 Queen
Pc. Seot
·
mers and a Mr. Finney ·stayed on
board for some 20 miles down river,
kept afloat by some empty salt
barrels. The boat finally sank. When
the boat passed Raccoon Island (at ·
00
the fllOtlth of the Raccoon Creek),
Swnmers threw over to the island a
handkerchief that contained . $500.
The money was never found. I Unfortunately that island no longer
exists.
.
IN 1152 WILLIAM Swnmers left
Gallipolis for california where he
remained 24 years piloting steame111
out of San Francico, includin~ the

...

·.

Red with white L.andau top, AM·FM·. · ' Whit~, cruise,. Prem. tires. ij~s been
Stereo; custom red vinyl seats, traded \, 1 driven only 53,221 careftJI miles. We
in by a retired Pt. Pleasant school
Sold It New. Sharp. .
·
teach~r ~nd driven only 48,026 miles.

.
Sunday Shop.,.trs WelcOme • CoiM In
.,

'

Seriir.g Gallia, Meigs and,Maso~ Counties
~

'

I

"

·,

~

'

'

•.·

'

.'

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44759">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44758">
              <text>August 15, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="51">
      <name>mccarty</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4321">
      <name>saxton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6457">
      <name>sheilds</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="166">
      <name>simpson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="305">
      <name>williams</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
