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12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Friday, August 27, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

21-year old con~icted of draft evasion ·
vlctedoffalllngtoreglsterstncethe
Vietnam war. A VIrginia col!egt
student, Enten Eller, was convlcted In a simUar case last week
and was given three years probalion by a judge wbo ordered him to
register for the draft or face prison.
In the Sasway case, the jury deliberated 50 minutes after a twoday trial.
When U.S. District Judge Gordon
Thompson J r. ondered Sasway to

SAN DIEGO (APl -A federal
prosecutor says the conviction of
21-year-old Benjamin Sasway on
draft evasion charges might encourage 700,1XXJ draft-age men who
haven't registered with the Selective Service to go ahead and sign
up.
"I don't particularly enjoy hav·
lng to take this type of case to trial
because there are a lot of emol ions
Involved. a lot of sympathy Involved,'' said Assistant U.S. Attorney Yesmln Annen, after Sasway
was convicted Thursday of willfully
fa lling to register with the Selective
Service System.
"I hope when other Individuals
see we are going to prosecute these
cases, It wUI encourage others to
register," she said.
The Selective Service System
says8.6mllllon men born from1900
through 19&amp;1 have registered since
President Carter renewed the reg1st ration program by proclamation
ln July 1980. The Census Bureau
says 700,1XXJ others may be eligible
to register.
Sasway was the second man con-

DRAFT RESISTER GUILTY - Benjamin Sasway talked to the
media and anlklraft registration demoustrators while the jury
deliberated luslde the Federal Courthouse In San Diego Thursdsy. Within
the hour, the jury delivered the guilty verdict. ( AP Laserphoto) .

prison Immediately, pending his
sentencing hearing Oct. 4, Sas·
way's mother, grandmother and
girlfriend burst Into tears.
Sasway gave his !amUy a reas-

suring smile before he was led
away.
His attorney, Charles T. Burner,
said he would a ppeal Immediately
to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In San Francisco to request
thai ball be reinstated and that Sasway be released.
Burner plans to appeal the conviction on the grounds that Sas·
way's motives for refusing to
register were not allowed as evl-

J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;
I

SHOP ELBERFELDS
THIS WEEKEND
AND SAVE ON:

Veterans Memorial
Admitted -- Frances Sampson,
Pomeroy; Helen Icenhower,
Pomeroy; Patsy LaudermUt, Racine; Elmer Pickens, Racine; Etta
Ellis, Pomeroy; Donna Phllabaum, Pomeroy; Richard DeMoss,
Pomeroy; Timothy Eynon, Pomeroy; Glenda Poole, Tocoa, Ga.
Discharged--Charles Snider, Oscar Price.

•PLAYTEX BRAS &amp;GIRDLES •BOYS' CORDUROY JEANS
•GIRLS' WRANGLER JEANS . •ANGEL TREADS
&amp;CORDS
•MEN'S CORDUROY JEANS
•LITTLE BOYS' WRANGLER •RCA COLOR TV
JEANS &amp;CORDS
•MEN'S &amp; BOYS DENIM
•DEVON SPORTSWEAR
JEANS
•GIRLS' TOPS
•WORK PANTS &amp;SHIRTS
•JR. JEANS &amp;CORDS
•ALBUMS AND TAPES
•HANES MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
UNDERWEAR

Miller releases Meigs fair poll results
area residents polled indicated their
support of this country's continued
assistance to the government ol
Israel.
On the question of tuition tax
c r edits for non-public school
enrollees, 55 percent of the people
polled opposed such credits. By a 80
to 40 percentage, Meigs County
fairgoers opposed the reintroduction
of the Equal Rights Amendment

Meigs County falrgoers said yes to
continued space exploration, the use
of nuclear power for generating
electricity, the 55 mile per hour
speed limit, aid to Israel and no to
tuition tax credits and the ERA
amendment, in a poll taken by lOth
District Congressman Clarence
Miller at this past week's County
Fair.
More specifically, in the area of
foreign affairs, 55 percent of the

I

Area Deaths

I

Columbus.
He is survived by his wife, Mar·
cella Hill Snowden: two sons, Jerry
Snowden. Atlanta , Ga., and Arnold
Snowde n. Jr.. Pomeroy ; two
daughters, Mrs. Steve iJUI) VaUerlote, Smither s, B. C., Canada, and
Mrs. DanleltJo Ann) West, Dover:
eight grandchildren; one brother,
James Snowde n. Corning; one sister , Mrs. Roger (Dorothy\ Mason.
Grove City .
Friends may call today from 4 to
9 al the Wiley-Van-Fossen Funeral
Home, Corning. Masonic services
will be held at the funeral home this
evening at 7:30 p.m .Graveslde ser·
vices will be held Saturday at 11
a.m. a l the Dew Cemetery with the
Rev . Ralph Post officiat ing.

James Conkle
James Conkle, 75, J08 Wetzgall
St., Pomeroy, died early Ibis mornIng at Veterans Me morial Hospital.
Mr. Conkle was preceded In
death by his parents. Jake and Net·
tie Ottle Conkle, his first wife, Neolla, and one sister. Mammie
Hendricks.
He Is survived by his wife. Eva
Conkle, Pomeroy Health Care Center; three sisters. Mae Lightfoot,
and Ellen Stewart, Middleport, a nd
Mary Eblin, Pomeroy: two brothers, Joe Conkle, Montgomery, W.
Va., and Fred Conkle, Cheshire.
Funeral services will be held Sun·
day at 3 p.m . at Ewing Chapel. BurIal wUI be ln Fairview Cemetery,
Lancaster. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m .
Saturday.

25.
I . Do you favor the reintroduction

'li

country s mt tary capabiUties are
insufficient to meet current defense
needs. On the subject
continued
space exploration 70 percentfavored

of the Equa l Rights Amendment to
me constitution? Yes, 40; No, 60 .
8. Do you believe that U .S.
military capabilities are adequate
for our defense needs? Yes, 36 ; No.

a continued space effort on the part
oftheUnltedStates.

j9 Do you supportthe continuation
of the ss mph speed limit? Yes. 69 :

or

Emergency runs

ElBERfELDS IN p'QMERQY

N~(/\:ro you believe that govern·
ment employees such as a ir traffi c

Lastly, in the energy area Meigs
County fairgoers favored by 64 to 36
power for
generatinguseelectricity,
·percent,
the continued
of nuclear
and by a 69 to 31 margin the continuation of the 55 mile per hour
speed limit.

SHOP fRIDAY TILL 8, SATURDAY TILL 5

64

strike? Yes. 36: No, 64 .
rlcjo~n~lr~o~lle~r~s~sh~o~u;ld~b;•~·.llo·w·e·d-lo~~;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;:::::::::::~i

Meigs County Fair

Poll Results
1. Do you support continued space

exploration? Yes. 70; No, 80 .
2. Would you favor tu it ion tax
cr edits for the parents of students
who attend non -public elementary
and secondary schools? Yes, 44; No.
56.
3. Are you in favor of contlnu·ed
use ot nuc lear power for generating
electriciTy? Yes, 64 ; No, 36.
4. Do you support continued U.S.
assistance to Israel? Yes, 55 ; No, 45.

S. Do you support allowing thei
mmigration of people into the U.S.
from crisis -stricken nations? Yes,

22; No. 18.

6. Would you purchase an
American made product even
though it might be more expensive

Service clubs have
golfing tournament

Members of the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Oub and the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Eva Archer. 88, Racine, died
joined
together for a meeting and
Thu rsday evening af the home her
' GuysvUJe. goU tournament for the first time In
nephew. Russell Archer,
many years Thursday at the JayShew as preceded in death by her
mar Golf Course.
parents. Andrew Jackson and EliGolfing with representatives or
za beth Roush Archer, five brothboth
groups taking part, highlighers. J ohn, Guy, Charles, James
ted
the
afternoon and ln the evening
Walter and Hom er . five sisters.
additional members of the two
Minnie Allee Circle, Margaret Jegroups and their famUles joined
well. Harriet Archer, Lucy Cather·
earller participants for a picnic.
ina Arc her and Sadie Archer.
Golfers Included Bruce Teaford,
Miss Archer ta ught school for
Ron
Ash, Pat O'Brien, Tom Bowen,
four and one-half yea rs. She was a
George
Morris, Dr. Ray Pickens,
life long member of Ca rmel MethoBenny
Ewing,
Ed Baker, Cash
dist Church where she held many
Bahr,
Dick
Owen,
Tom Reed,
offices.
Larry
Brogan,
James
Schmoll,
In add it ion lo her nephew. Rus- ·
Warner,
Ralph
Graves,
BIU
Dale
sell Archer she Is survived by nine
Francis,
Harold
Hubbard,
Tom
nieces.
Anderson, Paul Stodola, Bob
Funeral services will be held SunFreed, Jim Snodgrass. Dr. John
day al 1 p.m. at Ca rmel Methodist
Ridgway,
George Hackett, Jr., and
Churc h with the Rev. Mark Flynn
Russell
Brown.
The Rotary Club
and the Rev . Carl Hicks officlaling.
learn
emerged
as
winners of play
Burlal wUI be In Carm el Cemetery .
and
low
net
scorers
were Pat
Friends may call at Ewing Funeral
O'Brien
and
Russell
Brown
with
Home after I p.m. Saturday.
net ~ scores.

Arnold Snowden, 73, formerl y of
Coming, died Thursday at Unio n
Hospital, Dover, Ohio.
Mr. Snowden was born March 12.
1909 at Burr Oak the son of the late
James and Clara He nry Snowden .
Mr. Snowden was a retired chief
mine Inspector for the State DivIsion of Mines . He was a member of
the Chu rch of ChriSt. Mlllertown:
member Middleport Masonic
Lodge 363, all York Rite bodies at
Middleport and Alladin Shrine.

ANOTHER TRUCKLOAD OF CARPET
JUST IN FROM THE ·MILLS IN
lA.•

Go ahead, drive your tank drybut you'll' not find better August

RPET
BUYS·!

Th1 s 1s the sale l or YOU 1
lOOm . 1nstalleel wall -to-wall
sate pnce that once agatn
l u~ury ~~ - when you shop

Beauttlul . hrst -qual ll'f' broad m your horne
at a tow . tow
p roves tust HOW aUordaOie
and save at ~-

INGELS CUT RITE CARPET

A suit in the amount of $865,(0)
has been flied In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Jack L.
Ritchie, Middleport, agalnst Dravo
Corp .. Pittsburgh, Pa.
According to the entry the suit Is
!or Injuries Ritchie sustained on
Sept. 4, 1910 at his employment due .
to unsafe working conditions.
Also !lied In common pleas court .
was one divorce and one dissolution: Wntlam L. Foster, Jr,, Racine
!lied suit !or divorce against Arlyn
Foster, Mlnersvllie. Ronald Gene
JohnSOn, Racine, and Donna Sue
JohnSOn. Middleport, flied !or dlssolutki!l cir marriage.

PH. 843-2693

Sonday, August Zi

discusses barring the
Commies from the nation's tennis
courts... A-3

Inside ...
Along the river . .......... . B-1-8
Area deaths ................ 0-8
Business . .. . . . . . . .. . . .. .. . . E-1
ClassUled ads .. . .. .. .. .. .. D-3- 7
Editorial ................. A-2-3
Farm ....... . .... . ......... E-2
Local ................... . A-3-6
State-National .............. [).I
Sports .... ................ C-1-6

The Dave Diles golf tournament will
place more than $8,000 in charity
coffers••. C-2

•

tmts

( .' hi.lly

u•eat hl' r

.fon '('(l.\ 1 fur

Ohio .... 1-t
I

tntint
11 Sections, 88 Pages 35 Cents

VoL 16 No. 21
Copyrighted t982

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipol~s-Point

Pleasant

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Sunday, August 29, 1982

Gallia votes to withdraw from '648' district
By JEFF GKABMEIER

Tlme&amp;SeiiUDel S&amp;aff
GALLIPOLIS -Charging that It
Is "wasting numerous tax dollars"
and "duplicating e!!orts" or
another health agency, the Gallla
County Commission voted Thursday to withdraw from the GaillaJackson-Meigs 648 Boand.
Instead, the commissioners want
to contract directly with the GaillaJackson-Melgs Mental Health Center Board to provide mental health
services ln the county.
The decision Is the result of a
long-Standing conflict between the
648 and center boands, They disagree over what role each should
play In providing mental health services, with the center boand claimIng that the 648 Board has tried to
overstep Its mandated functions.
According to state law, the 648
Boand acts as a funding agency,
funneling state funds to the center
board. It also monitors and audits
the center board. The center boand
provides direct service io those
with mental health problems.
Accondlng to Bernard Nlehm, director of the center boand, the 648
Boand has strayed beyond Its duties
and has tried to become Involved In
servicing cllents.
"We have !elt that the 648 Board
has Interfered In our operations,"
Nlehm said. . "They have gone
beyond their mandated responslbll·
lty as far as auditing and monitorIng the mental health center."
Nlehm said the center board has
spoken to the county commissioners In aU three counties, state mental health department officials, and
648 Boand members concerning the

"abuses'' and "administrative and
fiscal pollcles" of the 648 Boand.
"We have,ln !act, asked the state
to Investigate the admlnlstratl~e
practices or the 648 Boand," he sal d.
"The Gailla County comlssloners
have expressed the same concerns
we have," accondlng to Nlehrn. "In
part, that Is why they decided to
dissolve their relationship with the
648 Board."
Commission President Lonnie
Burger said the county does not
need the 648 Board "because the
center board can do the same thing
for us, !or a lot less money."
He said the cdnlrrusslon will acr
as the funding agent !or the center
board and perform the same functions as the 648 Board. The center
board will continue to provide mental health services.
In a letter to the Meigs and Jackson county commissioners, Burger
said the county has "found that the
present 648 Board Is simply duplicating efforts and hindering, In our
opinion, the delivery of mental
health services ' by (the center
board). Further, we !eel that the
648 Board .. .ls wasting numerous
tax dollaJ:s."
Maxine Plummer, executive director the 648 Board, said she Is
not bothered by the county's decision to withdraw !rom her district.
"They're going to assume a
pretty big responsibility. But that's
fine, They can do that.
"It would make my IUe a lot easier," she added.
But she warned the648 Board still
must oversee the center board's operations, even after the county dissolves It's association. She said the

boand has that responslblllty under
state law.
"We'll stlll be monitoring them,"
she sald.
Plummer said the 648 Board has
not overstepped Its responslbUtles.
She blamed the center board for

starting and fostering 1he conflict
between the two me ntal hea lth
agencies.
"What they don' t want to accept
Is that we are the mental hea lth
authority" she said. "Whenever we
have tried to monitor them. we

have received a Jol of flak."
In order for the commissioners'
decision to become effective lmmeadlately, It must be approved by
the Jackson and Meigs county commissioners . If they do not approve
It, the Gallla County commission-

ers said they wUI have to walt one
year before they can legally break
away from the 648 Board .
Burger said h~ Is unsure If the
commissioners ln the two counties
will approve Gal lla County's
request.

or

GAUIA COUNTY WITHDRAWs- U the GaiUa County commissioners get their way, tbe county will be contracting directly with the GaJIJa.
Jackson-Meigs Community Mental Health ~ter Board to provide

stabbed repeatedly In the back. The Flemings, estranged at the time of the murder, had been living In
Florida since the late 1960s.
At the time of, the Incident, It was reported the
Flemings were Involved In a custody action over the
chUdren that came from their marriage, two boys,
Paul and Christopher.
A sheriff's department spokesman said Mrs. FlemIng had gone to her husband's apartment south of
Fort Myers during the early evening for a dinner
date. Around 8: lJ p.m . that night, Fleming and his
wife were walking towand the bathroom In the apart-

mental health services to GaiUa resident&amp; The mental health cenler,
located on Vinton Plke,ls shown here. The commlssloo voted Thursday io
dissolve Its association with the '648' Boanl.

menl when they were both attacked by an Intruder.
Fleming told Investigators a t the time the Intruder
clubbed Fleming, who fell unconscious to the floor.
When the doctor awoke 15-30 minutes later, he found
Aurda Fleming lying near him, dead .
Fleming was later treated and released from a
loca l hospital for his injuries . He told Investigators
the man who attacked him and his wife was about six
feet In height and wore blue jeans. The description
. was later rejected, reported ly because it fit the descriptions of too many other men.
Further detaUs on the Investigation were sketchy

Open 9:00 niii:OO
PORTUND, Ott.
FROM POMEROY TAKE 124 EAST

Social Security payment withholdIng ' !rom the mUitary, Speakes
said.
He said the Treasury Depart-President Reagan said Saturday
ment had agreed to change a reguhe has vetoed a $14.2llilllon supplelation to allow the deferral, and that
mental appropriations biU containIng funds !or mllltary salaries, but
Attorney General WIUtam French
White House o!flclals said the goSmith had ruled that was proper.
"This Is the first t1me this has
vemmli't would take extraordinary steps to ' avoid a payless
been done," said Speakes.
payday !or the nation's 3 miUion
In Washington, House Majority
servicemen and women.
Leader Jim Wright, D.-Tex., Issued
"I do not take this SteP' lightly,"
a statement criticizing the presl·
Rbagan said In a meSsage to Condent !or using the appropriations
gress annotlilclng hls,veto.
1¢ as "as a!l excuse to resume his
"But this bill wOO!d bust the war with Co~."
budget by nearly a billiOn ~llars."
Sen. Alan Cranston, D-CaUf., said
Reagan aimounced his decllion .ibe veto "Is Mt In tile beSt IntereSt
briefly In a five-minute r&amp;dto ad- : rl the U.S. ecooomy." Cranston
dress to the nation, broadcast from
predicted It Will bfi-''dlftlcult to get
hisrilllch.
the two:-lhlrds vote In both houses
White House Deputy Press~
III!CeiiiJ'Y to OYI!ITide the veto tary Larry Speakes saJd tlieTreaa-, but I do DOt deem that to be 'Mission
JrnpneeiNe., t t
ury needs $3.8 biJIIoo to meet next
' Tlleflday's mllltary payroll. :r.to.t rl
111.d!Jcldlng to veto the bill, Rea·
' that c&amp;o be achlevt\i:l by 1181ogunex•
i!UI tllmed biB ~on pleas from
·peoded tunds an ready apPI'OP- - ~ In Congteu. Calling
. riated and "careful !llllllqefllellt," lbe biD "l'f!III'W"''* and fllcally
Speekee said.
co.ervattve, •• Sea. Mart' Hatfield,
R-Ote., l&amp;ltl Relpa.bid ~
'1111! remainder miiUoa wtJI be obtained by, dt!fa I bilcollec- "e•c-'l"alY bid idYke."
tiOII cl federal lticQme tax and
By TERENCE HUNT

Allllocla&amp;ed Press Writer
SANTA BARBARA, Call!. (AP)

•

INGELS KUT RITE·CARPET ·
THI FACTORY OUTUT 110111

*""

..

shortly afterward, In an admitted effort to be "dellberalely vague" in the matter, the sherHf's department said.
Fleming, a Philippi, W.Va. native, came to Gallipolis In 1953 as a speclalls lln obstetrics and gynecology
at Holzer Hospital. He remained there until 1968.
Aurda McKinney, originally from Rutland, was a
1963 graduate of Harrisonville High School In Meigs
County and attended the Holzer School of Nursing.
Fleming suffered a minor stroke a nd later relocated to Florida. Following recovery, he received
.certification ln residential psychiatry, and moved to
Fort Myers In 1971.

When, how Arafat
will leave causes
•
growing
concern

Reagan vetos bill
cQntaining funds
for military pay

APPLES
•PEARS •PLUMS
•PEACHES
•BANANAS
•CANTALOUPE
•WATERMELON
•CANNING TOMA
•PEPPERS (GREEN or HOT) ,
•ONIONS ~ ~v· :f LB.
•WINTER POTA

..

Art

12 Noon- Women's A.S.A. SQftbaU Tourney
I p.m.- Twillghll!rs
2 p.m.- Sauerkrauts, Frisbee Golf, Hayride &amp; Nature Hike
3 p.m.- Hollerln' Contest, Cow Chip Throwing Contest
3:30p.m.- Sauerkrauts
4p.m. - SoccerGame
5 p.m. - Hog Wrestle
6 p.m. - Footstompin' Heelclickers

FORT MYERS, Fla. -Dr. Arthur Fleming, 58, a
former Gallipolis area physician, has been charged
with second-degree murder In connection with the
death of his secOnd wife, Aurda McKinney Fleming,
In an Incident at Fleming's apartment here July 3.
FIJ!ming was arrested Thursday by Lee County
authorities and later released on $50,00J bond.
The charges were brought because Fleming's
statements about the slaying "were not consistent
with the ef.dence," according to George Mltar, a
spokesman !or the Lee County Sheriff's Department
The arrest climaxed a continuing lnvestlgat:onlnto
the Incident, In which Mrs. Fleming was beaten and

NEW CROP PRODUCE

~A~~~~

Henderson's theft record...C-1

Family Festival schedule1

Former Holzer physician charged with wife's murder

r---------------------------1

Court actions filed

. i

•

from another country? Yes. IS; No,

Eva Archer

Arnold Snowden

A number of calls were answered
by local units Thursday. lhe Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service repm1s.
At 12:27 a.m., the Rutland Unit
wenl to Har risonville for Frances
Sampson who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 1:35
a.m. wenl to Meigs Mine 2 for John
Daniels who was taken lo O'Bieness Hospital In AI he ns.
Syracuse at 11: 37 a.m. took
Kathy Moore. Founh St .. to Holzer
Medical Center and Pomeroy at
1: 59 p.m. look Etta Ellis from Ihe
cou nt y infirmary to Veterans
Memorial. At li: 18 p.m .. Middleport took Craig Fife from S. Third
Ave., to Veterans Memorial and at
11:36 p.m .. the Pomeroy Unit took
Hazel Diles from Wetzel St . to Vete
rans Memorial.

than a similar product imported

(ERA) to the Constitution.
On national security matters 64
percent of those polled felt that our

dence of his Intent, that he was a
victim or selective prosecution, that
draft registration Is unconstltutlonal and that the law setting up
the s;stem Is faulty.
The judge had Indicated Sasway
could flee to Canada to avoid a posslble$10,1XXJ!Ineor!lve-yearprlson
sentence, altoough Sasway has
said he has made a moral choice
not to register and that fleeing the
consequences ._would be "selfish."

-

. . . . . _. .. _Gillie.._. . . .

eq4 1 eshtPn ca•Creei!C I)PartlM~IIntU,Gitii8Gt~ta
.... Fnmi:J F.av.J pt wl IW8J. fte ,_.. ewat, il(lww:red I!Y
1be 0 .0. MclldJre Park Dlllrld, IWimw tlltwch today.

.

By JEFFREY ULBRICH
Associated Press Writer
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The
Palestln\an dispersal wound up ils
first week Saturday with the sailing
of about 600 more guerrillas from
the U.S.-controlled port, and speculation mounted about when and
how PLO chief Vasser Arafat will
leave his west Beirut enclave.
With the number of armed PalesUnlaus In west Beirut reduced by
more than half, attention also began to focus on how to rein In the
armed mUitlas whose feuding has
ravaged Lebanon for years.
A meeting was scheduled Monday to discuss depiQ¥ment of poltce
. forces In Moslem west Beirut. Lebanon's Moslem elder statesman,
Saeb Salam, called for dissolution
or a)! millttas - Christian and Moslem alike.
Lebanon's state-run radio said
Arafat secretly left the capital !rom
the port before dawn, but he later
was !limed by television crews at a
west Beirut hideout The guerrilla
leader said nothing during thesession arid his chief spokesman, Mahmoud l..abadl, refused to say when
Ararat would leave.

The Palestine Liberation Organization chairman, who has been expected to go first lo Damasc us and
eventuaUy to Tunisia. must leave
by Sept. 3 - Friday - under the
plan worked out by U.S. presidential envoy Philip C. Habib.
Reliable PLO sources have said
preparations were under way for a
heavily guarded convoy to take
Arafat and othl'l top PLO leaders to
Syria.
PLO Foreign Minister Farouk
Kaddouml said in Blzene. Tunisia,
tha t Arafat would lead the PLD
delegation at the Arab summit
scheduled to open Sept. 6 in Fez,
Morocco, but would not provide detaUs of his travel plans.
Kaddouml was In Bizerte to wei.
come about 1,000 Palestinians who
arrived by sea to tumultuous
cheers !rom a dockside throng that
Included President Habib Bourgulba. They then were drtven to an
Isolated camp 45 miles we5t or
Tunis.
In Beirut, the Lebanese government and the Israeli milltary said
about 600 Palestlnlans sailed !or Syria Satunday afternoon aboard tile
Itallan ship Santorlnl.

�•

August29, 1982

Commentary and perspective
~m~

A [)ivisinn of
M""\..--L...--rt~=·F=I

'q:IV
825 Third Avr., Gallipolis, Ohiu
16141446-2342

ll1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
I614 l 992·2156

ROBERT 1.. WI NGETT
Publi sher
PAT WHITF.HEAD

HOBAHT WilBO N JR.

AsSistant

Exl• t·ul i\T F:dttor

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uul pt •nttnulitit·s .

And now the facts
By any definition, the WaU Street Journal is a remarkable journalistic
operation.
Not least in the ability of its editorial writers to remain oblivious of so
much of the superior reportage the Journal's correspondents contribute to
the news pages.
What brings this on is an editorial io the Aug. 19 edition on the subject of
Nicaragua, and the sorry mess into which the Sandinist government has gotten that country . ..
To swnmarizli: The regime is increasingly repressive, censoring the opposition newspaper La Prensa, harassing Catholic and Protestant churches
and kicking around Indians who don't wantto be part of the revolution. ·
The bare facts ofthe indictment so far are true enough, but they lead the
Journal's writer to a conclusion that falls considerably short of the whole
truth.
The Nicaraguan revolution was not one that the U.S. struggled against. In
the two years after the Sandinists took power we gave Nicaragua twice as
much aid as we had given it in the two years before. We did not force the
regime into repression and iotolerance; the Sandinists took that path
because the political philosophy with which they came to office made
repression not only possible for them but easy. It is time for people to stop
defending what the Sandinists have become, or pretending that any cozying
up by the U.S. could have made them otherwise.
Now wait a minute. That point about a struggle is at least arguable. But
in the space and time remaining here let's examine the aid business in
detail.
For one importa)lt thing, aid to Nicaragua was not an issue in the two
years preceding the Sandinist victory. Almost up to the end, the Somoza
government was receiving massive loans from American and European
banks.
As a consequence, the Sandinists inherited a $582 million debt to more
than 100 banks, but none of the actual funds. Those were io Somoza bank accounts abroad - a fact weU known in Washington. The Sandinists never·
theless declared their intention of honoring the Somoza rip off and
negotiated a 12-year repayment deal with the banks. This was reported in
the Wall Street Journal on Dec. IS, 1980.
Now for post.Somoza aid. In the montha immediately following the
change of government, $216 million was made available - aU to private
Nicaraguan organizations. A $75 million package was approved by the
House of Representatives on Feb. '!1, 1980. Conservative opposition led by
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., delayed Senate concurrence until May 19.
Most of the package was again earmarked for private recipients. Only
$15 million was to be at the direct disposal of the new government, hardly a
princely sum for a country recovering from a destructive civU war and
looted by the fleeiog Somoza.
Further, release of the funds required presidential certification that
Nicaragua was not abetting acts of violence in other countries. Read El
Salvador. The conservatives, leaking intelligence reports on Cuban anllll
and other horrors, managed to drag out the process until Sept. 12, when Jimmy Carter finally signed the release order. By then, in the words of an administration spokesman, the experience had had a "radicalizing impact" on
the Sandinist government.
Don't go yet. That's not the end of the matter. Within days of the Reagan
administration's taking office in January of 1981, payments to Nicaragua
were temporarily suspended. The issue was aid to the Salvadoran rebels and
some $60 million had by then been transferred. On April I, the suspension
was made permanent.
That is essentially the Nicaraguan aid story, all of it reported as it
developed in the Journal.
The Nicaraguan scene is unquestionably dismal. The Sandinist
revolution appears to be in an advanced state of decay. The economy even
more so. To a considers ble extent the Sandinists are the architects of their
own predicament.
But to pretend that the United States has been standing by with open
heart and hand does not square with the facts. And as to whether the San·
dinists, treated differently, might have cozied up, we can never know.
There are those in Washington who have made sure of that.

Good little deficits ...

~ Today

longer be so lightly dismissed if we
are to be faithful - as we must - to
the Supreme Court's command that
we fiod 'effective' desegregation
remedies, and find them 'now.'"
The trouble ·with mandatory
busing io Baton Rouge, the depart·
ment contends, is that it promises
neither long-range desegregation of
the elementary schools nor quality
education either. 1 "A plan that
erodes conununity support for
public education is not a remedy
that works, and works now." The
prime interest is that ofthe children.
"Forcing unwilling students to attend schools other than those
nearest their homes imposes a
heavy burden." To place such a bur·
den on children "who are them·
selves innocent of any wrongdoing"
is a violation of fundamental principles of equity.

In turning Its back on busing, the

department Is by no means turning
its back on the black plaintiffs in the
Baton Rouge suit. On the contrary.
The department's motion for a stay
suggests a whole barrel of iocentlves
and alternate remedies that would
achieve a unitary system. The
department holds no brief whatever
for the defendant school board.
Busiog is the bad apple.
The temptation Is strong - it Is indeed irresistible - to cry, "I told
you so." From the time these
draconian orders began in 1971, It
should have been apparent that the
lonj!-dlstance busing of children
solely for purposes of racial balance
simply would not work.
It has taken the Justice Department 10 years - 10 years and a new
administration - to discover this
truth.

about as conservative and laudable
as a wild Indian reaching out for a
white man's hair.
Our careless squandering of our
money at home and abroad by a
whole series of administrations,
mostly Democratic, and liberal
politicians duriog the last 40-50
years has snow-balled into a fiscal
calamity not justly laid at this administration's door by any fair·
minded journalist. Uncle Lyndon put
us on skids with his gwtS and butter
policy. At present one fourth of the
national budget goes to welfare most
of which was worked up by fellows
like Ted Kennedy, Uncle Hubert,
George McGovern, Fritz Mondale
and on and on.
No, I can't brag on how the
Democrats have handled our tax
dollars. At first they voted in a body
against the last big tax hike. Next
they came out for it like a bear in a
honey tree. Whataretheyupto?
Gayle Price
Portland

Berry's World

correspondence with recently roofed shacks straggled along rutted legal aid office, Patricia Cuellar
assassinated Archbishop Oscar Ar· dirt paths, iovisible from the busy came to the flower-splashed patio of
boulevard just beyond a thick screen the Fiesta Hotel to say goodbye. It
nulfo Romero.
of
subtropical foliage. It was mid- was more than a thoughtful gesture.
Given theolitical climate in El
Salvador that sununer of 1980, such morning and a few adults were Considering the high ~islbility of the
an experience might have per· about, but mostly'children and dogs . foreign press and its unpopularity
The visitor doesn't see much of even·then, it was a demonstration of
suaded a less iotensely committed
individual to find other work. It did ihat El Salvador. What lmpresseA courage. And conunitment.
There have been occasional
are the broad boulevards and the
not deter Patricia Cuellar.
The legal aid office was located in pastel villas of the capital's com· familiar names in the dispatches
San Salvador's Jesuit high school, . fortable neighborhoods that suggest fromEI Salvador the past two years .
Ian Mates, a South African
three cramped rooms off a colon- a Mediterranean city.
But something ugly was hap- ~hotographer working for United
naded passageway enclosing a sunny courtyard. At one open end, the pening to the villas. Cement-block Press International, fatally wounpassage overlooked a soccer field walls topped off with barbed wire ded in a landmine explosion. Manuel
where a game was in progress. A were rising around them, turning Franco of the National Democratic
sound system blared American pop each into a miniature fortress. Even Union, one of six opposition political
music- "I Need You," by the soft· in the best of neighborhoods, It was leaders abducted by anny and
not advisable to be out after dark. national guard troops from a press
rock group America.
From the other end, beyond a The nights were punctuated with conference at the Jesuit high school.
modernistic chapel, the view was gunfire. People disappeared. Bodies The mutilated bodies were found in
various parts ol the city the
strikingly different. The contrast . were found in the morning.
following
day.
A
few
days
after
the
meeting
to
the
said a lot about El Salvador. Tin-

"I wonder if the commies can make jeans that can stretch like that?"

CONSERVAII\'~ S

~~~~·

1He NEW

And now Patricia Cuellar. She was
reported arrested by uniformed . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - soldiers the afternoon of July 28.
I have in hand a release from the
United States Department of State
that states the case for continued
American aid to the Salvadoran
regime.
It notes "continuing instances of
human rights violations by leftist
guerrillas, right-wing extremists
and individual members of the
security forces acting against of·
ficial government policy .. . Nevertheless, there are tangible signs the
new government is making progress
in controlling the violence. We
believe that a finn base has been
established for future progress."
I also have in hand an Amnesty International report supplying details
of Patricia Cuellar's arrest: "That
same evening, anny and security
forces, who were io possession of her
keys, entered her home io Colonia
Roma, San Salvador, searching the
house and confiscatiog her property.
Patricia Cuellar was, at the time ri
her arrest, working with a refugee
program of the Archdiocese.''

On the beachea..s_______;____Ar_t_Bu_ch_wa_l_d

Drug-test nig~~h~tl~l~la~r~e~======Ja=ck=A=n=de=rso=n

Letter to the editor
Lately editorial writer Lowell
Wingett, regularly featured in the
Daily Sentinel, in his usual discourse
. on the wickedness of President
Reagan, seemed to be painting a
whole array of Democratic Ad·
ministrations as being as conservative as Scrooge.
According to his figures those
Democrats had wee little deficits,
· good little deficits of just the right
.. size. During all of those years that
· the Democrats were running the
· money pump they were getting a
seriously progressive disease called
tax and spend, tax and spend. That
disease is something like arsenic
poisoning. At first a little dose
produces a mere belly ache but
bigger doses causes the belly to
sweUup.
.
Having a wee little deficit and then
having a Jess wee deficit wasn't sup. posed to hurt much. Reminds me of
: cutting off a monkey's tall an ioch at
· a time.
: In my opiniori that array of
· Democratic Administrations was

of mandatory transportation as a
desegregation remedy. Experience
has shown court-ordered transportation generally to be a failed
experiment.
Documented
enrollment losses have too frequently transfonned desegregation io
theory ioto resegregation in fact ."
u1' Baton Rouge, 4,000 of the
system's elementary pupils - about
13 percent of total elementary
enrollment - have departed. "A
desegregation remedy intended to
eliminate one-race schools that
drives large number of students out
of the system can hardly be
reckoned effective.
" Those who advocated this
remedy as the cure-all for
segregation io the classroom badly
miscalculated conununity response.
In our view, that dimension of the
school desegregation effort can no

WASHINGTON - Mr. Emerson
advised us, In a famous phrase, that
a foolish consistency is the hobgoblio
of little minds. In the matter of
racial-balance busing, it is encouraging to note that the Depart·
ment of Justice has exorcised a
hobgoblin is nourished for many
years. The department's new
position, in brief, is ihat busing is a
bummer.
That position was spelled out in
early August during further
proceedings in what must rank
among the oldest and most protracted lawsuits in the history of
American litigation. The case is
Davis vs. East Baton Rouge Parish
School Board. It has been in the
. federal courts for more than a quar·
ter of a century, and it is not settled
yet.
Back in September, 1980, a U.S.
District Court entered a summary
judgment in favor of the black plaintiffs and ordered the school board to
get hopping . The evidence of con·
tinued de jure segregation was fairly
overwhelming. The parish was then
running a system that embraced
68,000 students (60 percent white, 40
percent black) in 113 schools; but of
the ll3 schoolS, 35 were virtually all·
black and 32 were virtually allwhite. Twelve of the 22 schools ihat
were all-black when the
desegregation suit began io 1956
were still all-black in 1980. Of 76 new
schools built since 1954, 73 were at
least 90 percent all-black or all·
white.
On that record, the Justice Depar·
tment joined the plaintiffs io seeking
swnmary judgment. At the time of
trial, the department urged the
court to order relief that would Involve pairing, clustering and
massive busing. Now the depart·
ment has made a U-tum at once
dramatic and sensible. It has asked
the Fifth Circuit to stay the remedial
order for another look.
How come? "In the two years since that proposal, we have had occasion to reconsider the usefulness

I remember most vividly Patricia
Cuellar's intense conunitment.
She was a small woman In her
mid-20s, dark hair parted in the mid·
die, no makeup, a pale-coppery complexion and six or seven months
pregnant. Hardly a heroic figure.
But my notes compare her to
"Liberty at the barricades,"
recalling the heroic art of the French Revolution and suggesting
something of the ImpreSsion she
made in discussing her work.
Patricia Cuellar was at that time
secretary of the legal aid office of
the Roman Catholic Archbishopric
of San Salvador. A few weeks
earlier, police had raided the office,
seizing case records of thousands of
Salvadorans who had sought the ·
church's assistance in the personal
calamities of the spreading civil
war. They had also carted off

James ]. Kilpatrick

Busing U•tum
A~

~issing~~------------~~----------D_o_n_G_m_fi

August 29', 1982

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page=:-A -3

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

WASffiNGTON - More than six
years ago, I first exposed the horror
of MK·ULTRA, the CIA's super·
secret program that used unwitting
victims as liviog test-tubes for
bizarre, mind-altering drugs. The
nightmare still isn't over for some of
the tortured guinea pigs.
·. :
Bits and pieces of the story have
come out over the years io various
forwns. But now for the t:rst time,
the CIA has been forced to
acknowledge in a judicial
proceeding the terrifying scope of its
experiments.
The CIA confessions were extracted in writing by Atlanta attorney Thomas E. MaddOlt Jr., who
represents four of the prisoners who
were experimented on in the Atlanta
federal penitentiary in the 1950s and ·
1960s. The victims, now'in their 50s,
are seeking $500,000 apiece io
damages from the government.
One of the plaintiffs, Farrell V.
Kirk, was used as a chemical mixing
bowl even though the CIA knew he
was mentally unstable. After being
dosed with a variety of drugs, Kirk
attempted suicide by burning and
hanging, and once tried to gnaw an
ann off.
A second victim, Don Roderick
Scott, says he suffered permanent
brain damage from the tests. A

third, John R. Maole, is a fugitive,
and the fourth, James T. Knight, is
still in prison. All lour say they suf·
fered flashbacks and other severe
symptoms for years after they were
drugged by the CIA.
Here are some of the shocking admissions made by the Justice Depar·
tment on behalf of the CIA, under
questioning by the victims' attorney:
- MK·ULTRA's purpose was
"research and development of
chemical, biological and
radiological materials (for use) io
clandestine operations to control
hwnan behavior." The CIA hoped
the "psychoactive chemicals"
would work on the victim's mind and
emotions to "release him from the
restraint of self~ontrol. ''
- The program was also intended
to develop an "anti·ioterrogation"
drug to counter Soviet truth serum,
or possibly to scramble a CIA
agent's brain so that any confession
to his captors would be useless.
- MK-ULTRA and its successor
program, MK..SEARCH, were ter·
minated in part because the drugs
and other techniques probed "too
unpredictable in their effect on
hwnan beiogs."
- Nevertheless, the·CIA pursued
another chemical program, MK·

Reagan loves the
Abraham Lincoln once said that
the Lord must love poor people
because he made so many of them.
WeU, the Lord can move over in
that department: Now he has an ear·
thly competitor who 'Is rapidly in·
creasing the ranks of the Jm.
poverlshed. •
'
His name is Ronald Reagan.
More than four million Americans
wiU become poor during the second
year of the Reagan awD!niatratlon.
L'lat's quite an accomplishment for
any earthly beiog.
Last Year Reagan only managed
to push 2.2 million· unfortunates
below the poverty line.
.
In fairness, It must be noted that
this trend began even before Reagan

BURN, until at least 1970. One of its
researchers was Dr. Carl Pfeiffer,
who also worked on MK-ULTRA.
Pfeiffer has sworn he was merely
trying to find a cure for mental
illness. That is what the Atlanta convicts were told.
- The materials developed and
tested were "hallucinogenic or
(would) otherwise affect the central
nervous system of hwnans." The
substances included various LSDs,
mescaline, a truth serum and power·
lui amphetamines.
- The CIA can produce no written
consent fonllll, and admits no
followups were made of the guinea
pigs; Normally there weren't even
doctors on hand the night after the
convicts were drugged. Some
prisoners were so hopped up they
had to be given more drugs "to at·
tain sleep."
- Two ·victims were transferred
to a medical facility "because of apparent mental problems," but the
CIA denies this was because of "an
adverse reaction" to its drugs,
which were iotended to duplicate
psychosis.
- Though expense records were
kept meticulously - $349,445.10 for
the Atlanta subproject - the overall
records were ordered destroyed in
1973 by Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, a top

CIA scientist. Dr. Pfeiffer destroyed
the records in 1972. Only a fluke - a
social worker's file - connected
Kirk to the program.
I confess to a personal interest in
the MK·ULTRA program. lbe
Watergate pair, G. Gordon Liddy
and E. Howard Hunt, tried to obtain
MK·ULTRA drugs from the CIA to
use on me. So, apparently, ·Richard
Nixon's White House was aware of
the brain-tampering experiments.
FIRE THE HANDICAPPED:
Stricken with encephalitis as a highschool student, George Bartlett of
Bangor, Maine, lost the power of
speech and all muscular coor· ·
dination. But with detennlnation
and special schooling, he recovered
enough to land a job 15 years ago as
a custodian at the federal building io
Bangor.
Earlier this year, the General Services Administration fanned the
janitorial contract out to Nationwide
Maintenance Inc. of Oak Brook, ID.
In his job interview, Bartlett conceded that he could not perfonn such
chores as heavy Uftlng or climbing
ladders. So at 45, Bartlett, whose
wife is also handiqpped, Is out on
the street. He was the only GSA employee the private finn didn't keep
on.

.Ep=o=o~r======Ju=lia=n=B=on=d

took office. This will be the third
year io a row that has seen a rise in
the percentage of Americans below
the poverty line.
In 1979, ll.7 percent of aU
Americans were considered poor.
The poverty-level population rose to
13.2 percent of the total il) 19110 and to
14 percent in 19111. The percentage
had fallen in the two previOiis years.
"But, hey," you may be saying.
"How can you blBme President
Reagan ior a trend that began while
President Carter was still in of.
flee?"
"Easy," l reply,
I can blall)l! Reagan for some,thlng
he didn't start ~use he !w done

aU he can to make it worse.
Poor Americans made up 14 per·
cent of the U.S. population io 1966,
the first year of'President Johnson's
War on Pnverty. The percentage
was back at 14last year and will be
even higher by the end of l!lli2.
Part of the blame must go to the
economy, whose weak condition is
not ell\irely the present president's
fault. But neither are inflation,
recession and , high interest rates
solely respnsible for overpopulating
the poverty precincts.
It's also the scissoring of the .
safety net that Is driving millions of

souiB intothesurpl~ lines.
And that~s where Rol)ald .Reagan

jumps to the head .of the class.
He moves ahead of Lyndon Johnson, who sabotaged his own War on
Poverty with a foreign war that
fueled the inflatiOn rate. He slips
past Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter, who trimmed,the War on-Pover·
ty to the dimensions of a backyard
skinniah.
But Reagan was the only one of the
bunch ·who made .severe slashes in
the federal assistance programs
that helped half of au poor
households in 1980. ·
.
That puta this · president first in
poverty productlClfl. He ·surely cannot want that title - no matter how
much he loves the Jl041r.

in ,history

Today ts Sunday. Aug. 29, the 241st day otl982. There are 124 days left In ·
the year.
Todily's highlight In history:
.
On Aug. 29, 1945, General Douglas MacArthur left Manila for Japan to
accept tlie Japanese surrender In World War II.
On tbls date:
In 1.87'7, Monnon leader Brigham Young died.·

•

'

I .
·,

'
L

..

...
.,

A bunch of us were sitting around
a lobster pot on South Succotash
Island, talking about what they had
done to the Russian diplomats in
Glen Cove, Long Island. It seems the
good people of Glen Cove decided to
ban the Commies from the tennis
courts, the golf courses and the
beaches. In retaliation the Kremlin
made their tennis courts, golf courses and beaches off limits to the U.S.
diplomats. The question was raised
"were the people of South Succotash

·Red-ink
budgets
William A. Rusher

Island willing to support the citizens
of Glen Cove in putting the screws on
the Russians?"
David Stern said, "We owe it to the
people of Long Island. If a Soviet
diplomat calls any of us and wants a
tennis game, we tell him 'not until
you get out of Afghanistan.' ' '
"I don't play tennis," said George
Stevens.
"You're a golfer. Don't tee off with
any Russians.''
"l don't know any Russians who
play golf," he protested.
"Find one and refuse to play with
him," Hawke said. "You owe it to
Poland."
Danny Brustein, who is a big Winston Churchill fan, said, "We can
fight them on the tennis courts and
we can fight them on the golf cour·
ses, but can we fight them on the
beaches?"
This was a good question because
for one thing, there aren't that many
public beaches on South Succotash
Island, and people who own private
ones spend aU their time keeping the
rest Of us off their sand. For another,
whlie it's easy to spot a Soviet
diplomat when he's on a tennis court
(he always wears a hammer and

"You're always thinking of yoursickle on his shirt) or on a golf cour·
se (he flies a Soviet flag on his golf self," I yelled at him. "The people of
cart), it's hard to spot one on a beach Glen Cove have sent a signal to the
Kremlin, and if we don't support
in a bathing suit.
It's even tougher to spot one on the them Brezhnev won't freeze his
nude beach where most of us who missiles."
"What about our diplomats in the
don't own private footage are forced
Soviet Union," Ekstrom said. " If
togo.
Styrom suggested we put up a they can't go swimming outside of
large sign, "No Nude Bathing Per- Moscow, what kind of summer are
they going to have•"
mitted Unless You Believe In God."
"We'll make it up to them when
"I don 't trust the Russians," said
Rappaport. "If they don't honor the they come back on home leave by
Helsinki accords, why would they . letting them swim on Jackie O's
beach," Stern said.
honor a 'no bathing' sign•"
Thompson suggested, " Let's get
"He's right," said Payette. " It's
unenforceable. I couldn't tell a off a cable to the Soviet embassy in
naked Soviet diplomat from a mem- Washington."
ber of the Moral Majority."
''What dowesay? ''
"There is a way," said Fain
''Just when you thought it was safe
Hackney. " A Soviet diplomat is to go back io the water, we decided
always followed io the U.S. by two you can't come on our nude heach."
FBI men. When an FBI agent is on
duty he is never allowed to take off ,_.,-----------~-----------------------­
his clothes. As soon as we spot the
FBI gumshoes watching a guy and
his wife and kids on the beach, we
can leU the family to buzz off."
"It's going to take an awful lot of
vigilantes to keep Soviet diplomats
off our beaches," said Ekstrom. "It
could ruin our vacations."

NEW YORK (NEA)- Every now
and then a controversy explodes
above the political landscape like a
star shell, brilliantly illuminating
the IJ!Urky scene below and
revealiog the true positions of
everyone on the battlefield. That is
what the debate over the budget·
balancing amendment has done, and ...-------------------------1
for that service alone we are eternailly in its debt, whether it finally
passes or not.
Needless to say, aU politicians
favor a balanced budget,. at least
nominally. Even Tip O'Neill, who
has arguably done more over the
years to unbalance the budget than
any other individual io Washington,
saw instantly that Ronald Reagan
could be pilloried for the huge deficit
structure he inherited and became a
late but noisy convert to the cause.
About 20 years ago, however,
Congress discovered to its delight
that a balanced budget - one io
which revenues equal expenditures
- isn't really necessary, even in
peacetime. It is possible for the
federal government to spend more
than it takes io and just print extra
money to cover the gap. If you or I
did this it would be caUed counterfeiting, but since the federal
government does it we caU it
"monetizing the deficit."
The extra money winds up in the
national economic. bloodstream and
gets spend on the same goods and
services as the money already out
there. The result, of course, is inflation: Since aU money in cir· '
culation is treated as having equal
value, the'new money is spent by the
·government and the purchasing
·power of each previously J,ssuejl
doUat is diminished to the necessary
extent. CongreSs had found a way of
· putting its ljand!l into l,he pocket of
·every American and rem~ a
portion of_the value Qt. the money
~en in on police cans._fife Caus. weather Wamii'Qi afl(1 more with a Beartat
there, While the . money itself
Scanner Rfll1!0. And.saye up to S30. S:lOCash Back on the BC-100. the world's first
'
remained untouched. (Look, Ma. No
and only hand-held no-&lt;:rystal scanner. $15 Cash Back on the ~C-2IOXL, the bell
selling
scanner
radio.
·$10
Cash
Back
o0
the
BC-2QO,
thll
neweSt
Bearciit
Scann~
taxes!).
.
·ss'Cash Back on tile BC-5. a great deal more scanner lor1 a QOOd deal less. Come in
Once Congress persuaded itself
today for coinpleta ~tails. Offer expir~ October 15. 1982.
~==c.,·that this delightful new method of
=..'"==financing
governmental ex·
pendltures would produce nothing
upper Rt. 7, GalliPolis, OH.
more •h•n
~-1 . a certain "acceptable"
e,GU~cln-~ a ~~..,.
P.H,. 446-4517
leve'l · · of
lnfl'atlon.

. BOB'S B.ECTRONICS ·

I
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.

on
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OPEN

�Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

August 29,1982

.August 29, 19.82

-Weather:------------ Akron ·abortion
s-1}!·.;)
ordinance opposed:
Chilly Ohio
•
The Forecast For 8 a.m. EDT
Sunday . Augusl 29

Rain~

By ,.,.. A-IAt.Pcl

I'M!.~

By Tile Auoclated Pn.
An Akron, Ohio, abortion ordinance could hamper good medical

care, four.national health organizations have told the U.S. Supreme
Court.
If ordinances Uke the Akron one
are allowed to stand, "we will find
ourselves in a situation where the
state wm be dictating to the nadon's
physicians how they are to carry
out the individual practice of medicine and how women are to receive
their care," said Dr. James Breen.
president-elect of the American
CoUege of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. "In an enUgh\fned and
democratic society, this would be
Intolerable."
Breen's group, the American
Medical Association, the American
Academy of Pediatrics and tbe
Nurses Association of the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists fUed their · brief in

The nation's weather
By The Assoclllkd l"rois

Fronts : Cold~
••
WEATHER FORECAST- Showers are due lor Nevada 8Dd Utah,
extending lo Idaho, Wyoming, Idaho 8Dd soutbern Mootana lor Snnday,
according lo the Nallooal Weather Service. Showers are also due lor pal'
ts of the upper Mississippi VaUey and lor a porlloa of tbe Southeast No
other slgnificaol preclpltadoo is forecast (AP Laserphotol.

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY: a chance of showers Monday. Fair Tuesday, and a chance of showers or thunderstorms Wednesday. Lows, mostly in the 50s. Gradually warmer days with highs
mostly in the 70s Monday, upper 70s or 80s on Wednesday.

The search

Cool air our of Canada sp!'l'lld unseasonabl)• mild weather over
much of the nation eas1 of the Rockies early Saturday, wltlt temperatures in northeastern Minnesota and upper Michigan in the upper
30s.

Storms struck from Ute Tennesset' Valley and northern Georgia
across Arkansas into southern Oklahoma and northern Texas.
There were also widely sea tt.ered showers and thunderstorms in the
Mld·Atlantlc states and along the non hem Atlantic Coast.
A resident of Bisbee, Ariz., drowned Frlday night following a
violent rainstorm. The victim was knocked Into an open culvert by
4-!oot-deep floodwaters, pollee said.
·
For Sunday, the National Weather Service forecast thunderstorms from the soutltem Atlantic Coast to Tennessee and Alabama.
Storms were expected across the lower Mississippi Valley into westem Oklahoma.

By Bob Hoeflich
Some 20 members of the Meigs
Jligh School graduadng class of 1973
are lost. WeU, maybe not
temporarily misplaced.
~
A reunion is
being plaMed lor
the class - to be
held next sqrnmer
- but letters of
explanation will
be sent next month to the class
BOB
me:nbers.
Help is needed in locating Randy
Chafm, Jodi Clickinger, Victor
Counts, Paul Cunningham, Merri
Ebersbach, Lois Fife, Kay Gilmore,
Greg Lane, Cheryl Long, Mike Marcum, Lisa McKetl21e, Nadine McMurray, Richard Mendenhall, Martha Miller, Christine Robinson, Ava
Sayre, Connie Shultz, Connie Smith,
Mark Still and DeloresStanley.
If you know the address of any of
those listed would you please contact
Edie King, 39054 Bradbury Rd., Mid-

cases lnvolvinll the ctty of Akron
and tbe Akron Center tor Reproductive Health.
The "friends bf the court" brief
said the Akron ordinance puts medically unnecessary restrictions on a
WQman's right to choose an abordon and could keep physicians
from giving patients the best possl·
ble medical care.
' l
::Our Interest is not in debating
the philosophical, ethical, moral or
reUglous Issues surrounding abortion on which our memtx&gt;rs have a
wide range of views," Breen said.
"Our pollcy ts to make sure that
once a pallent has made her decision, state laws do not unduly inter·
!ere with the physician's ability to
exercise his or her best judgment In
carrying out the patient's decision
in a way that is most suited to her
parllcular health needs."

&lt;Pepott.~lor~.orlJnda

Faulk, 1:11l Union Ave., Pomeory,
·~or 992-2732.

Mayor says dumps increased awareness
By lARRY NEUMEISTER

Associated Press Writer
HAMIL TON, Ohio (API Mayor Robert Weigel says state
and federal officials are much
more aware of the problems posed
by toxic waste dumps after dealing
with the Chem·Dyne Corp. dump.
State and federal health otticials
were hesitant at first to attack the
problem of the waste, he said
Friday.
"We were on the defensive. I
think some of the first response was
that It's in HamUton. let HamUton
take care of it. I think some people
thought we were crying wolf- that
It wasn't as serious as what we
were saying.
"It's a precedent-setting kind of
thing the way the state EPA (En·
vironmental Protection Agency 1

and the national EPA attacked
these problems. I would Imagine
they'll use the same tactics
throughout Ohio and other states.
It's certainly a national problem,"
he said.
The Justice Department filed
suit Thursday against the owners
and operators of the site and 16
companies who refused to participate in a $2.4 mllllon cleanup settlement with 112 companies.
Cleanup has been ongoing at the
site and It condnued Friday as
some companies removed waste
that had been ldentlfled as belongIng to them. The mayor said he
didn't expect an Immediate increase In cleanup activity because
of the settlement.
The 11,500 5:;-gallon drums and 14
large tanks on the 10 acres at the

site were discovered six and a half Chem-Dyne had no money and
years ago when city fire crews In- could not aHord to pay to have it
vestlgated a report of smoke In a dropped, the mayor said.
railroad car near the dump.
Responsibility for the cleanup
Weigel said the city thought the has !allen on companies which
company was manufacturing anti- suppUed Chem-Dyne with wastes,
freeze and fertUizer. not storing
Weigel said the dump site, which
wastes.
was Usted a year agobytheEPAas
"At that point, we found out some one of the 115 worst dumps in the
of the chemicals they were storing country, caused concern tor most
there. We took action In 10 to 15 of the city's 85,000 people.
days trying to close them down. AIThe dump Is near a raUroad
most immediately, they sued us !or yard, a power plant, six ball fields,
$30 million claiming we were ruJnthe municipal swimming pool, the
log their name and business," he
water treatment plant and a large
said.
fuel oil tank.
"The operators at Chem-Dyne
"I think It was a nightmare for
were not only suing u.S, but telling
everybody. It certainly was a night·
citizens they were going to be a ter- mare for anybody living out there,
rWc company," he said.
especially when reports came in
The company has since gone
that there were some very deadly
bankrupt. The suit against the city
things out there," he said.
remains in the courts because .--,-------------l

Teacher shortage critical in U.S.
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
- The dean of Bowling Green State
University's college of education
says the United States Is falling behind Russia, Japan and West Germany In science and math
education.
The problem, Dr. Sandra Packard said, is that math and science
graduates are being hired away
!rom the classrooms by business
and Industry, which pay higher
salaries.
Consequently, she said, the United States also Is trailing "in the.
development of engineers, scientists and technicians. What happens
when one billion Chinese modernize and join the competition for
world trade dollars?"
More than half the states are havIng trouble finding math teachers
and 16 have termed the situation
crt tical. she said.
When Bowling Green's latest
class graduated this spring, she
said, only eight students who were .
qualified as math teachers were
graduated In a groupof2,100educa-

tion majors. In academic year 197273, she said. there were 55 math
education majors.
There are plenty of jobs available
- the university's placement office
has. more than 450 vacancy notices
from around the country for math
teachers.
Maternity and sick teav.es,
deaths and retirements, teacher
"bum out," crowded classes and
other factors are trimming the
number of experienced math and
science teachers already in the
classroom, Ms. Packard said.
As a result, Ohio education officials have issued 131 temporary or
emergency certificates for mathematics, and many schools have had
to eliminate advanced math and
science courses because of the lack
of teachers.
She said thousands of Ohio students are taking remedial math
and science classes, subjects they
should have been prepared for betore they arrived at college.
"Aside from the added pressure
this places on students and their In-

structors," she said, "the 'make. up' syndrome represents a
staggering waste of publlc funds."
The problem is getting worse,
Ms. Packard said.
BGSU education official Marilyn
Braatz said some school systems
are paying bonuses for math and
science teachers just to recruit
them. She said, however, that the
practice hasn't caught on in Ohio.
"Teachers' unions or gi"'Jups that
conduct bargaining are generally
opposed to It," she said.

QLI~l'~~ITY

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LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
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memorials printed in full color.
Kindly have an authorized logan Monu·

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f'ler1se sent m e details about Mr1usoleums
without obligations.

!'iTRFFTorROUTF

Steve Yates
Is Back

CIT't' or TOWN ....

Tuesday thru
Saturday

By MARCIA DUNN
duce enough electricity to warrant
Associated Press Writer
Improvements·it needs and Its days
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The Ship- as a research center are over, said
ptngpon Atomic Power Station, the DOE spokesman Phil Garon.
nation's first commercial-size nu- r--------------1
: clear reactor, will be closed in October and dismantled after 25 years
. . . . 1:imn-lntind
as a training ground for the atomic
USPS5~
A Mult!m~h• New"p~:~pt!r
power Industry.
Publ1sht.'t.l each Sunday, 8:25 Third
It Is the eighth and largest nuA\'~nllt' , by Ole Ohio Vallt!)' Publishinf.!
Cu111pany- Mu ltirna!iu, Inc.&amp;."Cond du:JS
. clear plant to be deactivated by the
pi:SLHI(t' pc~icl ~tl Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631.
U.S. Department o! Energy.
Entered its se..·tmd ciiiSJt mailinJ.( mwtter
Ill PUIIIl'Wy. Ohio. root Offk~ .
"There aren't any unknowns. It's
quite straight-forward from an enMt&gt;.mbt' r: Tht.&gt; A&amp;ociah.'CJ Press. Jnlamd
Douly Pre:)S ~·it~tion and the
gineering standpoin t," Edward
Alllt.'rican NewHpaper Publi11ht!rs
Delaney, program manager tor the
A~HIII C iatiun . N11tional Adver t i sin~o:
R~prest!~t.aHve, Branham. 17117 Wrst
DOE's surplus facilities program,
Nmt• M1lt' RoW. Suitt! 20t, Delroit.
Mit·hil(an. Ull75.
said Friday.
· Dismantling the power station
SUBSCRiPTION RATES
will cost an estimated $66 million.
Ont·wc~~-~~~~~~~.. 11.00 ·
"There's always a potential risk
Ont• Month ... , •.. , ••... . ... .. .. f4.40
!fit's not done rtght," Delaney said.
011r year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152.80
SINGLE COn
'"But the regulations for that are
PRICE
pretty strtn'gent, and those would
33Cenb
be fully compiled with and assured
NiJ subscnptiom by mail pennitted in
by monitoring.
tuwn.!l whcre hornt' cMrricr servh.-e ia
MVailablc.
1J
"So the s!Bndard limits for eXJX&gt;sure of workers could not be ex11\t' Sunday Tirne:J-Sentlnel will not be
rcapon~ible for atlvuntt Pi}1nents made
ceeded. Likewise for people near
to earners.
the site."
'If AIL SUI!SCIUPI'IONS
The plant's steam-driven_ turSwodayo.Jy
bines have cranked out more than
One )'t!ar .....• ,, .,, .•.. , • .••• . $31.Z8
Sill: months . . ..... . ... .. ....... SIU4
7.1 bWlon kUowatt hours of electricIty since being designed and built
Dally--y
MAILSIJIIIICIIIPI"IONS
by D~quesne Light Co. and the
. ...... ow.
Iarmer Atomic Energy Commis1% w..u .. "" " .... "."" ". 111.11
!IW..U ..................... ·' Ill..
sion's Division of Naval Reactors
IJW..U ....
" .. " ......... ". III.M
Ra ...
under Adm. Hyman Rlckover.
161.11 '
Small by theCWTentstandardsof
IS ..U ........ ........ ... ... ta.M
IJ
W..U
....................
:
..
IIUI
an Industry it' helped establish, the
72-megawatt facillty does not pro-

_Oiolo
»;..u ...... "" ............

\

: Entries in the annual photography
of the Meigs County Fair s(lme 160 this year - show a definite
:Interest in the field and some of the
shots entered this year were fan·
lastic.
: So - a county camera club being
formed should go well. The initial
meeting will be 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 7
at the Riverboat Room of the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co. The
~~jub will · not ·be a "social"
'!Jirganization but a learning one.
:seminars, programs, field trips and
:a11 sorts of activities are planned to
'give members knowledge in the field
photography. Anyone needing fur·
.thlir Information on the new group
.)hould contact Roger L. Randolph at

LOGAN MONUMENT

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JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.
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LEO L. VAUGHAN, Mgr.
PH . 992-2588

•.

.
Each

Atomic power station
to close in October

_ For the second consecutive year,
12-year·old Amy Berkhimer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Jackson, Reedsville, exhibited the
grand champion Suffolk ewe in the
Meigs County Junior Fair.
·Amy reaUy doesn't have a farm on
which to raise her animals so she
has done well. She is a member of
the Alfred Livestock -Club of which
Charles "Red" and Rose Carr served 8ll advisors.
; Amy purchased her animals for
jler sheep project this year from Mr.
a)td Mrs. Catr and Mr. and Mrs.
'Rick Avis. Her grand champion at
·the junior fair sale was purchased
by Bank One of Pomeroy and she
received an incredible price of $11
1Jer pound.

A78-13
871-13
C71-13
C71-14
071-14
E71-14
E71;Uor 15
G71-14or 15
H71-14 oriS
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$172
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$200
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Campus employee murdered

Thurs. 9 am til ·9:30 pm
Fri.·Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

Ends 11 cases

OVER 30 IN STOCK

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The Sunday Times-sentinel- Page- A-S

RUTLAND -The Rutland Civic
office Is being completed by them. take place Sept. 25, and a valiety tlons from the public and r&lt;Keipts
from various actlvllles. Donations
Center committee reports that exA trophy case with all the former show Is scheduled for Oct. 2.
tensive Improvements have been
RHS trophies has been. Installed in
The committee has purchased of $10 for chairs may be sent to
made to the !onner gymnasium
the entrance hall.
'
300 chairs and 40 tables \l'ilh dona· Janet Bolin. treasurer. Rutland.
992-3063. '
which is now the civic center.
Plans are also being made tore- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The gymnasium was deeded to pair the rool .and Install a kitchen.
A green and white Girl Scout banThe exterior front entrance wall
ntr belonging to one of the girls of Rutland Village by the Meigs Local
Board
of
Education
Nov.
17,
1980.
has
been sand blasted. The front
the Reedsville Junior Troop 1015 was
Committees
were
appointed
and
lawn
has been landscaped and
apparently picked up by mistak&lt;!
renovation
work
began
immeparking
!aciUties made along the
when the booths were being dismantled following the Meigs County diately and still continues. The co- sides. Evergreens, donated by the
Fair. Anyone locating the banner is mlttee reports the public has been Rutland Garden club and the Ruasked to contact the troop leader, very ciioperatlve In various activi- tland Friendly Gardneers, have
Mrs. Donna Good at 843-2624 or 843- ties Including volunteering labor, been planted along the front and
2627.
and the committee expresses skies of the building.
thanks to them.
Anyone with any old aquariums
The Interior walls have been
Rented room:;, lncl~ding the
TREES• SHRUBS
and accessories lying around painted, the gym floor sanded, main gym, areavallable\othepub·
LAWNS • BULBS
unused?
broken windows replaced and ad- llc for such events as parties, reun·
Rusty Bookman, Meigs Junior vertising signs were taken by var· Ions and showers . Anyone
KOT ALIC LANDSCAPING
High science teacher, is looking for lous business places to cover the
Interested
in
using
them
should
conaquariums, pumps, filtering upper 32 windows. One of the
systems or any part, to use in his former dressing rooms has been tact Jerry Black, Rutland.
Skating will be held at the center
science classes. The equipment made Into the village hall.
•Complete planting• of treea, •-~• and !Iowen
each
Tuesday and Thursday nights
would be used so that students can
•Tree and ahrub trimming
The EMS is remodeling rooms starting Sept. 1, along with a
carry out special science projects.
weekly
dance.
A
hymn
sing
will
•Seaaonallertlll2lng.
mulching
and
cleaning
tor
a
place
to
hOuse
Its
truck
and
an
Students would work with the
reproduction and raising of tropical
(614) 446-o 100
fish .
861 Second Avenue
Gallipolis. Ohio4S631
Rusty thought, perhaps, some
residents might have the equipment
lying around in the attic gathering
CLEVELAND (AP) -The as· ~;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:==============================~-----------,
dust. Any resident having something sistanl superintendent of buildings I
to donate is asked to take the and grounds at Cleveland State UniSTORE HOURS:
donation to the junior high or call versity was found shot to death In a
Bookman th·ere and he will be happy restroom of the main classroom
building, aulhorttles say.
to make arrangements to pick it up.
Timothy P. Sheehan, 50, had
Mrs. Hazel McCallwn was so been shot twice in the !ace with a
pleased with the kindness of so many pistol in a third-floor restroom Fri..
who remembered her on her recent day, pollee said.
90th birthday.
It was the second killing in a resGO TO CHURCH £VtRV SUNDAY
" I woke up on my birthday feeling
troom of the main classroom buildw~·~·~··~·~·~·~'"~·~R~ig~h~t~lo~L;I~m~it~~g;~~------__j
like the last leaf on 'the tree and won- ing this year, and the university's
~' v f
dering why I was left here when aU third slaying in Its 18-year history.
my friends and family of my own
generation were gone. And then Sheehan's wallet was missing but
there came nooding in all those kin- he was wearing a watch and jedly remembrances and suddenly life welry when found Friday evening,
seemed good again. Thank all of you pollee said.
and God bless," Mrs. McCallwn
CSU officials said summer seremarks.
mester classes were over and few
By the way, you might remember
Mrs. McCallwn by the beautiful people were in the building Friday.
paintings she has done over the
years. A number of them were on
display a few years back at Bank
One of Pomeroy, the former
GALLIPOLIS - Eleven cases
Pomeroy National Bank.
were ended Friday In GalUpolls
Ambitious Allie Simon is resp- Municipal Court.
Steven D. Mullins, 23, J:;alllpolls,
nsible for the array of colorful
nowers which front the fence bet- charged with left of center, fined
ween the Daily Sentinel and Simon's $12.
Forfeiting bond form speed]J)g:
Pick-a-Pair Shoe Store, on tht · orKathryn S. Cox, 26, Rt. 1, Galliponer of Main and Court in Pomcory, I
understand Allie even hauled in dirt lis, $38; Jeffrey S. Howell, 18, Rt. 2,
in order to make the bright spot Oak Hill, $38; Davlct C. Hough, 32,
pilssible. Of course, Allie herself is a Gallipolis, $39; Roger D. Phillips,
33, Galllpolis, $40.
bright spot.
Michael C. Hobble. 22, New AI·
I hope you didn't strain yourself bany, Ind.,$43; DebraJ. Llvely.24.
learning the metric system. After all Gallipolis, $43; Carlett E. McClanathat effort to convert us - Uncle hl!n, 19, Letart, $43; Charles C.
Sam is giving up and the system is Snodgrass, 56, Rt. 3, Leon, $43; [lo.
being scrapped in the U.S. So - you nald M. Carr,l8, Rt. 2, Patriot, $76;
can just wear a big smile - a mile Vicki Johnson, 24, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
$18.
wide .

lS

SUMME·R SALE
.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Continue ren()vation work on Rutland center

Beat of the Bend

wee~·erul

The chilly weather wtU t'l'maln for much of the ll'l'&lt;'kPnd as colder,
Canadian air was lx&gt;lng for"&lt;'d ..outhw;ml al\~d of an oncoming
high pressure system. That h\J1h "~11 ~~~~ ov('r0htoSilturday night .
Near-record low temperatures at'&lt;' ""-')l("('ti'd by daybreak Sunday In
northern Ohio as the high mm~ ,,/-mss th&lt;&gt;aN';.t . High temperatures
Saturday afternoon 11111 be limltl'd to the low to mki.Qls in northern
Ohio and mid-70s In the south . SI\J&lt;htl~· mlld&lt;'r l&lt;'mperalures are
likely Sunday after thl' VIO't':l' ~hilly stat~ .

Pomeroy-Middleport~Gailipotis,

•

FR

H SLICED

BEEF
LIVER

�August 29, 1987 _

.

·1on the river

' '

At the top of
the money heap
By EDWARD MILLER
.'\ssoclated Press Writer
NEW YORK lAP) -A merica's
wealthiest person has a wallet so
fat thai he cou ld lose a cool billionwllh a "b" - on a s ingle bad venture and still come out richer than
Rockefeller.
Forbes magazine has come up
with the Forbes 400- a list of who's
got it. a nd who's got more. when It
&lt;·omes to money. The illustrated list
ta k&lt;'S up86 pages of the magazine's
Sept. 13 issue.
Who is the wealthiest American·~
Forbes says it's Da niel K Ludwig,
85. a resident of New York City who
made his money In shipping.
Of the top 12, five are sons and
daughters of legendary Texas oil
man H.L. Hunt. The rest or the list
Is a mix or well-known names - It
takes both hands to count the du
Pants - and those who somehow
avoided the limelight, despite their
money.
It's no longer fashionable to
flaunt wealth, the Great Depression having nixed that, and "a majority of the people on It would have
prererred not to be listed ," Forbes
said . So it relied on estimates and a
score ol business executives and
journalists to come up with what It
called a "tentative rather than authoritative" list.
The list shows that oil and blood
mix well - nine of the top 12 richest
people made their money In oil and
six of the nine Inherited their
fortunes .
Ludwig. however. built Ws fortune In the 1930s by taking contracts
he had arranged to ship oll for the
seven biggest oil companies and us·
lng them as collateral for loans to
build the ships. He build the first
supertankers. at lower cost In Ja.
pan, and Is now "buying savings
and loans, " the magazine said.
He "sank (a) probably unrecoverable $1 billion Into (an) Amazon
jungle pulp empire," Forbes said,
bul " his net worth Is still above $2
billion ."
Aside from Ludwig, those In the
top 12 who did not make their money In oil are Forest Mars Sr., 7B,
ranked seventh-richest, and David
Packard. 70. who ranked 11th.
Mars runs the world's largest
confections company, M&amp;M Mars
Inc. His net worth was put at $1
billion. Packard, starting with $538
In capital and a small garage, built
what becaljle Hewlett-Pack•-d
Co., which makes electronic equipment and computers. The other
half of that team - William R.
Hewlett - ranked 18th on the list.
No. 2 to Ludwig Is Gorden Peter
Getty, 48, the rourth son or the late
oil magnate John Paul Getty. Estimated oil wealth: $1.4 billion.
Third are the father-son team of
Perry Richardson Bass and Sid Rl·
chardson Bass of Fort Worth,
Texas, who made their money In
Inhe r it ed oil wealth and
Investments.
Margaret Hunt Hillis fourth rich·
est and Is the top-ranked woman.
Caroline Hunt Sehellkopf Is fifth.
Both women, from Dallas, InherIted their fortunes from their father, H.L. Hunt.

.,;

'.

PORT CLINTON, Ohio IAPl Officials of the Davis-Besse nuc lear
power plant have been ordered to
double-check piping welds alter the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
found that some X-rays of welds
had been altered.
The commission said In a bulletin
to Davls-Besse that some radiographs of welds in piping from ITT
Gri nnell Industrial Piping Inc. of
Kernersville, N.C. , to a Michigan
plant had been altered.
ITT Grinnell supplied the same
kJnd of piping to Davis· Besse and 11
other power plants. officials said.
The agency said the radiographs,
or X-rays. apparently had been
touched up with a soft lead pencil.
Davls-Besse. which Is operated
by Toledo Edison Co., has 120 days
to review all the radiographs berore
reporting to the commission, said
Jan Strasma of the NRC.
"At the (Michigan) plant only
four sets were found to have been
altered out of 94,00J radiographs, "
Strasma said.
If any welds were not done according to NRC standards, they
might still he lefl alone If testing
showed they could stand the ex·
peeled stress In the plant, said Joe
Collins, a senior metallurgical eng\·
neer In the agency's Office of In·
spection and Enforcement.
Roger Buehrer ot Toledo Edison
said the bulletin had just been
received.
"We have turned It over to the
engineering department which will
review the radiographs," he.said.
Davts-Besse Is shut tllwn for refueltn'g and maintenance and
should be back In service next ·
w~k, Buehrer said.
1'.As'·t understand the bulletin, we
are to look .at the radiograph$,
which should not affect us from
coming on line," he said .

.

.

1982

Jindra Winery strives for quality
Story and pholos
by Deb Fox
1lmes-SeotiJJel SWf
JACKSON - Nestled In Franklin
Valley, about eight miles from
Jackson and ;~cross the road from
the site of the county's first apple
orchard, Is the area's only winery
- Louis Jindra Winery.
Located oH State Route 93 on
Camba Road, the winery Is In Its
third vintage and has been open to
the public since Aug.l3, 198l.lt Is a
family business operated by
partners Dr. Louis Jindra Sr., 62,
who works at Oak Hill Hospital, and
Louis Jindra Jr., 32. The latter had
been a claims Investigator with the
Ohio Department ot Mental Health
until he resigned Aug. 13 to work
full time at the winery .
"It deserves constant attention,"
Louis Jindra Jr. said. "I was waiting for the rtght moment, and the
time was right to resign."
The winery has 20 acres of grapes
In seven varieties.
"Most are French/ American
varieties. -A cross between Europeail and native American grapes

gives a finesse of old world grapes
and the hardiness of new world
grapes," Jindra explained. But
among the acres of grapes are
American varieties, Including Catawba and Nlagra.
"We try to make wines to suit
everyone's palate - sweet, fruity,
earthy," he said.
The business had Its roots about
15 years ago when the Jlndras ~
gan making wines at home. But the
family has been growing grapes
only nine years.
"We sold mostly to other winerIes throughout the state with the In·
tentlon to eventually have our own
winery. We felt we needed to know
how to grow grapes so we became
farmers - vlneyarders - before
the winery began. Knowing how to
grow grapes Is Important because
!Kl percent of the wine business Is In
the vineyard.
"You can make a good wine out
of good grapes, but you can't make
a good wine out of bad grapes," Jindra said.
"The Industry Is so young In the
East that suppliers can't be de-

NRC orders
weld checks

•

Section rn5.

Jack8on County'siAluls Jindra Winery Is In Its third vintage and the
variety of wine produced lbere ill processed from the winery's own 20
acres of viDeyanls. Alter grapes have been barvell&amp;ed, crushed,
stemmed, added with a yeast culture, and the ft8Uii fermented and
aged, Lools Jindra Jr. checks the ag!Dg pmce88 (lower right photo).
When the wine has been bottled, also tested ill Its clarMy by Jindra
(lower left). From that polllt, some boUies are dl!ltrlbuted, but most are
bought or consumed In the winery's "laBUng room" (rflh!J.

••

pended upon for quanlty and
quality."
He also noted that although the
business Is new this century In
Ohio, the Ohio Valley was the first
area or commercial wine growing
In the United States. Diseases that
killed the vtney ards couldn't be con·
trolled at the time.
"Ohio Is now wnere -California
was 20 years ago. Wines that are
made here could be consumed any·
where In the world -could be palatable there."
The younger Jindra describeS
Wmself as self taught and has an
extensive llbrary of periodicals and
books. He also attends seminars
and associates with other
winemakers.
Besides both Louis Jindra Jr. and
Sr.'s Involvement in the business,
the younger's brother Jim, 20, Is
studying enology In conjunction
with the food technology program
at Ohio State University. However,
Ws plans for returning to Jindra
Winery after graduation are
uncertain.
The 20 acres of vineyards pro-

duce about 5,!XXl gallons a year
which translates to about 20.CXXI bot·
ties. All fermentation of grapes
from the vineyards Is done at Jindra Winery In either stainless steel
drums or American Oak barrells
and wine Is bottled, aged and stored
there.
In the winery Itself - once an
apple packing shed - Is what Is
called a "tasting room;" a restaurant, of sorts, where wine as well as
cheese may be purchased to go or
consumed there. Hours are noon to
8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday
all year round a nd the winery Is
open most holidays.
"The biggest part of our business
Is out -of -towners during the
summer," Jindra said.
Jindra described the future of the
winery as "wherever the business
ta kes us. Objectives are to have a
healthy business. but. really, from
a wine maker's standpoint, the chal·
lenge Is to make good wines and
continue to make them better .
We'U try new varieties and new
techniques and strtve for quality.''

�Page-B -2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- M iddleport-Ga llipolis, Ohio-P·oi

Pleasant,

w.

va.

August 29, 1912
• , August 29, 1982

Sunday/People===

'Celebrity' auction set for Rutland Civic Center

Ali plans Pakistan v1s1t

ByCHARLENEHO~CH

KARACHI. Pakistan lAP) - F'ormer world hea ')!Welghl champion
)Auhammad All wiU visit Pakistan In mid -October to raise funds lor
charity, an spokesman for All says.
All will hold exhibition bouts with boxer Jimmy Ellis In three cities,
Jamal Khat chi. director of the World F'oundallon Inc., told reporters
here Friday. The non-profit foundation Is owned by Ali.
Jamal sa id the tour will last ]() days, and All and Ellis wUI box in
Karachi, Lahore and Falsalabad.
Ali plans similar tours to the United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia
and Iraq, but negotiations for the three visits were In an early stage, the
spokes man said.

Times-Sentinel Staff Writer
- RUTLAND - U you've always

wanted an autographed picture from
~ actor on your favorite "soap,"
the place to get it may be at the
ucelebrity" auction to take place
~turday night at Rutland Civic Cen-

ter.
The auction is a part of a round of
activities plaMed for Friday and
Saturday by Rutland Emergency
Medical Service. It will be held at
7: 30 on Saturday evening and dozens
of articles will be put on the auction
block.

There are Mickey Gilley shirts a dozen or so in several colors along with several different issues of
his magazine; a nwnber "85" shirt
from Curtis of the Cincinnati
Bengals; autographed pictures and
records from Carmine Grey who
stars at Cory on "Another World,"

and Jaddrien Steele of "Ryan's
Hope," along with an autographed
script from one of the ''soaps.''
Both Eddie Rabbit and · Don
Willlams of "Amanda" fame, country and western singers, sent
autographed albwns for the auction,
as did AI Harrington of "Hawaii

A little bit tired at 72
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - Mother Teresa of Calcutta said she
was "a little bit tired" on her72nd birthday, whichshespentlnoneofthe
worst slums in Caracas dedicating a Roman Catholic mission house.
The Yugoslav-born missionary and Nobel Peace Prize-laureate
vowed to continue to serve the poor.
"I want to be a Missionary of Charity as long as God wants It," she
said. "This Is my work." The Missionaries of Charity are an order she
founded .
The nun was joined by Venezuelan President Luis Herll'ra Camplns
for the dedication ceremony Friday. About 1,(U) people gathered outside the small chapel and retreat that will serve as a base for other
Missionaries of Charity.
The mission home was donated by Venezuelan merchant s. "This Is a
nice gift lor my baptism day," said Mother Teresa.

Have
Employers
Turned Their
cksOnYou •

'Close to God' at Mount Ararat
ANKARA, Turkey tAP) -Former U.S. astronaut James Irwin says
· he felt "close to God" during an expedition to Mount Ararat, where the
Bible says Noah's Ark came to rest after the deluge.
"The moon and Mount Ararat are both very holy places," Irwin said
Friday, upon his return here after an accident on Aug. 20 forced him to
cut short his trip to Turkey's highest peak.
lrwtn, who spent three days on the moon during the Apollo 15 lunar
· mission In 1971, seemed fully recovered !rom minor injuries he suffered
when he slipped and fell in a snowdrift on the 16,621).foot mountain.
"Noah's Ark still might be on Mount Ararat and that Idea has always
fascinated me." he said. "But (the mountain) continues to hold Its
mysteries."
" ! would like to try to climb it again," he added.

Could it be that you are not
-t rained in the skills they are
looking for?

· Borlaug: Nobel sperm bank 'ridiculous'
·
·
'

·

ACROSS

Irwin

9 AM to9 PM
WALK IN 0'1 t AU fOil
A.N A.PI&gt;()IN lt.IIN1

Ill .....

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com mission of Ohio has set for
publ ic hearing Case No .
82-.161-EL-EFC. to review
the fuel procurement practices and policies of lhe
Ohio Power Company, the
operalion of its Electric
Fuel Component, and ·~ ·
lated matters . This hr;or·
ing is scheduled to begin
at 1:00 p.m. on August
30, 1982 at City Council
Chambers, 218 Cleveland
Avenue, S.W., Canton ,
Ohio 44702 .
Art Interested parties will
be given an opportunily ,
to be heard . Further informalion may be obtained
by contacting the Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OH IO
By : David M. Polk .
Secretary

saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

r-·r -\tt r

~

•

Monday thru Friday

·r;.~e

446-9510

A NEW DIRE C TION IN HA IR DESIGN ' "

b
""TAME HIM"

Katie's korner
By KATIE CROW
Times-Sentinel Staff Writer
POMEROY - It's one thing to
celebrate your 50th or even vnnrMth
birthday but to
celebr ate your
,95th, that is
something else.
Ben Quise
berry, Syracuse,
celebr ated his ·
95th this past
wee k. We understand that Mr.
Quisenberry wUl leave
live wit,h his son, Don.
Mr. Quisenberry is a gentleman
and a scholar and we will miss him.
We wish you the best of luck and we
extent belated birthday wishes.

With the iob market today •
•.• only ·the qualifi.e d are
getting the good iobs.
'

I

THE LaSALLE

'Birthdays and music instruments

With Our FULL TIME ADULT
TRAINING·PROGRAMS
you can •••

Homer Radford, Rock Springs, is
85 years of age and has never missed
a Meigs County Fair since he was
born.
The first fair he attended was in
the arms of his mother, we are told.
Now that is something to brag
about.
Leo Gilmore, Pomeroy, has been
very busy of late gathering
buckeyes.
He has all sizes of buckeyes from
very small to very large. Gilmore is

with training
in less than one year •••

HAVE A SKILL!

very kind and remembers the giriB
in the front office with gifts of
flowers.
The nice gesture was appreciated
by Goldie Carson and Peggy Doerfer.
James Wilhelm, band director at

LUNCH SERVED
11 :30-2: 00
DAILY SPECIALS

DINNER SERVED
S: 00-8 : 30
NEW MENU ITEMS

ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IN THE LOUNGE

Five-0" and the Bill Gaither Trio or
gospel singers.
And there's much more.
Activities at the Labor Day
weekend celebration will begin
Friday when a two-day flea market
opens. Refreshments will be
available all day and a variety of
games will be in operation.
On Saturday things will pick up
with a bake sale starting at 9 a.m.
and a flower show at 11 a.m. by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners. Cornbread and beans will be served all
day.
Most of the work on the fa cil ity is
by volunteer labor with donations
and money-making projects
providing funds for the supplies and
materiaiB. Currently the EMS members are working toward raising funds for a large overhead door.
"Make Mine Country Style" will
the theme of the flower show which

is to be judged by pubUc opinions.
Ballots will be handed out to the
viewers beginning at 11 a.m. Those
exhibiting must have their
arrangements in place by 10 a.m.
Ribbons will be awarded at 2 p.m.
The classes of the show are "Country Time - Turkey in the Straw,"
homespun arrangements featuring
native dried materials; "Hospitality
Country Style," a design for a picnic
buffet; "Roadside Country Beauty,"
a design featuring weeds and using
only fresh material; "Country Doctor, Lawyer, Merchant, Chief,"
design suggesting the "Early
American" theme; " Patent Country
Remedy," design in a bottle container; "Country Hoedown," mass
design featuring a ga rdening accessory ; "Country Gentlemen," a

tall design; and "Country Kitchen,"
design using a kitchen container emphasizing yellows .

Make
Their
Day.
Send The Preserves Jar or Salt
Box Bouquet For
Grandparents' Day.

Show them you remem ber, with the Preserves
Jar or Salt Box Bouquet
from Pomeroy Flower
Shop. Both bouquests
In beautiful porcelain
containers with '"""1c:·1
blue delft designs so
they're delightful
keepsake gifts.
Just call or visit our
shop a nd you can send
this bouquet almost any .
where in the U. S.
Ask for the PreservPs J ar
or Salt Box Bouquet. Because with Pomeroy Flower Shop the ·
flower s a lways come in something as pretty as the nowcrs
themselves ..

Grandparents' Day, Sunday, September 12.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

MON. &amp; TUES.-Charlie Lilly (Vocal &amp; Guitarl
WED. &amp; THUR.-Roger Elliott (Recording Artistl
FRI. &amp; SAT.-Billy Lee &amp;Sounds of Country (5 Pc. Bandl

"The Way America Sends Love"
Bu"ernut A".

PH. 992-2039
or 992·5721

Pomeroy oH.

We Accept All Ma1or Credrt Cards
And We Wire flowers Almost Everywhere

Eastern
High
School,
is looking
fora 1-1~:::::::::::::::::::::::1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::~~~~~~
good used
band
instrument.
Anyone
having a band instrument for sale
may caU Wilheim in the evenings at
593-59011 as soon as possible.
Fred Crow, Pomeroy attorney,
who has been a patient at University
Hospital, Colwnbus, has returned to
his home in Syracuse.
Fred is doing well but he just has
to take it easy for a while.
We're glad you're back.

The old jazz
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) They played "The 12th Street Rag"
recently at groundbreaking cerem·
onies for a 22-story hotel now rising
on the block where the jazz classic
originated in downtown Kansas
City.
Developers of the Vista Hotel say
Kansas City lazz will be heard on
12th Street again when the hotel op.
ens in 1984.

•Auto Body Repair •Auto Mechanics •Building
Maintenance •Carpentry •Electricity •Factory
Industrial Maintenance •Food Service
•Machine Trades •Office Clericai-Steno
•Welding •Business Data Processing

with a

FLEXSTEEL
RECLINER

FINANCIAL AID IS AVAILABLE ---

"In the pa.st 11 years, I'U! brought up three linebackers...
who brought home 3,000 filthy jemrys And I was/led 'em
all in one wa.shet. A Frigidaire."

Fall Quarter

He'll "Pur-r-r"

---INFORMATI.ON--....
Starts 9ct. 4th
FULL TIME ADULT PRQGRMS
REGISTER IN ~ERSON OR
MAIL IN THIS COUPON
-BUSINESS DATA PROCESSING

with

contentment
om tru~ oniol tho dotp ...tine comlorl and
ret111tlon thtJ 1&lt;1 in • F'i4!uteel Woll
Recliner. It 11101 110111 onr posit1011: lounp
ch1ir to lull rtclintl' with IHII' inches of wall
lfiiCI· All futuro ~~~~oet's potonted ,.,t
sprinl lftd dHP culhionint for unsurpassed
comfurt tnd quality. Tame the tiaer in ,our
Old with 1 Flexstetl recHne1.

CELEBRITY AUCTION - These are
just a few of the many
iteii\S whlclt will be
put on the auction
block at the "celebrity" auction to be
held at Rutland Civic
Center at 7: 30 p.m.
Saturday night. Margie Bishop, standing
right, displays a
slightly used shh1 secured from I. Curtis of
the Cincinnati Bengals. The other Emergency Medical
Service members pictured are, seated, Jo
Ann Earls and Janet
Bolin, standing left.

\

NEW DELHI, India tAP) -U.S. Nobel laureate Norman E. Borlaug
says the idea of using a "Nobel sperm bank" to produce Intelligent
babies Is "ridiculous."
The creation of the sperm bank In Escondido, Calif., showed "some
pretty ridiculous scientists" In the Nobel community wen&gt; "making
fools of themselves," Borlaug told reporters Saturday In the southern
India state capital of Bangalore.
On Wednesday, It was ann9unced In Los Angeles thai Afton Blake, 40,
an unmarried psychologist, had given birth to a son after being lmpll'gnaled with sperm from the Repository for Germinal Choice.
Borlaug, an expert in Increasing crop yields, won the 1970 Nobel
Peace Prize.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-3

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

-WELDING
-AUTO BODY REPAIR
-MACHINE ,TRADES
- BUILDINGMAINTENANCE ,
- FACTORY INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANC
.-E LECTRICIYY
-CARPENTRY ·
-OFFICE;S OCCUPATIONS
:-FOOD SERVICE
•
-:-A liTO
MECHANICS
......_....,.~--~--··

I would like · n~ore information about your
adult vocational programs. Chec~ one or
more.
Your Name ..... . . .. . ..... ..... .. . ....... .

FLEXS

EC

!iii._ .

FN:l.AIOISIL&amp;RINTUAE ·~~- _ _,.,
Titer• Is o Flexsteef Wall Recliner In a 1lze ond lfyfefOr ev~ry Dod.

Address ••••••.•..... •... .. . . .. .... .... .
Phone ...... .. ... . ........ . .. ............ .
Mail ·to : Adull Edvution
Tri-Countv vocational School·
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

_ _______

..,_ _...........

'

&lt;

. Tr.i~Co~nfy,_
.Vot;ational S'c tlool ·
·'

'

--·lflriei

'

'~~

toaiol it- Snor IIIII
doolr ·
oH ...............
.....,, tiNt h•laltilf
btl '

rodiiMf -fort. 'lllkl. ....

·

''""' ~ oH ........
ctnfllons. In cliolet, ionl -'111
INrics.
.

''lI

Rt. 1, State Route 691 .
Nelsonville, Ohio
. '

f

'

I·

'

~hone614-753-3511 Ext.44·

•.

'

',

'

'

.

I

'

BAKER RJRNITURE,.:· .-~.
OYER 30 YEARS·

· MIDDLEPORT, OH .

.
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HAMBURGER
SANDWICH

. SANDWICH

WHENl'OU BUY ANY

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·FREE SINGJ.E
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A ....IHilod. clloir
lhlt - . . • fllf.tilod, r.rtdlt roclN with o 10ft
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bvttoo·toflotl !lick ""' ,...,
toe ... • -· Wolift to

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· OFF.Eit EXPIRES SEP'J'ENIIER 19, 1982

fREE SINGI.E
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WHEN YOU BUY ANY

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OffER EXPIRES SEPTEMBER 19, 1982

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�Page-B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

August 29, 1982

Pomeroy-Midd le port- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
bows and baby's breath.
Traci Lance, cousin of the bride,
Reedsville, was the flower girl. She
wore a long lavender gown with matching ribbon in her hair. Guests
were registered by Donna Wilfong,
sister of the groom, with Darlene
Wilfong distributing the rice bags.
Best man was Dale Wilfong,
brother of the groom, and Charles
Calloway, Reedsville, was an usher.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Elkins wore a lilac and peach
polyester gown with a corsage of
while carnations tinted . lavender.
Mrs. Ruble was in a black chiffon
g_own and also wore a carnation corsage.
A reception was held in the c~urch
social room with Cindy Houghton,
Thelma Lantz, Ruth Longenette and
Dorothy Lance, all aunts of the bride
serving. The wedding cake was five
tiered and topped with a cupid. A
miniature bride and groom was used
between two of the
of the

Weddings

August 29, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

fountain cake and lbe entire cake
was trinuned with lavender roses.
Following a wedding trip fo Blackwater Falls and Cjlnaan Valley, W.
Va. , the couple now resides in Tuppers Plains. A lavender skirt and
vest outfit was worn by the bride on
her wedding trip.
·
The new Mrs. Wilfong is a· 1982
graduate of Eastern High School.
Mr. Wilfong graduated from
Federal Hocking High School in
1980. .
Out-of-county guests attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Larry Reed, McConnelsville; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Jeffers, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Elkins and family, Birmingham,
Ala.; Mrs. Flora Elkins, Rockledge,
. Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Epling,
Dunkirk; Miss Jessica Elkins,
Rockledge; Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Nicholas, Spencer, W. Va.;
Mrs. Debbie Wilfong and Robbie,
Harrisville, W. Va .; and Dana
Winfield,

RACINE - On March 20 In an mal gown which she had designed.
evening ceremeny at Racine Wes- Mrs. Johnson made the wedding
leyan United Methodist Church, gown as well as the gowns of the
Della Louise Johnson and James
attendants. The alencon lace gown
Robert O'Brien exchanged wed- featured a four-tiered skirt worn
ding vows.
. over a hoop. The bodice had a
The bride Is lhe daughter of Jerry ruffled yoke with a standup collar
M. Johnson Sr., Racine, and the and long lace sleeves which came
bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and to points over the hands. Her lullMrs. Larry O'Brien, Adams Road, length veil of illusion fell trom a
Racine.
lace Juliet cap. She carried a bouThe 6: 30 ceremony was per- quet of silk roses and carna lions In
formed by the Rev. Florence cross replica made by her aunt,
Smith, grandmother of the bride, Carol Freeman, wore diamond earand Rev . James Clark. Music was rings and necklace, gilt of the
provided by Mrs. Marlene Fisher groom, and carried a white Bible
with Larry Fisher and Paula EI- and handkerchief, gift from her
chinger as the soloists. Selections grandmother. Rev. Smith.
The bride's ~tendants were ValIncluded "We've Only Just Begun"
and "The Wedding Song" by Miss erie Hanstine. Pomeroy, matron of
Eichinger; and "Annie's Song" and honor; Michelle Johnson, Racine.
"The Lord's Prayer" during the ce- maid of honor, both sisters of the
bride; Linda O'Brien and Carol
remony by Fisher.
Two 14-branch candelabra and O'Brien, blrdesmalds. sister of the
lavender floral arrangements deco- groom; Jennifer Johnson. a junior
rated the altar. Pews were marked bridesmaid, also · a sister of the
with hurricane lamps accented by bride. and Renae Freeman of
Janette. Pa., flower gtrl.
Ia vender ribbons.

End of Season
SAVINGS!
Free-Arm
Machine Model 5528

Mrs. Holler
POMEROY '- Marriage vows
were exchanged by Devonia Susan
Bissell and William Eugene Holler
on June 26 at Madison Christian
Church on Bixby Road , Groveport.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Delberl L. Bissell,
Groveport, and the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bissell,
Bashan, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Brewer, Reedsville. The bridegroom
is the son of Mrs. Marlene Cook,
Dillsboro, Ind ., and the grandson of
Mrs. Loretta Ritzer, Groveport.
The bride wore a gown of white
nylon chiffon and peau de ange lace.
II was sty-le~ with a Southern belle
skirt with tiers of lace, each
gathered to tiny lilac rosebuds. The
off-the-shoulder bodice had a filled
waistline.
A matching chapel-length veil fell
from a crown of pearls, and the
bride carried a crescent bouquet of ·
lilac
and
breath. She

wore a single strand of pearls.
The bride's attendants were Billie
Jean Roark, maid of honor; Susan
Morre, Kimberly Toney, Kim Gardner, and Kathy Van Heswick,
bridesmaids; and Erin Schwan and
Traci Grale, flower girls. They were
in Southern Belle style gowns of lilac
organza with off-the-shoulder design
and full ruffled skirts pulled into a
bustle at the back. They wore matching lilac picture hats to complete
their ensembles and carried cascade
bouquets of lilac roses and baby's
breath.
The groom wore a white tuxedo,
while his attendants were in silver
tuxedos with lilac boutonnieres.
They were Delbert Duane Bissell,
best man; Jeff Gee, Chuck Holler,
Jinuny Nupoll, Mark Needs, Tim
Brewer, and Mark Mullins, ushers.
Shawn Paul Price was the
ringbearer.

Built-In buttonholer •

(continued from B-4)

Universal pressure

Louise and Jlmmy Ginnelti of the
Silver Nichols Band presented
special music. The Rev. Randy
Snyder performed the double ring
ceremony which was followed by a
reception at the Yorkshire Country
Club. A party 'was held later with entertainment by the Crosswinds Band

system adjusts to
varying Iabrie
weights

I

20% Off
'ftEGULAR
PRICE

i

music
Chrissy
Watson
used onbythe
reception
table.included
Organ
the theme from "lee Castles," "I've
Never Loved This Way Before," and
"Endless Love."
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the btide wore a gown of
polyester lace and sheer polyester
organza. The Queen Anne neckline
was trimmed with beads and the
gown had long sleeves with snap cut-

STORE FULL OF FALL FABRICS
FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
APPIOIEO
INDEPENDENT
IDLER

5

SINGER

THE FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy, OH.
Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

PRODUCTS

r::===============::=================;
Cabll'ltla/KICinylogcueeruaonaumodols

SEPTEMBER SALE.

liu
-r

FURNITURE
GAUERIES

ON ALL CUSTOM

Mr. .and Mrs.
GAWPOLIS - Beth Ann BarncOrd and Stanley Brian Burnett were
united in marriage on May 22 with
Elder Sidney Young efficiating the 3
p.m. ceremony in The Seventh Day
Adventist Church, Lionville Road,
Newark.
Parent:; of the couple are Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Barncord, Newark, and
Mr. and Mrs. G. Alan Burnett,
Reynoldsburg . Mrs. Stanley Folden
of Gallipolis is the maternal grandmother of the groom.

WINDOW TREATMENTS
SAVE 10% to 30%
•DRAPERIES
•SHEERS
•FANCY TREATMENTS

•PADDED CORNICES
•WOOD BLINDS
•VERTICAL BLINDS

•WOVEN WOODS
•VEROSOL SHADES
•LEVOLOR BliNDS

IsALE ENDS SEPT. 25th-ALL PRICEs INCLUDE

PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATION

I

Any treatment you have seen or can
imagine Tope's has the means, ideas
and installation professiona Is.

oNt~

The staff at Tope's will help
you With every decision you
need to make to have the most
practical and beautiful windows you can imagine! Tope's
will measure, helP you select
from hundreds and hundreds
of fabric choices, install the
Traverse Rods and Drapery
then professionally steam
them to elegant perfection.

QUALITY HOTPOINT
LAUNDRY PAIR SPECIALLY PRICED!

The attendants wore floor length
gowns of lavender print, fashioned
with ruffled V necklines and gathered skirts with deep bottom
flounces. They carried lavender
silk flowers on wicker fans.
Edward Roush of Racine was
best man, and the ushers were
Jerry Johnson, Jr .. Terry McNickols, James Powell, and Shawn
O'Brien, all of Racine, ushers. Acolytes were James Freeman. lli
Janette. Pa .. and Aaron O'Brien.
Racine. Joseph Derouin Jr. of Millvale, Pa .. a cousin of the bride. was
the ring bvearer. A sliver grey
tuxedo with white shirt and boutonniere was worn by the groom . His
attendants wore sliver grey tuxeA reception honoring the couple
was held at the American Legion

The bridegroom is employed by
Slife Industrial Trucks, Columbus.
The bride is employed by Red Roof
Inns, Inc.
The newlyweds reside 6009 Lake
Club Court, Columbus.

at

~urnett

TAUGHT BY
PAID FELLURE

How soon college!

ding and reeeptlon. Among those
from Meigs County attending were
Mr. and Mrs. David Grate and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
BisaeU, Mr. and Mrs. Paul price and
son, Mrs . Frank Riffle and
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Brewer. Others from out-of-town
were Mr. and Mrs. Ron Ely and son,
Gillette, Wyoming; Jeff Brewer and
Jim Brewer, Hampton, N. H.; Mr.
and Mrs. Seldon Garverick and son,
Lexington; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Randolph, CUnard; Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Van Meter, Beverly, and Mrs.
Margie Holter, Malta.
Mrs. Haller is employed by Tahdy
Corporation as a receptionist and
PBX operator at Radio Shack
Warehouse. HoUer is employed by
Big Drum in Columbus. They reside
at Blue Pine in

Wih

Life insurance can help.
Ca ll Garland M . Davis
512 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446-8235
Home Ph. 388-9691

TAUGHT BY HELEN ZINN
REGISTER BY PHONING 2S6-13CJ2
OR 446-8074 BEFORE SEPT. 3.

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
fraurnal

Studio located at 502 112 2nd Ave., Gallipolis

Li/• '"'"'"""

fi~Ho;m;•;O~fi;&lt;O;-;•;&lt;k;•;•I•;~- ;IO~Iion;~~,;i~~;;;;~~~;;~;;~~;;;;~~;;~~~ir~ll

~

Wicker House
C&amp;R Paint Center, Inc.
41 Court St.

EAR,-NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Gallipolis, OH.

Sale Starts Wed., Sept. 1
At 10:00 A.M. Sharp
Final Day of Sale, Sept. 10

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

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

44~·1830

•Beniamin Moore Paint-goes at our cost-some below
•Paint Accessories - % Price
•All Wicker Furniture &amp; Accessories

V2 Price

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

One Day Only!

ASK ABOUT OUR NEW
ENERGY EFFICIENT
THERMAL LININGS!

GYMNASTICS LADIES EXERCISE &amp; DANCE

you be ready
when they are?

446-9458

WAYSIDE FURNITURE
241 THID AVE.

Sept. 1 thru Sept. 10
Hours 10:00 til S:OO
Fri .. Sept. 3-Mon., Sept. 6-Fri .. Sept. 10

Sunday 1 to_6

10:00 A.M.-8:00P.M.

(AT NO EX"tRA CHARGE)

.. ,._c:,'\t
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~t~

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Beautiful, Elegant, Sheer
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._r

CHIMES

~ \.\.,~

,$19995

REDUCED20
" (JJ
THIS
/0 FOR
SALE

The couple now resides In Letart
Falls. The new Mrs. O'Brien is a
graduate of Southern High School
and is employed with Cowles and
Boster Law Firm. The bridegroom
is self-employed.

BALLET &amp;TAP
BATON lWIRLING

or~~~~~~e attended the wect-

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

dos with lavender shirt s a nd
boutlonnieres.
Hall In Racine. The tiered wedding
cake was topped with two bells and
clusters of lavender flowers. Kay
Warden. Becky Mallory and Amy ·
Bragg presided at the refreshment
table. Guests were registered by
Debbie La Valley and Debbie
Russell .
For their wedding trip to Mrytle '
Beach, S.C .. the bride changed into ·
a denim blue pantsuit with match·
lng accessories .

Gallia-Mason
Performing Arts

Bissell-Holler

Mr. _and Mrs. O'Brien

8 built-In stitches •

POMEROY - Sl. Paul 's United fs. The bouffant skirt featured a cenMethodist Church of Tuppers Plains ter pleated panel in the front, and ·
was the setting for the wedding of flowed into a chapel train. The
Wendy Ann Elkins and Pete Wilfong . bride's veil of illusion was also
The bride is the daughter of Mr. chapel length. She carried lilacs,
and Mrs. David Elkins, Tuppers carnations and baby's breath, and
Plains, and the groom is the son of wore a blue sapphire necklace which I
Lena Wilfong Jackson, Steubenville. had been worn by her mother at her
His foster parents are Mr. and Mrs. wedding 28 years ago.
Calvin Ruble, Coolville.
Robin Wilfong, _sister of the bride,
The wedding was performed by was the matron of honor and Debbie
Rev. Richard Thomas at 7 p.m. on Pooler, Parkersburg, W. Va., was
June 25. The altar was decorated · the maid of honor. Bridesmaid was
with two seven-tiered candelabra Melanie Bailey, Pomeroy. All wore
decorated with greenery and satin identical dresses of lavender
bows, and two silk arrangements. polyester knot with capes of
Bows marked the family pews. polyester chiffon . Each carried long·
Arrangements of wild flowers were stemmed white roses with lavender

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-B-5

Escorted to the altar by her fa ther, the bride was attired II. a for-

Singer

Mr. and Mrs. Wilfong

w. Va .

~

¥2

Price

Large capac ily washer llli! Heavy-duty transmissron EJ No-kink drain hose [ill) Timed dryer
wrlh selections up to 80 minutes !Til 4 Venling
optrons f8ll Separale start control.

0

Washer Model WLW30008

S286
Dryer M.odel DL812508
·
OUR LQW PRICE .. $239
_CASH&amp;'
CARRY PRICE
OUR LOW PRH;::E ..

$,52·5.FOR DAJR.
just..
THE ra
I u I P •• •. n . I
DOW

v

STARTS AS AVAlUE
... srAvsAvALUEI

POMEROY LANDMARK

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

992-2181

DriWI a li1tlt and SM a Lot- Delivery Within 7! llilos
Yes. W. Strvico II your local Holpoint Dealer
Storo ttoon: t:30 to !:30. 11~1 Closed It 5:00 P.ll.
s.nq IItts. Gili.llnd" llnon CounlitS

REDUCED 20% .

,.

.

Include$ all this:
-.. Resid~ntlaJ or Commercial-

TOPE'S FAMOUS "LEE'S FACTORY AUTHORIZEQ CARPET
SALE" WILL BEGIN SEPT. 3_- SAVE 20~ TO 30% ON OUR
'rEN MOST POPULAR STYL,ES ' FOR 1982. INSTALLATION' BY '
TOPE'S PROFESSIONAL INS"fALI.-ERS - YOUR CHANCE TO
••
•
.
..
,SAYE ON QUALITY CARPET, ,
'

•FINE FURNITURE
•CUSTOM DRAPERY
PCAR·PET
•INTE.RIOR DESIGN ·

• (op•'l
FURNI
T
URE
fW GA!J;ERIE.S ,
'

'

RNER SECOND

'

MACRAME
BEADS

#

•

'

FRE~ PARkiNG
FREE DELIVERY
HOURS : 9i01-S:OO Dally
(Incl. Thursday)
9:00-8: 00 Mo~.

.

J

GR~PE IN GALLIPOLIS

r

~nd

Fri. Everiin,as

HEADBOARD -:-.FRAME - DECK - PLAIN RISER - FUU:. WAVE MAITRESS
- LINER HEATER - ·FILL &amp; DRAIN - WATER CONDIJIONER - PATCH KIT
- KING or QUEEN SIZE.

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. Other Special Buys

S~NDA Y ONLY

REGISTER FOR AFREE WATER BED
.,.

BE-GIVEN AWAY

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LUSTERLINE

~
Price

All Sales Final
·No Layaways
Cash Only

{

~- i'
Price
/
.fll\?'

CUSTOM OR IN-STOCK

BEI)SPREADS

lfJaaoli

�AU9!JSt 29, 1982
Page- B-6- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

i" the adopted son of Mrs. Lanna
Waugh, 574 Sun Valley Dr.,
Gallipolis, and the son of Mario Sac·
coni. Rome, Italy.
The custom of an open church
wedding will take place at Farmdale
Church of Christ, Barboursville, W.
Va., Dec.l7 at 7:30p.m.
Hatfield is a graduate of Bar·
boursville High School and Hun·
tington Business College and is employed by B. R. Compton , DDS., Inc.
Sacconi attended Gaiiia Academy
High School and is a semor at
Buckeye Hills Career Center
majoring in cosmetology. He is employed at Ohio Valley Foodland.

Anniversaries

White-Roach
Hatfield, Sacconi
GALLIPOIJS- Announcement is
being niade .of the engagement and
forthcoming mlutlage of Patricia
Ann H'tfleld and James Douglas
Saceonit
Hatfield is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James A. Hatfield, 215 Wilkin·
son St., Huntington, W. Va. Sacconi

Hawks-Brown
(;ALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
William C. Hawks announce the for·
thcoming marriage of their
daughter, Deana, to Keith Brown,
son of Kathy Brown of Gallipolis,
and Jimmie Brown of Waverly.
Hawks is employed at Scenic Hills
Nursing Home. Brown is employed
at Federal MoguL
The custom of open wedding will
take place on Sept. 4 at 6:30 p.m. A
reception will follow at Ewington
Academy.

Saunders-Warner

Caudill·Bennett

GAHANNA - Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Saunders of Gahanna announce the
engagement of their daughter, Lee
Ann, to Barry Alan Warner, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Laverne Warner, also
of Gahanna.
Saunders is a graduate of Gahan·
na Lincoln High School and is a
senior at Mount Carmel School rl.
Nursmg in Columbus. Warner is a
graduate of Gahanna Lincoln High
School and attends Columbus
Technical Institute majoring in
business data processing. He is em·
ployed by Airborne Air Freight Cor·
poration and is a member of the Ohio

COOLVILlE - Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Caudill of Coolville, Route 2,
formerly of Gallipolis, announce tbe
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Shannon
P., to Charles Bennett, son of Mr.
and Mrs . David Bennett of
GuysviUe, Route 2.
The bride-elect is a 1982 graduate
of Federal Hocking High School and
is a student at Hocking Technical
College. She is employed by
Beneficia l Finance of Athens.

Whire, Roach
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas L. White, Long Botlom, an·
nounce the engagement and approaching lllarriage of their
daughter, Jennie Rosa, to Raymond
H. Roach, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Roach, Pomeroy.
White is a 1977 graduate of

POMEROY ·· Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Bell of Morning Star and Mrs.
Jacob Holman , Racine, announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their children, Sherr!
Lynn, and Loyal Monroe. The pros·
pectlve bridegroom Is the son of the
late Jacob Holma n.
The wedding will be held on Sat·
urday, Sept. 4 at 7:30 p.m. at the
United Methodist Church In MornIng Star. Rev. Earl Schuler wUI perform the ceremony.
Matron of honor wUI be Kim
Chapma n, cousin of the bride, a nd
John Holman will serve as best
man for his brother.
A reception lor family and
friends will be held Immediately
following the wedding. Serving at
the reception will be Mrs. JacobS.
Holman Jr .. and Mrs. Doug Bell,
both sisters-in-law of the bride.

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY 2 OR ,
3 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE.
SAVE $300 - $600 OR MORE, OFF
THE SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE.

BROYHILL
- . --- --- .

-

- --..

~~

Astrographs

Her fiance Is a 1982 Federal
Hocking graduate and is employed
by Hubbard Realty of Columbus.
The open-church wedding will
take place Sept. 25 at 2:30 p.m. at
The Plains United Methodist Chur·
ch.

National Guard.
Sauf\ders' grandparents are
Charles D. Carter of Patriot, and Qt.
Bennett, Caudill
to B. Saunders of Eureka Star
Route. She is the niece of Mr. and .-~-~-------------------­
Mrs . E. Leon Saunders of Gallipolis.

Bell-Holman

Health care
by house call
PHilADELPH IA (API- APhi·
!adelphia doctor and a medical college have joined In a plan to provide
home visits to selected Medicare
and Medicaid patients, says Family Practice News.
Five days a week a van leaves
the Tiwmas Jefferson University
hospital with a family physician, a
nurse, one or two medical students
and-or resident s, and a box of medi·
cal supplles.
The teams' house calls are federally funded .

Eastern High School and her fiance
is a 1972 graduate of Meigs High
SchooL He is employed at Land·
mark.
The open-church wedding will
take place at Middleport Church of
Christ, Fifth and Main Streets, on
Saturday, Oct. 16, at 2:30p.m.

The Sunday Times· Sentinei- Page-B-7

w. va.

August 29, 1982.

Pomeroy-Midd leport-Ga llipolis , Ohio.:__ Point Pleasant. W.Va .

Engage~nents
Hatfield-Saccoru

Pomeroy- Middleport-Ga llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

For Back-To-School Comfort

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For one of the best selections of comfort shoes.
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Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0.

Saunders

WILL BE DRASTICAUY REDUCED FOR 1
WEEK FOR SHIPMENTS COMING IN.
BUY QUALITY BRAND NAME FURNITURE
AT
PRICES.

: 3 PIECE PILLOW
ARMED LIVING
ROOM SUITE
Antron Nylon Cover
NOW

1495

5

985

5

SAVE •500

3 PIECE
NORWAL~
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NOW

3 PC. BROYHILL
ALL WOOD LIVING
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With 3 matching tables,
has been d iscontinued.
ALL6 PIECES
REG .
NOW

·
August zs, 1982
In the year ahead you'll be far more courageous and daring when it
comes W challenging enterprises or ventures. That which is large in
scope won'tfrighten you. You'll know you can handle it.
VIRGO (Aug. !3-Sept. 2%) Seek activities today which are challenging
mentally and ph_ysically but which are not work-related. It's important
that both your rnmd and body are active.
, LIBRA (Sept.l!3-0ct. 23) Your protective instincts toward those you
live wiD unpel you to be a good provider today. You'll supply what they
need emotionally and materially_
. SCORPIO (~t. %4-Nov. 2%) Without being selfish, do things today
which best serve your own interests. Such conduct is sometimes
necessary to assure one's survival.
SAGmARrus (Nov. !3-Dee. 21) It may be necessary to be a bit
assert1ve today m order to collect from others that which is due you.
Present your case without creating ill wiD.
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 2%-Jllll.. 19) This is a good day to pursue a project
which has recently captured your fancy. You're likely to be luckier now
with your newer interests rather than with your old ones.
•
AQUARIUS (Jaa. Z6-Feb. 19) Keep your goals in mind at all times
today, but try to proceed as unobtrusively as possible. Success is likely if
you don't make waves.
PISCES (Feb. ZO.March 20) The impression you make on others
today will be a favorable one because you'll back your words with action.
What you say you'll do, you will.
ARIES (March 2l·Aprl119) Though this may not be a nonnal work
day for you, your drive could suddenly change if you see ways to advance
your career. Something may motivate you in the p.m.
TAURUS (April ZO.May 20) You're good at inspiring others today,
es!M71ally t~ose you deal with on a one-t&lt;HJne basis. With you around,
they re not likely to suffer from sagging spirits.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Don't be reluctant to put forth extra effort
today on what may appear to be another's interest. When the benefits are
tallied, you'll share in the returns.
CANCER (JUne 21-July 2%) Being diplomatic today doesn't dilute
your strength - it will enhance it. Others will respect you more for not
bringing your clout to bear.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2%) Utilizing your skills as a handy person will
give you great satisfaction today. Projects will become fun , rather than
chores.
August It, 1982
Avenues could open this co!lling year which wiD enable you to make
certain changes in your employment. U things have not been going too
well for you financially, don't hesitate to make the switch.
VIRGO (Aug. !3-Sept. 2%) You'll get your work done a lot quicker
today if you don't waste time shopping around for labor-saving devices.
There is ,!lO substitute for elbow grease.
· LIBRA (Sept. z:I.Oet. Z3) When an invitation w a fun event arrives
today from a 1~ source, you'll realize you've been befriending the wrong people. Switch your loyalties.
SCORPIO (~t. %4-Nov. 2%) You can bring an important goal into
being today once you stop anticipating all the negatives. Have faith in the
positives.
SAGmARWS (Nov. !3-Dee. %1) If you see that you're getting no
place with an interest of yours, quit barking up the wrong tree. Qtange
directions and you'll succeed.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2%-Jaa. 19) Your plans wiD fizzle if you try to implement them prematurely. Timing is all important today, so be patient.
Waitfor your cue. It'll come.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. 19) _You may be an expert at getting the
door opened today, but chances are you'll need assistance to close your
deal. Bring along support when you knock.
PISCES (Feb. ZO.Marcb !0) Extensive discussions about your
problems wiD only confuse you more. What you need today is wget off by
yourself. In quiet places, reason abounda.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) U someone's actions have put you in a
bad frame of mind today, don't sit around dwelling on it. Get out and mix.
A pleasant time awaits you.
TAURUS (April ZO.May 20) Something could develop from out of left
field today which would alter a losing situation into one where you'll come
out on top. Remain hopeful.
GEMINI (May Zl-June !0) Even if you are gaining support today,
don't be afraid wtest your ideas on your own. Your creativeness wiD sur·
prise others.
CANCER (June 2l..July 2%) A unique situation may arise today which
can offer you special benefits, However, unless you handle the person involved tactfully, he'or she could delay your start.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2%) After beating your head against a brick wall
trying to persuade someone to your way of thinking, you'll finally
cfucover, accidentally, the avenue to reach this person is through charm.

Hysells ·observe 50th year .42nd year celebrated
POMEROY - Denver and Frances Swick Hysell wiD observe their
50th wedding anniversary on Sunday, Sept. 5, with an open house at
their home on Pomeroy-Rutland
Road, State Route 124, from 1 to 4
p.m.
The affair is being hosted by their
children.

Madeline Painter, Middleport,
!Wute I; Evelyn Wood, Long Bot·
tom ; Ruby Mossman, Union
Terrace, Pomeroy; Roger Hysell,
Hysell Run Road; Gary Hysell ,
Pomeroy, Route 1. They have one
deceased son, Roy Everett. Mr. and
Mrs. Hysell also have 17 grand·
children, and four great-grandsons,
with one granddaughter, Jennifer
Hysell being deceased.

Mr. and Mrs. Hysell -were married
by Rev. Lewis Russell, Hysell Run
Road, and are the parents of seven
children, Guy of llysell Run Road;

Friends and relatives are invited
to call during the open house hours.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Martin Major were ho~ored with a sur·
prise dinner by their children and
friends at the home of their son in
Bellefontaine on their anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs . Major are former
residents of Meigs County and were
married on Aug. 24, 1940, at
Pomeroy Court House.
Attending were Janet and Charles
Bland and Melissa Bland, Mark
Bland, Shelia and Milton Little Jr.,
Johnny Little, Mike and Cliff Little,
Melanie and Charles Bland Sr.,
Charles Bland Jr., Breanna Bland,
Judy, Tamula and Mitchell Borne,

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Mr. and Mrs. Martin Major Jr.,
Steve, Ruby, Millnda and Charles
Major, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Horsley,
Mary Jo Horsley, Angela Hawley,
Die, Hawley, Richie, Sherry and
Jimmy Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Major and Jason Major, Mr. :
and Mrs. Jerry Little, Billy, Jerry, Eric and Theresa Little, Lee Little, •
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Varian Jr., ~
and Deane, Maurica, Elvia, Heather :
Varian, Nancy, Gene and Tony Van •
Meter, Rutland.
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Mrs. Major is the former Ruby _
Lee of Middleport, daughter of :
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�SUNDAY
ALFRED - A Swartz and
Carr School reunion will be held
at Carr Grove, Alfred, on Sunday with a basket dinner at 12:30
p.m.
BIDWELL - The men's
laymen league of Mount Carmel
Baptist Church will hold an aliday service Sunday. Rev. Watson
will speak in the morning and at 2
p.m. the Royal Harmonizers of
Dayton will sing. The public is invited to attend.
GALLIPOLIS - Springfield
Baptist Church will hold
homecoming Sunday. Guest
opeakers will be Rev. Bob Grubb
and Rev. Kirby Oiler. The Heirs
of Christ and The Holley Family
will sing. A dinner will be served
on the grounds at noon . The
public is invited.

CHESmRE - Homecoming
will be held Sunday at Poplar
Ridge Freewill Baptist Church
with Rev. Ray Davis, Columbus,
as after speaker. A basket dinner
will be served at noon. Pastor
Miles Trout invites the public.

Calendar

TIJESDAY
RUTLAND Civic Center will
hold skating Tuesday from 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. and Thursday from
7: 30 to 10:30 p.m. Children, $1;
adults, $2. Take your own skates.

KANAUGA - Fairview
Apostolic Church will hold
homecoming meeting Sunday at
Kanauga roadside park at 12 :30
p.m. Everyone is welcome and
Individuals may take a covered
dish. For information call 4464175. Pastor is Terry Pope

WEDNESDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
the township garage at 7 p.m.

LECTA - Rev. Earl Hinkle
will be the speaker at Walnut
Ridge Church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Singing will follow.

MIDDLEPORT - Th e
auxiliary ri Middleport Fire
Department will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the fire
station.

ADDISON - A charge-wide
service will be held at Addison
United Methodist Church on Sun·
day at 6 p.m. with Rev . Carl
Hicks as guest speaker.

GALLIPOLlS - Gallia County
Board of Health will meet at 9
a.m. Wednesday at 412 Second
Avenue.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Eastern 'Athletic
Booster wiU meet Monday at the
high school at 8 p.m. to discuss
the athletic building and food concession for the first football
game.

GALLIPOLIS - Bethel Ladies
Aid will meet at 1 p.m. Wednesday with Eva Gilmore.

FAC's

Gallia seniors calendar
GALLIPOLlS - Activities for the
week of Aug . 30-Sept. 3 at the Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
are as follows:
Monday, Aug . 30 - Ceramics
Class, 9:30 a.m.-12 noon; Vinton Site
Exercises, 11 :30 a.m.; Chorus, 1·3
p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 31 - Birthday Party, 1:30p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. I - Vinton
Nutrition Education, 11 :30 a.m.;
Vinton Bible Study ; Crown City
Mobile Unit, I p.m.; American
Uterature Class, I p.m.; Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 2 - Vinton Site
Crafts, 1 p.m.; Bible Study, 1·2 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 3 - Expo '82 (leave
Center at 8 a.m.); no other activities
scheduied for today.
The Senior Nutrition Program will

•

serve the following menus:
Monday - Salisbury steak,
potatoes in jacket, spinach/vinegar,
ro ll , butt er , lemon pud ding/cinnamon topping, milk.
Tuesday - Ham loaf, au gratin
potatoes, tossed salad, cornbread,
butter, applesauce, milk.
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
potato salad, baked beans, roll, butter, choice of fruit, milk.
Thursday - Johnny Marzetti,
shredded lettuce/ cheese, mixed
greens, hot fresh baked bread, butter, fresh fruit, mill&lt;.
Friday - Ham and cheese on bun,
carrot and celery sticks, whole
banana, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
"Services rendered on a non·
discriminatory basis."

Meigs sentors calendar
POMEROY - COAD Senior
Nutrition program menu Aug. 3(&gt;.
Sept. 3:
Monday - Salisbury steak, boiled
potatoes, sauerkraut, lemon pudding, roll, butter and milk.
Tuesday - Baked chicken, potato
salad, baked beans, pears, roll, but:
ter and milk.
Wednesday - Ham loaf, au gratin
potatoes, tossed salad, applesauce,
cornbread, butter and milk.

Meigs bookmobile
POMEROY _ Bookmobile service
in Meigs County scheduled by Meigs

August 29, 1982

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

Page-8·8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Seniors' expo in Scioto this September

Riv~rby

GALLIPOLlS - The August exhlblt at the French Art Colony, 500
First Ave., Is comprised o! 20 oU
paintings and charcoal, Ink, graphlte and pencU drawings by Cliff
McCarthy, of Ohio University
The September exhibit, "Satire
and Sympathy: Daumlre's Human
Comedy," ts from the Ohio Founda·
tlon on the Arts and was proposed
by Christine Dyer o! Allen Memor·
Ia! Art Museum. 1t Is comprised of
79 lithographic works that explore
Daumlre's stylistic development
between l!!.ll and 1.861 on a broad
range o! topics.
Gallery hours are Tuesday and

instructor Cindy Nau. Fees for preschool students are $18 !or
members, $22.501ornon-members;
chlldren, $22.50 members, $25 nonmembers; and adults, $24
members, and $26 .5 0 non ·
members. Call Judi Sheets, 4467865, to register.
Sept. 20- Painting and drawing
classes taught by Phoebe Carey ev·
ery Monday night !or six weeks
!rom 7 to 9 p.m. For teen-agers and
adults, fees are $24 !or members
and UJ !or non·members.'
Sept. 21 - Interdepartmental
meeting at 8 p.m.
Sept. 25 - Oktoberfest/sllent

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

0..--....

AP tabs Pitt .top college team
,,
By IIEB8CIIEL NJSSENSON

AI' 8pol18 WrMer
The University of Pittsburgh, coming off three consecutive 11-1 seasons
but sporting Its th1rd head coach in seven years, has been picked to win the
-1!182 natianal champlonAhlp in The Associated Press preseason coUege
football poll with defending champloo Clemson in the No. 11 SJMI!.
The Pitt Panthers received 36 first-place votes and 1,002 of a possible
1,110 points from a nationwide panel r1 :19 sports writers and broadcasters.
The Washington Huskies were second with 15 first-place votes and 1,064
JMilnts, followed by Alabama, Nebraska and North Carolina.
The last team to win the AP national championship alter being ranked
No.1 in the preseason poll was Alabama In 1978. Pitt won Its last title in 1976
alter startlng. out No.9.·
1
That was Johnny Ma}ors' last year as Pitt's head coach. Jackie Sherrill
coached the Panthers to folp' Top Ten finishes the last five years, Including
the runnerup spot behind Georgia In l9IPJ and fourth place a year ago.
However, Sherrill left Pill last January for Texas A&amp;M. IDs successor,
!onner defensive coonllnator Serafino "Foge'' Fazio, finds himseH in the
unique position of being ranked No.1 before his debut as a college head
coach.

The Area Agency on Aging
District 7, Inc.; Is a non-profit
organization funded through the
Older Americans Act, with funds administered through the Ohio Commission on Aging . "Services Rendered on a Non-Discriminatory
Basis.''

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

SWIMMING
POOLS

calendar of events

Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. auction will begin at 7:30p.m. Cost
and Saturday and Sunday from 1 to ,_I~s_!$7!_:e~a~c!!_h_!!fo!!:r!!m~e~m!!!be~rs~a!!Jn'!!d_$8 •each
5p.m.
Coming events are as !oUow:
Sept. 13 - Southern Hills Arts
CouncU will meet at Jindra Winery
at 7:30p.m.
Sept. 18 - Dance classes will
and run !or
weeks with

Thursday - Hot roast beef open
f a ce sa nd w i c h ,
w h i p p e d ,...;.~:::...:::.:::...:..::::....:::::...!!!!:!;...::.;:::::::::...::.:::.:...j
potatoes/gravy, fruit salad/grated
Call the
cheese, brownie, bread, butter and
experts ...
milk .
Calf Sears
Friday- Johnny Mjlrzetli, mixed
Service
greens, shredded lettuce, grated
O...ult ,...,....,._..
... , .. ., 16.000
cheese, peaches, hot bread, butter
......... ~ - ­
and milk.
onl)' "" SNn IINM1•·
Coffee or tea and a choice of whole
.,.,........,.
..... _,,..-.a_
milk or buttermilk served daily.
.... ,...... ,...CM'I
It\. c.l:
Lunch is served five days a week to
-2902
seniors age 60 and older. Please
make a meal reservation in advance
Silver Bridge Plaza
and join us for lunch and participate
in the activities of the day at the

cider throughout the day, and selling
it to the public.
The day wiU be filled with plenty
of live entertainment, craft demonstrations, cake aucilon and several
awards ceremonies.
Parking and admission to the
Fairgrounda Is free. Food booths
will be operating for the convenience
of those attending the elpO!Iition.

LUCASVILLE - Hundreds of political figures.
senior citizens from 10 S()Uthern Ohio · There also will be special booths
counties will gather at Scioto County manned by representatives of
Fairgrounds in Lucasville, on various agencies who provide ser·
Friday, Sept. 3, for the Eighth An- vices to the elderly. Included are,
Social Security, Mental Health,
nual Senior Citizens Exposition.
Geraldine McKinniss, coordinator Department of Highway Safety and
of the event, said plans for the Internal Revenue Service tax coupfestive occasion are complete and seling.
activities will get underway at 10
a.m. and continue until 3 p.m. The
For the first time in its eight year
public is invited to join in the
existence, the elpO!Iition committee
festivities.
This elpO!Iition is sponsored by the has invited state and local political
figures to attend the festivities and
Area Agency on Aging District 7,
Inc., at Rio Grande, to showcase the address the gathering. McKinniss
talents and accomplishments of the said Myrle Shoemaker, Democratic
elderly residents of Adams, Brown, candidate for Ueutenant governor,
Gallia, Highland, Jackson, Lawren- Senator Cooper Snyder and
ce, Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton Representative Oakley Collins, have
Counties. It also provides craftsmen accepted the committees' in·
with an opJMirtunity to market their vitations.
creations if they wish to do so.
McKinniss said this year's
Senior center directors from ali!O
program promises something for
everyone. There will be several in- counties participating in the e: ··
fonnation booths, arts and crafts position also plan to operate special
booths, food booths, live en· booths. As an added attraction this
tertairunent throughout the day, and year, the Ross County director,
appearances by state and local Grant McDonald, will make apple

Shearer falters,
Floyd takes lead

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
SALE
ln-rrwnd Kils from $1675.00

lor non-members, purchased by
noon Sept. 24. Ticketsare$9eachat
the door.

HOLIDAY POOLS, InC.
I

SEMI -ANNUAL ONLY

GIGANTIC

BACKING THE TEAM -Tile Cohmlllal C1lppen, --leaP affDlate of the New Vorl Yankees, are IUilOIII the mc.t ~ bueball
farm CIIIIJIID thecoqotry,Playen, f. . aJidiijiOI laW I lien IBytheteam'l
buebal1 produetloa Is flnkla11. (AP Luerplloto).

CLEARANCE SALE

Cooperation keys
Clippers success

JlJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~

COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP) - The
crowd starts drtfllng in to Franklin

County Stadium on a warm
summer night almost two hours before the Columbus Clippers will
host the Syracuse Chiefs.
The few early diehards watch as
a summer . thl!llderstorm qlllckly
sweeps through, playing havoc
with the ground crew trying to
cover the Infield with tarpaulins
that billow in the wind.
It's August, and the Clippers are
battling for the Class AAA lnternatlonal League title they have won
three straight years, s11ccess that
has halped put them among the ml·
nor league attendance leaders.
.
On a night when the Cincinnati
Reds will draw 11,368 fans two
hours south along Interstate 71, the
Clippers pull in 6,341 to a stadium
with barely more than one-fourth
Riverfront Stadium's capacity.
The publicly owned Clippers the top !arm club at1111ation tor
George Steinbrenner's New York
Yankees - are en route to another
profitable season.
That's no easy accomplishment,
considering this Is only the sixth
season after a "No Baseball" era In
Ohio's capital city- a period of six
years when decaying Jet Stadium
sat Idle Just a couple of miles from

If you are considering a trade or purchase, check our cars.
We

have ,the one for

caM~

1979 BUICK leSABRE, 2 DR.

County Pubiic Library under con- r~Se~n;i;or;C;it;iz:e:;ns;c;e;nt;e;r:;;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
tract with Ohio Valley Area
Ubraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday,
Aug. 30 - Carpenter (Laura 's
FIRST PRESBYERIAN CHURCH
Store) , 3:1().3:40 p.m.; Dexter
(Church), 4:10-4 :40 p.m.; Danville
Morning Class: Mon. thru Fri. 9:00-11 : 30
(Church), 5:26-5 :45 p.m.; Rutland
Structured pre-school program . Teachers have com·
(First National Bank), 6:30-8 p.m ..
bined 24 yers pre-school experience. Check our cost
Short film will be shown 15 minutes
and program .
after bookmobile arrives.
Tuesday, Aug. 31 - Portland
Mrs . John Moore 446-279S
(Post Office ), ,2:1().2 :40 p.m.; Letart
Mrs. James Roush 446·4274
Falls (Effie's Restaurant), 3:15-3 :50
6 Openings Only

NURSERY SCHOOL

This Buick Coupe is sharp throughout. Air cond .. AM-FM Stereo. chrome
plated wheel s and new radial tires . This local one-owner has bee n well
maintained Must be seen to appreciate the value of this one.

p.m.; Racine (Bank), 4:35--9 :35 p.m. 1!~~~~!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!~~
Short fiim will be shown 15 minutes Iafier bookmobile arrives; Syracuse
(Pool) , 6:50-8:50 p.m. Short film will
be shown 15 minutes after book·
mobile arrives.
Wednesday, Sept. I - Tuppers
Plains (Arbaugh), 7 : ~ : 05 p.m.;
RJggscrest Addition, 8: 2().9 p.m
Short film will be shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives.

Arts and crafts
ATHENS - The fifth annual Barn
Raisin' Arts and Crafts Festival will
be held Sunday and Monday, Sept. 5
and 6, at the Dairy Barn on Dairy
Lane in Athens. More than 40 artists
jllld craftspeople will display, sell
and demonstrate their craft.
The juried works include pottery,
jewelry, woodwork, carved birds,
clothing, paintings and stained
glass. The festivities include .
musical entertainment from noon
until4 p.m. both days with music by
the Travellin' Ught, Bruce and Gay
Dalzell and olhe_rs.
Programs for children include
story reading, puppet show, a
children's theater workshop, face
painting and a pelting zoo.
Food and beverages will be
provided by Crumb's Bakery,
Hocking Valley Arts Council,
Kiwanis, Kathryn Zeller, River
Valley Community School, and the
Athens Middle School.
Admission to the Bam Raisin' is $2
for adlllts and $1 for children. Admiasion .fee is good for both days.
The Bam Raisin' hours are from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m•.Sunday and Monday.
There will be free parking.

Firefighter tra~ning
GUYAN TOWNSHIP- Anyone in

Guyan Township, GaDla County, m.

terelled In taking basic training for
volunter firefightlng may call 2561484 or 256-1288.

,_

1982 CHEVROLET

SNew
ed
Chicken Dinner
$4.59
A boneless breast of chicken charbroiled Shoney's own
special way so it's incredibly iender.
'
We cover it with your choice of Shoney's own balbeque_or
sweet r{ sour sauce. Or choose any combination of our three greet
toppings-onion, mushroom and cheese. Or no toppings at all
Served with grecian bread, fries (baked potato available after SPM ), and aU the hot homemade soup llrxl ganlen fresh

3~=~CAVD SBO~E~
AJn.encai
Always a favorite! A tangy
tomato base «;hock fuU of
Iasty vegetables.

downtown.

But the purchase o! the facWty by
the county and a subsequent $5.5
mUUon renovation reslllted in one
of the minor league's gems.
The J.:i,IID-seat stadium, with artlflclat turf and gl••sec!-in boxes for
seaaon-Ucket bolders, Is a well-lit
diamond In tlie rough cornpai-ed to
many of Its flea-bitten and pigeonInfested cousins.
Players, fans and SJMirtswrlters
sax the baseball production here Is
first-class, from the stadium to the
winning combination ofYankee talent and the organization headed by
former · major leaguer Geol'l•
Sisler Jr. ljlat promotes the whole

This Black Z-28 is a hard to find model. Only 3.503 miles. V-8. auto. trans.
air cond .. AM-FM Stereo.

package every night

. pits."

'

4-Speed trans., stee_l bed, oak racks and fresh paint. Don't Mis~ This Truck.

Over 40 Late Models To Choose From

renchtawn Car Ca.
.I

'

developer.

''I had a lot of connections in Columbus, and when Pittsburgh decided to leave, I thought It would
make a good location for us," said
Steinbrenner, who moved New
York's Class AAAafflllatetrom Tacoma - where It won its Pacific
Coast League Division - to Columbus atter the 19'/8 season.
B11t Steinbrenner's Influence Is
not felt as directly in Columbus,
where players rarely see him in the
stands and evetl less often in the
locker room. The only rea!'contact
comes in the multitude of player
moves between the minor and rna-,

-

Ill kDow seyeral pla)"!!'i, ~
larly 8l1lgglna' flnt baseman Mar·

.

IJIIllla' liiiR ,.

PT. PLEA$ANT, W. VA;

1

Mrs. Gerardi says she hai aotten

~---T-LI-

328_VIAND STREET

Brant traces the Clippers success
on the fiel!i and In the stands to organiZations which cooperate to produce a team that finished In
seventh place when It was a Pittsburgh affWate for two years before
the Yankee connection was made.
"Most teams only care about developing their four or five prospects," Brant said. "But the
Yankees are a little more committed to winning. They br:lng In a defl·
nlte mix, with a lew older, more
experienced players along with the
yotmg prospects."
The desire to win stems trom
Steinbrenner; who attended graduate school at Ohlo State University,
spent tlme at a nearby Air Force
base in the 1950s as a recreation
officer and served as a high school
baseball coach. His wUe Is the
daughter of a Columbus real estate

.

.

·'

1640 Eastern Ave., Gallii.,Oii11;l
. 446-0069.

IIIR Gene Johneon- Tii'Ty HlmiltonGib Milliron
.
.

..

"Wimlflla Ia DDt ~."
Sisler IIYI wiiDe JllllfiDI Cll a clpr
lhall Brant: who has spent three In bfa small, c;omfortab1e of&amp;ie Jut
ye81"11 in Colwlibus awaiting · a a liard tJirOW tram tile ltlldlurn.
cbance Ill break in10 the Yankee '1'vebeardlhaldtbltthe_beatprolinellp.
modoo ~ a wllmlllf lll8m. ~t'a
'1~e~~tblmaaet-weUC81'1!~~ 1IIDit l8yiJII 1111 w11c111 --s' diVwroll! back lD the off -I!CIJ,"IIIe ' 11JoD of every Jequellloald be loiIBid, adding that she !lCC88Ionally . inl moaey.
br1ncs "goocUel"lllle suear wafDes · "Bulc pwdlon 11 ·briJI8lnl
for the players.
0 '
your prodllct to ai many people Ill
. 'Ibis Ia Brant's flftb minor leaille poee0&gt;1e " 811* bu a cbart Cll IIi.
team lA a C8I'W tbat cldl film o111ce Wl1 ttlltil lllb II'IJIIIII 81111
~llildilll;ludeatlu'ee--wlllll ........ , . tbat Jlaft ....,• •
""'\'uasiD 1980.Ju miDy ways, - lllabllllCheduled ,at tbf ~ .

Curtis Strange was next at 178.
He was out In 31i.
Tom Kite, wtth a front side 38,
and !sao Aokl of Japan, out in 36,
followed at 179, 4 over par.
Jack Nicklaus matched par 35
despite two double bogeys on the
front and was at 181.. Tom Watson
shot 34-1&amp;1.
Shearer and Floyd were tied tor
the top spot going to the ninth hole,
where Shearer made double bogey
from a bunker. Floyd missed the
green and made bogey, but it was
good enough to give him the top
spot.

Andretti has pole
for AirCal event

he epitomizes the type of player the
Clippers have become known forsoft-spoken off the field and high
quality on It.
"Without a doubt, this Is the !!nest
organization all the way around,"
· says Brant, 26. "You're not going to
find a facWty like this In the minor
leagues. The players say It's better
than some of the major league
parks."
•
Brant says his continued stay In
the minor leagues "wollld be a lot
tougher to take If I were playing
anywhere else. This Is the highlight
of my career. I think It's belped me
play better. "

"I came to my first game three
years ago,- and now I don'tmlasone
unless there's something else 1
have to do," 73-year-old Juanita
~says aa she leafs lhrDIIal1 a
paperback In the ' general adniJs,. Jar~.
1
SWer, t15, wbohaswon'IbeSportsion seats behind the first base line.
lng
News' Minor League Executive
"I like to get here ·1!arly, see
of
the
Year award aevera1 times,
what's happening and save a few
IBYI
he
m.lstl!d It WOiild have to be
¥&amp;ls for my friends, .. Mrs. Gerardi
way
as he lifted thtougb often
that
Said. "It's a be&amp;ullflll park. You.
.
from
major
ieaglle teum after the
ean't beat lt. I've been to CharlesPirates
spilt,
fiDalbt decldiDg on the
ton and Toledo, and Qley're the . Yankees.
.
.

s

·

AKRON, Ohio (API- Australian
Bob Shearer double bogeyed the
ninth hole and handed the lead to
PGA titleholder Ray Floyd haHway
through the third round Saturday in
the $400,00J World Series ol Golf .
Floyd reached the turn In 1·
under-par 34 and had a 45-hole total
of 174, I under par on the7,173 yard
Firestone Country Club course.
Shearer and Masters champion
Craig Stadler, who had shared the
second round lead, were one stroke
back at 175. Each turned In 37, 2
over par.

r-~Se:!;p~t._!28~:_:Tru~~st.ees~:_;m~ee~tlng~~at~8~-===========

---· · . .FURNITURE
V_.1/L 1/) /cs HOWCASE!

Rounding out the preseason Top Ten behind fifth-rated North Carolina
- which, by the way, Is Pitt's opening-game opponent on national televl·
slon the night of Sept.9- are Southern Methodist, Grorgla, Penn State,
Oklahoma and Southern Cal.
Third-ranked Alabama received three !lrst-place votes and 966 JMiln~
Nebraska had two firsts and 9ol9 points and North Caro!Jna also had two
No.1 votes and 863 points. Then comes SMU with 743 points, Georgia 6!!11;
Penn State 682, Oklahoma 638 and Southern Cal 624.
The remaining first-place vote went to Clemson, but the 1981 kings, the
only unbeaten team In the nation a year ago, totaled just 561 polntsforllth
place. Last year, the Tigers were not even In the preseason Top Twenty but
stormed to their first national championship.
Besides Clemson, the preseason Second Ten consists o! Michigan, Ar:
kansas, Ohio State, Miami, Florida, Texas, Notre Dame, Artzona State
and UCLA. Michigan was No.1 in the 1981 preseason poll.
The !lnal 1981 Top Ten consisted or Clemson, Texas, Penn State, Pitt
SMU, Georgia, Alabama, Miami, North Carolina and Washington.
The Second Ten had Nebraska, Michigan, Brigham Young, Southem
Cal, Olllo State, Arizona State. West Virginia, Iowa. Missouri and
Oklahoma .

LOSES LEAD- Auatrallaa Bab Sbearer, sbo'Wil saluting tbe gallery,
blgeyed the allltb hole tbUI banding tbe lead to PGA titleholder Ray
Floyd balfway tbruugb tbe tblnl rouad Saturday in tbe $400,0011 World
Strtes of Golf. (AP Lalerpboto) .

RIVERSIDE, Ca lif. (API -Indy
cars are basically built for speed
and making left turns. That's why
putting them on a road course like
the 3.3-mlle circuit a t Riverside International Raceway Is such an
adventure.
Mario Andrettl, a seasoned veteran of both Indy-car racing and vir·
tully every !orm or road racing,
wrestled his Cosworth -powered
Wildcat SB'around the nine-turn circuit Friday to a course record.
His average speed of 130.003
mph, breaking the ma rk of 129.559
set last year by Geoff Brabham,
was good enough to give the 1969
Indy 500 winner and 1978 Formula
One world champion the provisional pole for Sunday's A!rCal500kllometer Indy-car race.
Positions for the 24-car field will
be determined In the European fashion, by the best lap of each car
during the two days or qualllylng .

Andretti. who quit his lull-time
ride on the Formula One circuit aiter the 1981 season, readlly admitS
there is a big difference In the cart;
between the two forms of aulo
racing.
"The Formula One cars are
made strictly !or road racing and
they can run closer together," the
42-year-old from Nazareth, Pa .. explained. "But, here, we're asking
the (Indy ) cars to do a two-fold job.
"They were really designed tor
ovals, but we're making them road
racers and they're a handful on a
road course. They're not agUe at
all, and they're very heavy and extremely powerful by comparison
(to the Formula One cars).''
It is only In the last three years
that the Indy-cars have begun mix·
lng road races with their more us-ual oval racing. The last time there
were any road races of consequence on the Indy-car circuit was
In the late 60s.

Henderson sets
new theft record
~WAUKEE (AP) - Rickey Henderson kept his priorities
straight amid the surge of clashing emotions he felt as soon as he
. stole his record l19th base.
Henderson broke Lou Brock's 1974 major league record of us
stolen bases in a season with a head-first slide into second base in the
third inning of Oakland's 54 defeat by the MUwaukee Brewers
Frtday night.
When second base umpire Mike ReiDy signaled safe the 23-yearold A's outfielder sprang to his teet, yanked the bag ~m its moorings and raised It above his head In triumph. Then he Immediately
looked for teammate Dwayne Murphy, who was In the on-deck
circle. He rushed toward Murphy, embraced him and kissed him on
the forehead.
"I had to look around for Dwayne because he was hitting third
tonight Instead of second," Henderson said. "He was hitting behind
me most of the year. I don't think I could have done this without him.
He had to sacrifice hlmseH. Hitting Second behind me, he had to take
a lot of pitches," he said. "You don't hit !or a high average that way.
Dwayne had to he patient."
But with Murphy's help, Henderson had broken a record many felt
never woold be threatened. The game was stopped tor several minutes and Brock, the former St. Louts Cardinals' star, presented
Henderson the second base bag In ceremonies at home plate.
With the pressure off, Henderson stole three more bases during
the game for a total of 1.22- his third lour-steal game of the season.
"I feel relieved and exhausted," said Henderson, who broke the
record in only his 1Z7th game of the season.
''To me, It was a lot r1 hard work, trouble on my mind," he said or
the long weeks of mounting pressure and media puUdup. "Whell, I
got the record, I stole three more bases easier."
. Winning pitcher Doc Medich walked Henderson on Jour pitches
witb two out ta the th1rd Inning. Medlcb four times threw to first base
ln an e1!ort to keep Hendenon clo&amp;e. But on the first pitch to the next
·ballet, Wayne G1'06S, Henderson broke for second.
1)le Brewers called a pltcll-out, and catcher Ted Simmons' throw
was quick but slightly to the right of second base. Shortstop Robin
Yount had to lunge to pull in the ball, and Henderson slid past him.
Wben ~ aignalecl
the' croWd r1 41,100 at County Stadium .

sate;

llive Header8DD a standing ovatiCII.
Henderson, who bad tied Brock's JeCDrd here Thuraday night, felt

~t he coUld run on Medlch.
"Medlch II not Dl!e of the~ piJC~ to steal on," he saki. "He
' duel DOt hav.e a~ qllick cle1lvery to the plate and he throW&amp; a lot of
~ pftl:llell. Wbea he wallted me the flnt time, I bad a lot of
Jiutledl$11R w11e11 I got~ flnt bale," he aaJcL ·• :

HENDKRSON BREAKS BROOK'S RECORD - O.Jd•M A'a .:
IUclrey lleader8DD bolds up II!COIId !Jue - Ills ~br' . . . llllli ..
llolea baE
to aclaeeltJIIcrowduMiiw.-.11te'
:
......., alp&amp;. -l.oa Brook, who- tbe okll'8lllll'il alll8 ...... . . : : : :
lJ'H, laolll GD M left. Sw •auu'altealtwDe Ia tile t111rt !Mi1aat alllli : ·
A'1 . . - aplntit the Mihnlllllee 8reftn. (AP 1 rrq!' IJ),
. ::

II*--

.
......
7

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•

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.&gt;

'

�, ..

...

for 1.15 to be able to distribute this
kind of money to worthwhile causes
makes every one associated with the
event feel a whole lot better," Barnett emphasized.
The fourth annual tournament
drew an overflowing field at Riverside Golf Club. In addition, 300
guests attended the dinner on tour·
nament eve at Royal Oak Park.
Plans for the 1983 tournament are
already underway.
Here are the benericiaries of the
1982 proceeds; The golf teama at
Wahama and Meigs high schools,
the Dave Diles Scholarship Fund at
Ohio University, Big Brothers,
Meigs Boxing Club, Jaycees' Christmas fund, Salvation Army in
Pomeroy and Racine, senior
citizens, old age home, hwnane
soc iety,
Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary , Lions' club, historical
society, EMS units in Racine,
Mason, Syracuse, New Haven,
Rutland, Pt. Pleasant, Tuppers
Plains, Pomeroy and Middleport,
and fire departments in Middleport.
Racine, Syracuse, Mason, Bashan,
Salem Center, Rutland, New Haven,
Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Wolfe emphasized that the committee - as usual- has established
an emergency fund for use in
unusual circwnstances. The committee decided, a few years ago, to
save back a few dollars to use in
emergency situations. "Sometimes
an unusual need crops up," said Barnett, "and when that happens, we
simply like to be ready to lend a
helping hand when we can. That's
what this tournament is all about."

Big Bend All Stars
ousts Gallipolis, 14-l 0
WELI.SrON - The Big Bend Ut·
tle League all-stars, who have been
on quite a tear of late, defeated the
Gallipolis all-stars 14-10 in an actionpacked quarterfinal round of the
Wellston Little League tournament.
Big Bend, who was beaten earlier,
stayed in the running with the ever
important win.
Big Bend was scheduled to face
the loser of the Athens-Clay game
played Sat11rday, with the winner &lt;!!
that tilt advancing to the finals on
Sunday. Gallipolis ended play with a
follrth place finish.
Big Bend started the scoring in the
first inning when it plated three runs
on a walk, hit batsmen, a double by
J.R. Kitchen, and a single by Brian
Tannehill.
The big Benders scored three
more runs in the second frame to
.take an undisputed 6-'l lead. Big
·blows in the inning were a home run
·by Scott Williams, a John Sisson
single, and a home run by J.R. Kit·
: chen.
Gallipolis made 1t a &amp;-2 ballgame
. in the third inning on a walk, a hit
. · .batter, and a single by Robbie
· Young. The winners upped the score
to !f-2 in the fourth on two singles and
a walk, while the trailers played cat·
ch-up and edged closer at !4 during
the same frame .
Through the sixth inning with a !H
score, the Bend area youngs~rs appeared to have an easy win. The tide
quickly changed, however, as
Gallipolis gained second wind and
roared back to a !!HI advantage.
Todd Casey had a line single and
Shawn Grant a grand slam home run
in the rally .
J .R. Kitchen tied the score with a
long home run to dead center field to
lead off the next frame for the win-

ners.
Scott Williams became the hero of
the game, when with the bases

loaded, he launched a dramatic
grandslam home run to give Big
Bend a 14-10 victory. Gallipolis hit·
ters were Robbie Young with a home
run and single, Todd Casey a single,
and Shawn Grant two singles and a
homerun.
Big Bend hitters were ;Jeff Nelson
with a double, Michael Bartrum a
single and a home run, J .R. Kitchen
with a double and home run, Brian
Tannehill three singles, Artie Hunnell two singles, Scott Williams two
home runs, and John Sisson a single.
Gallipolis used fo11r pitchers,
giving up 13 hits, six strikeouts, and
five walks. Matt Fisher pitched the
complete game for Big Bend giving
up 10 runs on six hits, while striking
out eight and walking five batters.
Thursday night, the Big Bend Ut·
tle Leaguers kept their hopes alive
with a I~ win over Rock Hill while
Gallipolis eliminated Albany,~.

MIDDLEPoRT - VIllage Phar·
macy narrowly defeated Cleland
Realty 6&amp;.a:J In the championship
game of the General Hartinger Park
swruner league basketbaD tour·

nament..
Close action and fine competition
highlighted every game in the tollr·

nament.
A well-balanced scoring attack led
by Ron Ferguson's 18 points paved
the way for the championship
Village Phannacy team. Three
others hit double figures as M. Kennedy had 16 markers, Ron Drexler
14, and Rusty Bookman 12.
Cleland Realty's Chip Brauer
powered in a game high 'l1 markers,
foDowed by Greg Cole with 13, P.G.
Riffe eight, Mike Bissell eight, C.
Kemedy four, and Scott Van Meter
four.
The General Hartinger Park Summer League Post Season Tollrnament began August 16. Quality
Print defeated Brogan-Warner In-

BATI'LE FOR BALL- Rulty BoomlaD (3) 81111 Cblp Brauer\JBU!e
for a rebowJd dDriDg Friday'• cbampl0111blp game ol the llartlqerTouroameot at Middleport. Village Pbarmacy look cbampiODShlp bollon.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Tickets for the Ohio State-Baylor
football game Sept. 11 wlll go on
sale Wednesday morning In the
east ticket lobby of St. John Arena.
OSU ticket director Bob Rles says.
He said Friday that a substantial
number of tickets are available.
Sales will continue untll all
tickets are sold, he said.
OSU has had 83 consecutive sellouts for Ohio Stadium games. The
last non-sellout was against Oregon
in 1968.
Rles said many tickets for the
Baylor game were unclaimed by
students. most of whom would not
be back on campus untll alter the
Sept. 18 Michigan State game.

s11rance~.

Ron- Ferguson led Quallty Print
with 30 poiJ\ts and Kevin Smith chiP'
ped in 15. Mitch Meadows led the
losers with 21.
Other flrllt round action saw
Smith-Nelson Motors defeating KC's
Club 6~2 while 8econd seeded
Cleland Realty got a bye.
Smith-Nelson had a balanced at·
tack with Bob ABhley scoring 15,
Doxie Walters 13, Brian Swann 11,
and Greg Becker 10. KC's Club was
led by Phil Harrison's 22 points.
Second round games saw topseeded Village Pharmacy def~ating
Quality Print ~7. Ron Drexler,
Rod Ferguson and Britt Dodson led
the scoring 15, 14, 13 points respectively.
Cleland Realty advanced in tournament action with a clcJIIe 53-61 victory over Smith-Nelson Motors.
Gene Cole set the pace with 16 counters, Chuck Keml!!ly scored 12 while
Greg Cole chipped In 1q.

SXL Chain Saw

COMING HOME - Clndn1111tl Reds' RoD Oster
slides In front of Phillles' pltcber Larry CbriJ!teDSOD
who comes to cover the plate lD the flrllt inDIDg of

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less time
and not look
as sharp,"
said
Dick LeBeau,
defensive
back- ~...~pe:rml::tted:.l:as:t~y:e:ar~·-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
field coach.
The qther two prospects are
speedsters Robert Jackson and
fifth-round draft choice Paul Sorensen. Jackson runs back punts.
"Bryan Hicks is stlll first team
but the Issue ls not decided yet,"
LeBeau sald.
LeBeau rated the players:
-Fastest - Jackson when his
knee ts well. and lt's Improving
slowly.
-Quickest - Fuller. Jackson,
I
Jauron.
-Best pass coverage - Hicks
and Jauron .
-Best "reader" of opposing offenses; Jauron and Hicks.

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GREAT SAVINGS TO BE FOUND
Limti'ed Time Only

in Lady Bug Trot
RACINE-L. E. To~n,atwo
year old filly, owned by Paul Sayre
of Racine, and driven by Brook
Sayre, Syracuse, will compete in the
"Lady Bug Trot" at' North Field
Park, Cleveland on Monday, Aug ..
30. The horse will run in the ninth.
race. The purse for the racie is
$100,000.
L. E. Townson was outstanding at
the Meigs County Fair reCently.

I

I

MINNEAPOLIS (API - Mlnne. · sota catcher Tlm Laudner hit 44
home runs last season - 42 In the
minors and two ln the majors .
Thls season he has hlt six. Hls
power dropped when his batting
stance was changed and hasn't
climbed back to it's former status.
But there was a hint Friday night
that it might be starting the climb
as his twcrrun homer provided the
necessary edge ln the Twins 5-3 v1ctory over the Cleveland Indians.
"I'm stlllln that contact stage,"
Laudner said of his hitting ln the
new stance. "I go with the pltch and
I go with the runner.
"I don't know lf the success I had
last year Is any Indication of what I
can do In the big leagues. It's a
whole different ballgame."
Laudner's home run Friday was
not the run-of-the-mlll type either.
"It happened to be the margin so
I'D take It," Laudner said.
It was hit llke a hlgh pop fly but it
kept carrying down the left fleld
line and finally caromed off the
wire holding the foul pole In left
field and dropped down Into the
seats.
"I didn' t think lt would stay fair,"
Laudner said of his reaction.
Cleveland lefl fielder Miguel Dllone said he didn't know what it was
going to do.
"It was so high.! saw it go up and
and saw It come down," Dilone
said.
Twins Manager Bllly Gardner
said he just listened to the crowd
reaction; and besides. he was just
glad to get a wtn against the
lnd(ans.

NORTH RANDALL, Ohlo (APi
-Mark Salvaggio guided Jr's Axe
to victory In the slx·furlong feature
race at the Thistledown.
Jr's Axe covered the fast track in
1:133-5 Friday to pay $8.!ll, $4.W
and $3.

HAMLIN, W. Va. - The Hamlin
Jaycees Motorcycle Hill Climb will
be held at I p.m. Sunday, Sept. 5, at
the J:Iamlin Uons Club Field.
Trophies will be given to the first,
second, third, fourth and fifth place
finishers in the following classes,
100, 125, 200, 250, 372, 400 and 500,
open class, and one trophy goes to
the rider having the best time. There
will also be three trphies lor Class

For furtherinformation call Frank
Ignatious, chairman, at 824-3981 or

The
Shoe

The Reds pushed their lead lo 7·1
ln the fourth lnnlng on Duane
Walker's RBI Infield single and
then scored their ftnal run in the
eighth on Alex Trevino' s sacrifice
Oy.

R 10 GRANDE - All tacililies in
Lyne Cen ter at Rio Grande College
(gym, pool. we ight room and hand
ball court) Will be CLOSED TO THE

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Christenson was forced from the
game ln the third Inning after
straining a thigh muscle running to
first baSP. A team offlclal said he
probably will miss hls next turn ln
the pitching rotation and could be
lost for up to 15 days.
The Phillles may use reliever Ed
Farmer In Christenson' s normal
spot in the starting pitching rotation. PhilliE's manager Pat Corrales
said .

The Reds staked Soto to 5-0 lead
ln the first Inning·.
Cincinnati loaded the bases on
two walks by loser Larry Christenson, 8-9, sandwiched around a double by Dave Concepcion. Cesar
Cedeno singled lor the first run and . . - - - - - - - - - - - with the bases still loaded, Paul
Householder bounced lnlo a
fielder's choice, making lt 2·0.
Oester then tripled off the wall in
rlght·center to give Cincinnati a 4-0
MEN'S CLASSIC
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passed ball by Phlllles catcher Bo
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Dlaz.
eB eiqr
Krenchlckl' s home run ln thE' second put the Reds ahead 6-0. The
Phlllles' lone run was unearned,
coming on Manny Trillo' s RBI sin·
gle ln the thl rd.

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Wllllams said he was determined
to keep the game under control.
"A girl came up to me and said
where's the fight? I said maybe It' s
ln Atlantic City, but It's not here,"
he sald.

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PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Twice
the Philadelphia Phlllles had
rattled Mario Soto, and twice they
had come away with victories while
the Cincinnati Reds pitching ace
was on the mound.
On Friday night, Soto kept his
cool and pitched the Reds to an easy
8-1 triumph over Phlldelphia . Soto,
11-9, · struck out elght and walked
two, In upping his major leagueleading strikeout total to 221.
The pitcher's smooth perfor. mance was In sharp contrast to last
Sunday, when Soto traded taunls
with Phlllles third-base coach Dave
Bristol and went on to lose an 8-2
decision In Cincinnati.
Earlier ln the season, on May 31.
Soto was ejected during a 5-4 Phil·
lies win after a melee that began
when he was hlt by a pitch.
"We read all that stuff in the
· newspaper about the controversy,"
said Reds third baseman Wayne
Krenchickl, who bel ted his second
home run of the year In the second
Inning. "I guarantee It was extra
incentive for Mario to win tonight."
Ron (!)ester, who had three hlts
lor the Reds, added: "The main
thing ls just to win. The best way to
shut them up ls to beat them."
Before the game, head umpire
Billy Williams Issued an ln!orrnal
warning to both managers at home
plate to avoid any fiareups between
the Phlllles and Soto.

blg third wlth a ground-rule double
and Tom Brunansky walked. Kent
Hrbek grounded to shortstop Larry
Milbourne, who let the ball through
his legs for an error as Castino
scored and Brunansky raced to
third.
Gary Ward's Infield single made
It 2.0. Gary Gaettl then grounded to
Milbourne, who flipped to second
baseman Alan Bannister lor the
force on Ward. But Bamlster's relay throw to first went Into the dugout, allowing Hrbek to score.
Laudner made lt 5-0 with hls be&gt;mer, his first in the Mctrodome.
The Indians got their first run In
the seventh on Dllone's RBI single.
They added two more In the eighth
when Rlck Manning reached on a
fielder's choice. Bannister walked
and Milbourne tripled.

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"We haven't played well against
this club. TheY've given us trouble
all year," Gardner said referring to
the ract that this was only the second victory In 10 games.
Al Wllllama, 5-7, pitched 61-3 in·
nings, while Ron Davis pitched the
final 22-3 to record his 17th save.
Larry Sorensen, 10-10, took the loss,
allowing all flve runs, although only
one was earned.
Wllllams, who picked up his
second-straight v1ctory, was sent
down to the Twins' triple A team to
help his overall game.
"He's concentrating more now, "
Gardner said, adding that he believed the move had helped WlUIams. who was expected to be the
Twins' ace this season.
John Castino opened the Twins'

Thi8tledown re~~ults

A True Short Story:

AUGUST SPECIAL

.Friday night's game lD Philadelphia. Oster scored
from third after a triple on a CbrlsteDSon pitcb that got
away from catcher Bo Dlaz. (AP Laserphoto).

Laudner strokes two run blast
in Twins 5-3 win over Tribe

-Best hands for Interceptions"All of them catch the ball
adequately."
"Guys Uke Hlcks, Jauron and
Fuller might get outrun by some
people, but these are the kind of
people who are going to know
where to be, make the proper ad·.
justments and, If you need a crucial
tackle at the 8-yard line, a good percentage of the time they'D get the
guy on the ground."
But LeBeau refused to rule out
any one of the five for a roster spot.
Jackson, in particular, has been lm·
presslve on special teama, whlcli
will work to his advantage.
The National · Football LeagUe
this year also wlll allow teams to
carry 49 players Instead of the 45

LE. Towneon
OSU-Baylor tickets
go on sale Wednesday

Unrattled Soto defeats Phils

Five .B engals vie
fo~ free safety
CINCINNATI (AP)- Ctnclnnatl
Coach Forrest Gregg has five players vying for free safety and the
Bengals are having trouble decldlng who wU1 win the job.
"Nobody has convinced me
they're ready to move out Bryan
Hicks," Gregg said of the third·
year player, although he added that
he's looking for more interceptions
from the position this year.
Hicks has one In two years and
Mike Fuller got the only one at the
position last year.
The thlfd contender Is 10-year
veteran Dick Jauron, making a
comeback' after missing last season with a knee Injury.
"Hls knee Is coming back very
satls!actorlly. I've seen guys miss

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C·l

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

August 29, 1982

Village Pharmacy
takes tournament

Diles Tournament
•
.places $8,100 In
charity coffers
POMEROY - The fourth annual
Dave Diles-Appalachia Semi-Closed
Golf To11rnament and Hillbilly Supper will place more than $8,100 in
charity coffers in the Meigs-Mason
county area . Some 33 charitable
organizations will benefit from the
proceeds.
The finance corrunittee of the golf
classic - Tom Wolfe of the Racine
Home National Bank, Ted Reed of
Farmers' Bank, and Paul Barnett of
Bank One meeting in executive last
Wednesday determined where the
money will be spent.
"We had hoped to raise $10,000,"
said Wolfe, "but we had some extraordinary expenses with travel.
We're delighted with the results
especially since we held the line on
the entry fee."
In the four years the tournament
has been held, some $3D,OOO has been
raised and every cent has gone to
charity.
"We're putting $1,500 into the
Dave Diles Scholarship Fund at Ohio
University," Reed noted. "We've
established a good scholarship fund
at OU, for some worthy and needy
high school senior from the Meigs
and Mason area to use to pursue
studies in journalism or communication.
"We hope the schools will be more
aware of this, and direct some young
people toward that co11rse of study."
"We're in tough economic times,
and to have this kind of turnout, and
this kind of response - and particularly this kind of bottom line - is
extremely gratifying. The tournament has grown each year, and

August29, 1982

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

. Page-C-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•
'•
'

store Hours: MOnday-Friday ·a am-5 _pm

~turday

a am-12 noon

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

Sllv11r Bridge ·Plaza

Member FDIC
Spring Valley

�,.

Redus, Barnes
•
WID MVP honors

Scoreboard ...
Majors

Leaders

AMEKif AN U:AGUE
1-::....tn-n DtvWon
W
I.
Pt-t. 08

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MJI~&lt;o• auko, •

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Tor!&gt;n!O Ill. NI'W York J

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tatltunila 7.

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OalllEi nd 4
Kansa.\ C:ltv 7, Chicago 1
.\o\i nrlf'!illlll ~. Oevt"lard 3
!)t"trolt 6. Sf&gt;attlt" l
Sunday'a GIUilPII
N~· York at Toron to

NA110NAL LEAGUE

~

l .ool~

Ptltladl'lphla
Mont rea l
PttlsbufJih
Chic ago

NPW '1'0111.

w...... -

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Clnd nna ll B. Phlladl'lphla l
Al lanUI 9. Nt•w Yor k fl

Durham. C1UcaRO. J):

Madlock. Pllts-

bui"J(h. :11.
TRIPLES: Thon, Houtton. 9: Mr.\o(l(!,
~. Loub , 8; Carner, Uo uston, 8: 6 T1ed

14·1. .667, 2.33: O.Robhuon. Plttabw'lfh,
14-i. 667, J.9'l: V llk'nz ~a. toe Anse les.
17·!.1, .1()4,
WPk'h. 1..011 AngpWs. ~ ~­
-~t J.fM : Fonch . St Louis. IJ-7. .6".0.
1 11: L..ea . Montreal. 11 -6 . .647, 3.22.
~IKEOLIT'S: Solo, CIOOnnall. 2'.11:
Carlton, Philadelphia , nl: R yan, Hou.~ ­
ICNI. 191 ; Va~l a, Loa Angell'S, 147:
Sulton, Hou5ton . 139.

uo·.

C.. llfomla . 89.

RBI: Mc Rae. Kansas City, 112: Thomron. Oevf'lud. 9R: G 11loma!l. MllwaukM&gt;.
!N : Cooper, MUwa uJuo.to. 91; Yount. Mllwa ukcfo, 87.

I.A'I AnRt'IM 9. Ch lraKO 4
gamf&gt;!l lit'hfldulro
Swtciay'• GIUIWII-

On!~

HITS: Garcl11. T!XVnlo. It&amp;; Your1t. Mil·
wuket&gt;, lfi2: Cooptr, MJtwaukl"e, 1~7 :
W . WilMW~ . Karw u City , lM ; Mc Rae. Kan-

II ou~ l orJ 111

Mont real
Atbtnta 111 N•..,.. Yo rk
C1n&lt;'lnlllltl m l'h llaek&gt;lpnla

sns Clly. IM.

Cttlcaf{i.lll t l..os Angtok.'S

OOUBLF.:S·

St Louis at Sa n DleRo

Yoont,

Whitt', Kanaas City, :n:
31 . Mc !Uf', Kansa s Cit y, .11 : Cowt-ns.
St"attl t', 32.

8.-\SKETBALL

1RIPI.Ei: W.WIIson. Kansas CITy. 12:
Ht'1'Tldon, Del roll. ll ; Yount, Mllwauk('(',
Ill: Whitake r. DPtrolt. 7: Mumph ry, Nf'W

NatloMI Basketball AuodaUon
76ERS- Tr11 d t'd

Dar
ryl Oaw kl n!l, Cf' ntt'r . 10 the New Jf' rsf'y
Nt&gt;15 for a 198.1 Unt -ruund dril l! plc k and
an urJd tsrlost"'la mount of ca5 h.
UT1\H JAZZ-Si f(ned M a r)! Ea •on, Cf' n·
w r. tua m u lt i-ye a r contract

FOOTBALL

Nailonal Football Lu(Uf'
Ct!I CAGO

BEAR S- AnnouncE-d

th&lt;'

&lt;e·

tl remt'nt of Gtrry Su lli va n. olfc nslv('
line·

· ma n. and go t back lhl' s ixth-ro und dratt
cholr f' lhry 5ol'n1to th t'C I('vc tand Brow ns
In r~c h a n~~:r for So ll lva n.

HOCKEY
Natloul Hockey Lea1af'
WAS HI NGTO N CA P ITALS- Firf"d

Ro

ll:l'l' C'r oz iN, ac ting gcn t"ra l man ager

COLLEGE
HOF STRA -Na m ed
an lst ant l oot ball coar h

AI

Langl'nu s

· Stabler, now in training camp
with the New Orleans Saints of the
National Football League, is seekIng ~ million In actual and punt·
tive damages in the suit filed
Friday.

MllwaultPP, .~:
Lynn, California,

....
"""'!11" " ""l'Jon"'
""'.l'!O!'
1 ransac
Pli!LA DE LPHIA

HOUSTON (AP) -Houston 0!1ers quarterback Ken Stabler has
filed a Ubel suit against The New
York Times and the National
Broadcasting Co. in connection
with news stories that claimed
Stabler associated with professional gamblers.

\ 'ork, 7: Wlntle kl, Nf'W York. 7: llt&gt;rnazard, Chlca!JO. 7: 81'1'11 , Kansas C'lty. 7
HOME RUNS: G.lbomas, Mllwailkl't'.

Attorneys tor Stabler said they
based their claim on the expected
Income from the balance of his professional football career. The slllt
stated that this amount "may ex·
ceed $10 million" and asked !or exemplary damages of an equal

Jt; R.t.Jack.mn. Calfomta . .11: l11omTon,
Of"V'eland, TT; OJU v~ . Mllwauk.Pt&gt;, 'tl:
Ol_ICincH, California, 2!\.
S'ml.EN BASES: R.Ht"ndfor!OO. Oa k·
land, 122: Gama, Toronto, ~ 7: J .C'ruz.
Sfoattlt, 11: Wathan. l&lt;ai'L'IIts C1ty , 31;

Mollltlr. Mllwaukf'f', 29.
PITCHING !l~ Dfcl5iOM I: Vuckovlch.
Mtlwa ukt"l'. 1~ • .7111, 3.:16: Burn~. Chi·
caao. 13--4 . .761'1. Ut : Sutc llffe. Ck&gt;veland.
11-4. .n1. 3.00: Guid ry. Nf&gt;w York. 1 2 - ~.
.'O i, 3.11 ; Zahll, Californi a, 14-'. . 700.
.1 . ~ Gura , Kanaaa O ty. 16-8, .667. 3.97;
f't'try , J:Wirutt, 14·7, .!i67, .1.07: Rl'nko,
cau tornla . 10-~.. 667, 4.14.

STR.IKEOL"l'S:

F.Bamlster.

Tournament set

SeaHil'.

152: Bar kP.r. Cleveland . 140: Guidry. NPW
York. 131; Beattlf'. Seattk&gt;. L'll : Righetti .
New York, 126.

for the Eastern Division championship.
Redus earlier won MVP honors in
1978, his first season in pro football,
when he batted .462 for Billings, the
second highest average ever recorded in the history of professional
baseball. He also won the MVP at
Tampa in 1980, where he batted .301,
hit 16 homers and had 50 stolen
bases.
Barnes, a ~year-old righthanded
hitter, played second base and third
base at Waterbury, where he batted
.306 with 12 homers and 72 RB!s
before earning · an early-Augwt
promotion to Indianapolis. Barnes
has ~n in 15 games for the Indians,
batting .314. Waterbury is the Class
AA Eastern League.
Barnes is a graduate of Cincinnati's Woodward High School,
where he led the Public League in
batting in 1975 with a .444 average.
He was signed by the Reds-off the
University of Cincinnati campus in
1978. Redus was selected in the 15th
round and Barnes in the 16th round
in the June, 1978 draft.

amount.
The suit cites a story that a!&gt;
peared in The New York Times on
Aug. 30, 1981, and reports broadcast
shortly thereafter by NBC. It also
names RCA Corp., the corporate
parent of NBC, as a defendant.
The Times article, entered into
court records as part of the action,
"suggests a wrong and malevolent
connection with a known gambler,
a man convicted o! crtme, a man
connected with the Mafia" and
Stabler, then quarterback for the
Oakland Raiders.
"Within the day and apparently
picking up on the same beat, the
National Broadcasting System prepared and caused to be dlstrtbuted
through its a!!lllated stations a vi·
deotape also insinuating and suggesting that the plaintlf! threw or
deliberately lost !ootball games, or
shaved points In football games, so
that gamblers might prevall or win
bets," the suit adds.

BIDWELL The Bidwell
baseball association will sponsor a
sl~pitch softball tournament for
church teams, Sept. 3-4, at Raccoon
Park. Trophies will be awarded to
first three teains and first team individuals. For further information
call44&amp;-2737 or 38S-9957.

1982CHM

customized by Bivouac . Air cond., AM/FM/Tape, 350,
Auto. Trans., PS, tile wheel. cruise &lt;;ontrol, 4 captain
chairs, sofa, running board, wire wheels, 40 channel CB,
power windows, power locks, only 4,000 miles. Covered
byfactorywarranty.

ONLY , ,

1i,SOO

1979 PONTIAC

4 dr. sedan, auto. trans., PS, air cond., AM/F M radio,
power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, local owner.
Clean car.
~~

305, VB, auto., trans., PS, AM/FM , air cond ., cloth in·
terior, V/Roof. Local owner.

Loca I owner. Only '1 ,HJ.

1981 MERCU

4 dr ., two tone blue, auto. trans. , PS, air cond., AM/F M
radio, low mileage, extra clean .

1974 CHEVY PICKUP
Long wheel base, 112 ton, PS, AM radio, 6 cyl., 3 spd.
BOUGHT NEW I:IE~E .

SEE US SOON!
YOUR DEALER ON THE RIVER.....

SIMMONS
POMEROY,OH.
Open Mon .- Fri. 9 to 9
SUNDAY HOPPERS

SKYLINE LANES

EACH SUNDAY
9:30a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
(

Shoes Free
Up to 6 Bowlers Per Lane

CALL 446-3362 OR STOP IN
TODA V·r oR DEl AILS

$39500
WINTER HOURS: Beginning August 30, 1982
Sunday-Thursday-9 a.n:w~ ~ Midnight
· Friday'&amp; Satu~da~9- a.m. -1,a.m.

Super Specials
•. WE WILL MEET OR BfAT ANY DEAL
ANYONE ELSE CAN GIVE YOU.

.,

,,.
.,,.,.
;.. •

...
.t .

"Local Service"

j BETZ

~; Upper Rt 7

. ..
.

.,

HONDA.SALES
·Open Fri., ti1 .6 p,m.

.;

..

.Kanaup,_Ohio'
.

'J

Sept . 2, Warren Loca l, Home, 4

I

Jackson, 4 p.m.

Sept. 14, Trimble, Home. 4 p.m.
Sept. 20. Athens and Waverly ,
Home. 4p.m.
'
Sept. 21, Trimble. Away. 4p.m.
Sept. 23. Belpre, Home, 4 p.m.
Sept. 27. At Logan with Wavelry.

J ackson, 4 p.m.
Sept. 28, Warren

p.m.

Loca l, Away.

•.
'

·sKYLINE·
LANES
UPPEI ROUTE 7
.OHIO ,

Goodyear· s
Newest Bias

I

p.m.
Sept. 8. Gallipolis. Away . 4 p.m.
Sept. 9, Bet pre. Away, 4 p.m.
Sept. 13. At Ironton with Athens.

Ply Tire

EAGLE ST RADIAL

I
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1

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I
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I

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G78-15

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4o.oo
41.00

1.35
1.54

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Whit e Lett er
Perf orm ance
70/60 Se ri es

1

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205 60 R 13
245 60 R 15

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$1 .91
1.24
2 63
189
76 .00 3 13
58 00 2 08
7600 298

••

I
I

••••••••••••••••••••••

L•••••••••••••••••••••_.

r•••••••••••••••••••··~

1982 Girts' Volley ball
Aug. 30. Eastern. Away. 6 p.m.
Sepl. 1. Trimble. Home. 5:30p.m.
Sept. 2, Fort Frye, Away, 6 p.m.
sept. 7.1ronton, Away. 5:30p.m.
Sept. 8. Kyger Creek. Home. 5:30
p.m.
Sept. 13, Vinton County, Away, 1
p.m.
Sept. 14, Jackson, Home, 5:30p.m.
Sepl. 15, Southern, Away, I :30
p.m.
Sept. 16, Gallipolis, Away . 5:30
p.m.
,
Sept. 21. Waverly. Away. 5:30p.m.
Sept. 22, Eastern, Home, 5:30p.m.
Sept. 28, Athens, Home. 5:30p.m.
Sept. 29. southern, Home. 1:30
p.m.
Ocl. 2, Warren and Caldwett,
Away.tpm .
Oct. 4, Vi nton Counly, Home, 5:30
p.m.
Oct. 5, Gattipolis, Home. 5:30p.m.
Oct. 6, Trimble, Away, 5:30p.m.
Oct. 12, Logan, Away, 5:30p.m.
Oct. 13. Kyger Creel&lt;, A&gt;Nay. 6
p.m.
Oct. t4, Fort .Frye, Home, 5:30
p.m.

!

CUSTOM POL YSTEEL

I
I

Gas Savtn g
Steel Belted
Goodyear
Whitewa ll

I

1
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I

I
I
I

218
2.34

·1

21575R 1
215 75 R 15

1

WRANGLER
BIAS PLY

~- ~; ~q III
~

69.00

RIB HI-MILER

TRACKER A-T
For Al l
Season
Light
Truck
Service
Outline
Whit e
Letters

For Light
Trucks
Service
And Long
Low Cost
Mileage

Reserve Football
·sept. 13, Belpre, Away. $:55 p.m.
Sept. 20. Jackson, Away, 5:30p.m .
Sept. 27. Wellston, Home, 5:30
p.m.
.
Oct. 4, Athens, Mome, 5:30p.m.
Oct. 11. Ga llipoli s. Away. 5:15
p.m.
Oct. 18, Logan, Home, 5:30p.m.
Oct. 25. Vinton County , Home, 5:15
p.m.
Coach - Larry Grimes.

Club championship
pairings announced
POMEROY - Pairings have been
announced for club championship at
JayMar Golf Course here. First
round matches are to be· played by
Sept. 4.
Pairings are as foUows:
Champ. Ill. - J. Thomas vs. B.
St(vers; R. Brown vs. L. Boggs; G.
Hackettvs. R. Jean; B. Netson vs. c.
Knight; B. Hackett vs. R. Karr; H.
Lohse vs. D. Mills; B. Ashley vs. P.
0' Brien; J,. 0' Brien vs. E. Schuler.
First Ill. - R. Morgan vs. H.
Karr; J. Thomas Jr. vs. 0. Conolly;
J.lngelsvs. J. Hall; R. Dillardvs. C.
Northup; C. Matthews vs. J.
Musser;, B. Freed vs. K. Frecker; G.

Moore vs. G. Harris; B. Fultz vs. G.
tngleL
.
Second Ill. - E. Teaford vs. C.
Gaskill; w. Grueser vs. -R. Pickens;
T. Karr vs. D. Dutton; G. Snyder vs.
D. Diles; R. Follrod vs. B. Reed; C.
Ingles vs. R. Reynolds; F. Crow vs.
C. Sayre; J. Thomas Sr. vs. R.'
Graves.

RUST PROOFING
Applied

By Qualified Personnel

Helps prottct mttll fro'" s.11t · HtiPI prtvtftt
can. Mt lpt ru1t from sprtadlnt
on older c•rs . All vulntr~blt art•• sprly

'"'" $9995
rust on new

va
A

BRAKE SERVICE
rour

C$'iflr~ BDrum

lmpon o r OOI'nftShc caB Addr.hona t parts ;u-ld servtees c •tr a ot 1'1('1'(h'(l"

Includes: Install new l ront gr e a se se al s . pa c k lf on t w hf' o&gt;l
beon ngs. m spec t hydraulic s y s t e m . add 11 Uid . roa d 11'&lt;&gt; 1
2-Wneet Front Disc: Insta ll ne w fronl br a k e ptt d ~ rro c.tort. 1c 1 •

fronl rotors . tn soec t calipers

OR
4-Wh. .l Drum: In s tall n e w brak e h n rn q C~nrJ n ·::. u rt o..~ 1

,.

olt

lour drums

Warrant ed 1 ~ mon th s or 1 ~ . 000 mr.tcs wtuc n~'"' ' '' , orr.u ·•, ru ,,l

More People Ride On GoocJ,year Tires Than On ~ny Other Kind

21 STORES
TO SERVE YOU
. .

.

Third fit. - C. Bahr vs. G. Morris;.
P. Mitchvs. M. Chllds; F. thlevs. H.
· Vanvranken; P. Hill ys. H. Hubbard; U. Clark vs. J . Proffitt; J~ .
compton vs. K. Walton; B. Me- .
Dani•l vs. C. Gard; L. Powell vs. P.

426 VIAND STREET PT. PLEASANT

Simon.

FO\Jrlh Ill. - P. Barnett vs. D.
Owens Sr.; T. Bowen vs. J . Fre&lt;:ker;
L. Jewell vs. 0 . Vaughn; 0 . W~rner
vs. A. Strauss; B. ·Conde vs. o.
Owens Jr.; C. Werry vs. L. Schuler;
, . R. Hoce vs. S. Schuler; B. Schuler
vs . . Johnson.

..

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1

•••••••••••••••••••••• DJ

Oct. 22, Huntington Vinson, Home.

JUST RECEIVED! ANEW SHIPMENT
OF 1982 EXPRESSES

~

GO LF SCHEDULE

I

POWER STREAK II

I
I
1

8p.m.
Oct. 29. tronton. Away , 8 p.m.
Nov. 5, Jackson. H.ome. 8 p.m.
Coach- Charles Chancey . .

EKpress~

.

I

varsity Football
Sepl. 3. Bet pre. Home. 8 p.m.
Sept. 10, Point Pleasant, Away. B
p.m.
Sept. 17. Warren Local , Away, B
p.m.
Sept. 24, Wavelry , Away. B p.m.
Oct. 1, Athens. Home, B p.m.
Oct. 8, Gallipolis. Home, B p.m.
OCt. 15, Logan. Away,8 p.m.

Every Friday &amp; Sat~rday Night
9-Pin No-Tap Tournament
Beginning 9:30p.m.

••

Meigs fall ·
schedules..•

.

Coach - Karen Walker .

(Begins Sept. 5, 1982)

YOU WILL NEVER FIND THESE
BIKES AT LOWER PRICES. .ALL
BIKES PRICED TO SELL!!

numbed his shooting arm. He eventually lost his starting job to a pa ·
rade o! veterans, including Len
Elmore and Sa m Lacey.
Dawkins. 25. was the Sixers' first ·
round draft choice In 1975 after his
senior year at a high school In Orlando. Fla.

•••••••••••••••••••••I

··~····················,

Coach - Bob ASh tey .

PH . 992·6614
Saturday 9 to 5
E

University center Mike Gminski In
the first round after trading George
JohnsOn to the San Antonio Spurs
the previous season .
But Gmlnskl, in the third year of
a S200,(XXI per year no-cut contract.
has been plagued by an assor1ment
of Injuries, including a pinched
nerve In his right elbow that

The .Right Tire . .. Goodyear. The Right
Name ... Appalachian Tire. There's A Store Near You!

9a .m.

OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVY, INC.

a multi-year contact before the 1982
NBA Championship Series, which
they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers.
Dawkins' escalating contract was
reportedly in excess of $5 million.
By obtaining Dawkins, the Nets
hope to solve their biggest
weakness.
In 1980, the Nets drafted Duke

Basketball
Association
college r---:------------------'---------------------------------- -- -- - -- - - dra!t and a reported
$700,(XXI cash
payment.
Brown said he discussed the Im-pending trade with club owner Joe
.Taub earlier this week.
"About four or five days ago, Joe
asked me if I would like to have
him, and I told him that was tough
for me to say because I understood
It would be a pretty stl1! financial
commlonent," Brown said.
"He said, 'Well, don't worry
about the money. Would you like to
have him?'
"So I said, yeah but I didn't want
to change the chemistry o! our
team !lY giving up players and he
said, 'Fine. We'll explore it.'
"I was out today and he called
my wUe and got a hold of me and
said we could r'nake the trade. And I
said again that I didn't want to give
up any players. And he said, 'Well.
We're not,"' Brown said.

Ocl. 6. Gall ipolis. Home, 4 p.m.
Oct. 11 . SEOAL Meet at Gallipolis.

EARLY BIRD"
BOWLING SPECIAL

'1

Taub said there have been "dis·
cuss!ons on ando!ffora whlle,"but
when Nets General Manager Bob
Mac.K innon contacted Sixers
Coach Billy Cunningham earlier
this week "there seemed like there
might be an opportunity for Darryl
to come to New Jersey."
The 76ers had signed_Dawkins to

Oct. 4, At Jackson with ,Logan,

11

As low As

Dawkins. who Is 6-!oot-11, 258
pounds, averaged 11 points and 6.4
rebounds last season.
"We're all excited," Taub sald.
"Now we've got the man In the middie we wanted. we think Darryl has
a great opportunity to come In and
help our team in an area where we
are lacking experience. "

I ron ton . 4 p.m.

AM F Magicscore

WE MUST SELL THESE
BIKES BEFORE WINTER!

T he Sunday Times· Sentinei- Page-:--c -s

~~~============~~~~~~~~~~~~====~==~======~- ~

: EAST RUTHE~FORD, N.J.
(AP) - Coach Larry Brown says
·he was surprised the New Jersey
Nets managed to acquire Phlladel·
phia 76ers center Darryl Dawkins
without giving up any players.
: Dawkins came to the Nets Frlllay night in exchange for a firstround selection in the 1983 National

. '

FOLLOW THE LEADER

Pomeroy-Middleport-GalliJJOiis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va .

August 29, 1982

_New Jersey Nets ·a cquire Dawkins from Philadelphia

Stabler sues newspaper, NBC 1975
VB, auto trans., PS, air cond., AM/FM/ Tape, V/Roof .

MIJ!:IU(;AN l.ltAGUE
HAlTING t32J 11 bal! l : W.Wll-'01'1 ,
Ka nsu O ty. .3*4: 'l'ounl. MUwaukfrt&gt;.
.l29; Harnh. C'lfowland. .J'M: Gl. rciA, Toronlo, .Jt8: C.rPW, Catllomta, .316.
RU NS: R.lfendenon, Oakla nd, 10'7;
Molitor, MIJWIU~, 100; YuW1t , Mil·
waukeoe. !JIJ; Evans. Bol1on. !!2; Hamh,
Ck&gt;Yeland, !)}: Downlna.

sr Louis 2. San o~ I
Plltsbui'J!h 3, San Fr ancOCO 'l

.-

Knight, Houston, 152: J .Ray, PltlsbuJ111\.
00. Lo.Smlttl, St.l.ouls. 150.
DOUBLES: T.Kennl'dy . San Dlt&gt;xu. 36,
Oliver. Montreal, J'.l: Kl11ght , HO\IIton, J J;

.:tn

Ill

Ctncl nnarl

GB

73

10

Loll Anj~elel
Atlantll
Sin lJieof,IO
Sa n Frai'IC'Isco

•

RUNS: L..O.Smlth. St.Loub. UU: Murphy. Atbr.nta. 18: Schmidt, Ph!ladelphla .
RS: Sandbe!'$1:. ChkaRO. BG: Oawaon, MonU'f'a ~ fli.
RBI: M~hy . Atlant.a, tt; Buckner,
Chic ago, II!; Ollwr. MoniJ"'"a l, 88: carter .
Montreal, 88; Clark. San Francbro. 86.
HITS: Bw-kner. OUcaao. 162: Oliver,
Montr-.al, 161: Sax, U. An~. I.YJ:

STOLEN BASES. Ralnta. M on tn&gt;al. !!8:
Lo.5mlth, St.Lou.ls. ~ ; Moreno, Plt lll·
b.l.ll(h. ~: WIJJOn. Nt'W Yorll, 4!1; S.ll,
Los Angele1i. t1
PITCHING t ~ Dfdslonst : P.Nitkro,
Atlan ta. 12-1 101. :UII; Candelarta. P1tU·
buf'Rh, 11 -~ . .11!11. 2.58: ftoKt&gt;n. MontrMI.

[ \(&gt;vl'land at Minnesot a
Karuas City at Ch k'ago
lbk!Jirvl at Mllwaulu&gt;{&gt;
IA&gt;trolt 111 Seatlle, t n t

W

314. Kntatu, HousiOn, .:no.

71.

Ca lilurnlil ill Boator.
Tl'~tas at Baltlmort&gt;

-

CINCINNATI - Outfielder Gary
Redus, a three-time winner, and
William (Skeeter) Barnes, a Cincinnati native, have been selected as
Most Valuable Players on Cincinnati
Reds' farm teams at Indianapolis
and Waterbury, respectively, and
will be honored by Budweiser and
the Reds at Riverfront Stadium on
Sunday, Sept. 26, when the Reds play
their final home game against the
Houston Astros.
Redus and Barnes will each be
presented with a Cincinnati RedsBudweiser Minor I.:eague Most
Valuable Player Award trophy and a
-check for $250, along with the MVPs
of the Reds' other four farm teams.
Redus, a ~year-old righthanded
hitting outfielder, is having a spectacular season at Indianapolis, the
Reds' Class AAA farm team in the
American Association. With three
games to go in the regular season,
Redus is batting .321l with 22 home
runs and 90 RBis. He is leading the
league with 54 stolen bases in 59 at·
tempts and has been a major factor
in keeping the Indians in contention

NA110NAL I...EAGUE
BATI1 NG tl20 at bats\ : Oll vt"r, Mont l'l'll l , .11."1; Durhltm, Chk:aJO, .317; Mad·
lOCk, PUtsbUf1h, .Jlti ; Lo.Smlttl , Sl.Louls,

Wtthl
HOME RUNS: MU!l)hy, Atlanta, J1.
KlniP'I\ln. New Yort . :JJ, ca rter, Mon·
trt&gt;al. '11: Schmidt , Phlllldl&gt;lptlla, 'l1: HorIV'r', Allanta. 77: GUPrrPI"'. Los Anat'les.

,\otllw~ukfo;• ~-

August 29, 1982

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

Page-C-4-The sunday Times-Sentinel

PHONE 675-3930
r

�Pa_!!~ C - 6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

4lugust29, 1912 .

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

:s tate/ ational
I

:1 .

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~nnw ~enlind SectiOn D
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CLEANING THE SLATE- Former congresslooal
page Leroy Wllllams, rlgbt, teld a news CGnference
Friday that be bad lied about allegadoDll of

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By OWEN UU.MANN
Associated PreSs Writer
. WASHINGTON (AP) -The French subsidiary of
• :Dallas-hased Dresser Industries Inc. on Friday ap::pealed as unconstitutional and Illegal a Reagan ad. mlnlstrallon order blacklisting it from U.S. tra,de for
:participating In the construction of the Soviet Union's
natural gas pipeline to Europe.
Attorneys for Dresser France asked the Com·
· merce Department , which issuro the blacklist order
•On Thursday, to dismiss the order on grounds that It
; ·was "a violation of constltuional due process and of
: the statutory and regulatory authority of the

: department."

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liRht truc ks and cars requiring
Mac Phe rson Strut corre ction

four popular srze5 to hi most loreren and

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1!!·~~~~~~~~~---~t domestic

HEAVY

bomose:rual relalloDll with congressmen. At left, is
Williams' attorney, Bob Scott. (APLaserphoto) .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Former congressiona l
page Leroy Willia ms says he lied a bout having homosexual relations with three members of Congress because he wanted to focus attention on the page system
on Capitol Hill.
William s. 18, said Friday a t a news conference In
his home town of Little Rock. Ar k., tha t the a llegations. which he lped spark a froeral Investigation,
were " not true. I have lied ...
" Words can never express the remorse tha t I feel
for the pain a nd the trauma tha i I've caused" the
families of those Implicated a nd his own family, he
said.
The ex-page was to give a deposition today to Rep.
Louis Stokes, D·Ohlo, cha irm a n of the House ethics
committee, and Joseph A. Califano, the panel's spe. c ia! counsel. The committee dec lined to comment on
Williams' reveia ticns .
The ethics panel has been Investigating alleged sexua l m isconduct and Illegal drug use a mong members
of Congress.
Earlier Willia ms, who left the page service In J anu ·
a ry, had acknowledged that he failed a lie detector
test given by the F'Bl. At the time he sa id he was
s ta nding by his story.
WIUlams sa id he lied to bring attention to a lac k of
supervision of teen-agers pa rticipating In the con·
gresslonal page.system .
" For the past few months 1 have m ade some very
selious accusa tions," he sa id . " These accusations

are not t rue. I have lied. I regret tha i I have lied. "
Willia m s had claimed he had sex with three male
m ember s of Congress and that he arranged a homosexual liaison between a sena tor and a male
prostitute .
Askro If he knew of any homosexua l rela tionships
In volving congressmen, he said: "The re may be, but
not to my per sonal knowledge, a nd I was not Involved
In it . I knew that there we re suspicions a bout these
types of activi ties ... so, I used It as a tool. "
Bob Scot I of Little Rock, who said he would r ema in
Wllliams' a ltorney. said Willia ms could face legal
problems because of the a llegations. "There has been
no offer of Immunity," Scott sa id. Willia ms In under.golng psychia tric treatment, Scott said.
Willia m s sa id he left Washington after serving as a
page for seven months because of a drtnking problem . " ! was becoming an a lcoholic, and I was scared
of It." he sa id. "All my life I've had to lead a dual role.
I've had to pretend I was heterosexual when I had
homosexua l feelings. "
Willia m s said he admittro lyi ng Thursday while
being questioned a t DeGray Lake near Arkadelphia,
Ark., by two lnvestlgalors for the ethics committee.
"The gentlemen gave me an outing to say this Isn' t
true." Willia ms said. " !' could no longer live with the
fraud."
Las t Sunday. Williams was arrested for public Intoxication a ft er patrons a t a m ovie theater complai ned that a ma n was spitting In their hair.

HOISTING THE PIPELINE - A Japanese-made
tractor carries a West German-made pipe along the
route of the Trans-Siberian pipeline In the Soviet

Union's Western Ukraine r ecently. The pipeline is to
carry natural gas from Sovie t Siberia to western
Europe. (AP Laserpboto) .

Dresser subsidiary
appeals Reagan decision

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Sale

state campa ign headquarters Sunday by having gUbernatorial candidate P hyllis Goetz "snip a swathe of
red tape." The headquarters will be In downtown
Columbus.
-The . Ohio Civil Service Employees Association
called on the sta te Democra tic Party's platform committee to recognize the need for collective bargaining
for public workers.
Arthur L. Evans. the union's executive director,
sa id the party should " get Ohio out of t he da rk ages"
by recognizing that government workers aren't adequately protected "under the myths of the civil service system ."
- Paul Pfeifer, the Republican nominee for U.S.
Sena te, said John H. McConnell w!U oversee fund·
raising effort s for Pfeifer's cam paign agains t lncum·
bent Democra t Howard Metzenbaum. McConne ll is
cha irman a nd founder of Worthington Industries
Inc., _a metal and plastic prod ucts producer .

Ex-page says he lied
about Capitol Hill

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replace or disrupt , current procedures for obtaining
m ortgages."
The Cha mber of Com merce endorsed similar proposa ls In 19'75 and 1981.
In other political news Friday:
--Cha rles R. Saxbe, Republican candidate for attorney gener aL charged tha t his opponent has no
e xpertence as a priva te--attor ney before the Ohio Supreme Court.
Saxbe said a computer check showed that Demo. era! Anthony Ceiebrezze J r . " has never been a counsel of record before the court as a n attorney in private
practice."
Celebrezze, Ohio's secretary of state, responded
tha t he had handled cases before the high court. If the
computer search didn't show them, Celebrezze sa id,
It probably Is because they "were dismissed on
briefs" or otheiWise not argued before the jus tices.
- The Liberta ria n P arty of Ohio said It wUI open Its

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A78xll
878.13
D78xl4
E78xl4
F78xl4
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H78xll
L78xiS

pense of the coll)merclal and Industrial consumer."
the business group said In a bulletin m ailed to Its
m embers .
Backers of the proposal argue that e lecting the
commissioners would ma ke them more respons ive to
consumer dema nds.
In endorsing· State Issue 1, the cha mber said , " With
Interest rates for mortgages a t or near aU-time highs,
there Is an urgent need for the state to do what It can
to ease the situa tion ."
Backers say Issue 1 would a llow mor e money to be
made a vailable, at lower than prevailing Inte rest
rates, for buying, building or Improving privately
owned. multl!amlly housing for the elderly a nd
owner-occupied single-family homes.
In its endorsem ent, the chamber noted tha t the
a mendment would require the lower Interest money
to be m ade ava ilable only through regular mor tgage
lenders . Thus, It said, " the Issue wiU a ugment, not

SJI.OO

F71XI5
G78xl5
H78XIl
L71K15
Plus Fed~ral Excise Tax of S1.4llo S2.79

$65

Price

SALE
PRICE
$33.00
$31 .00
133.00
$36.00

G78xl~

$60
$63

Highway

Extra

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A78k13
87iiX13
C78kl4
D78kl4
E78XI4
F78xl4

Plus Federal Excise Tax of Sl.S2 to S2 .93

Site

PRICE EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT. 4

A OURS

ARE YOUR
Whitewall

By MICHAEL HOLMES
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) - The Ohio Cha mber of
:-Commerce has come out against two proposed stale
·:COOslltutlonal amendments, one that would hike
:;taxes for a high-speed passenger train network and
:·another requlrlng that Publlc Ulllllles Commission
::members be elected rather than appointed.
·: The cha mber on Friday endorsed a third constltu. itonal amendment, which would allow thestateto sen
.· bonds and use the proceeds to help finance hOme
: purchases.
: In opposing a penny Increase In the sales tax to
. finance the high-speed train, the chamber said the
plan is " not In Ohio's best Interest."
The plan calls for a network of high-speed trains
that would link the state's larger cities.
In opposing it, the chamberUity r ates to residential
:customers and who, In fact, are elected by such con·
' sumers, could only lower resldenllal rates at the ex·

·' .Dresser France's attorneys also contend that the
; ;order " Is based -ori an unlawful export control pro• ;gram, one whose extraterritorial scope is not au tho• .rtzed by the Export Admlnlstratlon Act (of 1979) and
: :is contrary to International law."
: ; the attorneys added that the company is suffering
: · "serious, Irreparable harm" as a result of the "IUegal
: : denial of Its export privileges." The company Is being
· : represented by theWashlngton law firm of Covington
: · &amp;Burling.
; : A commissioner In the Commerce Department's
-: International Trade Adrrilnistratlon wt11 hold a hear: ; lng on the appeal, but a date had yet to lxl set, Com-

m erce officials said Friday. The commissioner 's
decision can be a ppealed by either side to the assistant sec retary of Commerce for trade adminlstra tlon
a nd 1hen to U.S. district court .
The a dministration Issued the tempora ry order for·
bidding the export of all u.s. goo:ls and services to
Dresser France after three compressors the company built for the controverlsa l Siberian natural gas
pipeline were loaded on a French freighter bound for
the Soviet Union.
The dispute Is the first stemming from Presldenl
Reaga n's embargo on pipeline shipments to the Soviet Union. Reagan Iss ued the embargo in June to
protest the mllltary crackdown In P oland. The presi·
dent , how eyer, had strongly opposed construction of
the pipeline befor e Polish a uthorities decreed martial
law In December.
The president has been unable to dissua de The Uni·
ted States' European allies from going ahead with
pla ns to help build the $11 billion plpellne In order to
get Soviet natural gas. Reagan contends the pipeline
will ma ke Europe too dependent on the Soviets. However. F r ance, Britain. West Germany and Ita ly - the
ma in E uropean coUJlt rles Involved In the project have signaled their Intention to go a head despite U.S.
disapproval.

lncl• .. •: I
I
IHI•IH, p11d , f ro nl · :~ · ··.-:•"". ' '' ' ".''~~
•pect h~d r~t u l lc KJMII!m,

Government scores
Mafia convictions

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•traale WI~ 1be orpnfzallon. At right photo, John

"Beeble'' een..a,left, wa1kl with bla aiterney David
JlriPIIan Frida)' JIIPt GUIIkle ol Federal Court In
N~ York CJai hiJowluc bla acqulttallu ·the five-week
trial. (AP Ulerpllot.l), .
.

By ARTIIUR EVERETf
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP ) - Four reputed members of the
old Joseph Bonanno crime fa mlly were convicted of
chaTges stemming from the FBI's deepest penetra · ·
tton into the Mafia- an Infiltration so thorough tha t
the undercover agent Involved once was enlisted as
hit man for the mob.
The four were found guilty Friday of a racketeering
conspiracy In which they were charged variously
with murder, attempted murder, robbery and drug
dealing. A fifth defendant was acquitted.
The case presented by government prosecutOrs
was based on Information gleaned from deep Inside
the mob by Joseph Pistone, 43, an FBI agent who took
the name "Donnie Brasco" and the occupation of
hoodlum, thief and hit man.
Pistone; the government's star witness, testlfled
for 5 ~ days. Federal authorities said Pistone's work
represenied the most extensive lnfUtratlon of the Mafia In the history of the FEUII

--------

-

He got so close to the fa mily leaders hip th ai he was
enlisted as a hit man whose mission was lo find and
kill a rival mobster. P istone said he did not sea rch for
the Intended victim .
II took the ju ry 48 hour s of delibera tions to reach a
verdict. Judge Robert Sweet sa id he would sentence
, the fou r men Oct. 6. They face prison sentences of up
to 20 years .
The complicated Ind ictme nt charged the m with the
murders of th ree men In an Internal "family" battle,
a nd with the attempted murder of a fourth man , as
well as bookmaki ng, drug dealing, hij acking an(!
armed robbery .
The ma n the jury set free, John "Booble'' Cerasani,
43, hugged his lawyer when he heard the verdict,
saying later: " Twa,s really surprised .. . I feel sorry for
my fellow defendants."
Convicted were Benjamin " Lefty" Ruggiero, 55;
Anthony " Mr. Fish" Rablto. 48; Antonio "Boots" Tomasulo, 56; and Nicholas "Nicky" Santora, 39.

'$-. ·-.

�Pag-D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

P&amp;merev- Niilldleport-Gallipolis, Chio-Point Pleasant,

_,

w. va .

August29~ 1982

Rebirth includes excursion line
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP ) .,.. As Toledo's downtown waterfront undergoes what some communit y
leaders call a " rebirth," a new excursion ship Is to be constructed
that will feature dinner cruises
along the Maumee River.
The Toledo-Lucas County Port
Authority Is backing a $650,1XXlbond
Issue to l!nance the new boat that
wiU ply the waters of Maumee Bay.
Riverview Excursion Lines Inc.
plans to have the craft In operation
bY April, says Thomas Bourdo, the
company's president. The boat will
be built In Toledo, he said .
The new vessel, named the Arawanna Princess, will be a repllca of
riverboats operating on the Mississ ippi and Ohio rivers. The boat will
be 65 feet long bY 21 feet wide and
wlll accommodate 1lll people lor a
sit-down dinner with a maximum
capacity of 250 passengers.
Bourdo told the port authority's

board of directors that he plans to
run the boat from Aprll to October,
with lunch and dinner cruises, pubUc port tours, sightseeing and char·
ter service. He estimated 64,1XXJ
passengers would be carried
aimually.
Three !Inns - AmShlp dlvlslon
of American Ship Building Co.,
Merce BaUer and Repair Co. and
Hans Hansen Welding Inc. - have
Indicated they wlll submit bids lor
the project. Bourdo said.
In addition to employing 10 full·
time crewrnembers, the Arawanna
Princess wW have six part-tlme
employees . Six other full-time
workers will be hired bY a caterer
to provide food service.
The boat will operate between the
mouth of the Maumee River and
Perrysburg. Bourdo said he Is negotiating with the city for dock space
at the SeaGate dock In the downtown area. The cruises will feature

August 29, 1982

Dixieland ja22 and other music, he
said.
Arawanna n, now In Its 50th )'l!ar
of operation on the Maumee, Is too
smaU to handle large cruises. and
Bourdo said as a result he has bad
to tum away bllslness.
.
Last year. Bourdo obtained a
toot fiberglass cruiser to carry six
people In luxury. Bourdo said then
that he beUeved the yacht would t;,.
popular with executives who
wanted to entertain cllents alq
the 19 mlles of waterway on 1M
Maumee. The price ranged from
$72.50 to $100 an hour during June
and July.
The port authority's resolution
permJts Riverview Excursions to
finance the cost of the vessel with
the authority's revenue bonds, to be
sold on the private market. The
agreement Imposes no t!naOclal llablllty on the authortty, accordlnf to
President John McW!Illam.

HAPPINESS IS CAMPING- Jesse O'Reilly, a 111yeai'Oid cancer pallent, bas a blood sample taken by
Dr. RaodaU Segal-Friday at a camp wbere young can-

cer patients can enjoy olitdoor activities and still
receive treatment!or tbelr IUness. (AP Laserpboto).

Young cancer patients go ·to camp
By DRUSIE MENAKER
Associated Press Writer
BLAIRSTOWN, N.J . (API
Most of their chatter Is about hikes
and fishing, but lhe children at
Camp Gramercy know more about
chemotherapy and spinal taps.
The 30 youngsters are aU battling
cancer and, lor some, the first
chance to snuggle In a sleeping bag
or cUmb on a horse may also be the
last.
The camp, established wtth the
help of a couple who lost a son to
cancer. offers a brielvacatlonfrom
hospitals.
"These kids have been missing
part of the experience of growing
up In America," said Dr. Randall
Segal of Mt. Sinal Hospital, a specialist In pediatric cancer. "They
can't go to camp because In the (ap-

pllcallon) forms , It asks. "Does the
child have a medlcal!Uness 7 " '
The youngsters. who range in age
from 7 to 17. settled Into their bunks
Frtday alter the 75-mlle bus trtp
from New York City to rural
Warren County.
Doctors and nurses from the New
York hospitals where the campers
receive treatment have volun·
leered their · time to act as
counselors.
In the camp Infirmary, a closet Is
llned wtth the most advanced
cancer drugs and a temporary Ia·
boratory Is sel up. Some of the
children will undergo chemotherapy during their stay and one 1().
year -old boy must b e led
Intravenously each night.
"It's a break from the hospital,

and when I'm not at the hospital
I'm just at home ," said Kara DIGiovanna, a Greenwich, Conn., teenager who had a leg amputated
because of c ancer a nd has lost her
hair because of the treatment she
receives.
"This Is sort of a switch from get.
tlng chemothe rapy eve ry week,"
added Pia Navarro, a n 11-year-old
from Hartsdale. N.Y.
Kara, Pia a nd the ir friends are
frank about the ir !Unesses.

&amp; Auction

·CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - AJ.
though the first patients for Ohio
State University's "test-tube" baby
program haven't been selected, officials say the mother probably w!U
be under 40 years old and will undergo "some minimum psychological evaluation."
OSU officials announced Friday
that they would begin an In-vitro
fertilization program. commonly
known as "test-tube" fertilization,
In October or November. The program is designed Io help women

who cannot otherwise become
pregnant by fertilizing the mother's
egg In a laboratory and then
transferring It to the womb.
Dr. Moon H. Kim, who will direct
OSU's "test-tube" program, said
the mother should have irreversl·
ble damage to her Fallop,! an tubes.
The world's first "test-tube"
birth occurred In England in 1978.
Kim, a professor of obstetrics
a nd gynecology, said the first parents for the OSU program have not
been selected. But he said hundredS

Local Briefs:
Peck sentenced to prison
POMEROY - James Russell Peck, 21, Rt. 1, Cheshire, was sentenced to six months to live years In prison on multiple charges In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Peck was remanded to the sheriff's custody a nd wW be transported to Columbus to serve hls sentence.
He was charged with two counts of receiving stolen property, one
. count of breaking and ente ring and one count of sale of drugs, all
fourth-degree felonies. According to a bill of Information !Ued bY
Prosecuting Attorney Carson Craw's office. the break-In charge
came from Incide nts at the Ca ndlellght Inn and a drug sale last
March.
In other matters. Carl Eugene Bowman. 54, Dayton, waived extradillon before Judge John C. Bacon and wlll be sent back to Florida as
soon as officials arrive.
Bowman was arrested by the shertfl's department Thursday
while working at a Middleport garage. He was sought bY authorities
In Palm Beach, Fla. , In connection with attempted murder and
aggravated robbery charges.

of couples have asked to be considered and that the university has
Identified what It considers the
best-quaUfled 15 or 20 among them.
Kim said only married couples
wlll be considered and has ruled out
the use of "surrogate" mothers or
fathers.
OSU physicians want to work ·
wtth women under 40 to minimize
chances of complications ~t blrih,
Kim said. And both would-be p~r­
ents will be subjected to what he
termed "minimum" psyc hological
tests.
Kim said the pare nts of OSU's
first "test-lube" baby may not be
Identified.
"That depends on what the parents want, " he said. "Some do not
want to talk about it. It's going to be
very much a personal Issue."
Mary Sauer, president of the Columbus Right to Life chapter, said
she opposed the program because
she said It would allow Imperfect
babies to be aborted and the possible destruction of fertilized eggs In
the laboratory .
Kim said, howeve r, that eggs are
discarded only after physicians determine that fertilization has failed.
U a couple chooses to use an amniocentesiS examination to determine whether the baby Is
developing nonnally, Kim said.
IIley may do so. And he said OSU
officials will cooperate it couples using such exams decide to abort the
pregnancy.

Calls squad

Registration dates, places set
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla County Board of Elections will hold
branch voting registration from 2· 7 p.m. during the next two weeks
at the following locations:
Rio Grande Elementary, Aug. 30; Green Elementary, Aug. 31;
GaUia Academy High School (In Ubrary), Sept. 1; Hannan Trace
High School, Sept. 2; Southwestern High School, Sept. 3; North
Gallla Hlj:h School, Sept. 7; Kyger Creek High School, Sept. 9; Clay
Elementary, Sept. 10.

Band boosters to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla Academy Band Boosters wW ineet In
the band room at the high school at 7: ll p.m. Monday, according to
Rod Tolllver, band director.
Fall activities will be plannect. he said.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Emergency Squad went to 158 S.
Third Ave. at 6:00a.m. Saturday
for Unda Baker, who reportedly
had difficulty breathing. She' was
laken to Holzer Medical Center.

lngood condition
POMEROY- Elizabeth Davis Is
a patient at Camden-Clark Hospllal, Parkei'Siluri:! w .Va., where on
A11g. 25 she Underwent her second
blp Implant operation performed
~ summer. ~he Is reported to be
good condition.
.
Cards may be sent to Room 404, '
Fourth Floor. Davis resides on
Rose HW,
Pomeroy.

near

Bro. Racine picture . occup. Japan and other knick knack, sleeve iron, Jenny Lind walnut beds, small
library table, set of gold plated silverware made In
Thailand service for eight, smok ing stand, tobacco •
1Press. oa.k &amp; walnut chairs, collection of tea pots,
pitchers and glass bells.

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

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPtEMBER 4, 1912
10:00 A.M.

Ji!len~. _ nx36

·--

~

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tl~ .. -

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. ............._..
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f~.M"«

JIM CARNAHAN
Phone 949·2708

.... ·-

air compressor .

MISC . &amp; OTHER
1963 Cadi l lac, sold for parts, runs good , CB radios. 2
SchOol bu s seats, 31!2 sq . of shingles, large dog
· house, 1974 Chevy Impala, runs good, 2 tour ft .
levels. new square 0 breakers, skillsaw, small fan,
Midland C B base unit with D 10.4 mike, fishing rods,
small coleman camper stove, 45 lb. bow, J l/:2 h.p., 2
cy c le motor with mounting bracket lawn mower, 5
appl iance te sters, lady 's lS I/2 in . Bonnie Saddle, pr .
new 14 in. studded snow tires. 20 in. bicycle, socket
set . grinder, vise, ice cram maker , cabinet style
stereo with AM -FM 8 track and record player, Deer·
slayer shotgun, sever a I gallons of interior paint.

..

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-

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

The following described
items will be offered for

public sale on the premised
of
BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, NA, Court &amp;.
Second Streets, Pomeroy,

Ohio, on the 7th day of Sep·
!ember. 1982. at 10:00 A.M.

3

Public Notice

The Birds are Coming,
The Birds are Coming.
Keep· watching this paper
seller reserves the right to for opening date.
reject any and all bids.

double guard diamond
r'ing . Items may be sold in
units or parcels and the

(81 29. 30, 31 , (91 I. 2, Sic

In Memoriam

In Memory of Merrill "CuoiJ" lm
pet, who poaed IWIJ 5 JUIS ljO,

Public Notice

Aut.16. 1977.

PUBliC NOTIC

be offered for public sale
b~
BANK ONE OF
POMEROY , N.A. to the
highest bidder on Salur·
day, September 4th, 1982,
at 10 :00 A.M. Sate will lake

(8) 29, 30, 31. (9) 1, 2, Sic

But when we lost our f1ther,
We lost out dtalest liiend.

Sheppard .
675·4595 .

Irish Setters &amp; German

For par1 of IIJ went with him,
Tho day Ht toot him hom~
.
Sid~ mlatd by wit~ drlild~n

aod Jtanddrildten.
Announcements

SWEEPER

and

sewing

machine repair, parts, and

supplies .

Pick up and

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Card ot Thanks

To each and everyone
who sent flowers, letters, cards and phone
calls while my stay in

Huntington
Cabell
Hospital. Food brought

in, visits to my grand·

mother during my absence and especially all
the prayers shall .never
be forgotten.
.
Gratefully, Mrs. Ken·
dati Deckard and
Family.

Georges Creek Rd.
446·0294 ..

Call

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAl
Professional

Electrolysis

Center. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor

referals,

pointment
6234.

only.

by

ap-

304·675·

Golf
lessons . John
Teaford. Chesler, Ohio.
Finally

Kittens. 304·

Openlng·Capco.

collectables,
r--------,...,l Antiques,
used · furniture a.· ap·
pi)ances . Something for
everyone. 9:30 a.m. -4:30
p.m. Mon., Wed., Fri.
Other times bY ap·
polntment. Buy-Sell-Trade.
527 Fifth St., Ivan Powell
Res.. Racine. Oh: 614·,49·

2485.

F and E Gill Shop. All
prices cut through Sept.
Syracuse, Oh.
' Come In and R'eglster for
Squlrrei Tall Contest.
Spring Valley Trading Co. '
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·
8025.
. BallOons ior Birthdays &amp;.
-Get Well, Anniversaries,
sweet Hearts or Parties.
·call Balloons &amp; Co., ~­
.cJ1,3.

I

4

Giveaway

does not otter or attempt to
offer any other thing tor
sale may place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser. :
Found gold &amp;. while kitten
in vlnclnity of Sup~r
American, Gallipolis. C111
.w6·262'1.

I

part

German

BUilDING FOR SAlE OR LEASE-See Owner
TERMS: Cash or Chock with Proper 10
OWNERS: John J. Allison&amp; Muriel J, Allison
Sale Conducted By
McGHEE AUCTION CO.
Auctioneer: Mr. "Bud" McGhee

5 while kittens . 614-94' ·

2732 .

8 6
lost and Fovncf
Cookapoo &amp;. 5puppies about FOUND Golden llama
6weeks old. Call 446·0770.
mat~ in the Spring Volley
are. Call Animal Sh~tter .
6·six week old puppies. 614·245·5880 . .
Evenings-614-985·4212.
weeks,

Shepherd

male,

1 female

PUBLIC AUCTION
··

1 week old Beagle puppy
light colored E lkhound. 1 named J&gt;ee·Wee, lost early
year old, gentle. Make good Thursday
morning 22nd st.
night hunting dog. 614·9'12·
Jerico
Rd.
area. 30-4·675·
7650.
.
582'1.

the

From u. s. Route SO, turn Westattopof hill by road- :
side puk, East ot Guysville, follow Co. Rt. 53 abOut•
6 mites to Carthage Twp. Rd. 112 cDutch ltldwe:
Rd.), 110 abOut 2 mitis to the home of Norman.
Midkiff. The followlnl ·w m be told;
.
FI\IIM EQUIPMENT: 4·wheet wagon. New H91tan!1'
"Super 66" bater. John D,eere hay rake on rubber,
International hay rake on steel, Tandem disc.
!;ylllpacker,lratter type ma~ure spreader, side hill
plow Chorse drawn!.
TOOlS: 100·lb. Anvil, pipe disc W' to-2", pipe cut·
ters, pipe vise. metal work bench. bench vise and
hand tools, tog chain.
.
,
OLD ITEMS: Gas Servel refrigerator, 5 gal. milk
can, 10 gat. milk can. platform scales. beam seales,
rocking chairs, old stands, oak clothes closet, •old
chest (cherry), dresser (Cherry), old wardr~
(poplar), Iron bed, treadle sewing machine. 121 otcl
cupboards.
OTHER ITEMS: Kenmore dryer (dOeSn't work),
Deep Freeze !doesn't work), wringer washer, Vz HP
electric "!''ior, sausage grinder. davenport. chair,
straight chairs, lampe, TV, wood bed, dishes. 20 g.ol.
eqUipment greaie, 30 . lb. drum whftl bear IIIII,
grease. pols, pans and many lither mlscitllaneous
Items. ,
Food served by the Alfred UMW
,.
OWNER-Norman Midkiff
TERMS: Cult-Check with positive ID .
'
Not respons11111 for acct-fl..
i
ilucttoneer-Lioyd Dillinger
·
Rt. I, Slllde, OH.-PH.
61Wt6-1269
.

.

.

odds

Yard Sale Next door to
Country Carryout, Upper

Rt. 7. Fri., Sal.,&amp;. Sun . lots
of Tupperware.

ton Blackhawk floor jack:;, large chain hoist,
heavy duty swivel bench vice. 4 sets of jack ·
stands .
·
.
.

HAND TOOlS AND WRENCHES : Blue Point tap

and die set, double flarring tool set, .. adjustable
reamer sets; easy outs, grease guns, t'tacksllws,
hammers, chisels, screwdrivers, combination
wrench sets- both open end and box end, reverslble ratchets. 112 Inch to l!.. inch drive ~fs, torque
wreni:hes-1" pd to 600 ft. pds, all featuring Arm·
strong, Bluepoint, Cornwell, New Britllin, Proto,

numerous to mention.

,

This will be a rare opportunity to purc~ase -It
cared t~r equipment and tools "' auction. Cal Ills

' ot shop equipment and, toots around.
OWNER -CALVIN SANDERS
PH. 446-4798
GEORGE E. WOODWARD, JR.-AUCTIONEER
, .t46•94U-JJ9•2597

121

1

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH POSITIVE I.D.
Not Responsible For AccidenJS"

HOME -

7 yrs.old, ex·

Ladies needed for pleasant

good paying temp. office

work, gas allowance. Apply
in person on I y (no phone
calls) to Mrs . Carter room
18, Econo· Travel Motet . 9·

9:30AM. Tues. Aug. 31st ..
sut·roiJnoiS this
older 2 story home. 3 bedrooms, living
room, fam iy room or 4th bedroom.

General

dining room. kitchen. I bath. utility
N 178

niture. small appliances.
dishes, clothi ng, drapes,
curtains, bedd ing, linens,
Si l verstone pans, toys,
knives, tool s, lamps, misc.

tO

Need more Room?
This lovely new contemporary 4 bedroom home is
available for your needs . It offers vaulted ceilings,
oak cab inetr&gt;y, finished family room , garage and an
acre of ground at a very reasonable price and 1er
m s. For more information or an appointment c,all :

OH!
bath home . With lving , dining and
family room space . Convenient to shoppin g and Holzer Medical Center. A few
m inutes drive from Gallipolis. Priced

BilL CHI LOS 992·6312
or
CRAIG SWENSON 1·593·5571

in line, $51 ,900.

Real E1ta1e- Gener1l

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066
Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408

PRICE REDUCED on

is lovely bi·

level home located near the hospital.
Amenities in this home are 4 bedrooms.

I full and 2 hall baths, kitchen is com·
plete, dining area , liv ing room , family
room, 2 car garage and an enjoyabl e
sun room
# 156

sale . Small home and 37 .38 acre s. Ap·
prox . 82 3 lb. toba cc o ba se. Home con·
si sts of 2 bedrooms, livmg room ,
fir eplace . 1 bath, large k itchen, add ed
room to back and pa r t basemen t .

NJ J2

GREAT BUY - Older 2 stor y home a nd

Pleasant.

.84 acres of lawn . Home consi sts of 4
bedroom s, large kitchen, dining room.
l iving room , 1 bath, utility and smal l
room on the back . Listed at 525 .000 and
possibility of a land contract.
f/137

Yard sale Fri. 27th. 5 to 9;
Sat. 28th, 9 to 9; Gallipolis
Forry across trom Beale
School.

"STOP-READ"
WE HAVE SOME GREAT BUYS THIS WEEK .. .
DON'T PASS THEM UP IF YOU ' RE IN THE
MARKET FOR HOUSING ... !!!
SPE Ct AL-S PEC IAL-SPEC IAL-S PE ClA L
2 acres of ltmd, with 12'x60' mobile home plus a con·
crete block building, plus an old farm house . All for

ONlY $10,000.00.
ASSUMABLE 10% LOAN on 3 BR home located
a tong Old Rt. 7, Lower River Rd .• 1 3/8 acres with
mobile home s ite. Buy now for $32.500.00.
OWNER HAS REDAJCED the price AGAIN on this
1112 story home in Vinton . Assumable V .A . mor. tgage, small monthly payments include faxes &amp; in-

YARD sale, first lane on
left past Gallipolis Ferry
Post
Office .
Mens,

surance : Price was $37,500.00, Now$29.500 .00.

womens,

sevices, county water, qualified buyer"ftlay assume

childrens

ng, mosc . Monday
30·? from 9·?

Rick

Public Sate
&amp;Auction
Pearson, E~ ­
' AUCTIONEER.
antiques,

farm,

Licensed Ohio30~·

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community ·
Center. TrudiiOIIdS of new
merchandise every - k .
Consigmenll. of new and
usee! merc~andlse always
welcome . , ' R lch1rd
R@ynotds Aucnoneer.' 275· .
3069.

REDUCED to $40,00 for

H 122

North 41h olde r 2

s~ory h_or:ne . Some r emodelin g with new

Monday , Aug . JO. 9 a.m . to

go .

SPECIAL -

one week . Remodeled Victorian home
located on upper Rt . .7 . L arge lot . 3 car
garage, natural gas heat. basem ent . 3
or 4 bedrooms, 2 bath s, fir epla ce. Check
thi s one out soon.

MIDDLEPORT -

2 p.m . 510 29th St . Point

Clothes and m isc.

N146

RCSREALTY

family ,

- - - - -- --Saturday , Aug. 281h, 2814
Birch Ave . 9 Iii 1:00.

N 179

This ISO acre Rutland Twp. farm has an older 3·4

s. Portland Park on 124.
Mon ., Tues. , •Wed. Emerson Johnson.
810 s . second, Middleport.
July 30 thru Sept. 4. Fur·

bui lding whi ch could be used as apart ment or commer c ial. Home has 2
bedroom s, 1 bath, livin g room. dining
room and kit chen. Older 1 car garage
and a good bu y pricee in the $20's.

bedroom home w ith barn and several out buildings.
Oil/gas is prevalent in the arell . Some marketable
timber. approximately 50 acres of tillable ground,
and an anxious seller, all make for a golden op·
portunify for YOU .

3 fam 1ly yard sale. 1V2 mil.

been in business for many years in the Gallipolis ·
area and mai.,tains one ot th~. most c:omplete set.

'i

sct1oolls.

FAMILY

ceptional neighborhOOd. Meigs Coun ty.
Orange Twp. features 5 bedroom s, J
baths, 3 shower s. family room , living
room , delu xe kitc hen. large deck. two
car ga rage, corner lot. So much more!
Pri ced lo se/1.
1/ 138

11 __ _ t:~e!P_V!_arlt~d- _ _

room and cellar room . Home in process

t.u .

large line of body shop

auto parr. and tools. Many. many mor@ items too

,.

Real Estate -

Back to school yard sale
plus more. Former Tupperware dealer clearing
stock . p ;,. miles north New
Lima Rd ., Ru t land . Sept .

,

equipment, log chains, snow chains, shop manuaJs
from 1935·1975. boxes Of nuts. bolts. washers. large
new diesel truck parts, new auto parts, antique \

'

Good used cann ing iars. al l

s izes. Call614-388·9354.

centenary Toen House Rt.
141, Sept. 2 &amp; 3. Furn iture,
dishes, baby items. Lot s of
ieans.

lots of glassware new and
old . antiques, all kinds,
furn . and lots of misc. mer·
chandise. Everything must

8· heavy duty Black and Decker flexible disk grinder
• and sander, sandblaster. blacksmith anVil, two 1'12

•'

Clothes, furniture,
and ends.

: tachments . A irco Combination Burner and
" Welding Oxy·Acetyline torch outfit, Weidenhoff
: ·volt and amp meter tester, 6 volt full size battery
• charger, 800 lb. Sioux 3!.. drive poWer wrench with

.

SettBIERS

OON ' T OVERlOOK OPPORTUNITY
- to see this excellent ranch only
minutes from town . 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, new kitchen with island, formal
dining room . 2 car garage, central air .
Plus 2
of nicely landscaped lawn .

Invest In your Future

1 day only Sunday. 312 5th
St. Pt. J&gt;l. 30 pairs jeans,

'r

ElftpiDifMEAI

Pleasant, Rt . 2.

filly teet of hose. dryer and oiler-all like new. 7"

}..'
·,

in good running condition.

Call 614·992·7880 or 9'12·
7165 .

of bei ng res tored .75 acre lot .

• armature lathe. 10 ton Porta Power and at·

·snapon, and·Wright.
MISCEllANEOUS:

Want to buy a good 318 or
340 Oodge motor. Must be

everything, Thursday &amp;
Friday, 8 miles from Pt .

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1982
10:00 A.M.

•
:"
•
·
'

desk~

REDUCED $8,000 a nd priced for quic K

• Air compressor , 2 HP motor, 2 HP pump. P&amp;H
: amp. arc welder . welding rods and cable. Full size
• Sioux valve refacer . .Black hardset grinder, KD

SATURDAY, SEPT. 4- 11:00 A.M.
RT. 1, GUYSVIU!, OHIO .

Real Estate - General

typos . Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 9'12·
6370 ,

Beacon

Vinton Full Gospel Church
Rummage Sale Sept. 1·2-J .

YARO sale,

The following items will be offered for
sale, located at the residence of Calvin
· Sanders, 225 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
: Ohio. Watch for signs.
: EQUIPMENT AND POWER TOOlS: DH 68 Auto.

·FARM AUCTION .

'
----+-----~----------:----'----~-_:_:__---~~--

Eastman film reader with Hotpoint parts film,
billing machine, large amount of metal shelving,
Thor elec tric hammer, ten t ier Rot·a-bi n pipe dies.
cutter reamer , volt ometer. red tester, ovenf heat
tester, refrigerator temperature tester, volt am·
meter, one appliance dolly, sweveral 4 wheel
dollies, one Chevrolet service van with built-in
metal shelves, a few ladders.

Border

Baby si tter in my home.
Re fer ences requ1red. Must
be over 18 . Cu ll illter 9 p.m .
or bef or e .:1 Middlepor t
area. 614 ·992 ·6233

silver, old money, pocket
watches, cha ins. rings, and
etc . Indian Artifacts of all

wanted To Buy

9

LOST ·· At

Bundy Clarinet, $150. Call
446·4676 .

EQUIPMENT: McCaskey electr ic cash register,
largo typing desk with typewriter and desk tighl,

1·3 yr. old long hairl!d,
white female cat. Colt -146·
0747.

--·-~-----

Earn $195.75 week l y, w hile
worki ng in your home. Part
t im e or tun time, no ex·
perience necessa r y. Com·
p l e te deta il s and ap·
pl ica ti on se nt on request.
Please send a SASE to J . T.
Po st Of f ice Box 294 .
Cool vi ll e, Oh

necessary . Also need ladies
;~=~~~E~C=l;=:~~~;,~=~~like
. No
experience
with work
car tor
light
delivery

Yard Sale

Hotpoint mobile dishwashers and compactors. One
Hotpoint Microwave, Hoover spin dry washers.
Hoover 120 volt dryers, a few Sylvania color TVs, a
few Amana Radaranges, living room suites, plat·
form rockers. recliners. swivel rockers, some
; stereos, end tables, pictures, lamps, electric
. heaters. small appliances, radios, decorative light
bulbs, a Tappan built-in gas oven and surface unit,
springs and mattresses, double bowl cabinet sinks,
lighting fixtures and much, much more .

ANY PERSON WhO has
anything to give away and

Kittens. gray&amp;. yellow. Call
614·245-9244.

Collie pups, 3 months old,
very pretty and make good
pets. Call 379·2134.

Gocllnew ht h•• to Jmt ·~
But he ilidn't 10 atone.

3

4

Two black

But time so f1r has Mlr prowetl,
How ~nuch we miss you yel

500 Ea~t Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 :
1979 Chevrolet 1h ·ton
Pick·up

ter 4.

SIX ·week·old puppies.'part

Th., .., time huh Ill sonow.
And heltn us to IOtltl.

place on the premises of
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.,

PUPPIES. half Beagle,
half mi xed. 304·675·5897 of·

Wh1t is home without 1 fathef,

All thinp this wcrtd may Stnd,

The following vehicle will

Giveaway

4

PUPPIES , 304-675·5826.

Eastern Standard Time.
Terms of sale : Cash .
One lady's d i amond 2engaQement ring, and

Terms of sale are cash .
Seller reserves the right
to bid and the right to
reject any and all bids.

Announcements

61 4 698 ·7111

iron , brass. or wOOd. Kit·

value. 985·3839 .

Located at 213 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH .
EVERYTHING MUST GO- NEW MER·
CHANDISE
DEALERS WELCOME
HOME FURNISHINGS: Several Hotpoint ranges.

, . _ ..... ,...,CIII'O'til,. l

.. t ............... ..... ,

now

col lec t .

complete household . Gola.

man inside . Reward if
found or any of the con tents. No questions liSked .
Contents are of sentimental

SATURDAY,SEPT.4,1982
SALE STARTS AT 10:00 A.M. SHARP
ALUSON ElECTRIC COMPANY
IS GOING OUT OF BUSINESS

tM-- ....... _
,,___._
..,..__
....

...

til- ( -

~

•"'""'fQYo-0
, . . ,.. ..., ,o,,.
"' "'•"''"'"
""""'"

....

, _ L_,~

Ca ll

and bookcases. Wi 11 buy

Fuel oil stove. old wi cker ·baskets. 1 bedroom
suite. oak wash stand, old picture frames, glass
door safe, pink depression glass, pie safe . Maytag
washer, 1 book ot old post cards, china cabinet, elec ·
tric nmge, odd tables, 1 oval trunk, quilts, 1 ha lf
bed, stone jars, old crocks, refrigerator, 1 dinette
set, old irons.
.
Auctioneer - Col. Bill Ohlinger
Lunch will be served .

black wallet belonging to a

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

....... ,.._

Se t you r own hou r s. Sell
A von. (Must be 18 or over) .

OLO FURNITURE , beds,

SATURDAY, SEPT. 4- 11:00 A.M.
THE ESTATE OF MRS. AMELIA ROACH
HARTFORD, W. VA.
HOUSE AND LAND

1973 2 too 710 lnle rnational llalbed dump truck. 306

__- _,__,_..... .._.._
_,_
-·-·-

AVO N. Need ex tr a money?

ber Shop, Middleport . 992·

PUBLIC AUCTIONS
"ANTIQUES"

A Poll and chain saw. complete set of harness. smal l

- - u . wv

1/ AviO •..,.,.

/ W ( _ .... , ... ._ . ...

Also hiriDI uemonstr1ton. Ca I

tree 1-800-553 -9071.

Tables, round or square.

ga l. fuel gas tank , 1972 Ford 1h ton pickup truck (flat
bed , 302 motor) , several assorted boxes of nails,

,_

IO A~IO P •rl • l. A&lt;&lt;r'"" ''"'

peritnct neciiSSiry. Cit and phone
nHded. Gifts, lop, home decor.
Ho inwestment.~.. deii"IJ· c~l ettinl.

3476 .

Wood ice boxes. Old

FARM
1948 Ford 8N Tractor . rototiller. space heater. 300

file

ATIENTION HOMEMUEASI

MERRI-MAC netds ...,,., SUplt·
visors in this area. P1rty plan e1·

chen cubbards of all types.

Wooden three piece dining room suite. old bottle
capper , old German front door (with design). 2
wheel antique scraper (approx . 80 yrs.oldl , hardl y
used , made in Ohio.

teleplwrte e..c.\e"Ke.. . .

r ..... '"""'""

, , .. c:r.o ......

to ...

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

......... . v ...........

·.. \40.

~ ...

v- • •wo

... . .

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

~

\/_,

-

II TriiC O\Ior
11

~

.. . ..,,....,e.,,.,....,
.................
ll " '' '

,,,.,.._,
,...............
..
,....... .,..,.

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

............... ,•..

11_1.,.\olo
)] -

''I)'''~"
""P "''""''
' "" ..........

-\6 ,....... . .

ntoer

It----------,

Gold. sil ver , sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·

Not responsible tor accidents or loss of property.
For Sale by Owner: 9 Room House, must see to appreciate.

HOUSEHOlO

AVAILABLE

Write : M.O. Miller. Rl. 4, __ _ _ _ __ _ _: . _ - : - - - - - - - - - - - - ; - - - - - - - - - Pomeroy, Oh. Or9'12·7760.

flower arrangements, m i rrors, Presto electr ic grill ,
Walton jogger and misc. exercise equipment .
Owners, Mr. and Mrs. James S. Rees, Sr.
Eats- Cash - Positive 1.0 ,
Auctioneers :

18 Cubi c ft . deep f r eeze, dining room suite, bedroom
suite, two pi ece liv ing room suite , padded chair,
swi vel desk chai r, couch and love seat.

POSIT ION

Help Wanted

Superintend ent.
Gal li a
County Board ot Mental
Retarda t ion and Developme n t
Di sab il it i es .
Qu alif ica ti on : Meet ce r ·
tifi cation st andards for
Sup er i nt e nd e fft.
On i o
Departm ent of M en t al
Ret ardati on and Deve lop·
Di sabili t i es.
m ent a l
(Master degree essen t1a l l.
Re spon sfbi l i t ies
Ad ·
min st er
day
to day
op eration
at
sen nces
provided by the Boar d.
Salary negotible. Avail able
immediately . Cont ac t Mr .
James Holl ey , Vice Chair ·
man , Gallia Count y Boa rd
of M ental Re t ard ation and
Developmen t Disab ilit ies.
P .O. Box 14, Cheshire, Oh
45620 Appli ca nts shoul d in·
hi s t o r y ,
e lu de w o rk
ph i losophica l
r es um e,
stat ement. tr anscr ipt and
cop ies of cer t 1f ica t ion.

furr1iture , gold, si lver call614 ·992·3505.
dollars, wOOd ice boxes.
stone jars, antiques, etc .•
Complete
households.

MISCElLANEOUS

CAN SMITH
Phone 949·2033

I1

BEOS· IRON . BRASS. Old from 10 to 6 p.m. Please

wool carpet, baby bed,

2 good motorcycle seats, small pasteurizer, dned

Due to sickness, the farm chattels of Fred McNeal
will be sold as listed. Coming from Gallipolis on
State Rt. 141. go to the 11 mile marker at Gage and
on lett s ide - coming from Waterloo, go through
' Gage on State Rt. 141. and it is on the right side,
coming from Rio Grande, fake 325 to 141, turn left
and on right, watch for sign.

, _.,!M iorlo,..

~-

I OWJ .. , ....

~u,

au.;fjeG ,_.,.

uct
,.., , • ..,.. r..,...,.....,
·· -~

consider
full
grown ching my two son s. ages 2
Registered
or
non and 3. This position would
reg istered. must be good also include som e light
with children. Call .w6·7541 house -keeping . Th e hours
if no answer keep frying .
are Wed . and Thurs . from
11 to 6 p.m . and Saturdays

large Ashley Imperial wood b-urner with thermostat
and fan, Panasonic 8 trllck tape player &amp; misc .
Small appliances.

Stat ion in Pomeroy, Oh .
Tan Ladies purse with

n-."l
....
JJ P•OI•"-''-"""

Wanted Hunting Bird dog .
Wanted·an enthusia sti c
Puppy preferred. but will woman interested in wat ·

HOUSEHOLD
tures. misc.

Products. 304-675·51&gt;81 after
4p.m.

dleport, Oh.

black ). pressed. cut. Hull . Fenton &amp;. Ruby glass.
wicker basket. milk botlles. 1892·1935 books, Ellis

949·2708

Cash
Positive 1.0.
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property .
Lunch served.

ltN•~·o ' V Io ( eR o"''

-~

Little Wizzard Dietz railroad lantern, J .C. Hayman
plate &amp; other collector plates. carniva l. depression ,
Heisey , custard , crystal , milk glass (white, blue &amp;

Jim Carnahan

OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION
AUCTIONEER : LONNIE NEAl-(614) 367·7101

l(o&lt;e
.. ln"""' '""' '"""""'' '
(~·~ ....... , . ..... '" ......... .

Also

Distributors Needed : Aloe
Vera · Forever Living

Sales Counter man for
We pay CliSh tor late model Home Cen te r . Must have
exper ie nce in hardw ar e
clean used cars.
and building materials . ApFrenchtown Car Co .
ply in person at Valley
Bill Gene Johnson
Lumber and Supply in Mid ·
.w6·0069

Couch, r ecl iner , West Bend humidifier . Gibson
refrigerator, large round rugs, lamps, stands, pic·

ry - - - -

a val table .

P.O. Box 102. Henderson ,
wv 25106.

Co.• Spring Valley Plaza,
446·8025 or 446·8026.

picnic basket. stone jars and )ugs, buffet server,

"Not responsible for accidents or loss ol property ."

the wet pavement, went off the
right side of the road and struck an
enbankment. .
Another single-car accident occurred on Ohio 7 at 8:50 a.m.
According to the patrol, Jennifer
L. HarrisOn, 22, Cheshire, was
southbound when she lost control
on the slick pavement and struck a
bridge. Her car was slightly
damaged.

Silver .

coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale. Spring Valley.Tr8ding

buffet, chest of drawers, rocker , iron bed, wicker

CASH - POSITIVE 10
Dan Smith

quotes

stand, round dining pedestal table with 2 leaves,

Cncket Ca r , 1970 Ford 'h ton. 1970 Honda motor·
cycl e, chai n sa ws, shotguns and rifles , wood stove
used 1 yr ., new wa tches and r adio, chrome break fast set, doub le bed, hide·a·bed , barrel end tables
and mo re to be consigned .

949·2033

Gold,

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

Oak hall tree with marble top. drawer and umbrella

1975 '• len Ford Pi ckup. 1978 Ford Fiesta . 1972

number to : Job Placement .

Buying

ANTIQUES

m

===
.. ........ o-.......

evenings.

MOVING FROM A 9 ROOM HOUSE TO A SMAll
HOME, SO MUST SELL THE FOllOWING.
LOCATED ON STATE RT . 124 IN RACINE, OHIO.
ANTIQUE OR COlLECTABLES

Located on St. Rt. 124 in Syracuse, Ohio
,a t D. J 's Trading Post.

"People In the neighborhood are
scared to go on Kinsman," said Duward W. Prewitt Jr., whose family's 30-year-old dry clean1111
business on that street was robbed
of about $2,1XXJ worth of clothes earlier this month.
"Customers are scared," he said.
"We've got a lot of old people In the
neighborhood and It hurts."

GALLIPOLIS - Two weather·
related accidents were !nvestl·
gated Friday bY the GaiUa-Melgs
post of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
A car driven bY BObble Fout, 52,
J ac)&lt;son, was slightly damaged In a
wreck on U.S. 35 at Ohio
early
Friday morning.
Fout was reportedly eastbound
at 7: 15 a .m . when he lost control on

- - z -_:g

«6·315' or 251&gt;· 1967 in tho Write qualification&amp;. phone

.10:DG A.M.

MONDAY, SEPT. 6, 1982
10:00 A.M.

The ~unday Times-sentinei- Page-0· 3

niture and Antiques Of all WAITRESS . maids, bar ·
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, tenders &amp; clerks wanted .

SAT., SEPTEMBER 4, 1982

35.

w. va .

9
Wanted To Buy-- 11
Hetp w
- a-nt_ed___.
WANTED TO BUY Old fur·
- -="'-'=="-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

Public Sale

8

Two accidents reported

ADMITTED Hazel DUes,
Pomeroy; Kathy Robinson,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED
Ma r e
Ketchka, Timothy Eynon.

~~-·-"
•G·-•••

Guidelines set for test-tube cases

But she and other business people
In the neighborhood "onder how
much longer they can survive' the
Increasing violence and drug crime
on the corner.

Veterans Memorial

l

" We're very honest wt th these
kids." said Segal. "They know the
names of their diseases. they know
It Is serious. Some have seen their
friends die . These kids are happy to
be around.

Three bullet holes In the shop's win·
dows stand as grim reminders of
the event.
"I would like to stay here," said
Ms . Coleman. 60. "This IS my busl·
ness. I've been here for 20 years."

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,
8

Residents reclaiming street comer
CLEVELAND (AP) -In recent
months, most of the stores within
100 feet of East 128th Street and
Kinsman Road have been robbed,
burglarized and vandalized. But
residents say It's time for them to
retake the corner from the criminals who have- made It their turf.
"It's a whole cllmate of fear,"
said neighborhood poUtlcal leader
Mack H. Clemmons. "They're firIng Uke It's Dodge City, and sooner
or later somebody's going to get
killed."
Several weeks ago, a 72-year-old
man was shot to death bY a group of
men as he stood near Irene Coleman's beauty shop on the corner.

'

3 BR RANCH STYLE HOME secluded but close to
land contract. price $40,000.00,
RENTALS:
1- J·BR ranch style home, Rodney t I
2-2· Bedroom apartments, adults only, no pets.
3 BR HOME in Gallipolis. new renovated, new I.a .
gas

furance,

new

water

tank,

new

kitchen,

fireplace, new kitchen, new bath. Lot size 42'x170'.
Buy now tor $25,000.00.
·auY A BANK in Vinton and convert itto a njcesolid
home with large parking area. Brick construction.
$53,000.00.
'
1 RM. HOME in Gallipolis with modern garage
Buy to live in and investment.

;apartm~nl.

SEVERAL MOBILE .HOME, priced froll'l $7,500.00 .
Wood Really, Inc.
32locust 51 .. Galtipolls ·
446-!066 .

VInyl S1d1ng, new roof, new fv r nace, and
n~ w storm wind ow s. L . r oom . 0 room,
kit chen down and J bedrooms and ba th
up . Separate l car garage.
hl 70

LAKESIOE HOME pr iced at $26,000
Home has 2 bed rooms, main ba th
livin g room , utility roo m and ni ce big
lawn w ith ch ain l ink fence L •vc year
round or summ er fu n in th e 5un

' 152

SMALL FARM - 25 1I J acres. 2 story
farm home , large ba r n, r oo t ce l lar and
1,075 lb . tob acco ba5e A I5o inc Iudcd is a
LOVELY VIEW of the river and priced tractor. wagon , busn hog ilnd wood
under $30 . This 1112 story home has 3 burner . Li sted in tne $30' s
I 127
bedroom s, 1 bath, kitchen and living
room wi t h fireplace . Part basement LOOKING FOR A BA RGA IN ? Then
and 31h acres of land . L,.ocated on look no furth er . 42 acres, 5 room co l·
Honeysuckle Lane.
tage. Dug w ell . Mos tl y w ood ed Morgan
H124 Twp Rock botTom pr1 ce
If 130

NEW LISTING .$11,000 - For only HIGH AND DR Y
Mode rn 7 room
$11 ,0:00 you can .own our own 3 bedroom house, onl y ei ght yea rs old 1 obac co

mobile home SltU~fed on .51 acre. Ad- barn and base. Pasture and wooded
ded 12x24 unflmshed room . Rural acres Township road, well m ai ntai nwater . Secluded location .
ed Harr ison Tow nshiP Must sell.
K 171 $50.000 .
w157

SUPER LISTING - Price and terms
will sell this attractive 3 bedroom ran· PRICE R EDUC E D! s1o.ooo
ch. Full basement vinyl siding . Large
flat lawn . V\lifhln walking distance to
store and post office. Priced in the
SJO's.
H102

u .ooo .

R ead ~ to take over. Just hookup the

c lectr• c. 2 acr es, mo: e or less. ~ood
1-:vel fenced loT. Poss1bl e owner tman -

c.ng.

PRICE REDUCED to $22.900 on tn is
welt maintained home in Rutland . 2.AND CONTRACT -

H99

Will sell com·

bedrOOO"S, living room , family room or nerci al metal bld.g. w•tn low down
formal dining. bath, enclosed porch ..ayment and low 1nteres t rate. Bldg .
Basement. Nice lawn. Storage building . Qx48 metal Var co Pr v~e n . l acre of
Da•~nable terms.
:md. M . H . hook-up sept iC tan k , covnty

"SOMETHING SPECIAL"
. " '04,ater aod approx. 8 miles from town .
b 1k 3
Beautrful
_, 71
r c ' bedrooms, 2'1~ bartls family

room · with fireplace, sunke~ l iving BEEF CATTLE FARM ·- May never
room, formal dining room wood· buy cheaper! 169 acr es more or less.
burner, formal entry. Central ~lr &amp; in- Modern far'm home, central heat, run-

lerCOI'Tl

system. Oouble car garage &amp; ning w~ter, 2 barns, tobacco base, 30
2,4()0 sq. ft. living space City acres fill able, pasture, woods, wafer.
· 113 Blacktop road. Walnut Twp.
1120

"""'"'

�•

Page-0 -4- The Sunday Tomes - Sentonel

Pomeroy- Moddl e port- Gallopolos , Ohoo-

1J

serv1 ces for f1re 1nsurance
coverage 1n Ga llla Coun ty
for al most a centur y
Farm, home and personal

phcattons

proper t y coverages ar e
available to meet •n
d•v •dual needs
Contac t
Foster L ew1 s, agent Phon e
379 2204

for

Manager

and

Manager

Trainee

postt10ns Interested persons should send Resume to ·
Bo x S-29

c-o Pomt Pleasant

R~1 ster

200 Maon 51. Point Piea .. nt, WV 2SSSO
1~

D1rect Sa tes A thens and
Me1gs Co H1 gh pay and
bene f tts
Ex c e ll e n t
tra•n •ng Ca lt Cliff Myer s
at 797 4168 Mon day or
Tuesday 9 10 a m tor •n
terv1ew

HELP WANTED
RADIOLOGICAL
TECHNICIAN

Immediate Opening for
Radiological
Tethnician.
Full or Part Tome.
Send resume to :
Veterans Memonal
HoSpital
115 East Memonal Dr.
Pomerov. OH
Ph 614 -992-2104
Good l rmg c be r~ e flh E quill Op
portunlty E mployer

Sch~~~ n s tru_c t •o n

Kara te th e ul t1mate rn self
defenc e all prrvate lessons,
Want ed someone to stay M en, wome n, &amp; ch rldren
w •th elder ly lady. 6 n1ghts a 1nst ruc t1 on thru black be lt
week Ca II 446 3548
Also ava rlab le Karate
un1form s puchr ng and
A ttentron
RN 'S Pomeroy k rckr ng bags and protec
Jerry
H C C now has openrng for fr ve equ•pment
&amp;
Assoc ra tes
full and part t rme R N for 3 Lowery
143
to 11 and 11 to 7 shrfts K a r a t e Studro,
Upgr aded sa lar y and Sh ift Burlrngton Rd , Jac kson,
drffercntr al Contact Nancy Oh Call6 14lB63074
Va nMeter drrec tor of Nur
song 6149926606

HUNDREDS Part trmc at
Home Webster , Amerrca s
popu lar drctr ona ry com
pa ny needs home work er s
to update loca l m ar l rng
-----lr sts Easy work Can be 1_2__~!~ tron ~ Wanted
done whrl e wa tChing TV
All ages No ex perrence Wr ll take care of elderly
per son rn our home on
necessar y Ca ll 1 716 842
f
a rm,
good
cou nt ry
6000, Ext 9041
cookrng Go out 160, turn on
second road on rr ght 0 J
WHITE RO , go I mile lo
Charolr as Hr l ls Lak e, house
tnmmed m prnk by l ake
Wrll do baby sr tt1 ng m my
home Can piCk ch rldren up
at your home 614 742 3061

1B

Wanted to _Q_~

Lawn Mowrng no ya rd to
b1g or sma ll R e l• t~ Oi e and
dependable For es tr mate
call 446 3159 aller 6PM 156
1967
Trash coll ec tron &amp; hau lrng
Call446 4480
Spec ral Made Wcddrng
cakes ar reasonab le prrces
L arge or sma ll , no
problem Ca ii61A 388 8482 .

Will do baby srtt rng rn my
h ome
Re f erences
available M1dd lepor t area
Ca l l992 6349

ROOFI NG oob ca rpentry ,
etc Reason able r ates, 304
8B 2 137 4

w oul d trke to do house
cleanr ng Wrll do baby s•t
trng rn my hom e Have
good ref erences 614 992
6556

August 29, 1982
31

==:J lnantla!

__ l~sur~~c!

SA NDY AND B5AVER In
su r ance Co has offered

Local Ladies Apparel Store •s now accepting ap-

Poont Pleasant, W . Va .

WORK
wanted , car
pentry,block, roof pa rntr ng,
304 B95 JJJB

21

Bu srn ess

Oppo!tl!n_!!.Y_ __ ~

a.

House 13 0 acreage
76 SALE or rent, 4 room
Massie Ferguson 23o' a nd house, bath, utrlrty room ,
In ground concrete pool on equ1pment Call 614 367- 5175 00 month, Henderson.
2 acre lot A Iso has a J bdr 0194
Deposit, 304 675-4359
a rr cond •t•oned house w1th
full base ment, 2 WB
f rreptaces, new ca rpe t
Real Eatate - General
Would con s1de r tower
va lued property rn t ra de or
wri t frn ance w rth tow down
payment and 10% rnterest
Loca ted 123 Ga rfr eld Ave
Call446 154ll

31

Homes for Sa le

TUSSEY MOUNTAIN LOG
HOME S Inc \f.Je are a fast
growrn g Pennsy lvan ra log
hom e compa ny , We have a
few pr otedt ed areas &lt;coun
frcs) open fo r dea ler s If
you have been wa ntrng to
be rnvo lved rn log homes
and ca n sell , do you rself a
fa vo r and call or wr rte me
for an appomtment Mr
James Br own, Exec v P
of
Sales,
Box
48 8,
4 room house, large lot,
s roneboro,
Pa
16153
mrnor repatrs needed
Phone 41 2 376 3076
$18,0000 Cal l after 3 p m
304 675 7689
OWNER F IN A NCING w1th
reasonabl e down paymen t
f or ag 1ng down t own TW O stor y bnck, 6 rooms ,
ltreplace &amp; ba sement , new
r es t auran t
n rce
at
mosphere , good l ease gas f urnace 121 1 Ma rn Sf
agreement, super locat1on 304 675 238 1
w1lh parking unt rm tted
potent1al , need to sell •m
House and 10 acres of land
med1a tety as owner has
Sale or ren t
Newtey
other busrnes s mterests,
remode
led
2
room
s and
n1ce drscount for cash
4
room
s
and
bath
bath
up,
buyer , for rn format10n ca ll
down New gas furnace and
304 515 3055 or 523 7277
gas hot water hea ter
Loc ated Mulberry Hgts ,
Pomeroy 614 99115CB or
i2
Money to Loan
ca ll co llec t , Columbu s, 444
B601
REF INANCE or pu rc ha se
you r home 30 year fixed
r ate wva &amp; Oh1o Leader 3 bed r oom bnck home,
Mortg age, 77 E State St , garage, full basement
Fenced tn bac k yard in
AI hens, Dh 614 592 3051
Tuppers Plams 614 667
3288
Professional
Servrces

23

C&amp;L Bookkeep ing
Bookkeeping &amp; ta x servrce
for all types of busmesses
Carol Neal
446 3861
PIANO
RUNING &amp;
REPAIR Ca ll Boll Ward tor
ap po tn fm e nt,
War d's
Keyboard , 446 4372

HOU SE M eaqowbrook Ad
drt1on, 3 bedrooms, f am rly
room w rth frre palce, cen·
tral atr, basement, phone
304 675 1542

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

NEW LISTING - HER !! IT lSI II you have been
lookrng for approx rmately 20 acres of elbow room
for huntrng and firewood and a new three bedr oom
home w1th unusual desrgn then here 1t 1s Rustrc
st yle with upper desk off marn bedroom Large
foyer with sunken planters, lots of closet space ,
wood burner , two ca r garage with attic storage, JUSt
off bypass, two m1nutes to Pom eroy Owner ask 1ng
562,000
FARM - LONG BOTTOM - Approxima tel y 71
wooded ac r es w/ newly re modeled three bedroom
home, new vinyl sidrng , rn sulated, new two ca r
garge Askrng $5.5,000 or owner wrll se ll house,
garage and small acreage seperate
ASSUMABLE LOAN - Jlh story frame home w rth
three bedroom s, fam1ly room , ga rage wrth stor age
above and on a good street on Moddleport $29,900
OLOE R HOME - Needs some r eparr but has two
la rge lots, fou r or f 1ve bed rooms. basement, could
be a rea l n1ce home for S20 500
RIVER VIEW - A two story frame home wrth
seve n r ooms, eqVtpped k1tchen, full ba sement. and
nrce f ron t porch $32,000
REALTORS•
Henry E Cl eland, Jr , GRI
Jean Tru ssell
Oottre S. Turner
Offrce

Lov e l y
re m ode l ed
3
bedroom home, basement,
fenced backyard, ca rpeted ,
Stded, storm wtndows, near
sc hoolS 304 675 4338

[H
REAlTOR

1-

Real Estate - Gener al

Real Estate - General

992-6 191
949 2660
992-5692
992 -2259

August29, 1982

Homes for Sale

J2

MODERN
J bedroom
house, Patriot Star Rl .
Green
School.
Full
base ment Ca l l 446 JO.OO

CLEAN USpo ' MOBILE
H 0 M E $- • . K E S S E L ' S
Q UAL1T Y
MOBIL E
HOME SALES , 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIPOLIS , RT
J5. PHONE 446 3868
1980 Wondsor 14x70, new
cond Delu xe kitchen, large
living r oom &amp; bath, 2
bedrm H1dden ut1l. room
379 -2310

Three bedroom home, ap
prox
3 acres m Mer
cervrll e Cal' 446 7428
Newer 3 bedroom home, 2
acr es, c rty schools, patio,
woodburner, b.1se ment,
n1ce porch Ca lr 446 2663

Kirkwood 12x60 mob 1le
home, 2 bdr , new carpet
Crll614-367 0327
1977 Wmdsor l4x70 all elec
tri c Call446 9681

For sale by ow.1er erght
rooms , two baths, new
modern k1 t che n !dish washer, disposal, stove and
refr rgera tor) , two blocks
from down town, across
from GAHS Shown by apPOintment onl y Call after
6PM , 446 2999 or 446 62ao.

1981 Mobile home 52xl 4, all
electri c, 2 bdr , $8,700. Call
446 -9JOJ, weekdays afte r
5PM
12x 12 It add a room ·Car
pet, baseboard hea t , c loset ,
well rnsulated Can serve
as addit ronal bedroom Call
W -3547

•Mobile Homes
for Sale
1971
$6,500

USED MOBILE
576 2711

HOME.

]21&lt;21
fl
add a-room
B.byvtew W!ndow infront,
niiii'TJ ca rpet, dry wall
basebo~rd hea t Can be
used for a fam1ly room or
large bedroom, or dlv1ded
to serve as two bedrooms
Caii446-J547

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
L1censed &amp; rnsured Call
304 576-2711

12x65 Champ10~ 2 bdr , new
carpet, arr cdnd, r econ
d1troned &amp; clea ned, par
tielly furn , set up on r en
ted lot, askmg 56,500 Call
446 -4491 afler 5

Must sell 12x50 deluxe
Freedom on rented lot. 2
bedrooms, all electnc,
relocat ,ng $5500 304-576
2154

1973 Baron 12x60tolal elec,
2 bedroom, washer and
dryer, ce n1ral arr , awning,
underp1nnrng, pract rc ally
new ca rpet though, one
pwner Call446 4192

Real Estate - General

~;;;;.;;.;;~;;~~~;;;;;;~;;~;;;;~;;;;;;~;;J. ..~~~~~ ....~ ............................ ~ ..........I..I·I······I..I..I..I

WISEMAN REAL EST ATE AGENCY· tQ

1973 2 bdr , gas, large
awnmg, under-f)innrng Can
sta.y at present loca t1 on.
Call 446 7065 af ter 4PM or
614145 5324 Ask for Steve

REAL~OR~

PHONE 446-3643 .
Ike Wiseman, Broker, 446-3796 Eve.
Jim Cochran, Associate, 446-7881 Eve.

1973 HOLL Y Park, 14x68, 1
bedrooms, central arr, all
electnc, se t on half acre,
304 675 3025

R. J. Hairston, Assoc. 446-4240 Eve.
Clyde Walker, Assoc. 245-5276

FAIRMONT mobile home,
in Ravenswood, 14x70 wrth
8x2S expando
A ntenn a
system , stereo &amp; other ex
tras $11 ,500 or bes t ofler
Call Roch 9 6 at 614 267
4948
TWO mobile homes
sale, 304 675-6512

BEST BUY IN TOWN 1 YR
WARRANTY - EnJOy a shady Jot, nice
burlt '" krt chen, f am i lv room or forma l
dmong, 3 bedr""iiillll\\ firepla ce, ce n
tol,._-o rel axed a t
tra l a1r K1d'
mosphere
n a 2 car
garage, w! 'lf\l'" , ~.~rapes and cur
tarns Nat gL .. .. eat and floored attic for
$65,000 - Owner frnancrng available
Call Ike W1sem an

01'"
t.t't\"'ll

$5,000 DOWN PYMT. - EXCELLENT
OPPORtUNITY
Affordable
payments to qua lrf1 ed buyer Ma1n
tenance free 3 bedroom ra nch located 3
m11es from town on Rt 141 Has full
basem ent (could es rly be frn1 shed) ,
garage &amp; flat yard Prrced f 1rm a t
$42,000 Call J1m Cochran

RT S88 - NEW LISTING - SpaCIOUS 3
bedroom ranch rn an excellent tocat1on
rn c rty sc hools has full basement,
f amrl y room, f rrepla ce, 16' master
bedroom , J111 ba th, garage, carport plu s
40 'x60'x l 5' hr gh burldrng w/ 20x40' at
fil ched shed (Excel lent tor tra ctor
t r ailer wor k) all loca ted on l'!.r ac res
$60s Ca ll Clyde Wa lker

I
I
1
I
I

CHANCE OF A LIFETIME RE SIDENTIAL , PROFESSIONAL OF FICES OR BOTH - Attra ctiVe 2'1'
story, 12 room house on 2nd Ave '"the
heart of the profes~t'.. ""~a l bus 1ness com mun1ty ln c lud PG_\~'- • ns, 2'h baths,
full baseme1 ~" ~:,\.~ garage Top
Qualtty ca nst ('.t\,~ ·"t'len burlf and
good ma rnte n ~ ~"'V rakes thr s a solrd 1n
ves tm en t A ,, afel y atmospher e rs
prov ided bY the lar ge room s, hardWOOd
floor s, frr cp l aces, etc
Ca ll
Ike
W1 sem an

13 AC - 3 BEDROOM HOME - 2
mrles from town you frnd thr s very n1ce
home wrth barn anti ~""'er outburldrngs ,
- th e rest has
about 1/ 2 the hou
been compl ete
.._,..._ rn exce llent
l aste Nat gas,
,ew beautiful
kr tchen w rth at ,... dnces Children can
have horses , cattle or any other farm
actrvrt y and strl l be a crty slicker
S69,SOO Catlike W1seman

t'En

\.\S,\"'ll

WE WILL
HOM£ IF WE CAN'T
SELL IT. !Qualified
Homes).
BUY ON MARKET - MAY
- 9~% owner
is available on this 1700 sq. ft.
ranch In city school dist:
e~ ~;~~~~e:2 baths, large family
spacious kltche'n &amp;
l!!inling
gara,ge &amp; '12 ac. yard.
.,,,,,.,.., Cal Jim Cochran.

~~!1~~I1~W/OPTION

!

: 1

$4,000 DOWN PAYMENT CITY
SCHOOLS - Ver y nrce 3 bedroom ran
ch in La Sal le Crrcle off Rt 14t Has
large roo m s, eq urpped kitchen, bath off
master bedroom, garage &amp; over 1!2 acre
ya rd w/ ga rden ara Assumable VA
mgt W1 th 54,000 down S40s Ca ll J 1m
Coc hran

or -.

bedroom bri ck ran ch th a t has
everythmg Thr s top qua ltty home of
fe rs hardwood &amp; teak floors, som e new
carpet, superb decorat rng, 2 baths, 2
I ~re pla ces, forma l d1nrng, f am1t y room ,
deluxe krtchen , full b asement, plu s ex
cept1onal !a ndscap.n g, and l ar ge
heated pool Much more Call J rm
Cochran

118 1ST AVENUE A PLACE
Romantic vi ew all day tong but espec ially rn the
evenrng wrth the moonbea m s r efl ec t tng ott th e
Oh1o's npplrng waf ers One of the best locations m
town and one of the fme older homes rn town th at
dates back to &lt;~round 1840 The owners spent 8 man
th s r emod l• 'tng , repa1rtng , re butldrng &amp;
r edecorat rn g ( Has new r oof , floor s, beautrful 1oak
krtchen, 3 zone H W hea t1ng system , wrring, 2 new
bath s, etc ) T he owner s took employment out of
town and have pnced thr s property les th an what
have rn rt Catlike Wr seman for more rnto

160 - ATTRACTIVE
- JO yr old qua l1ty home
loca ted 20 mrnutes from M etgs M1nes
Thrs home offers 4 bedrooms, f~repl ace,
large k1tchen, form al d1ning, full
basement, sc r eened porch, carport &amp; 1
acre landscaped yard $63 ,000 Make us
an offer Ca l l Dan Evans3BB Bill

30 ACRE MINI FARM JUST
LISTED - Older 3 bedroom hom e
w/ equ 1pped kr tchen, woodb urne r , and
lots of shade tr ees The 30 ac r es has
14X48 toba cco barn , 10X I 6 she d, 1100 lb
toba cco base, 5 ac r es crop, balance rn
woods Mobrl e home sr te Only $3 5,000
Call Clyde Walker
LOW INTEREST, SELLER FINANCING - 509 MAPLE DRIVE - You can
walk to th e stores, t heater &amp; stlopprn g
from thiS home just off Rt 35 Qua o1ty
neighborhood and a f1ne 3 bedroom
home Has a deluxe krtchen, 2 full
baths, basement, has large family
room w/ bar &amp; firepla ce Nat. gas, c:ent
arr, 2 car ga ra ge, large deck &amp; corner
lot 560s Call ike W1seman

,,

2
MILES
FROM TOWN Family sized 3
bedroom brick &amp; frame ranch In good
nei ghborhood. Has fiHiy equipped kitchen, fireplace, full basement, family &amp;
rec . room, 'garage, d~k. nat. gas &amp;
cent air SS3 000 Call Jim Cochran
·
'
-

-

CEDAR BI -LEVEL - ASSUMABLE
MTG. - Ntce 3 bedroom home rn K C
Schools Thrs 7 room home offers a
deluxe built in k 1then, d1nrng room ,
family room , firepla ce, 2 baths, 2 car
gagarage &amp; large wooded lot Low rn
terest frn anc 1ng Ca l l Clyde Walker

ASSUMPTION - 1.5 MILES
NORTH OF H M C - Family SIZed 4 bedroom
bnck ranch located leS&gt; t han 1 mile off Rl 160 Ha s
equtpped krtchen &amp; d1nette, f amil y room rs l ar ge
and has n1 ce frrepl ace full basement rs partrally
ftnrsh ed, and also has workshop Utiltty room and
kttchen, ov er 2 acres of land 1n nr ce wooded settmg
Pr~ ce d 1n S60s Call Clyde Wa l ker

Ill AC. FARM - POSSIBLE LAND
CONTRACT - Approx 50 acres crop,
50 ac pasture, balance rn woods 4,000
lb toba cco base, 60x90 barn , 24x38 barn
&amp; 18x65 stlo Concrete floor tn barn
w/ approx 4,000 sq . ft. concrete loaf1ng
area Hrgnway tron1age on Rt 775 Also
very nrce 4 bedroom hom e with pool
Call ClydeWalkerformore 1nfo

l

WATERFRONT
PROPERTY
LOCATED IN TOWN - Very attractive
home at edge of town with ' stone front
This hbme has exceptional decorating,
4 bedrooms, l'h baths, full finished
basement, 2 f~replaces, nrce kitchen
w/breakfa st nook, insulation, H/ W gas
fired heat, &amp; garage Must see to appreCiate 569,500.
ll'l 2% MTG ASSUMPTION

- Energy effocoent, qualoty buoll 3
bedroom, marntenance free ranch 1ust 2 miles west
of town You wtll love the care thr s f1ne home has
had Inc ludes 2 stone ftrepla ces, 2 ce ram1 c t 1le
baths, wde approved k1tc hen, full;b ase ment. famtl y
room w/ bar, new eff1c1ent nat. gas furnace , 2 ca r
ga rage plu s large cover ed porches &amp; 20)(40 rn·
ground poo l Ca ll Jtm Cochran

JUST LISTED - AI
tract rve 3 bedroom
home 1n Fatrf1eld Acres
I mmacu~~\l)JSekeepo ­
ng,
g, ~\J
main
tenan ce t. ee sid1ng, tan
dscaped, fl ~ t yard on
corner Jot. Proced at
$45,000
NEW ON MARKET House &amp; 2 acres in town.
Older 3 bedrnnm home
with lots ..nU)racler, 2
fireplac~ ~~u1pped kitchen, full basement &amp; 2
car gar9e, Will finance
at low interest. $38,000_

SPRING VALLEY Very good quality, top
nelghborhoo1 ,
3
bedrodm b• ~ S) ranch
wlfull baste:,\\\;. Has 2
baths. dinl1 4, ,.eq,, kit chen, fireplace. 2 car
garage &amp; possible loan
assumption $67,500.
CAPE coo W/POOL Charming 4 bedroom
home in a fi" • Rt 35
neighbor~,;.\\\
2 11&gt;
• baths, laot~m, full
basement, oversized
garage plus 'in-ground
pool &amp; lounge area. $70s.

10 ACRES- RT 160 NICe 3 bedroom, 2 balh
home in e.cellent condition Har ;.n• rt1 room ,
equipped ~;JU\.11, 2 car
&amp;
h
garge
o~ouc
more.
Land lays excellent for
part time farmng,
$39.000,

EXECUTIVE RETRE AT- Over 3,000 sq. ft.
brock resodence w ith
over 3 acres~··
ing
holts &amp; va,
~ excellent areio ""' can't
d
lbe h" ho
escr
I o_s
me - In
this ad, yoU JUSt have to
see for yourself. Over
$100,000.
-

NOTICE
Lowest
Prices
Ever

1
-1 MILE SOUTH OF RIO
GRANDE - Attractively remodeled &amp;
redecorated 3 bedroom bnck &amp; frame
home on Rt 325 Has fam 1ly room , 2
baths. large dtn1ng room , Fla room,
full basement, woodburn er, 2 car
garage , plus some ntce roll rng land with
600' h1ghway frontage, sleeked pond,
lar')e barn and several frurt trees. Call
B J Ha orston

on
New..,14' Wide

MOBILE
HOMES
$9,995 .00

t-11!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

OUR PARTNERSHIP MORTAGE
CAN GIVE YOU A 4% DISCOUNT ONYOUR INTEREST
RATE FOR THE FIRST 5 YEARS. ·

for

4~1---'-H"o"'
u.=se=.:s:.:f_::
O:__
r "R_,
en
:.::l:____

2·

or 3 bdr house In Eureka
Dep requ~red Caii6 10561413

-------

5 rms &amp; bath, adults only,
no pets, Bob McCormick
Rd Ca ll 446 2650
Attract1ve 4 bdr . home 10
ci ty, full ba sem ent, fully
ca rpeted, $300 per mo Call
446 1323
Coun tr y
sett1ng , c1 ty
utr l tties
Beaut1ful
3
bd room w1th f~re place,
tully carpeted Just off
Rt 7 P1ne Tree Drive, Tup
pers Pla ins, Oh10 SJOO. per
mo plus utilities, deposit
614 667 JOBS
You ' ll love th 1s 14 acre
farm tn the country wrth a
pond andsmal lbarn. Th1s2
bed room brick home os
only 2 miles from downt~"n
Pt Pleasant Will
vn
sognayearleaseatS450per
month 304-675 -6276
4 room house, Camp Conley
$140 month 304 675 1371 or
304 675 3812

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

42

Eureka riverfront 12x60,
turn . 2 bdr . adults, Ref &amp;
dep, $160 Bx30 furnoshed
Ca lli 643 2644
nat gas neat,
clea n, Rrverv1 ew Call 446
1602

OUR BUYER PROTECTION PLAN
WILL HELP YOU SELL YOUR
HOME AND PROTECTS YOU
AGAINST COSRY REPIUR BILLS
ON 9 MAJOR COMPONENTS IN
YOUR HOME.

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
Wtth 2Locat1ons
Rt.93 North
Jackson, Ohto
286 -3752
or
Corner 2nd &amp; V1and
Pt . Pleasant, W Va
675 -4424

TRANSFERRED - Thrs 1mpressrve
brick &amp; stone home Is located in town
and offers over 2,000 sq ft of livtng
area 4 bedrooms Ccould be 5), new car·
pet, Buck stove I save$$$ on fu~l bills),
h w gas frred heat, equ1pped k1tchen,
d1nrng, fam1t y room ,2 baths, plus 9'11%
mtg
As sumpt1on
All - for $42,500
(owners are not fooling around) Call
Ike Wrseman

33

40 acres, 6 rm house and
barn, toba cco base on St
Rl 218, 7 112 miles from
c1ly Call614 245-9122
207 acre fa rm on Me1gs
County for sale Land con
tract ava1lable $16, 000
down , 12% interest,
mineral rrtes included, no
~ouse Call614-388-9346.

REDUCED TO $49,900- LOCATED IN
RODNEY - A charming tudor ranch at
a barga1n price Has J bedrooms 116'
master bedroom w/ private bath),
f amrly room , woodburner, 2 baths,
equopped ko tc hen, 2 car garage and '12
acr e yard. Over 1400 sq ft of com·
fort able llvrng Call ik e W1 seman .

'For sale Farm, 207 acres
Land
contract avaolable. $16,000
down, 12 percent 1nterest
Mrnerat rrghts inc
No
·'house Call388 -9346
1ln Parker Run Rd

·142 acre farm near R1o
· Grande, house, but ld ings,'
: ·mmeral rrghts, w•th or
.without livestock and
equopment, 614-446-2599

OWNERS WILL FINANCE - LOW,
LOW INTEREST !..... CMtners anx1ous for
an offer on th1s 4 bedroom ranch near
town
Has equ,pped k1tchen, full
basement, huge famtly room , ftreplace,
l 'h baths &amp; gar age Nat gas heal &amp;
large yard
Cochran.

Only $44,000

• '"28 acres, toba cco allot
. ·ment, mrneral rights, no
- "bu1ldmgs, SB.SOO Call 304: -675 6851

Call Jom ·

18 ACRES &amp; HOUSE LOWER
RIVER RD. - Stately 4 bedroom, 2
story home 1n crty schools Has 2 wood·
burners, family room . equ1pped ktf·
chen, 2 bath's, 2 car garage and 18 acres
wooded. Wotl sell l]ouse &amp; JV, acres at
reduced proce Tota l price for all
561 ,900 Call Clyde Walker

- •Min' farm in Letart, Wv 14
acres M· L, 2 story, 3 br
~frame home, vinyl siding ,
storm Windows, all elec :lrlc, whole house carpel,
-fireplace
with
wood ·burn,ng, capable of heattng
entire home, rural water,
garage, out budd1ng, Far' mall Cub tractor w 1th
, .equipment. 304-895-3652

5 LOVELY ACRES -

OWNE
FINANCE - Very affraclive lo&lt;:~tion
near Rio Grande on City School
The 5 acres lay e•cellent for horses &amp;
cattle. 2 outbuildings. The 3 bedroom
home has foreplace. LR, kotchen &amp; bath.
Call Clyde Walker. $39,900
1

SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOLS 18
ACRES &amp; NEWER HOME - Located
off Rt. 775 ~ear Raccoon Ck. thos 2
bedroom home Is 3 yrs old and needs
some fonlshed work The 18 acres is
mostly wooded with over 1,000' Iront~e- Nice garden area and 2 sheds .
S 000 C II Ci deW lk
'
- a _Y
a er.
RT, JS - Well kept brick home located
near Rodney on Rt. 35 l bedrooms,
woodtfurner, .new bath, n - roof in~"
sulation, attractive decorating, garage
w/workshop, storage building and9WH,
mi. assumpiton. $49,900 Call B . J . Halrston.

r•1111•••••••............... ,...,........._......................................

Farms for Sale

'OUR' INTERNA·
TIONAL REFERRAL &amp;'
RELOCATION SYStEM.
CAN'T BEAT IT.
TRY

• Mini:farm in Letart, WV ,
14 acres M -L, 2 story, 3
- bed&lt;oom frame home,
• ;vrnyl siding. storm won , d9VfS, all elvclassified ads
(

,•_•••••••11!1

11!111""'. . . .~. . - . ._'1111!. .

Business Butldings

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2 acres. Panoramic top of.'

the hill view of Big Bend of

'

SELLERS' LOSS IS YOUR GAIN Aulllenllc old b~lck ranch located In
town with a kitlg's view of trio city and
Ohio River Valley, yet close enough t o
walk to downtown ,;orea . .Has a large
beautiful family room with fireplace 2
full ceramic baths, beautiful decorating •
and excellent care &amp; 2 car g•rage
OWners moved out of, state and,doslres
quick' Nle. Celli ke Wiseman,

34

1

• Ohio River in Pomeroy .
Utilities, ~ew 2 car garage .
,Extras. Will consider land
• 'contract. 614-992-6254,

!

'

·' - - - -,-------'--~-Building tots.· Radne. 614" Ut-2571
'
-

.

" CHOICE IOifor sale, Triple '
Estates, New 1-i_aven, call

:r
• 3114-lf-2651,

Household GoOds

Oon'l hnt SIO,BOO, S7,800 01
"'"$1,000? Coli Chotlts Dannn
606-6214413 colilcl todlt 01
loll lilt l.all0-147-S995 foo I
""Curtis Homos CJ!Jiol 11o
down f)IJIIIont roqo~rtd llld ,..
don't lmt to
lot Coli

t...t-!
;;-,no'

own,..,

we ur rn when otflm

OUR CONSTRUCTION
CREDIT IS 12.5\
44

Apartment
for Rent

4 room unfurnished apt all
ca rpeted, utllitoes paid,
adults only no pels Call
446-3437
.

2 bdr tra11 er '" country
Ca ll 61 4 256 6813
2 bdr. mobile home rn crty ,
ref &amp; dep req Ca ll614 256
1921
2 bdr mob1 le home for
rent Call 446 4292
12x60 2 bedroom un
furnr shed mobil e home rn
Cheshire Water , gas fur
mshed, heal ed by N gas,
$200 per month Call 446
4229
12 x60 1 bedroom un
furn1sh ed mobrle home
New carpet, centr al arr , on
Rl J5 N gas Call446 A219
2 bedroom t r a tler Rea l
n1ce, adults only . Brown 's
Trailer Park, Mrnersv 1lle
614 992 JJ24
Furn1shed
2 bd ro om
mobile home, ut1l1t1es rnc
Ad ults only or tamoly with 1
ch1ld 2 m1les out St Rt lAJ
Pomeroy Call after 5 61.4
991 3647
Traile r rn Rac1ne 2 or 3
bd room s L aundry room
Nr ceyard l n qu ~r ea1 topof
M a 1n
St
Racrne,
Ohoo Doug Warden

2

trail ers 1n Tuppers
Plams $160 month You
pa y ut olot1 es 614 667 3487

1 bedroom mobr le home,
a~r

condrtion, all utrhtres
furnrshed, outskrrts of Hen
derson 304 675 6730
furnr shed
2 bedroom
mobile home $185 monlh
304 675 6512 .
2 Qedroom house tra1ler
$150 month plus ufllt t 1es
304 675 4088
TWO bedroom mob1le
home. kitchen furnished,
couples only, 304 675 1076
Also2 t ra rl er tot s

a

3 bedroom unfur nrshed
14x70 all elec mob1le home
$200 monthl y plus utolil1eS.
304 576 9073 or 304 576 2441

N1ce furnrshed effrc1ency
apartment for 1 adult,
private, utrl1ties paid, no
pets, ret requ~red 30A-675
1083

44

Apartments 304-675 5548

ONE bedroom furnoshed,
new apartment, washer &amp;
dryer lurnished, $200 a
month, 304-675-9760

Nice 2 bd furn1shed Apt
614 992 5434, 992 -5914 or J04
882 2566

FURNISHED apartment,
c lean, 3 rooms &amp; bath 304615 2482

Apartment
for Rent

WE WANT TO LIST
YOUR HOME

446-3021
437 1/z 2nd
Gallipolis
ISte~1en Holmes, Assoc.
388-9762 tVI'Illnll!i
Real Eatete - General

Real Estate - General

lr-----------------------,
Mason County, W. Va.
Residential Site &amp; Farmland
A.P.Co. offers for sale on a sealed bid
basis two tracts of land located Of1e-half
mile SE of the Letart Post Office on
both sides of LI.S. Hwy. 33.
'

Tract! - 7.27 acres- nice residential site with 886
ft of frontage on U.S. Hwy_ 33 M05tly open land
with medi um nsing grade from highway. Minimum
bid acceptable tor Tract! is $19,000.
Tracl2 - 193.62 acres t - approx. twctlhlrds ollhe
land os open and is being used for agricullurat pur- '
poses, Has long frontage of U.S. Hw. 33 and the Ohio
River. Medium size barn in fair condition.
Minimum bid acceptable for Tracl2 is S196, 1$0.
All "' interesled parties SltGufd asNmble an IINI
property, Thursday, Sept. 2, 1912, Mtw•n 11:00
a.m, and 1:00 p.m. f&amp;r cOnducted tGurs by Ap-,
patachian' s represent•llvo. For furtllftl lnlwmallon
conflict Appaloclllan Power Ca. U04) Ml-5721, l•t.
15721, R. G. Harper, or write P.O. Box 1916,
Charleston,
va. 24327.

w.

..

51

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY
OFFICE
446- 7013

[H
REAllOR

OWNERS DESPERATE TO SELL - May be
purchased for ss,ooo or
$10,000 down payment
or land contract Very
lovely
ranch,
J
bedrooms, fi replace, 1112
car garage, large tot, no
reasonable
offer
refused
1148

*

LAND CON'TRACT Beautiful two story
Home 1n the heart of
downtown .
Has
2
bedrooms, 1'1&gt; baths,
formal dining, 9ice car·
pet See today,
'1149
Nella Smith, Assoc,

311-1649

Bob France, Assoc.
446-llU.
JOhn Fuller. Realtor

245-947J

Household Goods

7
washers· Kenmore ,
Whirlpool &amp; GE 5 dryers
Kenmore, Whirlpool &amp;
Maytag All 30 day guaran
0
teed Call61425612 7
Boston Rocker and Zen1th
Allegro stero Ca ll446 7190

2 pc sot a, o11ve green w1fh
reverstble flower cush1ons
Call6 14 JBB 9803

54

Misc. Merchandoce

2 HMP SOO
Ptoneer
Speakers, Sony rece ov er
and Zemth turntabl e $650
304 675 3994

1 BOO 642 3053 IWV I
Woo d burnrng add on fu r
nancl!
St rll rn fa ctory
cr aie, $450 Ca ll I 614 256
1216

REPOSSE SSE D SI G N'
Noth1ng down' Tak e over
payments $58 50 mont hly
ot'x8' flashrng arrow srgn
New bulbs, letters Hale
S1gns 1 BOO 227 1617, Ext
667
BABY bed, compl ete, new ,

$75 Call alter 4, 304 576
Mrsc. Merchand1ce

2780
L awrence lead shot $12 95
per 15 lb bag Spnng
Valley Tradmg Co , Spn ng
Valley Plaza, 446 8025
Frrewood , $10 p1 ckup toad
Call6 14 245 5804

Sea r s self rnstalled lire
plac e w1th f1re scree n &amp;
prpes never used Compl ete
$300 Call614 388 8764

Real Estate - General

Round steel f rreplace com
plete woth flue &amp; ac
cessor•es also rn cludes
hearth &amp; approx 112 cord
of seasoned harwood Must
see to apprecra te Ca l l 446
7918
Compound bow sal e, Bear
Wh rtetarl hunter S69 Bea r
Polar L TO SlJ9 Spn ng
Vall ey Tradmg Co , Spnng
Vall ey Plaza, 446 8015

::.._....:.:=====--

O'BRIEN-CROW
REALTY

ADDITIONAL D I SCOU N
T'
LIM I TE 0
TIM E
ONLY ' TH E BI G, NEW
AMAZ IN G 1982 FAMILY
SI ZE POOLS WHIC H IN
CLUDE DECK , FENCE ,
FILT ER &amp; WARRA NT Y
ARE NOW AVA I LABL E
FOR ONLY $999
IN
STA LLAT ION &amp; F INAN

-!~

HOUSE COAL for sale
summer ra tes, s ummer
Sale ends Aug 31 Mrne r un
coal Prttsburgh No 8
Delivered to Ga ll ipoli s $30
a ton Pt Pleasa nt $31 a
ton , c 0 D Ca ll 446 1488

"'----"-= ====--

UNFURNISHED apart
ment, ca ll 304 675 -2218, B 6
675 6753, 6 10

Mrsc. Mer chandrce

RAT LI F F'S POO L CEN •
TER Pools sate, suppl 1es &amp;
1nsta l latron 403 2nd Ave . ~
Gal l rpolrs, Oh Ca ll 446 ..
6579
In ground Ablove
ground

54

Furnished
apartment,
utli 1l1es pa1d, 304-675-1897

2

54

ort~o~-~.,~-~~~~~~~::~~::~~~~~;~~i CCALL
AVAFIR
I LABLE
FIR
STING
COME,
ST SE RVE
1 BOO 624 851 11 0hiOI ,

bed
$99 gs,Mattresses
box s,spnn
full or twin,
$58., firm, 568. and $78
Apartment
Queen sets, $195 4 dr .
for Rent '
chests, S42 S dr. c hests,
SS4 Bed frames, S20and
APARTMENTS, mobile S25, 10 gun Gun cabinets,
home s,
hous es
PI
SJSO . d1nette chairs $20
Pleasant and Gallipolis and $25 Gas or electric
$325
B b
614-446-822lor6142459484
rang es,
a Y
matresses, S25 I $35. bed
Three room lurniSh ed frames S20, 525, I $30 Used
t d It
t
Furniture
bookcase,
apartmen • u s, nope s, ranges, cha1rs, end tables,
Point Pleasant Call 304 reclrners and TV 's 3 mtles
675-2453
t B 1 11 Rd 0
9
ou u a vi e
pen am
to 7pm, Men th ru Frr , 9am
THREE room fur noshed to 5pm, Sa t
cottage, utilities furnished,
446 0322
adults, no pets, 304-675 2812
or675 ISBO

51
Household Goods
APARTMENTS
bedroom , r ent starts at
SWAI~
$152 per month
Equal AUCTION FURNoTURE &amp;
housong opporlumly Call PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St ,
446 2745
Galllpol rs Couch, loveseat
and
cha~r,
$199,
wa
l
lhuggers
Sl25
;
bunk
3 room furnished apt. $250
month includes utilities. beds with bunk1es, $170 ,
lnqutre at Metgs Inn m box spr1ng and mattress,
$100
F~rm,
Sl20 ,
Pomeroy
rec liners, SBO , 9 x 12
leum rugs , $22 • maple
s rooms down town trno
roc kers, S49 , wr.nger
Pomeroy $125 per month wash ers, refrrgerators ,
Plus utilities. Adults, no d1 nette
se ts , c hest.
pets Phone6U 992 -3201
dresser s, bunk 1e mattress,
SAO Call 446 3159
Elfecoency Apt Suitable
for 1 or 2 people Chesh~re ,
Oh 304 773 -5882
D1n1ng room set , 4 charrs
and
table ,
cushioned
1 bed, lurnoshed Apt. 992 c hairs Caii4SB 1997
54J4 or 992 591A or 304 882
2566
Real Estate - General

by Larry Wrlgh'

1975 Case 450, dozer
tr ac tor, 1,800 hr s, very ·
good cona, $14,900 Cal l
446 4537

Effiency apartments 1st
floor Call 446-0957, 729 2nd -,
4S,____,_F_,u.,_rnec•cs,
:: hed
=::.:
R_,o,om
= sAve, Gallopolos.
Sleep1ng
room
$100,
utilities pard S1ngte male,
1st floor furnished apart share bath . 919 Second Ave,
men!, adults preferred ref. Gallipol iS 446 4416 after
&amp; dep requ1red Call 631 7PM
41h Ave , Gallipolis
Ctrcle's M otel , telephone
Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath, w 2501 For Ren t, Weekly,
clean, no pets, adults only, 1 person S60 00 ; 2 persons
$70 00 Cable T V , air cond
dep req Call 446 1519.

bedroom unfurni shed
mob1le, Camp Conley $140
per month 30A 675 137 1 or
304 675-3812

'N' CARL YLE'•

Page-0-S

LAY NE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, charr, rocker, ot
loman, J tab les , (extra
heavy by Front1er) , $685
Sofa, cha1r .and loveseat,
$275 Sotas and chairs
priced from 5285 to $895 .
Tables, $38 and up to S125
Hlde-a·beds,$440. and up tQ
$525, queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $325 .,
Lamps from $18. to 565. 5
pc. dinettes from $79 ' to
$385 7 pc., $189. and up.
Woodtablewithsi xc hairs
$395 to S6SO
Desk $110
Hutches, $300. and $550 .,
maple or pine f i niSh
Bedroom suites
Bassett
Cherry , $795.
Bunk bed
compl ete woth mattresses.
$250 andupto$395. Baby

44

HUO ava1lable 2 bdr 46
space for Rent
deluxe, kotchen lurnoshed,
good locatron, utilities par COUNTRY MOBILE Home
! 1ally paid 5 rm house for Park , Route JJ, North of
rent Resident ra l and com
Pomeroy Large lots Call
merc1al properties for sale 992 7479
or 1ease
A-One Real :===;:c;:==~;:o:=;;:==;==
Estates, Carol Yeager, 47
wanted to Rent
Realtor Call lOA 675-5104 or
675-5386
Responstble family of 4
needs 2 or 3 bedroom house
Bath &amp; 112, furnished &amp; un or trarter m the Brdwell
furnrshed, 2 bdr , swtm· Porter School area Call
m1ng pool, basketball court 61A-245-9414 between 5 &amp; 7
&amp; playground Call 614-367
7850
Country home, prefer w1th
pasture land Call 614 245
91JJ
2 bdr downtown, all ca r
pet, complete k1lchen, all
electric heat arr cond, Want 6 or 7 room house to
Washer dryer Call 446 4383 rent tn cou ntry Prefer
days, 446 0139 eve
Langsvrlle area Ca ll 614
992-6096
Furnished effrency , ?lf2
Neil ,
Gallipolis.
$135
utrlrtr es, one person 446·
4416 after 7 PM

The Sunday Tomes - Sentonei-

Plasl 1c Septic Tanks Sta te·
and county approved 1,000 :
ga l tank, price SJ40 Other _
s1zes 1n stock , hau l rn your .
po ckup t ruck Ca l l 614 286
5930, Jackso n, Oh RON
EVAN S ENTERPRISES

t~=;::;:::;;;;::;;==;-t~~~~~~~~~~~
lOUR OWN HOMI
OliN
ThlbltntJPtOIIIftl

w_ va _

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers.
r~fr l gerators,
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pllances, Upper Rtver Rd ,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446-7398.

J tr aders,

From

SS,OOO DOWN PYMT. S360 MD.
PAYMENTS - What an opportu""y to
buy th1 s n1ce 4 bedroom home tn good
condrt ron Ha sequrpped kitchen, drn 1ng
room , sewtng room , enclosed porch ,
nrce carpettng , new roof &amp; fur&amp; =¥,. acr e
w1th large storage bldg &amp; mobile home
hook up Located on Rl 160 Call J1m
Cochran

Sl

Lots &amp; Acreage

MOBI LE Two acre lots ISO fl road
fr ontage,
City
water ,
HOMES. USED-MOB! LE behind 84 Lumber Call 304
HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS 1675-6873 or675 3618
GALLIPOLIS
CH ECK
OUR PRICES . CALL 4467&gt;12

Wr i t tr ade my eql•rty rna 4
unrt apt bldg for a tr arlef
&amp; lot o· a house &amp; lot
Balance oan be paid by
land con tract c .111 for
detai Is 446 3937

M ob 1l e Hom e
Hol lypark 12x60
614 992 2469

J5

TRI - STATE

27 acres wtth house near
Vrnton for sa le or tr ade.
MAKE US AN OFFER
Cai i446-B615.

32

Pomeroy:._Middleport-G allopolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Re1l Eltate - General

CANADAY
REALTY

OWNER FINANCING!
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
3 bath s, 4,624 sq ft of hvrng space
sure you do? And here 1S a bargatn 1 Marn entry ,
huge formal lrv1ng room , formal dmtng room
w/ l arge gleam1ng chandelier Completely equ1pped
kttchen w1th I Sland Jen Arr grtll, bar WaiHo-wall
ma ss1ve stone ltreplac e rn th e fam1ly room Rec
room , ma ster bath features a garden tub J car
garage Thrs home fea tures much more Lrk e to buy
a lot for your money' Then th1s home rs for you!
FOR APPOINT(IIENT - CALL

s bedroom s,

STUTES REAL ESTATE-446-4206
Rea l

Eatate - General

446-3636 ANY HOU
Broker Aucttoneer

Ron Canaday, Rea~or, 446-3636
~~ --- -· 'Audrey Canaday, Rea~or 446-3636
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

LIFE
IN SURANC E
Cil ll 446 0552 Anytrm e
BMR 412 - Older home l oca ted rn Thurman Co n
ta1ns 7 rooms and bath, 2 frrep l aces, profeSS IOna ll y
1nstalled wood bu rner , forced a1r fu el furna ce Out
srde featu r es a garage and a screened, summer k•t
chen wtth built •n grr ll Call for appo1ntment
BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION! - Two Slory
home presen tl y bern g USPrl
duplex cou ld be
ea srly convert ed to srn·RE.t)\) , 1 Cho1ce toc at1on
nea r Wash rngton Sc hool \.B tl for det ails•

-C£0

JUST A LITTL
COUNTRY' - Country at
mosphere w 1th c rtv convenrence 3 bedroom brr ck
r anch A ttac hed ,qarage, full ba sem en t wr th lar qe
r ecrea tiOn r oom EffiCren t kr1 chen has Wlllrlt wood
ca brnets, ran ge, adro rnrng f nmrl y room has
frreplace, butlt 1n book.case, covered pa t ro for sum
m er drnrnfl Nea rl y a n ac re lawn K yqer Cree k
ar ea Just m1nut es fr om town S49 000
W1ll buy a nearly new 3 bed roo m r anch
home ; fully carpeted Carport On over an acre
Kyger Creek Schools Ca ll soon for an appo•n tment

S24,SOO -

THIS HOME DEMANDS A SECOND LOOK - The
ctecorat1ng 1S fabulou s, wall s are m1rrored,
wallpapered, nea rly all have charr rail , excellent
taste Cozy den oft kitChen has bea med ce 1lrng
rustle brtck hearth w1fh Franklrn stove, mantel for
clocks and th1ngs Gorgeous drapes rn lr vr ng room
stay w1th home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, forma l drning
w1th access to cover ed deck , ce ntral a1r cond , a t
ta ched garage, large level lawn, back yard f enced,
vtsrblefrom Rt 35, near Holzer Hasp $69,900
tfOME FOR ALL SEASONS - Pool 1n the back
yard for Summer
wood burner to cut heatmg cost
th1s Wrnter Low ma rnfenance U S Steel siding,
fullr carpeted e•cept k 1tchen and bath Wallpaper
in most rooms adds a n1 ce homey to uch 3
bedrooms, large ea t 1n k1tchen Attached garage
The pnce 1S great , too 1 $35,000
FIVE ACRES KYGER CREEK AREA Remodeled J bed room frame home. Equopped eat
in kitchen 24x36 barn, chicken house, 1100 and
tobacco base Beautrtuttocatron $38,900
NEAR SCHOOLS
SHOPPING - •Very noce 4
bedroom nom e, ea t m k1tchen, snack ba r, forma l
drnrng low cost gas heat, $.47 00 gas budget, garden
space A steal at $42,000
HOME PLUS
batt 3, dtn rng
mobrle home
Kyger Creek

INCOME - 3 bedroom home with 2
room and fam1IY room plus S unrt
park All unrts presently r ented
area You can't lose on thr s one'

$60.000
FITS YOUR BUDGET! - SJ9,500 Three bedrooms,
l'h bath ra nch. Famtlv room w1th frrelace At
ta ched garage, city schools, f_ew m 11es from c1ty
uOOd 1ocat1on pnce tUS1 reduced ... owner needs
QUICk

sale

YOU LIKED THIS FARM AT SS4:000 ~ou're ~omg
to love '' at the new lcm pnce, SA9,0001 27 acres
mostly level, 3 bedroom home has new furnace,
water syslem and bath. Coal and wood burnon g
stove Aluminum Sldtng Good barn plus other out
build;ngs Rural water Located~ustoff Rt 160
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Brick and block
building on 40'~ 150' lor on Eastern Ave on Gall opolis
' Presently In use a$ carry out E.cellent location
Call for showing $48,5(!0

SMR 389 - Thr s frn e home has 4 bedr ooms a nd 1S
loca ted close to town You Will have a large lot wr th
a country at mosphere and hnve all th e c1ty con
ven rences Ca ll now'
BMR 398 - GET READY FOR SUMM ER' Owner
t ransferr ed and must se l l th rs 3 BR r anch Close Ia
town rn ctud es deluxe 18xJ6 1nground poo l Cal l for
an apporntm ent tod ay r
BMR 413FJ - Mrn• farm located ru st off tilE' Ap
palachtan hrghway nea r Jackson 3 1'7 acres mil
wr th an older two 8R hom e, seve r al outbull drnqs
lU St rrght for le1sure trmeorfull tr me l rvrng
BMR 414 - 12x60 mobrle hom e srflJat ed on(, 1 acre
-t lot In cludes f urn1ture, has rear pal10 w/ covN
covered front dec k, 12x24 garage wrth stor age

BMR 415 EKtra nt ce br leveL rnc ll!df'c. 3
bedrooms, lg famil y room w.th br1ck ftrcp lacr ,
18)(2 1 ltv rng room, ea t rn krtchen lg utrlrty room
and garage Srtuated on large lot Cr l y sc hool
drstrtct Call for detail S!
BMR 416 - Want a nrce 3 RCPC'\)1nch st ytp hnrnp wrlh
of the ground
t. _rng r1 pos:&gt;rblr B sooo
mortgage assumptror , '' so, coli now

a top

PR£.DU

BMR 418 - New L rsti ng - Br rck &amp; lr ,lrnf' r, rt u,llf'( i
on5acr es tn c tud es3 ~f'o' ii('S:0 t h5 tq ldmrl f roon1
With frreplace and •K'-....~~rn er tq lrv1nq room
d1nrng room and delu xe kr tchen Call for c!erarl s
NEW LISTING - BMR 420F - ThrS t 1nr homers
only three years old It fea tur £'5 1400 s q f t of hvrnq
space, with 3 lar ge bedrooms 11 1 hrlii1 C. l.Jra£&gt; lr v rn g
room and a lovel y kitchen wr t h drn rnq Mr() , full
basement Pn ced at on ly $60,000 Oh yes 1 am surr&gt;
you writ also en lO Y th e 24 acres of 1r~ nd rt st ts on
BMR 402F - Chec k on lh 1S onC'
37 acre s wrth
1401 lb toba cco ba se, 30x30 barn N O W cJvailobl e
Qn la nd contrac t at 10% 1nteres t Ca ll for dc l arl s
BMR 421 - New Lr strng- Possr blc Loan Assump
tr on at 8'h o/o rnteres t Nrce J BR ra nch on lg l iM
lot prJ cedat$35, 000 Better ca llon th rs one todilY 1
BMR 422 - New L1 st tng - Nr ce ranch loca ted on
Roush Lane rs prrced to sell at $38,000 Large LR, 2
BR , krtc hen 1ncludes range, eve level oven, diSh
washer , and drsposal Call t o see

BMR 423 - N e w L1sllng! In town locatron Walk toi
school Large two Stor y home rnclude!i 4 bedroo m s,
11v rng room , drn tng room, formal entr ance lg coun
tr y k 1tch en, full basement w1 th tam rl y roo m , 2
frreplaces. plus more Call for de1arls
BMR 424 New Listing. - 2+ acr es w •th a ver y
nice 3 bedroom ranch st yle hom e You w111 lol/e
the country atmosphere Poss1ble loan assump
1ion
BMR 42S New Lrstrng - Execut1ve type br1c k
home, rn Frnch Provrncial Featunng 2, 100 SQuare
teet ol liv ing area on the m aon floor plus a full
walkout basement Thr s ttne honfe IS one of a kind
intnrsarea . Betheflrstto see
one . Call now.

�August29, 1982
Page-

D -6-

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, OhiO-

The Sunday T im es- Sent i n e l

S4 - M~_s c M-~rc h a nd tce

BRIDGE

SOl id enTrance 32 tnc h door
&amp; storm door Lad tes new 3
spee d b tcyc le
Ca ll 4-46
7369
Ten t fo r sa l e Ca ll 6 14 367

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Duo wins with defense

05 11

- -I --H•de

spades wuh a queen of
hearts lead and duck m

-

a bed

condttro n

sol a, ver y good
$200

Call

'lORT il
• Q 10 71
., A 7 td

614

156 1690

t K r.

SPEC IA L PRI CE on wood
&amp; coal burner s as long as
s u pp ly la s t Ca ll 446 278 3

F ormt ca Top t abl e, blond e
wt t h St)( c hatr s •n g ood
c ond Ca l l 446 1909 or 446

'A-'E.-.,:1
KJ
• QJ ~
f AQ J52
Q 10 4

I+

+

.,

t i0 9 84
4 96 52

Vul nerable Neither

Dea ler South

l NT

Obi

2+

Pass
Pas-.

••

John Deere A Tr ac tor 71
P tnto 4 cyl auto m a ti c
Good cond for $575 247
1191
30 1n
elec trt c ra nge
Roper Used 11 y r s $75
843 2105 Don Johnson
Call Robert Harper for Ginseng
a nd
Y e ll owroot
pmes 304 675 1293

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

SHALLOW w e ll pump
l str~teJ. 8 tt p1ck up truck
topper, Sears humidifier used very little, c all 304·
895 3388

ca ught m an end play He
gave 1t hts best try by leadmg a club. but mght had fallen

,.

Sout
Pass
3+
Pa ss

dadn t get t he chance Nor·

man over took the queen of
hearts wath has kmg to lead
back a cl ub
South won and led a

1s-

Bu_i_i d'u1Q'SUiiPiie5 -

sull ct •n g ma ten a ls bl ock,
brt ck, sew er p1pes, w tn
dows, ltntels, e tc Claude
Wtnf ers, Rt o Gra nde, 0
Call614 245 5111

Butld your own garage or
barn 24 x24 All lumber fur
mshed, $700 Other s•zes
av ailable Call614·866 7311
M etal sheets fo r
a ll
butldtng purposes
Fl at
por ce l tan enamel coated
4x8 thru 4 x 12 Pnces, $7 00
to$9 60 614 667 3065

56

Pe ts for Sale

5 turt le doves f or sa le
Large cage &amp; small cage
$50 tor all 614992 2969

TWO Beagl e dogs, I mal e, I
fema le, both run ni ng, $30

eac h. ca ll a fte r 6 00, 304

led a diamond But 1:orman
had hiS second entry pla yed

H you want to see partner ship defense look at th1s ge m

sure of that btg tnck wath

another club and Edgar was

pl ayed by Edgar Kaplan and
Norman Kay who have been
one of the best pa1r s m th r
world for 25 years
It was a tea m of four
match back 1n 1967 Both

South players played tn four
_

~~s

for Sa l e

CAT
DR AGO NWY N D
T ER Y
KE NN EL A K C
puppi eS ,
CF A
C how
Htma layan, • Pers tan and
Stamese ktttens Ca ll 446
3844 after 4 p m

ht s queen

sa

t=rut t
&amp;_lle ge!&lt;' bt es_ _

G OO D
TH I N G S T O
EAT
CANNI NG PEAC
HE S Yel low Freest one
cann1ng peach es no w
avatlable wh tl e th e supply
last s BO BS MARKE T
M ason W VA 773 571 1 open
7 day s a week
Farm

Sqpp!!es

&amp; bl•testael!

H I LL CRE ST KE NN EL
Boar d •ng a ll br eed s AKC
Reg Dober ma ns pups and
Doberm an Stud Serv tce
Ca ll446 7795
POODL E GROOM IN G
Ca ll Judy Tay lor at 61 4·367
7120
AKC RegiSter ed Poodle
pupp 1es Call 446 0857
Beagle puppt es Ca ll 614
145 5614 or 614 245·55 97
AKC Reg Colli e pups 61 4
991 3923

57

MU SIC a l
Instruments

For Sa le Saxoph one, 388·
8457
Lowr ey e lectn c Orga n,
$1 ,500 Ca ll614 388 ·8259
T RUMPET , used, $50 Call
a tier 4, 304 576 2780

61

Farm Equtpment

Jo hn Dee r e
40 se lf
prop el led co mbtne, both
heads Gr atn fed fr eezer
beef Ca ll 614 245 5181
1974 John Dee re Dozer , 6
way blade, heavy du t y
wenc h, ex co nd Ca ll 614
682 6163
Fa rm All Super A tr actor ,
all the equ1pm ent S2 ,500
Call 675 6930

Montgom ery Tr a tl er sales
61 4 669 4245. F ar m t r a ders,
See you at the M ason Coun
t y F cur
GRAV ELY tr actor, 6 HP,
30" mower, almost new
batter y, e)(ce ll ent con
d11 1on, $950 304 456 1880

Rabb•ts for sal e. bl onde
bl ack and wh1fe bunn• es 3
months old 13 each 304
675 2887

R EG I STE RE D
pupp 1es. phone
1552

Beag l e
304 458

Real Estate - General

TEA
Phone

1-( 614 )-992 -3325
NEW LISTING - N1 ce
bn ck ve nee r hom e
L arge landscaped ya rd
w 1th lots of shr ubbery 3
good S12 ed bedrooms,
2117 bath s, central a1r
and heat 2 ca r gar age, 2
pat1 os, equ 1pped k1tchen
and lar ge fam il y room
wdh
woo dburntng
f1repla ce Only 30 yea r s
old wan t 1115,000
NEW LISTING - Lot
160 on bl ac ktop r oa d and
120 feet deep 1ust ou t of
Middl eport Water , gas
and elec t nc av at labl e
tor on ly $3,800
NEW LISTING 66
acr es of mtner als not
leased Pasture, some
t•mber , storage bu dd1ng
and fenced on bla cktop
road Good mvestm ent
tor $45,000
NEW
LIKE
2
bedroom fram e home 1n
the country on hard
road . Front and back
porche s,
ba se m ent ,
garage and 2 acr es of
nt ce lay tn g land for

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

Autos for Sale

1980 Pont1ac Ftrebird. AMFM ca ssette, a1r , $6 ,000
f~rm Call61 41 56·1596
1971 Ford Mustang fast
back 351 CJ , ex cond ,
rad1al t~r es , AM· FM t ape
cassette, radio Wtfh power
amp. Call458· 1997
39 ACRES IN CITY
SCHOOL SYSTEM
Frame 4 room cottage,
bath. eat 1n kttchen
Assu mable loa n Tobac
co base, 692 lb s Lots of
fru1t tr ees A ll mtneral
r ights go Cla y Town
sh1p Ph one for all the
det atl s
N 54S

GRACIOUS LIVING
INA COUNTRY
ATMOSPHERE
Trul y gracious family
liv ing can be your sin
th is
bea uttful
four
bedroom approx imatel y
8 m11es trom GalliPOlis
The kitchen is a gour
m et 's
delight
Un ·
bel1 ev abl e dming room
and fa mtly room Built
f or
th e
most
d1sc nminating homeow
20
A c res
ne r
Pasture land,
Horse
Stabl es
Anoth er 73
ac r es av a ilab le Many,
m an y am entttes

IN GA LLI PO LI S
WALK TO SHOP
DOWNTOWN
6 r oom s, 3 bedroom s
full ba se m e nt. n 1 c~
larqe front por ch No
upk eep V1n y1 S1d1 nq
Niltur al Qa s furn ace,
n 1ce larq c shade trees.
low taxes Hom e you
sh ould check on
,; S30
BEAUTIFUL SETTING
BEAUTIFUL HOME
1 acre plu s - 8 rooms plu s, full basement, 2 full
baths, with showers, famil y room , llvtng room.
dining room . nice step-sav er kit ch en , 3 or -4 BR Lennox heat pvmp, also coal and wood burner furnace
N ice landscaped yard All ol thi s for only $53,900
Needs sm a ll amount of work to ft n1sh thts NEW
HOME
NSJ2
COUNTRY HOME
&amp;40ACRESM. &amp;l
Room Country Home - 5 bedrooms, bath , shower ,
l ••orr1e carpetin g, drilled w ell w1th pu m p N1 ce tobac
Two corn cribs Garag e Al l m1ner al n ghts
natural spn ngs, some fru1t trees
LO&lt;:atE,aon State H1 ghway Pr1ced onl y $3 0,000 00
NS43

1980 Chevy C1 t at1on, tront
wh eel dr tv e, a•r con
dltioned, PS, PB, 4 spd ,
exc shape, wh1te tnmmed
wtth orange, AM FM radi o,
exc
gas mil eage, new
tires. Call 614-388-8764 or
614·368·8611 Pnce $4 , ~

TIP TOP SHAPE'
Just a li ttle p r ett1 er t han so many M odern 3 4
bedroom bn ck hom e Formal h v1 n g &amp; d1n1ng r oom
L ar ge k •fchen Fu ll b ase ment Lar ge 2 car garag e
Work shop &amp; ba rn S1 tt1n g on 5 8 acres, mo r e or less,
of landsc aped grounds Spr 1nq wil l be br ea thl ess
!
r w 1l l t1el p f 1na nce , l0° o lnt Ra te

LCOKIN G Ft'1R r RI V ACY '
WF W O UL t'1 li~ E lO SHOW Y OU THISONF
WOOdf' d SCi fi OQ at C.harola iS H il lS OVf'riOOk. IOQ th e
li!ke Step 1n to the ent r y on the second level and
v tew the brnut lf ul at nu m from th e lrvE'I below Tht s
co ntem p or e~ ry un1que dC's 1qn 1S a decorat or 's dream
co mf' trut:- In door pool , offi ce, w e ll f'QU1pped k1t
C" hl' n With buil t 10 fOOd 1S in nd , (''X t ra IArQf? IIVIOCI
r oom , 1mnortcd td f' f loor Qrii CC' the spc1ous fnm dy
room, 2 fireplaces. 21f'2 bath s. balcon y on front of
hnth lrvelc, Cr~ll for a pcr sont11 show 1nq and ft nd out
The mnny rlf' f('I IIS too numrr ous TO m enTt on 1n th1 s ad
'531
J 8S ACRES OR 18
In Green Twp cl ose to Gallipolis, farm home
Sc reened tn front porch. g lassed 1n back porch
Perm st one S1d1ng, chte ken hou se, 2 storage bldgs.
L ots of shrubbery and t r ees Pn ced to sell See fh rs
love ly land and countr y hom e
1534

TIME FOR A CHANGE I STOP PAYING RENT
W1th only $2,500 down payment you can buy this
beautiful 3 bedroom brick ranch . Sitting on 3 acres
of sceniC woodland . Nice pond, all fenced. Only 9%
lnt Rate You c an' t beat a deal like th1s one! South·
wes tern School Dt stnct

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots, m~e sJZe bUJidl ng lots with all utilities
there. Lot size 101 .8 by 171 2 Better get 'urn now.

1456OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk 1nto formal entrance with open staircase to
this lovely completely redecorated home located in
the city Within walking distance to shopping area. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths and charming la{ge kitchen.
Spactous living room with woodburning fireplace
This gracious home has a ~atural gas FA furnace
like new. Immediate possession. We're waiting for
your call .
N146
REMODELED COUNTRY HOME
Ohio Township, sets on 2 acres more or less, has
num siding, 3 bedrooms and barn. Priced
,900. See by appointm,e ntonly .
, 1473

NEW MODERN TRI·LEVEL
Lots lots of closet space! J(bdrms .. 2'h bathS'. ac·
tivity rm , view of the river, rg, lot, city sch'ool dist.
1
Priced in th e 60's !

a.

1976 Vega s taft o n wa~ on ,
good cond 1t 1on Ca ll 446
4109
Must ang bodted, dirt tr ack
ra ce car, 400 cu 1n engt ne,
90 % complet e, pr~ ced uoo
Ca ll446 7406
1960 Dodge M~rada , 31 ,000
m1 Call 614-367 -0394 or at
fe r 5. 30PM 614·367-0511
74 M er cury Monte rey atr ,
AM FM rad1o, good cond ,
$450 Call 614·367-0490
1977 Toyot a Crolla , good
cond, $1 ,500 Ca ll 61A 156
1598

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG
: ::~:~=~lng
•sePIIc·systems

1977 Camara LT , 76,000mi ,
305 engine, AC. PS, PBI '
AM · FM 8 tra ck , $2, 500 Cal
614 388-9783
1977 Cam ar a, PS, PB , tilt.
wheeL atr, good cond Call·
614 367 0631
1974 Ol ds 98 Regency .
Good runmng cond , good
mferior, reg gas. $650. 614949 2639
J EEPS, car s, tru cks under
$100 av ailabl e a t lociJ1
gov ' f sales In your area
Call (refundabl e) 1·714· 569·
0141 ext 1855 for directory
on how to purchase 2.4
hours

•

A~ater, sewer
&amp; gu lines

•dump truck
*limestone

• Dry en

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5
yr old spltt l eve l features 4 or 5 BR s, 3
baths, 30 tt LR , 2 fa mily rms, 2 woOd
burn1n g f.repla ces, l arge kttchen and
d 1n10g area, 2 car garage, on e of the
county 's ntces t pools ( 20x5 0) and a trul y
profess1onal landsc aped lot Loc at ed on
Debby Drtve Owner say s sell so cal!
Ranny blac kburn for a personal
show1ng You ' ll be pl eased you d1d
GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fran
tage on State Route 588 F alftleld Cen
tenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd Ex
cellent for farm tng or development
Older 5 rm . &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
silo tncluded Owners will cons1der
se lling smaller tracts of shor t term
ft nanctn g Call for more informatiOn

Sl,OOO DOWN PAYMENT on fh1s Ohio
R1ver V tew property Approx 8 ac res
wooded land on Route 7 and 5 m 1 south
of town Own er w11l f tnance ba lance at
10%
LARIAT DRIVE- OWNER FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE - Lovely 3 BR, I
story, 15x21 LR , form al d1ning, full
ba sement wtth l4 x27 famtiY rm
fmtshed 1n knott y p1ne, 2 f1replac es, .42
ft rear screened 1n porch, garage and
100x300 lot Can be bought w1th or
wtthout furntture Ask1ng S59,SOO w1th
25% down and 12%- on the balance

us

clean

C:~r;,"~~;:r:;'ture.

your

PRICE REDUCED TO $69,500! BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST Over
2100 sq ft ov living area This all bnc k
rancheroffers3 BR's (master IS 16x22L
3 baths, 14x 24 LR w1th !~replace, 13x25
family rm , forma l dtning rm ., galley
kttch en tncludes double ovens. corning
typt counter fop range, OW &amp; di sp , gas
heat. cent a tr, attte fan &amp; much more
Located tn town on Spruce St E x
tensiOn . Call Ranny Blackburn tor a
persona l showtng
Corner lot. zonrrl
CO'll'll(' r Cta l
140)( 156, ni l Ut d! I ICS
il v il d ab lr
R r ildy for you r
new
bU Si nf'S5
RIO CRAND F.

-

OWNER WILL FINANCE Great
family home with 3 Brs .. 2 baths, 15x27
LR wtth gas ftreplace, large modern
ki tchen with range, self -cl eantng oven ,
OW and dtsp , laundry w1th washer an
dryer. part ba sement and over 6 acres
ot land at the edge at town
GENTLEMAN ' S FARM - 33 acres 'm / 1
· on .State Route 160 near Nor th Gallta
H1gh School
Mostly c lean rolling
grassland, stock POnd, 3 BR ranc h type
home with full basement, good barn
Out of town owners says SELL
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef, hay &amp;
gratn farm BO acres, miL approx.. 35 A
good cropland, iO A woods, balance
pasture , good fences, 9 rm./bath, home
was built in 1872
has been part1ally
remOdeled, 50x50 cattle barn with con·
crete. floor , large silo with auto
unloader, several sheds, large pond,
springs, standing crops go to new
owner

a.

BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY ID
acres m , mostly clean hill pasture, good
fences, 1112 story home, la·rge barn, tob .
base. fronts won 3 roads near Mudsock
Price reduced to $64,000 .
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should
deswbe t,h1s lovely 3 BR bmk ranch.'
Special features are a large LR &amp; din·
ing rm . , equipped kitChen, 1'12 baths,
laundry, quality carpet, cent air &amp; an
overs1zed 2 car garage . Located on U s.
35 West shown, by appointment

• Downspouts
eNew orR cpatr
• Pamttng

a.

I
'

I

( )

1 Yesterday

•I

Jumblot HOVEL

!',"hat

PROXY

(DAWNED
- ManclaYI

~0~upVmEight
do0

BOWL'~

Y
, R
..Jull!Mtlooi&amp;No.tt.oonWninlttopuatM.Ie........,..lorlt.Npot.-.

..

..

,_......,cto .. ,_,~... loaJ4.NcwwooO.N..I 07'141-tndlildl.,our

t~·~~~~~~-~-~·~~-~""'~'"~~l"r-.=1;-;.;-~;..~-r·~

Farm oeaeer
Equl
t
pmen
Parts &amp;Service
13-tfc

7S

Boats and
MotonforSale

Tennesse trail er
Caii6U·388 9783

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

CANDLELIGHT INN

Sizes start from l0)\24"

Utility Buildings

PRESENTS
Tuos.-Ud1a N11ht
All Dnnkt Rlducl4 to. Women
1114.-0rtft N1pt

Sizes from 4 to 6 and illl
woocf buoldlngs 24x36.
Insulated Dog Houses

lllliltft Bttr \\ Pnu
fn I S.l IP.M.-10 P.M
llllil1nkt \\ Pr1&lt;e
1111$ MDNili'S UNO
Wed-S.l-Minllllllennanl
lilink llilown EKh

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph. 614·143·2591
6·15-tfc

!92-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9 30 tfc

Bass boat. 15' terry . car
peted, 80 HP Mercury ,
Mercur y Thruster , two cir
culattng wells, rod storage,
runmng lights, horn , two
Marine batteries, two gas
tanks, CB radio, ogarefte
lighter, Q Beam, battery
meter , skts, tow rope, tow
harness, 311fe 1ack ets, sled,
Tennessee tratler com plete compare at $11 ,250,
$6200 t~rm , 304-675-5057 at
fer 5

Nlrfttof lht Bind.
Carry out betf &amp; wtnt IYI!II,.

Open Mot1 -fn

z·oo p m.-2:30 • m

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION [
Custom
kitchens
and
bathrooms.
Remodeling,
add -ons,
new
homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

COMPLETF
RADIATOR
&lt;.; F f? VI CF
Fr o m th e \ m fl ll es l
H ter
Co re to th e
lilrqes t Rad1ilf0r.

c.,

Pad1 il tor

S.t. &amp; Sun. 4:00 p.m 2:30 1 m
PHONE 992-9913

~ pCCh111 S t

NAl HAN tl iGf.'.

JS Yrs E llpen cncc
TUNING

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph 992·2174
2 26 ti c

8 20 ttc

Newl y built s1ngle ax le, tow
buoy car tratler Wtth
tounge 1ac k, $450 Call 446
7406.

&amp;
REPAIR
Call Bltl Ward
Ward's Keyboard
......372
Master C. 59 tt~

Baha k it tor Volkswagen

~.;;;;;_...:.;,;;:::.::;~;_;:.:_;;;:,JJ Beetle, never used, com

----------~===---------t::;==~=.;=;;~;=;==::S&amp;WlV

AND

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Oewayne Wtlllams
&amp; SCOttie Smith
All makes and models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
serv1ce ava1lable.
6 13· 1 mo Pd

coN'm~W!noN

New Homes extensive remodeling
• Electroc work
• Custom Pole Bldgs. &amp;

Garages
• Roofing Work
• Alumtnum &amp; Vmyl
S1ding!.
15 Years Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
815-1

r:========:;1~========:::;-i
NOW FOR
FAll ENROLLMENT
SIGN

LOG CABIN - Very unique, old hand
hewn log beams, s1eep1ng lott, large
stone ftrP.place , modern barn, 1~ acres
woods, l ocated 1n the Wayne National'
Forest , 20% down

UP

BARBARA'S SCHOOL
OF DANCE

ASSUME 8lf2% LOAN - Lovely ranch
at the edg e of town JS pnced to sell at
$49,900 F eatur es re 3 BR , 1'h baths,
large LR with WB fireplace, modern
k1tchen &amp; d1n1ng area, laundry rm,
garage &amp; gas heat Call tor ap.
pointm e.nt

JAZZ...,

TAP

, AGES 3 &amp;UP

Ladies Jazzercise
Call Barbara

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding CG.
Vinyt

&amp; ~uminum

won,

Complete
gutter
complete remodeling, roofing of all t.noc Worked in
lJ,.-

home aru 20 realS.
Free estimates

Call843 3322

Lawrence
992-3282
8 25-1 mo

·
7 16 2 mo pd

plete, 304 675 3354
PLYMOUTH
Satell1te ,
Chevr olet 300 H P small
block heads 350 Turbo
transm•ssion, Chevy -Must
ang parts, 304-675 4452

72
Truck'storSale
52 Ford pr ckup truck good
shape Trade for school bus
dnvable . Call 446-7377 or
614-245 5667

HEAVY duty car haul er ,
1978 Chevy one half ton $400 304 458· 1656 or 675·
PICk up 4700 m11es, 6 cyl 7541
standard trans runnt ng
boards S3200 lOA 675 2835
71
Auto Repatr
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
SPECIAL
Compl e te
enamel patnt jobs from
SJOO
sunroof s 1nstalled
from $225 Auto ,.nm Cen
ter , 446 1968

1974 Super Van nice, clean,
exc. cond Call «6 7370
VW Dunebuggy
367 0512

Call 614

78
1966 GMC
P1ckuptractiOn,
V 6, 4
speed,
fJ()SitiVe
good tires $295 . Call after 5
p. m 614·9911761 .

PULL type camper, ex
cellent cond1t1on. new tires,
sleeps si x, $950 00, 304·576

2866

1981 CHEVROLET Custom
Deluxe .4 -wh eel
drtve
pickup, umco 11ft diSc,
King cutter blade, Far mall
H tractor, Farmall M trac tor , 1970 Calillac sedan
Dev11le, auto, International
2 bottom 14" plows, 1969

Real Estate -

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission .
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
·
3 1A-ttc

1_.---------'j t

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
11

Beautiful. Custom
Bultt Garages"
Calf for lree siding
estimates, 949-2801 or :
,49·286G.
No Sunday Calls

656 0 Tractor Call 304 67S·
3280 and ask for Ron Hick
man between 8 a m .4 30
p.m .

Motorcycles

197A Yamaha endre, dirt
bike. Call456· 1997.

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL
LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quarl
of
all ages
available up to 8 weeks
!Monyquanttty.
,Mature Quail Available
Ready to Turn Out

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE RemOdeled home include~ 5 rms . and
bath, carport , stove, refrlg ., dish·
washer, mobile home pad1 almost 6 ,
acre son 586, 2m' from town $30,000.

CletllaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, Oh. 45631
~ 4-9 1-4

1 8 7345
-28 1 mo.

a.

302 Mechantc St.
Pomeroy, Ot-4.
PH.992-6506
eSEAT COVERS
e VINYL TOPS
eCONVERTIBLE TOPS
eCARPETS
• A Complete L1ne of
Automobile Upholstery
8' 4 1 mo. pd .

614-992-2656
1978 Honda XR75, 304 675·

2864.
74 HONDA 200 street bike,
$350
or
trade
for
something of equal value,
304-576·2564.
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

=~;,;;;:==~t";:l.:_:_:-~-~-=-=-~-:-:_:_:_:_:_:_:_~.Ji cQnd.,
1980
15 fi . Bay liner
with
50
H P Mercury
motor,
new
skfls and equipment
Included, Tennesse drive
on trailer Included, $6,000.
PULLINS
MILLER
ELECTRiC
' EXCAVATING Caii&lt;IA6· 8J8Saflers.
_SERVICE
~oozers
1969,22 ft. flbreglass, North
.
-hcthoes
American cabin ,cruiser.

~

For

all

your wiring
n~eds; furnaces
rejHiir service and
il!stallatlon,
/
' • • RHidefttlal
· ,: &amp; Commercial
• •: Caii742·319S ·
l. •.
3-1-tf

-Dump Toucks
' -Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-water
=:.':'t'ines
-Septic Systems
• Largo or small Jobs
PH. "2-2471
1-1-1 mo.

Ne trailer, off shOre with
options, marine 150 cu
Buick, outboard·lnbo·ard
motor. 30H55·75.45.
1977 15' flbreglass boat,
convertible top, 85 HP Mer·
curv outbcyord motor,
trall~r &amp; atc'essorles,
$2800. 304-675-3514. '

'

'

General

3 FLAT ACRES - In Rac tne, OhtO Ow ner Wtl l help
f1n ance Ask 1ngS 16, SOO

1976 Suzuki 550, road bike
Call ASS -1997

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - L 1V1nq room has
woodburn1nQ f1repl ace, llh bath , hardwood floor s,
w ell c onstructed nad tnsulated Asktng $35. 000

3 11 ttc
L - - - - - - - - . J I 1 9 8 1 Honda CB fully
dressed,
like new cond ., 2
helm"'s Call614·388-8764

.DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

OffiCI 742 2003
NEW LISTING - Ce dar
and bnck ranch wtth
cathedra l cetllngs Total
elec tnc heat pump and
atr condt t ton1ng
3
bedroom s, d1n1ng room ,
full ba se m ent
Red
wood tnm throu gout
E x tra n1ce decktng 2
car garage Exce llent
country se tttng on 7 60
ac re s
Loc ated
on
Ca ll
Pomeroy, P1k e
today ! 1
LOW
DOWN
PAY ME NT
On ly
$1,200 00 d ow n a nd
pay ments of a pprox
$125 00 per m e tor 20
y rs at 12111 f1 xed 1n
terest r ate We have 2
homes wtth -these ex
celtent ter m s One 1n
Pomeroy and one 1n
Rutland These m ake
great st arter hom es, so
don' t m1 ss out on your
dream
PRICE REDUCED Ex
tra ntce 2 story , 4
bedroom hom e 2 bath s
and new hand cr afted
k ttchen ca btnets You
re alty must see th1 s
home to apprec tate tf! •
Located on larger lot m
Racme
Prt ced w ay
below market value at
$12,500 00
PRICE REDUCED St Route 124 - Onl y
mtnutes from town wt fh
country atmo sph ere
Large 2 story fram e
home w1th 4 bedrooms, 1
ba th
M a ny , ma ny
pOSSibilitieS With th1 S
home S1 tuated on 1112
acres Prt ced to sell at
$20,000 00
Cheryl Leml ey, Assoc
Phone 742 -3171
Ieima Ntcmsky , As soc
Phone 742 ·3092

HOME on approx 2 acr es Basham &amp; E aq le R1dqe
Nee ds handym"n Askmg $15,000

-----------1-----------...:....l

S18,000 - NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD 4 bedroom sectional home, must sell
th1s month to settle estate . Call for Appointment

REALTY

Georre s. Hobstetter, h
Brobr

3 TRAILERS - Can be used as add on s, small
bu stn ess or constru ct ion off1 ce 1 tr a der s (asktn g
S4500 &amp; S5500) ar e 10)( 50 wJth 3 room s eac h F urn ~ c e
&amp; centra l cur One has 1!1 bath &amp; hot wa t er heater
Th e thtrd IS 10x35 Casktng $3500) w1th 1 room s fur
'
n ace, central a1 r 1!1 bath &amp; hot w ater hea ter

1560.

1979 XS 1100 YAMAHA .
Fully dressed . AM FM
Cassette. Cruise Control
Excellent cond
extras.

HOHSTElTER

NEW LISTING - Loca ted 1n Syracuse Th 1s home
has an extr a large lot and 5 poss1ble bP.d room s The
dm1ng room ,and k 1t chen are spa c 1ou s. klt chPn 1S
fully equ1pped 1nc lud1ng di Shwa sher
Ask1nq
$32,000
'

1973 4 wheel drive K5
Blazer, $1095.00, 304 675

74

Real Estate - General

CENTRAL REALTY

nay trailer,
CSTlnternafiOnal
10 pickup, 1
~::::::::::::::==~~:::::::::::::::::~lj Chevrolet
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

camp1ng
Equtpment

Starcraft fold out, used
twtce , excell ent cond
$2495 Located Ma 1n and
Second, Middleport, Oh1o
614-992-2828

1974 Jeep CJ5 4 wheel
drive Wtde t1res Hard St
cloth top $1 ,200 614 992
7074

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERIN G
te xtured ceilings co m
mere ta! and res1dent ial ,
freeest1mates Call614 256
1182

~~=========:Jchors,
holders,
trolling
~
motor , $700
00, 304 675-1169

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

245-9113
81

RENTALS
Bnck home lor rent 1n L et art , Oh10, $27 5 00 a month
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers- Assocaate

1~~~~~~~~~P~H~-8~4r3~-2~07~~~~~~~~~~~
~

SOLUTION

Bl

Home
Improvem ent s

G ene's St ea m Carp et
Clean Scotch Gaurd Free
estt m ates spr1ng spec ta l s
Gene Sm 1th , 992 6309

Improvem
Homeents_ _
m ten or and
plum b , n g,
roof1n g, some rem odelin g

81

CAR TE R' S PLU MBIN G
AND HEAT IN G
Cor Fou rth and Pme
Phone d46 3868 or 446 4477

Free Estimates

81

9652y rs
10

&amp; Hea ttng

CHAIN LINK FENCE

PA INTIN G

14 FT alum tnum boat. 2
sw tve l se ats, tra iler , 2 an

811 mo

DENNY

r

ex t e r~ o r ,

SA,600.

1976 15 tt. MGF Bass boat
Jollnson 70 hp
motor
Many extras, asking $2,800
6U·742 2152

Between Cheshtre &amp;
Middleport, Ohto

Bill'S

Nu· Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; v!Myl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
How met screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Miller Dnve
446-2642
Free E 11mates

GOBLET

1

YOUNG'S

f:'

.

Antwer

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, BushH09
Farm Equipment

• 992 • 2791
or .49• 22 • 3
1 1A tfc

pd

V. C. YOUNG Ill

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 106 acres m/ 1,
located south of Mercerv1lle. Approx. 20
A lillable, ba lance woods, tab . base.
Owners will help finance

OHIO RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - ~m~oo~~:,~e~~ Eureka In the
Located 3- miles below Eureka sTYLE ... ELEGANcE .. . A wAY oF,.
"d I
Ll FE - First time on t~e market for
I ea
for tamping, this like riew contemporary, 3 or A
Dam,
"ld"
ob
' BR's, 2 baths, large open LR with
'a. beamed ceilings, kitchen
bUl lnl Or m iJe homes. Call fireplace
Includes range, OW a. refrlg., full
BLACKBURN at basement, wrap-around deck, cedar
al 'JY u~: NinO .
siding, 12x24 abOve ground pool.
garage, barn &amp;. 10 aarfll !lear Eureka ..
REN. ~.
City schoots.
'

-

Guysville, Ohio

Ph ESTIMATES
FREE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- App r ox. 51h acre-s located on the
Graham School Rd . co water. over 300
ft rd frontage, Green Grade S.:hool &amp;
Gallla Academy H1gh School SI0.900

a.

SALES &amp;SERVICE

8 111
=·

~O O N f Y CORA ROAD App ro &lt; 24
il ' t f'S wood l and. loc ated 3 m1 f rom Rod
n1 Y CounTy WaTC'rd V&lt;lt l ilb lf' Sl2.000

AFFORDABLE FAAM- 9'14 % LOAN
ASSUMPTION- Nice remOdeled 6 rm
bath hom'e, WB fireplace,, stove:
refrlg., cellar house, 3 sheds, 50 acres
m/1, approx. 15 A. cleared,
balance

-

WHAI iWO W~t;&gt;:;
HAVE 'THE M06'T
L-EiTER'S IN 'THEM~

()

"'l
L!

Ca r penter wor k Repa1r or
re modeling, w a ll pane lmg,
ce11ing t ile, f loors, door s,
some pa1nt1 ng 614 992 2759
Hom e

repatr s
1m
roof 1ng a nd
pat nf tng Free es t tma tes
Ca ll Oennt s Harr1s 614 992
7365
p r ove m e nt ~.

exp

Plumb1ng

82

~~IMPROVEMENTS

BOGGS
U . S. Rt . so East

ouraclean gets your
c rpet
deep
down
1
thoroughly clean .

~

a.

RECREATION LAND - 25 acres m / 1,
mostly woods, front son Little Raccoon
Creek
State Route 32S near Tycoon
L_a_k_e_
. _s1_s_,ooo
__
. _________•_ __,
Ir
'

l

...

.A

Mercury
, Baha,
sta1nless
steel
======· =m=o=~t=========~£=========~~1979
19112
150 Horse
prop, bow seat, top covers,

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 176
acres m/ 1 vacant land, fronts on Raccoon Cr eek &amp; th e Tom Gle n Rd . A pprox
31 tillabl e &amp; the balanc e wooded Under
$400 per acre.

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCHER plus 78 acres of land in Cheshire
Twp offers tots of good living for our
growing family . Home is just ltke new
w1th 1436 sq . ft. ot IIV1ng area plus an attached garage _2 spacious BRs, 2 baths,
8x27 LR, 10x24 kitchen with retr1g
disp., OW, double oven and range:
washer and dryer stays in laundry
L and is mostly rolling pasture land with
approx 25 acres wooded.

ROOFING

a Gutters

1-767-3361

GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE - 131 tt
front on State Route 554, t orner lot,
ov er 3100 sq . It , S bays, pr ese ntly used
for auto, tractor &amp; farm equ tpm ent
repair s, pa rttal ftnanc,ng avatlable

CENTENARY - LOT FOR SALE Super location , 93 ft frontage on Route
141 , county wa ter ava1lable. Asking
$7,000.

1

Ph . 949· 2160 or 949· 2322

H. L WRITESEL

CALL
Home
orTODAY
Bus10ess
For Free Esttmate

HOLIDl\Y PARK - 2 Camping lots,
furmshed 26ft trotwood travel trail er ,
shelter house. utiltty butld1ng, county
w at er , sewer, access to Raccoon Creek.
Pn ced for a qu1 ck sale

PRICE REDUCED$27,000
MA~E US AN OFFER
I thtnk you w ould say th at tht s
sprawling brt ck tri level lS on e of the
ni cest country homes you ' v e ever seen
Th1 s b eauty IS Situated on 4lf'2 acres of
land about 31h miles from Rodney. Why
not let your family en ,oy 5 BRs, 3 baths,
large livin9 and dining rm . , complete
kitChen, family room With StOne
fireplace and) car garge

• Freeten

"'l

PASQUALE
ELECTRIC CO.
Electric Heating
Rewiring
Ucen&amp;ad Electnc1an
All Wo!lc Guorenteed
152 Jrd Ave
Ph 448-2718

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Heating &amp; Air
Condt t ionlng. All Types
1nsu1at1on E lectn cal
Wmng
Call 446·851 5 or 446 044S
alter4 : 30p. m .
tt c

35 Court St.
Gallipolis, Oh1o
Call446 3896
446· 3080
ttc

±

ll FEED

TOM HOSKINS

• Refrigerat-

• N o Sc rubbing
*No Shrtnkage

""""''til
....
-rtombtnaond

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% down - CampSites In the Wayne
National Forest 5 to 6 acre tracts
wooded land, good hunting . pnces start
at SJ,SOO

•

• Dish ·

V' 'V
r:.. Js

1

( )

by ROBERTS

Let

·oo.

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Styli sh 2 story
home wa s but It tn 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate Large open foy er and
stairway , LR , d1ning rm , parlor, com pl etely equ 1pped modern kitchen , ~·
BRs, 11h baths. new S1d1ng , garage,
near schools, shopping , etc

I TYLFQ

And Homo Maintenance
eRoofingofalltypes
Siding
• Remodeling
eFretestlmues
• 20 Yrs. experience

,- DURACLEAN

STROUT. REALTV, Inc.
MORGAN TOWNSHIP - L1k e new 2
BR home, 4 yrs. old, stov e, refr1g , a tr
cond1tioner , WB stove, 20x30 barn w1 t h
carpor t, 2 shed s, almos t 2 ac r es, ask1n g
$21.900 w tth a n assum abl e loan Be th e
f1 rs t to see th1 s one

Furniture Stripping
and refinishing

~~~;;~~3~~-tf=c~~=P:A:RT:S:a:n:d:SE:R:V~I~C~E~b~~~;~A~2;0~tt~c;l ~ PETICK I
29

1976 Tr ans A m , excellent
cond1hon, mu st see to appreciate, good f 1res , $2500,
304 576 2929 after 4

1979 V-6 MONTE CARLO,
AM -FM stereo, sunroof , air
cond111Cnlng , $4800 00, 304
675 4595 or 446 7295

Services offered

OHIO VAUEY
ROOFING

All Makes

:r~anges

'Uce1151d &amp;Bonded
P'H, 992-7201

HART S Used Car s, New
Haven Wes t Vlrgima. Over
20 less expensive cars In
stoc k

71 PONTIAC Catalma ,
good condtti on, phone 30467 5· 1401

KEN'S USE "
APPLIANCE
SERVICE.
~

FOR

• Washer.
wnhers

tltctncolworl
(frtt bt1m1in)

1 ACR E 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
N1 ce comfortabl e home wtth ntce large shade trees,
concrete front porch, lots of frut1t tr ee s (apple,
cher r y, plum and peach). grape arbor, raspberry
v1nes, g&amp;d gard en land, all level In Green Twp
Rural water , 2 ca r garage, fuel 011 FA furnace .
Basement, barn approx 16' x2 ~ ' Pnced tn theS20's .
#491
8ACRES
W1thtn 10 m1n dnve to downtown Gall1polis City
School System . Has hookup for mobile Home, Galli a
Rural Water , electnc and septic tank , mte light on
pole, 200ft. frontage on Graham School Rd. Timber.
Bu1ldmg Slles Cal l Now.
1477

76 Olds Cut lass Suprem e,
exce llent cond1t1on, new
front t1r es, new fr ont
spnngs &amp; shoc ks, new air
shock s on ba ck , AM FM
ca ssette dec k S2,000 t1rm
Ca ll446 9510 ask t or Paul

81 Pont1ac Formu la, 4 spd .
tran smiss•on , AC, PS, PB 1
extra low mtl eage Call614·
156· 1582

Real Estate - General

2 LOTS IN GREEN ACRES
Lot#21 Sidewalk , 75' x1 46 '
L ot ! 23 Vaca nt 99 ' Frontage by 148' depth Pnced
lo se ll
~ 334·N333

Th e Sunday Time s - Sentone i- Page - D -7

Business services

Autos for Sale

-looltOflnd pHil wOJII

LOOK OF LUXURY
Ex cel lent des 1qn 1n i\ hom e th at cou ld be yours
Sty le p lu s coml or t all comb tned Lu x un ous mas ter
bedroom wdh pnv ate ba th &amp; wfl lk 10 c loset EQUIP
ped ru st1c sty le k tt chen w lfh b r ea kf ast nook LM Q€
r ec reat1o n &amp; ta m dy room w 1th open stone ft rcp lace
plus for ma l d1n1 nq r oom &amp; l1v 1ng room Walk ou t ot
entr;~n ce foye r to an Pxcep t. ona l court yar d Assum
bl e lottn
1 525
WOW ! I J9,900 .00
WOW 9% owner t1nanc, ng WOW 3 BR, 1 baths,
ce ntr a l a1r, g =
H age, stor age bu 1ld1ng, all furn 1ture
tnc luded 5 m ilutes to downtown Galltpoll s Ctty
Schools L arge level lot
#407

DUTCH COLONIAL
Sty le. bea uty, charm, comfort - all descnbes th1s
home, 4 BR , 2117 ba t hs, equtpped eat-1n kitchen,
family r oom w1th fireplace, formal ltvtng and dtn
1ng room You won ' t beli eve th1S home unles~ yC'u
see If for yourself M ake your appo1ntment today to
w alk 1nto the entrace of on e of th e most lovely
homes 1n th e ar ea
fl 322

MODERN RANCH HOME
3 or 4 bedroom s. n1 ce ll v tng r oom , ea t 10 k tt chen
famil y room , full ba sement Th1 s home has been
ver y we ll kept 2 ca r garage pn ced o nl y •n t he 40's

Ca ll 614

71

'AHens1nd otltiGdtlllf

6.94 ACRES
VACANT LAND OFF RT . 35
Rolltng land - bes1de Old U S H1ghway 35 In an
ar ea th at 1S develop 1ng fas t Rt 35, short d tst ance
w es t of Ga l l 1pohs Get tf now

$A5 ,000
SYRACUSE - On Rt
124, a 3 bedroom ranch
with carpeting, range,
dbl . sink, nat. gas F A .
furnace and large level
lot for only $27,000.
STORAGE BUILDINGS
Good for garage,
workshop, etc . One has
elec. water and conc rete
floor. Plenty of parking.
$23,000.
S ACRES in the country .
Some level. some
woods, dug well and
utilities ava11able.
CAR WASH - All equipment, 2 rooms and land
for only $15,000.
SOME ARE SELLING,
TRY US.

71

GOOD HOUSE SENSE
RETIREMENT OR STARTER HOME
Com fort able, neat, home w 1th large lt vt ng room ,
eat tn k1tchen w tth bu t It tn cabtn ets, 2 bedrooms.
storage r oorn , bath and car port Very convenient
locat1on Call for furth er de fa t Is
fl 533

Groom•ng se r v tces tor
pets
Will cl tp Engl 1sh
Sheep dogs, poodl es &amp;
Schnauz er's
Reasonab le
For appt 614 9917342

VIRGIL B SR .
216 E. 2nd St.

• Phyt11s Loveday, Phone 446-2230
*Joan Boggs, Phone4•6 -3194

1544

TRACTOR A C 200, ca b alf
heater. exce llent condit•on ,
$8,000 Also d1 scs, plows &amp;
accesso r •es 304 -458- 1656 or
304-675 7541

Real Estate - General

304 675 -

•W•ll•s T. Leadtngham, Realtor, Ph. Home44,·9539

of hea rts, ruffed a tlrart and

675 5079

Green Parak eets
1693

STRAW tor sa le, S1 00 bal e,
Morgan woodlawn Farm.
Pliny 304 675·2275

ma n stgna led wtth the 10 to
show the nme
South played dummy s ace

18,000 btu atr condtttoner
$150 304-675·2835

Hay for sal e 61 4 667 6164

dtamond Now Edgar ca me
up w1th the ktller He played
has queen . not has ace Nor·

By O.wald Jacob y
'Dd Alao Sontag

1981 Rabbit sunroof, AM
FM st ero cassette, 8.000
m iles Call446 7370

1976 M onte Carl o 1n toP con
d lt ton Call be tween 5 &amp;
RPM, 446 8636

West look hJS kmg and was

the same hne of play , but he

1977 Olds D~ lta 86 AM F M
r adto, a ~r cond .• velour tn
ten or , vinyl top, ex . cond
Pr ice $3,600 . Call 614 388·
6764.

1975 Gr an Pri x
24 5 9272

played ace and a spade

wo uld probabl y have found

Opemng lead " Q

56

Hay tor sa le Call446·0163

Autos for Sale

-------

A. ga tn st Edg a r and
No rman, the other South

2 bed s, new m att r ess, 2
recl 1n 1ng cha1rs 71 Bu tck
Co nve rti b le good shape
Call 614 992 7791 af te r 4

Hay &amp; Gra1n

the sutt back Now declarer

• K !0 8 5

+ &lt;KJ

2t

dumm y At tabl e one. West

64

West took hts ace and led

t.: A:-iT

+ ..U16 t Z
• 9J
• 7J

Nort b

Ju m bo Bob White Qua11
M a tu r e Quad av ailabl e
Read y to turn out La Bonte
Qu a i l F arm 614 985 4345

RE G QUA RT ER HORSES
T ra t n tn g ,
s h o w t ng ,
b reed1ng, sales and boar
dtng Contact Dan Beam .
Gallipoli s, 446 0183

hearts South took dumm y s
ace ruffed a hea rt and led a
dtamond

SOUTH

Wes t

GE Au to
wa sher $12 5
Wh1rl pool Au to $125 24
c u tt
f r ee z e r c h es t
t ype $150 Call 614 74 2 1351

For Sa le Baby beef , e~ tra
n1ce Call446 0211

71

L1vestock

contmued wttb the Jack of

+R 7 1

9160
A ll steel tandam a)(l e
traile r , Stf Wtde by 12 f t
long Heavy dut y Ca ll 614
156 1484

8 28 82

Super 81 son of Super ch1 X.
17 months old, gudded, has
one wh1te sock and blaz e
f ace
A def i nite show
p ros pec t Excell en t tem p e rm ent, $800
Own er
r eloca tmg
Ca ll 992 7205
m ormn gs or after 10 OO Pm

w. va .

August 29, 1982

Point Pleasant, W . Va .
63

P&amp;meroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh1o-Pornt Pleasant ,

Ca ll 614 388

M a r cu m
Roof 1ng
&amp;
Spouttn g
30 year s ex:
pen enc e, spec 1a li z1ng tn
bu111 up root Ca ll 61 4 388
9622 or 61&lt;388 9857
CAPT A IN STEEM ER Car
pet Clean1ng fea tured by
Haffelt Bros th ers Custom
Carpets F ree est tm a tes
Call 446 2107
M asonar y wor k , L og ue
Cont ra c t 1ng
Rt
1
Ewtngton
Ca ll 614 388
9939
C H R I ST I A N 'S
C ON
STR UCTION
Co n s t r ,
roof 1ng, S1d1ng, spou t 1ng,
fenctng, patnf tng, re patr s &amp;
c lea n 1ng
446 2000, c a ll
betore 8 and aft er 5 30
BIN GS CO NCRET E CON
ST RU CTI ON Spec 1ail11ng
tn co ncr ete drt v ew a v s,
st dewa! ks, f loo rs, pa t1 os,
etc II yr exp Ca ll 614 367
789 1
General Contra ct 1ng, p a1n
t tng roofi ng tree tn m
m.ng, et c Ca ll col lec t 614
574 441 0

RO N' S Telev 1S10n Ser v 1ce
Spec 1a ll ztng tn Zentth an d
M otor ola , Quaz ar. a nd
house ca ll s Ca ll S76 2398 or
446 2454

F &amp;. K Tr ee Tnmm1n g,
stump re mova l Call 675
133 1
RIN GLE 'S SERV I CE ex·
pen enced m ason, r oo fmg,
ca rpe n ter .
e l ec tr 1c tan ,
ge nera l r e patrs a nd
remode!t ng Cal l 304 675
1088 or 67 5 4560
Water We lls Com merc1a l
and Domes tt c Tes t holes
Pumps Sal es and Ser v tce
304 89 5 3601

__ __¥xca ~a!!__nJL_ _

Ga ll1pol ts Dtve r sth ed Con
st Co Cus tom dozer &amp;
backh oe work
Spe c ta l
f arm r ates Call us for tr ee
es tima tes 446 4440
Lawr ence Std e nsfrt c k er
Back hoe Sen ve Cal l 675
5580
84
Elec tn ca l
~-~!_ R e fng~r~ t~ n

SEWI NG M ach tne r epatr s,
serv 1ce Aut hon zed S1nger
Sa les &amp; Ser v1c e Sharpen
Fabr 1c Shop .
Scts sor s
Pom er oy 99? n B4
---~-

81 _ ~e~n~ r2 1 Hau11!!9

JON ES BOY S WATER
SE RV ICE Ca ll 614 367 7471
or61 4 367 059 1
N ~ed
somet h1ng hauled
awa y or sometht ng moved?
We' ll do 11 Ca ll 4463159 or
614 156 1967 aft er 6

Now Hau l tng l1mestone fi l l
d trf top so1l gr ave l F ree
esttm afes
Ca l l 61 4 367
7101
JIM S Water Servt ce Call
J 1m Lan1er , 304 675 7397

87

Upholster y

TR I ST A T E
UPH OLS T E RY SH OP
1163 Sec Ave , Ga ll iPOli s
446 7833 or 446 1833

AD VA N C ED
Seam l ess
Gu tt e r Door s
Off e r 1n g
con rtn ou se
gufte rtn g,
se am less s1d1ng, roof1n g,
g ar ag e
door s,
fr ee
es t 1m at es. 614 698 8205

MOWR E Y S Uphol ster y Rt
1 Box 124, Pt Pleasa nt , 304
175 4154

PAINTIN G 1nter1 0r &amp; e x
tenor . tree estt mates, 304
67 5 11 18

Furnttur e re patred. an
t 1ques r est ored , custom
ca b1 nets, 304 675 3671 after

5p m

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 DeliCIOUS

tor one
6 Wast e metal
10 Culll\la le
14 Detests

19 Noblemen
2 1 W1te ol Zeu s
22 Lasso

23 Moon
goddess
24 Sad poems
26 Prusstan s
28 Weirdest
2 9 Dance lor
Gene Kelly
30 Trop1cal
tru11
32 l essen
33 1776 or
1812
34 Stalemale
35 Heavenly
SIQht
37 Italian com
39 Falsehood
40 Stop
41 Er ase, tn
· print ing
42 - tt1eAed
44 Decayed
46 Diving birds
47 Solicitude
48 A Fitzgerald
50 Young trees
52 Salts
53 Tra follower
55 Path
57 Tln symbol
58 Couple
59 Animal 's
coat
60 Note of

scale
62 Mormng
hrs

64 Uquety
66 PretiKw1th

base or
bark
68 Thallium
symbol
69 Transport

for Prmce
Wllllam

70 l 1betan

gazelle
71 Tmy parll cle
73 Frlgnl
75 Eagles'
nests
77 Sandarac
Ieee

78 Macaw
80 Groans
81 Federal
draft agcy
82 Coal cars
84 Shaggy
86 Alongs1de
87 Funny
picture
89 Poem
92 Pmafore
95 Flower part
98 Bread
spread

139

gold
Period o!
li me

140 Part ner
141 MUSIC81
groups
143 Lions or
Tigers
145 Dessert
treat
146 Substances

I48 TOUCh1ng
150 Pro1ec 11ve
dev1ces
152 Gratify
153 Alight
154 Unusual
! 56 A\lenue
157 Tnals
156 Insec ts
!59 Ftreplace
p all

99 Pl atforms
10 1 Fern lea\les

160 Kmd ot bear

103 Depend on
104 Insane
105 Quarrel
106 Con)uncl ton
10 7 Prepos1t10n
108 Depression
110 Click beetle

DOWN
1 Encourages

11 I Ar l 1cle
11 2 Perceive by

touch
11 3 Entreaty
11 5 Tellurium
symbol
1 17 E,xpt res
11 9 College dsg
12 0 Baker s
product
12 1 Those oweo
money
124 Gasp tor
bre ath
126 Bru nch or
lunch
127 tndlgent
128 Negates
130 Unusual
132 Tax
133 Fiber plant
134 Concealed
135 Urge on
137 Cover with

2 Roof of

mouth
3 Make ready
4 Type o f

Cllbln
5 Geralnt s
wife
6 0u1et !

7 Limb
8 Region
9 Mi xed up an
account
10 Ta lk Idly
11 Solttary
t2 Harvest
goddess
13 Pronoun
14 German title
15 Mideast
name
16 Seesaw s
11 Stora 1n a
way
18 Mediterranean
\19SS81
20 Circus
, performer

23 Chair

25 MIK
27 Prtncl pally
28 Lamprey s
31 God of love
33 Ttbet an
oxen
36 Small brook
38 The
sweet sop
40 MasSI\18
4 1 Weapon for
3 1 Down
43 81valve
mollusk
45 S1new
46 Joints
47 Sedate
49 Dlllseed
51 Specks
52 Backbombs
53 Ttt&gt;etan h O I~

man
54See3t
Down
56 Funda mental
59 Shammed
60 Bellow
61 Organs of
hearing
63 Played
the lead
65 Walked on
67 Bitter vetch
69 Greek letter
70 Welcomed
72 Muse of
poetry
74 Sun god
76 Deihl coins
Abbr
77 Snake
79 Time
gone by
83 Pinch
85 Glad 11dlngs
86 Tie
87 State
ot unconsciousness
88 Wolfhound
89 King ot
Bashan
90 Tradesman
91 Anc ient

I

chanot
92 Rear of ship
93 At om
nucleus
94 Artlfic1a1
language
96 Centur)'
plant
97 Anc tent
Instrument
100 Near
102 Cut
105 Trade for
money
109 Fhp
112 Young horse
11 3 Supp ort
1 14 Helpmg
116 DISCOrd

goddess
118 Pro1ectmg

tooth
12 0 Tells

121 Arrtve
122 Hay
spreaders
123 Part ol

a clan
125 Increased
tt1reetold
126 Prevailing
mood
127 Ro\ler and
Tabby

129 Pet1l 1on s
I 31 Slurred O\le1
t32 EnUce
133 Rabbt1 s
reJat tve
134 Workmen
136 Cheers

138 lrntable
140 Arm y meal
t 41 Loud no1se
14 2 Break
suddenly
144 Baseb all

gi0\19
147 Make lr
148Greek ll. ar
149 Prellx wlt t1
corn or pod
151 8elore
153 16 01
! 55 And Lat

�\

I 'A number of crazies' burning neighborhoods

Area death

\

Herbert H. McCown
CHESAPEAKE - Herbert H.
McCown, 78. 6ffi Riverside Drive.
Chesapeake, died Friday In St.
Mary's Hospital, Hunllngton ,

W.Va.
Born Sept. 'll, I9tll.ln Athalia. son
ol the late Sylvester and Mary
Ellen Wylle McCown, he was a retired Iockman lor the U.S. Army
Corps or Engtneers. a nd worked lor
20 years at the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam. He was also a member of the
Crown City Masonic Lodge and the
Sons of the American Revolution.

Surviving Is his wife, Nellie E.
Rose McCown; three sons, Brian of
Pensacola. Fla .. Roy, at home, and
Richard of Columbus; and five
grandchildren.
Funeral services wtll be held at 2
p.m. Monday In the Schneider Funeral Home, Chesapeake, with Rev.
Bill Rhodes officiating. Burial will
be In Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Friends may call at the fun·
era! home from 24 and 6-9 p.m.
today.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made to the American
Ca ncer Society.

City, police officers
sued for harassment
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -The
city of Steubenville. Its pollee chlef
and a pollee sergeant are being
sued In federal coun by four residents who allege a pattern of ha·
rassment and Intimidation and
efforts to deny them First Amendment rights.
The suit med In U.S. District
Court Friday seeks an Injunction to
prevent harassment or Interfering
witll plalnt!fls and others slmUarly
situated In exercising First Amend·
ment rights, and to prevent retalla·
tion against plalntlfls. It also asks
unspecified compensatory and pun·
ttlve damages.
The suit was filed by Ginger
Fyock and her minor son, Harold;
by James McNamara, an attorney
tor the Soutlleastern Ohio Legal
Services Program In Steubenvllle;
and by James Shockley, a law clerk
In the legal services program. Defendants are Pollee Chief George
Mavromatls, Pollee Sgt. Anthony
Falbo and the city of Steubenville.
A spokesman In the pollee department said Mavromatls Is on
vacation and that Falbo Is off duty
until Monday. No home telephone
numbers are listed for them and
Uley were unavailable for comment about the suit.
The suit says Ms. Fyock works
lor the Committee lor Justice In
Steubenville and said her son ac·
companied her during lund -raising
and other tree-speech actlvlttes
swnsored by the committee.

The suit alleged that Mavromatls
"acted In furthera nce of a conspiracy with defendant Falbo and
other employees" of the city.
"Said conspiracy had among Its
purposes the use of threats or prosecution , false arrest, Invasions of privacy, assaults, surveUiance and
other lonns of harassment to IntimIdate plaintiffs and other slmUarly
situated persons from the continued exercise of their light of free
speech and to lntefere with and-or
deny Individuals opposing pollee
department policies and practices
their constitutional right to effec·
tlve assistance of legal counsel,"
the suit a lleges.
It said Falbo "acted with malice
and In bad faith" as an agent of the
city.

Long sentenced
GALLIPOLIS -Robert L. Long,
2S, Gallipolis, was sentenced to a
prison term Friday afternoon In
Gallla County Common Pleas
Court .
Charged with breaking and entering, Long will spend six montlls
to five years In the Mansfield Relor·
matory, according to Judge Rl·
chard Roderick.
Long was Indicted on the charge
earlier Ulls year by the grand jury.
He was arrested by Gallipolis City
Pollee las t January after he was
allegedly caught stealing a calcula·
tor from the office of Frenchtown
Car Co., Hill) Eastern Ave.

Felker joins Peoples Bank
POINT PLEASANT - John R.
Felker II has been named to the
Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant
board of directors, according to VI·
tus Hartley Jr .. bank president.
Felker, Tl, serves as president of
both Point Distributing Co. and
Hartle! Corp., both In Point
Pleasant.

promoted to manager In 19'79 and
named president two years later.
Married to the former Deborah
Kay Stout, the Felkers reside at
JOO; Parrish Ave., Point Pleasant.
Felker Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Felker, 287 Lower River
Rd., Galllpolls.

He Is a !973 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School and a 1976
graduate of Morehead State Unl·
verslty with a bachelor's degree In
marketlng and admlnlstratlon.
Felker Is president of the West
Vtrglnla Amateur Trap Shooters
Association, a member of Ole Point
Pleasant-Mason County Chamber
of Commerce and the Moose and
Elk lodges, a director or the Point
Pleasant Gun Club, a West Virginia
beer wholesaler representative and
administrator of Stroh's Brewery
West VIrginia WUdllfe Conserva·
tlon Club.
He started with Point Dlstrlbut·
lng tn 1974 as a summer employee
whUe attending college. He was
named assistant manager In 19T7.

JOHN R. FELKER D

By CHRISTOPHER B. DALY
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP)- Boston Is an old
city, and It has old neighborhoods.
Some, llke the water!rol)t and the
South End, . are being reclaimed
and restored . . Others are burning
down.
"It's the uncontrolled burning of
Boston," says state Rep. Royal Bol·
ling, whO represents the hard-hit
Dorchester section.
A fire wave that began June 11
has rolled through neighborhoods
In Dorchester, Roxbury and Ja·
malca Plain. On Fire Department
maps locating this summer's 139
suspicious nres, the dots In those
neighborhoods overlap, whlle other
areas are nearly empty.
The arson rate has risen steadily
In recent years. In 1!178 the city had
7.5 suspected arson fires a week;

this summer the rate Is 12.6 per
week. This has taken place despite
a decline of 3'l percent In the overall
lire rate since 1979.
This summer's outbreak has
ca~ added alarm because It Is
concentrated In just a few
neighborhoods.
The arson zones are hurting economically. They Include large
numbers of Boston's poor and
pockets of racial confitct. Water
pressure In some places Is low,
streets narrow and crooked; the
typical building Is a decked,
wooden frame house.
Above all, these neighborhoods
breed vacant, abandoned build·
lngs. Many observers say vacant
buildings are Ole core of Boston's
arson problem - the kindling for
deliberately set fires.
The !Ires began on a Friday, June

11, when firefighters responded to
30 alarms. Over the following weekend, 101 alarms - some of Ulem
false - were ~unded during a 12hour period.
Since then, predawn !Ires have
plagued the city on several Frl·
days, but Ole suspicious !Ires haven't been limited to Fridays.
Of the 139 "Incendiary or suspl·
clous" !Ires since early June, 98
have been In empty stl'!ctures.
They haven't killed anyone, but
losses are estimated In the millions
or dollars.
Fire officials lay most or the
blame on vandals.
Fire Commissioner George Paul,
a JO.year veteran who Is Ole point
man of an Inter-agency task Ioree
on arson, says- the. arson Is due to
vandals, "a number of crazies out
Ulere," and, perhaps, several un·

coordinated arson-tor-profit
schemes.
Others disagree. They say the
empty buildings are the problem
and say the person who actually
lights Ole match Is not Important.
BoDing, who chalrs a !Eigislatlve
Special Commission on. Arson,
said: "I don't buy It (vandallsm) as
Ole only reason."
But he admits he's stumped, too.
"This rash of !Ires defies all previous patterns," he said. "I've
never seen anything like lt. It's not
even arsrin lor prollt. It seems to be
more like pure anarchy."
He wants all empty buildings ·
tom down or boarded up and pinpointed lor arson watch. Martlla ·
Goldsmith, a City Hall housing expert, estimated Ulat there are about
1,!00 abandoned buildings In the
city, but no one knows lor certain.

KIRTLAND LAKE, Ontario
lAP) - Helen Susan Schmidt, who
Is charged with chUd-steallng In
Ohio, has been arrested by Royal
Canadian Mounted Pollee after disappearing three weeks ago, authortiles say.
Mrs. Schmidt, 45, was arrested
Friday by pollee In Kirtland Lake,
about 250 roues north of Toronto,
officials said. Earlier In the day,
she had _falled to appear at a Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
hearing In Cleveland and a warrant

was Issued for her arrest.
Mrs. Schmidt earlier was acquit·
ted of a federal charge of lddnapplng In the August 1980 abduction of
Denise Kay Gravely of Cleveland,
now 4. The chlld was returned to
her motller In March. Mrs. Schmidt
admitted that she helped take Denise, but said during_her federal
trtal that she had believed Ole girl
was her granddaughter and needed
care.
Mrs. Schmidt was released from
jaU on $20,000 bond after the trial,

whlle a state charge of child·
stealing ln the Gravely case was
pending. No state trial date has
been set.
Mrs. Schmidt disappeared Aug.

6.
Cpl. Dale J . Begble of the Cana·
dian pollee said Mrs. Schmidt and
her husband, Ralph R., were arrested about 8 p.m. Friday. He
would not gtve details about the
arrest.
Cuyahoga County Sherltrs Inspector Peter Becker said he was

Police investigate 2 accidents
GALLIPOLIS - City Pollee In·
vestlgated two minOr traffic ace!·
dents recently.
Two cars were slightly damaged
In a collision at the comer of First
Avenue and State Street at 8: l8
p.m. Thursday.
According to pollee, J. Sherman
Porter, 74, Gallipolis, was attempt·
lng to tum left from State Street
onto First Avenue when the accl·
dent occurred. He reportedly saw a
southbound vehicle on First,
backed up and struck a car driven
by Deborah L. Shaw, 22, Gallipolis.
At 12: II! a.m. Friday, pollee responded to a car-deer collision on
Chllllcothe Road.
Roy K. Blankenship, 24, Gallipolis, was southbound when the deer
ran Into Ills path. Blankenship's
vehicle sustained moderate dam·
age. The deer fled, but was later
found dead at a ChUilcothe Road
residence.
Two recent thefts have been reported to the Gallla County She-

riff's Department.
A 1981 Honda motorcycle, owned
by Robbie Imboden, Gallipolis, was
stolen from a lot at the QuaU Creek
Trailer Park. The cycle was report·
edly taken sometime Thursday
night.
Rickey Enbanks told the depart·
ment tllat hls residence at the
Stover Trailer Court was broken
Into sometime between Aug. 20 and
Aug. T/.
The screen ln Ole Iron t door was
discovered tom and a metal box
containing cash and a watch are
missing, according to reports.
Pollee cited live persons Friday
and early Saturday morning:
James W. Hughes, 39, Portsmouth, no valid registration; WI!·
!lam N. Morris, 20, Gallipolis,
speeding; James E. Ught, 55, Cha·
rleston, W.Va. , disorderly conduct;
Betsy L. Taylor, :rT, Gallipolis, run·
nlng
light; City,
Phllllp
M. Caldwell, a28,red
Crown
operating
a
vehicle under the tnnuenee.

told the Scllmldts were trying to
buy a restaurant In Kirtland Lake.
Begbie said the couple would be
held lor Investigation In connection
with the Canadian Immigration act
and criminal code.
Beck.e r said he would ask County
Prosecutor John T. Corrigan to
begin extradition p_roceedlngs.
Meanwhile Friday, U.S. Dlstrlcf
Judge Alvin I. Krenzler In Cleveland sentenced Mrs. Schmidt's son,
Charles W. Gress, to 15 years In
prison for kidnapping Denise.

CANDLELIGHT INN
SUNDAy I AUGUST 29

8 LIVE BANDS
STARTS AT NOON

COUNTRY CONNECTION • CROSSFIRE
CROSSOVER • LONE WOlf BAND
MARSHALL-TENNANT • BLITZKREIG
CHARLIE LILLY AND POORSIDES
BOGUS BROTHEltS

.

•3.00 ADMISSION
PROCEEDS GO TO THE LONE WOlf BAND

CANDLELIGHT INN

Charles w. Lester. 19, Rt. 2, Patriot, unemployed, and Karla L.
Mlller, 18, Rt. 2, Patriot, student.
Ray D. Benson, 65, Rt. 1, Gallipolis Ferry, retired, and Sharlotte J.
Goody, 49, Galllpolls, Inspector.
Brian Stover, 18, Rt. 2, Patriot,
unemployed, and Pamela Klser,l7.
Rt. 2, Patriot, unemployed.
Homer Pellegrlnon, 62, New Boston, retired,' and Ruth U. Wagner,
60, Gallipolis, broadcasting.
Jeffrey A. Cox, 20, Rt. 2, Galllpolls, unemployed; and Rita F. Arthurs, 16, Kanauga, student.
Michael D. Martin, 19, Rt. 2, Vln·
ton, U.S. Army, and Tammy J.
White, 17, Kanauga, at home.
Stanley W. Henderson, 60, Rt. 2,
Patriot, plpefitter, and Delores
Harrington, 43, Milton, W.Va.,
plant employee.

'82 Buicks
and Pontiacs
in Stock
Ready To Go.

NOT EXACTLY

Secretarial program allows
•
student to work tn county
RIO GRANDE - AJ; an honors
student at Gallia Academy High
School, Ellen Rainey had a desire to
get a secretarial degree from
college and work in Gallia County.
"! really like it in this area and I
wanted to get my education here
then stay in the area and work," 'the
:!().year-old Bidwell area native said.
" So when a recruiter came to school
to talk about the secretarial
program at Rio Grande College, I
immediately became interested."
After completing her schooling at
Gallia Academy and the Buckeye
Hills Career Center, Rainey enrolled
in the tw&lt;&gt;-year secretarial science
program at Rio Grande College and
Community College. The program is
designed to service a two-year

secretarial program leading to
teacher certification in business
education and secretarial areas for
secondary schools.
She had been active in numerous
business-related extra-curricular
activities . 10 high school, including
the Office Education Association
and clerical graphics organization,
while being a member of the
National Honor Society. She was
listed in Who' s Who Among
Ameri can High School Students.
" It was an ideal situation," she added. "A two-year program with the
option of continuing for a four-year
degree and a good location. It was a
situation I couldn't pass up."
She completed her secretarial

Business Briefs:
POMEROY - Richard Rupe, 295 Wright St., Pomeroy. recently
retired after 30 years employment with Foote Mineral Co.'s Graham
Statlor1 plant at New Haven.
Rupe began working lor Foote as a general laborer on May 28,
1952. He worked various jobs In the production department and was
promoted from an hourly employee to assistant foreman on Jan. 20,
1961.
He was promoted to foreman and then general foreman in the
production department. His last promotion was to production super·
lntendent on June I, 1978, and held that position untO his retirement.

PLUS program offered at Bane One

ALL AT DISCOUNT PRICES

SMI.TH BUICK-PONTIAC
GALLIPOLIS

EASTERN AVE.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

studies at Rio Grande this spring af· '
ter attending the institution on five
scholarships - Rotary, Jaycees,
Board of Regents, Robert Reees,
and Thaler Ford. Her studies at Rio
Grande College includes courses in
typin g,
s horthand ,
filing,
bookkeeping, and office procedure.
Rainey graduated cwn laude from
Rio Grande with an associate degree
and a lready she's looking to cor&gt;tinue her education.
" I'd like lo get a secretarial job in
this area that would allow me to continue for a bachelor's degree at Rio
Grande," she said. "The courses
I've taken at Rio Grande have
developed a basis for further
studies. I really do want to continue

now.

"! think you can attribute that
desire to continue to the people I've
worked witll at Rio. They have a sin·
cere interest to help - both in your
studies and in finding employment
- which is a tremendous asset to the
program .
" Dr.
Shoemaker
(Pa ul
Shoemaker,
coordinator/administrator of technical
education program,; ) ha• been of
tremendous help in my two years
here. He has helped me both in what
I take (classes) and in what I want to
do in the future.
"He's career-oriented which I
think is important at the colle~e
level because you have a lot of
decisions you have to make."

GAlliPOLIS AJ; the 1982
World's Fair in Knoxville, Tenn. er&gt;ters the second hall of its six month
run, it has become apparent to lair
officials and area hotels that the
event's biggest success story from
an attendance standpoint is the hundreds of rnotorcoach groups who are
arriving each day to tour the site.

$12,500.
For further Information, contact Maxine Griffith, cashier, Bank
One of Pomeroy, or the Ohio Student Loan Commission Ill 614462-

OVB tops $100 million in assets

ML

·SAVE 20~/o
_,

•

•&lt;

ON ALL WALLPAPER ORDERS THRU SEPt.18, 1982

E.LBERFElDs·iN POMEROY

GALLIPOLIS - "We're very proud," commented Ohio Valley ·
Bank President James L. Oatley In announcing tbat Ole bank exceeded the $100 mUllon mark In total assets earlier this summer.
"During the 43 years I've been associated with Ole bank, many
changes have taken place," added Morris E. Haskins, chairman of
the board. "We feel this Is a reai mUestone."
The bank, which serves 31,248 accounts In Ole trl-county area, had
$101,&lt;li3,!00ln total assets as of June 30.
OVB has 72 employees with an annual payroll In excess of S1
mUllan. They staff the main office and mlnl bank In downtown
Gallipolis, a branch on Jackson Pike and another In Rio Grande.
Dalley said the. bank paid almost $7 mUllan In Interest on deposits
In 1981. "We expect It to be In excess of $8 mllllon this year," he said.
Shareholders' equity as or June 30 was $7,429,!XXI, or $42.45 per
share. Haskins pointed out the bank's total assets are up $13,833,!XXI
over last year and the bank has $45 mllllon In loans.
"Jeanie," OVB's automatic bank teller at the Galllpolls mlnlbank,
Is averaging 78 customers a day. A second automatic teller Is scheduled to be Installed at the Rio Grande branch In an fxpanslon
project later this year.
. .

Employees union names executive
COLUMBUS - Karl E. Stewart haS been named assistant executive director of Ohio Public Workers United, a local publlc employee
union, according to Mike Clifford, OPWU executive director.
Stewart will assist In f()rmlng union policies and direct Its lobbying
efforts. .
.
.
. A Marysv11le resident, Stewart was executive director of the Ohlol
ClvU Service Employees Assoctatlonln1974-78durlng OCSEA's larg·
est member growth period. He resigned the position and became a
legislative lobbyist
··

PORTSMOUTH - Tom Fiti, vice
president of technical programs at
Shawnee State Community College,
has announced the creation of Ole
associate degree in business
management for fall, 1982.
Previously, Shawnee State offered
associate degrees in banking and
finance and retail management.
These two programs are now majors
in the business management
program. Two additional majors
will be offered as well, business
management and real estate.
Foti said of the new program,
"Becoming a manager is to accept
responsibility to work through
others, and to make an organization
work. The skills needed include
hwnan relation skills, the ability to
plan, and the ability to make and
stand by your decisions. Managers
must also have the sell-discipline
needed to take orders.
"Many of these managerial skills
are transferrable across a wide
range of businesses and many non·
business organizations. Specific
areas include heavy industry, transpvrtation, petroleum exploration,
agribusiness, insurance, retailing,
Ole hospitality industry, the healthcare industry, banking and other
financial institutions, real estate,
and many others. Roughly, one
business job in every ten involves
managlng other people.
"In nearly every field there are
several levels of management jobs.
It is nonnal to be promoted through
the ranks. However, except in those
rare cases where promotion depends
mostly on seniority, the promotions
get much tougher as you near the top
of the organization.
"People who can manage well or
who demonstrate the potential to
manage well are always in demand.
And as the trend toward increased
complexity in all social institutions
continues, the need for more and
better prepared managers grows.'·
All of the classes should be transferrable to any fou,·-year institution
witll a business administration
major. At Shawnee State, the
associate degree in business
management is designed to provide
the student with the knowledge, understanding, and skills required lor
entry level management trainee
positions. The successful student is
provided access to a career path
leading to a variety of challenging
and rewarding middle-management
positions in business, service
organization, industry , and financial
institutions.
Flexibility is 11 key feature of the
business management curriculwn.
Students wlll choose 111-24 credit
hours within one of Ole four
specialized areas as their area of
emphasis. The remainder of the
required 45 technical elective hours
may be chosen from the remaining

three areas of specializa tion or any
other approved business courses of·fered at Shawnee State. This
provides the student the opportunity
to 'design a program compatible to
their individualized interest and
career goals.
The core curriculwn for all the
business management students
requires .si:x quarters for work, and
Is in some instances identical to the
curriculwn of the first two years in a
four-y~r institution.
The retail management major is
directed toward activities involving
the sale of conswner goods to conswners, which is a major and vital
part of the American economic
system. With over 13 million ern·
ployees, it is the third largest employer in the United States, accounting for 17 percent of total per·
sons employed.
There are almost two million
retail establishments ranging in size
from small 'mom and pop" stores to
giant department stores and mass
merchandise outlets. Typically,
retailing has a high ratio of manager
to nor&gt;-management employees. In
large stores one out of every 10 ern·
ployees have management responsibilities. Successful management
trainees in retailing can move into a
nwnber of challenging jobs. Department managers, assistant buyer or
buyer, sales manager, merchandise
manager, assistant store manager
or store manager are a few of the
possibilities. The number and
variety of management level jobs in
the retail industry make it a very attractive career area .
For those students considering
transfer to a baccalaureate program
after two years, the retail
specialization fits well with many of
the requirements for a major in
marketing or management in a four·
year program.
The retail option is also suggested
for those interested in starting ·and
operating Uleir own retal business.
The specialization in banking and
finance is designed to provide individuals interested in a career in
baking, savings and loan, credit
unions, or credit departments of
retail companies with the basic
knowledge and skills required to
gain employment and to advance to
managerial level occupations.
There are a large nwnber of lower
and middle Level manageme nt
positions in most financial institutions that a student would be
qualified to fill. Students should be
aware that most banks and other
lending institutions do require experience, in addition to formal
education, to advance to managerial
positions. Some of the managerial
positions available in banks are loan
officer, trust officer, collections of· ficer, branch manager and cashier.
Banking and finance is also an
ideal specialization for those in-

· dividuals currentl y emp loyed by lending institutions or credi t departments who want to advance in tho•c
particular occupations. The banking
and finance curriculwn parallels
those required by the American In·
stitute of Banking .
The business management option
is directed to satisfying the needs of
three types of people. First, this o~
lion serves students who are not
ready to make a specifi c career
choice. The progrsm provides a
general business background that is
helpful in gaining access into
management trainee programs and
may result in middle management
positions in small and medium sized
companies. Students selecting this
option should realize most potential
employers will require an area of
technical expertise or knowledge
gained from work experience, in addition to the associate degree, to be
considered for management trainee
programs.
Second, this option serves the
needs of those who may have considerable work experience or
technical degrees in a given area
and want to move up to a
managerial position. The business
management option will provide
them with Ole necessary understanding of business operations
and management functions to succeed and advance at th e
management level.
Third, the curiculum provides an
excelent background for individuals
who want to operate their own
business.
The fourth major Is lor those interested in becoming a real estate
agent, real estate broker, appraiser,
or manager of a real estate finn .
Successful completion of specific
courses in the curriculum of the real
estate specialization of the business
management program meets the
requirements of Ohio law and
qualifies the student to sit for the
real estate salesman's and real
estate broker's examinations. The
curriculum also prepares the
student for the grad uate real estate
institutute examination.
For those students whose eductional plans include a bachelor
degree in busines, the associate
degree program in business
rnanagement may offer additional
options not available in a traditional
four-year program . With an
associate degree in business
management, at the end of two
years, there is Ole choice of: (I)
taking a full-time job if an attractive
opportunity is available and completing your education at a later
time; (2) take a lull-time job and
complete work toward a bachelor's
degree on apart-time basis: or 13) if
suitable employment isn 't available
after you obtain Ole associate
degree, begin work toward the
bachelor's.

MotOrCOaCh groups biggest success

POMEROY - A new student loan program, PLUS, rece)ltly approved by the Ohio Student Loan Commission, Is available to
college-bound students from Bank One of Pomeroy.
Those eligible to borrow through the program are graduate students, Independent undergraduates and Ole parents of dependent
undergraduates; any Ohio resident or nonresident who Is a customer of an Ohio lender; and students who are In good academic
standing (minimum 2.0 average on a 4.0 grade scale! and attend
school on a lull or half-time basts.
Graduate students and parents of dependent undergraduates may
borrow from 3,!00 per academic year to a maximum oi$15,(JX) In the
PLUS program. Graduate and parental borrowing llmlts In PLUS
are ln addition to guaranteed student loan maximums, while the
combined total of undergraduate borrowlng ln GSL and PLUS Is

6569.

$79995

Section~

August 29, 1982

·e ommunlty CoUege. "II was an Ideal situation," she
said. "A two-year program with the option of continuIng for a four-year degree and a good locailon. I
couldn't pass II up."

Retires from Foote Mineral

Couples file for marriage
GALLIPOLIS - The !allowing
couples flled for marriages licenses
this past week In Gallla County Probate Court.
Keith C. Brown, 24, Patriot Star
Route, Federal Mogul employee,
and Deana D. Hawks, 19, Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, nursing aide.
Donald L. Elllott, 23, Rt. 1, Pa·
trlot, laborer, and Tonya L. Williams, 17, Rt. 1, Patriot, student.
Robert A. Wood, 25, Rt. 2, Bid·
well, unemployed, and Gena
Snowden, 20, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
unemployed.
Keith A. Boggess, 19, Rt. I,
Crown City, vendor, and Lora A.
Masters, 17, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, Wen·
dy's employee.
·
Mark E. Sims, 25, Gallipolis,
teacher, and Mindy J. Frazier, 26,
Gi!lllpolls, licensed practlcal nurse.

COMPLETES SECREI'ARIAL COURSE,- EDen
Rainey, a 1980 GaUl a Academy High School graduate, recentty graduated from the two-year secretarIal course offered by Rio Grande College and

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Alleged child thief faces extradition to Ohio

COMPLETE •••••
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Only

August 29, 1982

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

Page-0-8..L The Sunday Times-Sentinel

GWENDA CJIRBI'IAN

Named Fruth
manager
GALLIPOLIS - Gwenda Chris·
tlan, daughter or Mr . and Mrs. RDbert Christian, Oak Hlll, has
replaced Laddie Burdette In a management position of ttie Fruth's
Pharmacy near Holzer Medical
Center.
Burdette wl1l be managing the
new Fruth's opened In Milton,
W.Va.
An Oak Hlll High School graduate, Christian grdauated from Ohio
State University cum laude. While
at OSU, she was a four-year
member of the Student American
Pharmaceutical Association (SA·
PLA), for whom she served as
chapter president and regional
delegate to the American Pharmaceutical Association House of
Delegates.
For her work In SAPLA, she received the senior SAPLA award·.
Christian was also Involved In the
tollowlng 'honor societies: Phi
Kappa Phi, Mortar Boar(!, Rho Chi,
Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Lambda
Delta.
.

While there ha ve been some major
difficulties for individual travelers
who have booked their own accommodations in the Knoxville ·
Gatlinburg region, the thousands of
visitors who have come on motor·
coach tours have apparently had
Iitle or no difficulty with accommodations and are giving the
event high marks for its en·
tertainment and educational value.
"The tour brokers business has
been a real important aspect of Ole
World's Fair," said Roger Moore,
whose Knoxville firm, Property
Leasing and Management, has
taken over the fair's reservation
system that had proved a ll\3jor
problem for individual travelers in
the first several years of the event.
"I'd guess Ulat »40 percent of the
total attendance to the Fair bas been
from tours," said Moore, "and
we've had far fewer problems with
housing for these group5 than any
other type of visitors, which lndlcats
to me that mast tour brokers are
professionals when it comes to
bolting quality accommodations."
'

"The one reason we're getting so
many visitors from mid-America
and smaller conununltles across the
country is motorcoach tours," said
Bob Shelley, direetor, of communications for the fair. "We've
been getting up to 800 bu8ea per day
and haven't bad any problenis at al!.
And now Ulat's what we're telling
people to ilo. Let a tour broker bring
you - forget about the haasles."

"A motorcoach tour represents motorcoach tour groups entirely and
the ideal way to attend an event like have done very well," said Callan .
this," said Bill Francisco, vice "Alld the tour clients are really en·
president of marketing for the fair. joying Gatlinburg and the surroun"This fair requires a thorough ding area ."
Bill Grossman, president of the
knowledge of the site and how to enjoy it. The tour brokers are National Tour Brokers Association
(NTBA) said that most NTBA
providing that for their clients."
Pat Callan, executive vice brokers still have space available on
president of the Gatlinburg Cham- their upcoming tours to the fair.
"Our brokers are telling us that
ber of Commerce, said that tour
groups were enjoying very sue· they can still accommodate persons
cessful stays in his resort com- who haven't been down to Knoxville
munity located in the Smoky Moun- to see the World's F'air." said
tains about a hall hour from Knox- Grossman. " And they' re getting
very positive comments from those
ville.
"Several of our hotels converted to clients who have gone."

Realtors' corner

Preventing vandalis·m
Vandalism Is a continuing problem across the country, but much
ollt can be prevented, according to Winnie Blair, president of thP
Southeastern Ohio Board of Realtors.
Poorly-malntalned property Is always a target for vandals , and
damage estimates natlonaUy run close to $1 billion per yea r . Those
losses divert funds for repairs that could be better used elsewhere.
· Worst of aU, acts of vandalism sometimes result In Injury or death.
Homeowners ·bear the cost of vandalism In terms of repairs and
higher Insurance premiums. Everyone pays the cost of vandalism to
public property through higher taxes.
While no effective method to deal with the Impulsive acts of a
vandal has yet been devised, there are things you can do to help
protect your home.
Run-down property Is often an Invitation to further damage. The
Southern Ohio board suggests homeowners maintain their houses
and yards In good condition to discourage vand')llsm. Illuminate
exterior areas, particularly on weekends and holidays. Unless a
neighborhood Is crtrne free, clear your yard of such Items as lawn
mowers, hoses. barbecues, or outdoor furnishings. Lock garages,
sheds and other outdoor !acUities.
Increased security and t.ouglllawsareooe ~~BrtGI~utloo, but
the long-range answer In lies rerognlzlng vaitd&amp;ltmrt-1111-a behaVIor
problem.
·
Positive community action programs aimed at redirecting Ole
energies of young people are strongly supported by the Southern
Ohio boaJ:'d and the National Assoclatlon of Realtors.
With community care and action, potential plunder can be turned
Into positive pride.

�Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-P oint Pleasant. w . va.

· AugJJSt 29, 1982
Page-E -2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis , Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w.. Y a .

The sunday Times-Se ntinel- Page. E -3

August 29, 1982

Two -luxurious hotels: Park Central and UJsamer
Agriculture and our community

Despite weather, expect bumper crops

Lists feeder calf sales
By BRYSON R. CARTER
Livestock, Hillsboro, all beef breeds,
ExteDBioo Agent
calves and yearlings.
GALLIPOLIS ~ It's time for fall
- Oct. 13, 8 p.m., Ohio Valley
feeder calf sales and local larrners Livestock Co. , Gallipolis, all beef
ha ve several to choose from. Mo..t
breeds.
calves won't be going to market for
- Oct. 18, B p.m., Union Stockyarabout another month but it's not too ds, Hillsboro, Ohio State Charolais
early to be making plans.
sale.
The sales list is for Ohio Valley
- Oct. 26, 8 p.m ., Ath ens
Livestock Co. here at Gallipolis and
Li vestock, Athens, all beef breeds,
the Union Stockyards at Hillsboro calves and yearlings.
sponsored by the yard owners. All of
- Oct. 'll , 8 p.m., Ohio Valley
the other sales that 1 am listing are
Livestock, Gallipolis, all bee f
wh~t's known as "Ohio Approved"
breeds.
Fteder Calf Sales conducted by
- Nov. 1, B p.m., Union Stockyarstockyard owners in conjunction ds, Hillsboro, all breeds, calves,
witll Fanner Feeder Calf Com- yearlings and Holsteins.
- Nov. 3, B p.m., Producer's
mittees.
Livestock , Hillsboro , all beef
The sale dates and places are as
breeds and yearlings.
follows:
- Nov. 8, 11 a.m., Union Stock- Sept. 20, Bp.m., Union Stockyar·
yards, Hillsboro, pre-weaned and
ds, Hillsboro, yearling and Holstein.
conditioned sale.
- Sept. 20, B p.m., Ohio Valley
- Nov. 10, 8 p.m. Ohio Valley
Livestock Co., Gallipolis, all beef
Livestock, Gallipolis, all beef
breeds and yearlings.
breeds.
- Sept. 29, B p.m., Producer's
- Nov. 15. 6 p.m.. Union StockyarLivestock, Hillsboro, all beef breeds
ds. Hillsboro, all breeds, calves,
and yearlings.
- Oct. II, B p.m., Union Stockyar- -yea rings and Holsteins.
- Nov. 16 , 8 p.m., Athen s
ds, Hillsboro, all beef breeds, calves,
Livestock, Athens, all beef breeds,
yearlings and Holsteins.
- Oct. 12, B p.m., Athens hornless and feedlot conditioned.
- Nov. 22. 8 p.m., Union StockyarLivestock, Athens, all beef breeds,
ds, Ohio State Charolis sale.
calves, yearlings dairy.
- Oct. 13, 8 p.m., Producer' s

Homemakers' Circle

Preserving without sugar
By BETTIE CLARK
Home Economics Agent
GALLIPOLIS - Although you
usually add sugar when canning or
freezing fruits, sometimes it's
necessary or advantageous to
preserve without sugar. For example, if you're preserving food for a
diabetic or someone else requiring a
special diet, you may need to omit
sugar entirely. Or if you're just
trying to cut calories or cut costs, a
lighter syrup or less sugar may be
used.
Besides enhancing flavor of canned and frozen fruits, sugar does
help keep it from getting mushy and
losing its bright color. So preserving
fruits without sugar demands some
special attention.
Here are some tips for good
quality canned and frozen fruits
when preserved with little or no
sugar. First, whether canned or
frozen, select fully ripe fruit. These
will be sweeter !ban those not so
ripe. Work with a small amount at a
time.
When preparing for canning, keep

iiy jAME5 SANDs

By DON KENDALL
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON IAP I - The Ia te
planting forced on fanners by
1982's wet, cold spring Is producing
noticeable jitters among some crop
wal chers who fear that latematuring com and soybeans may
suffer when frosts arrive this fall .
According to I he Agrlcullure Departmeni's current forecast, the
corn harvest will be a record of 8.32
billion bushels. up l percent from
the pl'&lt;'\1ous high of 8.2 billion harvested last year.
Soybean production Is estimated
at 2.29 billion bushels, up 13 percent
from last year and l percent more
tha n the previous record of 2.TI btllion bushels produced In 1979.
A new crop productlon report will
be Issued by the department's Crop
Reporting Board on Sept. 10, renectlng fi eld conditions the first of
the month .
Meanwhile, weekly progress reports Issued by the government's
Joint Agricultural Weather FacUlty show that the fall harvest of corn
and soybeans will be later than usua l In some key production areas.
The latest report Issued Tuesday
covered the week Aug. 1&amp;-22. It said
that "corn was In good-to-excellent
condition In parts of the Com Belt
and Southeast and falr-to-good In
other areas."
Further, the report added: "Cool
temperatures In the western Com
Belt again slowed·development of
the already late crop."
The report does not attempt to
forecast crop production, but It

light-colored fruits from darkening
by dropping the peeled fruit into a
solution using two tablespoons each
of salt and vinegar to one gallon of
By DON KENDALL
water. Do you leave fruit in the
AP Farm Writer
water longer than 20 minutes. Then
WASHINGTON lAP)- The Unidrain before packing.
Fruit may be canned in its own ted States Is close to romplettng
juice, juice from other fruits or in "voluntary restraint agreements"
water. The processing times are the with major foreign suppliers to hOld
same as for fruit canned with a down Imports of hamburger beef
during the remainder of the casugar syrup.
Fruits may also be frozen in tlleir lendar year.
Acrordlng to Agriculture Departown juice, in other fruit juices or in
ment officials, the Office of U.S.
water.
To prevent apples, peaches, pears Trade Representative Is handling
and apricots from discoloring, add the actual negotiations with the blg
11'.! to 2 teaspoons ascorbic acid to a shippers, Including Australia, New
Zealand and Canada.
gallon of the packing liquid.
Harold Sanden, deputy director
Add artificial sweetening to canned or frozen fruits before serving of livestock and meat operations In
according to personal preferences. the department' s Foreign AgriculUsing these products as an tural Service, said Wednesday that
ingredient in the food preservation final agreements could be reached
recipe may cause tlle fruit to taste by the end of this week but that
some "flnal details" had to be
bitter when served.
For more infonnation on food worked out concerning the actual
preservation, stop at the county ex- . levels for specific rountrles.
tension office or call446-7007.

does provide a look at the stage of
development for various crops. For
example, the later com stages Include dough and dent - Indications
of the kernel development.
"ln the 17 major producing
states, 66 percent of the com was In
or past the dough stage, and 29 percent was In or past ihe dent stage,"
the report said.
Collectively, the 17 states were at
the same stage of dough development as !bey were at this time last
year- when the harvest went on to
be a record. The rating or 29 percent In the dent stage was two per·
cenlage points a head of the
year-ago pace.
"Corn was 42 percent denied In
the eastern area. nine points ahead
of average. and only 12 percent
dented In the western reglon. 14 per·
cent later than normal," the report
sat&lt;).
For example, In the eastern Corn
Belt the Ohio crop was reported 45
percent dented, compared to 15 per·
cent a year ago. Indiana corn was
50 percent In the dent stage, com·
pared to 15 percent a year ago.
But In Iowa, only 11 percent of \he
corn acreage was reported dented.
compared to 23 percent a year ago.
The Nebraska crop was 10 percent
dented against 25 percent a year
earlier.
Soybeans also showed the effects
of the late sprtng, with development ahead of last year In the eastern Corn Belt and behind In the
west. In Ohio, for example, 95 percent of the soybeans have deve-

loped seed pods, compared to 60
percent a year ago.
The Nebraska crop, meanwhUe.
was only 65 percent In the pod
stage, compared to 95 percent a
year ago.
WASHINGTON (API - The
Agriculture Department says a cutback In hog marketings In July
helped boost retail pork prices
sharply for the third consecutlve
month.
William Lesher, 'assistant secretary for economics, said lower prices for fresh fruit and vegetables
helped offset the Increases for some
other foods .
Lesher's comments Tuesday followed a monthly Labor Department report which showed retaU
food prices, overall, remained unchanged in July. Food bought at
grocery stores declined 0.4 percent
from June, while food eaten away
from home Increased 0.6 percent
durtng the month.
Retail beef and veal pr1ces
dropped 0.5 percent In July; pork
prices rose 0.9 percent; and
"other" meats, which Includes processed meat, rose 0.4 percent.
Poultry pr1ces dropped 2.2 percent from June, but egg prices rose
3.7 percent, Lesher said.
Fresh fruit prices dropped 2.5
percent as large supplies of bananas and many non-citrus fruit oftset
declining supplies of apples and
oranges, he said. RetaU fresh vegetable prices dropped 5 ~rcent as
Increased supplies of lettuce, tomatoes and many other summer ve-

getables came Into the market .
Lesher said food prices overall
are expected to Increase an average of about 5 percent this year,
compared to a 7.9 percent rue In
1981. It would be the smallest annual increase since food prices rose
3.1 percent In 1976.
"The farm value of foods Is expected to average near 3' percent
above last year's level, the third
consecutive year df relatively
small increases," he said.
The "farm-to-retaU spread" or
margin of prices between what
farmers get and what consumers
a!'&lt;' charged at retail stores w1II be
up4 to 5 percent thlsyear, the smallest annual Increase since 197'7,
Lesher said.

WASHINGTON lAP) -Drought
spread further Into grain areas In
Australlathe past week, says the
government's Joint Agrtcultural
Weather FacUlty.
"Isolated showers In Queensland
did little to ease the deteriorating
agricultural situation In the country's eastern crop areas," the facUlty said Tuesday.
"Drought conditions spread Into
the south where much of Austra-

lia's barley crop Is grown. Beneficial rains fell on crop areas of
Western Australia."
The report did not Include production estimates. Australia Is a
major competitor of the United
States In world grain markets, particularly the wheat trade.

U.S. may impose hamburger beef restraints
Under U.S. law dating to 1964 and
revised as recently as 1979. Imports
of certain kinds of meat are subject
to stiff quota restrictions lf they are
expected to exceed a trigger level
adjusted annually to reflect
changes In U.S. production.
The meat subject to the quota Is
prtmarUy lower-grade beef which
Is used In hamburger or In other
processed foods . Usua lly . It
amounts to around 6 to 9 percent of
U.S. beef output.
Each calendar quarter, the secretary of agriculture must estimate how much of the quota-type
meat Is expected to enter the U.S.
market during the entire year. If
any of the estimates exceed the
trigger level, quotas must be

proclaimed.
The tr1gger for meat Imports this
year Is 1.3 bllllon ·pounds. If quotas
are Imposed, the actual Imports
would be held to 1.25 billion pounds.
specified as a minimum floor .
Voluntary restraint agreements
have been used many times over
the years to avoid Imposing strict
quotas. In some cases, when U.S.
meat prices were tight and retail
prices rising, quotas were Imposed
and Immediately suspended so that
additional meat could be Imported.
Fol'l)'ler President Carter Incurred the wrath of cattle producers in 1978 when he Imposed quotas
and then suspended them to allow
an additional 200 mUllon pounds of
beef to be Imported during the re-

matnder of the year.
A. slmllar situation occurred In
1979 when Carter again Imposed
quotas, suspended them and then
negotiated voluntary restraint
agreements which were above the
ortglnal trigger level. The plan was
to do the same thing In 1981, but
Carter left office before 11 could be
carried out.
The Reagan administration decided quota action was not needed
1n 1981 because imports were estimated to be less than the trJsger
level for that year.
This year, Agriculture Secretary
John R. Block said In two previous
quarterly estimates that 1982 Imports also would be below the quota
trigger level.

THE ROOM OCCUPIED by Beuellelal FIDaDce date&amp; baelt tO 1850,
wbea It was a part of tbe Samuel Maxoa seboolhouse. in later yean tbe
room was a part of a hotel. A fire in 1958 destroyed tbree large buildings
on Ibis block wltb tbe Beaellclal room surviving. Tbe new exterior to match tbe rest of the B &amp; P bulldJDg was added in 1960.

Peeps, a Gallipolis Diary:

Andrew Donnally h,e ads
family of Popes, Peeps
By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOUS - Some months ago
when the basic descendancy of Andrew Donnally appeared in Peeps,
this colwnn suggested that A. Don
Pope, another descendant, try toe~­
pand the list of our forefather 's
descendants. Pope's address is 2916
Helen Ave., Orlando, Fla. 32004. ·
ANDREW'S YOUNGER brother,
Dominick, who also settled near
Rodney, had a son named Dominick,
making· three Dominicks to confuse
the hapless researcher. Sadly in 1832
the elder Dominick died of cholera
on a boat at Cincinnati. His and
other bodies involved were burned.
WHEN PROOF of his death
reached Gallipolis, the chancery
court cleared the way for sale of his
real estate. Listed as his children
were Charles Thomas, James,
Mary, and Dominick,· Jr. Pope
would appreciate more data on this
family; therefore, please either
write to him at the address in the fir·
st paragraph, or telephone Peeps at
446-2342.
ANDREW SR.'S SON Dominick
was born in 1792 and died in 1832. He
married a Mary. Merry thing to do;
what! Capt. Jefferson Donnally,
.their son, was born Nov. 26, 1808, and
died Feb. 24, 18411. Capt. Jefferson
Donnally married Frances Devacht
Feb. 12, I837, and she died at age 23.

1.,
/

CO-OP HEAD RETffiES- Neal Taylor, left, Arabia, accepts a plaque of commendallon from Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperallve Manager Donald
Robinson on his retirement after 35 years' service as
a trustee of the Gallipolis-based cooperallve. Taylor,

active as a farmer, farm equipment dealer, bank and
hospital official, has 5erved as the C&lt;Hip' s president
since 1956. The pre8entallon was made during Buckeye's recent anooal meeting al Buckeye Hllls Career
Center.

DOYLE HARVILL was a frequent
visitor to the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, the Daily Sentinel, and the
Point Pleasant Register, advising
the editors and answering a bushel
of questions from everybody
present. He offered suggestions,
such as shunning the passive voice
in headlines.

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

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

The Saving Place ®
Open Dai I y l 0-9; Sunday l -6

Offer Available Thru September 4, 1982

LIKE A SEMINAR one must
describe Doyle's sessions, but more
interesting.

OVP NEWS EDITOR Dal•
Rothgeb, Jr., and wife, Patty, have
returned to work following a week's
cruise in the Carribean. The
Rothgebs left Cincinnati Sunday,
Aug. 8 for tlle seven day cruise to
Cozwnel, Mexico, Grand Caynan
Islands and Jamaica.
WIDLF. ABOARD the "Fun" ship
Mardi Gras, the Gallipolis couple
met many interesting individuals including two pr1vate detectives.

BEING ASSIGNED to Table 52 in
tlle ship's Flamingo Dining Hall, the
MRS. ElSIE CAMERON, wbo vacationing couple met a
was a Donnally-Palmer researcher, honeymooning rouple, Guy and
made this conunent in 1956:
Brenda Berling of Irving, Te~as;
t talked with elderly Joseph Don· two private eyes, Johnnie Walker
natty who tlves in the Donnatty flats and his associate, P.K. Carroll of
in Gallipolis. That house is a
treasur'e of old things. His fa!her Norfolk, Va., and a mother-daughter
married Into the Devacht sitver- team, Wendy Ives of San Diego,
si'n ith family that sent work all over Calif. and her college teaching
the u . s. The family was written up mother, Yvonne S. Berry of
in the Gallipolis paper Easter 1953.
Coronado, Calif.
Mrs. Cameron mentions other
DURING THE WEEK, many
descendants :
stories
were exchanged ·during the
The elderly Mrs . (Flora A. Don·
luncheon
and dinner hours aboard
naiiYl Smith IS right about Mary
Ann IDonnally ) Palmer having a the ship.

sister, caroline u .• who married a
noted Ohio River boat captain,

1/

newspaper concatenation, has attained !he peak - the olympus - of
every journalist's ambition :
publisher of a newspaper. Harvill, il
carne out in August, is the new
publisher of the Montgomery, Ala .,
Advertiser and the Alabama Journal.

GALLIPOUS - Gallipolis' two
most lUllurious hotels at the turn of
tbe century were
the Park Central
and the Hotel
Ulsamer at 414
Second ,\venue: A
fire in 1958
destroyed most of
the latter hotel
which was about
the same width as
the steel and glass structure that
replaced the hotel. After the I~ fire
a small section of the hotel did survive ~nd was incorporated into the
new building (known as the Business
and Professional building I. Today
Beneficial Finance occupies the sur·
vivlng section of the old hotel.
Tbat old section dates to 1850 when
Samuel Maxon erected a three story
building roughly two-thirds the width of the present B&amp;P building.
Maxon started In !lis edifice a school
which came to be known as the
Gallipolis High School. Maxon's
school was a private one even
though the state in 1649 had passed
an act establishing public school
education. It was not untill858 that a
public school system was
established in Gallipolis. Prior to
1858 aU Gallipolis schools were
private.
IN 1850 THERE were no fewer
than seven private. schools in
Gallipolis. Besides Maxon's school
there were : Dellnda Jopling's
School; Mrs . Marks' French School
for Girls; Monsieur Fougries French School for Boys (which met in the
Anlerican House Hotel) ; Lycewn
Select School for Girls (located then
on the back lawn of the Presbyterian
Church in the Lyceum building

which has since burned down!;
as well as adding several feet on the Clendinen Hotel. In the mid-1920s the
David Hebard's School at 212 Third lower side of the building. All In all place was known as the Hotel AnAvenue and still standing; and the 15 rooms were added to the Shennan derson with Harry Anderson and
Gallia Academy.
House as well as a fancy tea room. It Fritz Nunnenkemp in charge. The
The Academy building which was
was about this time too that the hotel latter ran the " bar" in the hotel. It
located from the 1810s to 1846 in the opened two stores in its street level.
was questionable how much of a bar
300 block of Second had burned down
it
was for prohibition had been in efin 1846. The next academy building
~ 1883 THE HOTEL changed hanfect
for four years, nonetheless Nunwas not erected until 1853, but it is ds three times with John G.
nenkarnp
sold soft drinks and what
likely that the Academy continued CHerrington buying it only to sell to
was
called
"cereal beverage." The
· cla.:ises those seven years in tem- l.ewis Cavin who in tum sold it back
latter
drink
was made by
porary quarters.
to Mrs. John G. Cherrington. During
SAMUEL MAXON'S School con- that time the ~otel was known as the Wiedemann's and was later known
as " nea r beer ." Then D. L. Reese
tinued until1858 even though Maxon Millard House.
ran here the Reese Hotel as well as
died in 1853. Teaching in the school
were : E. A. Jackson, Henry Vose,
the Reese Restauranl. It then
In 1864 Frank Ulsamer took over became the Clendinen a second
Daniel Sammis, 0. Dyas, and R.
proprietorship
of the hotel Ihe later
WellS. The Ma~on School as well as
bought
it
I
and
changed
the name to time.
the Hebard School closed in 1858
IN 1943 TABIT sold the hotel to
with the opening of the Gallipolis the Hot~! msamer, a name that Charles and Elsie Swain, who in turn
Public School that same year. The would stick until 1919 even though leased the hotel part to John Johnson
courses taught at Maxon's school Frank died in 1910. His family ran who named the hotel the B&amp;B Hotel.
were: arithmetic, geography, gram- the place for nine years after About 1946 Morris Haskins bought
mar, ancient languages, natural Frank's death. Frank Ulsamer was the building for $32,1100 and Johnson
born in Baden, Gennany, and came
philosophy, algebra, and geometry.
to America in 1870 settling at cont.tnued as hotelkeeper. Eddie
In 1858 when the Gallia County
Nunnenkamp ran a cafe here and
Courl House burned down, the Gallipolis in 1881.
John Johnson had what he called the
Maxon building became the temBilliard Academy.
THE HOTEL'S MOST successful
porary court house. Charles Hoy had
When the hotel burned in 1958 the
in 1858 leased tlle Maxon building as years were under Ulsamer and
place
was known as the Hotel Plaza.
a hotel, but he had to wait until t~e during that ttme such notables as
It
was
in 1960 that the present
county left before he could open up William McKinley, William Jenbuilding
on
that site was completed.
the Washington House Hotel about nings Bryan, and Warren Harding
The
1958
fire
had also destroyed the
1859.
stayed there.
four
story
Elks
building and the
DURING mE CIVIL War the
three
story
laundry
down the street.
name of the hotel was changed to the
In 1919 George Tabit bought the
James
Sands'
address
Is P .0. Box
Shennan House in honor of William hotel and leased it to John Clendenin
Tec umseh Sherman and the who for about four years ran the 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
proprietor was William Jeffers. After the war Char:es Hoy again r;~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;,
operated the hotel as the Washington I
House for a couple of years
URGENTLY NEEDED OIL AND GAS LEASES
whereupon the name was changed
To fulfill future drilling progams write or call and be sure to include
property location and acreage that is available for lea se. Al so those
back to the Shennan House.
that have oil and gas teases that are due to expire within one vear .
In 1882 when John J. Pool owned
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
the hotel a massive enlargement
CALL
DENVER YOH0-245-5508
took place. Pool added a fourth floor

photo from a Palmer that had a suit-

DET. WALKER, retired naval officer; kept the group spellbound with
his sea stories.

Mary Ann (Donnally I Palmer was
the daughter of Andrew, Sr.'s son
Dominick and sister to Capt. Jefferson Donnally.

UCLA at Berkley, Calif. and widow,

Harry Bays. I oblained a copy of his

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case fitted wilh family photos.

H. DOYLE" HARVILL, 53, the
Number Two man in Multimedia's

MRS. BERRY, a graduate of
was infonnative with her knowledge
of various dishes served. In additon,
she overwhelmed everyone with her
friendliness.

Letter carrier-dog
matchup not too .funny

40

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DON'T MISS OUT. SEE YOUR aiRYSLEML~ DEAl FR.
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CARROLL-NORRIS DODGE IN~.
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counseling to bitten carters wishing
to file lawsuits against the dog
owners. It will also pursue set·
Uement with the third party to
recover losses Incurred by the ser·
vice.
·
Things don't have to go that far,
Struble says. All we ask Is that the
dog owner tl!ke a few common sense
steps to protect both their pet and
their letter carrier. U the dog is kept
outdoors, we ask that lt be secured
4way from the mail box and tbe
areas where the mail carrier enters
or leaves the property. .
Struble asks all local homeowners
to be aware of how serious dog bites
can be. "We constantly alert .our
carriers to ~ problem, bYt we need
the public's help to put a stop to aU
bites.''
.
The best protection our carriers
can ~ive iS a Httle tboughUul ac-tion on the part of the dog owner.
~the dog secured away from the
man
delivery area .0 that we IIIBy
• 1nm inJury bY wltbholdlng man
deUyery to any resident who keeps deliver tbe man properly .ancl
an wnstralned dog on the property. witholit any intel'ruptlon of serviee
·
In fact,' a dog allowed to run loose · to you or your heighoors.
can rault in interruption of aemce
The old saylns rlnga true --- "an..
ounce of prevention IIi Wlll1b
a pound
to a wboli block or~- ·
1
·
The Postil Service also provides ofcure."
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Postmaster Joe S.truble says of the
classic battle between the letter
carrier and the family dog. There is
irony here, Struble says. Many
people find humor in this confrontation, but there is mor,e human
tragedy In dog bite cases than you
might imagin~.
A newspaper story from Califor·
nia backs up this statement when a
postal letter .- carrier died in a
hospilal four days after he was bit·
len by 'a pit bulldog on the ann. The
cause of death was blood poisoning.
While a death due to a dog bite might
be rare, d~ bites are not. The "Dog
Days of Sumrriet" takes on a very
serious meaning to letter carriers.
Struble says that 5,700 letter
carriers across the nation were bit·
~n by dogs last year, including two
here.
Strubie•says tbe Postal Service
hu the right to priJtect Ita carlen

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'

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

�Pomerov- Middleport- Gallipol" s, Ohio-l'oi nt Pleasant,

w. Va .
August 29, 1982

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-E -7

Pom er oy- Middleport-Ga ll ipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. va .

High _rise structures -concern Cleveland businessman
WE RESERVE T1IE RIGHT TO

Because Cleveland Is an older
les wUI expand their business when ward and one back," Galvin sa id
rapidly .
The new construction wilt pres·
city that does not have as many they move In, but ot hers will slmply
"At the tlme that these buildings
sure
developers to till the bu ildlngs.
new companies moving In as a city
shift among several st ructures,
are filled, older class A and class B
Udrls
said.
!Ike Dallas, Texas, businesses tend Ga lvin said.
buildings wUI be under pressure
"Building
owners anddPvetopers
to expand their own base, which Is a
"It's not a serious problem. It's
with the possibility or greater va·
have
to
be very aggressive."
slower
kind
of
growth,
Galvin
said.
just a tlme lag," he said. Increased
cancles appearing In the downtown
said.
"From
the city's stand·
Udrls
vacancy
following
new
construe·
When the new buildings are fi n·
Cleveland market than has been
point,
this
Is
very
healthy.
lion
Is
"/Ike
taking
two
steps
for
·
!shed In Cleveland, some compan·
seen In the past decade."
rate Is," said Andl Udrls, commer· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - cia! development coordinator lor r
the city. "We have never had so
many buildings on line. I think everybody Is holding his breath.
"Obviously, there wlll be a glut
white the transition occurs, but If
the economy picks up we'll be tn
great shape. If It lags, the city will
be squeaking through, but In the
long run It won't hurt the city."
Projects under way downtown In·
elude the $78. ~ million, 26-story
SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
Medical Mutual Center; the $49.6
SUNDAY TO 10
mltllon, 16-story Ohio Bell TeleWe Accept Federal Food Stamps- We Resene The Right To Umit Quantities
phOne Co. building; the $40 million,
28-story Eaton Center, and the$ID
plus million Standard Oil Co.
(Ohio) headquarters, which will
•REDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY-SAVING
have 4~ stories.
COUPONS
AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V AND
The Medical Mutual office comRECEIVE
DOUBLE
THE VALUE WHEN YOU PUR·
plex, which Is to Include a public
CHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER
audltortum and recreation and fit.
ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE
ness center, Is scheduled to open In
REDEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY TO "FREE
mid-February. It does not yet have
DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACMERCHANDISE" COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER 49'
a major tenant.
IN
FACE VALUE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE
TURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
"We're worklng on this day by
COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM.
day," said Jerome W. Rogers, comTO 49' IN FACT VALUE.
CIGAREnES AND CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE
munications vice president for the
EXLUCEO BY LAW. TO INSURE PRODUCT TO AU
SAVE DOUBLE $$
firm. "A lot of people are InterOUR CUSTOMERS, WE ARE LIMITING OUR "OOOBLE
ested. We're sitting down and talk·
COUPON" OFFER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFEE
JOHNSON'S
lng on a dally basis.
AND ONE CAN OF GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
"We're aware that there's probaFAMILY. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD THURSDAY,
ANDMARKV
Sep tember 2, 1982.
bly more bu Udlng going on now In
the community than before, but we
feel It' s an attractive building and
we'll putl tenants In there."
Some eyebrows have been raised
because the complex has not secured long-term financing, but
Rogers said the firm planned It that
way .
"We were not Interested In long·
USDA CHOICE
term financing from the beginning
SUPERIOR
EXTRA LEAN
because or high Interest rates,"
BONELESS
Rogers said. "We went with short·
term, and In five years we' ll look at
long-term financing."
There has been comment about
LB.
LB.
Medical Mutual having higher rent
than other new downtown buildUSDA CHOICE BONELESS
U.S. GRADE A
Ings, but Rogers said rates cannot
USDA CHOICE
be compared easily.
B~EFSTEW
Udrls agreed, saying some rates
· Include utllltles and taxes, while
SUPERIOR
SUPERIOR
SUPERIOR
others do not.
12oz.
Peter L. Galvin of Adler, Galvin,
PKG.
LB.
Rogers Inc., real estate, said comparisons may be Inaccurate be~-------cause one rate structure Includes
all rent space, even that taken up
by air conditioning or heating
equipment and not usable by tenants, while another structure cov·
ers only usable space.
WHITE OR
U.S. NO.1
In January, Galvin's firm foreICE
BURG
FLAME
RED
ALL PURPOSE
cast that class A or first-rate office
space In Cleveland will remain ex·
HEAD
tremely tight untU 1983 when the
20
LB.
Medical Mutual , Eaton and Belt
BAG
. buildings are ail scheduled to be
finished.
YELLOW
TENDER CRUNCHY
CALIFORNIA
CLEVELAND (AP) -With lour
"At that time, a somewhat slgnlf·
major office buildings rising to- !cant glut will temporarily appear,
ward the sky, some officials are wtllch wW be magnWed with the
concerned about a potential glut of construction of the new Sohlo office
downtown busbtess space In the building" tn mld-1985, the firm renext few years.
ported. "However. It Is felt that
"Cleveland has never really pent-up demand !or class A space
known whattts potential absorption will absorb all four buildings rather

a..IIT QUANTITES

ifj.
USE OUR
A 1ft

....

_

o.elfl .,.. I U .Ill SIMCI

'

a-p 0,.. 'f- by·A••' AcctiiM

;.,Ul

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY
AUGUST 29
THROUGH
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 4

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN.9 TO 10:00 P.M.
85 Vine Street
Galipoli, Ohio Phone 446-9593

'We Reserve the RigM to linl Quantity''

9

MIDDLEPORT OHI

DOUBLE
COUPONS

THRU
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

"YOUR HOMETOWN
SUPERMARKETS"

AT

25°/o OFF
Mlai'S llf&amp;IJUIII'IIQ:
All Rods ond R -

ALI lisning rods and reels in our stock are
reduced 25%. You'll lind Zebco, Johnson,
Century and many otner name brands ol
spinning. spincasl and bailcasling rods and
reels at speclular savincs!
SPORTS DEPT.

Budget
Pleaser

Budget
Pleaser

Budget
Pleaser

Special

Special

Special

BONELESS
TAVERN
HAM

GROUND
CHUCK

MIXED FRYER PARTS

CHUCK STEAK

$ 49

CHUCK
ROAST

·-~FF~
-A\1

All of our fishing tackle is now II lf, off
our regular price. That includes hooks,
lines, sinkers and much, much more.
SPORTS DEPT,

Pleaser
Special

Special

$

WHITE
POTATOES

·.
12 Oz. Heck ~s

3.66

Glass Cleaner

Reg.lo 6.99

Heck's glass cleaner cleans
without streaking.
HOU SEW AR ES

TO

5.44

Assorted Lamp Shades
lamp shades in assorted
sizes.

Speed Stick Deodorant

long-lasting protection
from Mennen's long-lasting
speed slicl In regular,
spice, herbal and lime.

Special

ROYAL CRE9T

BUSH BEST
LIGHT RED

2LB.
LOAF

Reg. l. 71 Qt.

Gulf Charcoal
Starter Fluid

Ql.

Wedgee Gun Rack

Reg.1.B9

COLUMBUS - "The Power of
Rotary" will be the subject of an address to the Rotary Club of Middleport - Pomeroy on Friday, Sept.
10 at 6 p.m. at the Heath United
Methodist Church by Thomas C. Fitzpatrick, . governor of this Rotary

Creal for vehiclet Quick
and easy to install. Made
of durable plastic and
steel. Assorted clor~

district.

F01 desserts, snacks or any trme . Assorted

Fitzpatrick, of Columbus, will also
confer with Rankin R. Pickens,
~dent . of the local club and ,club
officers on the group's service activities for the year.
Fltzpa\fick Is one cl 403 Rotary
govemon throughout the world who
are representatives cl Rotary lntef!lltional in districts composed of
member clubs. Each district governor~ Clubs in his area. Mr.
Fllipltrick's district, No. 669, consllla cl 35 clubs with almost 3,000
me_mbers spread over the

tlawors.

~mquadrantclOhlo.

8 Oz. Reese's Pieces

ggc

3 Oz. Jello Gelatin Dessert

16 Oz. Reese's Pieces

.\ member ol the Rotary Club of
Columbus, Fitzpatrick Is president
and genera! manager of Elford, Inc.,

.,.

'

..
.

r

•

ROYAL CREST

FRUIT DRINK

oz.
CTN.

Pleaser

Budget
Pleaser

Sp~clal

Special

Budget

NORTHERN

TOILET
TISSUE -

¢

4 ROLL
PAK

Budgf!!
Pleaser
Special

Budget\
Pleaser
Spedaf

HOLSUM SPECIAt

'
VIVA

DINNER
NAPKINS

2~.8
'

.

14Q..CT.

PIIG.
•

·6·g~.

Pfeaser
Special
GRADE A
EXTRA LARGE

EGGS

15 oz.

SPINACH

CAN

BUSH'S BEST

PEPSI
DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW
CHERRY PIE

LIQUID

BUSH'S BEST

Pleaser
Special

'

acr.
PJG • .

GALLON ·
PLASTIC

KIDNEY
BEANS ~~~z.

Budget

MT. TOP FROZEN

SANDWICH or
WIENER ~UNS

9

PINTO
BEANS

8-16 OZ. BOlLS.

SUNLIGHT

general contractors; located in

QJIIImbua. He w:as elected to office
at the Rotary lntematlonal Con~on in Dallas, Teua, U.S.A., in
.hne, 1912, and will serve until'June, ·
It&amp;t

VITAMIN D
MILK

GALLON PLASTIC

8

ntOMAS C. FITZPATRICK

1.33

RED PLUMS

Special

ONION Dl P

1.99

LB.

Special

-

Reg . 6 .49 ,

4i99e

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

SEEDLESS
GRAPES

Pleaser

ROYAL CREST REAL FRENCH

Fitzpatrick
speaker

¢

Budget
Pleaser

$ 99

99 e

CHUNK BOLOGNA
Budget
Pleaser

Budget
Pleaser

KRAFT
VELVEETA

HOU SEWARES

79e

$ 49

Special

.HEAD
LETTUCE

JLB.
BAG

COOING ONIONS

1.38

99e

FRANKIES
Budget

POLISH SAUSAGE
Budget
Pleaser

All Fishing Taclle

LOCALLY OWNED
AND OPERATED.

THURSDAY ONLY
SEPTEMBER 2

BUSH'S BEST

26 oz.
BOX

CHILl HOT BEANS

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
P.leaser

Budget
Pleaser

Special

Special

BROUGHTON

SHEDD'S

PREMIUM
QUALITY
ICE CREAM

SOFT SPREAD
MARGARINE

BANQUET

FROZEN
DINNERS

$169
., ' .

�Pomeroy - Moddlcport - Gallopol ~&gt; , 01110

Page-E -8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Po 1111 Pl c d ~a nt ,

August 29, 1982

w. va .

Fred's Place, one of Cincinnati's hottest family .stores
CINCINNATI tAP) - Fred Cl·
anclolo, who began selling fruit and
vegetables at a sidewalk produce
Stand when he was 6 years old, now
one of the hottest little mom 'n'
pop stores In Cincinnati.
It's one of a scant handful of pl~ ­
ces where the public can get a
"sneak prev iew" of new products
from The Procter &amp; Gamble Co ..
the giant food and personal products manufacturer whose head·
quarters arc around the corner
lrom Fred's Place, the last of Cincinnati' s downtown groceries.
"When I first moved over here 14
years ago, they approached me and
wanted to know If I would handle
their new Items," said Cianciolo, ,2,
!"ho followed his father and grand·
father In the produce business.
· "The same week I was moving
Into this bigger store, another one
was going out of bu siness. They
were the originators, but they
!;VOU!d only handle the I P&amp;G ) food
!terns; I'll take anything that
romes out - drugs, medicine ...
&amp;caps, shampoo."
• Clancolo's "bigger" 20-foot -by60-!oot store has been portrayed In
a trade magazine and on television
liS a test market for Procter &amp;
Gamble. The company says that
Isn't exactly true.
"There are five or six stores In
the greater Cincinnati area that
typically carry some of our test
market products, primarily as a
ineans for our employees to try
them," said spokeswoman Kathy

oas

ing some people who adm it to being
"spies" for P&amp;G competitors.
"Every once in a while,! accidentially find out about something I 'm
realty not supposed to know ," sa id
Cianciolo, who reli shes being close
to the pulse of big business.
" I know the next thing they're going to come out with is toothpas te in
« dispenser. which sounds like a
pretty neat Idea. " he says, showing
off some 61 thl' products.
"This stuff I Rejoicl', a hand lotion I. thi s is going out in about 10
months because it's not making
enough money for them.
"But this one here is going to be a
good one butter rfiavoredl
Crisco."
Ci anciolo began workin g with his
grandfather when he was 6, and ran
a fruit stand by himself when he
was 9. His father, who Is 80. still has
a produce stand in Cincinnati' s his·
torte Findlay Market, and a cousin
runs a wholesale produce business.

F'red's Place does abou t a third of
It s bu siness at a delicatessen counter around noontime, and Cianciolo
says many cus tomers are attracted
to his store because It Is a P&amp;C.
outlet.
Two current big sellers- not yet
generally ava ilable - are a ba·
throom tissue called Certain, and
Brigadc. a toilet bowl cleanser that
2 ianciolo predicts " Is going to be a
tremr ndous it em ."
" I tr y most of the products mysel f," he sa id . " But there are very
few frN' samples . They very sel·
dam give you any samples."
Aft er P&amp;G decides to mass
market an item. Cianciolo has to
buy It like anyone else - at a
supermarket.
"I usually do all right until It goes
on the open market." he said.
"Then it changes; they (supermarkets! sell the stuff cheaper
than I can buy it. because they buy
t ru ckioads.

"One&lt;' ol gets on the big markPt
that' s thl' &lt;•nd of me. But I'll take
thr grm:.· w hile I can."
One of the newest products in
Fred 's Plac_e Is Ariel. a laundry detergent. Another Is a cake mix de·
sig ned to be cooked In a
micro-wave oven. It ca n produce a
cake in 10 minutes, ~t ar t to finish.
" I put in everything they IP&amp;G 1
have !(Ot," sa id Cianciolo. "l usually can get all. I want. The only
thing they rationed me on wasPrln·
gle's," a reconstituted potato chip
which sold well at Fred's Place but
falled nationally.
"I guess you cold say that Prln·
gle's was the baby that really
started this thing. Everybody came
over to get Pringle's, and then they
stocked all these other Items ln."
Cianciolo recalls only one P&amp;G
bomb. a desert - "Cold Snap. I
think; that was the dog of dogs."
" It took so long tomake it. somt'-

going. but his opinion won't kill or
save a product.
"I doubt It ; I ·m just a little. small
plug In their opera tion." Cianciolo
said . "But on Cold Snap .. It was a
very slow sale ... l might have been
a little more Importan t on that one;
I never did reorder it . That one just
didn't sell_,.,

AMESSAGE fROM IHE BIBLE...

THE WORD IS GOD'S INTERPRETER

William B. t&lt;ughn
Paul encouraged Timothy saying, "Study to show thyself ap·
proved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ~shamed, rightly
dividing the word of truth '' (II Tim . 2 : 15) . Timothy was to earnestly
and dil igently meditate (study J upon divine truths. He was to :•ri.ghtly
divide" the truth correctly , di r ec tly , and accurately , tor th1s 1S the
true meaning of the phrase " rightly divide." In doing this, he would
pass the test given by God (approved), and become a workman fha1
would have no cause for being ashamed .
Bible study can be just as enri ching for us today. If we will heed
the same admonition . The salvation at our souls r es t upon our coming
to the knowledge of the truth, "Who will have all men to be saved, and
to come unto the knowledge ot the truth" (I T im . 2 : 4) . It is the only
way in which we can stand approved unto God and be a workman that
will never be ashamed. To rightly div ide the truth , we must know the
divisions of the Bible, Old and New Testaments; the period to which
each testament belongs; know the tru e meaning of the words as they
are used; leave every scri pture in context ; know who is speaking, to
whom the speaker is speak ing, and the intent for which they were
spoken .
The scripture is God's interpreter tor us, therefore , we do not turn
to it to justify our doctrine, but to teach the doctrine of the Lord! The
scripture is of no private interpretation, "Know this first, that no
prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation. For the
prophecy came not in old tim e by th e will of man but holy men of God

..

spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost" t II Pet . 1:20.211 .
"Prophecy" is to speak th e mind and counsel of God, while "scripture " has reference to the writing of the wil l or counsel of God . "Is''
comes from the Greek verb, denoting to become or spring into being .
''Private" is one's own . " Interpretation" means explanation . One of
the f irst truths Peter established in his epistle, was that the mind and
wil l of God did nol spring into being as the result of the prophet's own
will and explanation , but that the mind and counsel of God were
spoken and written by the Hol y m en of God who were led by the Holy
Spirit .
As the prophets of old were led by the Holy Spirit in speaking the
mind of God and writing His w i l l. the law, so were the apostles led by
the Holy Spirit in speaking the m ind of God and writing His will, the

Gilbert.
: " He (Cianciolo) Is not at all a test
market. We don't take any read·
lngs from these stores for test
market purposes . There just
wouldn't be enough sales, market
or people for a test market .
"It's so our employees can try
our new products. Our people don't
get any free samples; with 40,1XXJ
(employees) In the U.S.. our shart'holders would go crazy ."
In many ways. Cincinna t1 Is a
Procter &amp; Ga!Jlble town. where
12.000 to 13,!XXJ people work for the
$12 bUIJon·a-year packager of a
wide range o!food, soap, soft drinks
and personal care products.
Those P&amp;G employees aren't the
only people who flock Into Fred's
Place, past the outdoor fruit stand
and through narrow aisles to stacks
or toothpaste, cooking oil and hand
cream that aren't available In suburoan supermarkets.
"Since the '20-20' Itelevision 1
.w two weeks ago, I'd say 25 per·
cent of my business has been P&amp;G
product s," said Cianciolo- lnclud·

thing like over three hours; people
were buying boxes just for souvenlers. But I wound up gettlngrldofall
of it."
Cianciolo doesn't have any pret ·
entlons about his role In the success
or failure of P&amp;G product s he prt'vlews. Company executives somt'\ tlmes ask him how things are

go,pel. When men spoke. who were not led by

lh~

Holy Spirit in the

apostolic or miracu lous age, they spoke their own (private) ex·
pla nations (interpretations) which came from their own wisdom,
knowlegde, and opinions (will of man) . Their ignoring the Holy Spirit
came from their own wisdom , knowledge, and opinions, produced
" private interpretations. " The same is possible today . The Holy Spirit
speaks to us inrJirec tly through the Word since we are not living in the
apostolic ( m iraculous age) . The scriptures that constitute the Word
reveal to us the mind (knowledge) and counsel (will) ot God, serving
as &lt;God's interpreter, interpreting, explaining, and teaching GOd's
m essage . When religious teachers of today, ignore the Holy S_)i rit's
teac hing in the Word . ann turn to their own wisdom, knowledge and
opi nions, they prod uce "private interpretations! ' ' Th e scripture being
of no private interpretation. men need to lay aside thier preconceived
ideas, thoughts, and opinions, keeping the word unmixed from these
impurities _When this is done. the word of God will be understood!
~
1For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write ... )
-~

'

-

~leoful .'Ifill ~!.«Mil

A schedule of area programming,
activities and events,
August 25 thru 31

A guide to area entertainment
Includes complete

~~tid

_of'

Bulaville Road • P.O. Box 301

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 4S63t

!&gt; und&lt;~v

·----····

Morn1ng
61bhr Study t ; JD

worsrup IO : JO

Sundl't' Eventnt
Wonllip, : OO

WldMidAy

Evtftlnt
1: M

Rldlo

" Mesu .. fr••

listings

IMiibl•"
D•ily· WJEH

MY STORE -

Fred Cianciolo, CloclooaU mer-

chant, smiles as he points to bfs store which has

become a bot shopping place in the Queen City. (AP
LaseJ11hoto I.

II :SSAM

TV Mailbag
Page 2
.Soap World
Page 5

While oth er banks merge and
becom e small parts of a large corporation network, isn't it nice to
know that one bank remains fir mly committed to the area and it's
people. Ohio Valley Bank. We're
one of the fastest growing independent banks in Ohio. Large
enough to provide the services you
demand . Small enough to provide
the individualized attention you
deserve . Proud to be your local! ·
ownedindependentbank.
·ohio Valley Bank has surpassed
one hundred million dollars in
assets, a significant milestone not
only . to us but to you, our
customers. We grew on your
dreams. One dream at a time. The
dream of owning your own home.
The dream your parents had to
send , you to college. Your
retirement dream . Thousands of
dreams built on years of hard
work, sacrifices, faithful savings
- and trust. For over a century,
Tri -Countians confidence in Ohio
Valley Bank has built 100 million
dollars worth of security for you.

Sports listings
Page 9
Area Events
Page 15
Misha and Cipa Dichter

·Marshall Artists Series ...Page 8
Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

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