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                  <text>OSP probes wrecks

WALK- Pointing up the importance of physical Thursday. The group hlked from the senior citizens
fitness among senior citizens, these Meigs County center for abouU5 minutes.
senior citlz•ns took part in the state-wide elder walk

First reading
$150,000 with plans for expansion.anticipation to add on.
There will be three teller stations
and one drive up window. The entire
area will also be blacktopped Wolfe
noted.
Council extend their pleasure in
having a branch of the Racine
Home National Bank in the village
and offered to assist in any way
possible.
Meeting with council were Mrs.
Bill Hawley and Karen Guinther
regarding employment with Ontario
Pipeline Company when the com·
pany begins work in Syracuse.
Ontario Pipeline is laying the
sewer line for the new sewer system.
Council infonned them it had no
control over the sewage system and
any decision to hire personnel was
up to Ontario Pipeline. However,
council did agree to contact one of
the members of the SyracuseRacine Region~! Sewage District.
Woodrow Hendricks, who lives on
Dusky St., lodged a complaint concerning persons traveling too fast
near his home.
Council agreed to place appropriate speed limit signs in the
area.
Council also stressed that caution
be used by those walking the streets,
riding bicycles and children playing
in the streets after dark. It was in·

(Continuedfrompage l )

dicated that people on the streets after dark arc posing a dangerous
situation.
Buddy Cundiff, a member of the
Syracuse Board of Public Affairs,
asked what progress has been made
in hiring someone to supervise the
laying of sewer lines in the village.
Council informed Cundiff that it
were told that perhaps grant money
is available to pay the salPry of an
inspector. As soon as council has any
information they will inform the
water board. It was noted that Commonwealth Engineers is repsonsible
for mspection.
Also meetmg with council was
Paige Cleek, pool manager, who was
given the applications that have
been submitted for employment at
the pool as lifeguards.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Kathryn Crow.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Janice Lawson, clerk, George
Holman, treasurer, Milton Varian,
police chief, Willie Guinther, Mike
Struble, Crow, Jack Williams and
Troy Zwilling, council members,
Bill Quickel, Larry Brogan, Mrs.
Hawley, Karen Guinther, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman London, Hendricks,
Bill Cundiff and Kenneth Cundiff
Jim Teaford and Jean Hall.
Council will meet in special
session Tuesday, May 12, at 7_p.m.

Judge ends 34 cases
Twelve defendants were fined and
14 others forfeited bonds i!t Meigs
County Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Donald Casto, Minersville, $5
and costs, unsafe vehicle ; Steven
Baker, Coshocton, $10 and costs,
failure to display valid registration;
Darrell Harmon, Jr., Parkersburg
and Connie M. Tucker, Racine, $23
and costs each, speed ; Timothy
Ebershach, Middleport, $10 and
costs, expired license plate; Mark
Mitch, Pomeroy, $3!i and costs,
alcohol in a state park; Deborah
Chevalier, Middleport, and Ronald
Robinson, New Haven, $24 and costs
each, speed ; Craig Hill, Marietta,
$20 and costs, speed; Alan C. Wilson,
Racine, $3!i and costs, speed excessive for road conditions; Ed
Savage, Pageville, $20 and costs,

disorderly conduct; Jon Kloes,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, speed.
Forfeiting bonds were Ronel
Burritt, Alhany, Jeffrey W. Allen,
Wheeling, Rodney Rohrhaugh, Caldwell, Ronald D. Eishenhour.
Ashland, Terry Barrett, Rutlano ,
and Stephen Halley, Pomeroy, $40.50
each, speed; Dawn Eich, Minerva,
$60.50, speed; Delores Tryall, Nitro,
and William Curtis, Pomeroy,
$360.50 each, DWI; Raymond L. Lit· .
tie, Pomeroy, $360.50, OW!, $30.50,
failed to yield, $60.50, no operator's
license;
Theodore
Steed, load;
Jr.,
Parkersburg,
$30.50, insecure
Wesley D. Clark, Racine, $60.50, no
operator's license; Mike Harrison,
Middleport, $60.50, no operator's
license or motorcycle license;
William Barber, Reedsville, $35.50,
no validation sticker.

Area Deaths
Jocie B. Zizafoose
Jocie B. Harrah Zizafoose, 69, of
Lewisburg, W.Va., formerly of New
Haven, died Thursday at Greenbrier
Valley Hospital.
Born April 24, 1912, in Asbury,
W.Va., daughter of the late Luther
and Mamie Moody Dosier, she was
preceded in death by her first
husband, Vernon W. Harrah, in 1978.
Surviving are her second husband,
Raymond Zizafoose; a -daughter,
Grace C. Sayre of Louisville, Ky.;
three sons, Glenn Harrah of Parkersburg, W.Va., Vernon Harrah Jr. of
Gennany and Roger Harrah of New
Haven; three brothers, Austin of
Mansfield, Wesley of Columbus and
L.C. of Asbury, W.Va.; four sisters,
Azeal LaFountain and Virginia
Morgan, both of Asbury, W.Va., and
Margie and Mildred, address
unknown; nine grandchildren and a
great-grandchild. .
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Graham Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Herman
Jones and the Rev. Homer Piercy officiating. Burial will be in Graham
Cemetery. Friends may call from 79 p.m. Saturday in the Foglesong
Funeral Home. The body will lie in
state at the church an hour prior to
the service.

The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio,
Highway Patrol investigated two
minor accidents in Gallia County
Thursday.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
Walter Peck, 45, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was
crossing Bob McConnack Road at
4::&gt;JJ p.m. and pulled into the path of
a vehicle driven by Charles McCormick, 25, Rt. 2, Crown City.
The vehicles collided, causing.
moderate damage. Peck was cited
for failure to yield.
The deer was killed and Cochran's
vehicle was slightly damaged.
On Wed,nesday, troopers investigated a car-deer accident on SR
7 in Meigs County. According to the
report, the animal ran into the path
of a vehicle driven by Philip R. Burton, 41, Mason. There was slight
damage to his car.

JEWELRY, THE
Gin•.MAKE HER
.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Earlene Kennedy.
Pomeroy; Eileen Smith, Syracuse;
Vivian Garnes, Pomeroy; Phyllis
Harris, Racine; Betty Mankin,
Pomeroy; Neal White, Pomeroy;
Paula Good, Middleport; Sharon
Jesse, Pomeroy; Marvin Dodrill,
Middleport.
Discharged-Nancy Je~ers,
Theresa Whitt, Pauline Taylor,
Dorothy Snyder, Sarah Henderson.

F

May lOth

Memorial service honors victims, D-1

In tribute,

D·l

•

tmts
Vol. 15 No. 15
Copyrighted ns1

. ;J,.»&gt;:

~.~

II&gt;
.

......,, ,,

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Sunday, May 10, 1981

,;

ELBERFE'LDS
Turn Mom's .presents into pretty floral bouquets
with gift wrap from Hallmark. Top each one
with a Hallmark card to show how much you
care. For Mother's Day, May 10.

. . __. .,. . . . . _............ _,. . . . ._,,. __f""'-· .
PLANTING SEASON - Meigs County farmers lD the Letart FaDs
~,...,

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

A rally for a humane budget with
U. S. Senator Howard Metzenbaum
will be held in Athens Saturday.
Those attending will assemble at the
Ohio University college gate at 1
p.m. for a march to the fairgrounds
where a rally will be held at 2 p.m.
with Sen. Metzenbaum as speaker.
Purpose is to show concem about
government budget cuts that hurt
children, poor people, the elderly, ill
and disadvantaged. In case of rain
the rally will be held in Memorial
Auditorium, E. Union.

fin1 crops for the approaching growiug seuon. A warm ,INal broul!lt

row of tomatoes. Earl Adams, Jim's f•ther,
tes the'bc!Or. Some
farm crews out~ full force Friday, after what fanners boped to ))!! the . · 75,~· tomatoes, 170,000 cabba1e p~nls, an • more than 138,000 peppers

11 AI'·I'UEV
'I

INC

BELFAST, .Northern Ir.eland (AP)
- Violence flared in Catholic areas
of Belfast and Londonderry Saturday and a fourth IRA prisoner began
a hunger strike "to the death." IRA
bomb hoaxes forced evacuation
from an orphanage and nursing
home, but failed · to scare Queen
Elizabeth II from a shipboard lunch
off Scotland.
·
Amid the tension, thousands of
people watched a parade through
central Belfast by 18 pipe and drum
bands at the climax of a week-long
muncipal festival. Rock bands
played and people enjoyed other entertainment without incident.
Earlier in the day, however,
guerrillas ambushed a British patrol
in Belfast's Roman . Catholic
Lenadoon quarter, seriously wounding a soldier with a sniper bnllet
from a high velocity rifle. A police
vehicle also was bloWil up , in
Continued on A-4

GAUL'S SHAKE HAVEN,
OHIO
lOth ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS &amp; GIVEAWAY
Redeem these coupons for special prices '
and for our Give-Away of ~ pecial prizes during the month of May.

..

-r,;"WW-::;;;:....-....-m

•

NOW 'AJ NEW I,;'0CAJIQN .
1

Gaul's Shake Haven, Chesler, Oh.

Pomeroy,OH.

Buy A Ham Sandwich At Reg. Price

And Get A FREE Order
of French Fries
Coupon Expires May 17, 1981

1981 OLDS. 98 REGENCY SED., Diesel ..............'11,495
1981 OLDS. 88 ROYALE SED. Demo ............... '9395
1979 FORD LTD WAGON ............................... '6295
1974 CHEVROLET 'h TON ....... :....................... '895
1978 CADILLAC DEVILlE CPE... ..... ~ ................. '7495
1978 TOYOTA CORONA SEDAN ........................'5295
1977 FORD GRANADA SEDAN. ............... :.........'3595
1980 OMEGA CPE. Low Mileage ...................... '5995_
1977 FORD f·250 4X4 ................................ '~29j_
1979 CADILLAC ELDORADO ............................ '9395
1976 PLYMOUTH VOlARE WAGON.................... '2195
1977 PONTIAC GP All Black....................... .. 13595
1
'
1978 FORD F-100 I Steps1de
........................ . 4995
1
1974 PLYMOUTH 'SEDAN .............................. . 495
1976 OLDS CUT. CPE.................................. '3295
1976 OLDS. CUT. WAGON. As Is...................... '2495
1980 OLDS CUTlASS LS SEDAN ..................... :'6795
1980 CHEV. CAPRICE ClASSIC SEDAN ............... '6795
1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO CPE. ......................'3795
1977 PONTIAC GP All Brown ..........................'3595
1975 PLYM.OUTH DUSTER CPE. .........................'595

of

See or Phone One These Courteous Salesmen:
Pete Burris, Marvin KeebaU!Ih.
Mike Anderson, Steve Kiser
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Buliness"

. VISITORS TO DIE OlD FRENCH CITY - lllary
Alllaoa (cenlerl dfsplaysooe of the museum pi~,. .
Oar HOllie Friday to some of the Eagllsh buslnessmea
wb9 have beeu travellin&amp; around soutlleastem Oblo as
guests of the WellstoD Rotary Clubs. Inspectlo« the

Item are (from left) Peter Bro1111jolw, John Ro&amp;Ull,
David Thomes and two unidentified representatives of
tile Wellston Rolary. The businessmen have been observing locai!Juslnes~e~~ and industries aud will travel
to Columbus this week.

Meigs highway workers
Gaul's Shake.Haven, Chester, Oh.
Buy a Pork Tenderloin
At Reg. Price

Get ·2nd One FREE
· C9upon Expires May 17, 1981

Gaul~'s=~~! ~~~
Buy A tootlong Hotdog.
At _Re_g. Price

Get AFREE Small Drink
coupon Expfres May 17,1981

Gaul's Shake

Haven,~.:::~=

Small Hot Dog and
frenr'· / rles

)5•
Coupon EKpires May 17, 1981

By KEVIN KELLY
CROWN CITY - Guyan Twp. is
entering its second week without fire
pro~ection after its trustees can·
celled a fire contract with the Crown
City Fire Department.
·
The trustees are still hopeful of
creating a volunteer fire department'
in Mercerville and of placing a onemill levy on the ballot to finance the
unit.
The decision to cancel the contract
came about because the township
could no longer afford it, according
to Trustee Lewis Sheets; who noted
the contract had cost the village
$1,400 annually, but was raised to
$4,000 in the past year when the
Crown City department entered into
an agreement with Ohio Twp.
Ohio had passed a levy in last

November's general election to get
protection from Crown City.
However, a village spokesman
said the increase for Guyan was
based on the fact Crown City
firemen were taking in a larger
coverage area and because the fire
departinent had also purchased a
new truck.
The increase, the spokesman said,
was to put Guyan on an equal hasis
with Ohio.
"The village has to bear all of this
out of its general fund," the
spokesman said. "We have the fire
station, the cost of gas, the price of
oil aU to consider, and if they keep in
with these townships, it's all at our
expense."
The trustees had decided not to
Continued on A-4

Violence
.
•
continues

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SIMMONS ()U)S..CAI)Ia.utVw.

and son, Todd A:~=~·~

but fi'OISI, lUted early that morning. Jbn

Please your Mom with a gilt from
Elberlelds- Many special sale prices for
this weekend on the very gifts she'll
treasure. You'll find excellent selections of
quality merchandise in every department.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;~~~~~~~~;;;;il

4

Guyan still
unprotected

.

A Bouquet for Mom

A film, "A Thief in the Night" will
be shown Saturday evening beginning at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene, Bridgeman Sl
Pastor James Kittle invites the
public.

9 Sections, 66 Pages, 3S Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

Rally set Saturday

308 E. Main St.

entint

h

Simmons Olds.-Cadillac-Chev., Inc.
ApoLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Making her feel
good, B·l

FREE ENGRAVING AND FREE GIFT WRAPPING

I

·Sundae

Scholars get early college start, C-6

ilm s owing set

WE NEED MORE ROOM FOR OUR GRAND OPENING.
HURRY IN - GET YOUR BEST USED
. SEDAN...........................'14 995
1981 CAD. DEVILlE

Free

.

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL WITH
A.Gin SHE'Ll.
TREASURE ALWAYS.
RINGS, PENDANTS,
BRACELETS,
EARRINGS. GET HER
iHE .GIFT OF LOVE.
.

Emergency calls
Four emergency · calls were an·
swered by local units Thursday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 3:36a.m., the Middleport Unit
took Gary Hart from the county jail
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; the
Rutland Unit at 8:07 p.m., took
Ronald Wilson from the fire station
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Syracuse Unit at 10:10 a.m. took
Elaine Smith from Dusky St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
4:44 p.m. took Mrs. Winebrenner
!rom College Road to Holzer
Medical Center.

Mother's Day--Did you remember?, B-1

P.ERSONAL, LOVING

hack on job Saturday ·
POMEROY- Astrike by some 24
Meigs County Highway Department
workers, which began on April 1,
was settled Friday, Meigs County
Engineer Phillip Roberts reports.
Negotiating teams from the county and the workers' union met
Friday afternoon to reach a settlement on the strike with the county
commissioners to ratify 'the
agreement on Monday. Roberts said
that ·workers returned to their jobs

on Saturday morning.
According to .the two year
agreement, workers will get a wage
increase of 70 cents an hour for the
first year and 50 cents an hour for
the seccnd year.
Workers had asked for additional
insurance benefi.ts, but none were
given in the final negotiating. They
do have Blue Shield and Blue Cross
coverage from a previous contract,
a spOkesman said.

\
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Inside today. ..
Area Deaths •.•...•.•.••.•...••••••.•..•..••••••••• A-6

Business , • • . . • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . • • • • . . . . • . • • . ; . . • . . . . C-5
Claaslfled
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Farm •.......•....••••••......•....•.......•.•••. • c-7
IAJ.cal •••.... •... ..•.........••.•........• A+7-c+D-8
IJfestyle .••.•••••••...•.....••••....••..•••....•. B-1·7
Sports •••••...•... .••. ... •..•...••...
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DEMONSTRATES MACHINE - Seve.,.year-old Jason Blair of tbe
primary class at the Meigs Community School demoustrateslhe Systems
80 teaching maeblne dooated to the school by tbe Pomeroy-Middleport
Uooa Club. The Rev. Robert McGee, lei~ president-elect of lhe Lions
Club, and Robert Morris, retiring president, watch Jason as he learns
about langua,e. Chris Layb, school administrator, advises that each
class uaes lhe lll!'eblne about an hour each day with onr or two children
receiving lnstrucUon at a time.

Coal officials still talking
WASHINGTON (AP)
Bargainers for striking miners and
the soft coal indllllry sat beneath
glarlntl fiuoreacent lights in a
Wuhlncton hotel room for a third
day Saturday trying to reach
agreement to end a f4.day walkout
lllll'ked by spurts of Violence in the
coaWelda.
After the three hour meeting, the

-

bargainers announced they would

meet again Tuesday.

While neither side would comment
on what progress bad been made,
the latest round of meetinp is the
ot\ly one to go beyond one day's
duration since the strike began March27.
.Questioned after Saturday's
Continued on A-4

Extended forecast, state weather
u.Jolzt JedJ'aaUIIIt-MondaylhrolighWedneaday: Clul:eoflt.owae

eut Monday m~. Otherwlle fair llld cool tbrouch the (lll'lad. Iflalll In
the mld-101 to miHII Monday and In the 11011 Tuelday and Wednelday. Overntabllonln the mld-101 to mld-4411 Monday and 1'uelday and In the 40s Wed-

..
JAMIIIWNIY

llllld8y.

Sbowen and lhuod,ntorms today. HJcb tud8y 15 to 70. Chance of ralilll80

Pllcelllloday.

.

DON McCALLISTER

CIIOIII:N J1'0R AUAITATE CHOIR - Jl'ev ID'Zhn al tile Ge111a
Bdlellellltr ..,. . _ " - - til partletp81e Ill llle A~
Illite
v..a. Qefr 11111 ,..., wllkll w111 perf- t1a1ty at tile lllte
f81r Alii· JWt Ill Cel h. 0.11 tile • If ft =
r. llld Mn. o-ld MeAC'

I

,

....

'*

'&gt;!

JEFF SANDERS

MAmtEW O'DONNEll.

Callilter; Maltalew tile IMID ol Mr. alld Mn. Francia (Odie) O'Domlell·
J81111e the IOD of Rev. IIIII Mrs. J._ Rainey; IIIII Jeff the 1011 81 ~
IIIII Mrs. MerrtD S.aden. All are from GalllpoUs.

�'

Commentary and

.

·
Times-Sentjnel
Op-:Ed
perspective . . .yT·:~;.:~'

1981

The

•I'

.·T he word·according to Engen""··. =======L=arrr=E=wl=·ng::::::::;;;;;~
.;;=;

William .F. Buckley
Jr.~~·
.

Hotrocks vs. Galbraith
John Kelllleth Galbraith, who I
repeat is a great tease, has been
abusing himself lately by a) reading
the reviews of his new, and most
marvelously readable book, "A Life
in OUr Times," and b) testifying
before congressional corrunittees,
doing his best to block economic
progress. For personal reasons, I
hope that Professor Galbraith will
live forever : but the autumn of his

~Ch

life would be sorely depressed if he
lives to see a society in which tues
were less, and tbe people better off.
His tactic, then, in opposing
Reagan's tax cuts - particularly
those that would benefit Americans
paying 50 to 70 percent of their income In tax - is to look innocently at
the face of the corrunittee chainnan,
and with a perfectly atraight face
say something on the order of, "You

ADivision of

~~
825 Third Ave., Galilpolis, Ohio

(614)446-2342

111 CourtS!., Pomeroy, Ohio
(6a) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher·Controiler

1\ MEMBER ufThe AlrmclatedPress. lnlaad Da ll )' Pr+:n Allriuclal lon and the American

Nrwspaptr Publlshen: A.ssociatiun.
I.E1"1'ERS OF OPINION are wckomed. They should bt len than 300 words long. All
lrttcrs IU t' subjt't'l tn ~llln~ ami muMt be ~lgnl"d wllh nMme, add~s and ~leptlunt'
numbu . Nn unH I~n~ letkn will ik-!)Ubllshtd. LeUers s hot~ld be In good taste, addrening
bsurs, nul J)t"rliUAIIill~s.

Sense, cents and nonsense

·. · Helms-Hyde Bill
is real can of worms
_,

d

BY LOWElL WINGETr
They're trying to open a new can of worms in Congress to dump on the
heads of a long suffering public.
By "they" I mean Senator Jesse Helms (R·N.C.) and Representative
Henry J. Hyde (R·Iil.). anti-abortionists and various evangelist TV
preachers who call themselves the Moral Majority. The Helms-Hyde bill has
been presented in both houses of Congress to declare by statute that life
begins at the moment of conception. It is known as the Human Life Statute.
This statute, its proponents believe, will set aside the ruling of the Supreme
Court in 1973 leaving the question of abortion to the woman and her
physician.
I am no more competent to comment on the merits of the bill than the
Supreme Court was to rule in 1973 when life actually begins. I do know that
Ia ws work both ways. By enacting the statute Congress would challenge the
balance of power in the nation. By prohibiting abortions the statute would
also prohibit many customs we have long enjoyed.
Whether or not the bill is merely a sop to the Moral Majority who think
they alone elected Ronald Reagan as president or is a serious effort to
change the constitution by statute, I don't know. Reagan was elected on his
premise to take the government off the backs of people. Women are also
people. The H-H bill puts government smack-dab in the middle of the bed·
room. Or in the back seat or a car parked in Lover's Lane, under a tree
beside a lake, on the steps of the Capitol or wherever. There would be some
interesting changes in the way we live. Here are only a few of the
possibilities :
Everyone would automatically become nine months older asswning, of
course, that tbe pregnancy must be delivered right on schedule. If Congress
can challenge the Supreme Court, a little thing like a biological law shouldn't
trouble them. All birth certificates would be void, to be replaced by a cer·
tificate of conception. Just to change all those 226 million birth certificates
would give CETA workers jobs for the next ~years or more. "Date and
l place of conception?" "Wait a minute. I'll see if Mom or Pop can remember." "Nope, they weren't keeping sex records then." Would the bill, if
passed, provide the money to make the changes or would the job and costs be
passed on to the states, then to the counties, cities or townships?
Would H·H make it mandadatory that all prospective parents, married
or not, keep a strict sexual record so the doctor could certify the date of ac·
tual conception? It would have to be a sworn record, so violators could be
jailed. Where?
Would the govenunent make up those nine social security payments we
oldsters missed by mistakenly applying on our 62nd or 65th birthdays rather
than on our conception days ? It would be a tidy sum even if it would cost
millions to change the records.
Would H·H make illegal all abortions and all devices, including most
pills, to prevent conception?
Before the Supreme Court ruled in 1973 in favor of legal abortions, it is ·
estimated that one million illegal abortions were perfonned in the U.S. per
year. Will Helm-Hyde provide funds for jails to hold a million women who
will violate the new statute? There is no guarantee that the number of illegal
abortions would not be even greater than before.
As I understand it, H·H would leave to tbe states the power to pass tbeir
own abortion laws and the problems of enforcement. Federal courts would
be forbidden to interfere. This is more'state's rights than is given to states
having capital punishment.
I have not had tbe opportunity to study the law myself but have been
limited to what I picked up from McNeil-Lehrer on Public Television and to
what I have read about it in the papers and magazines. What I have gleaned
from these sources is consistent with tbe Reagan policy of passing the buck
to the states. In California he passed the big problems on to tbe counties and
cities and tbe signs all point toward the same policy nationally.
When Reagan was courting tbe Moral Majority for votes before the
general election, it was evident that he made some concessions. After the
election he defended tbe Human Life Statute. After the election, I heard tbe
comments of one TV preacher wbo threatened the vice president with the
wrath of tbe Moral Majority If he "didn't atraighten ·up and fly right." He
didn't exactly threaten Bush with the wrath of the Lord but I think he got tbe
message. He has been flying right down tbe Reagam beam ever aince.
This Is not the best year most Congressmen have had. Congressmen love
to up appropriations and lower taxes. Then they won't make copstituents
and campaign contributors unhappy. Thl5 year they are asked to lower taxes
AND appropriatio!IB. It has them in a tizzy, especially since the strong public
support Reagan has been shown since the a-ssi!IBtlon attempt. I am sure
that 'many of them believe that tbe unproven economic policy of tbe
pre~~Jdent will bomb. But they are afraid to take the chance that It won't.
The gentlemen in Congress have to put on a l!how for tbe home folks. So
tbe H·H bill and others like It that will be placed before their peers for lack of
something better to do. I am sure that their sponaors never expect these bills
to make It through corrunittee, let alone through both hOUiel o1 Congraa. It
get. them wide publicity and keeps their pet lssue alive for another day.
Congreumen like to view with alarm. So do people who write for .
newapapel'l. I~W~'t express the alarm I feel for any attempt by Congress to
UIIII'JI the tnldltlonal power of tbe Supreme Court ..But they can a! !fays point
thenl out to their COIIII!tuents ~th, "Well, I tried."
Wllldl._n~~~ us with just one more question for Helm and Hyde: What
will hlppln tlllbe mllllons of "Happy Birthday" cards Hallmark and other

Cl1'd llllllllflcturm hive on hand?

Happy~ Day, Everybody!

•

~ ~

know, I've criticized tbe habits li somebody and what that somebody ception of two Scandinavian. coun· 1 government, leaving him with $800. ,
He will reckon, at the current ~ f
businessmen for many years, but I ends up with in pocket- tbe bigger tries, tbe highest marginal tax rates
flation rate in round figures, that the
do think It does them an injustice to the wedge, the greater the im- in the world.
So that Hotrocks, somewhere value of his savings Is going to
s,uggest that they are a class of llliJIIS pediment to employment.
So Hotrocks has his $200,000. Some along ihe line, finding himself with, · shrink by 10 jlercenl So: on tbe up.
malingerers. To sug'gest they ~
tax relief in order to get from them of It he has to bum just as we need to say, thirty thousand uncorrunitted side he stands to make $900; on the
more productive work iB really an bum calories in order to sutain life. dollars to spend at tbe end or his downside, he will lose $3,000. So what
,..
assault on their character, with Shelter, fOOd, medicine, education .. . budget · year, is going to decide does he do?
He looks at a boat, or an antique; • ·
which I wouldn't want to be iden- insurance ... travel ... boat .. . whetber to spend tbe dollars or to
or some gold shares that will swillg
tified." This is class Galbraith. ·jewelry ... antiques ... note that we save them.
are
traveling
down
the
line,
from
inIf
he
decides
to
save
them,
and
If
with inflation. Or he'll blow It on ·
Rollicking stuff. And as sound as
Confederate currency. (One won- dispensables, In the direction of in the course of his lifetime he has Good Times.
Such are the considerations that. .
ders whether the chancellor of the luxuries. It concededly helps the accumulated savings that yield
exchequer for President Davis was a economy if Hotrocks eases up on the $106,000 in interest or dividends, he go into thinking about Reagan's ·
distant ancestor of Mr. Galbraith?)
luxuries and increases his savings, will be advised that every dollar of proposed tax cuts. U we follow the
Let us, in order to make tbe case because the rate at which interest from his fre11h savings will prescriptions of Professor ..,.
as difficult as possible for tbe sup- Americans save is, by comparison be taxed at 70 percent. Hotrocks Galbraith, we will quickly discover •.
ply-siders, take a company with oth~r industrial states, being no fool, he reasons that that, in his ideal world, everyone, af.
president who is making f40(),000 per awesomely small and we need a banking tbe thirty thousand will ter paying food, shelter, education
year. The tacit promise of Galbraith capital pool. We in America have a yield him $3,000 in revenue (at 10 and medical bills, will be left with - '
is that a man being paid that much predilection to spend. lavishly, but percent), but that $2,100 . or these just enough money to buy Mr. •
money who isn't already giving all that apart, we have, with the ex· dollars will be .taken from him by the Galbraith's new book, I.e., $16.95.
his energies to his ocmpany is
something of a sloucher: Sounds
right, does it not?
But let us examine, more closely
than President Galbraith would encourage us to do, tbe situation of Mr.
Hotrocks under existing legislation.
He is, by the estimate of the marketplace, a prelty hot property- 'Which
is why a company is willing to pay
him f40(),000. But Hotrocks thinks
not in terms of the abstract figure on
his paycheck, but ihe real figure which, using round numbers, Js
$200,000, i.e., what is left after taxes.
The company that needs to put out
$.4 million to get him is paying just to begin our inquiry - $.2
million extra, which sum is now
available for other purposes. Such
as? Well, expansion of the capital
plant. The development of new
markets. The employment of more
people would be a result.
Thus the employer is penalized by
the size or the "wedge," the graphic
I
term by which .We, economists
1
describe the difference Jbetween
~~
HOM~
what IS costs an ei1Jployer to hire

10 ROOST

)•

CIA ·r eport says China wants to
•
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•
Jack Anderson '· .
h
c eck ·SoVIe s m n

Mother's

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camera?''
"I'm taking Polaroid pictures,
beca111e I can only give you one sit·
ling. I'll work from the pbotos at my
office."
"You mean thla will be the only
time I get to 11ee you?"
"Mom, Just look at the window and
don't talk. I want to get a beauUful,

motherly ell)li'CSSion on your face.
Don't smile, for heaven's sakes!"
"Why shouldn't I smile?"
.
"Because Mother McGarry Is supposed to be a serious person. That's
why her homemade pies taste so
good. Think of something sad. That's
it. What are you thinking about?"
"My Social Security check, and
how It all went for oil last month."
"I'm sending you $50 a month."
"Have you ever tried to eat on $50
a month?"
"I'd make It more if I could, Mom.
But this inflation Ia killing me. Okay,
I think I have enoligh pllotos. Now
I'll start sketching. Remain absolutely quiet."
"My back hurts in this chair.
Couldn'IIhave a cushion?"
"It will ruin the painting. Mother
McGarry has to loot like she's been
baking all day long. Now remember,
you're tired, but, at the 118Jlle time,
happy that every pie turned out just
as delicious aa the fll'lt one."
"U you stay for dinner, I'll bake

killing

Today in history. ..
Today is Sunday, May 10, tbe 130th day of 1981. There are 235 days left
lntbeyear.
.
Today's highlight Jn history :
On May 10, 1871, the Treaty of Frankfurt ended the Franco-Prussian
War, and Alsace-Lorraine was ceded to Gennany.
On this date:

Today's birthdays: Dancer-actor Fred Astaire is 82 years old. Actress
Nancy Walker is 59.
Thought for today: Humility is tbe solid foundation or all the virtues. -Confucius, Cbinese philosopher (551 B.C.-4711 B.C.).

'

you a real pie."
"
"I can't. We're going to a
party tOI).ight at the Wellingtolll. ~·
That's it, hold that exprea~~lon. You:"
know, tbey wanted me to get a
professional model, but I said my,.
mother would sitfor free."
,
"I !IBcrificed and sent you to art
school so some day you'd be dolnC,
paintings for phony homemade .

cocktail.·:

Millions of dollars in tues have
been spent demolishing fine old
l;&gt;ulldlnga .on tbe ~ld G.S.I. grounds
building so-called modem structure. to replace the old.
It Ia my understanding that Cottage J 'll'8ll the most recent cuualty.
The slate used a dHferent method to
destroy Cottage J. I understand this
cottage was not torn down bY the
llllual • wrecking crew but was
deliberately set on fire and burned to
the ground.
' Jllll recently a ground-breaking
was held for construction
of more residential facilities which
will COlli taxpayers an additional $1.8
mllllon.
· I have wondered why tbe name ol
the old G.S.l. W8ll changed to tbe

ceremony

. ?"
...
ptes.
· "Mom, I have to make a IIW.: .•,

Artists starve to death. It's'II'OI'IIe far •

portrait painters. U I tried to Mil.~·
this picture to a museum tbe7'• l
laugh at me. The money's in lid- II'
vertlaing."
':t: .
"Myback'skllllngme."
':'!..
"It will only take a few IIIOI'C'
minutes. II thla picture doe1111't lilA:
,_ nothlng -'"
.. ...
pRJD,
"w. "
- ,
"So when will I see you again?" '
"It all depends. U I can WOit from
the Polaroid plctunls,l WU~'t haw •
to come hick. But you may hive to ·
come up to the office Ill ca11e the)'
want me to paint apie on your lap.''

•

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California. He had come up with a
solution to the world's problems-aU
of tbem, everything from acne to
nuclear holocaust.
In a 12-page docwnent, this ·
character graphically explained
how all the frustrations and subsequent difficulties of human
existence could be eliminated if we
would all simply indulge in the practice of incest.
That's right-incest. According to
this guy, we have been placed in a
condition of mental discontinuity
because societal pressures have forced us to suppress what he calls our
natural "inclination and desire" to
mate with our parents and children.
And, somehow, if we would only go
ahead and do It we could end the
energy crisis-well, that's what he
said.
And then, there's the guy from
Boston-who by all appearances
lives in an attic and does nothing but

mFAS1'1STm

II rB WIST IS IACI

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·-'-"'7.'~~""1-0

BIO-LAB

POOL SUPPLIES

Tri-County Medical Supply

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Why
Pay More?

RIB STEAK

99

Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Perhaps our politicians have made
tbe change beca111e they have
developed new WB)'ll to waste our
taxes.- Marshall M. Burnett

fK&amp;K Mobile Homesf
,f Stop In And Let Us Show You f
~ Our fine Line Of.Mobile Homes.

t·

SCHULT AND HOLLY PARK HOMES

t·

A

MIRACLE
WHIP

29

.......

Get the hallattterou w1111t
Hair .._lng glvw JDU till PtrfiC1 halretyle
to compll"*'t your - . . . . enclll!eotyte.
Unlperm QIWI you till
perm to melntaln 11.

:!*feCI

Ltl your good looktgetoyoyr heed.

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write letters to newspapers-who
sends massive hand-written disser·
lations on the nature of our political
institutions.
This guy's writing is beautifulvery similar to Old English scriptand changes color of ink every two
or three lines.
Reading his material is a little dif.
ficult however. You see the words
are so small a magnifying glass is
necessary to make them out. His
submissions come in volwnes of
about 20 pages.
And, he hates everybody. Blacks,
Jews, Mexicans, Eskimos-you
name them, he hates them-very
no!Hiiscriminating.
When we receive such letters in
the office, we tend to share themkick them around the office and get
a few laughs. You know, like "can
you Imagine such characters really
exist." Well, they do exist-and
maybe that isn'tso funny.

by foreign policy conslderatiollB, by tbe Soviet Union and abandoned
because the embargo had become an many ol its traditional customers.
Impediment to cooperation between The United States sharply increased
the White House and numerous Mid- its grain exports to those nationswestern politicians.
notably Japan, Spain, Italy and
'
But were those complaints Colombia.
justified? By far the most Important
Despite tbe ambargo, U. S. grain
factor in agricultural economics Is exports for the 197HO marketing
an element that not only Is wholly year totaled 107.7 million metric
unrelated to artificial trade barriers ·tons, a record-breaking figure that
but that also Is erratic and un- exceede9 the previous year's ex·
predictable- thewesther.
ports by 15.2 mlllion metric to!IB.
• ALGALIDE INHIBITOR
• CHLORINE
In 19'19, the weather was almost
At tbe same time, the widespread
ideal, producing bwnper crops and drought pushed prices to record high
• PH CONTROL
• BALANCE PAK
record-breaking revenues for this levels. Thus, the value of this councountry's fanners. Last year, try's grain exports last year was aphowever, overall rann income drop- proximately $4ll billion, up sub• TEST KITS
ped by 22 percent- and disgruntled stanttallyfrom$32bllllon in 1979.
fanners seeking a scapegoat prompTo prevent , farmers from ex·
A Representative of Pools &amp; Things, Chillcothe, Ohio.
tly blamed the embargo, which went periencing the economic dislocation
into effect in early 1980.
tbey claim to have suffered in their
Many respected agricultural exaggerated accounts of the emeconomists, however, argue that tbe bargo's Impact, the Agriculture
Ph. 446·3856
Gallipolis, Ohio
decline waa direcUy related to the Department established an~===============~~~;,;~~~
glut or surplus commodities elaborate program to protect the
remaining on the market - and grain producers.
$TOR£ HOURS:
driving prices down - following tbe
The federal expenditures for
Mon.·Thurs. 9 11m til 9:30 pm
massive 1979 harvest.
direct purchases of grain, loans,
A protracted drought last year led contr~, storage and interest
Fri.·Sit. 9 11m til 10 pm
to a substantial decljne in produc- waive have totaled an' est~ted
tion. Corn yields, for example, plum- P.5
on, )'lith one-half to tw().
CLOSED SUNDAYS
meted from 109 bushels per acre in thirds those costa expected.to be
1979 to 91 bushels per acre in 19M.
~ t}leg all otthe grain temPoor weatber adversely affected porarll.Yl.withheld from the market is
production in virtually every grain- resold.
producing nation In tbe world.
That eans the net cost of tbe em·
Drought in M~co. for eJ18111ple, bargo to the United States was more
created an unexpected market for than 81 billion, but that money
u.s. exports.
r;omes directly from the federal
Argentina diverted much of its treasury and the burden is shared by
grain exports to the U.S.S.R., In all l!f tbe country's taxpayers - not
return for premium prices offered just its farmers.

~.:.~~ M~::uH~~:: 1
·"

MYfKJ{).:
MfMH416
I Paier..

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·

t
:Letter to the editor
t
14.5%
Where
t
Ways to waste taxes
t
t
t
t
t
FOR
A
ON NEW
Jlnd
MOBILE HOME t
..------------1 t LIMITED
t TIME ONLY!
FINANCING! t

Art Buchwald

profile."
"Are you ashamed to do me full
face?"
"No, but I want something dif.
ferent. This is for the 'Mother
McGarry's Home Made Pie' campaign. It will appear in magazines
and newspapers all over the country."
"Why don't you paint Mother
McGarry?"
"There is no Motber McGarry.
The company's owned by a
· conglomerate out of St. Paul. Okay,
Mom, hands on the lap, and feet on
the stool."
'''I thought you were ~oing to paint
me. ,What are you doing with a

Ellgene choee to reveal himaelf to
u.s-in a form letter. · ·
· alwaya a nuisance to me, but I cope
Hia second mailing served to pon- with humanity in accorda'iice with
tificate. 'Ibe latex!, a twl)opage tbeir ain."
mimeographed treatise, 18 a bit on
tbe vengeful side.
The message being: if you doubt
It begins: "As Almighty God I . Eugene's divinity, you'd better wat·
greet you. A lew decades ago, ar- chit.
Eugene's letter isn't really typical
tic.les appeared in newspapers
procl8iming that God Is dead. I of tbe mali we receive; but tben, it
repeat: I created time so h!IW can I isn'tall that a-typical either.
A few months ago, a weighty
be dead? I proclaim that I am alive
and not dead as many mongrels document arrived from a man in

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Now willing and unfortunate victims of
that President Reagan' has lifted tbe the embargo.
·
embargo on U. S. sales ol grain to
Sen. Roger W. .Jepsen, R·Iowa;
the Soviet Union, it's time to expose claimed that the embargo forced
the myth that tbe burden or the em- "one Segment of our population to
bargo was bome.exclilsively by this bear tbe burden of foreign policy."
country's farmers.
Sen. Robert J. Dole, R·Kan., spoke
The unfounded notion that tbe halt of lifting "a great load from the
·
in grain sales to the U.S.S.R. caused . backs of American farmers."
great suffering, ·financial and otherConstant pressure from the
wise, among American fanners agricultural community throughout
became instrumental in
the the almost 16 months of tbe embargo
embargo and even outlived it.
was crucial in convincing Reagan to
In . tile wake of the president's abandon a policy intended to impose
recent aMouncement that tbe em· economic sanctions on the Soviet
bargo had been terminated, Union.
politicians from agricultural states
Indeed, some knowledgeable ad·
continued to perpetuate the ministration officiala assert that
masochistic fantasy ol fanners Reagan's decision was shaped more
singled out as the country's W'l- by domestic political concerns than

In 1940, German forces invaded· Holland, Luxembourg and Belgium
·during World War II.
· Five years ago: Israel aMounced a pian to establish numerous additional settlements in occupied Arab territory.
. One year ago: Iran's Islamic Republic Party, which favored spy trials
for the American hostages, took a commanding lead in a parliamentary
runoff election.

Day~======================~

Things have changed aince the
days when James Whistler did his
famous portrait or his mother in
1871.
If he were painting it today, this is
how the conversation might go:
"Okay, Mom, just sit in this
straight chair over here. I'm going
to make you famous."
"How come I only see you when
you want to paint me?"
"Aw, come on; Mom, don't start
that again. I've been busy at the advertising agency. I call Y9U once a
week. Isn't that enough?"
"Mrs. Phllilps' son coriles over to
the house every Sunday for lunch."
"You know I play tennis on Sunday at tbe club. It's the only chance I
have to get some exercise. Please,
Mom, I don't have much time."
"Don't you think I ought to put on
a nice dress If you're going to paint
me?"
"The One you're wearing Ia perfect. Here put on this lace hat, and
face tbe window. I want to do you in

would like to believe. Some
mongrel8 and atheists vehemently
doubt my veracity. Bastards are

· ~Or embargo ?-=========R=ob=ert=Wa=lt=ers=:~.· ·~~.!1~-·.

In 1497, Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci sailed on his first voyage to
'tbe New World.
In 1865, during the Civil War, Union forces captured Confederate
President Jefferson Davis at Irwinville, Ga.
·
In 11169, a gold spike was driven at Ogden, Utah, marking the completion of the first transcontinental railroad.

dying are little more than
The best answer so far has been in Chinese policy in Africa Is to chedt·
surrogates for tbe big powers that a secret report by the Central In- the spread of Soviet infiuence," the .
supply them with guns and money- telligence Agency a few weeks ago. CIA report continues. "The major
and even, in some cases, provide the The document, reviewed by my focus of BeiJing's effort has been in
encouragement that leads the rival associate Dale Van Alta, represents · soutbem Africa, where MOIICOW has
groups to take up arms in the first the current lnfonnation on which the been especially active for L'le put
place.
Reagan administration is basing its five years."
· Angola is a classic example of this policy in Africa.
·
The intelligence analysts point out
lethal game of gl~bal strategy, but it
"Over the past quarter of a cen- that China has followed random
is not the only one. What they all tury," the CIA report notes, · poticles in Africa over the past few
have in common, of course, is that it "Beijing (Peking) has attempted to decades, but that in the last three
is the native population which bears project its infiuence in Africa with years a revitalized, better·
the pain and suffering for tbe super- · varying degrees of intensity and for coordinated policy appears to have
powers' strategic gamesmanship.
a variety of purposes.
emerged. As tbe CIA experts see the
China is now on our side in the
"Relative to Chinese interests in situation, Chinese policy has now
worldwide atruggle against the other parts of the world, Beijing's · focused "on its prime objective and
Soviet Union - largely on the basis interest in Africa is small, and both (takes) into account the limited
of the old Arab proverb that "the African and Chinese leaders are resources it has to spend on an arena
enemy of my enemy is my friend." aware that China's infiuence in the far from its own borders."
Faced with this reality, tbe National continent is margina." The report
How Peking upects to accompliBh .
Security Council has been curious adds, however, that there Is no this ambitiOUS program without a
about what the Chinese have been up reason to suggest that Chinese in- far greater commitment of money
to in' Africa . that may affect terest in Africa will not increase.
and effort, tbe CIA report does not
American interests there.
"Today, the principal object of say.

Son knows who the Father Is and He
to whomsoever He will reveal Him."

Who really paid

'

q

WASHINGTON - The longstanding , sometimes violent confrontation between China and the
Soviet Union along with 5,000.mile
border is not the only point of conflict between the two communist
superpowers. For years, the Chinese
have been challenging the Russians
all over the world, but tbe struggle
has been so quiet that tbe story is
usually told only in secret
diplomatic cables and intelligence
reports.
Frcm such documents, here is
what's happening in one vast area of
Sin~oviet rivalry: Africa.
In recent years, the onetime Dark
Continent has been a frequently
bloody battleground Cor ideological
struggles between the East and
West, as well as for deadly power
plays among tribal and national
leaders. Often the factions that are
actually engaged in tbe fighting and

A.i woald be ezpected, we receive perfume and newest roriianee novel.
a great deal of mall in our offices
This week, for example, I received
"each.day. Moat of tbe letters consist a letter from God-or, more acof 1nlber routine public relations . · curately, a mall in Maple Heights,
stuff aeetlng edl~ promotion of ,Ohio, who claims to be Gild. .
causes, producta, Ideas, etc.
Actually, this is the third letter we
A great deal Ia purely self-serving have received from Eugene
and"ofJJQ general interest to anyone- Changey, who occupationally
.end, ulUmately en~ up, ap- speaking Ja a lathe-operator.
propriall!IY enough, in the ll!lllle file
Eugene's first letter, which
.th8t holds,our candy wrappers and arrived about a year ago, announced
cigaretteb\ltts.
· .
his "coming." An excerpt: "My
,· OccaaiopBlly, .however, some real Father says I am &amp;-:reincarnated.
g~ arrive along wltll the anAs in Scripture: Only the Father
·nouncement8 of the world's latest knows who the Son is. Also only the

ES

::•35'
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

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Coal. . .

(ContinuedfromPageAll.

what has become a litany over the
three days of talks. , ·
Was ·there any progress, he was
asked.
·
"We're still talking," he replied.
Was the union ready to compromise on its demands?
"We're stiU talking."
B.R. Brown, chief negotiator for
the Bitwninous Coal Operators
Association, muttered "oh yes, all
good sessions" when asked if the
meetinghadbeenagoodone.
But when asked about specific
progress; he reverted to his habit
during the previous days of talks,
remaining silent or saying "no com·
rnent" as he walks the lengthy
hallway to the negotiating room past
television cameras and reporters.
UMW spokesman Eldon Callen
said the same seven union demands
were on the table that th• Rrn• he~

rene'fed negotiations this week:
The two sides met for a d02en
hours over the three days, and the
very length of the talks separated
them from the two earlier sessions
held since the strike began. Church's
brief comments also contrast with
.his wiUingness to tallt- sometimes
scathingly aboutthe industry sideat earlier sessions.
On Saturday, a glimpse into the
negotiating room showed Church in
a white knit .short sleeved shirt sit·
ling opposite Brown, who . had
removed his jacket as a concession
to the stuffy room but kept his tie
with its tiny polka dots knotted
neatly atthe neck.
On the table between them, with
its red table cloth,.were coffee cups,
ashtrays and Church's packet of Red
Man chewing tobacco.
(Continued from page AI)

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renew the contract, which was

GALUPOUS - Gallia Academy
High &amp;hool's junior-senior prom
was held Saturday night.
The junior class decorated the
gym, using the color scheme hot
pink, medium blue and white.
Featured decorations included a
star-studded stairway, and a large
reflector ceiling ball. The entrance
to the dance displayed a mural with
the senior class motto : " If you
imagine it, you can achieve it; if you
dream it, you can become it."
"Quintessence," a band from the

Nina Perry Agency of Belpre
provided music for the event.
Parents of the juniors serving the
refreshments. Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Allen were chairmen of the food ocmmittee. Mrs. Betsy Simpson
chaired the punch committee.
Junior class officers Jerry Eutsler, president, and Tonya Simpson,
vice president, with Mrs. Deanna
Cook, class advisor, correlated the
decorations and activities with
many junior class members and
junior homeroom teachers assisting.

Violence. . .--,--l(:::co:::ntin=~=from.::::.~pa=se;:.:A~1&gt;~..:..

.

IUJ'lled down at a olle-day session on

,J 0

GAHS prom held Saturday

•

meeting, UMW President Sam Chur·

Gu vnn
SHORTLY alter the final decoratioiiS were In place Saturday, the anuna! junior-senior prom was held in the Gailia Academy High School gym
last night. Members of the junior class decorated the facility.

•

already on a·three-month extension,
during their regular monthly
meeting May 2.
Trustees have been seeking to
place the one-mill levy on the ballot
since April, but were thwarted in
their efforts when they discovered
Crown City could not be excluded
from the voting because it's part of
the township.
They were advised creation of a
fire district including the village was
one way to get the levy on the ballot,
but a motion to create such a district
was tabled at the April trustees'
meeting.
Sheets said no action will be taken
on the matter until they have completed their study of creating a fire
department in Mercerville.
He explained trustees have talked
with state and county officials and
also discussed the possibility of
buying land owned by the county
school district.
"We've been waiting to find a
building site," he said. "We're
hoping something will happen
soon."
. .
. The, ultimate aim of U1e Mercerville volunteer unit is to f\lnn fire
protection for Guyan, Harrillon and
Walnut Twpa., all of which
no

Catholic West Be.lfast by a · ship anchored just oUtside the ler·
h0111einade hand g~de, Injuring minal where the queen wu to have
five policemen.
.
lW!Ch -.!th 110 dignitaries. ·
In - Londonderry, Northern .---.:....-""'"":~~~=====
Ireland's second largest city, rioters
hurled 1110re than 300 gasoline·bombs and botues fillf\1 with sulfuric
acid at pollee. Twenty-one people ·
were arrested and two rioters were
injured in what a police spokesman ·
described as some of "the fiercest
street fighting'' 'since IRA guerrilla
Bobby Sands died Tuesday in the
66th day of a hunger strike.
The bo!nb threat against Queen
Elizabeth came as she and · her
husband, Prince Philip, were at·
tending a ceremony at the British
Petroiewn oil tenninal - Europe's
largest - on the Shetland ~Janda, •
100 miles off the north coast d
ScoUand.
The Irish Republican Army warned in a message from Its office in
Dublin to The Associated Press in'
London that It had "breached the
English Queen's security. Clear the
Shetland oil rig of all civilians.
There is an anti-handling device on
the bOmb. This is no hoax.''
A BP
in London said
the
of·the bomb threat was a

contracts with area fire depart·
rnents, Sheets said.
"We're in a predicament here, but
that's no sign that we shouldn't do
anything,"henoted.
rr=;:;=~:======::::====~~~~~~r:~
Sheets said the township had of- I
fered Crown City $150 plus expenses
m
per run in place of the $4,000 price
·
""
,.
tag, which he felt was "double"
what's charged by other townshipa
,,"'
protected by Gallipolis, Vinton and
Rio Grande departments.
.....-"~~~
'
"We figured after they (the
"'
"
"
village ) said they couldn't take·less,
'•
we should spend the $4,000 on our
own fire department," he said.
'
"We bought a new fire truck
'
without a levy, through carnivals
"
'•&lt;
and bake sales," the village
spokesman said. "M\er you've
worked years for your own fire
department, would you want to vote
on a levy for something you've
already got?"
•.....
•• •w•

Your Career
dresS it Up With
whites from
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CLINir
sm

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USA

•••••

Letter-Legal &amp; 11x17
While You Waii
The French City Press

AN EXCITING Nq¥
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Appoint McMillan

La-Z-Boy Chairs
Mattresses
Sola Sleepers
Living Rooms
Dinettes
May we help you?

TOPE'S.---....._

Lifestyle
FURNITURE

Virgil King, Chairman of the March 1973 to February 1975. He has
Meigs .County Agricultural belonged to the slate and national
Third and Olive
Stabilization and Conservation Holstein Association for 19 years,
Gallipolis, OH.
(ASC) Committee reports that he and is a member of the Pickaway
Phone 446·3045
' has just learned that Secretary of CountyFarmBureau,FannersCiub
Hours: 9·5 Daily
Agriculture, John Block, has ap- and Holstein Club.
Til8 pm Mon. &amp; Fri.
pointed Thomas C. McMillan, of r-----:-------_L~~~~~~~~~~:__j
Willllington, as chairman of the Ohio
State Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation (ASC) Committee.
Named as committee members
were Glenn Dutton, of Fostoria, and
Reuben R. Jones, of Circleville. The
committee administers federal !ann
programs in Ohio.
McMillan, 54, has a 700-acre
general fanning operation in Clinton
County. He has been fanning for 34
years. He was a member of the
Fann Credit Bank Board of Louisville from 1973 to 1979 and was chairman from tm to 1978. He belongs to
the Farm Bureau, Grange, Farmers
Union, Clinton County Agricultural
Society and the Ohio Com Growers
Association.
Dutton, 63, engages in grain farming on around 600 acres in Hancock County and has farmed since
1941. He served as County Com·
missioner in Hancock County for 12
years; on the Hancock County for 10
years. He has belonged to the Farm
Bureau for 30 years and the Far·
mers Union for 15 years.
Jones, 63, began farming in 1937
and owns 537 acres and cash rents
250 acres in Pickaway, Jackson and
Clark Counties, in a grain and dairy
operation. He was a member of the
Ohio state ASC COnunittee in 1969
and 1970. From April1970 to March
1973 he served as Director,
Livestock and Dairy Division, ASal,
in Wublngton. He served again on
the Ohio State ASC Committee fr0111

Garden fresh!
Garden good!

Two tasty. hot, homemade soups!

nJCSON, Ariz. - An Ironworkers
. Union NCI'elary who came running
out ol her olflce in names is acCUSed
M 8eltlng a fire there benelf to
cover up an alleged embezzlement,
pollee NY.
(

(

Thank !1QU for coming to ...

SHONEYS

.LOW
PRICES
AT JOHNSON'S

"

•

College of Business Administration

•'

•

Ohio University
on offtrmariue

'

action insttr urion

0

'

Executive MBA
Program.
The College of Business Administration of Ohio University is
currently recruiting the fifth group for its very successful
weekend Executive MBA Program at its Lancaster Campus.
Classes will begin in Sep\ember, 1981.
The Executive MBA Program is structured so that all requirements can be completed within two academic years,
while the executive continues to handle his or her professional
responsibilities full-time. This is accomplished by scheduling
c&lt;;&gt;urses on one Friday and three Satu~days a month during
each of two academic years. Courses are offered each year
during three 11-week academic temis, with a five-week break
between Thanksgiving and early January.
Class size will be limited to 25 students. The group will
include representation from various types of organizations and
. diverse functional areas. Courses in the specially designed curriculum will be taught primarily on a seminar basis by a highly
qualified and experience&lt;! faculty with a successful track record
of Interactions with executive groups.
Current participants come frqm as far away as Wheeling to
the east, Cincinnati-Dayton to the west, Parkersburg-Marietta
to' the south, and Cleveland-Akron to the north.
The College of Business Administration of Ohio University Is
fully accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate
Schools of Business.

'
'

•
•
•
•

NEAR HARVEST - Mon( than 170,IItll cabbage · lime. Many months of hard work Including sowing
seed, potting plants, caring for the hothouses, and the
Letart Falls are about three weeks away from harvest plants In the field go Into a successful crop.

Vigorous construction · underway
HUNTINGTON - Boy &amp;out Center with adequate parking
Council President Dr. George BiU located at 733 Seventh Avenue in
reports a vigorous construction ac- Huntington, as well as provide camp
tivity has been underway this spring bnprovements including 10 campat C8mp Arrowhead near Ona; New site shelters, a large activity shelter
c:onl!tructton and refurbiShing of and picnic area, a new caretake~·s
many facilities were made possible · home . and office, a new showery the ·. successful $1161,000 "Total house, a large conference facility
Developmj!llt Fund" C8111paign con- with combined trading post, camp
ducted In 1978-00 In the llk:ounty Tri· office and infinnary, a new truck
State Area Council.
and tractor, camp maintenance
The drlv~ which was chaired by shop and equipment, new rest
Harold E. Ketley and Orin Atkins of roollJS, improvements for the hanAshland raised funds to purchase dicapped, refurbishing of kitchen
and furnish a new CoWICU Service and dining hail, and improvements
to water and sewage systems, roads

..••

_Name BHCC ceremonies speaker
RIO GRANDE - Ken Rodriguez, Regents Academic Scholarship. provided by OPUS X, under the
National Parliamentarian of the Patricia Denney, of North Gallia, direction of Wellston High School
·VocatiOnal Industrial Clubs of wiU receive the Certificate of Merit Vocal Music Dirootor Sandy NodAmerica (VICA) will be goest . Awai-d from the Century III Leaders ruff. The staff and students of
speaker during the sixth annual Program. And a senior student, yet Buckeye Hills Career Center and
Buckeye HiUs Career Center Senior to be announced, will be presented Buckeye Valley Career Center invite
Certificate Ceremony. Certificates with the $300 Hocking Technical ail parents, friends and home school
administrators to attend the sixth
will be awarded Thursday, May 14, College Principal's Scholarship.
annual Senior Certificate Ceremony.
Musical
entertairunent
will
be
9:30a.m. In the Buckeye HiUs Amphitheatre, Rio Grande.
Vocational Certificates wiU be
Announce clinic dates
presented to approximately 300 Event cancelled
POMEROY - Two blood pressure
Buckeye Hillll and Buckeye Valley
ATilENS - Spring Fever '81, an
clinics
for this week have been anCareer Center's senior students envirorunental art display near
nounced.
The Rutland Silver Circle
meeting state vocational Amesville sponsored by the Hocking
Club
clinic
will be from 12 noon to I
requirements. The top student in Valley Arts Council, scheduled to
each vocational class will receive open today from II a.m. unti18 p.m., . p.m. Wednesday atthe center on HiU
the Award of Distinction from the has been rescheduled for the same St., and the Harrisonville Golden
Age Club clinic will be at the town
State Board of Education. Perfect time May 17, due to the weather.
hall Tuesday, from 10a.m. to I p.m.
Attendance presentations will also
bema~.
r-------------------------------------~
Senior Betty Brooks of Wellston
will receive · the Ohio Board of

For details, call 614/594·6289 or 614/594·5446, or com·
plete the coupon and mall it to:

.

Pleaee eend me Information on the Executive MBA Program.

:()omppy·
Mmtimedil, tnc.Seeonddus
•poolojje pold II GoJUpollo, Ohio, 11131.
'tnlorod u 10001111 clue molting mellor
1
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CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning nwnber drawn ·Friday in the

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

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Director, Executive MBA Program
College of BusineSs Administration
Copeland Hall, Ohio University
Athens, Ohio 45 70 l

GAUJPOUS - Two cases were
tenninated and four continued 1
Friday in Gallipolis Municipal
Court.
Harley R. Wells, Vinton, charged
with 8S88ult, caae continued to May
18.
Charged with 8B88uil, Robert E .
WeUs, Mercerville, case continued
toMayl8.
Arnold Merritt, charged with
criminal trespassing, case continued to May 18.
Charged with criminal damaging,
Greg Carter, Crown City, case continued to May 12.
Ronald Fisher, 26, Gallipolis,
charged with reckless operation,
flned$75. '
Charged with reckless operation,
Larry J. Smith, 43, Miami, Fla.,
fined $50.

lonllfl times· lm!intl

..

and parking lot.
In other scout activity, it was announced Saturday that Dr. Tom
Haggai will be in Huntington on
Monday to address the Tri-state
Area Boy Scout Council Annual
Recognition dinner at 7 p.m., at
Marshall University Student Center.
The dinner will follow the council's
annual business meeting and election of officers and will highlight
significant accomplishments of the
.past year and honor four individuals
with the council's highest
recognition - the Silver Beaver
Award.
......_../

Ohio Lottery's daily game "The
NUIIIber" was 050. ·
The lottery reported earnings of
$961,1811.50 on the game•
The eaniings came on sales of
$1,048,326, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share
$87,139.50, lottery officials said.

•
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•

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-9593
"We Reserve the
to Um~ ~~::":'l""l~.l

plaDII, tel early lui month on Jim Adams' farm In

Tenninate six cases

SPECIALIZING IN:

SETILING IN - Joan Davis, Gallla County commissioners clerk, is
shown Friday seated at her desk in the modular unit on the courthouse
lawn. The commbisioners, who share the modular with the Gallla EMS,
moved from the basement of the HalUday aod Sheets building Thursday.
Anotber modular, which will house probate-juvenile court aod the 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District, is still being completed.

Secretary is suspect

Mon . &amp; Fri.-, 9:30 till p.m.
Tues .. Wed., Thur. &amp; S•t. 9:301115

In business to serve you
better and friendlier and
with satisfaction guaranteed!

-/l ' ';
'

423 Secon d Aven ue
Gallipolis .' Ohio

EVERYDAY

SIX MOfmtS

Minimum o....,sit SIO,OOG

Earnle' s checklng·savln9J plan
earns Y'OU 5 1f•~ Interest tvery

is t lftctlvt tht clay titer etch
Treuury IIIII Auction. Fadeul

need to. S.vings 1ccount Interest
- checking account con\ltnlence.

inttrtll. Auhlmltlully renewable

Write chtckl 11 you

Ask tor "Eernltl "

5.46%

5.25%
.... Annual Raft

Minimum DeposR S!OO

II maturity II lht PrtVIIIing rift.
The ectuo~ l return to Investors on
Trtasury 'slllllll hlthtr.

the Mrnt revulafiOM .II t~ M
yur ctrtlfiut.. tntwnt 11 com·

nuatlv.

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Annuatlilatt

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THRU MON., MAY 1h

-..I

llterel. MUll rtMilft tit Cllpolit I fUll yHr to Hrft lftftUII ylttcl. T""' II I
.-..allflal ...,ttY for IM"tl'ftlturt wittldra. . l of Ctrtlflcatt fuiMII. MlniMult'l
llotoMIIU-Ior Mooillly lntorost.
IACH DnOIITO• INSURED UP TO SIIO,IOI IY· THE FDIC, AN AGENCY OF

CAN

CAN

11.75f, . 12.65f,
...

17 oz.

17 oz.

PDUndld dally and paid monttlly,
quarterly, ttmloarmuattv, or an-

ennually, or antiUtillv _

THI PIDUAL ~VERNMENT .

SWEET PEAS

certtflcate tarns
fMIImt rate lnd IIIIIUt'd under

trUIUf'y ucurltln. 1nternt Is
compoundtd dlllv end 11 paid
monthlv, Quarterly, semi ·

"TMRU MON ., M'AY 11 - - -

~

longtr term fhll

Ptrlocl Md II reiatN to tnt

AftiWII Yittd

STOKELY

Minimum DeiiOIIttsoo

ever-v- 2Vl vear yield of

.

'THRU MDN,, MAY 1!1

For theM l"""torl WftO prtfer 1

Certlflcatt It aDDIIc.tllt this

.t.MUIIRitt

15.354%

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Tnt rate lhown below for this

11.75!, 12.65f,

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regulo~tl~l prohibit COIIII*!ntlint tf

•••••IYitld..r11) ....._____

2J,1 YEARS

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Thh Mont, Mullet Ctrflfle&amp;ft r1tt

Gay on vour total savings Iecount
bllanc~ .

15.5 OL CAN

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46 0~
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$}89

2~79¢

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

Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

va.

May 10~ 1981

Pomeroy-M

Beat of the Bend

Gallipolis police check theft_. complaints
charge of services.
Mr. Palmer.was chief of electrical
HENDERSON -- Elmer H.. construction for the American ElecBowser, 68, Henderson, was dead on 1 tric Power Co., and was a Navy
arrival at tile Pleasant Valley veteranofW. W. II.
He is survived by his wife, Rita
Hospital Friday evening.
Cronin
Palmer; one son, Robert W.
· He was a retired employee of the
Man G Transport Comapany, and a Palmer, Jr., Roanoke, Va.; two
former employee of the· Marietta daughters, Sue Spencer, Charleston,
Manufacturing Company. He was a and Mrs. Mary Holcomb, Titusville,
member of the Church of Christ in Fla.; his mother, Mrs. Katherine
Paimer, Charleston, and four grandHenderson.
children.
He was born on Janurary 13, 1913
to the late Henry and Mary Hooks
Helen Steiner Rice
Bowser.
Surviving are hls wife, Daisy
POMEROY - Helen Steiner Rice,
Barker Bowser; two daughters, famous author of verse for tile GiJ&gt;.
Mrs. William (Margaret) Priddy, son Greeting Card Co., died last
. Gallipolis, and Mrs . Ron Thursday.
(Debby) Givens, Willmington,
For the past several months, she
N.C.; five sons, Oren E. Bowser, has lived at the Franciscan Terrace
Taylors, S.C., Ralph E. Bowser, Retirement home in Greater CinGallipolis Ferry, Ernest E. Bowser, cinnati. She was buried in Lorain
Point Pleasant, Ray A. Bowser, area on Monday.
Southsi1e, David M. Bowser,
Anchorage, Alaska; several
Sheridan R. Russell
grandchildren and great grandMASON - Sheridan R. Russell,
children.
Jr.,
61, Mason, died Friday morning
Services will be held on Monday
at 2 p.m. at the Henderson Church in the Pleasant Valley Hospital. He
of Christ with Pastor Eugene Zopp was born December 9, 1919 in Point ·
officiating. Burial will follow in tlie Pleasant to Nellie Harbour Russell
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. The and the late Sheridan R. Russell, Sr:
He was a former employee of the
body will be tak'en to the church one
hour prior to services.
railroad and Interstate Utilities
Company in Mason. He was a
Friends may call at tbe Crowmember of the Stewart-Johnson
Hussell Funeral Home after 2 p.m.
VFW Post 9926 in Mason.
today.
Surviving are his wife, Evelyn
"Bunny" Belcher Russell, Mason;
Henry A. Frederick
mother, Nellie Harbour Russell;
POMEROY - Hen ry W. one son. Sheridan R. Russell, m.
Frederick, 86, 161 Franklin Ave., Rutland, Ohio; one daughter, Miss
Westerville, died Thursday at Doc- Paula Russell, Mason; one steptor's Hospital North, Columbus. Mr. son, Mike Brewer, Mason; one stepFrederick was retired from the daughter, Karen Turley, Racine,
Kilmore Manufacturing Co., Colum- Ohio; one sister, Mrs. George
bus, and was a member of the Car- Pauline Jeffers, New Haven: one
mel United Methodist Church.
brother, Roger Russell, Mason; and
Surviving are his wife, Ruby; a six grandchildren.
daughter, Alta Ballard, Long BotServices will be held on Monday
tom; two sons, Otis, Westerville, and at 1:30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Oris, Chester; a step-daughter, Funeral Home with the Rev.
Ze~na Stewart, Middleport; a stepson, Lawrence Deem, Marietta; 13
gra ndchildren : several grea tgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
GALLIPOLIS - The following
The body is at the Moreland persons filed for marriage licenses
Funeral Home, 55 E. Shrock Ave.,
in Gallia County Probate Court
Westerville, where friends may call
during the past week.
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. SerLarry E. Gibson, 18, Vinton,
vices will be held there at 10:30 a.m.
unemployed, and Karen S. ShepMonday. The body will be brought to pard, 20, Vinton, unemployed.
the Ewing Funeral Home in
Gregory D. Nelson, 23, Gallipolis,
Pomeroy where friends may call
respiratory therapist, and Valerie J.
from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday and serCampbell, 19, Bidwell, licensed
vices, with the· Rev. Ralph Gordon
nurse.
officiating, will be held at the local practical
Dominic S. Spirito, 22, Grand
funeral home at 11 a.m. Tuesday.
Prairie, Texas, bar manager, and
burial will be in Sutton Cemetery.
Elizabeth J. Sexton, 20, Grand .
Prairie, Texas, cocktail waitress.
Earlt&gt;y Hayman HI
James R. Short, 21, Crown City,
farm
worker, and Marilyn J.
GALLIPOLIS - Earley E.
Phillips,l9,CrownCity,athome.
Hayman Ill, three months, died May
Anthony R. Bright, 26, Logan, self3 at Gorgas Army Hospital, Ancon,
employed,
-and Kathy Stidham, 21,
Republic of Panama.
•
Born Feb. 26, 1981, he was the son Vinton,student.
Stanley W. McGuire, 24, Crown
of Earley E. Hayman Jr. and Helen
City, truck driver, and Connie L.
Rice Hayman, who both survive.
Funeral services will be held at 2 Hayslip,19, Crown City, at horne.
Richard W. Mullins, 26, Crown
p.m. today in the Warehime Funeral
City,
and Karen L. PatHome, with the Rev. Everett C.
Delaney officiating. Burial will be in
Mina Chapel Cemetery.

Elmer H. Bowser

ANNOUNCING

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
be holding an open house from 2 to 4
p,m. today to mark the opening of
National Hospital
·
Week.
Empl\lY!lfl will
be oo hand to
greet you and conduct. tours of the
faclllties. You can.
get your blood
pressure taken'
free.and to top it HOEFLICH
off, refreshments will be served. I
think tile loyal employes of the
hospital would appreciate some
moral support at this time so do try
to make an appearance.

. THE. OPE"ING OF

.Ttl I OFFICES OF

:STORY &amp; .STORY

f------------------------

I suspect students don'! feel the
same way that I do abou.t it, but it's
amazing that we're reaching the end
of another school year . already .
Graduation at the Southern High
School wlll be on May 17 while the
event at Meigs High will be on May
19. Eastern Is the finale with
'graduation on May 26. Seniors of
Southern .will be leaving on a several
day trip to New York City on Monday while· seniors of Eastern are
heading to sunny Florida next week.

POMEROY - The Southeastern Athens.
Ohio Association for Gifted Children
Creative activities and games
has been organized to promote the which parents and children can .
interests of girted children and youth share during the summer months
throughout the southeastern Ohio will be demonstrated. Speciat1
region. The association, an affiliate ·sessions will be devoted to car and
chapter of the Ohio Association for travel games as well as outdoor,
Gifted Children, serves a 10 county rainy day and teenage activities.
area including Meigs county.
All parents, children and
Parents and educators with an in- educators in the 10 county area serterest in the special needs of the gif- ved by the association are invited to
ted and talented are invited to join attend and bring their own game
the association.
ideas.
The next general meeting of the
A prize will be awarded to the inSEOAGC is scheduled for Saturday, dividual with the most creative acMay 16, from 4 to 5 p.m., at the East tivity or game. The program will be
State Street Recreation Center in followed by a potluck picnic.
Fwnilies should bring a covered
George Hoschar officiating. Burial dish, table setting and hot dogs or
will follow at !he Graham Cemetery hamburgers. Cooking facilities and
with military rites being observed. cold drinks will be available.
Friends may call at the funeral
For further information or details,
home today from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to contact tile TAG Coordinator at your
9p.m.
local school or the SEOVEC
(Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative) offices in
Athens.

·I j

terson, 18, Gallipolis, at home.~
Eric L, Saunders, 'tl, Gal · : lis,
construction worker, and K ri L.
Tho!l18.!1, 23, Galllpolls, teacher.
Ly!UI E. Feight, 26; Gallii'"lis,
tllerapist, and Carla J. Seiferth, 28,
Gallipolis, unemployed.
Mark R. Atkellon, 23, Gallipolis,
state trooper, and Edith E. Dodson;'
21, Gallipolis, key punch operator.

The Orange Township Volunteer

HUBBARD'S
·
SE

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - An earlymorning fire at the Akron Baptist
Temple Saturday caused an
estimated $7 million damage to a
new wing of the church, fire officials
said. No injuries were reported.
Cause of the 12:30 a.m. blaze
remains under investigation. More
than 100 firefighters - some called
in early from an incoming shift and 18 pieces of firefighting equipment were involved in fighting the
three-alarm blaze.
Some firelighters were still on the
scene this morning, making certain
the fire was extinguished. Several
companion fires ignited when embers wer~ carried by the wind to
neighboring houses, but a fire department dispatcher said they were put
out quickly without serious darnage.

LIMITED OFFER!
DIRECT TO YOU FROM HOTPOINT!

.GREENHOlJ

Offer llAllies 1011 retail .tucllases /,pl. I thru Mlr Jt, 1981 on selected Hotpoint quality applionces sllown.

Ph. 992-5776 Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON
• Potted Plants
• Complete tine of bedding
plants and hanging
. baskets.
All Dozen'Packs 9Sc doz.e.
Hours: Open Dally 9 to a
Sun. 1 to 5

SJO

USB Dti'OIY'
UUTI!

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE•..

CALLING ON THE NAME OF THE LORD

POMEROY - Funeral services
for Robert W. Palmer, Sr., 55, Fifth
St. , Racine, who died Wednesday at
Hqlzer MedJcal Center following a
brief illness, were held Saturday at
11 a.m. at the Sacred Heart
Cathedral, Charltlllon, with the Rev.
P. Edward Sadie olflciatlng.
Burial wu ln Tyler Mountain
Memorial Gardelii. Cunningham
Funeral Home, Charleston, was in

~ltaful ,1{UI ~~"

D/

Bulavil• Road • P.O. Box 3011
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45831

SUndly Mornlne
llblt ltUCIY •=JO
Worllillp 11:10

(

tt.mundPrk:aetlactlve thn!Tuea ., May 12,1981 . Items

ollered lor S81e

wholeealera.

not available to other retail dealers or

Racine Village residents have a
change in the pickup days for trash.
The new schedule is for pickup of an
of downtown to the end of Fifth St.,
on Mondays with the pickup to be
completed on Tuesdays.
The Meigs County Board of Elections office now has ballots for air
sentee voting in the June 2elections.
Involved in the June 2 elections
are a bond issue of 2.5 mills at the
Meigs Local School District; a 3 mill
current expenses levy renewal in
Middleport, and a 1.5 mill Alexander
Local School District, tax levy for
voters of Columbia Township which
is a part of the district.
The board office, located in tile
Masonic Temple, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, witt be open from 8:30 to
4:30p.m., Mondays through Fridays
and frtirn 9 a.m. to 12 noon on Saturdays for the convenienell of absentee
voting. The deadline for this type of
voting is 12 noon on Saturday, May
30 .

come to State Farm
for our rates.
They stay for
our service.''

\

I

CII.Ji m 5ef\/IC8 piUS,

our rrad1/rona/ly
/o 'ltl raux add up ro

msu rance ~alue
See me f01 deta1ls

RICK PERDUE
Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio

Phone 446· 4396

Like a good -neighbor.
Stare Farm is there.
lt.tll . . . .

A

--:
STmFARM

.fltl 1141 Clt•Mil

c.,••,

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

OUR REBATE ... . $50
HOTPOINTREBATE ... $30
Uodtl REV52

• Octu~~: e large capacrtv washer with 2 agitator He~­
wa5h lb svstem to handle gentle or rugged loads •
Variable w11ter tevet control • Rapid Wash and Extra

rinse cycles •

••

•••

Deluxe automatic lttrge capacity

••'

malchmg dryer • .A.utomalic Sensi-Ory 1111 • Up-front
lmt triter • Trmed cycle up to 50 minutes • Preaa
Guard ' ~ System • End -or-cycle signal.

•

NOT£1 120 Rttitlt lito ~11/tllltr Ol'l Wulltlr oVD!Mi WLWf700A
triO' 0/ylr Mcxlal 0LB2MOA, not iiiUSlrlftlJ

•
•

•

~

•

•
•

•

OUR REBATE ...• S50

DELUXE 13 CYCLE BUILT.IN
POTWASHERllll DISHWASHER!

HOTPOINTREBATE ... 130

OUR REBATE .... ISO
HOTPOlNT Rt&lt;BATE .. .130

Modtl ABT.t7(J.A

OUR REIATI ... .
HOTPOtNTAIIAT! ...110

not..,,.,,

NOTf: J.10,...... a111o ,..,.._
Moar CTFIIG,

011'

A&amp;P GRADE "A"

IN ADDITION ro ·THE HOTPOINT REBATE
POMEROY LANDMARK OFFERS $50 MORE!!!

~~

,,..

LET'S NOT FORGET TO
REMEMBER 1 MAY 25 1 1981

•'
•

•CUT FLOWERS •POTTED.PLANTS
•MONUMENT SPRAYS •WREATHS

•ARRANGEMENTS IN BOTH REAL
AND PERMANENT PLOWERS

WHIIIHIJ'

lvtllftt

POMIIOY LANDMARK

laiiG

503 E. MAIN
.
JACK W. CARIIY 1 MGR.
tt2·2111
Drlvt A Little. lift A Lot-"'" Dellvtry Wltllln 75 Mlltl. We

"MHIIttf,...,
tMIIIIt''

Dlllvo·W.IIH
11 : JJAM

~.

"Tile Cfturcft wlflllllt Mtllltl''

ltf'YiaY_.IIItpllnt Alll!llllncts.I"'*.H•niii»&gt;IA

Mill C..... ltMI.IIr¥1111 Mllll, GIIIII&amp;MIIOII Countttl

L e.

.••
•
.•••

'

"Tile WIY Aml'f'ICI Stndl LO~I"
116 luttvnut Avt.

I'll. tn·:INt

.,. m-m1

,omeroy, Ott.

·oozu

Wt Au.! All Mtllf' CrMII Ctnll
And Wt Wire FIOwtn

••lf'YW"'rt
.,'

I

r/

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

I

.

Sun., Mon. &amp;Tues.
Features

The department will stage public
rib and chicken barbecue with serving of cOmplete dinners to start at
11 a.m. You can eat at the station or
take your dinner along. Price is
$3.50. As an added feature a chain
saw contest will begin at 12 noon.

DELUXE MICROWAVE WITH
AUTOMATIC
COQ.Kito/G r.nNTRnt r

II

(

P'sANDQ's

Fire damages church

CIDLLI CO THE - Funeral services for Forrest A. Marsh, 73, of 431
Laurel St., were held at 10 a.m.
Saturday in the Fawcett-Oiiver and
By William B. Kughn
Glass Funeral Home. W. R. Golden,
minister, officiated and burial
"For whosoever shall carr upon the name of the Lord shalt be saved.
How then shalt they carr on Him in whom they have not believed? And
followed in Reynolds Cemetery, Adhow shall they believe in Him ot whom they have not heard? and how
dison.
shall they hear wllhout a preacher? And how shall they preach, except
Mr. Marsh died at 8:45a.m. Wedthey be sent?" (Romans tO: 1J.15).
nesday in Medical Center Hospital
"Call ," from the Greek "epikaleo," means "to call by way of
ado~alion. making use of the name of the Lord." This calling requires
after a short illness.
obedience to !he Lord's will and not simply saying, "Lord, save me,"
A native of Addison, he was born
for Jesus emphatically confirms, "Not everyone that salth unto me,
Jan. 21, 1908, to Charles and Orpha
Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth
the will of my Father which Is in heaven." (Matthew7:211
Sheets Marsh.
Paul desc ribes the process of this calling from the end result of the
On Feb. 13, 1932, he married the
beginning: one ca nnot call on the Lord unless he believes; one cannot
fonner Bertha Kline who died Marbelieve in the Lord unless he hears; one cannot hear without a
preacher; and one cannot preach excep he be sent, that Is, commls· ·
ch 6, 1970. He was remarried Oct. 9,
slo~ed or authorized by the Lord. Now. let us reverse this process,
1970, to the former Milda Vrooman
observing it from -the beginning to the end: Sending the preacher; the
who died Nov. l7,1977.
preacher preaching; the hearer hearing and believing. Now .we have
ill This calling includes sending, preaching, hearing, and believing.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
The
one who responds to the calling, hears and believes the gospel. At
Julia Miller, San Diego, Calif., and
this point, the believer has the power to become the son of God (john
Mrs. Jean Krout, Southfield, Mich.;
1:12), so he advances his call by humbly turning and committing
·several grandchildren; several ·
himself to Christ In complete obedience tohls will. This calling is vital·
ly connected with baptism!
great-grandchildren, and a sister,
,
And now why tarr1estth011? arise, and be baptized, and wash away
Mrs. Kenn~th (Eleanor) Scarberry,
thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord" (Acts 22: 16) . Ananojs, the
Columbus.
preacher, was ·sent by Ghrist to Saul !Acts 7:10·19; 22 :12·16). saul
heard and believed Ananais' message. At thiS point, Saul had the
Mr. Marsh, who retired in 1965,
power to become the son of God, therefore, he arose, and was baP.tized,
was employed at the Chillicothe
· having his sins Wllshed awiJy, "calling on the 'name of .the .L ord. 'Saul,
Veterans Administration Hospital 40
. In baptism, was "calling on the name of the Lord." He was active and
not passive In his calling. To be active, one calls and obevs. To be.
years. His last job was as supervisor
passive, one calls and does not obey.
supply clerk in the building
When you call upon the name of the Lord for salvation, you must
management department.
hea r, believe, arise and be baptized, having your sins washed away.
You truly call upon the name of the Lord by doing (being active) and
A Navy veteran of World War II,
nol saying !being passive) . If you refuse the complete process of the
he was a member of the Bridge
calling, and choose to be passive rather than active, you are not call·
Street Church of Christ and
ing upon the name of the Lord In the truest sense of the word. for Jesus
has said, "Why call yo me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things that 1
American Legion Post 757 and a life
say?" (Luke6 :16) .
member of the Disabled American
For tree Bible Correspondence Course write the .. ....
Veterans.

Robert W. Palmer

Fire Department would like for you
to join them today at the fire station
in Tuppers Pla'ins. By doing so, you
can give Mom a break.

Proms at Eastern and Meigs High
Schools were held over the weekend.
Donna Chadwell, junior faculty ad·
visor who headed the prom at
Eastern, commented that the kids
.really pitched i~ to work on
decorations.
, In fact, everyone wanted to work~
If your bicycle has come up
Donna said. Both the Eastern and missing, do check with Pomeroy
Meigs auditoriums were attractive . Village Hall. They have several un-:- qulle so - for tile proms. It's claimed ones. All you have to do is
amazing how students can trans- make proper identification to claim
form those bare auditoriums into your bike.
such attractive spots.
Remember Mom, today. After all,
The nationally know Russ Morgan among other things, she told you
band will be appearing at a post- long ago to keep smiling.
poned event at Royal Oak Park on .
May 4. The band, which was
scheduled here on March 29 but had ~;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
to postpone due to a breakdown with I
their bus, will be playing for members of the Royal Oak Ballroom Dan"Many
ce Club and their guests. Tickets are
long gone.
homeowners

r;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

Forrest A. Marsh

.

Association helps gifted children

Marriage licenses

AT THE NEW A&amp;J!
WEWliCHOUR

Hospital open :h ouse
.
will be observance

A minor two-car craSh on Pine
·A clepirblMiat sPokelll)lllsald the ~ through .the car~tor
Street Friday morning WI!S also .· car,OWIIIdby~CordeiJ,Kerr, . wheilstartedandlgnitedtheengine.
probed by city police.
Officers. said vehicles driven by
Judy L. Heck,l7, Gallipolls, and Will .
Darnbrough, :ZS, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
-collided as Heck was bicklng up 111
the Super America parking' lot and
Darnbrough was pulling into the lot
at 9:06a.m.
.
.
Heck's car was slightly damaged
and Darnbrough's car was
moderately damagect, tile report
said.
Also. cited by police Friday were
Stephanie L. Stoner, 28, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, red light; Tlm91hy A,
AnORNEYS AT . LAW.
Burnhelmer, 21, Gallipolis, no
,•
.
'.
motorcycle endorsement; Michael
Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story
A. Dyer, 18, Rt. I, Northup, red
light; Carolyn L. GrH!in, 24,
236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
Gallipolis, failure to display valid
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
·
registration.
Offlct Ph. 992·6624
.
Home Ph. 992·3523
The Vinton Volunteer Fire Department reports it was called to the
Kerr trailer park at 9:37p.m. Friday
to extinguish a car fi~e.

GAUJPoUS - Two thefts are
under investigation by Gallipolis
city Pollee.
·
·
Priscilla Stanley, Gallipolis,
reported a pocketbook cOntaining
caah, food stamps, a medical card
and her driver's license were taken
from ber residence on upper Third
Avenue someUme Friday.
Pollee were also infonned by Harvey Brown, Gallipolis, two ceramic
frogs were taken from his Grape
Street home earlier thls week,
possibly Tuesday or Wednesday. ·
Pollee cited a Rl 2, Bidwell man
following a tw&lt;H:ar accident on Upper River Road Friday afternoon.
According to the report, Jerry C.
Massie, 33, was attempting to make
a left turn from the access road to
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport at
12:19 p.m. and collided with a southbound auto driven by Janet L.
Morris, 38, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
Massie's vehicle was slightly
damaged and the Morris auto suffered moderate damage. Massie
was cited for failure to vi•lA

Times-Sentinei-Page-A-7.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

•

�~- ·-1"' ~-- -- · ----

Times-Sentinel

____.,:___"__ .,. ____.._....___ . ,_

--~----

--

w. Va.

Ohio-Point

May 10, 1981
The sunday Times-Se~tinei-Pa

Open Dai~ 10-9;
Sundays 1-6

OUr .firm Intention is to havt' ~erY adver·
tiled iteni in stock on our lhetvel. tf an
~~iMd "'"' io nol ovliltlllt kK pur·
chase due lo any- unloren•n rusort,
K marl willoaue a Rain Chock on rtquetl
tor the merch-.c:tiae (one item or reuOn·
obit family quonl~) 10 bo porchued allllo
Jlle Price whiM II¥. IVI~abte or will Mfl
ydu a oomparlblt ~UIIily 11om II a~lllile roduclion in pnco,
.

e-:

B.
·· I

·Mothers -- wonderful
By Charlene Hoeflich Lifestyle writer

iAI&lt;E
ADVANiAGE

It's Mother's Day!
A day when sons and daughters
· everywhere are making an addM effort to
show Mom how special she really Is.
Just a little extra affection ... breakfast in
bed, a gift, a bouquet of spring flowers, a kiss.
The observance Is so woven info the social
fabric of modern America that It seems there
must have always been a Mother's Day.
But not so.

FUN&amp;EASV

Or GUi{'

APPAREL

LAYAWAY
PiAl~
• rad;e s oild g:rr:.
OpiAJ;er

• mons o,-.:.J

be~·;

. This year marks the 67th official ob-

C.)p.:;;\il!

• ir.font"&gt;WOOI

(700)

• sh oe ~
• rc~h1 on

servance. It wasn't untll19141hat the idea of
Mother's Day, conceived by Miss Anna Jarvis

occ e~:,vr •..;)

in 190'1 as a memorial tribute to her own
mother, earned national recognition .
President Woodrow Wilson signed a joint
resolution of Congress establil!hing Mother's .
Day as a day for "public expression of OW'
,love and reverence for the mothers of the
Country" to be ob5erved on the second Sunday
of every May.

• hc~ :ery

• sporting goodl
cppc: e:

a.tNirl" lnchM;Ied

Not All
Styles In
All Stores

or C-41 Film on I
!second Print

4c

Boyer's
Peanut
Butter

7.77

/

Mello Gold
Vegetable
Oil
{720)

Our
9.97

SAVE

'----__; (701)

3.88

And today, the ob5ervance of Mother's
Day is as much as part of our heri(!lge as
Thanksgiving or July Fourth.
·
The lifestyle of mothers has changed over
the years since Mother's Day was first observed at that little chW"ch in Grafton, W. Va.,
but their role remains one of loving, caring
and doing.
No longer are mothers confined to the
"hearthandhome."
·
More than half of the mothers in this
country are now employed outside the home,
but that doesn't mean that the role of "Mom"
has diminished.
Her responsibilities are altered; her interests expanded, and she has new
aspirations, but she's stUI "Mom," beloved,
responsive, responsible and respected.
Today marks a special time of tribute and
appreciation to mothers everywhere.
For many of us, it is a personal day of
remembrance.

$4

I

(702)

Our

6.96

Our

Misses' Robes
Snap-front robes in
cotton/pelyester. 2
patch pockets. shirtlike collar. Prints.

Vegetable Oil

Delic ious crunchy or
creamy.

1Gallon plastic
container.

NOR WALL

Save•3

4.97

5 gal. Peanut Butter

./

,dJ

43~.

4 46
•

Bolt
Our Reg. 7.46

ln·stock Wallcoverlngs

Pre-pasted. vinyl coated. 50-sq. ft. Save!

--

(703)

-

luntone

4.97

SPEClAL MFSSAGE -

This spetlal Mother's Day · message is 81IJ'e to make

Lam McCulloagb's mother smUe.

Mllt·lone

8" Fry Pan
97courtsJ

Flashllght Set

Handy p/ t
With two .. g~ biC flashlight

Llmtt2

( 705)

3 Day Sale

( 706)

1.08
Aqua fresh·

12·oz. • Cepacol·

6.4-oz.' family-size
fluoride toothpaste.

Mouthwash for fresh. ·
clean-feeling mouth.

ggt~:

~.

(709)

-~::-OHenes.

BARBARA Coleman is assisted
· by Myrtle SlsBoo of the Retired
Senior Volllllleer Prop-am lD

making a glfl for.her mother.

~~

Our Reg. 1.78

Our Reg. 1.47

Soft Scrub

1.44.·

28·oz. • Pine Sol'"

1.17Pkg.

abrasive cleaner.

Cleans, disinfects
with a pine scent.

Sheer stretch nylon.
Nude heel. 8112-11.

1.09
26 oz. mild liquid

6·pr. Knee·HI'i

(710)

2 47

3.pc. set
our 3.43

May lOth--Mother's Day

8
r;
, ..
Kit chen ensemble
3 12
1 12V1xl
\6x26" loweci po\holder
dishcio\h. an

(n 4)

(711)

Your Choice

92eea.
Bounce or Downy
20 ct. box Bounce or
JJoz. Downy. SAVE

3 Days Only

u,.,,

(j

(718)
g·g~ X'ahile fluorescen
t
. .

2

t ube .

· In c h
••• 0

•

•

•• •

•

•

•• · ·· ··~~~~~~~~;ires S· 31 -' 81
WITH
COUPON

Footlong Hotdog

with Small Coke

,,oo

Offer Good Setwee~
. p.m. 0a1 Y
10 a. m · 5

Sale Price

(713)

1.50

100 In Pkg.

Sale Price

$1
2Coffee FIHers
Pkga.

For

13·oz. • Coffee
Rich. full-bodied
Blender's Pride.'

Designed for automatic drip ~:~nits.

(71 5)
Our Reg. 4.87

97C

2Vacuum$1
3.38
lags
Pkga.

SAVE

·Townhouse Crackers

KM78 110ur Best11
4-ply Polyester
Cord Blackwalls

~g~~1~:24.97
Plus F.E.T. 1.39 Eo.

Trash Can Uners .

Will fit many makes

Oval snack cracker

16 oz.

50 ct. roll of trash
bags. SAVE.

and models. Save.

'"'"'W t.

On Sale Sun.· Sat.

. (716)

For

1. lmtol Iron! dlle broke
pods and 11ningt on
rear wheels
2. Resurtocedrumsond

true ra ton
l . Inspect tront callpers
' 4, RebUIIO rear Wl'lfel
cylinder•. II poulble:

reptoce. ll necenory.
at additional porta
C0$1 per wheel
c:yllr'lder
5. Repack Inner and
outer bearing I
6. Inspect moster
c ytinder

7. Replace rront grease
18011

Sole Price

SERVICES INCLUDE,
1. 011 change (up to 5
qt. Kmart · IOW40

63.88

motor om

Disc/Drum

2. Install 1 K mdrt ·

brand oH IIIIer
3. ChOS~I IIJOoiCOIIon

Brakes

(fittings extra)

Savings for
many U.S.
cars.

Sole Price

7.88

011, Lube,
Filter ·
For many

lobof~ntluded
lcldllooroi KIYii:III~I!CI,

cars.

trucks.

8. Refill hVOfOUIIC system

e 7 multl-siped tread ribs.
e "78" series trend design.
e Whitewalls 2.88 more
each tire.

light

12'1•·0z. •

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

All Tires Plus F.E.T. Each
MounHng Included

Carry out
14.88

No Trade-ln Required

17.88
H.D. Muffler

Most

trucks.

Installed

U.S. cars,

light

I
1car

1

Wlndlhleld Wlpera
sale
Sole Prtee
Sondable pri- Pair of. refills or 1
mer. Aerosol. blade. Many cora.
Primer

1.27

1

'3

I

1

CARING, 8RAIUNG .., llld Icmq. Mlellllel ud

'*

'

molber, Mn.J.mda Ma)W, Pameroy• .

'

.RJIIT A ln'lU: El'l1lA AJifi!Cl10N ... • Me*r '•Da:rlnmlleaEwiJIIIAIIIIImolller,lleala.

•

�,...........

f&lt;'ay 10, 1911

""f • ., , • ._..\ .,. ..·~ - ~ ..,.,...,,

Ka'tie 's Korner

··:Pr~ident' responds . to letter
BY KATIE CROW
Staff wrller
Mrs. Nora J3uclllanan;

· Ronald Re~:
and; sure er
she received a
reply from Anne
Higgins, director
0( COrreSJ:tDndence. ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., MAY 16, 1981
Karen Kent
and Scottie Price

KAHN'S KRISPY SERVE
.

·Bacon................. ~a~
SUPERIOR

Hess-McQuaid

•

GALIJPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Hess, Gallipolis, are allnouncing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Teresa Lynn, to Andy
McQuaid, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James McQuaid, Gallipolis.
Miss Hess attended Gallia
Academy High School and Buckeye
.Hills Career Center and she is now
employed at G.P.W., Gallipolis. Mr.
McQuaid attended Kyger Creek
High School and Buckeye Hills
Career Center and he is presently
employed at Tom's Stereo Center in
Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will be
an event of Saturday, June 6, at
Faith Baptist Church in Rodney,
Ohio. The ceremony will begin at
2:30p.m. with music preceding at 2
p.m. Reception will immediately
follow.

Bottle sale
~n May 23
MANSFIELD - The Ohio Bottle
Club, Inc., will sponsor the Third Anmial All-Ohio Antique Bottle Swap
arid Sale on Saturday, May 23, at the
Richland County Fairgrounds,
Mansfield.
This year's sale will feature over
120 dealers from at least 15 states
displaying for sale antique bottles,
fruit jars, stoneware, insulators, advertising and a wide variety of
ge}leral antiques.
The Saturday sale will be open to
the public from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
antique bottle collectors and experts
in :an fields of antique bottle collecting will be present to answer
questions about specific bottles or
abPut t'he hobby itseU. The public is
encouraged to bring antique bottles
fop free identification a~d oP appraisal. There will be a $1 donation
fo~ admission.
The sale co-chainnen this year are
Ac!am Koch of Norton, Ohio, and Doc
Fotd of Cuyahoga Falls.

Fran k1es ........... :~~.
·

Ground Beef.......L.~~~

.••

~ .., ,. ~ ,.. ., ., .. .. .

•

. . .. - ~ ~ ..,

"' ""F·-" -1

~

With each Chipper you get=
·2 pieces of fish fillet
·creamy coleslaw
·crisp french fries
· 2 Southern-style hush puppies

m. SUNDAYS and all day
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAYS ONLY!

RIO GRANDE
rGE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

capta•1ft 0'

.,m.~;;

Electronic
Technology

'

.

~~
~

217 Upper River Rd.
GallipoliS, OhiO

6

.

.

,

~shi~:p~M~·~th~~'::::::::::::::~th~e~~~p~l~en~ow~re~sl~de~a~t~Che~shi~'re~.~~==~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~;;~~;;;_~_;;_~-~~~~~~,.

•••

'

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin G. Edelbute

Mrs. Vincent Marando

Mr. and Mrs. John North, Jr.

••

Michelle Skinner

Helen Bixby

'throw·Dovyak
Pam W1

John Carty

Gretchen Carty

Lyn Byan

Jenni Dovyak

Pastor and Mrs. Joseph Godwin

AmY Skinner

.
.. Wolford
Leona ~'·

Sheela J, Matthews
Elizabeth Bowersox

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bowersox
. Dr. and

Mrs. Isroel ]aroora

Dorothy Newcomer
~----

R ose Swidder

Brian Bowersox

Mr. and Mrs. Kail Burleson
Bruce M. Davidson
Dennis Jamora

Mr. and Mrs. James L. Davidson
Estlier Gooch

·,

Raymond Gooch
Marie Churchill

Cabbage ............. ~;

Mrs. E sther Danner

$ 19
Cheese.~~~

Cottage

Critique

GOLD MEDAL

Excalibur

Flour..................!!G••

5 LB.

SHOWBOAT

HYLAND BRAND r.HUNK

LEMONADE

DOG ·FOOD

Lfmlt One .Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires May 16, 1981

. 25 LB ..

·BAG

$349

FLAVORITE

SUGAR

. su.

··I

BAG

$149

Kevin Lee Keil

Thomas Myers
Elaine Myers

·· e Uo~ey
~ }\o\\eY
!1\ic\l.ae . ·AndreW Blank
lll1

Lee .l(eiJ

Fred Edlemann

Tamara Suzanne Keil

DITIIGINT

Connie "~·1 Yers

Becky Skinner

Mary Ellen Bader

oz. ~559

Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Polcyn
arfha Edlernlllln
.
Claire Lynne Adams
Mr. and Ml'S D
lJ
·
' ean Davis
~"·. a,d All's .

B

. etty Koehel

•

AUen B. Slrait · WU\iam B. Strlllt

Limit One Ptr Customer
Good only If Powell's
Offer lxplres M1y 16, 1ft1

John Koebel

Janet ~t.:J• Nortb

.

.Larry .·c. North
·

.

Th ·

~

Paul Bade.r

,/

J/

...

...

..-

Mary Bader

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Run yan

Bernard T epe

Susan Marshall

~immerJtla'D
Mark Zimmerman
Karen Tepe
GregorY
,
Mildred Keil
Debbie Tepe
Donald\... Kil
e

Geoffrey Zimmerman

eresa Geremesz

Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Zimmerman

Mr· and Mrs·
Catherine Rexing

.This Message Is SpOnsored By The Right To Ufe Society of Gallia County

ho~er, exploltlve.

..

Kathy Dinino

' JosepiJ Btad"

Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Vaicekauskas

.,

JoAnn Myers
Gary Myers
Lisa Myers
Sheryl Myers
Lynn Myers
Susan Myers
Patricia Myers
Walter Myers

M

.•
•
.••

\\~\" r

Glenn Myers

Michell

8rj

\'\\~erii

William Myers

' Cane,.

. Renee Keil
Stacle

CHEER

171

Phyllis Taylor.
Christopher Blank

Margarine ...........~~

.

COUNTRY TIMES

No 4K26·2

•·

TV dinners ...:!~. ·fS

Pork &amp;Beans~ .~L
$209

~ . MIRACLE

"BANQUET
5

10· Qt. Size

.•

oo

Richard Myers

. Mrs. Roland Weintrauh
Jeanne Dray
.

£

~0

'
·'

MarY Myer s

I

Li}Jjllll

h1\ ~·

~rii· )o

Sally ll'eintr
Mrs. Lexie Shelton
nub

HAWTHORNE MELODY · .

E~Robson .

iEJcaUbur' l.s i ·violent fllm-griphic and bloody-it Is not,

Lunch
Meats
.....
L~
39 . . - . . . .

$ 29

Ground Chuck....L~·
BUCKET
$ 29
Cube Steak .........L~·

~DDLEPORT-A surprise open
house will be held for Mrs. Maude
Blitz on the occasion of her 92nd birthday on Sunday, May 17, 2 to 4 p.m.
at iler home on High Street in Middleport. The affair ia being planned
by:her nieces, Genevieve Ward and

film.

~~~OR

;

s allr.1J

DeT1T'tt
t • '

$ 59

Open house May 17

By Larry Ewing
;John Boorman's EXCAIJBUR
(R) Is a large, impressive filmD&lt;iclisionally slow, but well worth the
effort.
The film l.s essentially a straightforward retelllng of the King Arthur:
camelot ·myth, drawn with great,
deliberate care.
The story of a boy and his swoi&gt;d,
'Excallbur' traces the rise, fall alld
~on of King Arthur-who
through rmst of the film 'Ia
SOIIIIIhlnc of a do~t.
In fact, most of tile characters portrayed-lllcludlng t..,ncelot and Percival-are a bit oo the twodlinenslonalslde.
The most appealing characters
&gt;al'l! the wizard, Merlin, and his
illmeslll, Morgana. Their relationship of rlvalr)' is the moet
thOroughlY developed theme in the

12 OZ.

I

H u itz

By
S•." y onn •
Lafestyle lllrder

••

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Pag-8"3.

HAPPY MOTIIER'SDAY, MOM
"ash" one breakfast morn; the
I am the worst and the best of my woman who, when in college I acmother.
cidentally washed my fiberglass
Mr. and Mrs. All~n Hartley exMy
mother
always
just
drapes with my underwear (don't
tend aincere thanks to each and
.
'
'Mother".
never
"Mom"
or
"Momask ), wrote me
· a 1etter procIa'rrrung
· ,
ev~ryone who helped make their
,
60th anniversary such a beautiful
my'.' (exceptfor a short period when "Honey, I ran your underthings
M r · s :· .
I was 15 when I thought "Mums" through the wash about a dozen
Buchanan'~ Jetter
couple extends thanks to
·sounded chic) - the reason, or part times. I'm wearing your panties to
concerned welfar-.
those who stopjie!l to visit, those
of it, for what I've become. ·
make sure the fiberglass is all gone
e. The letter .directed to Mrs.
who sent Dowers and cards. As
She's
the
reason
I
when
faced
of
before I send them to you." The
Buchanan read as follows : the couple said, "God bless each
a
choice
between
cleaning
the
house
woman
who, in a somewhat peren"President Reagan has asked-me and everyone."
and reading a book - will choose the nial state of confusion, sometimes
to let you know that your
It ' wsa nice of all of you to
book every time; the reason I stop a calls me "Taffy" and the dog (her
• message has arrived at the White spread some sunshine into the
dozen
times to read definitions of ill- joy), "Sallyanne". The woman who,
• House. With the large volume of lives of others.
teresting
words before I ever get to to thia day, wraps the price tags inmail t!ult has come to him during
the
one
I'm
looking for in the die- side her gifts. The woman who, no
these early days of his adA reminder that the R. C. 100
tionary;
the
reason
I like buttermilk matter how often I call, always says
: ministration, It is not possible to Heart Golf Tournament will he
anddon'tlikecigareltes.
"What's wrong?" before she says
: reply at l~ngth to your cmments. held May 21 at I p.m. at Jaymar
My
mother
the
woman
with
the
anything
else.
~ However, your message will
GoU Club, Pomeroy.
• receive appropriate attention and
mild countenance which belies her
Continued on~
Persons still have time to enter
: your views will be shared _with
razer
blade
sarcasm
is
the
same
r----~------::-:::-::-::-1
by calling 985-4270, 993-2370 or
woman who used to embarrass me
, staff members. working .in the
992-7680. The fee to enter, ill: area of concern to you .
at
high school football games by
eluding green fees, is $10.
· "Nothing means more to the ·
jumping up and ye!Ung at the op: President than knowipg of the
posing team, calling attention to herEarly Roush will be honored
: commitment so many Americans
sell
- and, unfortunately, me in a
today on his 85th birthday with an
: feel toward making our country · open house at the home of his
way that just "wasn't done" when I
• better. He values your special illwas a shy 16. The woman who, never
daughter, Eileen Buck, East
: sights.
Letart, from 2 to 4 p.m.
much of a gounnet cook, baked oat: " The President feels strongly
Friends and relatives are inmeal cookies exactly one time when
: that he was elected not to just try
vited however, no gifts, please.
I was growing up - those turning
· to put America's house in order,
Knowing Eileen, it will be a day
out the size of bloated sand dollars
· but to actually do so. Hearing
to remember.
and disintegrating into crumbs when
: from interested citizens - with
touched. It didn't matter; I thought
they were great.
My mother, who once hid her
Revival begins
savings pass book in the old:The Churches of God of Prophecy
VV
ir] this area will come together May
Serving as hostesses at the recep- fashioned, drop-side toaster Daddy
1().21 in a revival crusade "Sharing lion table were Dianne Young, Alicia kept rescuing from the trash and
ultimately bumed it from "cash" to
Life." The revival will begin at Evans, and Theresa Price.
A rehearsal dinner was given by r;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:~
Gallipolis Church of God of
YOU DESERVE THE BEST
hecy
on
0.
J.
White
Road
.
M
ay
family
members in honor of the
Prop
Photographic Coverage
5
F
b
1
1().13; then move to Wellston May 14- coupe on e ruary ·
.
. . . Your Wedding Day
976
15
1
17; andthentoAlbanyMay!B-21.
The new Mrs. Price
a
CQII
con be cherished mo:DiBtrict Overseer N. R. Jeffrey
graduate of North Gallia High
L.U;.
ments to live forever
wjlJ be moderating the services with · School and a 1980 graduate of
when you core enough
Rev.. Jesse Jewell of Columbus as
Buckeye Hills School of Practical
to plan ahead. We ol·
Evangellst. Pastors Pat Henson of
Nursing, employed at the Pomeroy
Offers
so photograph children,
Albany and Granville Hall of
Health Care Center. The groom is a
·
reunions. family wr·
Wellston, will be joining forces with
1973 graduate of Kyger Creek High
trolls. graduation ond
local pastor Jeffrey·IIi this united efSchool and Is employed by the 'Illsenior pictures .
fott ·to~ !Giether and share the
diana-Michigan Electric co., River
GRUBE PHOTOGRAPHY
Bread lit Life. Everyone in the comTransportatlon Division.
mUntty Is Invited to come and worAfter a honeymoon in Cincinnati,
Rio Grande, .Ohio
(614)446-2103

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

NEW HAVEN - Mr. and Mrs.
Rupert R. Kent of New Haven, W.
Va., are announcing the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Karen Sue Kent to Scottie
Dean Price, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James A. Taylor, Gallipolis.
The wedding will be June 12 at
Faith Baptist Church, Rodney. It
will begin at 7 p.m. The custom of
open church wedding will be observed.
Areception will follow.

,·

. .I

,...,,.

Times-Sentinel classified ads

S .omething
·from

all points of view - helps him as
he makes critical decisions."
No doubt the President
receives 8cores of letters and it
makes one feel that his letter was
answered.

ville, wrote a

Sunda110 am·lO pm

·· ~

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

Betrothals

STORE HOURS: . .
Mon.·Sal 8 am·lO pm

"1 ,.. ,, ,. •

.' I
.J

.,
1.1

Margaret Meunier ·
• I

'I

.,

�---

'

Page-B-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-G•IIIpolls. Ohi0:...Point Pleasant, w..va .

Pomeroy-Middl~port-Goilllpolls,Qhlo-P,oint Pleasant, w. va.

May 10,-1911

The Sunday- Times-Sentinei-Pag~B-5

•

OES to have
.inspection

STORE HOURs
OPEN DAILy
8 A.M .. 9 P.M.

Bookmobile ~chedule for Monday,
May 11 - Carpenter, Laura's Store,
3:1(1.3:40 p.m.; Dexter Church, 4:1()4:40; Danville, Church; 5:2()-5:45;
Rutland, Bank One, 6:20--7;
Rutland, Depot Street, 7:()1;.7 :45.
Tuesday, May 12 - Portland, Post
Office,.3:1(1-3 :40 p.m.; Success Rd.,
Near 39060, 4: 15-4:45; ReedsviJJe,
Reed's Store, 5-5:50; Tuppers
Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6: 2tl-7.
Thursday, May 14 - Coolville,
Post Office, 9:45-10:15 a.m.; Arcadia Nursing Home, 11:26-11; Tup. pers Plains, Lodwick's market,
.. 11 :20 a.m.-12:50 p.m.; Pomeroy
Health Care Center, 1:3()-2:30 p.m. ;
. Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant,
3:35-4:20; Racine, Horne National
Bank, 4:45-5:45; Syracuse, Pool, 6-7.
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
. stop for the free entertairunent and
. information. The bookmobile has
paperbacks, 45 and lp records,
magazines, large print books and
· . how to do it help for everything from
car repair to dieting.

IO SUNDAy
.
A.M .• 5 P.M.

RE·IDA-F

STOUFFER'S FROZEN

Bread ......... 3Var. 10·0Z. Pkg.

LENDERS ··~ t:~ ·
Egg, Plain, or OniOn

Bagels

1
99¢
62¢

GOLDEN DELIGHT • FROZEN

58¢

THOROFARE.

29¢

Non-Da1ry Creamer ...

THOR?FARE-FROZEN

16_01
ctn .

,

Whipped Topping .. 12·oz.ctn.

PEPPERIDGE FARMS • ALL FLAVORS

Layer Cakes ...... J7 oz. Pkg.

RAGU

THOROFARE

Corn On The Cob .... 4 Pack
Green Beans ......
~""

sq~

TOTAL DOWN PLUS

TOTAL DOWN PLUS

-

FIRST WEEK

HEINZ

Bathroom
Tissue

Porllfl

4·Roll Pkg.

1·1b. Can

Beans

98~

88¢

SECOND WEEK

SHERWOOD BRAND .

Slieed
eon

TOTAL DOWN PLUS

'"·

'"

OPENPIT

12-oz.$ 1
Pkg.

.....
•

.'
..
•.•
'

Fresh Ground Chuck ... lb.

1::;

Chuck Roast. ........ . lb.
Stew Beef ... . . Bonus Pak lb. ·
SMALLER PACKAGES ...... lb.

Taco
Kit ....... 8.45·01.
LA CHOY • ORIENTAL
Chicken or Pork , • 15·01.
Can
ARTS N' FLOWERS OR DECORATED
ScotTowe Is

,
$124
1 Elbow Macarom ... ~-~~- 42¢- , Chocolate Syrup .. 1~: 48¢
$1 9.8 Butter Beans ..
Townhouse Crackers ~-~~ $1 a
88¢
~

Hb.
Pkg.

TASTEOFNATURE

I f I I

THOROFARE-FANCY CUT

JOAN OF ARC

•
I

Green 16-oz.~4 t

Beans

can ~

LUX-LIQUID

Dish

22-oz. Bot.

Detergent

,

15.s-o1. can
.

Bacon Chi

325-oz. Jar

McCORMICK

ROYAL-INSTANT

Puddings]

All Flavors

98 t

SUPEROSE

KEEBLER

59¢

MEADOW DALE

Purple 2

0
6a ;

Plums

3 •.

~•'qr:

1

TUMS•2FLAVORS

Polish Sausage ..
GENERIC SLICED
ALL VARIETIES

CHEF BOYAR DEE

Lasagna
Dinner·

100-ct Pkg

SJ99

lb.

1

~~~~~ .. .............. lb69¢
PESCHKE
SMOKED • FULLY CO()KFD

Ch .ICken Th'lghs

~

.

Chicken Drumsticks lb.

64 ¢

Chicken Legs ... Bonus Pak lb.

SMALLER PACKAGES .. .... tb. 89•

Porh
Loin Boast

~~~~

lb.

SJ S9

PESCHKE- BONELESS

"SUPER TRIM&amp;EXTRA LEAN"

CENTER C~T

CENTER CUT

·lb.

~

-

SNOWKING • FROZEN

lb.

1

-

-

THOROFARE ANY SIZE PIECE

BRICK OR MOZZARELLA

COMPARE &amp; SAVE WITH

Generies

Generics are the alternative way to save money. No fancy labels,
no laney packages, just honest·to-goodness savings over top
quality comparison brands!

;l kg.

DIAL 3-VAR. SOLID

s-oz.Cin.

3·1b.
Avg . ..• • lb.

68¢
$179
$1
Ham Slices .....
Pork Loin Roast ... lb.
99¢ Heart 0' The Ham $169 Sandwich
Beef
$199
Steak .. ~~~
99¢ Sandwich
Beef
$399
$249
Steak. J~~: - Cheese .......... lb. -

'.2oz. sqe

_SJ28
Dressing •

Spring Roasters

• 'i.hole or Portion

Hot Dogs

74t

FRESH

Boneless Ham

SNOWKING ·FROZEN

FRE
. SH

89¢
68¢
79¢

Best Of Fryer ...... .... lb.

CENTERCUT

lb.

I

"SUPER TRIM AND EXTRA LEAN"

PESCHKE-BONELESS

FRESH

.

$1310
l-Ib

FRESH

FRESH

LUTER'S
OLD FASHIONED

1 lb

21 b

Turkey Roast ... ·. !'kg:

1k&gt;t

Pkg

*
w
·
$3~ hlte
ARMOUR

*

ARMOUR STAR
MIXEDLITE&amp;DARK

:1&lt;1. Pig.

GALLIPOLIS - Individuals and
organizations are being invited to
participate in thi s year's New
Games Festival on May 23 from 1-3
p.m.
The Festival will be held in the
(lark behind the Gallia Community
Mental Health Center at Routes 35
and 160 in Gallipolis. "Gallia,
Jackson and Meigs County seoul
troops, 4-H groups, church groups,
homemakers clubs and senior
citizens are some of the people who
may enjoy coming to the , New
Games Festival," said Linda Krasner, Coordinator of the Alternatives
Program. ·
"New Games can be tailored to fit
groups of any size and all ages,"
said Krasner, who has conducted
New Games events throughout Ohio.
•'The New Games Festival will be an
active outdoor event. Everybody
plays, everybody wins and no one
keeps score."
Most of the New Games need no
special equipment or athletic
ability. Some of the activities such
as Orbit, and Body Roll do use a six
foot in diameter air·flated "earth
ball." Other games such as Jaws,
Float Away and Cat and Mouse ose a
parachute.
The New Games Festival Is being
sponsored by the Community Mental
Health Center as a Mental Health
Monly activity. The rain date Is Sundliy, May 24. The event is free. To
register your group for the New
Garnes Festival call LLnda Krasner
at ~. 286-5075 or 992·2191
before May 00.

SUPERIOR BRAND

Braunschweiger .. lb.

Lunch Meats ... Pko:

White Vinegar ....
Anti-Perspirant ... ~~k $1 !Z
DEL MONTE • PINEAPPLE
69
10·ct. PKG.
.
$
4
Pink
Grapefruit
Juice
~;· ¢ Rescue Soap Pads ............. 65' :·
138
Glad Trash Bags . . . . - Thorofare Yogurt su~~~sWLE .. ... 33c Red Pack To~ato Paste ..... .. . can 32C

Sweetener ... :.

MHCplans
New Games
Festival

HEINZ ·

Roll

$ 1i

SUPERIOR-SMOKED

.

Antacid Mints .... 7~,$1~

SJ

3~~-

.

·

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

qqt S,bsl 4'

11b.

$12.9

79¢
89¢

Thighs .......... .. ... lb.

Po.-h
Sausage

Chunk Bologna .. 'lb.

.

TURKEY

JAMESTOWN

SJ39

SUPERIOR'S "S" BRAND

1
89¢

FREEI

--------------------

Drumsticks .... ..... .. lb.

Turkey Legs ....... ·.... lb.

Slieed Bacon

Pkg.

POMEROY - Mrs. Edwina Scott
·wm be the speaker at the Thursday
meeting of the Pomeroy Chapter of
Women's ·Aglow Fellowship at the
Meigs Inn.
· Mrs. Scott has served as vice
·president and president of the
Pomeroy Chapter of Aglow and is
presently serving as corresponding
secretary on the Southeast Ohio
Area Board. She attends the Midway
Community Church.
- Reservations for the meeting are
to be made before Tuesday with
Sarah Winters, 446-7444; Gloria
Johnson, 742-2442; Jackie Zirk le,
992-5859; Joyce Hoback, 949-2325; or
Billie J. Dawson, 773-9123.
The doors will open at 6 p.m. and
dinner will be served at 7 p.m. Mrs.
Scott will speak at 8 p.m.

WHOLE·WITH BACK

11.99

SMITHFIELD
VIRGINIA CURED

,,

$

Turkey Breast. ..... .. .lb .

SMOKED MEATS

' AT 63' ea.
GET ONE..

TURKEY

-

$ §i

HALF

BUDDIG SLICED

CUT UP TURKEY PARTS

$159

WHOLE

Turkey Breast ........ .lb.

$1 ~

BONELESS

Plain Or Hot

LAWRY • SUPER

-

$1 ~

BONE-INENGLISH CUT

~18·oz.58t
~Jar
_.-

$165

ANYSI:aEPKG.

ANY
VARIETIES

~,
.&amp;

•

CUT UP TURKE Y PAKT S

~

r~ \

BUY TWO 2.5-oz. PKGS. OF:

Round Bologna

, . Barbeeue
tl
Sauce
1\'.\\

PKG. FIIEE WITH PURCHASE OF TWO. VALID THRU
SAl MAY 16, 1981

Sliced

....

TOTAL DOWN PLUS

lb.

Boneless English Cut Chuck Roast ... lb. s1.89
Boneless Family Steak .... ..... .... lb. s~ .89 Fresh Split Chicken Breasts lb. s1.49
~---------------------PE;:,1...n 1\E
AT PENNYFARE WITH THIS COUPON. LIMIT ONE

'"

zs~

TOTAL DOWN PLUS

....
....
......
....
..
"

......
Sour Cream '... .
.....
8·0Z. Ctn.
SEAL
. TEST

11~"

..

~

$158
-

THOROFARE • CUT OR FRENCHSTYLE
20-oz. Pkg.

SJ28
FIRST WEEK
CORONET

78¢

....•
..•
......••

Ma,onnaise ~~..
..
...
...
Pint Jar

Quart Jar

$1 09

BIRDS• EYE

meet, hear
:Scott speak

-r·- .. ---.. -

12-oz. Pkg.

Waffles .......... 1.1-oz Pkg.

;Aglow to

•

SECOND WEEK

Plain, WIMeat or WIMushrooms

~

N

Dinner Fries ...... 24-oz. Pkg.

MIDDLEPORT - Final plans
have been made for the wedding of
Brenda Lee Hysell and James
Joseph Jeffers.
The wedding will be an event of ·
. June 6 at 6 p.m. at the Church of
Christ in Christian Union, Pearl St.,
Middleport. The Rev. James Keesee
will perform the ceremony.
All three of the bride-elect's
sisters will be in the wedding party.
Penny Hysell Burge will be the
· matron of honor and Julie Hysell
. will be the junior bridesmaid. Sherri
Hysell and April King will register
the guests.
. Clmrlie Burge, brother-in-law of
·the bride, will serve as best man,
and Mark O'Dell, brother-in-law t:f
-the groom, will be the usher. Tim
Jeffers, brother of the groom, will
serve as a junior attendant.
The custom of open church wedding will be observed.

"T ·- --------

SECOND WEEK

Spallaetti
Sauee

.Wedding
· •· Plans made

•

POMEROY-Inspection was announced for May 29 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Tuesday night meeting of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, held at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
A practice for irispection was set
for May 28, with tl)e cleanup committee to work at the hall on May 26.
There will be a dinner at the Meigs
Inn 5 p.m. preceding inspection and
all officers and other members may
attend.
Pauline Hysell, worthy matron,
and Dale Smith, worthy patron,
presided at the meeting with Mrs.
Kathryn Oliver taking the sunshine
collection. Invitations to inspections
were· read from Point Pleasant,
Athens, Mt. Olive, Kokosing, Valley,
Harrisonville, Bartlett and Grove
City.
A thank you note was read from
Evaline Teaford for her 25 year pin.
The cheer conunittee sent cards to
Kay Logan and Caryl Cook. A
· bazaar to be held in Columbus on
Sept. 29 by the OES was announced
and members were requested to
provide some article for it. A
household wares party will be held
in the dining room at the June
meeting by the ways and means
conunittee. Sylvia Midkiff and
Mabel Goeglein of the instruction
conunittee functioned.
Refreshments were served in the
dining room by Virginia Salser and
Ann Hemsley.

TRY OUR

1.09

STAR

Turkey Roast .... ~~~:

·
$3 9
7

-

BELL RINGER SERVICE
IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT:

OUR MEAT SPECIALISTS WILL PROCESS ANY SPECIAL CUTS OF MEAT YOU PREFER
JUST RING THE BUZZER FOR PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE.

U.S. N0.1 CALIFORNIA
SWEET AND JUICY LARGE 88 SIZE

8-oz. Ctn

Black Pepper . . .
ro.o.z ~x

$129
-

¢

$
Hershey K1sses . . . . . 228
-

14-oz. PKG.

,

Sauerkraut
..... 16-oz.can 25
•
1·1b. BAG
·
Chunk White Chicken ~ 77¢ ·Dried Lima Beans .... 68~
SANI FLUSH 4 MONTH
$
$
39 THOROFARE
Bowl Cleaner ... 14-oz.Cin. 1- Pancake Syrup .. 12~ ao1 67
SWANSON

GENERIC

·

,.

J,

..•

~

$3~

Dry Dog Food .. .

f

M

0

N

D

A

Y

KYGER CREEK Band Booster~
meeting 7:30p.m. in the band room.
Installation of new officers; all '
parents are urged to attend.

'

'

MONDAY

MEIGS COUNTY Refunders Mon-·:
day at 6:30 p.m. at Diamond Savings ·
and Loan.

••

•

.

79$
Leaf Lettuce .......
4. $1
Green Onions. . . .

.••

.

FRESH AND TENDER

lb.

ICY FRESH

•
•

..

aunc~~ee

....

~-

•• J,;

Tickets for the Racine Alumni'
Association banquet are on _sale at;:
the CI'OIIB Hardware, Fas Chek, and
Village Cut Rate. The deadllne for
buying the tickets at $5.50 for
dinner is May 16. Tickets can alao be1
secured from Barbara McNickle by ,
sellt!in8 the money to her at Box 44:':
Racine. The banquet will be beld on·
May 23. Letters were sent to only "
out-of-town alwnnl.
c.

the:

EXTRA FANCY 138 SIZE
REDORGOLDEN·DELICIOUS

Apples .. I

.
l-Ib.
ad~yh
I.S es ..... sao

SJI ..
::.;;r

For

e

CIIRedSP, CRUNCR

u.s. N0.1

3
$1
Avocados .. .. . .. . .

D'anjou Pears1b.69

CAUFORNIA ·LARGE SIZE

ror

•
'

RESTORATIONS, singing at Deer
Creek Church, 7:30 p.m.
UNROE family will sing at Belle
Community Chapel, 7 p.m. ; Rev.
Everett Delaney, pastor, invites
public.

CIUCKEN BARBECUE Sunday at
Pomeroy Fire Station beginning at'
11 a.m. Sponsored by Pomeroy Fire'
Department. Complete dinner $3, •
chicken only $2.50.

CRUNCHY FRESH

•

24-oz. Bot

·'

,,,...,,,,.
...-s q~ .

·

$1
Tea Bags ..... .
79$
Pancake Syrup ..
25-lb. Bag

SUNDAV.

Banquet tickets
on sale locally

Ra1sm Bran .. . . IQO.cl. Pkg.

Remember

SUNDAY

• f ¥.

$129

.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Nurses
Association (ONA) is sponsoring the
Ohio Conference on Institutionalized
Elderly: Expectations of
Professional Nursing on May 13, at
the Martin Janis Senior Center, Ohio
State Fairgrounds in Columbus. The
conference purpose is to gather infonnation about the concerns and
needs.of institutionalized elderly.
Many conferences dealing with
issues affectlng the elderly have
been held across the country.
However, the Ohio Conference is the
first to examine the expectations
society has of prof~ssional nursing
in relation to the elderly who are illstitutionalized. Carol Jenkins, ONA
nursing practice consultant, said,
"Elderly patients have the same
rights to nursing care as have
patients in other age groups. This
conference will identify those rights
for the public."
Concerned Ohio citizens are invited to present testimony at this
conference to offiCers of the ONA
Gerontological' Nursing Practice
Assembly. Also hearing testimonr
will be Ella Kick, RN, MS, of Akron,
who chairs the American Nurses'
Association Council of Nursing
Home Nurses. Testimony will be
heard from 10 a.m. to 2 noon and
from I ;30 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Social Calendar:

vel Oranges~
ARGO

ONA sponsors
conference

•

•

•

-

Art fair Monday
:.
RACINE ..:. An art fair will be hel~''

in conjunction with a meeting of the·:··
Racine Elementary PTO to be held' •
at 7:30 p.m. Moncllly at the I!ChooJ:i:
Parents, students and other in- 1'
terestedpersonsareinvited.
-"'

�'

'

1981

' ~P~agg~e~B~-~6~T~h~e~S~u~n~d~a~yJT~im~e~s-~S~e~n~ti~ne~I~==============~P~o~me~rgov~~M~i~dgd~le~~~o~rt~.~G~a~ll~ip~o~li~s~,O~h~i~~~P~o~i~ntbP~Ie~a~s~a~nt~,~w~.~V~a~·=====================================M=:ay~10:':1:9::81

De Witt, Price wed in winter ceremony

Area honor rolls announced

preceded the ceremony with Mrs. Price, both brother.s of the groom,
Gwen Phillips as pianist and soloist. .Johnny Roush, and Mike Bareswilt.
Escorted to the l!ltar by her father Each wore a white tuxedo and a red
and given in marriage by her paren- rose boutonniere. The father of the
ts, the bride was attired in a fonnal bride wore a dark navy suit and a .
gown of white organza over taffeta. red rose boutonniere. The groom's
The gown was f!IShioned with a father was unable to attend the wedsweetheart neckline, full bishop ding due to illness.
sleeves, and' an empire waistline..
Bobby Roush, son of Mr.- and Mrs.
The skirt had an insert of sinall Johnny Roush of Vinton, ·served as ·
crystal pleats. Alencon lace outlined ring bearer. He wore a white tuxedo
the neckline, bodice, sleeyes, skirt with a red rose boutonniere.
and chapel train.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
her all silk bridal bo~quet was DeWitt chose astreet•length dress of
composed of red roses and pink car- dusty rose and wore a corsage of two
nations, which was filled throughout red rosebuds with red and pink ril&gt;. with baby's breath, and decorated bons. Mrs. Price wore a streetwith red and pink satin ribbons. She length floral print dress on a llght '
also carried two handkerchiefs, one blue background.
belonging to her grandmother, Mrs.
Registering guests for the
DeWitt and the other belonging to ceremony was Brenda Call.
the groom's grandmother, Mrs.
Distributing the rice bags were
Roush.
Misses Tina and Tami Niskanen;
Debbie Roush served as matron of nieces of the bride.
honor. She was attired in a formal
Following the ceremony, a receplength gown of burgundy crushed tion was held in the reception room
velvet and wore a pink hat decorated
the church. Wedding bells and
with burgundy satin ribbon of
burgundy and pink streamers were
featuring a bow with streamers in used to decorate the room. A single
back.
pink candle was in each of two canBridal attendants were Donna dleholders. Fetured on the table was
Mulholand and Louise Crist, both a three tiered, heart-shaped cake, ·
sisters of the bride, and Darla Saun- separated by Grecian pillars. Each
ders and Valorie Campbell. The at- tier was decorated with pink icing
tendants wore formal gowns of a hearts and large ·red icing roses.
lustrous polyester knit. The gowns, Wedding bells and doves surrounded
misty mauve in color, featured front each tier of the cake. The cake was
and back yokes and sleeves of sheer baked by Mrs. Betty Carpenter, .
polyester lace, a small string belt to Rodney.
be tied in front at the waist, and a
full flowing skirt.
'
.
r-------------1
The groom wore a white longtailed tuxedo and wore a red rose ~Thli Week's Speclol~
boutonniere with baby's breath.
i!;
Jack Icard served as best man. The
7.UP
ushers were Mark Price and Bob .,.
.,..

oli-w,.u horior r&lt;&gt;U. AU capital !elton ·Indicate
StUdenta making fill A's ft::~r the ·fifth and' 1ix
': · ·
• .
·
\
·.Weelal ijradint~ periOd at Ohio VaUey Christian · all'A's.
&amp;hool were: ,.
FOUJ1h p-ade - 1'lmll!Y Ry111 Bnunllel&lt;l, Glen .
a1ne iliad Clary, t1111111Y c ........ Juon J~~~~t~,
Finrt grade - Stephanie Archer, Beth Blevi!'L'I,
Brian Montgomery, Tod&lt;INop,a.pna Wo!Ior.
Julie H11nl~t1. Cindy Sheets, Byroo Walters.
Fifth grade - Andrea Barnett, DIMy Buver,
St:cond jlrade - HoUle Davis, Barbara Wei;
ster.
.
Jodi Blrehlleld, Valerie IliUM, Brian Gn.IJ,
Third grade- Becky Wooten.
Divld HaniJ ADell Houdl, Mort Jlllklna,
Fourth grade- Tony Jlunora, Steve AdaJT18.
Tanyi Mlt&lt;heh, CMI Pe!to, SuWu!o ~
Kent Saundm, RICHARD STITI', Mlc:llern
Flfth grade- Gina Jamora, Rachel Danner.
Sixth 11rade- Sc«t Blevins.
u""".
.
Silth grade - Beth Davia, MeU.. Halley,
Seventh grade - Kevlh Ha&amp;er, Den!lis
Jamora, Sharee Mahan, Kindy Peasley.
Cathy bote, Lane Powen~.
·
. S.Voinlh gnde - Randy Angel, Kelly Blu,
Eighth,grade - David Blevina.
Ninth ~rade - Phil An: her.
Brten Blrt:hfleld, EV&lt;IY!I aloor( llolnq SME1W11DV.A.
Students making all A'und B'a for the fifth six
Etrhlh liJ'Ide - T.... Broce,
L
weeks ~radlng period were:
CLAGG, Mllce Davia, Kelly IIIUer;Kolhy Role,
First 11rade - · Jamey Black, Abra BWih, Ke~
Diane stapleton,~ STITT, """Y" Swain,
I:IY Coleman, Kennl Dovy1k, Pam Holley, Jenny
Lora IVhltley, SuzyS.W\dtrs, Kfthy Williams• .
Hughes, Amy Sue Icenhower. j
Second grade - . l1sll Mil iron, Touuny
Milstead, Davi4Snyder.
Honor roU for the fifth ail weeks ~or Addaville '·
Third gntde - Kelly Hayer , Becky Danner,
Elementary is •nnounced by Ronald E. Paxton,~
Torn . Rawlings, Kelll Fillinger, C11trimt
Principal .
·
Christhm, He11tfier Wood, Eric BurgeS$.
·
Fourth grade .- PeMy Beaver, . Tracy
fo~ourth g'rade ..:.. Pennie Poar, Barry C..ll, DetJ·
EHile!ori, Billy Hager, iliad Leach, Teddy
nis Bills.
Perry.
Fifth gntde - Bllfy l;'esslee, Aaron Young.
Fifth gl'llde - Tonya Black,- Tanuny Bates,
Sixth JVHde- Eric Thornton.
·
CalTOll, Curtis Cuto • 1:, Jill DrumSeventh grade - SIWin Archer, Cheryl Tar,Jor: Christina
mond Trena Gardner, Nina Hager · x, Eileen
Eighth grade - Dwight Dailey, George G1bb.s,
HarbOur, Connie Jones, Cindy Lemley, Margin
Angeht Wrl~ bt.
Martin, Todd Wooten.
Ninth grude- NaU\!In R~h . Tara Treible.
Shrth grade - l.Alri Beaver, Paula Brown,
Eleventh grade - LaDonna Pyles, Gail Jones,
Holly Corman, Timmy Gordon, Jodi Hall,
Larry Miller, Denise Ca nterbury.
Rkhanl Hudson, Stephanie Lellbelt, KriJtl
. Lemley, Fayette Newsome, KMUM Northup,
Millard CaS!ildy, Principal al Hannan Tral't! Chris Polcyn, Marc Re!pau, Debbie Rwnley,
Elementary School, wishes to ·announct the £ifth ApMISboemaker.
ri

•

r,::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Price
. KYGER - Deborah June DeWitt
·and Donald Wendell Price were
:United in ma rriage on Feb. 7, at 7:30
:')l.m. The candlelight ceremony, per'.tonned by the Rev. Jerry L. Neal,
look place at the Old Kyger Freewill

Baptist Church.
The bride is the dij ughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald L. DeWitt, Bidwell,
and the groom is the son of Rev. and
Mrs. William Price, Cheshire.
A half-hour prenuptial music

******************

*
*...
~

!
!*

New arrivals

7Jotudi~

!
!

**
!

'

:

..
Infant Kennedy

~

DRESSES
COATS

·-

·:.,

\\

OFF

:m
.

Electric
String Trimmer

S/L VER B!l/DGE

- OPEN -

PLAZA

101m · 9 pm Mon.·Sat.
lpm · 6p111Sudey

Ro1. S47.44

The ST-40 has a 3.3 amp pe~man enl magnet
malar and a 14 " cut1mg swath lo1 those who
need a l1ttle more fr om an elec!IIC trimmer. And.
11s lully adjusta ble hand g&lt;ip and lighl 5 1/3 lbs
make it comfort able to use

et Rest Furniture

HARDWARE DEPT

Sofa
and ·Love Seat

MEN'S
FASHION
JEANS

Tii5P .M.

~pRI.ia~ct!
.'

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Junge, Napoleon, and Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Phillips, Colwnbus,
81Ulounce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children,
Debra Sue and Robert Lee.
The bride-elect is employed in the
Physical Therapy Department of
Wood County Memorial. Her fiance
is employed at Jewell Grain Co.
An Aug. 2 wedding is planned at
St. Paul's Lutheran Chlirch,
Napoleon.

POLAROID
BUTTON
CAMERA

$1999

'788

REG. 19.99
LARGE SELECTION

SINGLE PACK
SX70 FILM

'666
REG. 17.39

STYWCTO

GRILL
18"

1300 Watt Blow Dryer

.. ~

~,.~pro ~'l" with 1300 w1ns uf

Small. lighiWiiw/11.

Regular: capacity 2speed, 5-cycle washer

'31749

,\I&lt;TI YOU · , tht· to&lt;ally ne w panty by Formfilthat breathes lik&lt;
wu do. YOlJ l'anli cs arc made entire!~ of Lita, t ~ 1 th e rcvoluiiun i.ln· nt•w fahri c lhat actually brcouhcs like skin . Lita makes
n~· l on ~J id · fa li hion t•d ,:

·v .-

~
.~:·.-: ·~~
-..· ~::alhes

'"" ""' . ,, I \

YO(J

, ... , ·
·'

.

ooo&lt;e"

.

-no•IIUie

Big, 19-in. diag. ~as.
picture! Reliable electronic tuner· with
quick Sensor- Touch
selection. · Super Chromix" picture tu~.

· • como etel~·

'

I .

;._ POMEROY :... The Porneroylllddleport Lions Club will hold a
~ar meeting at noon Wednesday
~the Meigs Inn. .

R~ular

.Automatic delay start
oven turns on, cooks,
then ofl . 30-in .
White.

1476.45

' Now

··33399

.,llllr•

-D. Tailored Brief, slzH 5-8 $3.75
E. Lace Trimmed Brief, abes t-7 $5,541
D. Matching Daywe~r Bn, alles ~ $7.50

:!to meet Wednesday

Continuous
cle•n
electric
oven

• Shipping dllilllly lndudld • Milly~ .. In colan 111
clwfll •
Klnmcn .,_,....,. • cao- not lndudld lnpra lhawn •iltiiiiiOift SellS.- plans • NOw an
uleln our "H)(" ublag ·~ I I&amp;!MIL

A. Lace Trimmed Hl]lller, 1lzt1 t-7 $5.00 .

IJ, Tallored JJWDI; 11ut t-7 $3.25
C. Lace Trimmed BUdai, 11ut 4-7 M. 75

.-' ·'

The special drying system monitors heat
from exhaust temperature to determine
load dryness. Heat shuts off when load
reaches degree of dryness you pre-set.
End-of-cycle signal tells you when drying
is done.
Pllot-rree gas d'Yfi 1000.00

color TV with Sensor·Touch

kc'l' l' )'OU rool. dry and romforrablr all the time.
Th4 · ~· 'n· slain-rt·sislanl and colorfast, too. And so soh, li)Cht and
,jU,,,, '"u'll ft•t·l "uu hil\'(' nothinK on at all ! No other panty
hre:uh;., like \'01 (
JHtnlit.•"'

REG. 114.99

"ri"ll powtl. Du•l vol11Qt, 1201240. ttuu hut'tli• sellinQS.

Each d these Mllertlsed Items II rudlfy av•lable for sale • lldllertlsed
SllllsiiiCIIan Gu.ontetd or Your Money k k

Moslmtrtho1ndl~llll•il-

rr

for pick-up within •

~w days

~

49 Oz.

•229~ 5

'50 OFF

.

e~oporore

,

Large capacity
electric dryer
White

A choice of five cycles gives you proper
agitation speed and cycle duration for
most any fabric. 3 water levels. 2 wash
temperature combinations. Dual-Action'"
agitator draws laundry to bottom where
most cleaning occurs.
.

" r,, ~.,~··· 1

As Pictured

JIWEUIY Dli'T.

White

t·n • ,,.,,.\JI )
1 ,, ,u .. rrqp

Not Exactly

513!!

11751

r ormf it Rog-n

. .~/:.:.'·.:~.~r.:s l

REG. 112.99 ·

0200

( I

Meet "YOU" the all
NEW PANTY &amp; BRA

'7''

S-M·L-XL

Debra Junge
and Robert Phillips

Tues. Wed. Thurs. Sa1.

1- - - 24"

88

$

Gillette

"

~. ,RACINE Barbara Pierce,
1tacine High School alumni reunion
anner, is seeking the name of the
:f964 alwnni queen not 1954 as was
!reported.
&lt;',

Homelite

't1 INIM-

mt:

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

' .

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Kemper of Gallipolis are
proud to announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Kolleta, to Rick Mayes,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Mayes, Gallipolis Ferry, .W. Va.
The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate
of Gallla Academy High School and
is presently an assistant manager at
McDonald's. Her fiance is a 1975
·graduate ot Point Pleasant High
School and is currently employed at
Gino's Pizza.
The open church wedding will take
place Friday, July 17, at the Firnt
Presbyterian Church of Gallipolis at
7:30 p.m. A reception will immediately follow in the church
fellowship hall.
·

o, ... , '"' hy·AWIY AttMM

SHIRTS

Sears I .·_VA.l:lJES ·

S omething

••
;torrection
noted
••

Koktta Kemper
and Rick Mayes ·

.KNIT

Mon . &amp; Fri. till

·. I

300
Second
Ave

l liN Oe,.sit "Pitts.. • t1 .00 Smiu
Clllllf

rn w.-"" m... "11\iJi.

*
!

709FirstAve.

USE OUR CONVENIENT lAY-AWAY

WHIL£ QUANmES LAST

'139°
..

**
!

CARRYOUT

PRICES.IN EFFECT
'THRtJ TUE. ·MAY 12

0

Gallipolis

H~·

.
Continued on B-3
: : She also has always been the one
'rna fam ily which all left for greener
:tareers found herself the only one
~~ft to ~ke care of those left behind
::;._ my grandmother, my grand:Jather, me - and now my father,
:whom she follows around with his
:lnedicine as if he were the Pied
;l!iper and the pills were his progeny.
' · She was the one when I, in my ugly
:"pre- and early-teen years, felt no one
: loved me, always did. It didn't seem
: lo make much difference to me (in
: my misery) then; but it does now.
;,: My mother who, because my bir~lhday often fell on the same day,
: never let me buy her~ Mother's Day
::gift. '
:~ My mother - never "Morn'' or
,luMorruny" and no longer .. Mums"
::"~ might finally get her due.

:

HOURS
Mon.- Thur. 8 tilll
Fri.-Sat. 8 til12

WE R(S£R\IE THE RI GHT
TO LIMIT OUANTITI( S

MEN'S

'looking Well
lnio the Fuiure'

!

ICE COLD BEER
WINE &amp; POP

NOT RISPONSIBU fOfl
H POGRAPHICAl ERMitS

MAY 10-16,1981

t*****************

Lafa yette
Mall

-·

'.

**

Suits

·· RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Rutland, are an: nouncing the birth of their first
· t hild, a daughter, Kristina Ma rie,
: born on Aprill 2 at 8:10a.m. at the
;Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
: L. Kennedy,

':!l&lt;JUnds
Pleasant,
. Va.
She weighed
andW14
ounces
and wasseven
~1 LD·
· ches long .
:: Maternal grandparents are Mr.
'.and Mrs. Allen D. Bishop of Route 4,
: Pomer y. Maternal great, grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray
' llart of McArthur. Maternal great:l;rea t-grandmother is June Hayton
· of Callettsburg, Ky. Maternal great:.great-grandfather is Darrill Kinney,
•llamden.
~ - Paternal grandparents are Mr.
~:and Mrs. Carl E. Kennedy, Rutland,
::Snd the paterna l great-great;:grandmother is Mrs. Bertha Janey,
:.Langsville.

25%

SWEATERS

7~P

WE '
SALUTE
NATIONAL
HOSPITAL
WEEK

! Gallipolis Ice Co. :
:
DRIVE THRU
!

Now In Progres.o;

.

DIET

*
!
!*

••
**
* oz. $129 !*
:a-1&amp;
: BTLS.
Plus Tax !
*
andOep. *

After
Easter
Sale
.-

*...

Engagements

1

, SILVER IRIDGE

PLAZA

,..me

Rita Vining
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Vining, Rutland, are 81U1Quncing t_he
·engagement of their daughter, Rita
Diane, to Homer Smith, Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Smith,
Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Meigs High School, class of IWI9, and
her fiance Ill a 1978 graduate of
Meigs High School. He Ill employed
with the State Highway De!M!rtment.
A summer wedding is being planned.

Tide
Laundry
Detergent
Or
64 Oz.

Downy
Fabric Softener

I

Armstrong Rugs
Thtrt't never hen 1 bener vin vl
vllut. The IOUfh, vinyl su~ote
IWIIN kJnt WI. with tlly Cll'l .
W it wipes elton so usily.
a-t troon llorll prints. tile and
tHocts, mll'lllo designs.

Shupe-Sanders
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. Shupe, 40
Florence Ave., Colwnbus, announce
the engagement of their daughter,
carolyn Sue, to Ray Richard Sanders II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray R.
Sanden, 234 S. Warren Ave,, ColumbUs, dd grandlon of Mildred Sanders, Gaillpolil.
The bride-elect received a degree
ln Englilh education from 0Uvc1
Nazarene College, Kankakee, Ill.,
and Ill a manager with Lazanu
Westland, Colwnbua.
Her lllnoe attended Ohio State
Ulllwulty and Ia employed by

12

IIOJtt IUZ EACH
IIOUIIWAIIl DIPT.

$26~~t~H

HOUSIWARE DEPT.

NAPA aulclmollve partl company,
Otiltlnbal.
AD Aaplt IIIIICidlllila planned.

sEARS, IOIIUCK AND CO. ·
•I

••

~'
(

J

�Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

•.•••.
T
HE
.
.
.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

May 10, 1981
The Sunday Times·Sentinei~Page-

·

·1

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HOOVER
COMPANY

AND••.

FfiEE DOOR PRIZES INCLUDING
A 4% FOOT, •200 APE. ·
FREE COFFEE AND DONUTS.ON THE 16th.

SAVE .
DINING ROOM SUITES
Table and Chairs
NOW
12 DINING
BUY A 3 PC.
SUITES BEDROOM SUITE AND
SAVE UP TO $200. RECEIVE
TO CHOOSE FROM THE NIGHTSTAND FREEl I I

BERKLINE
RECLINERS
I
SAVE

ALL BROYHILL FURNITURE
DRASTICALLY REDUCED

I

:1sso- s1oo

ON ANY IN STOCK
60·75 CHAIRS TO
CHOOSE FROM

OCCASIONAL FURNITURE,
· DINING ROOMS,
BEDROOMS,
LIVING ROOMS

LARGE INVENTORY OF

SEALY MATTRESSES

BUNK BEDS

GO DOWN TO THE

$13995

WAREHOUSE AND PICK ONE
OUT. YOU CAN PRACTICALLY
NAME YOUR OWN PRICE.
SAVE UP TO 1250 ON A

COMPLETE
WI BEDDING
TO
95

FULL SIZE PAIR.

COMPLETE WITH
BEDDING

All 7 PIECE WOODEN TABLE AND CHAIR
REDUCED s100-s150 SET.* EXAMPLE TRESSLE TABLE, 4 SIDE CHAIRS AND 2
CAPTAIN'S CHAIRS. REG. S90() FOR $59995

ALL LIVING ROOM
SUITES IN StoCK ARE
REDUCED TO MAKE .WAY
FOR NEW SHIPMENTS
EXAMPLE-3 PIECE EARLY AM. PILLOW
ARM, CENTER PRINTED 100'
ANTRON/NYLON COVER. SOLID OAK
FRAME, COIL SPRING BASE, SELF
DECKED. .1REG. '12.90 NOW

Cele~rl.ty™

Automatic carpet
adjustment

• 9 QT. BAG

Soft touch cord
rewind

• FULL TIME EDGE
CLEANING

Model

51016

~AJ..LAS (API- Play was suspended In the third round of the Byron
Nelson Golf Classic Saturday when a thuaderstorm packing high winds,' rain and lightning hit Preston Trail Golf Club before leader Tom
Watson could even lee off.
Watson held a 1-shotlead over Raymond Floyd alter 36 holes with a
4-under-par total of 138,
The thunderstorm sent golfers daahlug for the clubhouse, Including
Lee Trevino, wbo wu slnlck by lightning several years ago on the
Professional Golfer's Assoclatloa tour.
"You can start without me," said Trevino as lightning Rashed
acrou the sky. Tbeo be ran for the clubhouse like a footbaU player In
the 4t-yard dash.
The 7f.man field was a balf·hoai late In teeing off because of heavy
ovendgbt raiD&amp; and a moralng shower.
The tournament wu marred by tragedy Friday when a spectator
was kiUed by a glaat limb lbalfeU irom a storm-weakened oak tree.

'199•

HOUSTON (AP) - The. Boston
Celtics tied a National Basketball
Association playoff record by
limiting Houston to 71 points and,
. 'With Cedric Maxwell scaling 19 and
Chris Ford 17, breezed to a 94-71 victory over the Rockel.! Saturday for a
2-Ilead in the championship series.
The 71 pointa scored by Houston
equalled .the fewest in a playoff
game slnce the introduction of the ·
24-second !hot clock in 1954.
Syracuse scored 71 In a 7f.7lloss to
Fort Wayne In a game played at illdlanapolls on Aprll7, 1956.
The fourth game of the best-of·
aeven playtfl flnala will be played
here SWlday before the series shifts
back to Boston for Game Five
Tuesday night.
The Celtlca took control early, outICOrillg HOUIIon31·11 in al4:11 span

of the first ball to take a 41-JO lead at
halftime. The Rockel.!' 30 points was
the fewest scored by a team in any
half during the 1981 playoffs, and
half of them were scored by center
Moses Malone.
The Rockets led 11-8 midway
through the first quarter before
Robert Paiish scored on a dunk to
start Boston's big surge. Ford
scored nine points and Maxwen
eight aa the Celtlcs raced to a 3!1-22
lead with 4:29 to go in the second
period,
Six ftee throws by Malone helped
Houston close to within 11 at half·
time.
The Rockets managed just three
field goals and a total of 13 points in
the second quarter, shooting 3-for-17
from the field.

111·

Air-Ride
Vacuum
Cleaner

• ALL STEEL
AGITATOR

1.7 PEAK H,. (.11 VCMA HPJ
12 QT, MUt.n·MAGNUM BAG

Rides On Alrl
Wh..la •.•
No Runners •.

16 qt, bag capacity

No

PORTAPOtvER'"
VACUUM CLEANER!
Complete · Porteble • 11 K"
long, 6" widt, 10lS'' higll

• CONVENIENT CORD
WRAP
• POWER·PEDAL
SWITCH
• FULL-TIME
EDGE
CLEANING
'
.

SAVE

E.111r1 Powerful Suction ·
U.AsBiowtr

'20

J.Wov Fllttrld Air Sv11om
Eoov to Empty Dull Bog
Comploto W~h Tool• ltf1d

-tiP ANDOVII-B

leN 1•1 lell .. wltlll 111111

••Rulhll'

llllt-llle I LUI' I .... C" ...... .._..I.Jiwtw
................. MBA
I I - - II •••, .
.(API
• I 'rill).
0

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FRANKIE FRISCH

game, could hear everything on the field. Having big ears Is a legacy
carried on by Billy Martin In Oakland, Sparky Anderson, In Cincinnati
and Detroit and Frankie Frisch of St. Louis. (AP Laserphoto ),

Red Sox, Indians
triumph Saturday
TORONTO (AP) - Dwight Evans
drove in five runs on a three-run
homer and a bases-loaded single and
Jim Rice belted his 200th major
league home run to pace the Boston
Red Sox to a It» victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays Saturday.
The RedSoxchasedJimClancy,l·
2, in the fourth Inning. Reliever Luis
Leal came on to walk both Dave Sellmidi and Glenn Hoffman to tie the
game at 2-2 before being taken out
for Mike Willis, Evans then hit his
twD-run single.
. Evans hit his sixth homer of the
year in the eighth, scoring Hoffman
and Reid Nichols, who had both
singled.
Rice had pushed the Red Sox' lead
to 6-2 with his fourth homer of the
year, a solo shOt In the seventh inning.
Bob Stanley, 3-1, came on for
Steve Crawford in the fourth and
limited the Blue Jays to three 1hits
over the final six innings. Crawford
had to leave the game because of a
groin Injury.
JndlaDI Z, Twills I
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (API -

HayeB uUsfactory

I

SPARKY ANDERSON

AL roundup:

ST. LOUIS (AP) - U!nter Blake
Dunlop ol the St. Louia Blues WIL'I
lllllll!d by the Profl!lll!onal Hockey
Wrtten' ~aocte!fm Saturdly u the
wlnnlr of the 1•1 Bill Masterton
Mlmorill Trophy'

Model

(I

BILLY MARTIN

THEEARSHAVEIT-Big ears are a must for would-be Hall of
Fame managers. Casey Stengel, with the best pair of Rappers In the

Hockey honoree

COMPLETE WITH

ElCtrl Lont Cord

CASEY STENGEL

Jorge Orta scored an unearned run
in the loth inning wheR nobody
covered home plate and Sid Monge
contributed two innings of clutch
relief pitching to lead the Cleveland
Indians past the Minnesota Twins 2-1
Saturday.
0r1a si~led, took second on Jim .
Hargrove s sacrifice llmt and
scored on Miguel Dilone's infield
single after escaping a · I'IIIHiown
between third and home. As shortstop Pete Mackanin waa chasing
Orta, no TWin covered home. Third
baseman Dave Engle was given an
error on the play.
,
Monge, 1-1, pitched the final two
innings in relief of starter Len
Barker, holding Minnesota hiUess.
The Twins had tied the game 1-1 in
the ninth on conaecutive triples by ·
John Ca.stlno and Mickey Hatcher.
Minnesota proceeded to load the
bases on intentional walks to Gary
Ward and Engle but Monge retired
Ron Jackson and ChuCk Baker on fly
balls to end the rally.
Andre Thornton's RBI single In
the eighth had given Cleveland a 1-0
lead.

SporJs briefs ...

.•,,..

00

MONTREAL (API - Bill North
drove in six runs, four on his first
career grand slam homer, to power
the San Francisco Giants to an 8-2
victory over the Montreal Expos
Saturday.
· With the Giants ahead 2·1, Joe
Morgan led off the seventh with a
single and moved to second when
Montreal starter Steve Rogers , 3-2,
walked Johnnie LeMaster. San

Francisco starter Vida Blue legged
out an infield single to load the baseo;
for North, who parked Rogers' 3-2
pitch over the right-field fence for
his first homer of the season.
North's twD-run double in the fifth
had put the Giants on top2-L
Andre Dawson hit his sixth homer
of the year for Montreal in the eighth
to cut the lead to &amp;-2.
The Giants added two more in the
ninth when Enos Cabell doubled and
scored on Chris Speier's throwing
error. Darrell Evans knocked in
Cabell with a single:
Blue scattered seven hits to raise
his record to 3-2.

Suspend golf action

HOOVER.

WITH HEADLIGHT

Ouadraflex TM
agitator

Astros pitcher Joaquin Alldujar In the third Inning of a
game Saturday In Cincinnati. Oester reaches the bag
first and Andujar was charged with an error on the
throw. Cincinnati won, t-5. (AP Laserpbotol.

ning and Taveras' sacrifice fly
drove in the third.
Allen, 2-0, got the victory with Jeff
Reardon gaining his first save of the
season.
Giants 8,Ellpos 2

Boston 94-71 winner

EXAMPLE-3 PIECE
EARLY AMERICAN
LIVING ROOM SUITE,
SAVE UP TO •600 OFF
THE RO AIL PRICE.

HOOVER CONVERTIBLE
UPRIGHT

GETIING THERE -CIDclnnatl Reds base 111llller
Ron Oester sll'etches to reach first base ~fore Houston
Astros first baseman Deony Heep can come back down
alter Heep was pulled off the bag on a throw from

NEW YORK (AP) - Alex
Trevino's RBI single snapped a 4-4
tie in the eighth inning and Frank
Taveras drove in three runs,
enabling the New York Mets to beat
the Los Angeles Dodgers' 7-4 Satur·day.
Pedro Guerrero's second home
run of the game, a twD-run shot in
the eighth off reliever Neil Allen,
had tied the score.
But the Met8 came back against
reliever Bobby Castillo, o-4. A walk
to Hubie Brooks and singles by
Rusty Staub and Trevino gave the
Mets a 5-4 lead. A fielder's choice
and an error by third baseman Ron
Cey let In the second run of .the in·

'

· WE HAVE ONE OF THE BEST SELECTIONS OF CARPET ·
IN THE AREA. BUY NOW AND RECEIVE PADDING
AND INSTALLATION f

THE HOOVER CONCEPT ONE
SELF PROPELLED CLEANING SYSTEM

Twin lamp
headlight

-

ALSO - CHOICE OF NEW FULL SIZE MATTRESS - BOX
SPRINGS FOR '360 OR QUEEN SIZE FACTORY SECOND
PAIR ..............1350.

Reds opened a S.! lead. Oeste!'
scored on Ken Griffey's double and
Dave Concepcion followed with his
team-high 26th RBI on a single to
center.
The Astros scored on Terry Puhl's
double, a sacrifice and Cesar
Cedeno's grounder in the first.
Pinch-hitter Joe Pittman scored in
the fifth on Berenyi's balk.
The Astros added three more in
the ninth, two on Mike Ivie 's double.

Mets top LA, Giants romp

.. ' '"'"~':T:·• ' '

SAVE
$300. $600

and Joe Nolan, who had two hits and
scored twice, followed with a
sacrifice fly for a 3-IIead.
Bench lined his 358th career
homer, a lwD-run shot, In the sixth
off reliever Bob SprowL The homer
tied Bench with Yogi Berra for 29th
place on the all-time list and gave
the Reds a 9-21ead.
Cincinnati's Ron Oester extended
his hitting streak to II games with a
leadoff single in the second when the

NL roundup:

A.HOOVER FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WILl BE ON HA~-~ .
MAY 16th FOR DEMONSTRATIONS AND SPECIAL PRICES.

SAVE '1 00 • '150 ON
SELECTED ITEMS.
DON'T MISS THIS
.BIG APPLIANCE
SALE

Edge cleaning
plus.••

CINCINNATI (API - Johnny
Bench belted a milestone homer and
Gerirge Foster knocked In two runs
with a double, leading the Cincinnati
Reds to a 9-5 victory over the
Houston Astros Saturday.
Bruce Berenyi, 3-1, contributed a
sacrifice fly in the fifth inning. He
needed last-out relief help fr&lt;m Joe
Price.
Foster laced his double in the first
off Joaquin Andujar,l-2, erasing a 1·
0 Houston lead. Then Re•eh •ingled

y 16th. 20th

APPLIANCES
REDUCED
TO THEIR
LOWEST •

$399

Bench paces 9-5 win

4 DAY SALE

The Hoover Company and
Rutland Furniture are ·
Going Ape Again for
Another STOREWIDE
REDUCTION! Our
Inventory Must Go
At the LOWEST
Possible Prices.

.,

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OOWIIBUB, Olllo (AP) - Fornter Ohio Slale foolball, Coach
WOOISJIIIJtl-lll&amp;ed ill atllfac-

Houston in ,d ebt
DALLAS (AP) - 'l1le University
of Houston II llmolt two monU.
behind 1n illrlnl off about..,,ooo 1n
deblllncumd durinl the , . foot.
ball - · I DIIJu lleWipaper

reported Saturday'
The debll Include I lpllt ol pte
ret'elptl to Ylllllnl lielms and
teleY!IIon 1 - . hll the ftllarlll
teii!CBit ol the IbM •Rice football

lllrJ C!GIIdltion illlnll1 loDowlnc pne, 1111 Dlilal Mot •*c Newa
aald,
IIIJ'PI'Y to remove hll pU bladder,

· BACK RAND 8110'1' _; CUte Evert u.,d Ill F..t Leaderdale, Fla.,
VIlA, ...,. I .... ' IIIMI dutrrlllle I BUWJ •tellflllle lt.llan

.,. a

n'atlalla '

(

7\ llllaiJ..._di),SIIe.._..lludy

Ce!llll ..l. M . . wl1 ..., tile fllalllllldl .pfld Vlqbda a.ld al
111
I 8 ' y. ~APWir pll1te}.
·

�•
Jl,ay 10, 1981

Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

Times-Sentinel

Eagles cop sectionai ·title
SYRACUSE- An oull!tanding pit- Newberry provided the big blow for line drive to Cole at first. ·Cole
ching performance by senior Greg SWHS with an RBI double, while snagged the shot, then fired to third
Wigal and an offensive outburst led Smith knocked in Mike Bissell, who to double off that runner.
the Eastern Eagles to a hard-fought had doubled.
Everything went right for Eastern
:;.4 win over Southwestern's HighQuite a ball game developed over in the eighth round as Beaver led off
landers in extra innings here Friday the innings and produced a 'quality by being hit with a pitch. Griggs
afternoon In the finals of the ball game for the sectional cham- grounded outto advance the runner,
Southeast Class "A" sectional at pionship. As the tension grew, going and Wigal hit a ball back to the pit·
Syracuse Municipal Park.
into the sixth, Layton tagged a cher. On Wigal's grounder Beaver
In winning the sectional crown, single, Nida sacrificed him to was nailed at third, but Wigal
Coach Ralph Wigal's Eagles raised second. On a pick-up play Layton reached safely at fir81. Wigal at·
their season record to an impressive trotted home with the tying run. • tempting to steal second saw the ball
17-1 while earning a berth in the
Burleson set the Eagles down in carom into centerfield and raced inDistrict tournament at Chillicothe.
the top of the seventh, and the to third, while the Southwestern ceh·
Eastern will play the winner of the highlanders went to work on Wigal. terfieider bobbled. the ball. Wigal
Minford sectional during the week of From the Eastern standpoint, things raced home, scoring what proved to
May 1&amp;-23.
looked very gloomy in the inning. be the winning run.
The first inning of the game Gilbert led off the inning with his
For the winners Bissell doubled
foreshadowed a slugfest, but as the second single of the game. Jay and singled, Smith had two singles,
game progressed a tight pitching B\ll'leson came through with his while Griggs, Wigal, Cole, and Nick
duel developed. Greg Wigal went the second hit of the game to put runners Uonard singled.
distance for the Eagles to pick up the at first and second. With the winning
For Southwestern Layton doubled
win. Wigal fanned three and didn't run in scoring position, Russell ham· and singled, and Sizemore, Gilbert,
walk a batter. During the lastframe, mered a long fly ball to left, ad· and Burleson singled twice, while
Wigal struck the side.
vancing both runners.
Newberry doubled, and Kessinger
Jay Burleson, the losing hurler for
Newberry, the next hitter, roped a · singled.
Coach Jack James' Highlanders tur· ..---_:---------~----------1
ned in a good perfonnance. Burleson
turned up the wick as the game
progressed and fanned eight
Eastern batters. Burleson issued
live free passes.
ON
In the first inning, Eastern looked
unstoppable while rallying for three
runs. Johnny Beaver led off with a
walk, Gary Griggs rapped a single,
and Greg Wigal brought home the
first run with a RBI single. With one
out, Rob Smith laced a single for
another Eastern run and Gene Cole
POMEROY, OHIO
roped a single to right for another
run. After giving up four hill!,
PHONE 992·2174
Burleson settled down and retired
the side.
Southwestern got an early start in
the bottom of the first frame, when
Wayne Sizemore singled, Gilbert
singled, and Jay Burleson helped his
cause with an RBI single. After one
Auto., PS , PB, 4 cyl. This is really
2 dr., V-6 Turbo-charge, auto.,
was out, Scott Russell ripped a
PS, PB, Air, AM/FM/Stereo. a gas saver, local one owner.
Verv low mileage .
Rear defogger. Rally wheels.
sacrifice fly that brought home
another SWHS run.
In the third round, both clubs adThis is a Steal
ded
run to maintain its
LIKE NEW ONLY
for Only

[Marietta· edges. Gallip.()lis . . sEo~~s=~~dings

HONDA SPECIALS

•.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
1979 BUICK

LESABRE SPORT

HOUOAY POOLS

'4695
1979 CHEV. C.10

ST. REGIS 4 DR.

SWIMMING POOLS

318,

WHOLESALE - RETAIL
lnground and above
ground pool kits of any
type.
Filters • Chlorinators •
Motors and Pumps • Safe·
ty Ropes • Pool Ladders •
Lights • Pool Games •
Pool Base • Filter Sand •
Automatic Pool Sweeps •
Vacuum Hose • Cleaning
Equipment • Pool Paint •
Poolside Furn. • Chemical
Heaters • Solar covers •
Winter Covers • Skimmers
• Diving Boards • Slides •
Liners.
Buy all your needs from
loca I warehouse and save.

auto..

PS ,

PB , Air,

AANFM!Tape, rear defogger,
cruise. This also is a local one
. owner .

Hours
10 til s Weekdays
10 til2 Saturday

A BARGAIN FOR

'4295

1978 PONTIAC
CATALINA 4 DR.
Viny l top, air. F'S, PB, AMIFM &amp;
6-wav power seat . This is a local
car. All .service has been done
here.

Asmooth riding, shaft-driven touring machine
with a liquid-cooled, 1085 cc !!llgine and air
suspens.ion.

Great looks and a powerful827 cc !our-cycllnder
engine highlight this immble custom cruiser.

GOLD WING"

CB900
CUSTOM

INTERSTATE'"

: MASON, W. Va. - Guess who's
toming to dinner?
;: Jackie Sherrill, the coach of the
fill Panthers, that's who! The
t eteran and successful football
\1,03ch has infonned conunlttee of.
ficiais that he will be on hand for the
'third Annual Dave DilesAppalachia SemJ.Ciosed Golf Tourllament and Hillbilly Supper. Dates
l(re June 3-1, with the dinner set for 6
J!.m. Wednesday evening at Royal

1975 CHEV. MALIBU

4x4 PICKUP

WAGON

Auto., V-8, F'S , F'B. This is a good

Auto .. F'S, PB , air .' This one

4x4 pickup, one owner . Low
mil eage for 1976.

868 CAMDEN RD.
HUNTINGTON, W. V.
4294788

AGolid Buy For

'4895•
A902 cc DOHC four-eylinder custom. Honda's
exclusive Select-Range ™dual ratio
sub-transmission and shaft drive.

Afully dressed, full·s~ed touring bike with shaft
drive, a 1085 cc liquid-cooled engine and air
suspension.

CX500
CUSTOM

CR125R ELSINORE'" +

\".•.

L()cal bowling

•

BOWUNG BEUES

Derlfield Jewel r y - Ailee n l.ong 112--467 : Rob ·

BOWUNO LEAGUE

bins lind Myers - Nell ie Jackson 168·.U9 ; Mister

May l, 1•1

oonu1 - Drl'ma Hoschar 19.B l3; Tim's Body

StiDdlqs

Shop - Hau!l Marcum 1113, Flo Anne Riffle SOO;
Acr High Music - Send't' Courtney 21H17 ;
Federsl Mogul - Grl!ce Broy les 165, $harlene
Dixon 42"'; Doxol Gas - Marty Hunt IIJ , Joyce
Russ "'78 ; Jac k's AwninQ Sa les - Cindy Jones
1'1-~4 ; Amer ican U:glon - Millie Hoock ltl.'i·
Al6; etue TarTan - Patty Hun!rr 197·ol9 1.
Sp lits wrre converted by : Jan Howel l the 4·7·
10; Otbb'l R~;sseltlhe 5· 10; Rosie Sheets thr .4-5;
C!!rolyn Burt oo the6·7; Mary RObinSon, Flo Rif ·
tie, Nettle Jac111oon The ] ·10: Allee Smith the • ·.'i ;
Alteen Long the 5·J; O.lph ine Star ling the .'i ·6;
Lorene Gogg ins ! lifo 3-6·8·9·10.
Lt'T' s see a b ig turn·out for Sl.Jmmer bOwling on
Ma"J 12. 198 l ai6 :JOp .m . Meet and bOWl the same
night
·

W. L

J.11ck' s Awning Saln
Tim's Bod)' St~cp
Johnsoo' s S~;permark e t

ptue 1 artan
Team No. 6
Federal Mogul

'1395•
Amid-sized cnstom bike with shaft drive and a
liquid-cooled 497 cc V·twin engine.

'

Don' t Let This
One get Away

96

168
lAY

104
123

1.46

Pro-Link TM rear suspension and a wate~led
122 cc read-valve two-stroke engine make this

an ull out motocrosser.

•245000
'

126

us

127

IAJ

129

MAY 10th ·THRU
MAY 16th
JOHNSON
CENTURY ROD &amp; REEL

'

---

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395 cc counter-balanced twin,. This new custom
features a 3.7 gallon fuel tank and highlighted

•

·•
•

i

Oberlin

.......

•

'4195

•
•

Bait Canteen

•RiQklllre ~·''-" 14r11t,c ....,.,,,.,,.,.,litf,..,

992-3307

..

'1495

~ North

•

Second Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

•3''REG.4.99

..,29

EACH
' REG. 1.77 EACH

•

•CAMPUS

look what you g61 with the Bearcat
210Xl Exdti nQ. spaceage styling. No·
crystal . pushbutton tuning. New. 18 channel .
6-band coverilge ot over 6000 lreauencies.

• LAGUNA
• JOCKEY

nel Acce5s. Seletlive Scan !Riay. And much
IT'IQ(G There·s never been a Scanner like the
Bearcat210XL.

•

by
• CAMPUS
• LEVI
• KENNINGTON

OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 PM

!.

REG.S.77

'4''

Assorted

Panther Martin
flies

Wlt•r dr•mlin
J!lfllbo

Split Shot Selector

Sl!!

Aw\)lts type motocr~wer ,with water-cooled
246 cc tw().alroke engine and Pro-Link ™rear
suspension.

IIi

CB750
CUSTOM
II

c•....,

Spin Cast Reel ·

CHOICE

Workl type nwiOcnJIIIerwlthPro-UnkTII rear
allljlellllon IIIICI powered by an aw~ 432 cc
reed-valve two:-ltroke engine.

EACH

SPORTS DIPT.

SPIN CAST REEL~~~
6' SPIN
~~Fish -N-Fold"
CAST ROD
Fishing Rod
Choice

$14!~G.17.96

'19!!

Foldirta Rod/Reel/lint Combin11ion.
f 1t1 most glon companmltfl11 1nd
many III'Qtr tar:kl• bOle&amp;. filled with
Triltnl mono liM.

Cheolf t.-.m elttltr tM C11N 1111n cast reel.
C.. IM 6'
tM Clt1M J' Nit

•1'1• '"' ..... •

m.OOR!BATE
ENDS MAY 15, 1981

51 33

f1oJ To 12.01 loclo

REG. 29.99

!

·101'5 ELECTRONICS

HONDA OF RARDIN
·RAriDIN, OHIO

;,

One Tr1y TICkle ...

Jt'

by
• LEVI
• JORDACHE
CALVIN KLEIN
• WRANGLER

• SATURDAYS
•ARIOW
• VAN HEUSEN

od .

•

'1795•
,.

FASHION
JEANS

FAMOUS NAMES

dily ctnllruc:ttf of the finest quati·
ty sle1l and wire, heall' ily
giilvanlnd and 1troogly rll!inlorc -

salmon
diamond

•
•

And leatures like 2 scan speeds. Automatic
Squelch. Search. and Lockout. Direct Chan-

CR450R ELSINORE'" •

Used ud et~doned bv eaperitnced
IIStlll!rmen tor over ,D ye~rs . Stur·

tftS,

MllltCNI 1111. AI !tall U

'•

SPORTSWEAR

lllmOfl

-JUSTGOT

CR250R ELSINORE"+ '

by

SiU

'

four-speed gearbox, automatic clutch, large fuel
tank and torquey 106 cc four-stroke engine with
CD!.

9 Snap
Stringer

1

tlo· lluonsctnl
ttl'• "ttllow

•

ATC'200 '

SWIMWEAR

for

eM-He Nit ulmotl ens.

•

'19 99·

MIKE'S': SALMON EGGS

ICint

A work or play three-wheeler with a dual-range

Despite their reasonable ~:Jl~
price, these skirted spool "'
reels feature Ryobi' s exclusive internal auto·
matic/manual plc:kup and
other precision R

.-TODA"IL&amp; JOUOIIGW.

:BAKER FURNITURE

BROWSE••••

Baitholder Hooks

Johnson Century reel and 5 foot
glass rod. Pistol grip handle with
ceramic guides and tip top. Trim
and windings color-coordinated
with reel. At least 24 per store.

1155

••
'•"

ComSiar TM wheelll.

ATC110 '

Wright McGill
Bronze Finish

REG. 27.88

•

Athree-wheeled workhorse with a large frame,
a torquey 192 cc OHC four-stroke engine and a
five-speed transmission with an automatic
clutch.

- -·

COMBO

••

Soft riding flo~tion tires, two-ply carcass type in
the rear, full.cage roll bar and a torquey248 cc
two-stroke engine make this machine a
funmobile.

WE SELL
HUNTING AND
FISHING LICENSES

,,
•
•

Aclassic powered by a dependable 749 ccDOHC
four- cylinder, four-stroke engine
with Pentroof ™combustion chamber and
four-into-four exhaust. Air-adjustable front forks
and halogen Headlight.

WE HAVE AN OUTSTANDING
SELECTION OF GRADUATION
GIFTS. , .STOP IN AND

Softball tournament set May 16-17

NATIONAL
FISHING WEEK

•

HASKINS-TANNER CO. SAYS

!

"In the pas1 15 years, «-~:' U! lwd len mailmen. {iU! new
rugl and one refrigcraror. A Frigidaire:·

would make a nice family car.
Luggage rack . Nice vaca1ion car.

'3695

176

M ister Donut
IJO 141
Derlfield Jewelr~
120 l .'i2
American Legion· Post n
116 I~
Ace High Music
lh 151
QoxoiGn
113 159
Jtbbbtns and Myers
112 160
.l ndividUI!II high game ana series :
' Johnsoo' s Superm~~rket - G-a te Fer11uson 18 7·
SO. ; Team No. 6 - Oll!lphi ne ~t.11 r t1 n., n7 4rl ,·

CM400
CUSTOM

"

Oak Park and the golf tournament
scheduled for 10 a.m. June 4 at
. Riverside Golf Club.
Sherrill is regarded as one of the
brightest and most effective football
coaches in the land arid he'll making
his first appe~rance in the local
event. There are a very limited number of tickets available at $12li and
those interested should contact Bill
Nelson at Smith-Nelson Motors in
Pomeroy.

•

•.

:J'um

'·

6 cyL,Auto., PS, PB, Air. This car
only has 26,231 miles. This is a
clean car . Local owner .

ThisOneOnly

Wellston
Athens
Meigs

Pitt
coach to attend event
•

CB750K

.1978 CHEV. NOVA
CUSTOM 4 DR ·

Don't Miss

tron1on

wa"erlv

•

'4295

'3795
1976 CHEV. C-10

Clas,s AAA tourney

(leagueonl.y)

r

6 cyl, standard trans. Only 24,281
miles. This truck is iust like new.
Local Owner .

PRICEDTOSELL

'tEAM
l.og•n

l

PICKUP SHORTBED

This Is A Real Buy

ted much improved, she said Friday
evening.
Hayes, 66, also . sufferi1Jg from
bronchitis, was being treated with
intravenous antibiotics. He was undergoing undisclosed routine tesll!,
the spokeswoman said.
He checked himself into the
hospital late Wednesday afternoon.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Doctors tr~ating fanner Ohio State
w. L. University football Coach Woody
9 3 Hayes for a persistent chest cold
: ~ have found gall stones that may
5 6 have to be removed, says a Univer·
5 ·r sity Hospitals spokeswoman.
~
Hayes was in satisfactory con3 7 dillon and his chest cold was reoor·

: ATHENS - Marietta piled up an · first two innings, scoring eight nuis spring.
. .
!f-0 advantage after two innings of on five hits.
Other Devils hittmg safely were Jackson
:play, then held off repeated
Sophomore Tim Madison reliev,ed . Mark Nilson, Craig Mason, a one, ,Gallipoli~
~allipolis rallied to post a 9-7 Class
Haner and in four and one-third in- s~oring d?uble; Steve Sk!dmore, and
SOFTBALL
&lt;AM Sectional Tournament victory nings, allowed one unearned run, ·Tun Madillon,-a run-sconng doubl,e.
(L~agueonlyJ
:bvertheBlueDevilshereFridayaf· four hits and five walks._Madison
GAHS had the tying run at the TEAM
w . L.
1~
~moon.
fanned four.
plate in both the sixth and seventh ~~:~s
POMEROY - The City Limill! going to the top three teams.
: The loss snapped Gallipolis' threeIn 10 . innings of varsity ball, jnnings, but couldn't dent home waverly
Softball
team is sponsoring a USSSA Drawing will be held Wednesday,
7 3
Iaine winning streak, and left the Madison has allowed no earned runs plate.
. .
Wellston
6 5 Class C and D men's softball tour· May 13. For further information call
tllue Devils with a 9-13 season andonlytworunsalltold.
Scorebymnmgs:
~~~:~lis
~ nament, May 1&amp;-17 at Syracuse. 992·3119 after 4:30p.m. or 992-3132.
~cord. The Tigers improved their
Lee started for the Tigers. After Gallipolis
004 201 0-7-f&gt;-2 . Meigs
1 10 Trophies will be awarded to the top Entry fee is $70 plus two softballs.
S'nark to 12-5. ·
going two, he was relieved by Knot· r_M_a_n_et_ta_ _ _ _
350_oo_l_x_-_9-9-3
___J_a_ck_s_on_ _~----..:1..:1.:.1_:fo..:ur::...:.te.:.a_ms_w_it_h_in_d_iv_id_.,_•'-'-r""-";_"·-----------: Big Tiger blows were struck by ts. The two Tiger hurlers gave ilp
Job Knotll!, who had a three run five hits, seven runs, f91ll!ed 11, and
double in the second, and Craig Lee,
walked six and hit one GAHS batter.
fho belted a two-run homer in the
Five Blue Devils collected
first rung.
.
safeties. Phil King kept his season
• The Tigers jwnped on starting average (22 games) at an even .500
CAHS hurler Darren Haner in the
with a two-run double. King has 36
:
hits in 72 •trips to the plate this

1979 FORD MUSTANG
2 DR

'5695
1979 DODGE

•

~-7 in

BIG SAVINGS

LATE MODEL·· -PRE-OWNED CARS

.Woody has gall stones

IAll g•mes through May 71

•"

GOLD WING'"

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-:-C-3

. Pomeroy-Midclleport-Gaiii!IOII)Qhlo-Point Pleasant, W. Va ..

j·

u • *t,'7 ·

PH. 614-372-31 12
,.

..

Galllpolla. Olllo

. ~from theliiVII' lrl... PIIU ·

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Mav 10, 1,,
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v

Page---C-4-The Sunday Times-sentinel

!"omeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE

Week of May 10. 1961
Date - Gymnasium
Pool
May 10 12N·4 p.m./Women' s Voll eyball
·
2·4 p.m ./Foodland
and Basketball Auditions
4·6 p.,m ./Grace Met h. Church
1 p.m./ Redmen Baseball
6·9 p.m./College Swim
vs. Wilmington
4·6 p.m./ Foodland
6·9 p.m./College Rec.
May 117-9 p.m./ Foundations Class
12N-1 p.m./ Fitness Swim
9·10 : 30 p.m ./College Rec.
910 :30 p.m./ College Swi m
May 12 6·8 p.m.l'/, gum/ Basketball Pr.
112 gym!VG Class
12N·I p.m ./ Fitness Swim
8·10 p.m./College Re c.
· 8·10p.m./CollegeSwim
May 136·8p.m . 3-on-3 Basketbal l
7·8 p.m./Vinton Bapti st Church
8· 10 p.m./College Rec.
8·10p.rn./College Swim
May 14 6·8 p.m./ Basketball Pr.
12N·I p.m./ Fitness. Swim
8·10p.m./College Rec.
8·10 p.m./College Swim
May 157·9 p.m./Open Rec.
t2N ·l p.m./Fitness Swim
7·9 p.m./Open Swim
May 161 ·4 p.m ./ope·n Rec.
1·4 p.m ./Open Swim
5· 10 p.m.I Red·White·Biue
Basketball Game
May 171 ·4 p.m./Open Recreation
· 1,4 p.m ./Open Swim
Hp.m./College Rec.
.
7-9 p.m./College Rec.
NOTE . Ther e Wil l be no f•trress sw•m during f !nal s week .
·

Redmen post two more wins
RIO GRANDE - Rio. Grande 2-4 and also had a double.
pulled out of a losing situation in the
Winning pitcher for the Redmen
midst of the first of a non-league was Dave Wright, who struck out
doubleheader with Central State of four and walked two.
Wilberforce here Friday to win both
Rio was in total control of the
games, 9-5 and ~2.
second game, as Larry Carter hit a
The Redmen were behind ~I in the h~me run and was 3-4 at the plate.
fifth inning when they scored six Dan Knost was 3-3 and Tom
runs, pushing the score ahead in Bloomingdale 2·3. Jerry Stover was
their favor, 7-5, and scored two ad- on the mound, striking out four and
ditional runs in the sixth to ice the walking one.
game.
The win left Rio 1~14 overall, and
Credit for the win was a horne run 7-7 in the Mid-Ohio Conference. They
hit by Steve Little, who also had a play Wi~nington College tOday at 1
double, and Tim Hall, who was 2·3 p.m. in a doubleheader at Evans
including a double. Larry Stults wa~ Field.

Barnes to play at Shawnee State
PORTSMOUTH - Chris Barnes, a
6'1" senior from Ironton High
School, and the son of Keith and Linda Barnes, 2007 S. 12th Street, Ironton, has signed to play basketball
with the Shawnee Rangers, Coach
Dick Hopkins announced.
Barnes was the Cl}.Captain of the
Ironton Tigers and played guard for
the team. He averaged 22 points and
lfive assists per game. He was a
member of the First Team AA
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League,

and First Team All District and
special mention All State. He was
also selected for the prep Centenary
All-American.
CoachHopins said Barnes is an ex·
cellent shooter and defensive player
and will probably play the second
guard position for the Rangers.
"Barnes is a top recruit for the
college and an honor student, we are
pleased tu have him joining our
team,'' Hopkins concluded.

For the record.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST

EAST

w

l

II

Clevelund
New York
Baltimore
MilwaW!ee
Detroit

15

II

I!

'

13
1!
10
9

Boston

Toronto

Pr t.

7
II

14
13
16

.611

2.1

Texas
Chicago

··';!

.542
.462
.4.15
.360

,.,..,,

6

.793

14
13 II
13 16
tO t5
18
6 14

.609
.542
.4-16

'

California
Minnt!lfOLH

Seattle
K ans~:~!i City

'

400
.33.1
.JOO

Sund1y's G-ames
Btr.~ton

GR

.577
.571

WEST

Otikland

• •

St.Louis
Montrea l
Phi ladelphia
P1 t bibu r~1

NewYu

Chi ca ~o:u

-6

I JJS A n~el c:~

Allanla
Cincinnati

7~

Sa n Fra ncisco

10
11

Huuslun

San Diego

"

12 ~

14
16
17
10
7

'
Y.'F--ST
19
15
tJ

13
12
9

GB

t9

Ptt.
.700
.667
.854
.500
.318
.174

8

. 704

12
12
16

.556
.520

-

I.

6
8

'

10

15

" ·'"'
19

Sunday's Gamel

at Toror. Ln

Ka!Uil!l City at Chi ca ~:o
a~ e land at Minnesota
Detroit al Califo rnia
Milwaukee at Oakland
Baltimore 11 l Texa:j, ( JL I
New York at Seattle. (n )

w

I

S.n Fru nciscu til Monlre&lt;~ l . 2

Scl n Diego at Phlhtdelphia
Chit:agu at At l&lt;~ nta
Los An ~e l cs at New York
Houston at CincinnaU
Pitl~ bu r.l( h at St.Louis

.444
.321

-

'

Gallipolis B.oat' Club opens season
G ALIJPOIJS - The 1981 boating,
fishing, and skiing season is now in
full swing at the Gallipolis Boat
Club.
Saturday, May 2, marked the official opening of the 31-year·old club
located ofi Garfi~ldAve. on Rt.7. '
The Gallipolis Boat Club is a
private, non-profit organization
founded by and for boaters. The club
is located on the Chickamauga
Creek, approximately one-fourth of
a mile from the Ohio River. The club
has mOdem facilities with 130 in-thewater slips, two covered and two
open docks, a fuli·time dockmaster,
parking, trailer storage, and shower
facilities for members and guests.
Gasoline, oil, and soft drinks as
well as overnight and short-tenn
dockage are aYai!able to all boaters.
Over the past two wintPr months.
a great deal of improvements have

TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) - Phillip J.
Morse, an assistant ·coach at Coe
College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has
been named head football coach and
athletic director at Heidelberg
College.
Morse succeeds Jolm Spezzaferro,
who is resigning June 30, effective
July I. Morse also will leach health

South Point·
16-13 winner
SOUTH POINT - Gallipolis
visiting Blue Angels dropped a 11&gt;-13
non-league softball game to South
Point here Friday evening.
The loss left Gallipolis with a 11·9
season record.
Renee Halley was charged with
the . loss. Debbie Ingham was
credited with the win. GAHS outhit
the Pointers, 14-13.
For GAHS, Shari Howard had two
triples and three singles. Donna
Griffin had two singles.
Sharon Cozey and Mary Small had
two hits apiece for the winners.
Monday, GAHS wiii host Warren
Local in a Class AA TOurnament
game on Memorial Field, starting at
4:30p.m.

Sports transactions
BASEBALL
America a League

DETROIT
Fl:lhey ,

TIGERS

Clltcher,

catchtl'. for
101':1

-

A cti \·at~

Deslguated · Duffy

Bill
Dyer,

reas:d ~nm ~ nt.

1111

"-zz
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-

'

Ill:

Ill

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.t.

"Y((t'

40 YR. FACTORY WARRANTY

25 Court Street

~

''ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

... -·--- ____;,_

insurance~

~

,.
:!
0
Cll
.:,

Silver Bridge Plaza

REPORT OF CONDITION OF

URGENTLY NEEDED-OJL AND GAS LEASES

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY, N.A.

To fulfill .future drilling programs, please write or call and be sure to
Include propertv.location and acreage that's available tor lease. Also
those that have 011 and gas leases that are due to expire within year.

PUI JAIM

of Cincinnati in the State of Ohio, at the close of business on Mar. 31, 1981
published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title
12, United States COde, Section 161. Cha rter number 16416 National Bank
Region Number 4.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions . . . . . . ..... .. . . .... $ 15~ ,566 ,000 . 00
U.S. Treasury securities .. .. . .. .... . . . .... . . . . . .. ... ......... 79,170,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government
.
agencies and corporations ., . , , .. . . . ........ , .. ... .. . ..... . . 75,418,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ·
in the United States ...... .. .. ................... .. ........ !58, 190,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures .. .. .. . ........... . .. . . . . . . ... 595,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .. ....... . ..... . ..... 1,914,000.00
Trading account securities .... . .... . . . . . .. ..... . . . .. . .. . ..... 3,177,000.00
Federal Funds Sold .... ........... . .. . ...................... .. 150,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income ) .. . ... $651,197,000.00
Less : allowance for possible loan losses ....... . .. . 7,578,000.00
Loans, Net .. . . . . . .. . . . . . ...... .. .. . ..... ... . . ... . ......... 643,619,000.00
Lease financing receivables . . .. . .. . . .. .................. . . .. 44,502,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures,
and other assets representing bank premises .... . .. . . .. . , . . .. 21,730,000.110
Rea l estate owned other than bank premises .. . .... .... . ....... . .. 476,000.110
Customer's liability to this bank
on acceptances outstanding ............... . .. .. ........ . . . ... 248,000.110
Other assets ....... ... . . .. . . . . .... .. .. .... .. . .. ... .... . ... .. 24,444,000.110
TOTAL ASSETS . .. .... .. . ..... . . ... . .......... .. .. .. .... $1,206, 204,000.110
UABIUTJES
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . . . . .. .......... .. .... ... ... $2Bl ,301,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporati ons . . . ... .... . . , .... , , . , ........ 500,888,000.00
Deposits of United States Government . . ... . .. .. ... .... . . . .. .... 3,405,000.110
Deposits ofStates and political subdivisions
in the United States ...... . .............. ...... . ...... . . .... 73,799 ,000.00
Deposits of commercial banks . .. . . ......... . ... . ... ... ..... . 20,922,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ... .. .. . .. . .... . ... . ....... . ... .. 11 ,770,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS .... . .... . .. .. .. . .... .. ..... .. .. . ....... 892.085,000.00
Tota l demand deposits . . ............. . . . ...... $329,771 ,000.00
Total time and savings deposits . . . . . ....... . ... $562,314 ,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase .......... . ............. 171,230,00.00
Interest-bea ring demand notes (note balances)
issued to the U.S.treasury .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . 12,212 ,000.00
Other liabilities for borrowed money ......... . . . .. . ... . ..... . .... 13,000.00
Bank's liability onaccepta nces executed
and outstanding . .. .. .... . .. . .. .. ........ . . . ... ......... . .... 248,000. 00
Other liabilities ................... .. ........ . . .... .... .. ... 30,441,000.00
TOTALUABIIJTIES .... . . .. . . ... . . .. ...... . ....... . ... $1 ,106,229,000.00
CAPITALAOCOUNTS
.
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,500,00
b. No. shares outstanding 1,270,237 ........ (Pa r Valucl
$12,702,000.00
Surplus .. ... . ... ..... . . ...... .. ... .. .......... ........ . ... . 4il,447 ,000.00
Undivided profits ..... . . .. .. . . .. ... . . ..... . . . ..... . ......... 4D,842,000.00
Reseve for contingencies .... . .. . ................. ., . .... ...... (]6,000.001
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. . .... . ....... .... .. . .. . .. ........ 99,975.000.00
TOTAL LIABIIJTIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL. .. . . .. .... ........ .. . . ...... .. ..... . $11206,204,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outStanding as of report date:
Standby letters of credit, total . , , , , , , , .. . , , .. , , . ... , , , .. , , , . $ 24,230,000.00
Time certifica te~~ of deposit in denominations of
$100,000 or more .. . ...... . . . ................................. 184,545.00
Other time deposits in amounts
of $100,00 or more . ... . ... .. . ... ................ . ... . . . ...... 145,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date:
Cash and due from depository institutions .. . . . ......... ... . . 150,456,000.00
Fed. funds sold .......... . ... .. .. .. . .... . ... .. ....... .. .... 2,245,000.00
Total loans . . .. . ... .. ... ... .. . .. . .. . ... ..' . . .. . , . . , . , ... . . 635,182,000.00
Time certificates of deposits in
denorriinations of $1000,000 or more . ... .... . . .. .... ......... 170,596,000.00
Total deposits . .. . .. .. . . . . . .. . . . .. .. . . .. . ... . . . ... . . .. .... . 858,415,000.00
Fed. fWlds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase . . . . ..... ...... . .. ... ... . . . 175,309,000.00
Other liabilities for borrowed money ........ . .... . .... . . . .. . . . . . .. 7,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ... .. ... .. .... . ......... .. . ... .... .. ..... 1,168,180,000.00
I, Robert A. Rie11, Senior Vice President-Finance of the above-named bank
do hereby declare that thl.s Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of
my knowledge and belief.
Robert A. Ries-Senior Vice President
Apr. 15, 1981
We, the undersigned directors, attest the coiTectness of this statement of
resources and liablilties. We declare that It has been examined by us, and to the
best of our knowledge and belief is true and cotrect.
Joseph D. Landen
James K. LeWis - Directors
James E.

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
P.O. Bo&lt; 142

UU \I UNCI

•

Likeagood neighbor,
State Farm is there.
~hie l• i"' 1~}1/l.tnC t ecm•~" ''l
Hoftll [}lht n 8100111
111101'. llh"O'I

. . you sure your
n~af Is nwthtr·tigllt?

,_,lft

We install new front brake pads,
resurface rotors, repack front .
wheel bea.rings, inspect master
cyclinder, brake caliper, and
bra~ hoses, bleed system and add
new fluid, then road test the car .

U.S. loute 50 w..t-Athen•, Ohio
1 Mile Pa•t City LlmiU

'1495
!MOST AMERICAN
CARS)

SAVE '1.00

We'll set caster, camber and toe-in·
to manufacturer'~ specifications
Check suspension parts for wea;
and damage, also tires for wear
and safety. Parts extra, if needed.
No extra charge for air·condi·
tioned cars, or torsion.bars.
Call for an appointment now.

casn In on 10% price rollback ontbase price of all new '81 models AMC and Renault passenger
cars and Jeep vehicles. Limited time on!v. see dealer for details.

OIL CHANGE
SPECIAL

.,,••. .,.

SAVE

MOST AMEIII!=AN CAliS

Most

American cars SAVE $10.00
We lnstoll new loctory recommendtf spark plus,
~ew ,f~el filter, ldjust timing, setldte speed, check
olr IIIIer, p.c.v., ond rood tnt.
WE USE SUN ENGINE
PERFORMANCE ANALYZER

1--•SiiAVEUI

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

SAVI!GAS

1

5 qts. oil, new· 0il f,Uter,

lubricate chassif, ttteck
all fluid levels, tire
pressure, battery belts, hoses, and
check exhaust svstem condition ..

'

RIVIRSIDI AMC /. .PIRINAULT
.

195 Upper RIVer ~-Rt. 7, OaiiiPOIIS • (614) 446·9800

Member FDIC

Spring Valley

: L-----------------------------------------------------------.J
v

,.
Cll

n

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business

STOP
ROOF LEAKS
.,.h.
NEW ROOF or REPAIRS
VINYL SIDING &amp; GunERS

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE

:

't

Gallipolis, Oh.

MOST AMERICAN CARS

T~~~~~~!~nk%

f

417 Second Av e.

·:~~~

PHONE Anytime 446-6268
We do glass 'and screen enclosures,
trailer underpinnings, all types of awnings and patio covers. All major brands
and colors vinyl.

'4911

'I

,

Business ·labs will

CAROLLSNDWDEN

~

A.

WHEEL FRONT DISC&gt;

We're your one-stop financial shop! While others
might deal with specialized services, we take special
pride in doing it all under one roof ... just to ·make life
easier for you! So, why run all over town, when you can
do your checking, saving, borrowing and countless
other financial chores right here? We're glad to serve!

,''

Q

:Ill

Local OHice 401 Second Ave.

'39"

'

-

ECTO SIDING &amp; ROOFING

ELECTRONIC
IGNITION
· TUNE UP

'

GM unveils J-car

~

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EASY FINANCING- NO DOWN PAYMENT
WILL GO BELOW ANY WRITTEN ESTIMATE .
UP TO $300 TAX CREDITS
OHIO LICENSED·BONDED·INSURED
SERVING OHIO FOR OVER 30 YRS .
WILL FURNISH LIST OF LOCAL CUSTOMERS

$1495

I
1

,.

FIRST 5 JOBS FREE BW TV

*Add up to .1 lb. of
Freon ·
*Leak Test &amp; Cylinder
Performance Test
*Adjust Belts
*Clean Condenser Fins

f

The Sunday Times· Sentinet-Page-C-5

-:1'

VINYL SIDING SALE

BRAKE
SPECIAL ·

service
on the

'

va.

'•'

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS
FW\ph Dbc:un, cornerhltck.

•

'f

Business· an·d
.finance

FOOfBALL
NaUoul Foolblll Leacue
CHICAGO BEARS S~ "ed
Todd
Sheets, Mike Pic kne)' and Scott McG hee
wid~ . receivers; Ryan Mullaney, defensive
end-linebacker, and Jay Hll!j:enbe rg, centl! r, to free 1111ent contracl.s.

full

..
'
..

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

Morse named grid coach at Heidelhurg

8
II ~

four weeks: The tlrnetabie
bureaus, the Corps of Engineers less
. than
'
was
necessary
to .complete the job
granted the clUb a pennit to dredge
the boat docking area and the mouth before the begiMlng of the flab
spawning season, and to permit thil
of the creek.
.
;·
The dredging was necessary since clubtoopenontime.
In a recepl interview with Coq~­
topaoU, agricultural runo(f, and
other foreig~ matter had reduced . mOdore George Dur~l of Wellsto~,
water level in the club to only one to and. Vice Commodore Calvin Mitthree fe,!lt at nonnal river pool. The chell of Gallipolis, both of.whom oWn
houseboats at the club, It was Jn..
club was last dredged in 19'10.
dicated
that a limited number !If
Cong. Clarence Miller, as weD as
open
dOCk
space!! and a·few coverejl
other local citizens, played a 'key
role in obtaining the permit to slips are available for the 1981
season. i\pplicalion blanks and furdredge.
Jay Hall of the Jaymar Coal Co. ther infonnation may be obtained
and his brother, Buck Hall, with from the pockm~ster, Eldon
their newly acquired Mudcal Bowser, or by dii.ling him at 446.
Hydraulic Dredge, removed ap- 9107. ·
Most
club
members
hail from the
proximately 12,000 cubic yards of
sill, together with a truckload of Gallipolis-Point Pleasant area, bpt
debris from the docking area, and some members drive from
increased the water depth to over 'Charleston, Columbus, Athens;
five feet in the club, all in a periOd of Akron, Lancaster, and other dlsta'nt
points.
.
.
Boats range from 12' rowboats tj)
50' houseboats with runabouts,
cruisers, skiboats, speedboats, ~
boats, jet boats, and sailboats in beMol'Be, originally from Troy, N.Y., tween.
and physical education courses.
Morse has served as director of graduated from Wittenberg Univer- . - - - - - - - - - - - - , .
athletics, assistant football coach sity in 1956 and received a master's
and professor and director · of degree from Xavier University in
physical education at Coe College 1964. He's begun work on his PhD at
for the past three years. He went to the University of Cincinnati. ·
He previously taught and coached
Coe in 19'18 from Kenyon College, ·
at
high schools in Springfield,
where he was athletic director, foot·
Lebanon
and Steubenville and at
ball coach and director of the
Xanier University before going to
physical education department for
Kenyon.
II years.

been made at the club. To improve.
the electiical distribution system,
last winter members spent about six
weekends removing ail old wiring
and electrical services and Jn..
.stalling new weatherproof 30 amp
service.
Most of the materials and the
layout of the sysl!!!n was through the
Lignting Center of Gallipolis, To be
certain that aU boats were wired
correctly, a tema of volunteers
checked and certified each boat
before the owner was allowed to connect to ti]e new service.
The spring of 1981 was a very busy
one at the boat club. After almost
two years of trying to satisfy the
requirements of the U. S. Corps of
Engineers, the U. S. Fish and
Wildlife Commission, the Ohio
E.P,A., the U.S. E.P.A., and several
other interested federal and state

May 10, J981

oI

·i

'•

�Times-Sentinel

May 10, 1981

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

The sunday times-Sentinei-Page-C-7

NEA official says cuts will hurt Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The
president of the National E;ducation
Aasociation says Ohi'o stands to lose
$70 rnlllion under President
Reagan's budget priloosal.

Willard McGuire ,said· Friday
during the spring IIBIIelllbly of the
Ohio E;ducatlon Aas.odatlon th!lt the
cuts wOjlid Include a $22 mllllon cut- ·
back in progrlllllll for dllllidvimtaged
-. ~

A

.'.*'! m

By BRYSON R. IBUD) CARTER
Gallia Cnunty Extenslnn Agent
GALlJPOUS - The Gallia Couq-

IY E;xten,sion B~f Committee invites

all local heel families to join them
for the Annual Beef Queen-PrinceS's
· Contest and 4-H-FFA Bee£ Fitting
. and Showing Demonstration. It will
be held this Thursday evening, May
14, at the GaUia,County Junior Fairgrounds. If you know of a beef farm
family or someone connected with
the beef industry who didn't receive
a fonnal invitation, bring them
along.
One or the main purposes of the
even! Is to provide opportunities and
training for youth. Another purpose,
however, is to give Mom and Dad
and others a chance to "talk shop"
and enjoy an evening of fellowship
with other folks in the beef cattle industry.
,
Here Is the time schedule: Contestants arrive for pre-judging at 5
·p.m.; the demonstration will get under way at 6:30p.m.; the Princess
Contest at 7:15p.m.; and we will a,ll
head to the Feed Lot at 8 p.m. which
means roast bee£ and rnany other
good things.
Don't forget youth, parents, and
ali other folks interested in bee£ cattle are welcome to attend. See you
this Thursday evening.

ALL SMILES - Margaret Evans smiles at the prospect of gel1lng a
jump on her college education. Randy Spence, Rio Grande College,
Student Admissions Assistant, looks on as Margaret registers for the first
summer term which begins June 15.

Program provides big jump
RIO GRANDE- During the sum- and plans to earn an additional 16
mer while most high school students credits this swruner.
are busy enjoying the sun and sumAccording to Margaret, the ad·
mer sports or earning extra spen- vantages gained by this program
ding money, a number of area high are many, not only will she cut down
school juniors and seniors are taking on the time required to earn her
advantage of the summer break to · degree, but she will be saving a subearn college credit. These students stantial amount or money as well.
achieve their goal under a special Students within the four counties
program offered at Rio Grande surrounding a RGC&amp;CC pay only a
College and Conununity College.
$4 per credit hour institutional fee,
· Graduating high school seniors, plus books and supplies, as comand juniors who are in the upper haH pared to a normal payment of a $19
of their class, are participating in an per credit hour.
advanced scholars program which
For those high school juniors and
boastS the claim "Destination : Tbe seniors who are interested in
Future - Departure Time : Now!" receiving college credit during the
and which allows students to earn swruner (first term June 15 to July
(ecognized college credit during the 17 - second term July 20 to August
swnmer terms. One student taking 21) may obtain more information
advantage or this money saving, regarding this program by concredit accumulating program is tacting either the guidance counMargaret Evans of here. She is a selor or the Admissions Office at
Senior at Gallia Academy and has RGC&amp;CC by calling 24s-5353, ext.
already a,ccumulated 18 credit hours 208. Registration deadline for first
swruner tennis June 15.

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-------....1

~===========================~======~~~~~~=. . . .

RAVENNA - Babe Sexton, 43, of 1tCounty.
Kent, in a lw&lt;"Car accident on State
Route 43 in Portage County.
CLEVELAND - Joseph A. Baer,
21, of Cleveland, in a one-car accident on a city street.

Chamber to meet
.POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Cjlamber of Commerce will meet
Tuesday, May 12, at noon at the
Meigs Inn . Speaker will be a
representative from the Corps '1Engineers.

Records arrest
POMEROY - Matthew Long, 26,
Tuppers Plains, had been sought since July 1980, on charges of hitskip
and driving while under suspension
following an accident on Hutson
Valley Road in Olive Township.
I,.ong was arrested Friday evening
at his mother's residence on Rt. 681.
He was lodged in the Meigs County
Jail pending a hearing in Meigs
County Court..
James Smith, Sharon Hollow
Road, RD Portland, Friday reported
that between II a.m. and J. p.m. a
five ton hydraulic jack and set of
sockets and wrenches were stolen.

I.Hoofs and Paws I
POMEROY - Since fall, I had
begun to think that finally all but a
few Meigs Countians were "doing
right" by their pets.
No such luck, I just had not been
hearing of all the nitty gritty. Starting next week with H&amp;P you will be
back in the know - and not much of
what I report will be good.
·Today I must tell you that I have
both bad and good news for you. The
bad, in case you haven't already
heard, is that the Hwnane Society
Shelter has been closed temporarily,
so we have nowhere to keep animals.
U.ntil we find someone who will
" ~ive" us a small piece or land near
Rutland, Pomeroy or Middleport
ahd it is deeded to us, we will once
again be a "Shelterless Society"
which means that instead or the
Humane Society doing it all, we ask
t~e public to assist. How? By helping
animals in trouble when you see
them. If you see a stray, don't chase
it away. Most of these animals are
s¢ared to death, hungry, some sick.
and they are in desperate need 'of
YOU.
'If you will care for it a few days after calling us with a full description, if you will attempt to find it a
home (a good one), we will at the
same time use several methods of
placing it. You see, when folks
decide they want nice pets they call
us.
,These people we have on our list of
"pets wanted" and we get them in
touch with the very good people out
tHere who care for animalll for us
d~ring our "shelterless" period.
·Recently, we advertised. for a
lli!ephorie coordinator and a coupld
ot rescue agents. We were up to our
t'

J

ear lobes in really great people who
wanted to help us. We narrowed tbe .
list down to a few and met with them
and let me tell you it was difficult
because we would like to have hired
most of those we met with - but we
did select a real hwnanitarian from
Middleport for telephone duties
(loves and is concerned with both
people and animals) and three
rescue agents, one from Rutland,
another from Harrisonville and the
last£ rom Syracuse.
We will, starting on the 15th, have
a pennanent phone nwnber (9926505) which will be listed underH for
Hwnane Society in the new phone
book corning out soon. Until the 15th,
we have a nwnber you can call if you
need us, it is 992-7416. So, you see, it
really is true, never does one door
close that another doesn't open.
We had so rnany ask to work for us
- grandmothers, brides, 21 years
old through 45, a former marine to a
retired anny sergeant and we certainly appreciated the interest- all
of these people wlll be receiving a
· letter from us within the week.
This week, animalll that need good
homes are: A cute little pgray
Peeka-Poo, female; a sweet puppy
about three months old, black and
white Terrier type with long ears
and short hair; a lovable Miniature
Collie who wlll never be any bigger
than about 20 poundtl, and a part
Beagle pup, rnale, about lour months old. If Interested In these or any
pet, do call 992-7416. 11 we don't have
what you want today, we might•
tomorrow. AU of our pets listed
above have had a shot and been wormed ... now all they need il they are
to have a future is YOU.

Most grub-proofing insecticides
need to be applied about April·15 to
May 15 and/or mid-July to late September. Grubworms are most easily
controlled "'hen they are up in the
top inch o£ the soil and feeding. Call
us for benefits L-187 Control of Turfgrass Pests for a list of sprays to
use.
Fishwonns are most certainly of
some benefit to the health of turfgrass; . we just have not identified
them all yet. They serate the soil,
drill tunnels which penni! the permeation of water to deeper levelll,
and have something to do with thatch depletion.

Announce sale results

wiy.

:The dead :
FRIDAY NIGHT
DELAWARE - John W. Hoover, 23,
ot Raymond, in a motorcycle-train
accident on a Union County road.
SATURDAY
.
WAVERLY - John S. Stahl, 33, of
Stockdale. in a motorcy~le-car accident on State Route 3!i5 in j'ike

The herbicide, 2, 4-D and related
fonnulations sprayed on the foliage
of polson ivy kills the leaves and
may kill the roots. if retrowth oc'curs, retreat as needed. The "ester"
acts more quickly, particularly on
woody plants, however, fwnes will
injure nearby sensitive plants. The
"amine" form uf 2,4-D is the recom-

mended formulation for ~ in the
horne landscape. Aseparate sprayer
should be used only for herbicides
since removing 2,4-D from sprayers
is difficult.
Amino triazole, sold under at least
two brand names, Is particularly effective in controlling poison ivy,
especially in late spring or early
swruner. If necessary, retreat when
. new leaves are fully expanded. Since
this weed killer is systemic in the
plant, permanent control can be expected with two or three applications.
With both herbidices, use a COI!rse
spray, when the air is still, to
minimize possibilities of spray drift.
Always avoid contact of the spray
materials with desired ornamentals.
Always follow directions on the label
!or rates. Always store herbicides
behind lock and key to avoid accidents!

I

Carolina Lumber &amp;Supply Company

Two motorcyclists die
By The Associated Press
Motorcycle accidents have
claimed the lives of two Ohioans,
pi)Shing the weekend traffic death
tpll to four so far, according to the
state highway patrol.
:Troopers report tra££ic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sun-

•

Meigs County
agent's corner

Agricultur,e and
.' our community

RIO GRANDE - The Fourth Annual Ohio Lamb and Pig Sale was1
beld recently at the Gallia County
Junior Fairggrounds. The sale was
sponsored by the Southern Ohio
Ll\rnb and Pig Improvement Committee.
Sixty-three lambs were sold for
$6,210. The high lamb netted $320;
low Iamb $35. The average lamb
price was $98.57. There were 16larnb
consignors.
Twenty-two pigs sold for $1,031;
high pig brought $80 and low pig $20.
The average price was $46.86 with
three pig consignors.
The lamb and pig sale brought a

BY JOHN C. RICE
POMEROY - The Eastern Tent
Caterpillar is starting to do its
damage. The tree it dearly loves is
the wild cherry tree. They build
webs in the forks of these trees and
then proceed to devour all the leaves
of the wild cherry. They also feed on
other trees such as the · flowering
crab and fruit trees.
'
This is what you can look forward
" to in the next two-three weeks. When
the caterpillars defoliate a tree, they
leave enmasse and migrate to nearby trees and continue to reed if the
'm~ tree suits their taste. Upon reaching
1naturity (about two and one-half inches long) the caterpillars will leave
TAKE PART IN EVENT- Thirty-one members of the North Gallia
enmasse
to search for a place to
FFA Cbapter participated In and observed the District 17 Timber Tourpupate. The pupate is lemon yellow
nament al Buckeye Hills Career Center recently. Dale Bailey and Tony
and the shape of an olive seed. When
McGuire enteml the timber cruising coolest. McGuire placed third In the
they leave the tree to pupate, they
district Chrlfl Smith entered the medium sized chain saw class. Danny
are not interested in feeding. Ab.but
Ferrell Chris Smith, and Tim Taylor participated In the log chopping
two weeks after pupating the adults
contest: Several other members participated In the tobacco spitting con(a moth) will emerge, mate, and lay
test. Shown above are Chris Smith, left, with Alan Reese, FFA advisor,
eggs. Egg masses are jet black,
looking on.
spongy-looking collars laid on twigs.
But mid-June all is quite again.
Defoliated trees if still alive will
put out new le~ves. 1 have 'been
saying to use Sevin and this works
when the worms are small. As they
mature, they are hard to controL
f1·aturin~
Dipel or Thuricide might be better to
Aunic Anyhodl
try when they are mture. These are
non-chemical products. It is a baclly IIETTIECL,\RK
teria spore. They kill large cater·
Exh·ns iun .l\~t&gt;nl.
pillars and are not poisonous tu man.
Humc Et·uuumit·~
READ THE LABEL - 1 would
like to make a special plea to
"MOTHER'S DAY"
know what theit special family IS everyone using pesticides. Please
GALllPOlJS - As we celebrate l1ke and in order to do this, they read the label. Formulations
this day that is special for mothers, should attach the leaves to the change. You may buy the same
it might be time well spent to con- representative branches. This acsider the complete family unit. tivity can be exte nded by putting the
Much has been said recently about names of grandparents on trunks of
the rebirth of the family, and as we sketches of other trees.
reflect on the family unit, we might
The primary purpose of this acthink about how to develop some tivity is to help children feel secure
POMEROY _ Brenda Sue
"rootedness" t'n one's chr'ldren for and have a sense or belonging. It
the farru.ly both the nuclear and helps them to find a definite sense of Calaway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
the extended- falnl.ly Thr's feeli'ng of " rootedness in themselves and Guy Calaway, of Reedsville, is the
' strengthens learn more about their identity and 1981 Meigs County Beef Queen . The
bavl' ng roots not only
· the farnily unr't but · also helps realize they do belong to an extended Meigs County Beef Queen is selected
children create some inner feelings family. It also helps them discover from 4-H members carrying beef
that famil v members have in- Products.
ofsecurl'ty
.
Brenda has been a member of the
·s fun
d dividual as 'well as cmrunon characAn a tl.VI'ty that 1
an
M
eig
.s County Beef Club for five
c
especl'ally helpful for young ch'ld
1 re n teristics and that all can exist as a years, serving as treasurer for three
is to make~ farnily tree:.For this ac- unit in a family.
years. She has also been a member

Homemakers'
Circle

product you have alw~ys bought but
the strength may be drfferent. Many
products are made m differe~t
strengths and different forms. Ta~
Sevm for ~xample. Ther~ IS a Sevrr
XLR, Sev1n, Sevmol, Sevm SOW, arrjl
Sevin BOW. These are all the ~~~
ptoduct ~rth d1fl~rent form ulatiOns,
. Gra~s fetany m Cottle I!'
the time to watch. Fertilized
pastures are the worst. Grass
Tetany IS caused by a low level of
1nagnesium in the blood stream. The
uptake of magn_esrum by the plant
(pastures) IS hmdered by the ad-·
dillon of mtrogen and potash to
past~res. When pastures are
growmg rapidly, there . IS less
magnes1wn taken up: Milkmgc attle
excrete magnesium mthe rmlk. Sy
when cattle are tmlkmg heavy and
the pastures are fertilized and
growmg rapidly the chances of grass
tetany are greater.
.
.
Remedy - feed magneSJwn ox rd~
In the salt. Do not. feed 1~ore than
one part of magnes1wn ox1de to two
pa rts salt. Cattle do not like
magnes1wn OXIde and too much w1ll
reduce the intake or the magnesiwn
ox1de and salt miXture.
When suli testmg, keep at least 15
percent magnesiUm m the soiL:
When magnesiUm gets low m the
so &lt;i~ use a dulumt1c lunestone,
Dolumt&lt;c limestone can contam as
much as 12 percent magnes1wn. If
gra&gt;S tetany IS a known problem,.
yuu can feed two ounces of
magnesiwn oxide per head per day
m a gram ratiOn. Th1s IS nut a
problem for dalr&lt;es but can be a
problem for beef producers.

"ow

Miss Calaway 1981
Meigs beef queen·

grand total of $7,241. FFA and 4-H
members from Gallia, Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence, Pike, Scioto, Meigs,
Athens and Hocking Counties bid on
top quality animals that were preselected on the farm prior to the
sale.
Consignors included: Armstrong
Fanns, Tom Balmer, Don Barlow,
Ron Chacey, Forgey Suffolks,
tivitypaper,
you willmarking
need a poster
pens, board,
some
Jerald Haffelt, Marable Haffelt, or
Mark Holley, J-Mac Farms, Jones colored construction paper, paste;
Suf!olks, Phil Kasler, Karen Mc- and scissors. To do the activity ,
Carthy, Triple T. Suffolks, Fred draw an ·outline of a tree, print
Waller, Bruce Waugh, David names of arents on the trunk and
Graham, Harold Gillwn and Martin children's name . on the branches.
Next, rnake various leaves from the
Daines.
colored construction paper, and
tnark these with identifying traits,
respollBibilities or activities of each
farnily member. Explain as you go
along that this tree can help children

1

'

of the Alfred Angels 4-H Club fur
eight years.
She is a senior at Eastern High
School where she has been a cheerleader for three years, in. the marching and concert bands, Junior
track team, and the B.O.E. Club. :
Brenda will represent Meigs Cowity at the State Beef Queen Contest to
beheld in July.

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

Group searches for ways to cut
farin price program funds

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GAWPOUS - Com growers in
Ohio will again have an opportunity
to put into practice their best
Jll8DIIgement in a corn yield contest
sponsored by Chevron Chemical Co.
This marks the third year that the '
Ohio Conservation t-lo-Tillage Corn
Yield Contest has been open to all
growers in the state. In 1981,
growers can compete for the county
prizes with ear harvested corn.
The top prize this year will be a
· trip for two on a Caribbean cruise,

./

Free VISA
(with credit approval)

~

Continuous
Compounding

But after generally accepting
elimination or an April! increase in
dairy pric;e supports, the dairy 'induslry has.been lobbying heavily for.
the 1982 support levels initially approved by the committee.
With tbe May !5 deadline for completion or the bill approaching, Sen .
Bob Dole, R-Kan., said committee
members already bave reached
general agreement on trinuning
support levels over the next four
years for commodities other than
milk and sugar.
ll&lt;lle indicated Friday that tbe
revised levels still would be higher
than those proposed by the administration.

1981 CHEVROLET CONVERSION VAN
-Special Savings81 CITATION

Com yield contest open to all growers

~

Pay-by-Phone

WASifiNGTON (AP) - The
Senate Agriculture Committee, in an
attempt to meet mandated spending
targets for next year, is looking for
ways to cut $1.2 billion from the
farm price support program it
all'eady has approved.
Congressional analysts mantain
that substantial reductions are
needed tn the support level for milk,
which they say accounts !or more
than a third of the legislation's 1982
budget overruns.
Such reductions would give
Pre:!ident Reagan a significant vil'
tory in the farm bill, which now calls
for dairy supports well above those
he recommended.

second place will receive $500, and
third place will receive $300. Also,
each county winner will receive
$100.
Deadline for entries Is Sept. !.
Yields must be submitted by December I, 1981. lnfonnalion of the contest rules are available from local
chemical dealers, the extension service, A.S.C.S. office, Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District, 529
Jackson Pike, Room 308-C, or phone
446-8687.

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model AT 214

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show you all the greal

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Direct Deposit

81 LUV 4x4

--

'1 0,600

81 MONTE CARLO
list '9408. NOW '8499
81' CUTLASS SUPREME
aHtO. · air
List 9237. NOW '8498
1

SEE BILL "OLE" HOSS OR

Was·15495. NOW

'4495

79 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUIS
Was 5995. NOW s5144
79' F-100 CUSTOM
8 foot bed · 6 cyl. - 11.000 miles
Was '5100. NOW '4295
1

WEN~ELL

.

VAUGHAN

.Plopk COUIII... tht Dillmond Di//mnul
'

I" W. MAIN St.

POMEROY, OHIO

Morrli Eq!iment &amp; Tracking

992-6655
4ccount s tnaured IO1100,000 by FSUC.

Mon. ··WICI. N
Thurs. It lit. t-Noon
· llrl. H
·

LEO lOIIlS PHOIE 742·2455
',,

~EW I USED t'ARM EQUIPMENT
Route 1- Rvtlud, Ohio 45775

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

Page-C-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

classified

May 10, 1981

,•

Milly 10, 1981
.
The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pagr

D

-1

In focus ••

SHOW HER
YOU CARE

'

Memorial service honors
Air Force crash victims

· IN TRIBUTE.- THree A-7D Corsair lis from the
I78th Tactical Fighter Group of the .OHio Air National
Goard, Oy iu the "mlssiug man" formation past a Rag
at halfmast' outside the Air Force Museum at Wright·

This is for the best Mom

Mommie,
Even though I' m only six
weeks old, I love you very
m uch. You are the best

anybody cOuld ever have.

Thanks for all your help
and for always be ing there
when we need you! Happy
Mother's Day! We love you
in a very specia l way!

Mommie there ever was.

xoxoxo

1love you ,

Margie.

glad I have a grandma

t~S

e ,.

great as you. I can'twaltto
get some of your kisses I!!

Ri char d,

Jeff , Joh nny

""""""tr"'lll.l

xoxoxo

Love and kisses.
Stefani

'N"· .oo.oo ..... ~,..~

Mommie, ,

To the greatest

w11o 1S al ways

there wn en needea .

BElFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Firing
homemade mortar shells from the back of an open
truck, IRA guerrillas pounded a government security
post near the border with the Irish Republic, injuring
two British soldiers, police said.
The 10 shells .fired Friday caused extensive damage .
tAl the joint police-army post at Newtownharnilton in
south Armagh and underscored a sharp rise in the
violence that followed the death of IRA hunger striker·
Bobby Sands.
Pollee blamed mortar barrage on the ouUawed Irish
Republican Army and said it was the guerrillas' first
use of their crude homemade mortars in a year.
The truck used in the attack was later found by
soldiers, out it exploded as they waited for a bomb
disposal team to go over it. No injuries were reported.
Meanwhile, children and invalids were evacuated
from two convents and residents from their homes
early today after three masked men were seen planting three objects that were feared to be bOmbs in a
power station ,at Newry, also near the bOrder. Army
bOmb disposal experts were called in to investigate,
but later said the report was a hoax.
Rioters Friday firehombed and stoned security
patrols In Roman Catholic enclaves of Belfast, Londonderry arid Str~bane, continuing a cycle of violence
that began even before Sands' death Tuesday.
The 27-year-old IRA guerrilla, serving a 14-year
term fbr gun possession, died in the Maze Prison near

YOU ARE SPECIAL, you •
are sweet, loving and
giving. You can't be beat.
We love you.
Happy
Mother's Day, Mom.

Happy Mother's Oay. I'm

Mother's Day.

•

and me too!

Hi Grandma ,
I love you. Hope you ht~ve a

Dearest Mother,
We all love you and have a
spec ial y
Happy
ve r y

IRA guerrillas pound·
•
government securzty post

To the greatest
could ask for.
Mother's Day!
you.
Penny, Candy

David, Megon, Mary and

Stefani

Ja nice ,

r eally do love you.

Grand motl'ler

there in no other, to
take the place of

could ask for .

grandmother.

We love you .
Tammy Robinette

Love.

Pat, Mike,

Rhon

We
very much. We
proud to have a
Mommle like you.

We love you as Mothe&gt;•l:i

best Mother 's Day

and wi fe .

To

~"-'"'"'"' '·'·

Brent and

With loVe,

UP IN SMOKE - Yoaagsten hurl atoDeB, aa a
jacked truck goes In In smoke afler beiDg set oo fire,
during a minor lncldealln Londooderry, North Ireland
Friday. Apart from minor lncldeola, both Londonderry

and Belfaat were quiet Friday, after Thunday's
fuueral for IRA Hunger striker. Bobby Saads. lAP
Laserphoto) .

Jackie and J

Terri ,

Make this a Mother's Day
I'll never forget. Remem·
ber I love you. Please
come home.
!V''""~IIY''ail
Mom

We love you very

and we love you
much.

Belfast after a 6&amp;-day hunger strike for political
prisoner status for IRA inmates.
Sands was buried Thursday in the biggest IRA
funeral ever seen in Northern Ireland. It came one
month after Sands was elected to the British
Parliament.
Gerry Adams, vice president of the IRA political
front Sinn Fein, said IRA prisoners will replace Sands
and others who may die in the Maze hunger strike "one
byhone" until the British government bows to the
guerrillas' demands for political prisoner status. There
are 440 IRA prisoners in the prison.
.
Three hunger strikers already far along in their
Maze fasts were said to be within weeks of death.
Adams said Francis Hughes, 25, serving a life sentence for killing a British soldier, was going blind at the
start of his 56th day without food. Raymond McCreesh
and Patrick O'Hara, both 24, were having trouble with
their eyesight and constantly vomiting after not eating
for49 days.
In her first major statement about the Northern
Ireland developments since Sands died, Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher reiterated her deter-·
rnination not to give in to the hunger .strikers' demands.
The IRA's militant '' Provisional' ' wing has extended
criminal violence into the prison by instituting the
prison strike, Mrs. Thatcher said Friday 'night at a
Conservativ~ Party rally in Perth, Scotland.

our

are a perfect mother

Ha ppy Mother's

T.C.
We want you to know what
a wonderfu l mother you
are, and a special lady.
Love,

We tove you.
Maria Sheets .

Hope you have

DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- The mostly military crowd farriily that their loss was magnified.
wept openly and unashamedly at the memorlnl service
"We have opened our arins to you," Ward told the
for the 21 men and wolnen who perished when an Air relatives of the victims. "May God bless you and comfort you."
Force radar jet exploded Wednesday over Marylnnd.
Families and service buddies of the victims cramAfter the playing of "Taps," the Air Force honored
.med tlie Air Force Museum theater, the overflow the dead by a traditional formation flight of jets over
spilling into the lobby, as about 1,000 people gathered the air base .
for the solemn memorial Friday.
Identification of the victims' bodies might not be
completed
for some time, according to Air Force in"Do not let WI forget their service to a grateful
nation," said Chaplain Samuel Aaron Ray. He led the vestigators. The victims' remains have been taken to
crowd in prayer, reading from the Old Testament the the Bethesda Naval Medical Center in Maryland for
refrain: "Precious in the eyes of the Lord is the death pathology work.
of His faithful."
Brig. Gen. William T. Twining of Vandenberg Air
The 18 crewmen, two wives and one civilian Base in California headed the investigation of the crash
technician who died in the crash left Wright-Patterson scene Friday. Air Force officers, an EC-135 pilot,
Air Force Base outside of this southwestern Ohio tAlwn military expert.\;, Federal Aviation Administration
about 10 a.m. Wednesday. The. Air Force said it still representatives and Boeing engineers are on the indoes not know why the plane exploded about an hour vestigating board, he said.
later, near Walkersville, Md.
Capt. Clemmer Montaque, a spokeswoman for An·The plane, an EC.135 with sophisticated satellite drewS Air Force Base in Maryland, said Friday that intracking equipment, was on an aU-day routine training vestigators must comb through the wreckage before
Patterson Air Force Base Friday In Daylou. The Oy- . mission, the Air Force said. The crew was part of the making any public comment about likely causes of the
over ended a memorial service for the personnel of the
crash.
4950th Test Wing assigned to Wright-Patterson.
49501h Test Wing who were killed In a plaue crash In
" There will be something that is public on the thing, '
Col. Donald Ward, Test Wing corrunander, said the
Maryland, Wednesday. (AP Laserphoto).
1,800 people under his command were so much like a bulit may take several weeks or months," she said.

much.

Love,

F. and Jerry D.

Hey Maw,
We wuv ewe, yer the
greatest Maw ever.
From Paw and the Gang;
Blnky ,

Roof,

Senate votes to trim

Snoogs,

~ '~"·

Social Security increases
I

happiness and
Happy Mother's

Mom ,
Just wanted to '
wi sh you Happy
Motner's Day and

Roses are red,

I

say we tove ·you .
Vi ck,Chris, Ri ck,

Dad, Linda,

Mom, you're very
beautiful, under·
standing, spec ial ~
and alwavs there '
when I need you.
I love you

verv muc

Rod and Misty .
Lissa

Vlote!S are blue,
Sugar Is sweet
And we love you.
Happy Mother's Day.
Love,
v,terle, Joanie, Teresa.
Great Grandma Kirk
Hope YOU have a Happy
Mother's Day . I tove you.
XOXOXO
Stefani
Great Grandma Wilt,
Hope you have a Happy
Mother's Day. t love you,

xoxoxo

Stefani
Mom,

You're the best Mom and
Grandma In the wortd. We
love you. Happy Mother's
Day.
Terry, Penny, Debby, Ron,
· Angie, and Rona ld James.

To Faith,
Happy MOther's Day Mom.
We love you and every day
is really your doy, for you '·
deserve it.
From Tamara and Dad.

Great Grandma Pickens.
Hope you ahve a Happy
Mother's Day. I love you.

xoxoxo

Stefani

Ginny,
Happy lsi Mother's Day.
H.R.W. Jr.
Happy Mother's Doy Mom.
Thanks for everything you
do for us. We love you very
much.
Darlene, Timmy, Dllnny.

To Mom Logue
A
very
special
the .
best
Mom
ever.person,
We love
you very much.
. Mommle,
Love,
1 love you. I have my
David, Rose and kids.
little ways of proving
when you leave me for
a little while. I think
are the grestesl Mo•mmll•
Hoppy Mllm's Day,
To a real great Mom, that anyone could have.
without you we truly Amy

---------I

I

.,!

lW N

I'

'

·,

0

Tc

Btl you didn't expect to Me
this In !he paper. We love
yOU.
Dlrlene, Dennis.
Jr .., Mlkt.

B-.

{
·
=

Mommle,
Wllllt lnd t love you very
We think you are
t
eafesf Mommleln the

WOlf

Forever your ~ds and
future kl
Kevin, Steve and Teresa.
Lori and Ernie.
ToMommlt,
We're not very big tony
much, but we love you very
much.
JOihUI end Jeremy.

0

KrlllyandWiillt.

+

RAUY FOR DAl.'nl- An11J lid pl6lle , . _
I 0.,. Ill Cele!l'l fer llelhllwu
lleld Frtdar • a. ltepl., 111e Cepltlrlll w~

- - :-----""'·

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woutdn'f~l

Mom,

1e .... I 1 a Nad

..

WASIDNGTON - The Reagan administration, while . said President Reagan· will propose cuts of $8 billion
recognizing "the Impending solvency problems" of the next year iJ; Social Security and other programs adSocial Security system, Ia stopping short of endorsing a ministration officials have called a social "safety net"

\

-~--c

.......

•

The '""' 11 c-.ed wtlb J.dcet en JJIIu:thl
beelth HrYicel wtdelr .... IIJIIIIII'Ied "' ... ~eden~
Rovernmeut. lAP' nc ,,.,._,,

Senate plan to reduce IMUBI coat-of-living lncreues
for 44 million retirees.
The Senate voted 49-42 Friday tAl ttim by f/.9 billJon
COit-of·llvlng lncreuesfor recipients of Social Security
and Supplemental Security Income, .as well as for
rallroed, federal and military retirees.
·
Offldalluy the Social Security system' a lllllin lrWit
fund, whlcb PIYI retirement ~. ·will run out of
cub In late 11112 or 1113.
Budget direclor David A. Stoelonan, however, tAlld
Senate Mljorlty Leader Robert C. Byrd that Prelident
Relpn ltill ~ a1terin&amp; the the aruu1 COIIt of
living lncreuea ohal help l'lllreel keep pace with inflation.
White 801111 aldll and their I.'OJIII'1!IIIonal allies indicated they did not flcht the Senate plan lrec:aUM they
upec~ the proJected
.t lriiBOII 1n ~~Vine~ w be
adlie¥ed e1 when - without catting CIIIHI-IIving
beMfita.
D1pu1J Whlw ~ ~ leel'etary Larry Spelkee

rz

for the truly needy.
Stockman's letter to Byrd, ~W.Va. , said the administration "does recognize the impending solvency
problems of the Social Security Trust Fund. Significant
uvings are needed."
Health and Human Services Secretary Richard S.
Schweiker will come up with "a package ol reforms
designed tAl maintain the solvency" of the fund, Stock-

manwrote.
Speakes said raising the age of eligibility for Social
Security from its CWTeDt level of llli was one of many
poirllble reforms under consideration. ·
The Senate action came as the Republica~ntroiled
chamber considered its own version of a 11182 budget
blueprint.
The vote was on a Democratic-led attempt to reverse
the Senate Budget Committee's recommendation for
trimming CCIII-of·living adjustments by bulng them on
either a wage Index or the Ccinsume~ Price lndu whic:hever Ia lower.

_ _ _ _.___ ---· -

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-

Page-0·2-The Sunday Times·Sentmel

o- ...

.

,

.. _

...

-··

.. .. ..

May 10,1981

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohip=Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.

Ohio poor
protest cuts

"

1981

Rhodes plots building plan
By ROBERT E. MJUER
AIIIOCiatedPnst Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ C»Jio's
master builder, Gov. James A
Rhodes, 15 putting together another
massive state constructton plan
But 1t could run into big problems
m the legislature such as those that
sidetracked a capital unprovements
bill he sent the legiSlature two years
ago
His new proposal, to total at least
$400 million 15 separate from a $354
million pns~n constructiOn program
he also 1s pushing
Both would be fmanced by bond
ISSues, and subsequenUy would be a
considerable dram on general
revenue funda unless there 1s a
maJor tax hike, as well there may
be There !Sa Jot of talk about 1t
House Speaker Vernal G Riffe
Jr , !).New BOBton, sa1d he expects
the leglSlature, which IS to get both
btlls this week, will go along With
Rhodes on the genyral construction
plan, at least, despite the state's
dismal fmcancial condltton
"We merely authonze We don't
move on prOJects unless the money
1s availabl~," hesa1dFnday
He referred to language m the last
bill whic h required the ad·
nunlStrallon and the state con·

CLEVELAND (AP) - Undaunted
by House passage of President
Reagan's budget proposals, about
250 demonstrators chanted, "Help
the needy, not the greedy," as they
marched through downtown
Cleveland on Saturday to protest the
budget
The march was promoted by the
21st CongressiOnal DlStnct Caucus,
a group supportmg an alternative
budget that was offered by Rep
Louis Stokes, J.).()hio, and the
Congressional Black Caucus
Members of about 50 other groups
participated, mcludmg the
Federation of Retired Workers, the
Disabled R1ghts Task Force and
Ohio Council 8 of the Amencan
Federatwn of State, County and
Murucrpal Employees
"We stand a chance on losmg qwte
a bit under Reagan's budget," said
Larry Rush, 36, an orgamzer of the
event, "especially m this area
Savmg CETA (Comprehensive Employment and Tra1mng Act) JObs lS a
pnor1ty And a summer JObs
program Is v1tal here "
The economy of northeastern Ohw
has been h1t hard m recent years by
cutbacks m the domestic steel and
automobile mdustnes
Reagan's $889 bill! on budget, sparse by hberal standards and for·
mulated m part by Rep Delbert Lat·
ta, R..()hio, won tis biggest test w1th
an unpressJVe victory m the House
of Representatives on Thursday
But Rush sa1d Stokes alternabve
plan was supported by 68 members
of Congress
"They're supposed to represent
500,000 people each, so we're talkmg
about a lot of people," he sa1d
Rush sa1d he did not believe hlS
group lS f1ghtmg a hopeless battle,
despite the House vote m favor of
Reagan's plan
'What they passed was JUSt a
budget, ' he sa1d ' Each 1tem sllll
has to be decided m committees
Like (Massachusetts Senator) Ted
Kennedy sa1d, a lot of battles can
still be won over the next three or
four years Pnor111es can still be
shifted"

trolling board to certify that debt
retirement lunda are available
before projects are started
Apparently, the same la!;lgaage
will be Included ln the new measure,
which may propose up to $600
million ln projects, although Riffe
Sljld he anl1c1pates $400 million to
$500 million
Rhodes came up With a capital 1mprovments bill totaling nearly $700
million two years ago, but by the
time 11 got pork berreled through the
House, It had soared to more than
~million
Then, the Senate - m a runmng
feud with the House at that tune struck out many of the House ad·
dlt10ns and axed plans for a $25
million cancer hosp1tal at Ohio State
Umverslty, a project dear to Rhodes
and Riffe
Mter senators added some pork of

their own, the bill had become
irreconcilable between the two
chambers It dled ln a jolnt corjlmittee.
,
Many of the projects placed jn
such b1Us by Rhodes ln the put,
such as state office buildings, sports
arenas, college and univertfty
bwldings, centers for the retarded'
and mentllllY ill, and ~.
probably will be submitted agam.
He has been mum about his
discussions of the bill with majonty
Republicans in the Senate But ~e
did conflnn at one polnt that the C811cer hospital will be mthe billagaln.
Although the bonds lSSUed to finijfj.
ce those projects would be reti(ejl
With fees, tuitions, patients support
payments, or rents they generate,
the state pays the mterest, an tlem
known as debt service in the st&amp;ie
budget bill

Probe double homicide
sHARONVILLE, Ohio (AP) - A
spokesman for the Hanulton County
Coroner's office said two rmddleaged women found dead m their
apartment Friday had been beaten
With a sharp Instrument
Pollee Identified one of the v1ctuns

as 54-year-old Mane Schuholz No
Identify was available on the oth8r
woman
Police sa1d a maintenance man in
the suburban Cincinnati apartm~t
complex discovered the bodies
Fnday afternoon

BUDGET RALLY- Lee Johnson, 9, struggles with a heavy sign at
the end of a march and rally protesting the Reagan administration
budget cuts m Athens, Saturday Lee Is the son of Virginia Johnson,
Malta U. S Senator Howard Metzenbaum spoke to a crowd of aboul800
( AP Laserphoto)

Didn't mean crack
CLEVELAND (AP) - Boston
Ma) or Kevm H Whtte says he dtd
not mean to offend anyone WIth a
remark he made about Cleveland
last week
Cleveland Mayor George Y
VomoviCh satd he heard the com
men! by White on the NBC 'Today"

show, after 1t first appeared m the
Boston Globe
Wh1te sa1d at the tune "We're
gomg mto bankruptcy ThiS c1ty wlll
be techmcally bankrupt by July ! If
nothmg ts done Bankruptcy from
Camelot to Cleveland "

boom I ran to the door to see what
was happemng, and that's when I
saw all this fire and debns I mean tl
was aU out there, all over I never
seen a lire that b1g before," he sa1d
"The side of my house was
already so hot you couldn't hold your
hand against It," Kllpatnck said
Firefighters began responding to
the blaze around 12 30 a m and
were on the scene for several hours
No mjur1es were reported
On Saturday, Akron fll'e mvesbgators sifted through the
wreckage m the church's new Wlllg,
which had contained a 4,000.seat
auditonum and was used to televiSe
Sunday religious semces
An Akron f1re dispatcher satd the

lire caused about $4 5 millitlt!
damage to the building and $2.5
million damage to the contents
More than 100 fireftghters - some
called m early from an ln~
shift - and 18 pteces of firefightffig
eqwpment were mvolved m battling
the three-alann blaze
The wmg's wooden roof helped
feed the inferno, which generated
tremendous heat
"We just got out of the station and
there was nothing but red sky,"5111d
one Akron fireman
Several compamon fires 1gmled
when embers were carried by the
wmd to nmghboring houses, but a
fire department diBpatcher sa1d tlley
were put out qwckly without senQus
damage

••
_,

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Apnl24, 1981

Contract Sales Legal

Copy No 81 391
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals W1ll be

received at t he offtce of the

Dlreclor of the Oh10 Depar

tment of Transportation
Columbus, Ohto unt1l to 00

AM Oh10 Standard T1me,
Tuesday , May 19 1981 for
•mprovernents1n
Gal ll a County, Ohto on

GALSR 553· 10 31)
Sta te Route 553, and GAL
S R 218 (4 18 ) - State
Route 218 by spot treat
w•th

aggregate base

bttumtnous

Pavement W1dfh - 18
fe!f
Proj ect and Work Length

- 21,596 feel to 4 09 miles
The date set for com

plef1on of thts work shall be
as se1 forth m the b1ddtng
prQ.Posal
Each b•dder sha II be

required to f le w1th hiS b1d

a ce rttf•ed c heck or
cashter s check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of h1s b1d but 10 no
event more than ftft y
thousand dollars, or a bond

tor ten per cent of hiS b1d,
payable to the Director
Bidders must apply on

the proper form s, for
qualtftcation at least ten

days pnor to the date set
for opentn9

b1ds ' "

1

. . . . . . _, . .

• ••

• •

1
Card ofThanks
THE FAMILY of DaiSy

Columbus Ohto

ment

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

ac

cordance w1th Chapter 5525
Oh10 Revised Code

Plans and spec •f•cat10ns
are on ftle in the Depart
ment of Transportat•on and

Ross w tshes to thank
relattves, fnends netgh
bars, for the beauf1ful car

ds

flowers, food

our dea r mothers tllness

others for thetr acts of ktn

dness ond sy mpathy

I would ltke to thank all my
re tat1ves and frt ends who
donated the1r ltme tn the
maktng at cook• es for th e
btke htke Your devot1 0n to
such a worthy causes •s

deeply ap prwaled by
myself and all concerned
E1leen Clark

Wtfh gra teful hear ts we
w•sh to say thanks for all
the love and k1ndness
shown us at the dea t h of our
husband &amp; fat her Or•n H
Sm 1th It IS comfort1ng to
know th at God loves u s &amp;
we ha ve so ma ny won
dertul fn ends To l tve m
hear ts we leave beh•nd tS
not to dte Lllltan Smtth
Mr
and Mrs
Rt chard

Rosenbau m and Mary
Schwab and grandchil dren

--~
In

Memonam

In memory of Ro nald
Lester Mtl er Sr who wa s

cal led ho me May 7 1980

DAVIDL WEIR We m•ss you see you at the
DIRECTOR great reun.on
Sad ly
Rev 8 !7 73
mtssed by all who love you

2

2

lnMemonam

In memory ot our mother
Hazel Taylor who passed

away June 27 1980
A Farewel l to My

Cht ld ren by Helen sre mer
R1 ce
When I must leave you 1or

a little whil e
Please do not gneve and
shed w•ld tears
And hug you r sorr ow to
w th

And lor my sake and 1n my
name live on and do
a ll th1ngs the sam e

Feed not your lone! ness
on empty days,
But t il each wakmg hour
tn usetu ways
Reach out your hand tn
comfort and tn c heer
And 1 10 turn Wtll com tort
you and hold you nea r
And never never be
afratd tod te
For I am watt ng lor you
n the sky
Sadly mtssed by her
ch1 dren Marce lla Clara
Clyda
Herma n
Clyde,
John F ran k and Mtke
In lov ng memory of Edna

r--=L:...A:.:F__,F_· :...A:...·...:D=A,_,Y_~

In Memor1am

Molher our hearts are
fi ll ed Wtth sadness
But wh at a n1 cer way to

go
Read1ng Gods Holy War

ds
And 1n Dads arms who
loved you so •
we Wtlt always remem

ber

Of your ever last ng love
And know you rest m
peace

W1th our dear God above

We 11 all meet agam
On one glonous day

We II al l be there
logether
And we Will all be there to
stay
Sadly mt ssed by al of us
Your daughter Ad r1a G
Nelson

In to vmg memory of our
son and brother Joseph
Dean Loftts Jr, who was

kil led November 2, 1973 on
lh1s h1s 16th b~rthday May
9 1981

Th ere s an open gate at
the end of the road ,
Throu gh wh tc h each must
1980
go alone
Years of stnv.ng lltfle of
And there tn a light we
play
cannot see
Lovtng QIV tng the whole
Our Father clatms ht s
of Th e way
own
A chcnshed smtte a heart
Beyond the gate your
of gold
loved one ft nds happmess
To th e dea r est mother t he and r es t
world could ho ld
And there s comfor t tn the
Happy memones fond thought
and rrue
That a lovtng God knows
F ro m us who thought th e best
wor ld of you
Lov tngly m1ssed by pa re n
Sad l y m tssed by her ts and SIS ler Joseph &amp;
fam tly
Alberta and Bettyann

Summerft eld who passed
away one year ago May 9

---8

Public Sale
&amp; Aucl10n

FARM AUCTION
SAT., MAY 16-10:30 A.M.
Tahe Rt 33 N of Pomeroy, turn west onto sr Rl
611, follow this route 2 miles NW of Albany, Oh ,
lvrn left onto C 10, go to first road to right, Jrd house
on nghl The Parkers have sokllhelr farm and w11l
sell their well cared for equipment Partial listing
MACHINERY &amp; FARM ITEMS· Ford 640 Tractor
w/fronl end loader MF No 9 pickup baler 2 Grove
flat bed wagons w/ graln beds MF No 110 manure
spreader , Ford 4 bar side del rake MF 7
Dynabalance mower w/ cond hookup, Ford 3 pi
mower, 3 pt post hole digger, hay elevator, Ford
crimper, reversible Ford scoop, 3 pt 1 sack cement
m1xer, drags, 3 milker unlls, 3 pt Ford cord wood
saw, 150 gal gas lank on stand, Ford 3 pi boom,
platform scaiH r t wheelbarrow, sm lots of
lumber, cement blocks, bldg tile and [u nk Iron,
woven and barb w~re, hand tools, mise ANTIQUES
&amp; MISC ITEMS (Furniture needs refinished) 48"
solid oak round table wi ped ba .. and 2 leaves, mat
chino buffet rockers, washstand w/towel bar,
trunk, Dazey churn, old tools lg Franklin
Fireplace, many boxes canning jars, many Items
nolllsled Lunch avalloble
Not r"ponslble for accidents or goods after sold
NOTI! Machinery may be viewed ony evemng
after 6 10
Terms· Casll 01 check w/poslllvol D
Lortll a 'Nrl Parker, OWners, Ph 691 1610
c I! Sherlun, Auctioneer, Pft 461. 42'3

--------------~------·

•

~"""-,-~-"'-,=---,.----"
"~

'Mtaa Slioemaker, ..t me my
hal my eoal my briefeaoe my
umbreUo and my 'from !he dell
ol' pad I don't want to pia

3
Announcements
3
Announcements
SWEEPER and ..wing Skate A Way
summer
machme repelr, parts, and schedule
Open Wed
supplies
Pick up and nesday , Fnday Saturday
delivery, oav1s Vacuum nights from 7 30 to 10 00
Cleaner one half mite up Ava1lable for pnvate par
Georges Creek Rd Call ties, Monday and Tuesday
446 0294
nights, Saturday morn1ngs
or afternoons, or sunday
GROUND HOG CONTEST, aflernoons Phone 985 9996
first pme, $500 Tn County or 985 3929
Sports Shop Rl 1 PI
Pleasant w VA Call 675 Ground Hog Contest F~rsl
pnze $500 00 cash Tn
2988
Counly Sport Shop Pt
Pleasant
Stop tn for
details I 304 675 2988

AnnDuncements

I PAY h1ghest pnci!s
possible for gold and silver
co1ns, nngs 1ewe1rv, et_c;
contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Middleport
IT'S BEELINE SShowand
Tell T•melllll our new
spr.ng and summer hne ~~
now available and tS It un
bellevable 1 1' 1 Give us a
call for more 1nformat1on

about lh1s lnterestmg wor~
Phone 992 3941 from 9 6 ~

STOBARTS Greenhouse IS
now opened IllS localedJln
Rac'"e Rt 2, c R 100
NEW GARAGE OPENING Hang'"g baskets &amp; beddmg
Automatic transmissions plants Vegetables &amp; planls
and all sorts of mechanical of all kinds
repair and maJor and
minor auto body repair Flowers for Memor1al Day
S"' James Smith or Tom Faye s G1ft Shop located,l~
Masters or col1446 7757
tower Middleport

anymore

3

3

Announcements

We are lrymg to keep the
cemetery at Letart Falls tn
tts present condlf1on, but
must depend on your In
terest and help To msure

that your lot will be kepi

---- - - - - - - - -

May 3 10
8

mise

n

'~I('

G1veaway

,'~A~dorable black &amp; wh tte ktt
"l~ns Ready '"2 weeks 949
-2430
•.Pupp1es, 6 weeks old 3
, mates, 2 females 992 7750
")(NY PERSON who has
enythlng to give oway and
does not offer or allempl to
offer any other thing tor
.~llle may place an odIn this
colum~ There will be no
'tharge to the advertiser
O~E LOVEABLE, 6 wk
old, female puppy
l:'llocolate brown Also one,
10 mo old, female pyp,
White with black and tan
spots Both dogs are small
with short hair Call 388
9996, after 6pm

R-EGISTERED Snauzer,
'ffiale, papers lost Call 388

.,8

GERMAN Shepherd pup
.pies call 388 8586 or ~
~q)9

3 YR, old AKC Reg St
Bernard Cart 367 7378
5
Happy Ads
1'1lbl1c Apology Dear D1m
I

~pies

'ten

m sorry for my rot

mouth, and m tstrust

'!')ease forgive me' Love
"18'

"t'

•
l:OST

Losiand Found
Grey Schnauzer

that answers to the name of

'Sthutlz Lost 1n the Rock
rS,prings

V1C 1n 1ty

REWARD Phone D1ck
Owen at 992 2651 or 992
'!l6'l7
,,.;.,__

_ _ _ __

.J.Qst male red t1ck hound
w1th no collar Lost 1n
'R~c1ne Bashan Rd area
:'$100 oo reward J1m Circle
949 2573
Resse tra1ter hitch Bet
ween Rutland &amp; Danv111e
Reward 742 2422 or 742
]178

and death We especially
want to thank Rev Watson you through the years
But start ou t bravely
and the choor The McCoy
Moore Funeral Home and a ga ll ant smde

!he offi ce of the Dlstnct 2.
Deputy Dtr ector
The Dtrec tor reserves
the right to r e1ec1 any and
all b1ds

gIfts

visits and prayers, dunng

BIG GARAGE SALE
MAYI6
THALER FORD SALES
Automotive parts,
paints, tools, nut, bolts,

"t:Ost head part off of a

Classifieds
Public NOIICe

Annouacements

PUPPY
M1xed breed,
small, white, female, hod
worm and distemper shot
Call367 7712

Blaze destroys Baptist temple
AKRON, Ohio (AP ) - An eyeWII·
ness to Saturday's spectacular J1
million Akron church blaze said he
heard an exploswn and ran out of his
house to face the biggest fire he's
ever seen
When 11 first broke rnto the open,
the blaze at the Akron Bapt1st Tern·
ple sounded like the rumbling of a
large truck, according to A R
K1lpatnck, 68, who lives across from
the church
" It was an awful, awful nunbhng
sound It was the kind of nolSe them
big trucks make when they go by my
house, only this one was a lot louder,
too loud for tl to be a truck," sa1d the
retired truck dnver
' Then there was one hell of a

3

W Va.

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

clea n th is year, please send
check cash or money or
der to Clarence Norns,

LOCK &amp;SAFE SERVICE

23262 H11l Road Racme,
Oh1o 45771 $10 00 for one
lot S5 00 lor one half lot
Thank you The Letart

Food Coop Orlentat1on at
7 p m May 12 at the old
Pomeroy Jr High For fur
ther 1nformatlon call 742
2368 or 742 2630
Potted tomato plants An
drew Cross, 247 2852

SAT., MAY 16, 1981
10:00 A.M.
The personal property of the late Charles Samuel
Beller Take Stale Route 124 to Rutland, Oh1o, then
take the New L1ma Road Watch for sale s1gns
HOUSEHOLD
Tappen Green Gas Range. 17 cu fl Frigidaire
refngeralor, d1nette set with 4 cha irs, May tag auto
washer and dryer metat dish cab mel, Maytag chest
deep lreeze couch end and coffee tables, 2 pc llv
1ng room SUite color TV (doesn 1 work) mise pic
tures table a.rm chair book shelves, fan, record

cabinet 3 pc bookcase bedroom su1te, metal
cab,net base, woOd rocker, lamps 3 pc bedroom
su1te linens and mise dishes
MISCELLANEOUS
1972 Bu1ck Custom ca r, 2x12 Derborn plow, 4ft
bushhog, two wheel trailer 8 HP Wizard mower,
Springfield totollller, push lawn mower, alum ex
tension ladder alum grain elevator, wheelbarrow,

bench vise, push plow, ~ron kellle, draw knife, mise
hand tools, and platform scales
Case No 23421
Administrator Beverly A Ridenour
Lunch
Cash
Positive 1D
Not responsible for acc1dents or loss ol property
Dan Smith
AUCTIONEERS
Jim Carnahan
949 2033
949 2101
Lonnie Neal, Apprent•ce

--~I

11esday

1

Friday, May 15, beginning at 10·30 a m., 6 m11es
E111 of Tuppers Plolns, Ohio, 1 mile West of
Reednllle, on Stole Route 611
FARM MACHINERY
12ft H D Tandem flatbed trailer, wagon gear W 16
In wheels, Pattern sawed to build 12 fl flatbed, 7 It
Sidewinder 3ph blade (new), rear mount tractor tift
3 ph, M F 2-14ln r,row, M F 6 II lift disc, Ford 501
mower, 2 door hog eeder, Sfllrs 5 HP Shredd~r
TOOLSANDWODDWORKING EQUIPMENT
Betsaw tomato slake saw, Parks thickness planer
with 8 HP, B&amp;S epglne, Craftsman 36ln wood lathe
(all attachments), Craftsman Router Crafter,
Craftsman mitre saw, Croflsman stand grinder,
Penny's drill press, set drill bits, 2 bell sonders,
Craftsman bind saw, Homeljte c 12 chain saw,
Blocksmjlh forge, vile and anvil, with tongs, etc ,
set Stanley planes, HI Dado sawo, naw 318 In elec
trlc drill, lot lumber, 2 saw mandrtll, 30 In circular
saw, 32 fl tJttenalon ladder, lot of celluloid harness
omamenta, uwa, wrench", targe amount of mise
loolalncfudl!lll some antlquea
HOUIIHOLD
2 l!lectrlc hNtwra, 2 TV antermas, walnut atand,
drapes, bed aprlfllll, nietol foldl!lll chairs, allvar·
ware, blender, lot of house ll~lng, paneling, etc.,
mise household Items
AUCTIONIIR'I NOTI! • Thes• tools and
machinery In excellent condiHon If you need firm
and woodwork IIIII equipment, don't miss thiiMit
Not responsible for accldtnll or loss of property
Lunchaerved
Mr and Mrs. Alvlnf Mays, Owners, Ph 37HH7
I 0 "Mac" McCoy, Auctl-, Ph fU·m4

L-ost 1n Portland area
Black seller, female An
swers to the name of
Coalie 843 2971

..id

Now buy 1ng gold and
Stiver, old pocket watches
cha •ns, dtamonds, Stl\ler
money and co1ns Marttn s

General Store Middleport
992 6370

barn

witt'! brest knobt stvertl o.k rocktrt 2 o.k slftbalrcta wlttl ttncv
mirrors oalt; k!tclttn cupbOerd tltnl front MCratary bookctte ~
cupbHrd 2 otk splntl dllll. we tnut rope '"' tplntt llllk wlttt met
cntng,cht lr, 2G Dillon stone llr with writing Vlctotlanl: htlr MVWtl
wldl.er bt&gt;skets, f doi:Jr IPOOI clbll'llt 4 ctoor spool clblntt witt! lift top

w11Mtand wlltt fancy btck Mlrd, 2 ~teflon bOokc:aM otd post offlct;
Will dnlt with «&lt; pigeon holn VIctorian mtrlllt rop crw.t, 2 rwnct
01k flb...,3M'Iallwlcker labltl 2Mk,.l-o~quare tllb'"' 2 0111 •111...
roll top delk trHdlf MWint mac"'"' prlmltlvt flowr chllt ,.,,.,.._ _
cuDbNrd tartt bran candle holden prlmltlw ttiiV Cllt*Oirt....,.
ClrObl, Atwatlr Ktnf riiCIIO tlllh l:ltck Wkker rocbr, dinner betl,
f)lghbOY with llrPifltlnt front wk:lltr talntlnt ewell, Olk kitchen
cupbNrd, tall m1ntle clock wllflbont dr..ttr otk claw end .,..
lllnd t•blt Itt of bt'lllllmpt, 2 o8 WIIPtltanctl Witt\ fiWtl bin. oek
c"llct'II'Odttr high chair tMveral 01k drnMrt 1lfl'tAtl oak boallcllt

,

MC,..t.rln. 2 popltr ~~;ncrttn tupkel'dl. 2 dropiHf tlblft 1 H .,..
Olk chln1 ceblf'llt wicker cort.t tHit, Ofiii'NI 'YN rva
ctturn, Mill L.trl'lln dllk. 1ft of Mnt wooct cl\llrt This ltonlr 1 """'"

MJCIIOfl SEIVICE

cn1

K.-t!IM ... Aoct

car-,._ I Olive

llstlnv

Clthrdttclrwlllli,..,.wl D
IWAI'f AUCTION IA.N
Altdlllll

,.
•&lt; '

SWAIN

wanltlltoluy
' LO. 10k, lolk, llk, denial
~ and gold year piM
1675-3010

~

$185 00 to $500 weekly doing
matllng work
No ex
pertence requ~red
AP

PLY Circle Sales P 0
Box 224 D Richmond H1ll
NY 11418
Ne ed Money' Need
Clothes' WhY not get your
wardrobe at no cost to you
and earn extra dollars too?
For tnformat1on or in
terv1ew appomtment call
992 3941 between 9 9
Fash1on Consultant needed
NOW 1 Ladtes fash1on ftrm

Average $8 00 per hour

For appotntment mterv1ew

call992 3941 between 9 9

Recept ton tst bookkeep er
for doctors offtce Ex
per tence
1n
btll 1ng
med1care med1ca1d destre

d Calt9926601
BARTENDERS
cockta il

and

wa1fresses

full

time and parttlme The En
tertalner, 675 7600
COMMUNITY

Servoces

worker to work wtth in

dlv1duals W1lh mental
Part time
relardat10n
poSition Contact Beverly
Johnson at 388 8195
Buckeye Com mun1ty Ser
v1ces 1S an equal op
portun~ty

employer

SALES POSITION Local ,
fast grow.ng business, 1s

fas t growmg business ts
tak1ng appllcattons for a
good matured sales person

SCASH 1
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
420LtVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL
446 4775
OPEN9T05

1n

Cal1388 9060

the

CASH

gold

anythmg marked

!OK, 14K, IlK (Class

nngs,

dental), Sliver
coms or sterling Br.ng
to Tope Furn Ask for
Tom Top pnces every

day! Or see MTS Co1ns,
6 30 8 30 Thurs Eve

GalliPOliS and

su rroundmg areas Salary
based on expertence A:p
pl1cant must have a
mtntmum of two years
college and two years sales
expenence tf you qualify

send resume to Rt 1 box
287 Gal lipolis , Oh1o 45631
AnE 0 E

BRIDGE
Part scores
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Soa111
Br1dge literature lS consp1c
by the absence of diSCUS
sions on btddlng when there
are part scores There JS a
sound reason for thiS The subject " too diff1cult
We mtend to devote the
next few Saturday arttcles to
thiS subjt!d as a fmale to a
year and a half of bps on bid
deng and play
Today tile speclftc subject
w111 be the strong two b1d
when you have a part score
We get many letters askmg
whether the two bid 1s still a
force when •t ts also a b1d of
game There 18 no unan1m1ty
of optmon here but our sug
gest10n IS that you should pass
Wtth an absolute blank but
respond walh as much as one
kmg or queen and a j&amp;ck
On the other hand when
you straan to make a response
there 1s no need to whip a
dead horse You don t have to
make a second b1d Thus With
UOUS

Will do pa1n t1 ng and all odd

JObs Ca ll949 2145
Will do roof s 3 years ex
penence Free esta mttes

Call 742 2109 and ask for
Don

WOULD

Ll KE to do
babys1fttng •n my home for

Ek p.lrtdlng - MUst bl nit TO
st art 1mmech1teh BtCIUst ot
our un1que u p.1n11on progr.1m
we ue h1nng 1n the GllhJM~h $
(llSio~rtngs•larySIOOOa

montn ba 'ed on performance lor
those who quality m No
1.1y olts no strl~es Ill m.lnagtment pos.tlon avililable H•IJh
~c hOOI

eduutton •nc ear re

qu.red No previous e•perllmu
necessary For 1nterv1ew c111
between 10" m and I p m only

tl04tum•

uick 'n' Easy
92 9 0 271.. 40'

GUICI

'1

USHAITUIS 111

llZW 18S1 NtwYOik NYIOOtl
IISII100 Cltlflc (SIS) SilO

Dlli&amp;Mr Cltlllc

••

t•r ..... Cilolec

Ito

110

CIAfT IOOIS $2M M
134-14 QIIO . . .lilt Qlillll
UUIIflla 1t1a1 Qlillllc

mtr.~.
IJIII alii F....._SIIt Jl.51

..

lzt.Qiicl 'rl bar T_,.,
l~,..
QIIIII
IZ7....... 'rl . . .

...........

IJI.~er.._ ......

HltMifll

...

P1c k

up

and

L 0 CAT I 0 N - 610 4th Ave 4 BR , 2112 baths,
large LR , formal d1nmg rm, complete kitChen w1th
d1sp, OW, compactor retngerator and range, 6
fireplaces garage new a1um1num s1d1ng and storm
wmdows Show by appointment only Call RAN NY

deep lot

Wtfh n1ce bldg central ha s
heat, well msulated Rto

BLACKBURN at STROUT REALTY 446 0008

Grande, S27 900 Call 245
9325 evenmgs or week Three or four bedroom Beaut tful three bedroom

house
carpet
t~r e place ra nch bnck home tn Baum
sundeck two ca r garage 2 Add ttton Pomeroy Oh10
and one half acres Lovely Gas heat central a r Call

ends

ROOM hous e, 64
Chillicothe Rd only $3,500 settmg on SR 7 Nort h 991
7741
Cal1446 4038 or 446 1615

9912571 985 4145 or 1 687
6419

HOUSE 1 mile from North
Galha H S , ]1(, acre lot 3 31

33

5

Mobile Homes
for Sale

bclr

lg hvmg room k1f
chen and family room w1th
L P gas and cent a.r,
woodburner small barn

1973 Crown Haven 14 x 65
three bed1oom s new car

5 room house w1th fu ll

p m Sat 10 a m 3
Sun 1 p m Sp m

delivery

ava1 lab le

2 story home 3 bedrooms 1

ba tn full basement good

ROOFING, REMODELIN

13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE been ca n
ce lled •
L.ost your

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv1ces for f~re msurance
coverage in Gaii1a County

for

almost

a century

Farm home and personal
property coverages are
ava 1lable to meet tn
F Burleson your netghbor

and agent

locatiOn Pomeroy Call af
ter 6 992 72i4

446 6241
8 room hou se w1th bath &amp;

call for estimates call 446
2200
HAVE

YOUR

shower, full basement
alummum s1d 1ng storm
wtndows &amp; doors btg built
tn perth b1g lot par tl y fen
ced 1n Metal butldtng 992

Hoover 7453

sweeper repa •red at Em
ptre Furntfure call 446

1405
Wou ld l tke odd 1obs Lawn
mowtng &amp; m•sc
tabs
worktng aroun d homes

992 6595
Flnanelal

d1v1dual needs Contact T

58 acr es wt th house barn
and ot her build1ngs ,ust our
of Harn sonvllle S R 684
belong.ng to the estate of
Ronald Harbour at offtce
of o Bn en &amp; Q Bn en At
torn ey 100 and one half
Court Street
Pomeroy

OhiO May 11 1981 a! 10
a m mu st be so ld tor not
less than appra•sed valu e

of $22 400 00 For further m
Money to Loan
format1on call 1 614 992
FHA VA Convent1al Home 2720

22

IF YOU are a non smoker Loans, Columbus F~rst
you may qualify for spec1al Mortgage
Co 463 Second New two year o ld home 3
d1s.counts
on
your Ave , Gallipolis Oh 446
bedroom 2 and one half
homeowners policy Catl 7172
acres of ground Also new
446 2300 or see Ray Hawk
for a tree estimate

23

2!

Bus mess

Opportun1ty

highly successful
business
TWO BOOMING
INDUSTRIES
COMBINED INTO ONE

.

2 BDR house

D J s LAWN MOWER
REPA IR
On Ne1gh basem ent garage on
borhOOd Rd all makes ser doubl e lot at 280 7th St
v1ced Spec1almng m Lawn Middleporl Shown by ap
Boy Blades sharpened pQtntmenf Ca ll after 5 992
Call 446 4425 after 5 p m 71 43 or 992 71 17

LET us mow your lawn,

If you have the requered
1nvestment of 512,228 00,
you can have your own

DRESSING IS femln1ne fresh
plusltrlblt 1n til~ newest ver
11011 of tilt sfllrtdress. ~11 soft
ness from ptllered ,ole to full
~ to SWIAIJ siJrt
Punted Pattern 9117 M1sses
s.es ~ 10 12 14 16 18 20
S11t 12 (bust 34) likes 2ll yltds
60 1nch fabna
SUO for uch plltern Add
SOt each patltro for posllit
ond hlndil11 Stnd to

AKxxxx H A 0 AKx

x x x and you hav~ mtssed a
diamond slam 1t IS JUSt too
bad But you can console your
seif"w1llt the thought thal bid
dmg lS never gomg to be
perfect
In case you use two clubs as
your artaflclal and only fore
mg bid 1t 1s Important that
you respond wlth any hand
we have an mterestlng sug
gesllon here Play two d1a
monds as a complete negative
to show that you don t hold a
ktng or a queen and a jack
Th1s IS rather comphcated for
most players but then most l
players don t use two clubs as
the only forcang bid

G, pamtlng, concrete work,

WHY STRUGGLE
TOGETTOTHETOP
IN SOMEONE ELSE'S
BUSINESS WHEN YOU
CAN START AT THE
TOP IN YOUR OWN?

Your roclets sweaten blotlses
CllhnliOf new sk1rts to team
w1lh bl11er JICktls tops Here
are the top two nppled wrap
and 8-1011 sw1n1
Punted Pattern 9Z90 Hill
S111 WilliS 27 29 31 33 35
37\1 40 Inches Size 31 flared
style Ill rds 60 '" wrap Ill yds

HOUSE 7 rooms and bath,
old Rl 7, 1n AddiSon on 2
to your ~artner s two 'fade on
Opf!ntng btd but don t tee you acre lot overlooking nver,
have to bid acatn unless his central heat, woodburner,
second btd is a JUmp 1n a new well Insulated , walk 1n
closets, dishwasher, upSlUt
Take away that ktnK of sta.rs fully carpeted , rural
hearts and 1f your partner s water, owner w1ll ass1st m
two b1d IS a game contract ftnanctng or land contract
w1th down payment Call
you should pass
Joe Drummond, 675 3240
1£ tt turns out that partner
has opened two spades wtth s days 367 7536 even1ngs

I or 2 children Call 367
0691

operators lice nse? Phone
DI SP LAY MERCHANDISE

Homes for Sale

J1

Farms tor Sale

43

p lus ro lltng a cres
almost flat Has old farm
house, new alu mmum
Sldt
ng new roof need s m
pet
1971
Cameron
14
x
64
$27 500 Call 388 9969
two bedrooms new carpet stde repa1r In Chester
1972 Champ1on 12 x 60 two Tup per s Pla1n s wat er
S xx H Kxx D xxxx K (NEWSPAPERENTERPRISEASSN)
Free gas for
x x "x resoond two notrump
Or rent, 80 acre farm 3 bedrooms new carpet 1976 d•strt cf
~----------,---------~bedrooms u11 11ty room, Cameron 12 x 60 two dwelli ng Located one
I
carpeted, 2 bedrooms and bedroom s all electrtc 1971 quarter m tl e east of Tup
llvtng room, With pat1o SKy ltn e
l2sx 6)
two per s Pla•ns on Sf Rt 6S1
Help Wanted
11
15 Schools lnstrueflon
door Ben Franklin wOOd bedrooms bath &amp; 'h new Could be made tnto a ftne
atr (Ond1t1on large ca r pet
1970 PMC count ry home Pnced on
Schoo! In burner,
Got some fr ee ttme' Start SUMMER
barn 2 out bldgs mineral 12 x 60 tw o bed r ooms new tnspectton Conta ct Gordon
strucllon
Does
your
child
your own busmess Start
nghts 2,000 lb tobacco carpet B x 5 Sa les I nc H Ca ldwell Tuppers
sellmg Avon Be your own need extra help' Rev1ew base Guyan Townshtp 4.46
2nd X Vtand Str eet Po1n t Pla1nS OhtO
program
for
reading
or
boss Set your own hours
2002
Pleasant WV PhOne 675
math
Presbytenan
Chur
The ha rde r you work the
4424
FOR SALE 6 acre farm
more you II ea rn
For ch phone 446 4052 Prepare
w1t h house and tobac co
deta1ls call 742 2354 or 742 for fall classes now •
4 acres Wi th 2 bedroom base 12x60 trad er tn Crown
2755
•
trail er 70X14 2 car garage C1ty area SIS 000 Call 250
3 mil es from Ractne on Co 6307
Rad1oTV
FOR
SALE
BY
OWNER
16
Someone to wofk on
Rd 28 Before 12 noon or at
&amp; CB Repair
3 bedroom extra ntce
dr•ll• ng r1g Phone 992 7484
ter
5 p m 949 2618
bnck
plus
'h
acre
34
Busmess Bu1tdmgs
after 5 p m
RON'S TV SERVICE
Great locat1on Bl4% m
Spec •ailz1ng 1n Zen1th
terest Cal1446 1806
New Skyl ne sec t1onal Gar age for sa e tn Dex ter
House Calis Now serv1c1ng
S20 000 742 2025
home
24x56 3 bedroom
12 S1tuat1ons Wanted
Motorola Quazar Call 1
ca thedral ce thng tn gr eat
304 576 2398 or 446 2454
Repa.r o r r emode lmg
room 2 fu ll ba t hs garden JS
Lots &amp; Acreage
work, floor 1ng, doors wall
tub &amp; many ex tras Lot
paneling celltng or floor
Br•ck home on wooded model sa le at 1ust $28 500
LOTS Rea l n• ce campsite
t1 le Sldmg 992 2759
18
Wanted to Do
acre
Thr ee bedrooms
See at K1n gsbury Home on Rac coon Creek
ali
uttltttes avatiable
$300
WANT to bu 1ld tobacco f replace untque fa m ily Sa tes 1100 E Mam St
New summe r down owner W1ll fmance
fan1 shed doub le Pomeroy
Room board and laundry
barns free esttmates on room
hou
garage
dec
k
Upper
r
s
Man
Thur s 10 cal l alter 3 p m 250 6413
Reasonable
for elderly
s•ze Call after 6 p m 256
SIXtt eS 992 5420
a m a p m Fr1 10 a m 5
9926022
6307

992 2143

o~ rea

Neal

W, Hll onyt-lnl .for
aoyWy a t " " 11,. or Ill yaur home For
l~lor1111Non and plckop
,.,..... cell U.IN1.
lalelwry ..,..,.,
NftliloU p.lll

top.,....,.., 21Ctboxtl. 0fV11r
wlttt laney clr'VId Mck ftlnllnt couch. .,.,. chine clblnet, CftiW'f"
tablet. 2 01k with lull""'""

the ellg,bllily list at 992
2150 or 992 2157

sell Krugerrands Tawney
Jewelers 422 Second Ave

Auctioneer,

SWAIN
AIICTIOII BARN

111'1 w ith wrlti"O llltlakt

t mel route earner Phone
us nght away and get on

tak1ng appllcallons for a
Wanted to buy color good matured sales person
teleVISIOns that no longer 1n the Gallipolis and
work Also home serv1ce surroundmg areas Salary
based on experience Ap
calls 992 2034
pllcant must have a
mintmum
of two years
WE WILL PAY you cash
for your diamonds, wed college and two years sales
dmg bands, class rings, expenence If you qualify
pocket watches, dental send resume to Rt 1 box
gold We also buy sliver 287, Gallipolis, Oh10 45631
and gold coins anylh1ng
!hal 15 10 14 18 K gold We SALES POSI TION Loca l,

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

equipment to be sotd at
absolute auction.
Terms Cash or check
with ID Auctioneer:
fi!ercum &amp; Associates.
For Information call
304-5231371

l)l(k ll)lndlt

I

complete households
Marttn s General Store at
992 6370

Return to Befl

and warehouse lOG's of
pitcH of good Used

rockers aetOf-' 01k chairs 4lct cream ctlatn wtlnut lo'll'lllet wit
matching chllr Iron tnd briU btcl-very orntmtnltl 4 Iron bedl

,...... ft14) 2U.INJ

New, used and anttque fur
n1ture No 1tem to large or
to small Will buy one ptece

Turq w / orange and

THURSDAY, MAY 14
10 lOAM
1639 7th Ave, Hurttlngton, W Va Com
plete liquidation of
restaurant equipment

cr.rrv tt...c:v child 1 rocker, wt tnut merblt top vytlhltand lllk Vic

KMMtltiWIIII
0111.,..11,0...

si lver

AUCTION

I

Tfl'l'ltl

jewelry,

Honda or Ph &lt;.46 0648
after6p m

Llstlltlllft I[Nirt
Ol!lk highboys without m irrors wttnut alent trontsecretarv Vflttl bird
fHt oak 3 ~teflon bookceM br111 bed 2 Mit o1 4 P'"HMd spinate
blck chain 2 oMc drtaMrt Wlfh ftncv mirrors dOugh cabiMt
wicker rockers serpentine slant front Mtnttary with bird fftf,

~qUart

mgs,

dollars sterrtng, etc Wood
•ce boxes, jars, anttques,
etc complete households
Wnle MD Miller Rt 4,
Pomeroy OH 45769 Or
call992 7760

LOST
RT 554 Saddle bag

return

01k klfchtn cabinet 2 Ollk highboys with mlrrora. 3

lfontl

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
turntture, desks, gold

gold stripe Reward for

SATURDAY,MAY 16,AT IO:OOA,M. .,
Located 1n Gallipolis, Oh1o, at corner of
3rd and Olive Streets, one block otf of Rt.••

T IC AtPPttl ltont fir ~~Wral

largest

LOST
Gordan Setter,
femole, black and tan,
REWARD, call446 4191

Lonnie
614 367 7101

~

on

end $12 so per ton Bundled
slab $10 so per ton
Delivered to Oh io Parte!
Co Rock Spnngs Rd ,
Pomeroy 992 2689

L-ost male m1xed breed
block &amp; tan med1um s1ze
16st 1n the Portland area
.White flea collar Gentle
1143 2653 Reward

~

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE tra lnmg
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great g1fts as a Sen

11

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 14

-·~-----

--a1

torlan washstand with towel ban l Olk

Sti ver cams pocket

watches Ca ll Joe Clark at
992 205&lt;1 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy Ohio 45769

the

Ci II 9'12 7440

SAT., MAY 16, AT 10:00 A.M •.
7.

around

J.'Qmeroy post off1ce or the

AUCTION

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

gold

NEAL'S
AUCTION BARN
Hogsett, W Va Rt 1
Sale every Sat, 7 00
p m Complete auction
rvlce Public auction$
&amp; consignments token

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

form of adverttStng

offered''
gold colored

1K.roger store Has great
w~entrmental value If found

1160 Second Ave.
GaiAP"il
"YOUR KE"(TO SERVICE"
PHONE 446·1826
8

stamped 10K, UK, or 18K

Butova watch lost Wed

•.

INSTAU&amp;D

Class1f1ed Ads do more lh ngs I
more peop~ !han any other

AUCTION

ESTATE AUCTION

j:(eward
Woman's

LOCKS REPAIRED - SECURITY SYSTEMS _ ,
lnteraalloaal
elaullle4
••vertlalull
week
may4·10

Wanted to Buy class nngs,
weddmg bands, anyth.ng

motors and transm issions

Falls Cemetery Trustees

nat1ve to processed foods,
and chemeca l addthves,
101n us, were the Me•os

OLD COINS, pocket wal
ches, class rings wedding
bands, d1amonds Gotd or
Call J A Wamsley,
rP'""'" Chest Com Shop,
Athens, OH 594 4221

WANT TO BUY
AN
Lost bla ck &amp; wh1te puppy, TIQUE furn,ture, qu1lls,
1letween Gravel Hill &amp; stoneware Call245 5050
Grant Street m Middleport
Answers to the name of
Junk
.Qveeme Reward 992 2830 WANT TO BUY

AUTOMonVE -COMMERCIAL-RESIDENTIAL

Food for people not for
profit If you want an alter

WANTED TO BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
MISC ITEMS AB
LUTE
MARKET
RICE GUARANTED EO
BURKETT
~ARBER
SHOP MIDDLEPORT,
OH10992 3476

You will have the Income I rom
two different sources not 1ust
one Vou w ill menufacture de
mano 11ems for Il l businesses
We ~rsona lly Instal
the
machinery and equipment lOr
all two lndlJstries at your loc11
tlon Vou will be tttorouvh ly end
fliCper iiV tra inee! In all three
phases of faclory oper11t ons (we
guaranlee your cam p ete
•111tistactlon)
Tile m11rketlng Of your products will be hand l ~ by com
po~~nv established Hies oollets
1no selling by yoo IS necessary )
You w11t ho~~ ve a protected fe r
rllory t~nd each sate w u tt.1ve a
limited number of our factory
OPert~tlons so be one of 1M
first IPPilcan ts In y~r area act now - an unheard of op
portunlfv to be In lrt tKcluslve
buslnn• lor ,ou rsell Ach eve
total fl nlncial lf1depenaence and
become Olllll of the lop money
mektrs In your aree
Call

or Write (include leltphone

numlttrl
Cro~UWorld

lnternallonat Inc
415olfllad Drive
Monttrty Co~ttlornla tlf4D

Profess1ona1
services
COMMERCIAL and m
duslnal
photography
Phone 446 2909 or 446 7226
afler4pm
INCOME TAX AND AC
COUNTING SERV ICE
Call 446 7068 for ap
pomtment after 4 30 p m
and Sal call9 to 3

cotta ge at Long Bottom
w1th two and one fourth
acr es
Cha rles B1ssell

Long Bottom 949 2860
N1ce two story house

GALLIA Cleaning and
Rent A Maid Service Inc
Free Estimates, bonded,
Insured phone 245 923-1
Cleanmg by the week mon
thor contractual

RIVER
CITY
BOOKKEEPING Serv1ces
AI H &amp; R Block office, 27
Syc.amcore St , Call 446 0303
lues , ol46 2S75 after 5
and on Slllurday
ROGERS
PAWN &amp; COl N SHOP
601 Main St
PI Pleasant, W Va , old
state liquor store

from Chester Good con
dt ton
3 bed r oom 1969
Su nnse Par k mob1le home
located on 3 and one fourth
acr es of level gr ound
Double garage other out
butldtngs 992 2588 or wrtte
Box Hold er P 0 Box 249
Pomeroy Ohto 45769

DOUBLE WIDE 64
foot must be moved
pr esent
locatton
Syracuse Low 20 s

Bashan

1 614 985 4395

mob1le homes and travel

tra1lerS
TRISTATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
446 7572
TWO

together

trailers

,omed

turn , W1lh

washer and dryer, one IS a

10x50 the other IS 12XSO
Must sell, S6 000 Ca II 367
l&lt;x70 VINDALE

3 bdr,

cent atr, un

derpenned, gOOd cond 446
3044

Business

Opportuftlly

CIGAREITE DISTRIBUTORSHIP
FIRST OFFERING IN THIS AREA
FULL TIME OR PART TIME
WI need ambitious indlvldiNll In the aurroundlng
area seeklflll a solid, secure, highly profitable
buslnns Wo feature America's top brands Com·
peny furnlllles trolnlng, no experience necossory
All yO.. do Is service these outlets weekly
lnv"fmentfrom 147!1
For Information sonct your name, adclr"s ana
pl\one number to.
MID STATE MARKI!TlNG CORP
CIGARETTE DIV1$10N
14WH!tmAve.
Fonct du Lac, Wil 149J5
Phone (4\4) 923-4251

FA IRF IELD Ch urch Rd
approved sub dtV1S1on c• fY
schoo l rural water 1'/•
acres $5000 2'1" acres $6900
33!.. acr es $10 000 5 acres

$12,500 Ph 379 2196

LOT FOR SALE on Rt 35
sunk tst Village, concrete
st r eets, all
u1t lltles

ava1lable
Prtce

SIZe 93 X 172

$5500

Owner can

help f1nance Call 446 2573
or4461 171

'400,000

MOB! LE HOMES
Payments as Low as

Only

36

Real Estate

Wanted

'149.55

Windsor,
Fa.rmont,
Baron, Fuqua Norns,
Bayv1ew Un1bllt

VACANT
LAND
WANTED - up to 500
acres, must be under

5300 per acre STROUT
REALTY - 446 0008

17% lnlerest
lmmed1ate F1nancmg

UplolSYrs

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.
(J1m Ellioll)
Rl 93 North

41

Houses for R:ent

SMALL 2 bdr house, unf ,
1013 Second Ave
no
Ulllil1es pa1d S175 mo dep
req Call446 7886

Jackson Oh1o

286 37Sl

FOR RENT 3 bdr home, 2

OVER $500,000
IN INVENtoRY
Large

selec11on

of

K1ngsley,
Redman,
Bayv i ew , Frrendshtp
and Un1bllt Homes

PAYMENTS AS
LOW AS $140.00
per month w1th

low

down payments and up

to lS years to pay
17% 1nterest

FHA available at 1Slf2%

1978 BAYVIEW 12x65, total
elec , 2 bdr , exc cond
some extras, $7800 Ca II
250 6580
1976 LIBERTY 12x65, call
256 6&lt;86

Johnson's Mobile

Homes, Inc.
211 Eastern Avenue

Gallipolis OhiO
f614) 446 3S47

PhQne ... .U4m

21

4 LOTS on Plantz Sub
DtV1S1on pnce 54 850 Call
-146 1294

TWO one acre lots on Rt
For Sal e 197"' 14 xx 70 W n
160 Call388 8-137
dsor mob ile home Has new
hot wa ter tank I ncludtng
10 ACRES near Porter on
n sa le 4 se ts of anchors
old 160 •deal fo r hom es1te
blocks concrete sets Cen
tral atr condtfton er has a Call388 9067
Circular k 1tchen L ar ge bay
wtndoW tn front For more 19 plus acres no butldmgs
nformallon cal l992 5533
L oca ted one quarter mtl e
south of Tuppers Pl atns on
Rt 7 Free gas for one
dwelli ng Pnced on ' "
spec t on Con ta ct Gordon
Ca ldwel l Tuppers Platns
o•er
OhtO

1662
total elec

&gt; 24
from
" tn
992

2638

bedrooms 2 baths car
petmg extra l arge storage
butld tng Natura lgas fur
nace Three four ths acres
Owner Wtll fm ance down
Loc ated 1n
pay ment

PIANO TUNING ~
RE PAl R Will accept Visa
and Master Charge For
MObile Homes
appo1ntment call B111 32
for Sale
Ward, Ward s Keyboard
(614 ) 446 4372
PRICES REDUCED used
PIANO TUNING and ser
v1ce, all makes and
models Call Bob Grubb at
446 4525 Formerly w1th
Wards Keyboard

Just off Rt 248 3 m11es

4

App 6 m11es from Ra ci ne &amp;
Pomeroy

m

p

SINCE 1959

JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES, INC.
UPPER RT. 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

acres Rt 35 area Oepos1f
and reference requ•red
Century 21 Southern Htll s

446 6610
2 BEDROOM home
tenar y,

1n

Cen

f• replace,

full

basement garden lot $225
per

mo

references

&amp;

deposit required STROUT
REALTY 446 0008
FOR RENT 3 bdr home, 2
ecres R t 35 area Depostt
and reference reqUired

Century 21 Southern H11ls
446 6610
BEDR OOM
beautifUl country
large yard and
close to town, $300

ho me
settmg ,
garden ,
month,

refer~nces

depos1t

4

and

required, fully carpeted
stove,
and drapes
refrigerator Call at 631
Fourth Ave
3 BEDROOM House near
Eureka Depos1l plus 1 mo :
No.
rent In advance
utlllt,es paid Available lr&gt;
June, 250 6814
2 BDR HOUSE
unf .:
lower Rl 1, dep req Call
256 W3

Is announcing a new service to mobile
home owners in the Southeastern Ohfo
area.

FURNISHED HOUSE 7'
rms 29 Nell Ave S200 per;
mo, 1 child acceptable,
Coll4464416afler7 00
•

JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOME BROKERS

MODERN house 5 bdr ,t
with garden tot, write ol9!
VIne, Westerville, Ohio,,

II sell your mob1le home for you. We
have been 1n the mobile home busmess
since 1959 and we have buyers lookmg for
good used homes. Call now for more
deta11s.

446-3547
Appraslals Available

------------------:

43081

•

----------------:

4 ROOM house, In city,'
f)llone after 5 p m 256 9354 :
N
__
E_A_R_W_A_T_E_R_L_OD- -F-a-rm\

houM. 5 rm11. ana bath.~
G.rden and wetwr fur-;
nllhlcl, ret •na c1ep till 1·,

643·:M44

�Times-Sentinel
41

Houses for Rent

44

4 rooms a nd bath, stove
and retngerator turn1shed
!'lewly decorated Dep req
'1'12 3090

2 bedroom Mobile Home,
funished , adults preferred
Depos&lt;t . 992 2749

1}\Jj}~~\1 j"iiTHATSCRA-L.iDWORDGAME

Apartment
for !lent

~ ~ ~~ ·'

Two bedroom furnt shed
apar tment 992 5434 or 1
304 882·2566

1975 V1k&lt;ng tra&lt;l er , 12 x 65
two bedroom, btg llvtng

WE WILL be hav1ng 2
homes tor rent or lease 1n
the near future. Each

Mobile Home Park
3942

require 1 month's rent m
advance plus a security

Furnished two bed room
mob1le home on pnvate lot
No pe ts Depos1t r equ1red
949 2253

Fur n1shed thr ee room
apar tment. QUiet ne1gh·
bor hood No pets Depos&lt;l
r eqUired Phone 949 2253

3 bedroom mobil e home,
furn1shed, washer dryer,
a c , 2 ch ildren accepted
No pets DepoSit 992 7479,

Eff1 C1enc y apartment for
rent 992 5434 or 1 304 882
2566

personal

credit references

and

Strout

Really. 446·0008
42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

2 BDR . mobile home,
adults, no pets. Call 446·

1158.
3 BDR. and 2 bdr. mobile
home, call446·0175
12x50 1967
H&lt;lllopper
mobile home. Partly fur
nished 2 bdr May rent lot
53900 Call 245·5658 alter 5
pm

2 BDR

trailer on Kerr
Bethel Rd , call446 3371
Real Estate - General

POMEROY,O.
992· 2259
NEW LISTING - l'h
story frame w1th 5
rooms, 2 bedrooms and
some new Windows
Would make a mce r en
tal property $16,900 00.
NEW LISTING
RACINE A 12x50
mobile home w1fh 2
bedrooms, underpmned,
wood storage buildmg ,
and comes w1th a b1 g
lot N&lt;ce al$11 ,000 00
NEW LISTING 2
, story frame home w1th 7
rooms, 4 bed rooms A
lot of r emodelmg has
been done and wou ld
make a nrce ho me Also
an apartment, and a
store bU1 Idmg that br
10gs tn som e extra
mone y
A II
for
$36 000 00.
CENTRAL AIR FOI! A
HOT SUMMER - Is
iust one of the n1 ce
features of
th1 s 3
bedroom home Has a
fu l l basem e nt , 3
bedrooms, pa t10, new
Sid ing , and IS all
c arpet e d
Just
$21 ,500 00
JUST 6 YEARS OLD And has a l arge k1tchen,
n1 ce livmg room, and 3
bedrooms, all on one
floor . Could have a fu l l
basement , lUSt needs
the lloor 119,500 00
FARM - 113 A cres With
seve ral
bottoms ,
pasture
la nd,
and
t1mber l and, has 2
houses, severa l barns,
and mmeral r 1ghts N1ce
locat 1on
Ask 1n g
$68 ,{)(){) 00
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussel949·2660
Dott1e &amp; Roger Turner
992·5692
OFFICE 992·2259

Am
..
10.

Real Estate

General

room Located m Country
247

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one tetter to each square to form

Furntshed 2 bedroom up

statrs apa rtment

~

Apartment
for Rent

FURNISHED first floor
apartment
Ut111t1es fur
n1shed Adults preferred
Ref and dep Good locat1on
1n downtown Gaii1POI1s
Call at631 Fourth Avenu e

~
OloJE: $1MPL)"
CAioJ'T CAR:II:Y ON
~UfS-11-JE$$ IN
1'H16 STAlE.

tTREEWP I
Answ•rh•r•.
Yeslerday s

Bob&amp; t&lt;11ty Landrum
696· 1082
Ralph or Vack1e Coe
797·2096
Paul Perry- 797 · 2280
Zelia Ploghoii- S93· 5244
Cosey Nobhck- 797 2757

I

I

Jumbles ALIVE DIZZY FLORAL BANISH
Answer What the bachelor's laet words were-

RENT OR
LEASE
Bus 1ness bldg , corner of
Cour t and Second Ave Call
446 1615 or call AAA .W.·

0699
TOBACCO BASE · 1n
Walnut Twp , 1274 lb barn
room and st1cks, call 446
0519 or 446 0987
CO UNTRY MOBI LE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479
T RA 1L E R spac~s for rent
Southern Va lley Mobile
Home Park , CheSh 1r e, Oh
992 3954

NOW TAKING
LEASES

All UTILITIES
INCLUDED

I WAREHOUSE

TWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR THE ELDERLY
NOW RENTING

20' •JO' Bays
Conv..n1'1mf
Economical
Secure
For tnformatton call
446·9624. 7 30·4 Monday
thru Fnday.

--

Merebandlse

200 Second St.
Pt. Pleasant, WV
675·6679

51

Furntshed Rooms

SLEE PING ROOMS an d
l1ght housekeep1ng apt ,
Park Central Hotel

UPRIGHT freezer 21c
IIVIOQ room su 1te, bedroom
SUll O, 256 6814

'4 PC . II Vtng room SUite,
exc . cond , S200 Ca ll 256·
1968

SL E EPING ROOM · $75
utl lit1es pd, smgle m ale
preferred Range, r efng ,
call 446 4416 afler 7 p m
Sleepmg roo ms, by the
week
Kitch e n.
a nd
lelev1S10n lounge Car ry oul
store and res taura nt W1th 1n
500 l eet 992 6370
Sp~ e for. R en t

TRY THE NEW
"P ILLOWSOFT"
SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER
THE ULTIMATE IN
SLEEPING COMFORT

CORBIN and SNYDER
FURNITURE
GalliPOliS, Oh10
45631
PHONE 614 ·446 · 1 1~ 1

Re al Estate -Genera l

H eadquarter:;

STROUT REAL TV

-

~~~~~I ~16 ~~u3
E. Second Street

Phone
1· (614) ·992·3325
110 ACRES Good
fences, 2 farm pond s,
dr illed well, old barn, 4
bedroom ran ch home
w 1th full basem ent New
gas well wtth free gas
t70,000
31.5 ACI!ES - Rollmg
land on paved road Wtth
rural water available
Will make a m ce small
farm or deve lopment
MIDDLEPORT
LArge 7 room home
w1th 11h baths, new na t
gas furn ace, centra l a1r,
new sh1n g te r oo f ,
garage and n1 ce corner
lot Can move r1ght in
after closmg
7 ACI!ES - Free gas
supply, Lead1 ng Creek
wat e r .
littl e
one
bedroom home and two
small bldgs Askmg only
$11,500
340 ACI!ES, M or L New fences, pl enty of
locust lor posts, tree
gas, about 40 acres of
crop land
Good
bedroom home, two
baths, nat. gas furnace
on State l!oute . ASk&lt;ng
5225,000, but w111 con
Sider offer
BUILDING LOT- 1'1:1
acres on Rt 124 with
drilled well, electric and
pads for trailer. Only a
few miles from coal
m lnes, $6,500.
EXCELENT HOME Immaculate 3 bedroom
ranch home, 2 full baths
(ceramic), vqry mce
kitchen with dlnmg,
mostl~ carpeted, storm
doors and windows,
patio, garage and large
101. Only 143,500.

s

Housinq
!ft•ifdl uarters

LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should
descnbe th1s lovely 3 BR bnck ranch
Spec1al features are a large LR &amp; d 1n
1ng rm , equipped k1tchen, lll~ ba th s,
laundry, quality carpet, cent c11 r &amp; an
overs1zed 2 car garage Loca ted on u s
35 West &amp; shown by appo.ntment
RACCOON CREEl&lt; FARM - 50 acr es,
38 A bott om, 11 A pastur e, lovely
modern brick home w1th 3 Brs , 2 baths,
ca thed ral cet11ngs, fir eplace, large su n
deck and lots of other extras, new met al
pole barn , crib, l oadmg chute, approx
1700 ft creek frontag e, located 4 m1
from Me1gs Mm e No 3
PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres 15 A
S1 mms Cr eek bottom, balance rol l1ng
pasture &amp; woods, n1ce modular home .
large bar n, several other built1 1ngs, tab
base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
Woods Rd .
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted
bUild lOg lot I 22 acre, n1ce wooded se t
tmg, C&lt;IY schools $5,900
LOG CABIN - Very un1que, old hand
hewn log beams. sleep,ng loll , large
stone fireplace, modern barn, 14 acres
woods, located In the Wayne Nat.ona l
Forest, 20% down.
OWNEI! FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% down - CampSites 1n the Wayne!
National Forest . Sto B acre tracts wood
ed land, good hutnmg Pr&lt;ces start at
$3,500.
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - 10% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - Plantz Subdiv , 3 or 4
BR 's, 14x30 LR, 12x30 lamily rm &amp;
much more Immediate possession
Call lor appointment
EVANS HEIGHTS - Assume 9'h %
Loan - NIce Jl/:z story home offers 5
rms , bath, basement, carport &amp; nat.
gasheat Bethellrsttoseethisone
PRICE Ill EDUCED TO 159,500.00Jf 10%
financing available . L·shaped ranch, 3
BR's, 1'1z baths, LR with fireplace, den
with fireplace, formal dining, equlped
kitchen, gas heat, corner lot

56

High Chair, $8.00; S!rOJier.
$12.00. 992·3660.

Richard

Mowery,

Sr

Antiques

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
P.ORTANT TO YOU) Will
PliY cas h or certified check
for anttques and col lec·
ftbles or entire estates.
Nothmg too large Also,
guns. pocke t watches and
com collect&lt;ons Call 614·
767 3167 or 557 3411.

54

Misc. Merchandise

BURROUGHS Bookkeepln
g machine, SSO. Call 446·
2342.

9' )( 27' square olson rug.'
Same on both sides 992
6056.

Whether you're mowmJ.( tough grass
and 11eeds or a well-kept lawn, Gravely
·convertible tractors and rotary mowe; s
are the best all around your yard.
These rugged 30·. 40·. 50-mch
machines have all-gear d;rect
dn ve for long hfe.
Call for a demonstration .
We service what we sell.

POMEROY
LANDMARK
A WIDE SELECTION
OF SHRUBS
&amp;ROSEBUSHES

~GIRAVEt.Y

THINKING OF WOOD
HEAT? I have a complete
lme of stoves, furnaces,
f1replace inserts, at good
pr1ces 1 also Install stoves,
retme ch1mneys, clean
fireplaces Call the Chlm·
ney Sweep. Call373 6057.

Buy a Model

FOR LANDSCAPING
YOUR LAWN

THIS WEEK ONLY

q,f,._

~
I

STEEL SHEETS
20 In
ches W&lt;de,
II. long, IB
gage lor sale, will cut to or·
der Gallipolis Block Co.
1231f2 Pine St Gallipolis,
OH 446·2783.

so

F

·n

POMEROY
LANDMAI!K

E. Main St.

0

BAIRD &amp;FULLER

REALTY

~.

UPPER ROUTE 7- Block building and lot, can be
used for e1ther residential or commercial purpose.
PRICE REDUCED - Very well kept cedar ranch
home 1n one of Gall/a County's finest subdivisions. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2100 square feet ot living
space, fireplace, free pool and clubhouse
569,500.
ASSUMABLE LOAN - 9'1z% &lt;nlerest rate on this
bnck and frame ranch with 4 BR, formal dining,
fam11y room w1th fireplace Owner wants fast sell
Good 1nvestment at
U3,000.

CALL BETWEEN
8 A.M. &amp; S P.M .
446·1142

GOOD BUY - See thiS frame home W&lt;lh fenced in
lot, garage, mcludes furnrture. Only
S28,000,

BURSON'S

PRICE REDUCED - New bnck and tudor, 3 BR
ranch has family room w&lt;th firep lace, p;, bath, 2
car garage. A real bargam.
55S,OOO.

MARKET and GREENHOUSE
· U.S. 33 NORTH OF POMEROY

$5

Pomeroy

Building Supp!leo

ALL TYPES Of building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
tels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, o. Call 245

5121.
54

Pets for Sate

AI&lt;C male minature 7 man·
!hold poodle $100 667·6431
Needs a good home Small
beagle type puppy Shots
and wormed
Contact
Me1gs County Humane
Society al992·7416

CLOSE TO TOWN - Good 2 B R mob1le home in·
eludes range, refrigerator, and approx. lf2 acre.

OPEN DAYLIGHT TIL DARK 7 DAYS A WE EK

I

Culloden Nurserv
Spring Sale!
West Virgl~&lt;a 's
11
Greates1 Nursery"
Beoutlful
Canadian
Hemlocks ,
Scarlet
M1ples, Sugar Maples,
Pin Oaks, Japanese and
Chinese Crabs, Green
Ash, Purple Plums,
Pink Dogwood, Brad·
ford Pear, Upnghl &amp;
Spre&lt;~dlng Evergreen•.
All nursery stock is pnc·
ed to sell. 25% oil Ra1ny
Day Purchases.
All sizes of llowenng
trees fill• ran teed to
bloom thiS Spring!
Designing &amp; Planting
Ser~lces,
Free
Estimates .• Nursery 1s
located 1 mile out
Charley's Creek l!oad
on lhe Jell between
Wesleyan
Camp
Ground. Only 13 m11es
from New Htgn. Mall .
Trailer load deliveries.
Scotto Bluegrass sod
available.
743·9996
'

tn°

GOOD CITY LOCATION- Cozy 3 BR ranch with
lull basement and largt!lenced lot, low util ities. On·
ly
$32,000,

GOOD SOIL
DELIVERED

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·

7220.

DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. K lttens

available now, cream and

IIIIIMI. .

Stoker and lump coal, call
446 1.408.

Pets for Sole

Real Estate

bluepoint Himalayans and
1 lilac slomese Call ~
3844 after 4 p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor outdoor facilities
Also AKC l!eg. Dober·
mans. Call .w. 7795

----

ROOM TO I!OAM - Thi s lovely br&lt;ck
ra nch off ers lots of g ood li vmg for your
growing fam&lt;ly 3 BR 's, 2'12 baths, large
k1tchen &amp; LR, fo r ma l dmmg rm, 2
f1replaces, WOOd burnmg stove, cent.
a1r, ga rag e, fu ll basement w1th fam1ly
rm , bar &amp; laundry. Located on approx.
2 acr es on State Route 554 between
Por ter &amp; Eno Pnced to sell at 159,500
INGALLS ROAD - Approx 73 acres.
25 A. Rac coon Creek bottom land,
balance pasture &amp; woods Old house &amp;
build ings
INCOME PI!OPERTY - R10 Grande, 4
mobile homes presen tly re nted, water ,
1
gas &amp; sewer ava ila ble
LAKE FOR SALE With approx 40
acr es v aca nt land . Ideal rec r ea tiOn pro
perty , loca ted tn Clay Twp near
Eur eka Ask 1ng $26,900.
GEORGES CI!EEK RD - Lot lor sale,
approx 1856 It frontage , co water,
su &lt;ta ble for bulldmg or mobile home

'
L·SHAPED RANCH - 3 BR, 3 baths,
large dining rm &amp; equ1pped k1tc hen, 22
ft LR , 44 It fam&lt; ly rm with WB
f1repla ce, r ec rm , sundeck &amp; garage .
Green Sc hool Di strict
JOHNS CREEK I!OAD Near
Mercervi ll e 8. Crown C1ly Mines, 1973
Duke Crown Royal mobile home .
l,f )(65, 2 BR , wood burn ing stove, flat
lolw&lt;lh wel l, barga&lt;n priced. Call about
th1s one
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE Sll
- Remodeled home includes 6 rms. and
bath,
carport,
stov e,
refrlg,
dishWasher, almost 2 acres of and prlc·
ed tor quick sale
MOTEL FOI! SALE - Located by State
Route 7 (Eastern Ave), 17 units, good
Income, Idea I Mom &amp; Pop oper all on,
large restaurant building included
(under lease&gt;. valuable reol estate.
Shown by aPoolntment

Bananas

3

LBS. FOR

$100

Tomatoes
VINE RIPE

Potatoes

BRIARFIATCH
KEN ·
NELS .
Boarding
and
grooming, AKC Gordon
Sellers, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call «6·4191 .
JUST opened·The Fish
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2101 Jet·
Iorson Ave , Pl. Pleasant,
675 2063. Teddy Bear Ham·
sters, S4 95, Love b~rds, lin·
ch·$12 95 to S18 99
AKC REG Toy Poodle
Call256 9301
AKC Reg. old english sheep
dog, stud service Call 388
9767 or 388·8835
AKC Cocker Spamel pups,
3 black, 2 parll colors Call
675-5726.

--· ........
J , , ..... . .

_ .,

61

-~~~···· · ·

Farm Equipmenl

John Deere 45 combine,
good condition $2,000. 304·
576-2179.
2 HORSE frailer, new floor,
good condition, 446·0183
GOOSENECK
trader
frame, tandum axle, 28 II
can be finisHed lor horse or
stock trailer, 446·0183.

$f;49

50 LBS.

150 ACI!E FARM - Has good barn, tobacco base,
t1mber and large pond, good locat1on
10021

Azaleas

49~

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367~228
Darvin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

$300&amp; UP

LB .

VEGETABLE PLANTS AND FLOWERS
Real Estate - General

25 Locust St.,

-I:B

REALTOR'

GaUipol~

63

JERSEY and Holstein m1lk
cow, lust fresh, will sell or
trade for calves of equal
value. Good milker . Call
446·1004

General

BMR 3:U - With some TLC this one could be a
showplace. 2800 sq fl l iving space on nearly six
acres. City schools

' be the ;udge on The value of lh&lt;S
BMR 339·F - You
older home and 30 acres near R10 Grande. Owner
must sell.

BMR 371 - Restricted building lot In city school
district. 0.64 of an acre. Call now.
1
BMR 375 - Brick ranch near HMC on nearly If• acre
lot. Includes l'h baths, modern k&lt;l., 3 BR's and
more. S39, 900.

ANY HOUR

Ron Canaday, Realtor Audrey Canaday Realtor 446·3636 Susan Gilliam Assoc. 245·5208
LOWER RIVER I!OAD - $49,900. Beaul!lul green
lawn surrounds this beauty! 3 BR , 2 full baths for·
ma l d1ning, familY rm, custom built cabl~ets,
m1croave oven, refrigerator, range, dishwasher,
disposal and snack bar make the k1tchen a dream
come true ! Spac 1ous formal 11v1ng rm Plush
carpel , harmonizing drapes. Very private patio
covered with outdoor carpe t. 2 car garage Garden
space already has slrawberry patch and rhubarb
Peoc h, apple, pear and plum trees. Nice r iver view
RIVER VIEW - $39,900 - Beautiful view Of the
Oh10 aM only a lew miles from Clly. Immaculate
brick ranch, fully carpeted, large eat·ln kitchen
• with double oven range, n1ce front oorch and patio,
blacktop drive, storage building. City schools JuSI
I&lt;Sted! ·
1S7 ACRES - 5109.900 - Cattle farm , approx. \10
acres pasture, fenced Good barn other out·
building~, tobacco base. Comfortable '2 story farm
home 4 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, 6 miles from
Ga llipolis. City schools, 600' road frontage on
blacktop road.
FARM -$64,900 - Slxmlles,from RloGrMde . Nice
3 BR frame home has vinyl S&lt;dlng, 2 baths, full base·
ment, 2 car garage, 40 acres, mostly timer. 2.025 lb .
·
tobacco base. Great family home .
FOURTEEN ACRES - 121,000 - Just minutes
from town. Gently rolling land has excellent
building sites Rural water available. l&lt;yger
Creek schools.
IN CITY - 530,000 - Moneymaker! Two story
frame hos one 5 room apt. and one 4 room opt
Also 4 rm and bath cottage,
·
IN CITY - 126,000 - Home plus Income. 3 BR
frame home plus 3 room and bath garage apt
G~e~_tway to_get started with rental property.
·

THREE NEW HOMES
DESIGNED WITH YOUR FAMILY
· IN.MIND!
•Green Acres Subdivision
•Three Bedrooms
•2 Full Baths
•Heat Pump, Cen. Air
•Energy Saving Construction
•Equipped Ki ellen
•Finished Ga age
•Full Basemen
•City Schools
•You Choose Carpet Colors
•FHA/VA and Convention Financing
• Priced From $56,000
·

BMR 310-F - Excellent farm or commercial pro·
perty. 100 acres more or less. Located near Rodney.
Owner will consider financing lor qualified buyer-,•
No buildings
BMR 312 - Frame ranc~ wtth tour BR's and a lull
basement located on Route 7 north of Cheshire . This
,.me Is priced well below replacement cost Call

now.

BMR 313 - Rent It or live In It, either way It' s a
great Investment. Prlced at only $15,900. Located on
Mill Creek Rd.
BMR * - Quiet country home on '1:1 acre lot. In·
eludes 20x20 born with loll and partial ba5ement
You will en lOY this one $29,900
BMR 311 - Well cared for home close to town. 1n
eludes family room with fireplace, 3 BR ' s, Jiving
rm., and more. On flat lot. 539.900.
BMR 319 - We recently llsled this very fine four
bedrGOm ,.me In Green Township, You should be
among the llnttaseethls one If you like QUality . In ·
eludes 2 lult balhs, loads of storage.-you will love the
kttctltn. Colt for complete details.

•
SAVE 12.0001- OWner hn cut lhe price on this

IMII1Jt- Two story home tn Galtlpolls. priced to
selt 11 onty $29,900. Call lor delolls.

excellent home from 1!15,500 to a low 133,5001
On QUiet street In city . Large private, fenced
back yard. Easy core vinyl lldlng, hardwood
floors, beautiful plush carpet In living room.
Eot·ln ~lichen . 21g bedrooms, carport, storage
bldg.
•
'

BMII :192 - Now Is your chance to Jive In town for
1111 lhon a.o,ooo Three bedroom home near
G.A.H,S.

..

NEIGHBORHOOD IIOAD 114,100 - 2 BR
frame with vinyl siding lust outside city . Lorgt
lot with garden spoce.

paJoosa's. Weanl!ngs to
aged stallions. Mares, wet,
rebred, geldings, top blood
lines, horses from show

d&lt;ll on No rust
992 73 12

1971 Chevy truck for sale
$350 00 Has no motor but
has good transmiSSIOn. See
at 245 Mul berry Avenue,
Pomeroy

2 HOGS · 5 mos old . 25
roosters, 2 drakes, $100
Call446·2971 .

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

_.

._

1977 JEEP WAGONIOER ,

1978 Dodge truck 17.200 00
742 2025

professionally tra•ned .
Priced for tmmedtate
dispersal Phone 614-667
3.405or614 286 2571 ,

. _._

TOPPER for small truck , 6
fl. bed, lights, &lt;nsulated ,
paneled, exc cond , call
256 1420

~

Autos for Sale

1977 PONTIAC Grand Prix,
PS, PB, AC, AM 8 track,
bucket seats, 36,000 miles,
exc. cond. S4, 195. 446·4963
daylil]le, 446·9717 evenings.

1975 SILVERADO
Exc
cond , new l~res, $1650 1971
Jeep Wagoneer, $975 1970
Ford Tormo, good cond ,
$650 Call446 3709

1979 CORVETTE · L·82
engine, fully equ1pped. Call
675·1724.

73

~=========-r::-:::::::;::::::~:::::-j

$995

1974 PONTIAC GRAND
AM · 1800 Call367 0691
1976
CHEVY
Mal&lt;bU
wagon Call367 0581
1980 AMC Sp1r11 G T
4
spd , 6 cyl , 20.000 m&lt;Jes,
$4200 . Call 367·0500 or 367
7525.

Vans&amp;4WO

1978 Ford Br onco, 31,000

1979 CAMARO · Z28 , 4 spd., 1
exc cond , 13,000 miles
Autos far Sale
71
Autos for Sal e
71
Call614 286·3607
1979 MERCURY Zepher, Z 1976 Chrys ler Cordoba, all
7, 4 cyl., low m&lt;leage, power, only 22.000 m11es
1972 GREMLIN
runs
gorgeous car. Call 682-7544. $1600 oo Pho ne 949 2145
good , $450 Caii.W.·7817

1974 MAZDA Car

1211 .
42,000 miles, air, PS, PB ,

horses

str~ng,

$2600 00

198ll JEEP CJ ·5, 6·cyl., 4·
spd , exc cond., call 446·

197 4 D odge,
p owe r
steen ng, power brakes , a1r
cond1t10n1 ng, r adto , 318
engme, uses no ot l, m ex
ce ll e nt
co nd 1t o n
m ec h a nt ca II y,
1nte nor
ver y good cond•hon Body
1978 Fa1rmont stat1on needs some work Book
wagon
AM FM e&lt;ght pnce, $11 00 00 will sell for
tra ck. power steer1ng , $600 00 Leo nard Bass, 992
power brakes. a c 2995 00 5006
985 4175
-~-~----· -

74 MERCURY Comet, 302
V 8, a1r, good tires, clean,
76 Granada 6 cyl auto,
needs work, 446 3044.

1977 D&lt;plomat
742 2025

151 00 00

1973 SUPER B
75,000
miles, $1900. Call 367·0500
or 367·7525

1962 Comet 1980 Twm Star
Honda Color T V 992 3732

1975 MONZA S·spd , good
cond , cal1379 2468

1974 Pont1ac F1reb1r d 400
automat1 c Call anyt1me at
1·304 773 9170

72

Trucks lor Sale

1975 CHEVY Luv, $1 ,000
Call256 9369 or 256 6580
1971 CHEVY dump tru ck,
12 II. bed 427 eng exc
co nd , serllng due to death
Call 446·2938

rear window defogger,
power rear window, 4
wheel drive, exc. cond
Call388 9334afler 6pm .
MUST SELL, Make me an
offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl , 4
spd, low mileage, canvas
top, will trade, call4461211
or 446 3594
74

1975 KAWASAKI 500 · exc.
cond, $750 Call256 1962.
1972 HONDA CL350, good
cond, new tires and bat·
lery, 5425 Call245·5120
1980 SuZUk i GS250 motor
cvcle, new cond 1t1on w•th
only 1200 m11es 7~2 2184 or
742 31 54

1978 Honda 7505 Super
1977 Chevy Blazer 4 x 4 W1fh spor t Under 7,000 m11 es, m
low m11eage, needs some good cond1t1on $1500 00
body work 992 6114 after 4 Ph one 1 304 675 6550 or 675
1498
p m or992 2377 anyt1me

1975 DORSEY
Tr&lt; ax le
du mp tra &lt;ler, good cond ,
18500 Cal l 1477 1126
1980 JEEP CJ 7 Golden
Eagle for sale, Brownon
brown, only one owner, un·
der
coa ted ,
always
garaged, 8,000 miles, ex·
cel lent condlt1on, call 446·
7709.

ROBERTS BROTHER~
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecket

service. "Big or small" wp .
tow them alii 2332 eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
.w. 2445 or N lghl .446•
4792.
'
NEW BODY SHOP · now',
open. K &amp; K's Auto Sales;,
across from Southeastern
Equtpment, Kanauga. Call,.'
446 0342.
•
CAR CARE CENTER " ,
t1res, batteries, 2 miles
West of Gallipolis. St . Rl.,
588 , also eve hrs

Motorcycles

miles
c ustom
ter
6p m
$4,5001zed
949 Call
2324 at

1980 Chevv Le1sure van, a1r
condlt1on1ng,
capta1ns
cna1rs, couch makes 1nto a
bed, 1ce bo x, carpet
throughou t $13,000 00 Will
cons 1d er
l at e model
economy ca re w1th stan
dard tr ansm1SS10I1 as tra de
1n Ca ll Fn day Sunday 992
5147

Auto Jlepolr

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessor1es

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repa1r,
wre c ker service, buy
autom obiles, radiators and
battenes Call after 5, 446
7717
NEW REAR BUMPER l or
1977 Dodge Royal Monaco
Call446 7453

77
Auto Repatr
ALL SMALL gasol1 ne
motors repaired
Lawn
mowers, rota til lers, etc
Work
guaranteed
Prec1s 1on eng 1ne serv 1ce,
544 Upper R IVOr Rd ,
Gal liPOliS, call446 2096

78

Camping
Equ1pment

TR U CK
TOPPER,
fiberglas, w1th sl&lt;d&lt;ng win·
dow lor 6'1:1 fl. GMC or
Chevy lru~k, $325. Call388•
9334 alter~ p m.
2 USED 21 fl . Coachmen'
mmi homes, like new, well
equ 1pped , 1nquire at AppleC&lt;Iy Auto Sales, Rt 6 box'
42 , Jackson, OH 456.40 Tel
286 5700
APPLE CITY RV CEN
TER Will be cl osed unt1!
Apn l 1 Open April 1. 6
days a week. Complete
select ion of new and used
Coachmen Campers
Rt
35, Ja ckson, OH Ph. 614
286 5700
1969 Tru ck campe r
742 2025

$700

1969 CHAMP ION trailer,
good cond , call anyt ,me at
ter 2 30 367·7704
1972 13 FT. truck camper,
self conta1ned, gas stove
and oven, gas or elec
refngerator, sleeps 5, $895
Ca ll675 4357 afte r 5
1973 HONE Y · 10'1:1 II. truck
camper , se lf contamed , '
ca ll388 8738

Livestock

BMR 344 - ONner lransferred, musl sell this lovely
brick ranch, Is willing to help 11nance lor qualified
buyer.

446-3636

1977 Ford 150 Club Cab W&lt;th

power steering, power
brak es, excellent con-

77

12 h p Gravely 52 inch
r 1d 1ng mower
with
hydraulic
l ift
w1th
snowblade One and one
hall years old 949·2753

OFFICE SPACE for rent, downtown Just right lor
professional person

Ohio

25

Vano&amp;4W.D.

4 14,000 gallon tanks
located above gr ound at
Athens, Oh $3,000 each 1·
304 422 2781

BMR 390 - Mini farm near Gallipolis, includes
nearly 13 acres, 2 barns, poultry building, metal
storage building, detached garage, also a very com·
fortable home Owner will help finance qualified
buyer.

CANADAY
REALTY

diSpersal ,

regtstered quarter &amp; ap

73

Four 15,000 ga ll on tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Oh 1o $3,000 .00
each Phone1·304 422 2781.

BMI! 391 - Just in time for boa Ti ng season, we are
olfermg a 2 bedroom 50x10 mob&lt;le home w1th nver
frontage, located at the edge of town . $12,900

Ileal Estate - General

Complete

TrUCkSfor Siie--

12

INTEI!NATIONAL Cub
Cadet with mower, used 20
hrs Call 367 7A74

See Us For HUD Propert&lt;es
Equal Opportunity HOUSing

•1.00 Doz and Up

The Sunda

Livestock

G C. Call596·5417

Broker-Auctioneer
LIFE
REALTY
INSURANCE
428 Second Ave
Call446·0552 Anytime

NICE LOT - Good build&lt;ng site located In Rio
Grande, gas, sewer and water available
10054

63

71

St,SOO.

9SS Second Avenue
R1 ver lots for r en f Ca ll 992
5782 even1ngs

Misc. Merchanl,.

Two month spring special
tor upholstering furniture

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, $500 Sola,
c ha~r and loveseal, $275.
Sofas apd chairs priced
from $275 to $695 Tables, 2 MONTH Spnng Special
S38 and up to $109. H1de·a· for upholstermg furniture .
R1chard Mowrey
Sr.
beds.SJ-40 , queen size, $380
Recliners, $165 ., 5295 , owner, 675·4154
Lamps from $18. to $55. 5
pc dmettes from $79 , to GO·carl with McColluch
1365 7 pc , $149. and up
engine, $150 Call 675·4357
Wood tabl e and 4 chairs, alter 5
1199. Table, 6 c ha~rs, $350
and $375
Hutches, $300.
and $375 , maple or pme CENTRAL AIR con·
d1t1oner, comfort ltlr 36,000
f101s h. Bedroom suites
BTU, callaller4 446·4099
Bassett Oak, $595., Bassett
Cherry, $695.
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses, SWIMM ING
POOLS
$250 and up to $350 Cap· PR E · SEASON
SALE
lain's beds, $275 complete .$99900
IN STALLED!'
Baby beds, S89 Mattresses Above ground pool com·
or box springs, full or twtn, plelely mstalled starling at
$55 , firm , $65, and $75
$999 00 ' Pn ce includes
Queen sets, SIBS. 5 dr. pool, deck, fence, f1lter,
chests, $49. 4 dr chests, liner, and mstallat1on un
$42 . Bed frames, S20 and der normal ground con
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets, d&lt;I!Ons Free shop at home
S350, dmette cha&lt;rs $20
serv1ce. Ca lli 800·624 8511 .
and $25 . Tappan gas or
electm ranges, $285
USED
Ranges,
refngerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavl lle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon.
FOI! SALE
thru Fn ,, 9am 1o5pm, Sat
v, Int. 1n one of the
446 0322
fastest growing reta11
busmesses 1n the tn·
GOOD
USED
AP ·
state, Bo~e :214.
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges
Skaggs
Ap·
pl 1ances, 1918 Eastern
Ave , 446· 7398

sso

SLEE PING ROOM S for
r en t, Ga l!ta Hotel

46

Household Goods

1 COUCH 1 coffee table, 2
Call 446
USED FURN ITURE sofa end Tables,
and c ha1r, 36 1n gas cook 9476.
stove, used box springs
Corbin and Snyder Furn ,
54
Misc. Merchandise
955 Second Ave , 446 1171

Equal Hous1ng
Opportuntty
45

51

Household Goods

Housing

I

• YES t DO

NEW!

906A East StaleSt
Athens, Oh.
Ph 594·3543

A· l4 149 ACRE FARM
approx1mate ly 30 ac r es
t 1lable , 100 ac r es
pas tur e, 2 barns, tmpl e
ment shed, 7 room home
remod eled 5 yea r s ago
FrUit trees, m1ner al
nghts, loads of road
Jrontage PRI CE D TO
SELL

KI I XXI I I I I )

Space for Rent

46

SMALL apar tment. p refe r
man or woman 50 or older
Call446 1578

Jim Owen &amp; Co. Inc.
REALTOR

A·3 IN POMEROY 11
lots cons1s t1ng of ap
prox imately 3h acres
Poss1 ble owner fmanc
&lt;ng

Now arrange me c~rded let1ers to
form tl1e surpruse answer, as SUQ·
gested by !he above cartoon

(Answers Monday)

FURNISHED apt
near
HMC $2 10 Ul&lt;l!l!eS pa1d , 1
Bdr Adults 446 4416 after 7
pm

Real Estate - General

POMEROY
18
more or less, 1n
C1ty water and
Term s ava1lab le

(]

I

3 BEDROOM apartment 1n
R10 Grande, ca l1682 7056

3 RDOM lurn&lt;shed apt ,
downsTa irs, adults only ,
utilit1es paid, $195 mo ,
S60 depoSi t 94 Locust Call
446· 1340 or 446 3870

A· l
acre s,
town
sewer

~

I CYZAR
(J I

Two bedroom apartment,
2 BDR . mob1le home, fully
furn , a1r cond , adults furn 1shed or unfurn •shed,
1n Middl epo rt
$2 10 00
only Ca ll446 4110
Ul111t 1eS 1nCIUded No pets
Af tcr6p m ca ll992 7177
3 BEDROOM, bu11t m k1t
chen, cen tral a1r, 10
2 B DR apart ment, across
Kanauga, Oh10 446 9662
highway from Honda Shop
$200. mo. plus dep ca ll446
TRAILER for rent, elderly 9380.
couple or work1ng coup le
preferred
Also 1ra tler
space for rent at Ra ccoon 3 RM and bath, upsta~rs.
Tra11er Park on 141 Call clea n, dep. req No pets,
ul&lt; l turn . Ca11446 1519.
379·2469

44

54

Household GOOds-

Ohio-

Owner 675-4154.

tJ.............
.... ,......._I..... . ......)

Adults

only, no pets M&lt;dd leport
992 3874

For ren t newly remodeled
one bed r oom apartment 10
1970 BUDDY 2 bdr mob&lt;le
FurniSh ed
home, c1tv school d1str1ct Mid d lepor t
v.nth all Uli11fl es pa1 d
Rent, $175. per mo, water
$235 00 per month 992 3190
pa1d, reasonable sel lmg
pnce .
Land
contract
One bedroom apartm ent
available Call446 9313
furn 1shed 111 Mi dd lepor t
A •r conditiOned, uti11t1es
2 BDR mob&lt;le home on
pa•d $200 00 Per month M
Kerr· Bethel Rd , call 446
F fr om 8 3 ca ll992 5545
3101 alter 5

m1ddle aged couple. or ret
persons. 10 mm. from town
Jackson P1ke Call 446 9595
or 446·4063

51

lour ordtnary words

~-----

2 BDR . tra11er, w d, pre fer

byHenriAmoldandBoblee

Sl

Three bedroom house 742
2126.

deposit,

10, 1981

W.Va.

IMII :192- The house has recently been remodeled
lntldt and out, hn blsement, heal pump for vear
around comfOrt, five moblll home peds, 101101 fran·
t101 on Route 7 plus an equal amount on the Ohio
111-. Thtlantcouldblamoney maker, Coil now.

what lhl Dr. ordered. 7 Kl'll Of
fa~;~~~~-Di~
IIIDIIJte home. ~oil Of wood tor the
1111
Lit lhll one be your VICIIIon spot

IN TOWN LOCATION - Well kept 3
bedroom home
Some remodel tng,
large cheery k1tchen , liv1 ng room With
new carpet, new bathroom , new nat
gas furna ce, fro nt po'rc h and m ce stze
1750
lawn.

.!S;:~~~D::o-i

iiE'Eo?
Nothtng! 1 Th1s attract ive 3 BR ran ch
has 1t al l Fami ly room , recreat1on
room , 2112 baths, f~replace, profe s
sionally landscaped l awn and much
more C1ty school d1stnct . Gtve a call
today
N694

LOVELY TO THE EYE - Tree shaded
yard and mob1le home l4x7 0 W1t h ex
pa ndo, 2 large bedrooms , IIVIOQ room,
bath, d1n1ng r oom, n 1ce k itchen Front
and ba ck porches butlt 1n 2 out
bu 1ldmgs, approx 2 acr es of mce land
1752

FARMS

ACREAGE

RESIDENTIAL
ASSUME 91'2% LOAN - You'll be lm·
pressed w 1th the space and comfortale
atmosphere of this quality bHevel 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, family r oom, built·
1n kitchen, fireplace, natural gas
Garage . Above ground pool. Conven1ent
#708
location.
PRICE IS I!IGHT If you l1ke a m odern
home close to town with 5 acres f enced
m Home features 3 BR , DR , FR, lu ll
basement, large bUi lt in k1tchen ,
natural gas furna ce, new Circular
driveway, '1:1 mile from City lim i ts 1616
NO FINANCING WORI!IES - Owner
Is wlllmg to l!nance this home w1th
· reasonable down payment. 2 bedrooms,
bath, basement. Nice view of nver
$13,500.
#674
COUNTRY LIVING w it h fla ir In this
smartly decoraled 5 bedroom b l level
Formal dining, living room. k 1tchen
complete with appliances
Family
room, rec reat ion room, util ity area
Central air Electric heat Garage
Large lot City school distr ict
1620
MOVE IN AND RELAX - A frame
located in the quiet of the country
Modern 2 story, l'h ba f hs, shower, par
tlal bl!lsement, garden Nature and Its
beauty are here to enjoy A reasonable
price, only $26,500
I 725
CIRCLE THIS AD - Exciting new 3
bedroom home 3 mi les from HOSP&lt; Ial.
Excellent step saving floor plan,
fireplace. Drilled well. Just walt until
you see the msldel Priced with 3 acres.
Only one available at .this pra lce.
$43,500
I 707
NEW LISTING! STOP PAYING
RENT, BUY NOW! Need a home to
start bUIIdmg equttY! Put vour r ent
payment to work for you 2 bedrooms,
gas heat, alummum sid&lt;ng , Approx . 1
acre $23,000 .
734
STEP BACK INTO THE PAST In this
lovely older home, completely remodel·
ed for modern day Jiving S BR, FR,
DR , kll, 2 lull boths, new Ml gas fur ·
nace plus W.B F.P and 3 car garage A
lot of home and priced right.
1712
TOP OF THE LINE "- New briCk
ranch, 2016 sq . II Including 2 car
garage tocated on SR 141 near
centenary on 1.32 acres. 3 B R, heat
pump, central air, woodburner. In·
eludes a mobile home on back of lot .

'

Hit

LAND CONTI!ACT' - Raccoon Creek
properly. Act now and this beautifully
l•ndscaped hall acre lot and 3 B R home
con be yours. Reasonable down pay·
ment and Interest rale.
HlO
WNAT A WELCOME PLACE TO BEl
- ' Scenery IS IQP$. Large exciting home
close to hospital
Attra ctive 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, deluxe kitchen, lor·
mol dining room, lg. living room, full
basement, large polio, fenced yard, 2
acres
1713

FOR YOUR BOY AND HIS DOG - 115
acres range la nd, pine tr ees, sm all
cr eeks, wil dlife New log house bu 11t
from the farm
M odern , 3 BR ,
f1 r eplace, dec king , ch1cken house,
cell ar, wood shed, spnng deve lopment
water system, tobacco base
II 621
RIVERVIEW ACRES - Th1S char m1n g
br1ck r anch overlook1ng t he beaut1fu l
Oh1o R1ver can be purchased w1tn 2
ACRES or 25 ACRES 4 BR , 2'1' ba ths,
FR w1th t~r eplace and fu ll basement
Barn, tobacco base and approx 61f:z
acres of bottom la nd
H691
GOOD FAI!M FOR SALE - 115 acres
with one of the better farm homes 1n
Gallla County 2 barn s, silo, 5,000 lbs
tobacco base this year. 30 acr es tillable,
pa sture among the best. Please call for
more details
/1716 ·
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST Magnificent 41 acr e estate tu cked 1r:1
sedus1on Beau t1fu l home has 4 B R, 21J:z
baths, huge livmg room w1t h st.one
f1rep1ace, ma1ntenance free ex tenor ,
thermopane w1 ndows. approx 35x50
metal qaraqe w1t h con cret e floor 11 678
MINI FAI!M, but many amen &lt;l&lt;es go
lng w1th 11. Remodeled, Insulated 3 BR
modern hOme, over 7 acres land,
garage, metal barn, toba cco base over
1100 lbs. Pasture, wood lot, fenced 3
miles of Gall &lt;polls. May never buy lor
less $40,500
f 726

LOTS FOR SALE
BUILDING LOTS 15 to tal, all
underground sewer l ines Located off
Upper Rt. 7. $5,000 eac h.
1685
NEW LISTING - 3 Acres, m or e or less,
Rodney area City convenience, coun
try atmospher e Don't let thi s one get
away Call today
1697
LOOKING FOR A NICE LEVEL LOT7
We have al most an e~cre located 6 mil es

fr om town along State Highway Rural
water available and no r estr lct1 ons .
Call us today.
1736
WOODED LOTS - Kerr Bethel Road . 4
ac lot and 8 ac . lot Rural wat er
available Wil l consider land conlract
n•~

RESIDENTIAL
INCOME • LOCATION · CONVE·
NIENCE - Th&lt;S has everything . 2 BR
home, gas heat Concrete park ing In
back 2 car garage with 1 Br apartment
above, central heat. central air View of
the river .
·
1744

SlS,DOO -

Older ranch style home in
need of repa&lt;r Large lot Gorge. Shed
Located at Add ison.
731

*

ACREAGE - 5 acres, m ore or less, R1 o
Grande Exce llent build1 ng site Water
tal' Bu il d your new dream home th1s
spn ngl Call today •
N684
PRIME LOCATION - 10 acres, more
or less, 1ust off St. Rt 35 Beaut1fu l
bui ld 1ng s• te Plenty of trees Road
lead 1ng to property Call today Th •s
one won ' t l as t long
N710
COMMERCIAL LAND - 9 acr es, more
or less, w1th new 12x55 all eleclr 1c
mobil e home Loca ted on SR 35 150,000

N723

WEEKEND RETREAT - Get away
from 1t a ll on weeKends or bu dd your
own secluded home on this 31 acres su r
rounded by beaut1fu l pin e trees Add a
'I• pond and relax
N698
VACANT LAND - 66 acres, a large
porti on 1S new woven w1re fence Wa ter
available for cattle. Pasture, wood
land, approx 10 acres tilla ble. Harrison
Twp Fronts on Lmcoln Pike and Carter
Road . L &lt;shng pr~ce $25,000
H51

MOBILE

HOME~;

NEW LISTING - 3 acres, flat to ro ll
ing, some woods Large 2 1f:.~ car garage
perf ec t for that mac hine or welding
shop Al so 2 tr ailers L1ve in one and
rent the other Call Today l Owner
wants a fast sa le
N696
PI! ICE REDUCED BELOW COST - 2
BR r'noblle home , excellent cond1 ton,
ut&lt;l!ly room, all furniture 1ncluded C1ty
water , ci ty sewer. Natural gas heat,
budget $25 mo. Home and lot 1n
Ga ll&lt;pol!s. $15,000
1714
NE W LISTING - RAZOR SHOP! Ap
proM l ~ acres goes w.th th1s attract1ve
3 bedroom mob1 le home E xpando,
family room w1 th woodburner Garage
w ith shop for dad Close to North Gallia
H &lt;gh School
N740
A REAL COUNTI!Y SETTING sur
rounds th1s 2 year Old l4J&lt;64 m ob1le
home Th1s home has electnc heat, red
wood porch and many ext ra s All
Situa ted on one acre of land Priced to
sell at $1 3,000 .
K737

•

NEW LISTING - SPACIOU S m obil e
home, decorated beau t ifully , k1tchen
w 1t h formal din 1ng area, 2 n1 ce s1ze
bedrooms, l 1vll"'g room. family room
w &lt;th woodburner , 2 full baths Home
completely fu r nished, one acre of lawn,
patio and lovely surroundings
11742

INVESTM ENTS
MONEYMAKER FOR YOU I
Consider your Investment program
carefuly . Thts 2 umt is rented. Spacious
2 tory ·located in town includes 2 two
bedroom un&lt;ls, city water &amp; sewer Call
now
1713
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 4 unit
modern apartment buildtng w11h 2
bedrooms each, 1 bath 3 units with
natural gas hea t 1 all electn c. Al l
presently rented. pr iced to sell. Phone
tor complete dela&lt;IS
1735

I TOP

MOVE IN
CONDITION , w1t h
ma1ntenance free bnck extenor , 3
bedroom home, modern large ea t 1n k 1t
chen, ltvmg room · d1ntng area and 1
ca r attached garage. Thts 1s a good
ne ighborhood lor children
H83

PRICE REDUCED Pretty bm•
ranch, 3 BR , 1112 baths, sunny den, for·
mal OR , lg 2 car garage, ful l base·
ment S1tuated on one acre of lawn
Best yet, assu mable FHA loan at ll 1h%
1nterest w1th down pa yment
N705
A NATURAL BEAUTY - Move your
fam ily mto thi S beautiful cedar ra nch
w1th 3 4 bedroom s. k1t , formal dmmg
ara, 2 ful l baths, bay w1ndow 1n ltvmg
room , 2 car garage1 Loca ted 1n a pretty
coun try atmosphere
N6Q9
NEW ON THE MARKET , &gt;mmaculale
and decorated so pretty , frame ran ch
w1fh 3 bedrooms, main ba t h, llv 1ng
room, ea t In ki t chen , utd1 ty room , 1 car
garage , att1c storage, covered pat 10,
fenced ba ck yard and trees and shrubs
1728
CHARM AND LOCATION, plus a n1ce
in ground pool for t hose hot sum mer
days 3 BR home, 1 bath . ea t m k&lt;lchen,
1 car garage and a fu ll SIZe ba se ment.
Not far from c1t y 11m1fS Pnced in the
S.40' s
1 711
A LITTLE FAR OUT, bu t a pm e and
&lt;nleres! rale you can' t alford to pass up
A mce 2 story 8 room home Ce llar
house and 31!2 acr es located 1n Nationa l
Forest, a very pretty locatiOn Land
contract
N718
NOT THE LAST WORD IN STYLE but
located m a warm and tn endly VIllage
En 10Y th e comforts of m odern day ltv
1ng 1n th 1S older 3 BR hom e, w1th d1nmg
room , k1tchen , l1vmg room, ba th, car
port, plus a fron t oor ch
/1731
NEW LIST ING - 470 KATHY STREET
- Th 1S beaut1 fully mamta med 3 or 4
bedroom L shaped home has so m uch to
offer Ph baths , garage, natu r al gas
heat , central a1r, large flat l awn, plus
much more Pnced &lt;n t he $SO's
N724
NEW LISTING - A TOUCH OF CLASS
IS found in the 2 story V1cforlen style
home. 9 large rooms, bath , formal en
try. Beautiful woodwork . Full base·
ment. Garage Large yard A hom e you
must see to appreci ate . 549,500
1722
FINISH THIS ONE located on 5.97
acres. House size 30x51 II L iving room,
kitchen d&lt;nlng combination, fa irly well
f inished, 3 BR , bath , storm w indows
New asphalt shingled roof Owner oc·
CUP led $25,000.
I 642
NOfOOLINi It's a super deal for
someone. 3 bedroom home with bath.
Slluoted on 4 acres Barn. Smoke house,
wooded shed $24,000
1 621
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION - L
shape ranch with full basement and 2
car garage. 3 BR, 2'1o baths. EQUipped
kitc hen, d1ning room, natura l gas heat ,
Large ba ck yard Mamtenance free ex·
terlor
1741
LOVELY SMALL HOME just WO&lt;IIng
for you. Home has 2 bedrooms, main
bath, uti lity closet, storage closet, large
living room, kitchen w1th dining area,
covered pat io or carport, H1t car
gorogeand I lull acre of nice lawn 1743

�w.
w.

by l.ar:ry Wright

Business Services
*Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446·9539
*PhylliS Loveday, Phone 446·2230
*Eunice N1ehm , Phone446·1897
•Joan Boggs, Phone 446·l294
*Norma Lee K1nn ett, Phone 446-7121

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

JUST WAITING FOR
YOU
Lovely 3 bedroom bn ck
home m a very destred
locat•on close to
Ho lzer Hosp tta l Th• s
home has a forma l en
trance, a large ltvmg
room , a n tce larg e 1&lt;11
chen w 1th form al d tn.ng
area and ga r age Th1s
home tS s• tuated on a
la r ge wel l landsca ped
tot , wtth cha1n li nk fenc
ed tn bac k yard Also
nat gas heat and cen
tr a l atr

ANOTHER ATTRAC·
TIVE NEW HOME
8 room s, 4 bedr ooms,
lll:z baths, ga r age, step
saver k •tchen
l eve l
landscaped lot L arge
garden area More land
available w1th th1s new
hom e
Pr1c ed r eas
onable
1475

N488

REMODELEO!REMOOELEO•
Th1s 3 bedroom alummum Std1 ng house and barn stt
trng on 2 ac res more or less 1S located 10 Oh• o
Townshtp Pnced Sl 8,900 See by apporntment only '
N473
WANTED•!

I

A new owner to prov tde IOV tn g care for a 2 story
countr y home P 4 acres 5 m11es fr om Gal lipolis,
partia l basemen t, fue l oil F A furnac e, rural wa ter ,
Ga llipoliS c•ty school dJ stnct, garden space, fron
tagc on Ra ccoon Cr eek
N4S8
2 LOTS GRE EN ACRE S
Lo t #21, So dewalk , 75"x t48
Lot !123, Vacant 88 frontage by 148' dept Pr 1ced to
sell
Nl3Hl33
CHARMING TRI· LEVEL
1800 SQ FT. PLUS
Large I1 V1 ng room w •th f1replace, dm.ng r oom w1th
sl1dmg door s to a co ncrete pat1o, modern eat rn k1 t
chen, larg e recr ea t1 0n room on frrs t leve l Ut1l 1ty
room , 3 bedroom s W1 fh plent y oi closet space, 211:1
ba t hs, air cond •t•oned, storm doors and wmdows, 2
ca r li nt shed garage, leve l tot JOO'x300' lots mor e
Ca ll for 1nlo
N'46S
A HOM E TO BE ENVIED
(About one mile from Galltpol•s
on Lower R1ver Road)
Charm and splendor are yours m fh1 s sp•c and span
all brr ck, three bedroom, two and one half ba th
home W1fh large l•v mg r oom over look mg the Ohm
R•ver, fam•IY r oam w1th beam cerl1 ng and a
f ~re pl ace, Ftonda room , two car heated gar age w 1th
electr•c dnveway de tcer Many more ex tra s Call
for d~ l a11s
r¥47()
BRICK RA NCH
Three bearoom bn ck r anch W1fh1n wa lkmg di stance
to Hannan Trace sc hools Th1s home has a lar ge
back yard , some fru.t frees , built' " k•t chen and dm
1ng room, ca rport , f r ont and ba ck porch and 1S
reasonably pr~ced
N432
ENJOY • ENJOY!
Th1S sp1c and span 12'x60' 3 bedroom Academy
tra1ler A lso 3 outbulld•ngs stove, refr•gerator, all
goes on 61 ac re l ot for the low low pr 1ce of $12,900
Call and see today
#481
DON ' T FENCE ME IN
G1ve me land, lots of l and, 49 acres more or less w 1th
c lean 12' K70' mobile home, l ar ge barn, w1th 20 A
til lable, approx 3500 lbs toba cco base and pond,
Bonus 1Older 7 room house could be r em odeled goes
w1th the property L1ve •n one whil e you remod el th e
Other 1f YOU WISh Low 30s
#487
8 ACRES
Wtthm 10 m10 dnve to downtown Ga llipolis, C1ty
School System Has hookup for mob1 le home, Ga ll 1a
Rural Water , electnc and septr c tank, n1te ligh t on
pole 700 f t frontage on Gr aha m Sc hool Rd Timber
Buoldong soles CALL NOW
1477
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Va can t lots, ntce SIZe build•ng lot s With all uf ili liCS
th er e Lot s1ze 101 8 by 171 2 Befter get um now
1456

wow••

Look what you ca n get on a land cont r ac t at 9% 1n
teres t Owner r educed the pn ce $7 ,900 and 1S anx
10us to se ll lh•s three bed r oo m spotless, a• r co nd•
t1oned home has 2 baths, l•vmg room , ea t 1n ki tchen,
laundr y room and sew.ng room Metal storage
bu 1d10g, heated garage, all furn.ture •ncluded
E verythn g you need m one pur chase In ctty school
d 1stn ct
N4 07
37 ACRES MOR E OR LESS
Concrete block 24'x l 20' barn w 1th metal roof and
concr ete floor , I year old N 1ce pond, some fencmg
A ll 37 ac r es level to rolling and all cleared Pnced
ontv $37,500
#476
IN VEST IN HAPPINESS
6 acres more or less level to roll1ng la nd w1th some
p.ne trees w1th.n appro)( . 2•;., m•l es of Holzer
hosp1tal One s1de of proper ty borders on a small
creek w1th appro~&lt;. 200' fr ontage Block basement
home w1th br• ck fac mg metudes 2 bedroom s, I1V1ng
room , k1tchen w1th built m ca bme ts, ba th and
fir eplace All paneled and ca rpe ted l'h car garage
A ll lh1s resu lts '" affo rda ble cozy ll vtng A lso land
developmenf a poss•blltty Make t h1s your ne)(t Real
E state buy
1474
ONL Y 11,700 .00
Wooded lot , al most an acr e, 200' of road frontage
su .tab le for deve lopment or ca mp1ng lot on Oav1d
Road Ca ll for deta ol s
#438
39 ACRES M . OR L .
Secluded, cozy block home w1 t h 3 bedrooms, llv1ng
room , d10.ng room , eat m k•tchen, good w ell, large
Tobacco barn. 2 outbu1dongs Approx 10SO lb s lobac
co base, located on a sta te highway Get more for
your money when vou buy th1 s property Ca ll today
MUfl

DUTCH COLONIAL
Style, beauty, charm, comfort - all desc nbes th1 s
home, 4 BR , 2% baths, equ1pped eat· m k 1tchen,
ly room w•th ftreplace, formal llvmg and d1n·
r oom YOu won t be l1e11e th 1s home unless you
1t for yourself Make your appotntment today to
lh&lt;&gt;mesmto th e entrance of one of the most lovely
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tn t he ar ea
N322
90 ACRES PLUL S 2 YEAR OLD HOME
room s, J bedrooms, l1v1 ng r oom, dmmg room with
k1 fchen 6' x24' sundeck on s1de, 8'x8'
l s,un•deck 1n front. 12'x20' basement N oce barn t ype
storage build1ng Aprox 69 acres
&gt;~ •t u re . some lar ge ftmber All m 1neral rtghts go
sell house and 21f2 acr es or 89 acres of vaca nt
Call for de la1ts
1462
CITY SCHOOLS
J bedroom r anch sty le home, large ea t 10 k1tchen
plus d~nlng area Spac1ous 11v1ng room . owner m ust
sell Pnced drasllcatly low Low 30s
·
1482
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST
84 Acres More dr less (Free Nat GasJ
Step Into one of the cleanest farms on an Ideal toea ·
t lon Three good s1zed bedrooms, large hv1ng room,
sunny ea t· tn kitchen and bath Tobacco base, g~s
lease and free gas all yoes w1th '' Large barn,
cellar house and chic ken hou se Call toda y for manv
more ex tr as .
1483
1ACRE2BEDROOMCOTTAGE
Nice comfortable home w ith nice large shade trees ,
concrete front porch, lots of frOit trees (apple,
ch erry, plum and peach) Grape arbor, raspberry
v ines Good garden tand, all level. tn Gree~ Twp.
Rural wa ter 2 car garage, fuel oil F . A . furna ce.
Basement, barn approx 16' X24' Priced In the 20S
1

"N6W AD DAILY"

m

5.8 ACRES ranch, 4 tiedrooms, for
maii1V1 ng room anddm·
tng room, large k1tchen,
full basement, 2 car
garage .Ba rn and a •
workshop Owner Wtll
help f.nan ce TO% mt
rat e•
CHERRY RIDGE
RIO GRANDE POEM IN TREESacres of b reezy
mg ptnes and wo•odt.andtl
surrou nd
th1 s cap
t1vat• ng ce dar ranch
Formal en try , dmtng
and l1vtng room , 3
bedrooms, family room,
plank fl oonng , beamed
ce11i ngs Complete k1 T
chen, bea ut 1f ul so lid
wood cab 1nets, beame
ce ilin g,
2
w b
firep laces, full f1n1shed
basement, spac•ous r ec
room , w ood en deck
across back of home. 2
car garage Must see to
appr ec iate Shown by
appl on l y '
MOD ERN BI · LEVEL4 bedrooms, for mal l1 v
•ng
room
wb
firepla ce, modern k1t
chen and d tntng area, 2
fu ll baths
Spac1ous
fa m il y room , w.b
f~repl ace, 'h bath, util •ty
room and 2 car gar age
Gas heat centr aonJyi
Loa n assu mptiOn
AS TIME GOES ON You wil l be pay •
and more r ent
buy a home?
assu mpt1on.
onl y $387 00 '
taxes and lnSLora,nrPJOV:l%
1nt e r es t
bedroom ran ch, Ia
ea t m k1t chen,
room Hom e co mc11etelv
ca r peted
Very n1ce
S1ngle ca r garage Nor
thup ar ea Pn ced 1n the
40S
NEW RANCH HOME
Not compl etely fm 1
ed 13 bedr ooms, modE!rn l
equ opped ki t&lt;che,n.
bath
l ull
unlli111islhectl
basemen t Srngle
garage Pnced 1n the
40s

REAL ESTATE AGE
!Ice Wis eman, ltroker, 44i=l"', Evt

J•m coc l'lr~n , Assoc1ale. 44 ..7M1 , Eve

·...
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Quality But it
Ecanomtcally Priced

ARD
AVP,.TORS

a J Halnton!.Anoc , 4*4t~t. IYf,

Clyde Willltt, AUIX, 245 5276
Tom Holstein, Asoc , 3&amp;1· 9760

83

REESE BUILDINGS

PAINTING · tntenor and
exter ior Reasonabl e ra tes
Call 446 334.1

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PAINTING
Interior and
exter 1or , plumbtng ,
roofing, some r emodelmg
20 yrs exp Call 388 9652

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78

Campmg
Equ1pment

1977 BONANZA travel
traoler, 35ft long, a c , tip
out room New awn1ng,
del uxe 1ntenor, full bath,
call 388 8646

78

OWNERS
MAY
NOT
FINANCE! - But t here ts a grea t low
1nterest loan assu mpt1on For a few
thousand dollar s down you ca n take
over payments on th1s 2 yea r old home
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large I1V10g
1 room , fam1tv d 1n1ng area has w/ b
firep lace, very ntce k1tchen, mter co m
system, central a1r and 2 ca r garage
Mol l Creek Rd c ,ty sc hools $56,900

Camping
Equopment

14 FT camp trailer, all
metal, fold ·down, 3·wav
refrigerator, sink, stove,
table, tiolet, awnmg, sleeps
$495 Call 388·9969

Real Estate - General

CENTRAL REALTY
NEW HOME on 1 acre Rt S54 1n Gallia Co Split en
Try , spac tous L R Ar chway 1nto format D.R K1t
chen eauoooed . 3 A R and ? ba t hs Carpeted
throughout, full basement Could have extr a B. R 's
or fam1ly room, ready for 3rd bath If needed
Garage and storage area All of th1s and more for
S62 ,000 Ca ll for appt to see
BEAUT! FULLY LANDSCAPED and well cared for
- Just l1ke new Th1s mob1le home 1S wa1t1ng for the
same love and c are 1f IS used to. Many excellent
f eat ures : 2 B R ' s (one B.R 14' x 16"), eat 1n 14X16
k1tchen Covered la rge pat1o Barn ty pe outbUilding,
and much more and yours for only $22,000

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TIME FOR
DIP- Your famt·
ly wil t en 1oy the 18x36 tn ground pool as
well as the space lhtS attracltve bt·levet
affords 4 good SIZed bedrooms, 2'12
baths, equ tpped kitchen, dining, large
fam il y room w/ woodburner , 2 car
garage, central atr and over 1/:z acre
l enced law n 169,000

''''' "''

115,000 DOWN - REDUCED TO $40,000
- Owners an x1olJs to se ll and wil l help
1 qualified buy er Peacefu l country set
h ng tust a few m11es from town 3
bed r ooms, large llvmg room , drn10g
room , full basement w1th WOOd burner,
hot w ater gas heat, l arge ca rport 1
acre landsca ped yard Green Gra de
Schoo l

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&amp; Heatmg

W ATER
W ELLS
Domesflc and com merc.al,
pump sa les and serv1 ce
To m
L ew 1s
Dr lll1n g
Seasona l d1Scount on pum
ps 1 304 895 .3802 •or 1 304
895 3641

WOOD REALTY, INC.
Office 446-1066
Russell D. Wood-Realtor-Broker
Evenings 446·4618
Ken Morgan- Realtor-Broker
Eveninqs 446·0971

NEW LISTING Com forta ble 3
bedroom home 1n Ga tt ,potos, overtook
.ng the bea ut1fu l Oh1o R111er Fenced·m
ya rd, detached 2·ca r gar age, 2 1ots, cen
trall y located You must see to ap
prec•a te Call today' '

NEW LISTING - Adtacent to Tycoon
Lake, mob1le home w1th 112 acre l ot,
12 ' x20' butlt·on room wtth fireplace
Use for su mm er w eekends or l1ve vear
round Priced for $8,500.00

NEW LISTING - tn V1n1on, 50'x249'
lot, 2 bedrooms, for ced a1 r , fuel a ll fu r
nace Idea l starte r or ret~rement home
Proced $1S,OOO 00

SOB MAPLE DRIVE - Top quality
brick at a much prefer red address.
Many quality materia ls - birch t nm,
btrch paneling, oak floors, custom built
cab1nets, m ahogany, etc J k1ng s1zed
bedrooms, 2 baths. large firepla ce, for
"'at d ining, full basement, screened
backporch, nat . gas, cent. a~r , 2 ca r
garage and lovely landscaped lawn
$74,900 Must sell now 1

1165 ACRES - Producttve farm located
tu st 10 mtles west of Gallopol 1s on Rt
141 Approx. 50 acres crop, creek bot
tom, 65 ac pastur e, and 40 acres m
woodland . Frontage on Rt. 141 a nd Cord
Moll Road Good fe nce, 1800 lb tobacco
base, spn ngs, drtlled well (rural Water
avaolableJ. 40x60 ba r n w1th 16 x60 at
!ached shed . No home but several good
bu•ldmg sites

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$J/

Water Sewer E tectrtc
Gas Ltne·Dttches
Water Ltne Hook-ups
Sepltc Tanks
County Certofted
Roush Lane
Cheshore, Oh
Ph. 367·75&amp;0

SPRING IS HERE and fh1S 3 bedroom
home 1S yearning for you to com e see
how well i t ' s arranged Carpeted lg ltv
rm , 2 bedrms .• k1t, dm rm , ut ility
rm ., and bath down 1 tg bed rm up, '12
basemen t, nat gas heat You mav want
to consi der div iding 1 acre tot 1nto
smaller tots. Conven1enttv located on
Rt 160 Pri ced on the 60's
HEY t II vou ' relookongtor a home with
a beau t ifU l voew, th 1s 3 bedrm
carpeted, 1 vr . old home is toea ted
along Upper River Rd. tn the bend Of
the beautiful Ohio Kyger Creek School
Dis! , modern and w ell Insulated This
has lust been put on the market Look at
thiS and buy for 54.1 ,000 00
YOU WILL LIK E THIS carpeted 3
bedrm , modern ranch style home
located between Gallipolis and Rio
Grande . Attached garage, comfortabl e
yard PosSibility of assummg existing
9% land con trac t Priced In the 30's
INCOME PROPERTY - Downstairs
bustness locati on on Vine 51, upstairs 5
room apartment, w/ tub and shower;
also l room cottage tn rear. SJ8,SOO
11!% flnancmg available to qualified
buyer

oo

THE THREE MOST tmporlant tht ngs
to cons1der when buying real estate Is.
locat1on, loca t ion, loca t1on ' Th1s st ately
vrc torlan home Is comfortably located
on F~rst Avenue overlooking the Ohi o
R1ver 62'x 173' 10" corner lot woll let you
have ampl e access to vour property . 2
car garage off attev on r ear We ltke t his
one very mu ch and w e hope you do Call
for more mformat1on and a VI Sit to the
l"'roperty
GAS KEEPS GOING UP so why not
consider this 2 bedrm home across
from Pennyfare Grocery Sell your auto
and enlov the extra money ~ nd comfort
from ttvtng close to the shopptng, school
and enterta inment area . Thlnkmg of
ret~rlng some day Buy now, rent and
move 10 when you ' re ready .

vt NTON

- comfortable fram e cot·
tage, forced air furnace, village water,
a nice home for a ret tred couple Priced
for only $15,000.00
BUILDING LOT - 1 ~ere tot located
along Kemper Hollow Rd . Rural water
available. Price

u ,ooo.oo.

IN VINTON - Mobile home With 2 tots,
has carport and porch. 2 bedrooms. 2
baths This Is nice property and vou can
have It for S25,00 00.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Located along 2nd Ave In c1ty, 3 r en·
tats, all In good condition. Call for more
Information .

PERFECT LOCATION for small
YOU WILL ENJOY thiS cottage along busmess or remOdel and move into
the Oh10 R lver, 3 mi below Eureka, Located on the main corner tn Ew
easy drove to Huntington or Gallipolis. tngton, tot size, approx. 56'Xl70'. Buv
this property now for $20,000 00.
Priced for $18,500 00

WOOD REALTY, INC.
32 Locust St.
Gallipolis

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129,500 - Owner may help f inance
quat ofled buyer on thos large 2 story
home on Rt 160 4 bedrooms, large eat·
1n k1tchen, dming room, spacious living
room, msulaflon, elec heat, storage
area, uttii1V room and 84 acre flat treed 1
lawn ,

637 KRIST! DRIVE - O.Vners anxo ous
to sell thiS large bnck b1·levet i n one of
the area's better neighbor hoods In
etudes 4 bedrooms, 2112 full baths, famt
tv room w / f lr eptace, equipped kitchen.
15x15 master su1te with '12 bath 8o walk
in closet . Heat pump, central air, 2 car
garage p lus 24x24 above ground pool. A
ntce well planned home off Rt 36 70' s

HOME - 10 ACRES -139,500 - Near· 1
tv new 3 bedroom home with full base·
meQ1 Includes fam il y room, woodburn 1
tng furnace, oil furnace, 1'/:z bath,
detached 2 car garage, large barn and
10 acres Ju st listed 7 m i. from town.

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All types of root work,
new or repair gutters
•nd downspouts, gutter
cleamng and pa1nt1ng.
All work guaranteed.
Free Esttmates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949· 2862
949-2160
2 4·tfc

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ASSUMPTION- l ACRES You' ll love tho wooded 3 acre tot that
has a small pond as much as this
spacious 4 or $ bedroom brkk split. 2
w/b fireplaces, 2 full baths, extra large
family room, 2 neat p~mps, targe con
crete circular drtvt and priced at only
112,900. Cltv SChOOlS •

PARTS AND

II

1
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• l

V. C. YOUNG II

•Wntl trs

2 8 tf c

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

84

J IM ' S DEPENDABLE
water de livery. Call 256
9368 anyt ome

a'

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; tomestone for drovewaya.
Ca II for est1mates 367·7101

Electncal

&amp; R efngerat1on

DILLAROS
WATER
DELIVERY Service Cal l
446 7404

QUALITY COOli ng and
Heatmg Serv 1ce, call 388

Backhoe
Excavatmg
Septoc System s
Wa ter, Sewer &amp; Gas
L1nes
eOump T ruc k
LICensed &amp; Bonded

•R•nots

• Hot W•ter Tanh

... coin L•u nctrlu
..- Renlti.Properhes
HOIUt Owrwen

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Sozes
" From JbJO"
SMALL

s 6 1 mo.

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
Siding
Roofing &amp; Gutter
Remodeling
Serving Your Aru for
20 Yurs

EUGENE LONG
FrN Ellimltll
Call Collact
5-8·2 mo.

----------1

BUYING

sua &amp; GoLD
COlliS

112"

to 11P

For Sliver Dol,.rs
'

......

GLEIIN BISSELL
NOiulldltJC.111
$·1-11110.

10 7 tfc

Sizes from 4K6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

•Insulation
•Storm Doon
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph, 992-2772

992-5682

Utility Buildings

J&amp;R
.TRASH SERVICE

Rt. l , Box 54
RaciMe, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
6 15 tfc

78

Box 65, Portland, OH .
Ph. 143·4912
ss.oo Monthly
Servmg me followmg
townshtp s: Lebanon,
Sutton, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Salosbury, Bed·
ford , Chester, Salem,
Scipio, Rutland and
Harrtson

Camptng
Equipment

1977 30 ft
Cavalcade
Travel Traoter wtth roof,
atr condtton,ng, self co~
tamed, lots of extras. Call
Friday thru Sunday at 992·
5147 S6,!i00 00.
81

Home
Improvements

'

JIM MARCUM ROOfing ·
spouting and siding. 30
years exP*rlence . Free
eallmalta. Remodeling.
Call388-9857.

Stripping

and Refinishing
35 Court St.
Gall1pohs, Oh 10
Call 446·3896
or 446·3080

Rio Grande

REESE TRENCHING

RUSS ANO MAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Heat1ng &amp; A1r
condtt1on t ng
All
Types Insulation.
Electnca 1wmng.
Call
446 · 8S1S
or
446-0445 after 4 30 p.m .

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
• Water
• Gas
• Electric • Sewer
Lines 1nstalled,
Ph, 367-7560

ACROSS
1 Gold pro-

ducers

6 1nca rna11 0n
of V1shnu
10 Maralhon
14 Walks m
water

22 Sacred

1mage
23 Soften m
lemper
24 Sure
26 Clergymen

28 Dressmaker
29 Make a

m1slake
30 Dregs
32 Household

SM I1H NElSON
MOTORS INC.Ph

Pomeroy, OH
992-2174

57
11

Home

·ffc

33 Parts ol

sou thc.1ster n 1nsult1 tton
&amp; Canst. rypes· blow·
1ng, c elulose
Free
es t1m t1 t e.
Work
guManteed &amp; msured
Also home 1mpro11e·
m ent. O&lt;~v e H&lt;lg er &amp;
J"'Y Hancoc k, Owners
446·8605- 44&amp;·1637

gallery

40 Free ticket

plant
42 Sweetsop

Home Improvements
NU· Pr1me Replacement
W1ndows, Storm Wtn·
dows and Doors. Paho
Covers ,
Carports
Mob1le Home Ac
cessones .
Free
Estimates.
691 M•ller Dnve
446·2642

Spec1allzlng in Contrete
Roofing &amp; Remodeling
Home Improvements
EK!ertor &amp; lntertor
Vtnyl Stdtng and SOfftl
ReSidential and ~om·
mercial. Work Insured.
:167·0194 or 367·0427

~ft. LMPROVEMENTS

Bill'S

I

Storm windows &amp; doo rs
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
How met Pat10 Covers
How mot screen rooms
Mobllehomeawntngs
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive

18

135 Tvpeol
e:o:am
137 Tom D1ck

20Count

44

139 Ex1sl
140 Force
141 Oozes
143 At11tude
145 London
repast

80 Pamph le t

146 Strong

attract• ve

81 Openwor k

Iabrie
82 Long steps
84 Maneuver

troops
86 Dwell
87 Asyl um
89 Anger

9.2 Home-run
~mg

104 USMA
grad s
105 Bridge
106 Near
107 Parl ol a ql

sets

111 Charles -

Qf OUp

47

99 Passageways
101 Ermines
103 Prolrudmg
rock

W~reless

46 Ret•g•ous
Dreadful

48 D1neS

50 Dep ic t
52 Unruly ch1ld
55 Ent r ance
57 Compass

pi

58 DepresSion
59 Real estate
map
SO Ene's St
S2 Church
be nch

M Macaws
66 Fnsco sS t

ee Scale note

and Harry

75 Spantsh
e:o:porl s
77 Ra bbiJ s
rei at ve
78 Ringworm

l OB Soaks
1 tOStlkworm

lang

Gaulle
11 2Part of a
loot

113 Aroma
115 Three-toed
sloth
117 Performs

119 - a huff
120 Highway
121 Makmg

ready
124 Sound of a

course

ISO Cen am
marksmen
152 Anc1ent
Hebrew
ascet1c
153 Domest•cate
154 Wander
156 In shon
supply
157 l 1ke some
'IOices
158 P1tcher
159 Tease
160 Curved
lel ler s
DOWN

1 Symbols of
aulhonty
2 Ponugal
and Spam
3 Tell
4 Superlat ive
endmg

5 Fur bearmg

mammal
6 Delhi
money
Abbr

7 H1gh
mounta1 n

S lr~ct

pref1x
90 Schoolbook.

calones

9 1 Bar legal ly

23 Decays
25

92 Cleo s
nemes1s

3 1 Heaven ly
body

93 Reach
94 Arllf1caltan-:
guage
96 Ram s

Approach
27 W1ped Oul
28 L1ght ram
33 Agreement

36 An thr opolo
g•st Marga

current
148 Sponsors

sa Detest
89 Negative

17 Alt

ret 38 Paradtse

40 Shut up
&lt;11

Decree

43 Poruco m
old AI hen s
45 MediCtnal

plan t
46 Perta1n1ng

10 ol d age
47 Small
we1ght

49 Sh ore bird
51 Wnter
Ernest

52 EkpiOSIOf'IS
53 Quarrel
54 Pers1an laity
56 livmg on
prey
59 Gave
60 Cu i l he rmd
6 1 War god

63 Rambles
65 Ag 11e
67 H1gh In
muSIC
69 One of the
med•a lor
short

carbon
12 1 P1ece olfur :
122 Relat1ve of ,

125 Baggage
earners
126 Sullen

131 Fencing
pOS iliOn

132 Anon
133 Prong
134 Hind er
136 Camera pari ·

138 Fertile spo ts ~
140 Negate
•
14 1 ldenllcal

72 Walks

144 Keen

1 t Play p;:Hi s

74

unsteadily

Babylon•an
de1ty

12 Kmd ot
lettuce
76 G•ve - to
126 Vantsh as
13 Pnnt er s
me
•ce
measure
77 Conceals
t27 Ogle
14 Marr es
79 Likely
128 Gasped for
15 Moham.
83 Free of
breatt1
medan
65 Jumped
130 - ttte bill
name
66 Bellow
132 Allecrlon
16 Dinner
87 Vended
:-r.-r.-........,......,.,,.,.....

eOVERHEAD
GARAGE DOORS
eROOFING
e CONTINUOUS NO
LEAK GUTTERING
NITE

,,

·.

127 B1t of fluff
129 Plalform

142 Wea ther
word

fall

'

word
118 Ch1mney

70 Rhythm

'

r,

114 Swo rd
116 DIVISIOn

8 Clayey earth
9 Fl1 er
tO Ascended

~~~=:§Fr~"~·~~·~~~f~W:~.,~es~~~~~~~~~~
1::1~1

DAY

100 T1n symbol •
t02 Cease
105 Cha1r
•
109 Word wtlh ,;
tum or her •,
112 P1t
113 RuSSian Ctt y:

harmony
123 Begmmng o(
antdea

Thomp
son -

1112.

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Cart~~enter
work. panet •ng, ~oncrete,
lendlcaplng, 446·2717.

garment

97 Emerald Isle:

120 Tu rn back

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
44f·3915
No Answer 446-2042
.ll~odlern
stea,m ~~:~~~!~~~
carpet &amp; up
(insurance
• Scolchgua rd
eWalls, floors, wi11dowsll
• Water &amp;
damage
lndu51rlal
Com mereta!

I mprovemonts
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com ·
mercia! and resldenllat ,
free nttmetn. Call 256-

4 1 Flowerless

53 Romance

BILL' S

134 Plunge

mgred1en1
7 I Sandarac
lree
73 Prove

95 Compact

39 Fash•onable

C&amp;W
CONTRACTORS

70 Gndlock

98 Paddles

taughl

Frank Rose const. co,
Remodeling repair, new
construction, all types .
Free estimates, all work
fufly
guaranteed
Residential, commer·
~tat , tndustrtat and mtn·
ing,
work.
MSHA

133 Cash
drawer

peaches

37 London art

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING INC.
Bock hoe and dozer wor
by the job or by lh
hour. Also, licensed septoc tanks Installed.
Dump truck
Fre
esttmatres. Call 388·8623
or 446·94 9.

69 Slreetca r
Br1!1Sh st yle

34 T1t1 e of
respect
35 Where Ann a

shade

WindOWS

Radiator Spe~taltst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experlen~e

PAINTING
Residential
and commer~lal . Interior
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. FrN ntlmates. 17
yrs. exp. with references
call3ol7·nU or 3ol7-7160.

SOLUTION

SOUTHE RN SERVICE
CO
Heat1ng
mobile
home furnaces, e l ec tn c hot
water tank repa or Call of
f1 ce, 446 3008 n1g ht ,
emergencY no 367 7131

19 Demeaned
21 Certa1n

Nu· Prtme replacement

FrOm the Smaflest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator

2096.
· STANLEY STEEMER
CarP*! Cleaning
446·4208

DENNY

f:'

COMPLETE

RADIATOR
SERVICE

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamwav . Call 614·446·

BROTHER S UPHOLSTE·
RY , Gall 1polos, Oh oo, 256
1562, all work completelY
guaranteed

STANDARD
Plumblng·Heatmg
215 Third Ave , 446·37 82

Eu r opean

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transm•sston
Repair
Hrs. : Mon .· Fri.
9 a.m. -5:30p.m.

Farm Buildings

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Furn~ure

24H11l

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

ALL STEEL

appl •ances L awn mower
Nex t to State Highway
Garage o n Route 7, 985
382S

GENE PLA NT S
AND SONS
Plumb1n g He at~ng
A ~r
cond tf•onmg 300 Fourth
Av e Ph 446 1637.

gods

4 15 1 mo

Call
ex

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Ken Soles

5-6·1 mo.

PH. 992-7201

J ONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE, call 367·7471 Or
367 0591

87
Upholstery
SEW IN G
MACH I N E
TRISTATE
Repair s,
ser v 1c e,
a ll
UPHOLSTERY
SHOP
mak es !
992 2284
Th e
Fabnc Shop, Pom er oy 1163 Sec. Ave ., Gallipolis.
Auth OriZ ed S1 nger Sal es 446· 7833 or 446 1833
and Ser v•ce We sharpen
MASTERCRAFT UPHOL
SC ISSOrS
ST E RY SHOP
Com·
merc1a l and res1dent1al 32
ELWOO D
BOWER S
years expenence Call 444·
RE PAIR
Sweeper s
2301
or 446 4971
toast ers ~ron s, all small

DEWITT'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEAT IN G
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446·273S

D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
Home 1mprovements,
room additions, Std1ng,
electncal &amp; air cond1·
t1onmg, and insur•nce
cia 1m reports
Guaranteed work Fr ee
Est&gt;mate 446·3407

FREE ESTIMATES

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anvtime

•
•
•
•

e DIS POI •h
• D1 shw.shers

•Dr"terl

rI ~=========~

CHAIN LINK FENCE

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Call742-3195
or 992-7680

SERVICE

Inc Call698·8205
Seamless
gutter and door

INTERIOR and extenor
painting, Mark Wh ole, call
245 9561

992-6121 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

ALl. MAKES

II

LOWINTEREST - LANDCONTitACT
Builder want~ to sell now! Brand
new 3 bedroom hOme In a quit!
neighborhOOd. Over 1 acre yard, flmllv ,
room , large kitchen, 2 full bitliS. k1ng·
strld bedrooms, central air, 2 car
garage, Green Twp., city SChools.

Let George M1ller check
your present electn ca l
system
Res1dent1al
&amp;Commerc1al

Call Ken Young

~!STING

1
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322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

APPLIANCE SERVICE

II
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BAILEY'S SHOES

4 9 1 mo pd

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DOZER work Sm aiJtobf
specoalty 742 2753

7785

'

- Addonsand
remodel1ng
- Roof1ng and gutter
work
- Concrete wor k
- Ptumb1ng and
e1ectr1ca1 work
(Free EsttmatesJ

MILLER ELECTRI
SERVICE
For all of your wiring needs.

CONTINUOUS no·leak gut
tering, custom made at
your home
For f ree
est1mate call Advanced

Does you r house need a
face l1ff? or 1ust a l1t tte
makeup? Ca ll me &amp; I' ll
have 11 l ookmg young agam
.n no t•m e Wd l do all types
of 1nteno r work, panelmg,
ce 111ngs, fl oonng, etc, plu s
extenor work, pam1mg,
sh mgllng r oof s, work 01ng,
sh mglm f any SIZe and
shape 30 years ex pen ence
m carpetr y Referen ces
prov 1ded upon r equest 992
6293

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free s1dmg
es t1mates, 949· 2801 or
949·2860
No Sunday Calls
3 11 tf c

Effective 4-6-81
MON , thru SAT.
· 9 to 5
Closed Thursday

I

w.,

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BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NEW STORE HRS.

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125,000 - VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE
- 1112 story 3 bedroom home near Cam·
pus Has dtnmg room, full basement,
l arge porch, nat gas heat &amp; noce l arge
QUALITY CONSTRUCTED BRICK yard. Has been part1ally remodeled.
10 ACRES - This energy efftc lent Owners must sell.
1 home has 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths on 1st
fl oor area plus 1h bath m basement, 219 ACRES - NEAR GAGE - Over
equipped k1fc hen, dining room, oak 1300' paved road f rontage, 2 barns and 1
fl oors, carpeted, rec room 1n base productive crop and pasture land. Over
ment,
car garage, central a~r , rura l 1;, 1n wood s and some could be cleared
water plus 10 acr es (4 acres cropJ w1th for more pasture 1517 tobacco base.
I 2 sheds Located just off Rt lS near 4 Modern 4 bedroom home with full base· 1
men I and heat pump. Make us an offer.
IIanes $60' s.
$)5,500 - A niced 12x65 2 bedroom I
.35 ACRE FARM - $16,900 - Owners
mobile home situated on 2 acres wl1 wa nt fast sale 2 bedroom home 10 need
pond Owners want sold to settle
of some r epair 3S acres mostly hilly &amp;
estate. Near Rio Grande
woods COll i VISib le out your back door
1 C1ty schools .
•
$6,000 - 1972 14X65 3 bedroom Fleet·
wood. Has 3 bo""" 01 , 1'12 bath,
FAIRFIJ;LD • CENTENARY RD range &amp; reft sO\.. , a~r condi·
We have Just listed a lovely 3 bedroom
ttoner Must bL •t1oved. Make us an
bri ck home you would be proud to own
offer
Has fam ily room, woodburner, formal
dining, equipped eat· In kitchen, 2 baths,
111,900 - 10x50 older mobtle home tn
heal pump (SIIS avg.), 2 car garage, a nd
good cond1loon 2 bedroom , most fur·
over '12 acre yard with fence. 1 year
ntture &amp; a1r condtoner, 105x200 tot jn
Buyer Protection 70's
a good area near Tycoon Lake Ex· 1
BEST BUY EVER - $65,900 - You
cell en! summer retreat.
won 't even come close to replace this 40 ACRE FARM - REMODE(ED
home for such a tow price. OWner's HOME - This 1S a very scenic area
sacrifice Is your gain. Quality stone wtth tots of woods &amp; valleys Nearly 15
ranch overlooking Ohio River near acres crop, balance tn pasture &amp; woods,
town. Offers 4 king sized bedrooms, 3 30x30 barn, corn cnb, 2400 tb tObacco
full baths, family room, stone firepla ce, base, orchard plus a nice 3 bedroom, 2
detached 2 car garage, 10&lt; 30 c overed story home Insulated throughout, new
stone patio, nat. gas, central air and wiring , eat· ln kitchen, electric heat,
what a view .
well and 2 springs There's stilt more.
BRAND NEW
- We are of
Call us for details. S39,SOO.
I
fer1ng a very nice brick home that IS $19,300- VA ACQUIRED PROPERTY
priced well below todav's construction -Equal Housing Opportunity , A nice 21
&lt;MIS This 3 bedroom home has a large or 3 bedroom hom e on Rt. U1 just out of
famtv room with a lovetv w/ b f ire place city lim its Full basement, nat. gas
surrounded bv several shelves, large neat, •12 acre
11v1ng and dining room, full basement 2 ACRES - RIO GRANDE - Nearly
with rec room , workshop and laundry
room . F A . nat. gas h@at a"d garage new 3 bedroo~"'"'N/full basement.
Leu than 2 miles from town off Rt. 144. 2 baths, largt c.O\.."J kitchen, dining
room, family"' · "'"· elec . heat. Very
$54,900
nice 2 acre vara.
91'4% ASSUMPTION - 2300 ,SQ . FT. Attractively designed 4 bedroom home 54,000 DOWN - . LOW INTEREST situated on large prtvatelake. Over660' OWner willing to ftnance a qualified
ltke frontage The home Includes a buyer Roomy 4 bedroom 1'h story I
large kitchen, format dining, fireplace, home on lower River Rd, Full base·
I 2 baths, 2 car garage, central air, 2 heat ment. Living room has w / b flrit~~lace,
pumps, and 2 acres In a quality large bedrooms and garage Priced to
I neighborhOOd . S80S
sell fall at 534,900

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NEW LISTING - Centrally loc ated for
res1denti al or commerc 1al use This
property presents many oppor tuniti es
for you Can be used for professiona l of
f1 ces, wtth park1ng, restdence w1th
busmess .n rea r , or residence onl y. 1
stor y bmk, 1. 424 sq. ft . Plu s full base
ment 2 wood burntng ftreptaces, qualt
tv buttt If vou are looking for profes
Slona l off1ces or a n1ce centrally located
home 1n GallipOlis, g1ve us a ca ll, we
wo ll be happy to show you

1ST TIME OFFERED FOR SALE Everyone's tal k tng about lhts spectal
brick hom e on a super tocatton on Rl.
568. A q ua t1ty 3 bedroom home with 2'
fireplaces, 2 f ull baths, large kitchen,
full basement with fam1ly and rec.
room, heat pumps, 2 car garage and a
lovely 1 acre lawn Convenient to
everything Call for DetailS 70s

ROOFING

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2,000 sq ft of hvmg area tncl udtng a
1 fu lly equ1pped kotchen, llv 1ng room
w/ tovely f1rep lace, forma l d1n1ng,
room , 3 full ceram 1c !tied baths, new
F .a. nat gas furnac e, centra l a ir plus
over V2 acre landscaped yard 121J•%
loan assumptoon. 175,000
·

•

lNG FOR A
BARGAIN .. ,Here tf tS'! • Owner anx
10us to move to Florida Pn ce reduced
from 60s to 50s Econom1ca l hot water
hea t, gas fired, woodburnmg fire pl ace,
3 bed r oo ms, full basement, garden
area, poss1bolotv of extra buil di ng lot, 2
car garage, electnc opener Don't walt
Ca ll to see th1s one today! •!

1011 2nd AVE. home Has
bedroom mam tenance
ftrep lace, fa m 1ly room, equipped kit
chen, d1 n1 ng, 1 1J~ baths, woodburner,
nat gas heat, central a~r, garage, ptus
fenced yard wtth a darling tree house
retreat Call to see fh 1s one S40s .

Roaches ,
B•rds,
Rodents, Spoder s, F leas,
Ants and other smal l m
sect co ntrol
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or 5 year term1te
guarantee
located m Gallipolis
Ph. 614·446-2801
3 27 1 mo

Vtnyl &amp; Aluminum
Sl Dl NG

H. L WRITESEL

~

OWNER TRANSFERRED TO FLA. - ~
Famtlywantstofollow Very anxious to
ESTABLISHED FLORIST Op sell th1s 1mmaculate brick &amp; alum.
por tun1ty knocks for you on th1s flonst ranch Includes 3 bedrooms, h.w . floors
and craft bust ness m a good sales l oc a carpeted, equopped kitchen, full base·
tion for Ga lha and Mason County In ment, family room, woodburner, F A,
ventory , bU1Id1ng a nd equ1pment , pl us 3 nat. gas heat ($29 budget), central air &amp; 1
r enta l mobile homes Owner wi ll con carport, city schools. $49,900
s1 der pa.rt1a1 fman c.ng at low mterest RIO GRANDE S ACRES 31
rates Call for deta ils and appotntment. bedr oo m home with a large Heattlator
f~r ep lace, carpet, large ki tchen and
OWNER HAS 2 HOMES - MUST SELL
bath,
660' road frontage on paved road,
- If you ' re lookmg for t hat special
brick home .n town then you m ust see Land lays real well witH several poplar
th iS quality 3 bed r oom ra nch Over tr ees, spnngs and 2 sheds UOs

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CARTER 'S PLUMB ING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and P1ne
Phone 446 3888 or 446·4477

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

8'12% LOAN ASSUMPTION - A dandy
of a home pnced at only $49,900. Attrac·
f•ve and spacious 3 bedroom ma1nt. free
home Equ1pped k1tchen, 2 full tiled
ba t hs, new carpe t, full basement has
loads of good storage area 1n addition to
fa mi lY room, rec room and fireplace,
ca rport and 2 acres Uavs very good)

~~ ~~~::;! ~

Plumbmg

82

15'12 ACRES and 2 B R home, 1 m tl e above
Reedsville Beaut1ful v• ew of nver Extra poSSibl e
bUil ding Sttes ASk1ng $27,000

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LIMES TONE, gravel and
sand All sizes At Richards
and Son, Upper River Rij.,
Ga ll lpOits, OhiO. Call ~

COMPLET E seve r 1n
st allat1on &amp; backhoe ser
V1ce for Ra c1ne Sy r acuse
sewer d1stnct Dozer wor k
1f needed 949 2293

ELECTR IC WORK
256 1748
1S y rs
penence

CLOSE TO TOWN on Rt 143, thiS mobole home on
1'1:1 acres offers 1fS own pond Home 1n like new con
d•t•on, carpeted and totally fur ni shed For only
$12,500

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancv Ja spers- A ssociate
PH . 843· 207S
Virgmia Hayman- A ssoc•ate
PH . 985-4197

DOZER work excavat tn g,
la nd clearing . Call 446·00S1

9698

W:~tW;'*t-::::r'"q -~~,_*-'....:q.; '~

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- D&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Home Wiring,
Restdentlal &amp; Camm•"
c1al.
:
L•censed Electr1cilnl .""
Guaranteed work
·•
446·3458

DOZER · backhoe, dum p
truck Call 446 4S37

WEATHERALL
CON
C RETE qualtiY and ser
vice, catt67S·1582.

-~ ~

Excavating

WAT ER WELL Drtllln g
and cleaning Pumps sold
and tnstalled, Call W T
Gr ant , 446·8508.

WOODSHOP
Cab1nets,
ptcnt~
tab les,
por ch
swings, mosl wood produ c
ts 101 Court 51., Gall lpoto s.
Call 446· 2572

HJ 50"- 20-JO"H . P .
60" - 25·60 H. P. ··
60" ~45 · 80 H. P.

PHONE 446-3643

Hom e
Improvements

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured bv
fjaffelt Brothers Custom
Carpet~. Free estl mates.
Call 446· 2107

WISEMAN

Bonnte Stutes· Realtor
446 4206
James Stutes, Assoc.
446· 288S

11

14 7 Pr~mary
color
148 An•mal s

foot

149 Capuchm

...•

~·

monk ey
15 1 Dance step

153 Tellur1um
symbol

t55 - St
Helens

~,

�Page-D-B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

~

May 10, 1?81

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

·No one hurt ·

®allipoli!) 1Jaiarp

in mishaps

ltttp5 ...
Bv J ..Samucl Pc~ps
GALLIPOLIS - Bertha, the older
Si says it's tryin ~ to be ""
sister ofDenverYoho, Rt. 3, Box 202, organization as big as the American
Gallipolis, had a suitor in 1900, when Legion or the VFW. Only one otber
she was 18 years of age, according to Anzio veteran Si knows of, that's
a letter from Denver. Denver's let- Harold Waugh of Gallipolis, GDC
ter is in actuality a carbon copy of an employee. He thinks there may be
epistle addressed to the Hillbilly, more in Gallia County; if there are,
SwrunersvUJe, W. Va. Handwritten, he'd like them to get in touch with
tbere's a note which reads that the him at 446-0439.
Hillbilly didn't print this, but it was
all right if Peeps printed it if we saw
THIRD GRADE elementary
fit. What Denver writes about is a students at Hannan Trace wrote Jet·
story told by Vesta Yoho Rollyson, ters to the editor concerning Our
Ironton, who tu: ned 94 years of age House museum under guidance of
last Dec. 6.
their teacher, Judy Sanders:

BERTHA BAKER married Bill
Baker of Ashland, Ky ., when her
parents disapproved of this other
guy. It was 1915. They moved to Ona,
W. Va., in 1932 to live with herfather
after the death that year of her
mother. Fellow named Clutts, who
owned the old Greenbottom postoffice building, found an old letter in
1933 when they were remodeling the
structure. It was addressed to Ber·
tha Yoho, Greenbottom, and it so
developed - after Clutts forwarded
it"to her at Ona -that the letter contained a proposal of marriage. Denver commented: "That is how Bertha received a proposal of marriage
from her 1900 lover 33 years after it
was written and 18 years after she
had married Bill Baker."
GREENBOTIOM is the name of
the home of Confederate Gen. Albert
G. Jenkins, and is only a short
distance form the former Greenbottom postoffice.
SILAS .HAMILTON, an investigator with the sheriff's department, recently returned from the
second annual Anzio Beachhead
veterans convention in Orlando,
Fla., April24-26.

LIBBY MONTGOMERY writes
that she "would like to help keep the
musuem (Our House) open but I
can't." She suggests a slogan,
~ 'Please save the musewn!''
HEATHER SWAIN has never seen
Our House, and "now I'll never get
the chance."
BRIGITIE BURD says that the
class was planning a field trip to Our
House museum ... but "now I cannot. I'm very sad about it ... I was
anxious to see the French soldier's

coat. ,,

LEECHONA CHAPMAN thinks
"it is awful to close the museum. So
please don't let them close it ... You
could go places and get money or
charge people a little money for

taxes."
SONY A CARDWELL wonders, if
they close the museum, how wlll
people see "the things that are important?"
LEN SHEETS avers that "Our
room would like the Our House
museum open so kids and people can
go and see the French soldier coat
and paintings."

ROYALTY - Amid an attracUve, colorful setting,
Renda Rucker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Rucker, and Rodney KeUer, son of Mr. alld Mrs. Roger
Keller, were crowned Eastern High School Junior-

Senior Pro~ queen and king Friday night In the high
school auditorium. They are members of this year's
graduating class.

Veterans Me morial
ADMISSIONS-Benjamin Fields,
Point Pleasant.
DISCHARGE8-George Moore,
Phyllis Harris, Myrl Roberts, Tara
Montgomery, Neal White.

.'

''

.

''
.Listings For May 10 - May 16

Will discuss tenant rights
POMEROY- The rights of tenan-

Heights.

'

ts and responsibilities of landlords lr~=::;;;;;;;::;;:;;:==~
will be discussed by representatives
of the Southeast Ohio Legal Services
at a worksh0P on Tuesday, May 12'
at 7 p.m. at the Corrununity Mental
Health Center.
Attorneys Jon Sowash.and Anne
Manley will talk about how to get a
security deposit refunded, what to
do about.a landlord who won't make
rena irs and about leases.
Manely and Sowash work in Meigs
and Gallia Counties. they have offices in Meigs County at the
Multipurpose Health Facility. The
workshop is being sponsored by the
Corrununity Mental Health Center as
one of the activities for May, Mental
Health Month. The program is free
and the public is invited.
It will be held in the Multipurpose
Room of the Corrununity Mental
Health Center in the Multipurpose
Health Facility located on Mulberry

TO DAY

3:00P.M.
Old Pomeroy Jr. H.S.
Grounds
Benefit : Meigs Co.
J

LAS VEGAS/HONOLUW
JULY 6·16 ................ Kathleen Pattc!n • Escort
OCTOBER 5·15 •.•.•••.••.• Dan McTurner • Escort
NOVEMBER 2·12 ............ Ava Duncan • Escort

4 ISLAND HAWAII
JUNE 13·27.....Clarence &amp; Garnet Pack • Escorts
OCTOBER 10·24.. ••••• ••• Marian Finnerty • Escort
NOVEMBER 7·21 •..••••••••• Ginny SmHh • EScort

~-

Emergency ('ails
POMEROY---Two runs were
made Friday by local emergency
units the Meigs County Emergency
Service reported.
At 12 ::i2 a.m. the Middleport
squad was called to City Limits for
Roy Boggs who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 11 :19 a.m. for Sarah
Congo who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

GAWPOLIS - Two minor traffic ,
accidenta in Gallta County were Investigated Friday by the GalllaMeigs Post of 'the Ohio Highway
PatroL
The patrol said a car driven by •
Bradley S. Abels, :lj), Gallipolis, was .
southbound on Woods Mill Rpad,
north of SR 55f in Springfield Twjl., '
at 4::/j) p.m. when he reportedly lost
control of the vehicle.
·
The car then went off the left side
of the road and overturned, caUBing ·
moderate damage and no injury to
the driver.
· Troopers reported a vehicle
driven by Todd E. Rothgeb, 16;
Cheshire, was northbound on Mill
Creek. Road at 10:45 p.m. when it
collided on a curve with a southbound vehicle driven by Carl E.
·Myers, 41, Rt.1, Gallipollir.
Both vehicles were moderately
damaged and there were no injuries
reported.

Cool, coloiful

and canvas.

GALLIPOUS

T~•Agenqr
Travel Services
*

360 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PH . 446-0699
TAOI34

C I11 ~[) !.J I~ IIo AQOIJ

•Navy
• Beige

THIS WEEK'S

$6495

,•· 1 ~ 711

-Ji£
! lt ShoeTheCafe

:mo Second Ave.
Lafa ydte :\!all
Gallipolis. 0.

ELBERFELD

Introducing

18HOUR®

....LY LOOI&lt;bras
by Playtex'

·Sterling Silver Finish, Dark Maple, vinyl Interior,
economical V-6, air conditioning, and much more!!!!

1980 CHEVY
'79 BUICK
CITAnON, 4 DR.
ELECTRA
LIMITED
HATCHBACK
White with contrasting
buckskin vinyl top and
interi or, fully equipped
with all convenience op·

tions. Excellent condi·
lion.

4 c yl., air cond., driven
only i6.127 miles, Gen·
eral Motors all new
front wheel drive. For
the economy minded.

~995

~795 .

1980 CHEVY
CAPRICE
CLASSIC

1980 PONnAC
GRAN PRIX

ONLY

Air
cond . ,
AMIFM!Stereo, rallye
wh'eels,

driven

only

14,609 miles. light blue,

very !itunnlng.

SPE~Ctal

1980 BUICK
CENTURY .

accent stripes,

1979 PONTIJ£
BONNEVIllE
COnditiOned,

.
air, power win·

4 dr.,
dows, driven only 16,127
miles.·expect the besl.

$5995

~695
1979 MERCURY

1980 OLDS
CUTlASS '

MMQUIS
2 dr .. hardtop, air cond.,
AM/FM/Tape,
wire
wheel covers. Driven
. only 12,127 miles. New
Regal lrode this week.
Sharp.

Supreme

al r,

cruise, '-"'"'"'

a lot more. unven
14,472 mites.
see this one.

$7495
12%
FINANCING
ON
NEW CARS
Two new beautifu l bras that are pretty enough for a bride, yet slUt give you the famous 18 Hour comfort and au~port.
New 18 Hour Lovely Look bras !rom Playtex . Not just for brides, but for all full-figured gala who '?"' pretty th ngs.
·
New 18 Hour Lovely Look bras are designed with delicate sheer accents, are cut gracl!lfully lower
pmvl~ a ~n...~more feminine looK. Plus they feature the famous 18 Hour fabric that stretches all around for real com ort an rd u.,......, •·
New tricot soft cup and Seamless underwlre bOth a¥allable In white. Tricot. sofl cup alsQ available for the first time In l*ge.
All styles offered In sires 348 through "200.
.
And now during our Speclallnlroctuc:torv Period, you can take advantage ole Money ,Back Guarantee Offer from Playttx.
'
(OIIor Ofld• July 15, 19111. See dl•play lor detaiiB.I
.
stop In today and try new Playto' t8 Hour Lo.ery Look btas-They're pnolty enough ror a brldllnd your

•net

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WITH
APPROVED
CREDIT

1979 TOYOTA
PICKUP
.

Long bed, 4 spd ,
driven only 24,325
m lies,
Pontiac
Bonnevi~l e

Trade

ln. Economy plus.

1975 FORD

MAVERICK
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one.

Hud10n portrays a famou s movie director and Suzanne Pleshette appears as ht s wife.
is also one of his sta rs. in the four-hOur mintseries THE STAR MAKER. on " NB C Monday
at the Movies.' May 11 and "' NBC Tuesday Night at the Movies.' ' May 12.

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