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                  <text>Sentinel

· Ohio

Sickouts continue in ·B elmont .County •
.

By Tbe Associated Pra•

BelmOnt County Sheriff Richard
D. 'Stobbs pla118 to Issue a statement
later today on the slckout being
.staged by deputies under the rank of
lieutenant.
·,
·
Other sickouts were still under
way ·iii the BelmOnt COunty community of Martilis Ferry and in the
communities · of Bellefootaine In
Logan COunty and Jackson in
Jackson County.
"The sheriff met with some of the
officers, members of the FOP
(Fraternal Order of Police), .last
night,'' a spokes~Dlin for the
Belmont County.sheriff said today.
"I'm hoping thBI'I! has been some
progress.'.'
The job action was ~ered when
Belmont County commlssioners
l'llfused to hil'll two employees of the
Comprehensive Employment
Training Act as summer
replacements. Since CETA fundlng
for the two deputies expired today,
the cornmlssloners said they can't
afford to pay them 26 weeks of
jobless compensation when they're
released later this sununer.
Stobbs said he tried to hire special
deputies to work as summer

.

'

'

'

'

School leaders s,ee •
fewer staff changes

.

'

replacements. But "they have' pl'lll- .refused to follow through on ·a
ty much ilidlcaled they're not promlle to "'"' more olflceri and
available," he said.
· purcbue new petrol can.
He got a slriillar reaponae {rom
Shrodes, the only law In lhla comsurrounding pollee departments. "I mUJiity of nearly 10,000, said hasn't
can't get anyone to work for me,'' he ·encountered' any major problems ao
said.
'far.
.
ComrnlsSioner Robert Olexo said
City. employees, Including pollee
he plans a meeting sometime today rlficers and flreflghteri, in lbe west
in an attempt to reach a compromise central Ohio community of Bellefonin the situation.
Iaine conUnued their aic:kout today.
A total of19 deputies al'l! involved
City Service-Safety Director Fred
in the sickout along with two Breweter lndlcaled the community
secretaries and a cook.
of about 12,000 Ia running liiiiiJOihiY,
"We're·just handling major calls, despltethes1Jd4enlllnesles.
and many of the routine complaints
"We're doing relllirkably well,''
are being handled over the Brewster said. "We ._ve outtelephone, or we'l'l! ~people to standing department heads. 'lbey're
come into the office,"· Stobbs said gOOd and !hey know their departThursday.
ments.
Stobbs said his office is reponslble
''We've got plenty of baCk-up perfor a 559-square-mi!e area and, if aonnel, 88 well as a few optl0118 I'd
needed, possibly could obtain help nither not dlacuss. And we've' got
from nearby communities In the coverage from the Logan COunty
event of an emergency.
sherifrs office."
The situation In Marlill8 Ferry
More than 70 members of the Ohio
remainli the same, with Police Chief Civil Service Employees Alaoelatlon
Uoyd Shrodes the only officer on are participating In the sickout, apduty.
parently staged over wage
Alll6 members of the police force negotiatioll8.
began caUing in sick Wednesday, apWilliam Westfall, president of the
parently because City Council local OCSEA chapter, said the city's
latest wage offer would put
municipal employees' salaries about
20 percent behind those of their
counterparts in nearby com·

muniUel.
· ' City Qfficllla have offered a 8 per- ,
. cent. piy u - lhla year. aild 5 . ·
percent next year. OCBEA alao
wanta · the city to negotiate ·
aepinltely with the aafety and serviceemployeea.
In lbe aouthem 'Ohio city of
Jacllaon, about 45 llllliTibeae of the
Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association contiliued asickout they
began 'i'hunday.

Congress should look at problems
that industry gets from other agencies, too, he said.
Mullan cited efforts to promote
use of the fluidized bed combustion
technology for cutUng pollution ln
coai·fired boilers.
"Ohio has a strenuous program
for using fluidized bed boilers, but
because of refusal of the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) to identify
them as pollution-control equipment, industry can't profit from industrial development funds,'' he
said. "This is a detriment to people
who want to convert to coal."
To take advantage of the growing
export market for coal, an adequate
transportation network is needed
and port facilities must be updated,
Walgren said.
"The locks and dams on the Ohio
River have deteriorated, creatilig
bottlenecks," he said. And East
Coast ports must be dredged to accommodate the new generation of
coal·hau!ing freighters.
''There is a tremendous amount of
work !D be done on the transportation system before we can
fully take advantage of the export
market," he said.
The bipartisan coalition is comprised of about 220 of the 435 House
members.

Tbe workel'll aay they're upHt at
not r:ecelvlng lick pay beneflta for ' ·
six da18 they,called In ill du!'lng the .
pUt t1l'll 'weeks. The worbn urged
City Council to begin nesotiaUODI
fat a new pacllo replace the current
one, which eJpires iii the fill. '!bey
also asked that city lawmakers.end
their consideration of contracting
with a private firm for garbage
collection and that the city drop a ,,
• lawsuit flied agaill8t the workers \
overlbeslckpay.
~
In the iaateBt development in the
dlapute, .the employees flied reducliorrof"JIIIY complaints with the
JackliOii Civil Service Commislon.
C!lalnl!an Don Buckjey said he
will try to hold a hearing 'on the malter aometlme nul week. .
li city spokesman said the job aC:. #,
lion haa not affected pollee and nre. ·.
protection,.
·
·~&lt;~

Market report
Athea~ Uvtskrl.SUn
Albl1y, Olllt
Moy . . ...

PKICES:
F'Mlt'r Steera: IGood lllll Choice ) 300-500 Jbs.
fo6.11Hf : ICI).700 '""· !Hl.lll.
Fa&gt;der Heifen : fGood and Choice) 310-500 lbs.
~.511-60 : ICI).700 lbs. ~ .11 .
F«&lt;ier BuiiJ: &lt;Good and OloicoJ 30»00 lbs.
&amp;+Q.50: ICI).700 lbs. 50.5NO.
Sl &lt;~ ug hlerBul ls : (Over I,OOOibl.) 4UO·S2.2~.
Slil ughlt'r CowJ : Utllitif! 40.25-U.AS; Cinnen1
and CUUtnJ 32-38. ~ .
Cuw ~md C. If Pttln : IBy lbe U11it ) -..&amp;30.
Veu l ~ : !Choice and Prime 186-&amp;1.
&amp; byCalvet: fBy the HeadJ52.50-9$,
HOG PRICES:
Hug.s: rNo. 1, Blrrowa and Gil\1 ) m.z.w lbe.
C ~ITI.E

41 .1~ . 25.

Butcher SOws 31-3U $.
Butcht!r Soan 32-39. •
Feeder PiiO: IBy the lleld I Hl.
SHEEP PRICES:
Slilughler I.A&amp;rnb!t ~7G .

William Mako, Rosemary Ma)lo to RlghtofWay,Salisbury.
Algin Brandeberry, parcela, Salem.
James Jackson Crisp, Teresa Ann
Bobby Joe Patterson_, Sheryl A. Crisp to Jack W. Crisp, Glenna R.
Patterson to Columbus and Southern Crisp, 1.03 acres, Salem.
Ohio Eiec. Co., Easement, Bedf9rd.
Clara E. Heines to Janet Sue
Robert Marcinko aka RobertS., Grueser,JodyGum, l.Ofacres, BedMary Marcinko, aka Mary Manne, ford.
·
·
to COlumbus and Southern Ohio
Clara A. Paulsen by Robert &lt;;.
Elec. CO., Easement, Orange.
Paulsen, Gdn. to Murphy Oil Co.,
Way Clark, Audrey Clark to Right of Way, Bedford.
COlumbus and Southern Ohio Elec. . Sally A. Calogar to William P.
Co., Easement, Orange.
Moffett, 7acres, Olive.
Wayne Brickles, Evelyn Brickles
Ernest L. Brewer, Mae Brewer to
to Columbus and Southern Ohio Deloris Jean Harrop, Parcel,
Electric CO., Easement, Orange.
Lebanon.
Kenna H. Bush, Kathy S. Bush to.- Robert D. Roberts, Nanga F. ·
COlumbus and Southern Ohio Elec. Roberts to Robert D. Roberts,
CO., Ease., Bedford.
Nonga F. Roberts, Lot 9, Wehe's
.Larry Plcke118 to Herald Oil and Add., Pomeroy.
GasCo. , Rig~~ ofWay,Sallsbury.
15 Easements, Tuppers PlainsMarvin L. Kelly, Burnalene M. Chester Water Dlst.
\

Deputi'es
probe thefts
I

Jack' Shinett, Rt. 1, Rutland, informed the sheriff's department that
two Honda motorcyclea had been
taken from his residence sometime
Wednesday night or Thursday mor·
Ring.
One cycle w88 found wrecked
today in the Shifiett driveway. The
other cycle mlasing Ia a Hands 250,
red and black in color.
James Borders, RD, Pomeroy,
reported that a Winchester lever action model150 rifle W88 taken from
his car while parked at the residence. The rifle W88 on the back seat
and is valued at
Ronald Rife, Albany, Salem Township, informed the sheriff's department that someone had dumped
three bags of trash on his farm.
The Vinton County Sheriff's
Department is attempUng to locate
two individuals wholle names appeared on recently pDIIImarked let·
ters.
, ·

sm.

. ,.

.

.Area n· eath

Sidney T. Russell

·'

staff 10 IDICII that-at one time, the · no jobs 111'8 available ~are illtllfled
statui ct the en~ coaching staff .with their praent politiCIIII.
In 1be Gallls County Local School
'GALLIPOIJS ~ Tlda llllbe time of ,uln limbo.
Dislrict
me head coacblng politlon .
year for cbiuige~ln the educational
Since that time, IIUIIe coaches
and jUBt a few claaBroom vacancl• .
profeaalon, but, unlike previOUB have heal rehired. ·
111111111181'1, no major mlgration ill
With lbe burden of property taxes exist. The coaching vacancy ill a
for1aeen In the GaJila.Meiga-Maaon bearing heavily on the shouldera of head bull:etball Job iii the Nc: lh' ·
Ill'S.
, . :·
the tupeyer, many~ levies Gallla attendance area. However, in ;'·
ofder to fill ~ poet, Supt. Gary :
Due ·to what appear&amp; to be a . havegonecknmthedraln.
S!ll'Plus Of ~chen and no abun- . Altbough voter .action now will Toothaluir is seekin&amp; a special '
dance of tea~ VIICBIICies, there hurt IIOille cummunltles In the edueatlon or English inBtructor.
Due to cutbacka In the diltrlcl'a ·
has 'been verr little movement.. future, it leelll8 to be the Only way
federal
fuudlng ($85,1100) two
among inltructol'llln achool S1111erJ18 John Q. Publlc has to express his opteachers
may
have 1o be abloriled in
tbroughout thole three counties.
poaitim to lUes which conUnue to
Becauae of flnanclal difficulties increalle, delplte an the promises the syetem. Adelaide Sanden, perthroughout the state, JIU!IIY school made previOUily by leglalators to sonnal supervisor for the dlllricl,
districts In Ohio have been forced to change various ways of financilig said tboee two teachers may be
placed in posts beJd by retiring
cutbl!ck their teachins and non- much needed services.
teachers
or in a split session incertificated pei'IIOIIIIel. In neigh·
Becauae levies have failed, school
volving
Vinton
Elementary School
boring Jackaon County, Ohio, both ; · cll$lcls In the state'~ big cities
students.
the Jackaoo and Wellston boards of ' · llhete IBBues have lost year iii and education are facing · money year out, ·have cut their teaching · Several teacher aides employed
problema which could )ead to major staff&amp;, thus creating an abundance through federal funds have already
been cut by the board.
budget cula. In recent months, the of applicants.
"We are luckY we've haven't hac).
J.ogan Board of Education; faced
However, locally, teachers apContinued on A-4
with financial difficulties cut Its parently are under the opinion that

•
tttttJ

SOLD - JIMi wm~em,, rtcbl, 111ns .,.Ole keys to lbe Pomeroy

(AP) - High electricity costs are one reason why the
Northeast and Midwest are losing industry, a coal industry spokesman
has told congressmen from states in
those areas.
"The real problem is the need (for
utilities) to get relief from oil
prices," said Joseph Mullan of the
National Coal Association. A large
percentage of the electricity in the
Northeast·Midwest region is
generated by oil-fired boilers.
"You 'II feel the results next year
when 30 (congressional) seats go to
the South and West," he told a Northeast· Midwest Congressional
Coalition seminar on the future of
coal Thursday. "Part of the way to
reduce that cost (of electricity ) is by
switching from oil to coal."
The coalition conducted seminars
on coal and energy problems as a
followup to hearings held over the
past two months in Boston, Pittsburgh, Sioux City, Iowa, and Stamford, Conn.
Rep. Doug Walgren. O.Pa., said
he hopes the coalition stsff will
pl'l!pare legislation aimed at ex·
pandlng the use of coal. But it's apparent there will be a battle in
Congress over whatever legislation
is developed, he said.
" There was no underlying
agreement (at the ' Pittsburgh
session) about a reasonable way to
go forward," Walgren said. "That
means it (the legislation) will have
to be worked out on an issue-by-issue
basis here in Congress.''
As in recent years, the fight will be
led by the environmentalists on one
side and the coal industry and labor
on the other.
"Environmentalists are sup·
portlve of expanded use of coal, but
believe it can be burned cleanly,"
said Blake Early of the Sierra Club.
According to Mullan, the government must ease the problems which
industry has getting permits from
the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy.

!

By DALE RO'l1IGEB, Jr. :
OVP Nm EdiiGr

COngressmen t 0 ld p
utilities need relief ~~~:_T!~r!!-:~ "· ?-?..=-~==::.;=.;
Buy .sea.rs St
. or.e
W~GTON

•

me

., , .

Patty and Greg Gibbs, Seventh
St., Middleport, have purchased the
Sears' Store at 1011 W. Main Sl,
Pomeroy, from Jack and Judy
Williams,Syracuse.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams have
operated the Pomeroy store for the
past two years and three months.
Mr. Williams will return to the field
of banking. They have expressed ap-•
preclationtotheircustomersforthe
period they have operated the .
business.
Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs have been in
the gi'ocery business over the past
few years lncludlng the ownership
and operation of Greg's Key Market
at New Haven, w. Va. Both will be
activeinthenewenterprise.
Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs indicate that

•

nt

·

Seeks •
restra1nt
order
•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A . .
southern Ohio hospital, trying to
dismiss one of its doctors since
Febn111ry, has asked that a federal
judge grant orders enjoining' and
restraining the physician's hospital
privileges.
The Veterans Memorial Hospital
of Pomeroy suspended Dr. Norman
J. Ehllnge~of Pomeroy on Feb. 6.
Hospital. officials blamed his
dismissal I. alleged negligence and
improper ~reatment of patients,

•

MeigS County happen1ngs. •

Sidney T. Rusaen, 74, former MiddleporttStMahomeyor, dled Thursday at his Veterans Memorial
crackdown against thoee n~ comGran ·
·
plying. Pamphlets dealing With new
Meigs COunty COronor Dr. R. R.
Admitled··Ellzabeth Stover, regulati0118 are available ,free of
Plckell8 said that death was due to Racine; James Smith, Albany; Dora charge at village hall.
self.lnfllcled gunshot wounds to the Smith, Pomeroy; Denny Smith,
I
chest.
Mason.
Emergency cal s
Mr. RusseU W88 born Sept. 29,1906
Discharged.. Millia Hysell
Three calls wel'll answered by
inBradbury,asonofthelateJohnS.I . Kalberine Weaver Herbert Gllke/
local
unit, Thursday, the Meigs
and Maids BoUn Russell. He was ','Debra HUt.
'
'
COunty
Emergency Medical Service
also preceded in death by his wife,
reports.
Donna Tuckerman RusseU In 1976, Receive complaints
At 10:38 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit
and a brother In Infancy.
Jainta
.
took
Robert Riffle from Route 7 to
Mr. Russell was employed as a · Nwnerous camp
are bemg
machinist with the Penn Central: ,received at Ponieroy Village Hallm .Velerall8 Memorial Hospital; the
Railroad for a nwnber of years HQ· Ireference to the operation of mopeds Racine Unit at 11:37 p.m. took
was a member of the MiddlePort •·~ in the town, PoUce Chief Harry Russell Tucker fr&lt;m Rowe Road to
Church of Christ and Middleport Ly0118 reports. Chief Lyons says that Veleall8 Memorial and the Rutland
Masonic Lodge 363 Free and Ac- 1 rules and regulatl0118 governing Unit at 5:32 p.m. took Dora Smith,
cepled MaiOilli. He formerly served ' must be obeyed and there will be a Hysell Run, to Vete1'8118 Memorial.
as a chief of the Middleport Fire
Deparbnent and over the years had
been an active member of the Middleport Emergency Squad.
Surviving are two daughters and
SORII-in-law, Myrna and Larry Lindsey, t1lornville; Ruth and Robert
Hayth, Wellston; two grandsons,
four granddaughters; two alllters
and brothers-in-law, Elizabeth and
Alfred Roush and Mlldred and
Continues through Saturday, June 6th, Many
Carroll Johnson, ail of Middleport.
savings in every department and at our
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday at lbe Rawling&amp;- Coat&amp;Warehouse on Mechanic Street. It pays to take
Biower Funeral Home with Mr.
advantage of the sales at Elberfelds.
. ·
Robert Melton offlc:iiiUng: aurtaJ
will be in Riverview Cemetery. ·
Friends may call at lbe funeral
home from 7 to 9 lhla evening.
'
Maaonlc rites will be conducted at
the funeral home at 7:~ this
evening.

ElBERFELD$
JUNE SALE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

TUISDA Y NIGHT .AT CtoW'S

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat! .

35 Cents

teasant

they will conUnue to offer the same
services at the Sears' store. They
will carry a complete Une of ·appliances for lmqlediate sale and
delivery and other orders will be
teletyped daily to Insure a three day
delivery on most merchandtse. The
store will be open from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
and Friday; fr&lt;m 9 a.m. to noon on
Thursday and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on Saturday. Aton free number, '/73.
9577, is offered to customers in
Mason County, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs have three
sons, Sean, nine; P. J ., eight, and
Anthony, three. Mr. Gibbs ill the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Jr.,
New Haven.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8

court~showed.

IUPPBllY WIIDI WET?- rtlidliillt i1111kaJt Ia

_ ...... ....., .... .,O.O..MIIp..tan.,llp

u.u.s.. ., • 1111 Jel

•

B•••~• Allnml a-t 1a
lid. ..." ..... daoqwol ap to tliree ....

"rala.

lllellr CJ•IIi ae• ptllll• ICIIDI' Ill__,

-......,tile lllf lip wu el lltlleca11e1111 to ....
de u llie palee waakl llilelial'dopillled to catdi blm.
(AP tat'! .....,.

.

.

Area roads closed by water
'

p()¥EROY-Due to the ba\&gt;y rain
in lbe ... leVWII hlglnraJII were
reported cl~ due to hlcb Wiler accordiDc to tbe lherllf'• depai buent
and lbe Poioeroy and Middleport
Pollee Deputmenta.
Water wu nparted to be on SR
I.S toward Hlrrlllonville; SR 124
tbe Rt. 7 Byp111; U. S. 13 at
Ililrirln and Burlingham; Forest
lUI Hold; a 11reet II) Rutland
Vlllace: Laurel aJfl Road and
m.bland aMirch Rolld.
.
In QIIJia Oaunty' Rt 104, Wilt of
Qlelblre, ~ by hiCh Wlfar

.....,.

Mluwldle, Alaodltad Praaa

Slillirdl1 ... w

bavy rainl

caused local flooding in the upper '
Ohio Valley. Serloul flooding a1ao
occumd in western .vu... witb
flub flOOd watdlea ~ ewer
mudi of lbe Ohio Valley and the
lower Mlp!Mjppt Valley.
'l'llnllnlorma eetended from the
Ohio Valley and the eutern Gulf
states the aoutbern Plains Jn.
1o New Jlalcoand Colarldo.
sa- and """"'ll«&lt;hhl thundershowers were ICIIttered from
western MGiilana to lbe northem
Paclflc:CouL
A small boy wu killed In Rapldel
Plrilh, LL, when be wu Qeptlnto
1 raJMwollen dralalct CIIIIL Tornedoel dlrnqed aeveral bulldlngs

at Loulslana College and Slocwn
Elementary School, both In
Pineville.
The body of Antonio Ray Jones, 7,
was pulled frcJm the drainage canal
in Aleaandrla, La., about three
houra after twllters lllruck.
At least 35 homes were evacuated
In two West Virginia counties, and
Oood ntchll were laued for half
lbe state early today.
Showers and thunderatorms continued over the aouthem Plains and
from the lower )llnt. .ppl Valley
the Allantlc Colli lllalel.
Rain lllo c:mllnued over western
Waahinglon.
MM other ueaa had IUIIDY lk!e1.

On Feb: r\, Ehlinger requested a
lernp4ftry' restrilning &lt;rder In
federal court In Colwnbus agaill8t
hill dlllml.lsal fr&lt;m the hospital,
whlch ns denied. In the origlnal
suit, U.S. Dl8tricl Judge John D.
Holschuh heard Ehlinger's
argument for the order against the
hospital, its chief of staff, Lewis D.
TeUe, and its administrator, Walter
Scott Lucas.
Three dsys later, Ehlinger filed
for it again in a state court in Meigs

County.
Hospital officlabl said Friday that
to avoid further court action,
lawyers for the plaintiff and defendant met In February at the Meigs
County Courthouse. Both sidm
agreed that the federal and state
court action would be suspended and
a board of review established to hear
claimll against Ehlinger, comprised
of two osteopaths and a medical doctor from Meigs County, court recor·
dsshowed.
The hearing was postponed by
Ebllnger, however. On March 20, his
COUIIIIei was given a choice to accept
ilnotber review date, u agreed in
the settlement, or go to court, court
records showed.
lbpltal officlala aald that since
Mardl20, !hey have given Ehlinger
several poulble hearing dates and
he has refused lhem ill.
· In FridaY'• request, the officials
s'ald Ehlinger's action was an at·
tempt to obtaili a bearing before a
hand-picked committee.

.

ReCall
mushrooms
in Mason
POINT

PLEAsANT -

A Mason

CaunlJ helltb alllclal illd Saturday

•CclmblutiDa Dlnn• On~

· - RaamOniJ
Strvtd with: Whipped
Pttttoes, Chicken Gravy,
Satl(l, Hot Roll, Butter and
Cofftt.
...,, Nt llllltnuttons, lxceltf levtra...
wfiiCIIIIIW II ........_.llll'lce.

e1111 of I'!MIIIIOCIIIIII aold at an
. . aton 11117 be pllt of a con......... """i"lnl bolldllm.
~ Slaally Barril aakl hill
clljMatmU wu IIIGiiiiid Jlaaday
fc
• c:a ct .... IIIII piecel
I
' ;t•nd bJ .....,... may
c h'n tilt pallali, wllkll can be

filii.

NEW AGENT - Dale Stoll, Atbeal Coanty, bu been Dallled Ole aew
Melgl Coanty Exteulon Ageal, bome Moaamlcs, replaclllg Djue Ellel'
II, w1la reeeatly reslped from tbe polltiGIL Mn. StoD received 11er
muter'1ilqne IIi bome ecoaomlca from Miami Ualvenlty. Sbe lerVed
88 lbe e..-.. qeat Ill ViDtoa Coanly frum 1m lo lt74. Mn. SleJill
)lnlldeDt of lbe Atlleaa Bruch Gf lbe Amerlcu Auocialloa of UaMnlty
Women. Her busbud, Bob, ill a researcll blologlat employed witb tbe
'*o Deplrlmeat ol Natural Resources at !be Waterloo Expertmeat
Slatloa. Mr. aod Mrs. Slollluive a soo, Natlum, 6.

Baker, Meese predict
additional tax cuts
-

PI II I "-llllliitlewuflnlllll' ulla
................. l!lu lip .... ,......, . . . . . .

.

to make a count of their likely IUJI'
porters.
Reagan announced Thlll'llday that
he was revising hts tax-cut plan, ,
reducing benefits promlled to •
business and raising those for ln. .
dlviduals in an effort to win blpar,
tisan support in Congress for a
three-year tax cut.
To win approval of the 25 percent
tax·rate cut in the House, where
Democrsts are the majority party,
the president needs the support of
the same conservative DemoCrats '
who helped him win approval lhil
spring of his budget ceiling.
,
Baker said that "bet11een 15 and
!l" were committed to the president
oo a tal vote. He aald that 10 to 12
were similarly committed · at tiD
stage In the budget process.
But, Balter said, "we think there
may be 10 to 15 Republicans we need
to ilo aome work on" to make IIUI'e
they don't vote against the •
llftlllidenl

WASHINGTON (APJ - President
Reagan will propoee a second taxcutting biD, after hla first Ia ell8cled,
and lt may Include prvvlsions to pel'
manenUy protect taxpayers from In·
flation-relaled tax increases, two
senior White House officials
diiiC.IIJied.
The meuure alao might Include
tax .crecu~ for families who pay
private achool tulUon, they said.
Praldentlal COIIIlleior Edwin
~ m and White House chief of
staff J - A. Baker W aiao told
reporters Friday tblt it Will too
early tp determine how the admlnllltntioll would fare with the
COillervaUve HoUle Democrats
whoue llqiPOI't .could be Cl1lcial to
winniiiC approvl1 of the president's
fint tal-ad~.
They indlcallcl they face a tougher
beWe than they did In wlnninc ap-

)II'VVII af the 11 Iktd'a propoeed

budpt ceiling, IIIII aakl they had yet

..

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June7. 1911

Times•Sentinel

· ')

~·-

•
~

. Of professors, pollticians .and college
.

WASHINGTON- For a moment
or two, brOthers and sisters, let us
pray together over the rights of men,
1\lld more specifically over the rights
of pt'(lfessors, politicians and college
presidents. Let us briefly examine
such grand themes as democratic
government and academic freedom.
And let us contemplate the case d
Bertell Ollman.
This is a splendid intellectual
exercise. To begin at the beginning:
In the fall of 1977, a search com·
mittee at the University of Maryland
set out to find a new chairman for
the Department of Politics and
Government. Some months later the
committee chose Professor Oliman
of New York University. The unlver·
sity's provist provisionally' offered
him the job and recorrunended to the
university's then-president, Dr.
Wilson Homer Elkins, that

~~

Those are the bare bones of the
.tory. To flesh them out: ProfeBBOr
Ollman is a dyed-in-tfle.denim
Marxist. His academic credentials
(Wisconsin and Oxford) are 1mo
peccable; he has taught not only at
N.Y.U. but also at Chicago and
Columbia. In an essay published in
1978, he candidly proclaimed his own

A Division of

ts:mlitl ,..,..,_,,_~, ,....,., c:::~.""'
~v

825 Third Ave., GaUlpolls, Ohio

lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) !192-2156

(614)44~2342

ROBERT L. WINGETI

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

.

.

Professor Ollman be hired.
Dr. Elkins, manifestly unhappy
with the choice, bucked a · ftnal
decision to his irnmedlate successor,
Dr. John S. Toll: A noiay roW erupted. After a few weeks ol review and
consultation, Dr. Toll .-ejected the
nominaiton. Whereupon Professor
Ollman filed suit In U. S. Disbict
Court in Baltimore, demanding that
he be hited. The suit has gone to trial
before Judge Alexander Harvey II.
We should have a decision soon.

Assistant Publisher-Controller

AMEMBER of TIM:! Auoeia&amp;fd Prns, Inland Dally Prell Auuclation aad lhe A.merkaa
Nrwlpiptr Pllbll1hcn A11tdi1Jou.
I.ETTERS OF OPINION art wl!lcom~. Thry 11hoold be IH1lhan lOt wordlllooJ. All
lrnt!n~ art Nubjel'l kl tdllllllt aDd nu1111 1M! H
lgntd with umc, addre111 and lelepboae
numbtor. Ntl un.~lKned let&amp;mi will be published. Letten; 11hoold bt In good ta1te, addmsln&amp;
lllllDeti, Dt ll pcrHilJIIIIUa.

DaaiDI tile Pll!l-.1 neb we ..,....!i," ~ 111inloimed
hawbadaeoodll.ltb,.,.npof . llplniGn, II bOt lbe lndb. 'nlat wbicb
.Qlllnllllllta oar 'lailtcl to the ld1tDr' · _ , . rnm tbe con111et l*ii1111a
lldlclft llftbe edltArtal PIP·
......and 1t1 JIIIU.Ibeiallllthe .lhlff
Two toplca have Prbnarllr of wblcb the. llevelopinent · anc!
dailll11ated: lbe 1ta1e of e11111101m..t growth of ideas II made. · ·
and«' 11118mployment at the
So, as the 11111111 type on our mast

view that SOCialist teacheni lhO'uid
make "the most effective use of the
classrOOm situation" to draw their
pupils Into the Marxist moveJilellt.
The professor Ia alao an ~

Gellipnl!l

and, ·the abortion ...,_ topic
lpiiited on by an app~aeitly
pro.uregrouplnGalliaCounty.
. F~ our COillplmleuta to the partlclpailllln tbele exdlancea of Inkthole watllnlbave addreB!d ~auea, 1
not attacked penona11t1ea lhd their
contrlbattona bave been obviOUI!y
lllncere and thoughUui.

In 1m he copyrighted a
board pme, somewhat llq the
Unea · of Monopoly, called Clasli
Struggle. The game perfectly ref1eC.
ts his view of a world In which
capitallsts, represented by top ball,
attempt to grind down the·worten,
represented by hammers. ·The ~ ·
ject of the game Is for the worken to
win their .revolution, despite the unfair advantages of the bloated
businessmen.
On · to our dlscwlsion. In an
editorial the other day, the
Washington Poet looked a~ the
lawsuit: "If the court linda persUasive Mr. Ollman's cOntention
that Mr. Toll rejected his candl!lacy
only because his Marllst views had.
become the IUbject of Maryland
political controversy, the university
ahould act promptly to reinstate Mr.
Oliman's appointment. Maryland
politicians muat not be aBowed to intrude into the appointment' of
teachers and scholars at the University simply because of displeasure
with their political aplnlons . period."
So S&amp;yetll the Washington Post.
Horsefeathei'IJ, says I. Mr. Oilman
baa a right to teach Marlism, but
where, pray ten, did he acquire a
right to teach llliii'ZiBm at· the
University of Maryland? And what
Ia this about aUenclng "politicians?"
The Maryland legislatun who complained about the proposed Ollman ~reneur.

iellve

. A. ·~·a , editorlai · IJIP
·should eiiCOinge its readenhip to
think and even, on occailon, make
themangry.
,
The co11f1 ontation Clf ldeu Is
probably the best way of arriving at

·

Immigration agency beset by
waste and low . moral~==J=ac=kAntkrso==na

U. S., Russia
on collision course

~ds:

~_.tten

~

opinion are
welCOined. Some IItten, however,
wedohayjproblllllll~th.

.

"'i•

Other than the fact that a~ IIIII 'lritilold

liliftlta

so-

apou request.

-Some are 10 poorly written we
Clll't mab 11111e of them. We will
"... Or to put It In movie parlance, this Israel·
edit ·ldtlin-we wW not rewrite
Lab1111on-Syrla situation could be our 'Heaven's
them.
Gate'."
·
-same are limply too long-we
don't bave the lJIIICe to priDI a JS.
J1111 J,etter and we probeb)J c.nnot . ~========::;======::::=;;;;::::::::;~.
tMIIIJ!Ittilthel'lqllired300wordl
wllhlal chaJIIInl the Intent of the
writer.
So, keep tboae cards and letters

( Ol 0\' ·
•

comlnc, felka-e little cooperaUon,
tbiit'a an we ask.

me-,e.

are

1

""

n-

"rrorist

"

SUI·THURS dUIE 7-11

'I JAMEs
RYAN ~
is back in
w•w1111

General's office In perticular may
well be ukinc themlelvea what they
h8ve been doing wrong. The 11111wer
Is really nothi!l81n their approach to
the lillie as a medical problem. An
bm1- amount of research hall
been undertaken on the negative
relatiOIIIhlp between smoking and
healtll and~ reacllly available to the
public.
But smoklrlg Ia more than a
medll.'l! problem. It II allo ·social
and paycho!CJ81cal. Tbe ptessures
encouraging the smoking blbit
remain immense In American
society. Juat check the cigarette
ads. Even with thole subliminal
warnings, the ~estlons of joy to
be derived from the product are
overpowering. The currently "In"
ad features one or more beautiful
young people exulting over the
flavor of their polson to a detlree that
could ralle questions as to what's in
thole little tubes In addition to
reguiar·tobicco.

Further, the capacity of in-

TodAy in history. • •
'

eaune

IJII ·

He's mad. He's bad.
Andlte's

actually a board bandling a city's
debts; in recent years, the purpose
of the Gallipolis sinking fund
tnJstees have been llllended to
make appointments In the unique
situation there are vacancies on the
CllllUJiisalon. No doubl the city
fathen are confident of a continuing
favorable financial conclition.
Probably all of this is moot ,Iince
there Is one randidate for each open
post this fall. Two are incumbentsPierce McCreedy and Mlles Epling
-and the other, E.V. Clarlle Jr., is
running lor the position ~Y
held by Richard MacKenzie.
And lor aU practical JIIII1IOie8,
these ~emen are juat about elected, as they are I'UIIIlin« \JJIOppOII(!cL
Why didn't anybody else me?
LiJtenin« to our present conunission

gives us a pretty good clue: would
you really want phone caUa every
night about how high the water ratea
are, how lousy the cable TV service
Is, or being the asked to get a tree or
something out of the street because
you're the only person the caller

knows who's with the city?

li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=:;====~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

Add to this the fact city commissioners don't get paid for their
efforta, and your sum total is
probably the least desirable public
post in Gallipolis - barring the city
school board.
But you've got to give these guys a
lot of credit for what they do. While
the city commission may never lack
for membership, it's a sobering
decision indeed for one who decides
to take the job on.

prorully presents

Do you smoke ·or read?-===="===no=n=G=ra=ff

.By LcrweU WID&amp;eU
The 1ut war to be fought wltll "~venti9na!" lft!lpollll ended horribly
Aug. 8and Aug. 9,1Hh~ HirllelllJm and Naguald, Japan.
That was World War n and, llthough it was fought long and asvagely
with what we tenn ''conventional weapons," It did Dill end unUI two of
Japan's g.-eat cities were virtually· destroyed by the new atomic bombs.
Chancea are remote that guns, shipe, planes, or any of the vw array of armaments being planaed by the Reagan adtnlnlstraiton will ever be used in
World Warm. Nuclear weapons will swiftly end all great wars'ofthefuture.
For more than 30 years n have been told that we have enough nuclear
weapons to complete!¥ destroy Russia. We have also been told that Rllll8ia
has enough weapGill to destroy U.. Af. Ronald Reagan ahould !mow froM hil
long career in Weaten movies, that Is what is called a "M~canStand-olf."
It wiiii()OII be 38 years since lhl\t fateful !laY in Japan and In that time
there have been no bombs used In war. But we and the Rll&amp;li8na have constantly beell making them, deadlier ~nd more efficient. They
perched on
intercontinental misBJies In cluslenl aimed at different targets. They are
carried 111 ..mmar1ne, 111t:f~ by ship. No place on earth Ia safe.
Both the U. S. and
have stock piled an awesome nwnber of
nuclear 'f!ellpons o1 viii'IOUI dealgn and power. No doubt in the • 30 )'eaJ1
there have been times when each side has been tempted to use them. Bvt the
fear ol the ~nsequeiiCel has so far outweighed any temptation. We may not
always be fO lucky. An acclden~ a
or a demented mind CO\II4 In a
lew rnotneJJts deJtroy two of the gre~~test countries on earth -If Dill earth itselt.
Georl~ F. KeMP, this year's winner of the Albel1 Eln8teln Peace
Award, volj:ed hil caaeern in a receRJ speech ,cceptlng the prile. "Leu than
II per cent of the i8ldltlnB weapons wpuld suffice to deter nuclear altlck," he
eaid. "We bave pl8 on pUlng weapops upon weapon, ml.uile upon mtnlle ...
helplellliy, abnott yoJuntarlly, llli:e u,e vlctlrna ot some sort Of 11ypno11a, Uke
men in a dream, llli:e ~ hea~ for the eea ... ''
KeDnaa termed the adminlstraljon's plana to spend an addlti~ '181
bliUon doU.n In the nut five )'e&amp;l'll lor apans~on of already ~vy
.defenee ~ "a fonp of maW.." While It Is true that nuclear ex·
pallllon II to be compar..~ly ~. any expansion of a nucjear ll'lelliJ
abWdy blllllted wltll ov~ only speeds us onward In Our colllllon
with Ruasill. Safl Ke~~~~¥. "We're getting very close to the point of no
return."
·
Alter readiqg o1 Kennan's warning, I did some last reaearcb t.ck
through ~ pag41 of hlllon'. I found that every prealdellllince Elleabower
hal made- rpelbod to,ant nuclear control.
·Kennedy - Oclll, IJI3. A ball on testing. atomic lJtiPCIIIIIA lhe at!IIOipbere wullped by the Soviet UJiion, Britain ancl the l)nlted IIIla
J~ - 'J'he !In$ ~,.-atton trea!f to be err,dlw ~ 5,
1970, wualped ~uly ~,1118 II1Bri~ United States and theao.tel tJDIGn,
Nlml - At a -tt meeUng bi Moacow lllay 2HII, 1m, Pnlldent
Nlzon and Sovl,t Ieider Leonid I. Brezlmev achieved the lint 1!mHiJ11
production of au.ntc -pons.Thil tn~~SALT I and Will ratified ll1the t1. S.

/f/1

DIGHT flru JUftE 18

Kevin Kelly

In case you wanted to !mow:
After swallCI)ViN! the ~ndy
Purlng the April ameeting of the remarks about how my piece should
GalllpoUa City Commission, the have apPeared In the Waahlngton
filing date for candidates for the . Post, I found out later this .was
thn!e open positions cln the com. basicaUy true, if the city was govermlllian wu liiiiOUI1Ced In case there ned by the Ohio Revised Code.
~ .be eiiOIJ8h candl!lates to However, since the city has been
warrant a ~ry.
operating 10111ewhat harmonloll!)y
If there ·were less than s11: can- under a charter for the last 8G-odd
dldiites, no prlmaay would be held, yean, the charter pretty clearly
and tbll reporter wu led to believe speUaoutwhatiatobedone.
. illbere were no candidates for the
If two or more vacancies are
· three]IOIIUOIII, then the lncutnbentl created on the commlaslon due to
would nimaln on the commlaslon un- ~lion, death; fallare to elect or
Ul replacemenll were found.
. otherwise, and the vacancies are not
At the lime this lounded logical, so filled In 10 !lays, then the "sinking
it wu What I ~· Allout a wee~ fund" tnJstees must make aplliter one af the eommiasioners haH· pointmenta.
Jc*il1cJy l1iformed me this wu not
Which causes a good question to be
the ease: "What are you trying to do aalled: ,what Is a "sinking fund"?
-lleepuaontherefOi'eVer?"
Under state law, a sinking fund is

Sclnelime8 nothing falll like succea
Or to put it another way, you can
leilcl • llllCiker to tbe lrut!l 'bat the!
cloea'tlllllll .... ~to read lt. ..
· Tblt- to-be the
or
tbldfll"-Ciftbeme=ap,eaotalned In tile report Clf the ........
:rncse OlneDI•m an Ill nv.,ur
_ . on the ~ of. the
blilllh Wlmlnp that ~
pacta,. and advertlllng Ire
required by law to carry. Among
other thlnp, the FTC clllcovered
.._t fewer than . 3 percent of all
aclalil eapM to the wamlnga are
botberinC to read lllfm.
And that llllkea discouraging
readlnl for ..~ who have been
wqlng 1r pUbllc lnfonnatlon war
apinlt lhe blurds of smoking lor
and ICIInd their areatest
ie&amp;lllatlve victory 11 years ago when
CWe• maildated the wamlnp.
were IIJilll Daed to bring home
~ every lmoter every time he of
lhe·llt .. the"'* llflnl run. .
The fellows In the U. S. sUrgeon

-- -

.

Is, Indeed, ~ until proven Either thi name
on the letter or
guilty, about »-years qo lalll)'lft tbe letter co-In the lrllh.

cameupWithawayCifwiDnlncF.or eJIIIIIIIIe, we CIIIIIOH1o 11)11- theyWIIIilcl~De.II'a~ed
let: bow' ttue it ~ · ~bUsh pr.trtai pabllclty-e motiOn that
your opinion that the guy who llvei allowl111 attorney to cJalm tbat hla
next door II a lilll'ilf+bltcll. Flnl, client baa beeniiO badly •tterec~ by
lt'a not a very nice tblni to ay; and, the pr-. tbet he or abe cannot
lltCOIIdl)'-and llllllt Importantly- pouibly l'el.'elve a lal,r triallmn a
we're not CI"IIZ)' a~t the I~ of jury of hil peen, A debatable pQinl
llflnl neil. The publisher '!fa ~butoneWt!IIIUIIdNlwttll.
newapaJIIlr, you aee, Is responsible
There are.Other lypel of material
·foreverywordlnllandmaybeheld · we won't print: ·
llbelforyouroplnlon.
- There are a few homHpun
.Also, we cannot allow you-hot phllosphers 1111t there who would,
wltll our ink, anyway-to refer to given half a chance, llllimlta !laily

Vacancies and
the city commissi

::~~~~;es a~e ~;1B~ec~~ ONEILL, W~GI-fl;. ;IW 01ll£f \.001~ ~.~'4t Ji yMm; ~a_,.
payers whose hard-earned money
WMNG COH~NaP ~'PR~I'D£Nf1HEY MQN Bl51NESSOO 'IJiEW&lt; OilS.
.

Dmlopmenlal Center;

101oecme ~bu nat •1.'01191eted dllleriatlll ~. on . tllelr cute
Clf a Clime a a aladRII. Untlllhe
;IIQina on the 111tun of m.verdlcUmacleiiCI, lllcw!iti! · J o1 they ..e't llftil thet chanc».
lilurder, rape, baaPIY. 111'1011, .te., ·
r s •ae ·~~Uera ~ ·illllllned-«
.are n(lt munlerera, rapiata, ,OO're ..., to lilbrnlt an opinion,
burglars. anonilll, etc.
you're Pill to iJiaDd by it. We will

divlduais to tune out truths they do J&gt;rocelslng Industry In this case out·
not want to !mow is awes0111e, as welshed the social goal.
Similarly In 1978 when, as a
demonstrated by some additional
cabinet
membei:, Califano was in a
FTC figw-es, Despite the bllenae tn-'
position
to launch his own anti·
fonnatlonal effort of government
lllllOking
campaign and did so with
and private healtll agencies, the ·
highly
publicized
·zeal. His support
study Indicates that some Jl percent
of the public Is stW unaware of from a president whose own contobacco's much publiclled and victions and lifestyle should have
debated cancer connection, and made him the finnest of alnes was
more than 30 percent does not !mow muted at best. Again, the political
that IIIIOking Is I factor in heart price ol fighting this particular good
.
diaea11e. Among women, It is news to fight W89 too high.
almOII baH that smoking inmues
~W:: ~::'f~
pregnancy rlsb.
And there Is more. The pteblem Is they have simply become to
alao poUtlcaily charged, as Joseph . familiar, and the message stale. It
A. Califano Jr. coincidentally con- sugesll the possibility of several
firms In hill current best-selling insider's guide to the Carter ad- as are used in Sweden, each ernphulzlng the
connection
between
worded
warnings,
such
ministration,
"Governin&lt; differently
llliCIIdng and a different alhnent.
Anlerica.''
The former secretary of health. Sudl a change 'WOUld require action
education and weilart tak• time by Cangreas, and inevitably more
out from analYiing various llllljor pelltfca.
and minOr political sklnnlshes lJe.
That is Dill a prospect to ~
tween the good buy (guess who?) courage the anti-smoking crusaders.
and the bad «UYS (virtually every- Corllidering this administration's
one elae) In Carter Waahington for laislez.lalre phil'*lplly and its .
an lllamlnaUng chapter on his own dominance of the ' governing
Involvement with IIIIIOklng and proc:e~~ea, the chances of a
healtll going back to the mid-'8011. M leclllatlve 91ICCe8ll appear slimmer
a key aide In the activist Jolilllon all- than at any time in the last two
ministration, be had been unable to decades.
penuade a president who had flrstIn the lllht Clf the FTC findlng.l,
hallll evldlnee in his own heart con- the llllklrllokeB ml&amp;ht have better
dillon of the COIIIIqllelleta of luck If tbq ceued attacking the
smc*lnc to move lomfidly on the beaJt11 lslae head ill and jl I~ 111Issue. The political otaulel ral8ed steail for a nmedlal readinc carnI
by the tobat!eo f11'81rlli8 and palp.

U:

D. J, Forrest at 7:00p.m.
Friday &amp; Saturday
"THE SOUNDS OF TODAY &amp; MEMORIES
FROM YESTERDAY "

Spinning the recordings from
1945·1980
Including Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman
and Woody Herman

J:

The Down Under Restaur.m~ in order
permit our staff a summer break
wiH cklse 011 Sundays.

to

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~
..

Senate A1111•3, 1m

Ford- At a11U111111it JDee11na ill Vladlvottok, 8oviet Unll!ll, Noy, awf,
lrl4, Prellclent (lerald FCJI'd and Lejlnld I. Brahnev qreed In principle to
pit "cap 011 the arma race," ·.
Carter- JilL 11, 1871, I code ... aclos¥d 111 u.s.,Sovlelt1qkia IIIII 1J
~ ,.tlolll to prmnl
of -tomlc weapGIII by blnniDi llilel ollr
1mb Jill. . .. and eq•4Pment c,_rter lpellt QIUCb of .... lenD in aalot
..... WVI to end ~on. lf nacleilr 'll!ilpGI!IIIIId 11114 lipid the
~T n IIWIJ:wllb B•fllliiW · ~ wu wlthclial'!l tnm 1ea1tt ~
ildlr!IUC!ft ,,ien ~ b~~MiJ!inllten.
. .

to llilauncllD the die-

e

llllllllour ~In pftlc:e, Relpn bu llliMIIIIGI'IInlellt 1111" "' ""
~ Jlmlil,r c..t.t 11111 '-" ......~,.,. 111111·111 -IIIJIIUI
JIC*Itlw N IIf. Atlllllnt pl'w COIIfw ..... be ""IK'Iiid lbtllfllt UJdGa
lD . . . . . llllllt ~tic lqaqe. He bu ................
Bla I 7.If llate, IIIII. laliCCIIIIIIIIbt R"'"" Clf
Ill
'- .,._ llcailtlirJ of Dlflllle c.per Willnbaa&amp;a the . . . . '1 w
lJidll&amp; Ia blllllJ. Wllb tllelr madiO IIPPfOIICh to diDIGmac:r. I !1111 Ill the
t11w lleft *-'1 lllbd • klto a eomer. But matbe not. 'l'bt J.,. a; •
, _ GfU. I. Men lid World Rtpan CIITiel tb11 ,.n,ripb Iii tllllr.lladan,

--- ·--

laaGI,_...,.._

-~--

From arrangements for the first bridal party to the
toss of the bouquet, we will strive to make your
wedding as beautiful os you dreamed it would be.
You can depend on us to odd that special profes ·
slonoi touch .and advice for this Important occasion

--

1

J' • 5Ufl·l10n • TU!S OnLY
'

"W ' a'~l'll''·
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·.POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
"Tile Way America Sends Love"

Pll. ,....,
•fft-1721

Rile Ill' ....
1

IIIII

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a ......... Gf their ''IMIMdt 'fl dnlu" •

·- ~MLT ...

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

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In your/If•.
1

..

' .

106 aunernut Ave.
Pomeroy,Oh.
all metor cradlt cards, and we ·wire f!owtrs

�w ,,...,_,, •....

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.. ._ .. .-:;

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'

.,-~~~~~~~~~TQigm~e~s-~S~en~t~in~ehi================~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~W~-~V~•~·~==~==~==========;==========!
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(~tmi.Al)
~jOhio.
_
,
.
•
·
&lt;ConllnuedlrompageAl)
Sch
l
.
.
. --~~~~~-----

. ::servers expect, aU~ it \0 become
•'. ~ law Without. his algl)atui-e.
·
·: If it take~ effect, i)le bill ' would
,•raise the CIJI'I'illt state tax by 3.3 cenJuly I. Future lncreastJI would be
·l tied to a fonnula reflecllng blghway
:; maintenance CUlts and IIIIJOiine con:• SUn!ptionlevela, but in no cue could
:! Ohio's tax total inore than 12 cents
·: per gallon.
.• 'Three-fourths of the new revenue
'

,:Is

.

:~Will present
-~trophies
.

to=Ord.

two...._..,......_

SALE .
ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS

GALLIPoUS - Three people
were hurt in separate area accidents
investigated Friday by the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
. Chester F. Hale, 21, Oak Hill, was
:. eastbound on SR 124 in Meigs County
·. at II: 10 a.m. when he !oat control on
·· a curve, went off the road and over.: turned.
:· The auto was severely damaged
· and Hale was injured, but not
: treated. He was cited lor left of cen. ter.
: Troopers said James M. Bentz Jr.,
': 17, Syracuse, was southbound on Fil. · th Street in Racine at 9 p.m. when
:: his vehicle struck a bump where a
·· new sewer llne had been Installed.
· Bentz was also hurt but not
:· treated. His auto suffered moderate
:: damage.
-: According to the report, an auto
:: driven by Mark S. Kelley, 17,
: Gallipolls, was northbound on
· Bulaville-Porter Road In Gallia
: County at 4 p.m. when he lost con: trol, went off the right side of the
;. roadandstruckalence.
His vehicle was· moderately
,.

~rda::tlyE~~

-.a

;' ~~=~

~~C~rrJto•itaDwnpupqain:

Pltuant reports on Laura

Hilllt, dlallder af Mr. and Mra. .

w...a a- ., 111111' PuiDeloy

c.lemt.w 'l'burlday to aee Laura
receive'ln award at the IIIIo State ·
u•••lltJ,Coi~NeafArta.lkhoolof
M1llle llonln Oiovoo:wtim hild in

r. ..,.. .,.,~

~·

y

%.OFF .

W._ Audltorhan. Laura received
the Nllll Welle! Award which 11
· eittl unually to 1 janlor or seniOr
nMn lludent on ,the bull ot
seMianhil), leaderabip and
conpntal ptriOIIallty. The aiMwt
111710.
·
IMra 11 COI!lpleting her ;.mi~
)'Ill' It Ohio State. She ila member
of the concert Jlud, the osu orcheltra, trunbone choir and Unlv.-;
11itJ a.r.Je. She waa i'eCiently elected 11 widen! of Tau Bela SJcma
Sararltf, ID orpnhiatlon tor 1IIOIDeiJ
111111 memben. ~ this year,
Lain &amp;8und with the concert band
in Nail theta Ohio and Mlchlpn and
alfPIIINII with the Chorale Ill New
Orleial. A millie major, Laura

' SLEEPWEAR
INFANT FASHIONWEAR
'•" '

JEANS '.._~0%

SWIMWEAV-"OFF

BAKER FURNITURE

111 w. 2nd PonJtro¥.011 • .

.1'.

.

lilllwlt.telllwoaldyQuapect? '
llr. · IUid Mra. Boom were in

Infant To 14
.'

O.vtdaon~NewYOitCltywaaeii!C-

~

1

~~~~TS

muld. Just hope If you encountl!r

BRAND NEW
HONDA MOPEDS

en.

AU. 1HIS wrn
nu;n
·•
20 %' 25%, 30% Off
ALL OVER THE SlORE
Bargains On:

ONLY AFEW LEFT TO SEU!

1

teaume.on July 14 and will continue
'1'111· ~ 0111 BIUrocm o.nce Olle,heiln'tbungry. ·
at the -~·· quartera on
Clllb Will be ho!r!!DCitallnal eiua for
Mulberry Hetchta on the aecond anc:!
tiU 111111111 'l'ullcljJ mnlnalll the · PauUne AtkiN, a ruling elder of fourth Tuelldays of eicll month.
..,- ,
R.,.a ...,IIIMII bal,ldlnl the HarriJonvtUe Prub...•rian
Tbn will be a
· Cllirch, wu selected as ~";, 20
Vernon Niue .rtparta the next
p1l' $ . . _ I&amp;
eldera, mlnlltera and youth by the American Rid
bloodmobile
7:• p.m. Ttie
SckJio ~ry, 111 a com- will be Ill the Melga CGunty Senior
T II.., -lihc·
milll!l'*' to the. 193rd General Citizens Center, MUlberry Helghta,
•ll'llllltoaD
Assembly , of . the United Pomeroy, Iron! 1:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
f - ..., ••
PresbyterianChurch.
on,Wedrielday, June,17. All type11 of
. llllllriellaf lilt ,
, Pauline has returned home blood are needed and walk-In donora
d-. Club Jllllllo
:followjng a to-day itay at the auerri- are more ~ nic;ome. ",Donate a
~ _,. 1 btJI7
.
,bly held in HOUlton, TeLShe reportS unit so If 1ou neeid blood in an
aiid', en)of.lble
lOB '
. ' llle' had a· ~ time with the ~rg~ ~ it Wtn be there to save
yeti ud lllllle undollbtedly will be bullneu lleiiiOJII!. The ReV. DO,nlld yourUfe," 1NeUee&lt;mrnenbJ.

.

REDUCTION

p~lion, ~

8Y lOB IIOBrJJCR

mme'r•' ·sa lei

coacb,hasjustonevacaney~~~~Wand

Best Reconditioned Automobile, plicanta.
. .
.
Another cor!unlttee cons1st1nt of
· '
'
Oldest Automobile, Best Equeatnan
•~
Individual, Second Baton Group, Staas. board prelident 0ean ar- _
Second MarchiJIII Unit, Second cle, board member Jay Simms and
SJOCI(
Walking Unit, Best Decorated Bite athletic dlreeto!' BW Wamaley are
interviewing
football
coaching
and Secood Best Decorated Bike.
Caudill reminds thqse wishing to
dlltrlct has a
enter this year's patade the theme is
"Let's Rebuild America." Parade social studies position open which
·
entry lo1111S are available at may be tied to coaching: a math
Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce pcl!Sition which a~~o may be tied to
Building, 16 State St. Deadline for coaching and two others at the high
school level, .horne economics and
submitting entry lo1111S is June 20.
An 'Admiral dehumidilier can
physical education. At ihe present . m11ke vour baseme~~t or other
lime tbere are no elil!nentary - damp area more comfortable by
laking the excess moisture out of
positiOill open.
the air. II helps protect furniture
At Rio Grande, a new superinand woodwork from tho damlft
tendent Is expected to be employed . ing effects of constant dampness.
It ret1rds mildew, mold, musty
for the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Odors and rust- gives your llome
at the board's June 2.1 meeting. Pllnmore living area.
damaged and Kelley was injured, ney Cisco, the school's director, has
but not treated.
18, 23, .37 pt cap.
The patrol was kept busy Friday ::~~~ f=an~
investigating several other ac=r.-.J:eon
cidents in the area.
The report said a northbound auto . the resignation of Jim Duias, a
Middleport, .Ohio
driven by Edith W. Ward, 69,
at its satellite
buUdlng, 1JAshland, Ky., was unable to stop for supervisor
Buckeye Valley
at Allensville.
a stopped vehicle at the intersection However, Dubs' poaition ·will be
of SR 7 and 143 in Meigs County at
!2:30p.m.
Ward's car then went left and hit a
another stopped vehicle driven by Pamelit L. Camden, 24, Bidwell, was
Charles F. Scott, 40, Middleport. northbound on Bidwell-Rodney Road
Both vehicles were moderately at 9:23p.m. when she attempted to
damaged and Ward was cited for avoid collision with a vehicle driven
assured clear distance.
by Donovan R. Garber, 32, Vinton,
The report noted a vehicle driven which was backing out of a private
by Mark L. Killen, 17, Gallipolis, driveway.
pulled from Oak Drive on U.S. 35 at 3
Camden's auto went left of center
p.m. and struck a stopped vehicle and collided with Garber, causing
driven by Mary J. Guthrie, 51, Vin- moderate damage !o both vehicles.
ton.
The patrol said an auto driven by
Guthrie was attempting a right Robert D. Taylor, 45, Gallipolis,
turn into the Rich Oil station when pulled rrom a service station on U.S.
the collision occurred. Guthrie's 35 at 10:50 p.m. into the path of a
auto was moderately damaged imd westbound auto driven by George M.
the Killen vehicle was slighUy Plantz Jr., 38, Thunnan.
damaged. Killen _ was cited for
Both autos collided, causing
failure to yield.
moderate damage. Taylor was cited
The patrol said an auto driven by ror failure to yield.

:Three people hurt in
:·area auto accidents
;:
:
·
.:
.-

I 1d e, • ... ·
J"lilll~" w1tb In chn aU Is . .
plofld wilt will be lhl I ll!r 111111
lafldlnlf 11111
• ... t Mid_. .... - ·
DOt tft1111111 Ill&amp; tiJat 'lilt I IIIII
voeatlmPl , . . CIIM be lit a
llil!dJ u • ..- . lla . -..... a
MpiiCitltdla'IMIIDr.BI ... r.ad
...Ice i*IIIIIIIL llow I iUd
IJiliCial edltcltloll illhltlllr &amp;,~diD
'wl!k!IJ .,.tfti-el ta lw 1
~.
'l'bl dlllrlet II &amp;

former
· 'Jolin
C. empl01'1f
SouthernBill
Loeal,
which
recentlY ·r.;structor~
. ~~~~~~~~;;;;;;thla;;;;;_;;;_;;;;,;~;.;;;~'
Wickline admlnlslralol's,
and Jlllnel O.VIs
are ln-.
Hensler;
an~
tervlewlng prOipeCtive prini:lpai ap- coach ill put years u bead fDOtball

Specials

Wateh 'o ut·for those hears

In Mum CQIII!lJ,"'ftrJ -··:
. . d btl ........... llilil fir

' =heolllp&amp;. .r_,a.. II,

••c

Ti

The

BObl.BMt of the Bend

~ .. ·-·~ri;~m;~~;;;;;;;;d;;;~ih~~~~~;;~~~~~:;~~---;~--~~·
aroam.
at..,.,. !Del'- ..
'
. ,
·

·tW ....,. 111m iftllwil
raised by the tax ,woil)d be used by to~ollpti'IOIIIJe!likeiiDJi~ fDied b7 inovtnc penonne1
.ll'he board allo ~ ~ . pllrdonlwfedei'llfal!dl~
· the state, mainly for highway ancl Ia, ¥11-lll!denilld. ' ,1;,. .
GiJ!IpaJ!a
City
Wool·
llupt.Don
Denile SIJocklq lD itllbmJe tcon1
·
.·.
bridge mainteilanci the rest of the
.
....
and
Ills
boatd
are
b!u1
.1n.
mi~~
.
·
.
IMII;SupL
llafldOhn.,
Inoney \VOIIId be dlatributed BIDOJIII
In Melp County, . the EaatenJ II
I fiiiJCimt tD (IIIIIIIIC
cities, counties and townships.
·· ' tervtewtnc candida~ foi' tine
POiiti1111 ~ that dlltrlct ln addition • IAeal Board of EducatiCII II IIIII . c!!phllii;J) teadler, )!mlor bfCb
The gasoUne ta~ ~Y enac- to applleanlll • for Giber ·leacltlna • ttng a held foaa.tl COich,
1 .....,. ua!dor wlicb cauld ·be
tell at a rate of two cents per gallon vacancte~.
·
· ~· ·· · reaerve bukelbaD eoech and lild lo 1 lliDib ..-. .- c..
in 1925, has never been raised more
Staal noted
bOUd liOpel to rpecialedueallaninltndar.
1=&lt;1 1 bM; I a ltna •uher ..S
,_, the._,_,..._
Supl
than two cents in a single year. It . empl
Of · to -~, a..uu..,...tora, a '
Richard Roberti bope8 to
has remained at the current seven higb IICI!ool prlnctpal and·•aillaill ~ 1 coach will! teaching credenMCIIt ·ldloal . . rl I tenia feel
cents level for the last 22 years.
princlpal and a bead football coach t1a1s ln eltlw IIOCial f!ludiel, lpi'dal . adl!itiw.l 1wt6iilil!l 11111 ccme
alltaJune17meetJnc.
educatimorEncllsb_
blton Jab' 10, tbe filill da1 for
Acommittee COIJIPCII«&lt;•of·Stagp,
The reaerve buketba11 job c8me ~ and actmi!JW!nton Ill
principals Nell Sanden and Marvin open when the ac:bool'a vocatiOnal l'e!liiD fro!n tl!e!r ecdlidl, but, ll
McKelvey 1111(1 board members and agriculture lnatn!ctor l'l!lipd,
· appear~ the ·ell): fl the ~ Ill-

16 parade
on July Fourth

• GAWPOUS - Ron Caudlll,
:·chairman of the 1981 July Fourth
·:Parade, has aMounced the 16
:; categories in which awards and
·:trophies will be given at this year's
· event, sponsored by Gallipolis ¥ell
, :Jaycees.
.
: The categones are:
·· Best Theme, Most Patriotic,
Judges' Trophy, Most Original
Costume, Best Baton Group, Best
Marching Unit, Best Walklng Unit,

w. va.

~~~~~~~~~~U.~~~~I=l·~=~=~~~~=======;~

--·

ted moderator and Mra. Atkins was
Did you notiCe the picture of the
~ to the AJaernlllY Conunittee
giant
cave-in at the Guy Guinther
on Cqregational miuions. While
hOme
ln SyraCUie .in Wednesday's
in Houlton, Mra . .Atkins attended
edition?
Now - 'that's one lime we
aervlees ' at the Memorial Drive
'Prabyterian Church which has a did give you the "bole" story. You
l'lllllllbershlp of 5,500. The ReV. keep Bllliling.
Donald Frazier, a Scotchman r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;;;;~
rniDlltering .ln Northern I~. 1 .
ft.J the guest minister. Mri. AWns
COME HOME TIRED?
alao attended a Mexican fiesta 1
visited the Astrodome .,u1 I!Je
GET SOME REST! ! !
Gll!lerina and dined ln the revolving
needle restaurant atop the 4Utory
NOT JUST ANY CHAIR
Regency Hotel.

A junior-senior prom may be !n
the makil)g for Southern High School
where uauaUy IUCh an ~ent Is not
held. The, junior class this year to:ok
care of. aerving the Racine alwnni
banquet and came up with a profit of
$1,394 for the clilss fund and cl8ss
l'lll!lllbel'l are hoping for a prom next
spring. The class e:dends a blg
thanks to bultnesses, parents,
teacllen, cooks and janitol'll for big
helping hand&amp; extended towards the
alumni project.
,
Do make a menial note that' ~
munizations will not be given all day
on June 23 by the Meigs County
Department or Heollth. Ad· '

LONG...
NOT EXACTLY AS PICTURED-197BMODELS

e PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE

.: CB650 CUSTOM

GOLD WING ,.

$2395

$3695

lA-Z·BOY CHAIRS

AT
Gold Wing~

Li .fes tyle_
'} •

FURNITURE
Third

A smooth riding, shalt.ctriven tOUring machine
with a liquid-cooled, 1085 cc engine and air
suspension .

Great looks and a powerful627 cc lour-cycUnder
engine highlight this custom cruiser.

anci Olive

to

~=:~~

, HURRY - THESE WON'T LAST

BUT THE BEST-

Gallipolis, OH .
_
,
Phon.e 446-3045
R'a tnae. Melp County does have
. Hours: 9-S Daily
bear1 u- days. Mr. and Mrs.
,Till pm Mon. &amp; Fri.
Elmer Bailey, who reside on Route ,..:m~in~is:te~ri~ng~imm~~un~iza~tio~ns~~wt~·l~lL~~~~~~~~~~
Ill .-r o.rwtn, were Ill bed about
10:30 the other evening when they
STORE HOtiRS:
!Ieard noises oulaide. Elmer looked
out the window - one of tholle kinds
McJn.,Thull. 9 am I~ 9:30 pin
that are high to the ceiling - illd he
FrL-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
saw a bear. He couldn't believe and
dedded to lake another look. Th1a
CLOSED SUNilAYS
time, the bear hllcl moved the winilolr on the outside and there were
Elmer and the bear looting eye to
eye.
TIP prblge of a neighbor· •
and relative, Helen MIIIIOin, nearby
""" Oftrturned and !MIIcbd.
Tilt ..... IIIPIJ'elllly took oft when
Mrs. WJIMwl arrt'VIId .llllne by car
wi*b probeiiiJ friiMeaed the bE.
prteenledberjunlorrecltalinApriJ.

I

CM400

$}795

CUSTOM

Dressed up to suit your style with a large, 3.7gallon custom teardrop tank and highlighted
CornStar 'M wheels. Mid-sized and easy to
rnaintaln. Dependable big-bore, OijC 4-stroke
engine.

CB900
CUSTOM

$3295

$2450

CB 750K

Aclassic powered by a dependable 749 cc OOHC
lour-cylinder, lour-stroke engine with Pentroof TM combustion chamber and four-into-lour
exhaust. Air-adj~table front forks and halogen
headlight.

$}795

CR 250R ElSINORE

Daily Delight

tiJe word illltat the .,._ are jult u
afraid crl people u tile other wa1

· SLICED

Court actions filed

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

POMEROY - A foreel0111re suit

RCA
XL-100

13"
......

Independent banking is a vital and
essential part of the American enterprise system.

Directors and officers of the Ohio
Valley Bank are folks with a
whole -hearted Interest in the
prosperity and well-beihg of the area~
we serve. They have a real stake in Its
future. They know Its conditions and
needs intimately. It is their home.

..

...•·.
.
...'
.,•
...;.

A good portion of our depositors'
funds are invested-in the communities we serve-in sound loans
to the Individuals and businesses of
our banking area.

...
.·

.

'

wullled In Melp County Common
Pleu Cclurt by l'l!iilet'Of Ceme:t
Block CO., Pumetoy, qainst Jerry
L. J.._, Riltlud, lit a!.
An IDjundlon - mec1 by Joe P.
Mcltllllie and ~lla Marie
Mdtetlllt, Hilliard, tplnsl Lynn J.
Hom., Ion aty, (OR. A IIIII to
quilt title wu ftled by Patrtct E.

A 902 cc DOHC four-cyUnder custom. Honda's
exclusive Select-Range TM dual ratio su~
transmission and shaft drive.

CB750

$2695

CUSTOM

McDill, . . . . and Emalll! Me-

Aworks type motocrosser with water-cooled 246
cc two-stroke engine and Pro-Link r M rear
suspension .

Passport™ ·

OM, I..q BollmJ, •plnat C!lrlell
'f171or, addrwlllllaMIWJ~ eta!.
,_, J. wm~aw, Pwueroy, filed
lAiit fW dltCICI apiMI Dua R.
WIOtenw, 8r~ Pumei OJ. FillDI for

, I

RCA

•a.aer.-.
. .

XL-100
19"'
~

dlllohdlon of marriage were
CaniiiD P!:laiDt Laney, Pw&amp;OJ, .
1D11 l'..a Dmd Laney, PuiDeiOJ;
VfiP* L. ...,_, Lilli Bclttllm,
andlltknll. llaJIIPI!, lAIItlllolo
lim; ......, J. Onndal. Middleport,
and D.alli P. Granda!, Owapeake,

v•.
Ask
Plll

Take i t ro sc hool, work or the store. The Honda
Passport has an easy automat ic clutch and push·
button elec tri c starter. Splashguards to k eep you

Miracle

A DOHC !~valve lour-cyUnder custom with
superb perfonnance and handling features.

Whip

10 wed
· ~-A marriage license

-

....... to Ray L. Clait, 69,
GtQiptta,lllll ~ret H. Bennett,
•• lfllll'lllllt.

~Passport•

?

130 miles to the gallon.

I

29

ATC 250R

The new ATC ., with aU-out perfonnance. Big
enough to take you justa bout anywhere you want
to go. Powerful 2t8 cc, CR-type 2-stroke engine
and ~peed transmission get you through the
rough! spots. Full s~nsion; hydraulic fi'Oit
disc brake. See the new ATC250 ~ today!

ALL RCA CONSOLE TV's REDUCED
FOR CLEARANCE
'

neat. Large fr ont basket and rear luggage ra ck
so much tun , you won' t want to go anywhere
without it, sosttngy you won' t ha ve to !

-

$1695

ATce 250R

••

..
.•,...
....•' .•
.,...- ..
,,....

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

..-'..'
,-

,.

I
I

Whether you deposit or borrow or
use some of OI,IJ' many other banking
services, you benefit by dqllng with
your hometown, home-owned~nk. '

,• •
'

I' '

'

II,

'

-you

:
·'·',•

t
dopotlt, . . !IOU

bonow.-

~---~~---"~
..,.1.~- .

I

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,'
~

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IIOT EXACilY AS SHOWI
.

.

.

.

'599'

.. .... !i

·-..'649

XR ell

CM 400E

.

.' )

'$}495

,.

'Oto ..........................
lirCI!illloo•---

Gil .............. ......... . .. .
Oto,... ,.~,

.... ..

XMO
An iCIHI lint bike in the dirt. Smooth, predic·

~=
r:E·~·
"J.;' U"'!-~~W'ru':1·
:~k
for tll
riding diiiiiiCt.
·

APfil"'l flluNtl* qlne and big 3.7 gulali:
take you 11C11!1 WI)' between fillupa. Yet there'•
perfonnance ei10ii8h for nperienced rlclm.
, Ughtnlght. Low llepped ~e~t. Electric start,
• too. See It toda)'!

Honda Sales·

GIUPCIIS. a

'

�--~-·

Times-Sentinel

~licenses

·'

G~LIS · - The followlilg
~filed for marriage UceN~ealn

George D. Bumgardner Cle~eland;
MASoN

G
Dean
- · eorge . .8 umgardner, 41, of Geneva, SWitzerland,
fonne~ly of Mason, died on June 3at
a hospital mSwitzerland. .
He .worked for the United States
9Gvernment while in Switzerland
and served four years in the U.S.
Navy.
He was born in Mason on Aprll22,
.1MO to Lillian A. Bumgardner
McNickle of Pomeroy, and
the late George J. Blllllg8l1Jner. . .
Survivl!!{!, In . addition to hia
mother, are his wife, Peggy Dee
Anderson Bumgardner; two
daughters,
Kimberly
K.
Bumgardner and Lisa S.
Bumgardner, all of Geneva,
· Switzerland ; three brothers,
Donald N. BIDIIgardner, of New
Haven, Lary J. Bumgardner, of
Mason, and David L. Bumgardner,
of Middleport, Ohio; one stster,
Mrs. Unda J . Morris, bf Rutland,
qhio.
·Funeral arrangements will be
announced at a later date by the
F.oglesong Funeral Home.

a daughter, ~· Allin
(Willa Dean) Potts of Cleveland; an
adopted daughter, Rolle Marie.West
of Gallipolis; five grandchildren and
a grea&amp;-grandchild.
Sh8 was also preceded in death by
two children.
Funeral arrangements will be announced later by McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home.

p 0 Jice probe
complaint

Gallla c;ounty Probate Court thla .
pUtweek.
'
.
· , Tom G. Brown, 24, Gallipolis, carpenter, and Margie D. Grimes, 19,
Gallipolis, factory worker:
Michael K. BeU, 22, Gallipolla,.
welder, and ·Teresa E. Mitchell, 19,
Cheshire, at home.
Bobby H. Thomas, 21, Vinton,
boiler maker, and Tami L. Spencer,
17, Vinton, at home.
Lloyd J. Carter, :IJJ, Gallipolis, ad-'
vanced emergency medical ·
technician, and Deborah L. ~!:ads, 24, .
Gallipolis, nursing assistant.
Arlow Bowden, 67,. ·NortHup,'
retired, and Evelyn V. Bundy, 64, ·
Huntington, W.Va., retired.
·.
Mark A. Smith, 21, Gallipolis,
mechanic, and Sherry L. Gilbert, 19,
Gallipolis, at home.
· Randall L. Rice, 2!i, Gallipolis,
assistant manager, and Robin A.
Bryant, :IJJ, Vinton, licensed practical nurse.
Jackie D. Paynter, 23, CookviUe,
Tenn., unem111oyed, and Judy
Parker, 23, Fort Payne, Ala.;
professional photographer.
Paul R Shaffer, 19, Crown City,
.self-employed, and Kimberly A.
Sheets, 18, Crown City, at home.

GALLIPOLIS - Mike Summers of
Superior Car Wash, 1730 Eastern
Ave., reported to city poUce that
sometime Thursday night a bottle
was thrown through a sign on the car
wash lot.
Summers estimated replacement
ofthesignat$1,000.
Seven city firemen responded to a
caU at ther Silver Bridge Sbopping
Plaza. A 1m Chevrolet Corvette,
owned by Winford Ward, Rt. I;
Gallipolis, caught fire when the
manifold overheated the wiring and
insulation,
l,{ay Queen
Cited by police Friday was Boosters meet Monday
:GALLIPOLIS - Ray Queen, &amp;4, of Thomas J. Saunders, 38, Rt. I,
cHEsHIRE - The Kyger Creek
q alllpolis died yesterday at 3,30 Crown City, insufficient funds Athletic Boosters will meet at•the .
a;m. at Holzer Medical center. "~f'w'"':a"'rr"'"an"'t~._ __ ,;_'"'--==-L.,hi_;;'g;_h_sc_hoo_l_a_t7_:30,;.;,.P·;.;,;m.,;.M~o==nda;;;;,:,;Y·--1
had been in failing health for a year.
'Born Nov. I, 1916, in Wayne,
~.Va ., he was the son of the late
Walter and Bertha Napper Queen.
l{e was a retired coal miner and a
njember of Big Four Church of God.
;He is survived by his wife, Betty
Hunt Ellis Queen; three children
Betsy and Missy of the home and
Rj!y (Kayo) of Cleveland; and six
s~hildren, James Ellis, Eva
Ellis and Mrs. Carol Marie Beaver
of. Cincinnati, Mrs. Thomas (Martha ) Cox and Donna Ellis of
G!illipolis, and Joseph Ellis,
stationed in Germany with the U.S.
Atmy.
.Other survivors include four
children from a previous marriage,
Ray, Betty, Wanda and Bertha Mae ;
fi~e brothers, Jim of Middleport,
Frank of Florida, Appy of Kentucky,
Cl!arles of Virginia, and Billy of
Parkersburg ; ~our sisters, Lois and
Cindy of Shelby, Haney of
~IIimore, Md., and Lucy of Columbus; and nine grandchildren.
Queen was preceeded in death by
a $On and brother.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.in. Monday at the Willis Funeral
Home with the Revs. Charles Turley
aqd Alfred Holley officiating. Burial
Try our new Buttennilk
w!fi be in Old Mercerville cemetery.
Biscuits 'N Bacon, Sausage, or Ham
Friends may call at the funeral
Enjoyour new homornadebhcuil• wilh your favorlle breakf"'·
hOme today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

iessie Mae West
:VINTON - Jessie Mae West, 74, of
I, Vinton, died Friday at her
residence.
:aorn March 16, 1907, in Athens,
ctpughter of the late James and Lillie
Saunders, she was a member of the
Tftedstone Baptist Cburch.
:Surviving are her husband, Floyd;
Uiree sons, James of Columbus,
C!larles of Vinton and Alvins of
~.

or in one of these tasty combinalions. Eat hear1 y because
Shoney's includes two Piet.-cs ol' .~a u~Bae, b1u:on, or cured hi m
in each biscuit!
•Sausaac and bi s~ul t s •Coun1ry ham and biscuils •Bacon and
biscuhs •Cured ham and biscuits •Country sausaac ara~y and 2 biS~.;ui t s
•Hi .~~.:ui t s

and jelly

328 Viand Street
Point Plmant, w. Va.

EVERYDAY '

Judge .·ends 22 ·Cases ·,

..LOW,
PRICES\

, !lJarpd 111111 fanure tO ~·
· valklllcenllr pl,atill, Carl V81111Ck1e,
liQ,RaV..wood, W.Va.,forfeltedpa
bond. .
,
.,
'Each c~ with failure tc) ' •
dilplay valid ~ and far.
lei~ PI bond_.. Harry L. PuP
n, Bidwell; wuu.m D. PJct. az,
Grove Qty; and ~ A:. Green,.
29, Ch1111cothe.
· ·
Charles s. Rbl, 33, Jaelrlon,. ~
charged wilb P8lllnc in an intene¢ion, forfelted$30 bl;lnd.
$*), .
'
'
.
. C)arged With left ci ~. Rallo. . .
Frederick D. Wray, 23, Galllpolb, dall L. Green, II, G~!li. lor- .
. c~ed. with high teer blin)per . felted po boll\!. ·
·
fined fll.
·· .
, '
FOrfeiting bond f~r ·speedblg
' ' Cha1111\d· with driving . under were:
.
.
sulpaskln. David G. ~ld, 22, . Thomu ~oily, 218, Col~bul,
Galllpolll, fined$15.
S28; Robert A. Leo, 38, Centerville,
Barbera Butcher, · Gallipolis, toe; ~e E. Flirclolb, 211, Princharged with assault1 case ceton. N.C:, $25; U1llan Maynor, 51,
PlAQUE- O.lleUU ef tile Melp C8llllly Baud el Mem1 Rellu'
dilrnilled.
•
Dayton, $28.
datlta, Clldl ud Carvl t.~ of tile Melp' (»iii!++II;Y ~ . idlffj
Charged with fjahjng without a
Katherine B. · McCoy, 65, Point . praatMn.KateJurell,eeuter,willlapillqlleeapreulll&amp;appleelaU.
vaUd II~, ~!den E. Slom\1, 23, · Pleuant, $30; Jeannette N. Filhir, 1Gr 1llr "dedleated aentee to tile petple Ill Melp c-ty witll -.tal
RioGrande,forfeltedt40bond.
38, CinclnnaU, PI; Joeeph L. Fultz, ~" Mn. Jamll bu w.ted witllllle Melp c.uty Baud of
· Michael E. Lawhorn, ~. Vinton, 20, Columbua, P2; Diane K. Mer1111, Mtld8l Rellrilalloa lor over alae y-. ud II rellrla&amp; llila year after Ill
ya., charged with fallure lo stop at a 21, Kllamazoo, Mich., $30; Larry E. yean olleacbflll. "Mn. Jarrell liU beeo a dedicated preleuioaal willa
grade CI'OIIing, forfeited t40 bOnd.
· S!rjckland121, Oak HW, t89. ,
· part1ca1ar eoaeenafor all Jlei'IOIII!I wltb apeclal Deed~," t.Jilcommewted.
GALLIPOUS - Twenty-two
were terminated Friday in
GalllpoliaM111)1¢1p11Court, . .
Jllllll R. Bowlin&amp;, 19, ~
W.'ia., ~ with DWI, fined
piG, ..wne.d lo four daYIIn jail,
ttlver'~ lleeale IUiplllded for Ill
llllllllha 11111 plaeed on 111 ~
probltlon.
Charled with fail'" to stop at a
stop qn, Paul R. Barry, :M, Scottown. lined $15; charpd with faUure
to dllpla~ yalld llcenae plates, fined
~

\

AT JOHNSON'S

?•·

.y·Sam Holcomb~ Col~ Safford :::.~=.=:.~~::~~ ·~w:~~~f~~
' shared city's
blockhouse
. · K.~===:~~J:
:~.~:~.~S::
.
,
•
·
Polk 81 prelldent. Holcomb, Holcomb died on January 24, 1867,
" BYJAMESSAND8
·
VINTON - One of the great early
aeUlen of Gallia County wu 1111e
SamuelHolcomb.
notthellnt
settler in Hunttnston Twp., he
was for many
·yean the mOlt infiuentlal In that

arid wa8 bured at Vinton with a
Masonic service. ·
James Sands' address is Bo1 92,

Clarksburg,Ohioot!115.

$J89

'

GAU.ON .

2% MILK

PLASTIC

' '
. VALLEY
IELL

.

$139

TRU·CK
LOAD
SALE
INCLUDES
HUGE *BALDWIN WARRANTYS
ON MOST
SAVINGS *WURLITZER
PIANOS
$$$
*LOWERY
AND
'

ACE
FRIDAY
SATURDAY HARDWARE
SUNDAY

SPINETS
STUDIOS
CONSOLES
PlAYERS

407 PEARL STREET

upon Gdla billllr7.

+!*' . .

PH.

Holcmlb mcmd to

..._~VLRwubeNJbat

an tnllt Q!:C!Imd IIlii! ' ~ed

992-3662

Holccimlia ,_, IIIIIW a bllck illave

-..r far 1 IIUII'dlr without the .
benefit of • ll'tiL Alid .. onl,y tllat

RC?Y AL CRIST
.
-

BUTTERMILK
HAWTHORNE MELOD: OZ. .

YOGURT

~.

2~
~.

gc,

but the ~ paid the ~veoWner
an indelllllit)' lor the 1!111 pi hil
alave. Fnlallbll point do Holc(Jmb'
lind tu. l!llljre ~ ~uae
perhapl, Ga!Jla'a ·~ advocala ci lb!l•be&gt;UU4!11 qt ·~.
At Meltel' ~ Qoleonlllll'lade

IU living bf iplltllag rllis 1•1. . in
the fllhll!ll of ~ ~
abolitlonilt A. Uneoln) ~~~~ per 100 raill. It wu ~ U.t fon.
lelm Holcomb"" bon!. '
~

Hole!lnb

moved bee$ 10 Gallla ·~ ~
he boqbta puwl ollln4 cCJ ~·
Tyler wilD lfll Hunliii8\0ft fwp. 1
lint littler. Tyler .... areal ~
ter and • cle. friend ci ~··
throulh Robert Salfor4 • Jt ~
be noted tltat ~ ~· did
not yet all&amp; In IIMII IIIII ajl rl

'

TOILET TISSUE
SCOI LAD

CATSUP

6 ROLL
PAK

·,

JUNE 5-6..7

or

SALE
STARTS
FRIDAY
AT. 11:00

Toe to Toe
\'.

'

edalteofVintoa,•~•

the Olerry Jloltqm. Tor·=~

...er
.. c.... era,, ...

IN'~

Cz'hp wulllllt . . . ~~~
CltJ 1111, ..,. RlliJ ......
twnw" 1 • lml' . . . lllf

.. a. ... · ., •• ' n
.,
...., .........

' ...

01111~,

~RICES.

SU,DAY

*~ a·~r
RWANCING
,..
. ..

*Q~ FI~CING .RATE$
·*L()ftG .QING.COMP~Y
'

'.

I=···•PIP.
'

YEAR'S

'

trr,-.bMwtl.~~
I

1~-6

NEXT

*AlEE DEUVERY. (~ OHIO

~

I

FOR

10-6 ~TIJRD~Y

TRq

ED. NOl'l
- Dllf
left
t1 n'z'hfHp 1

..,,

DON'T
WAIT

·RENTU 11-6 FRIDAY

ta

:a·
...............
,..,
.......,_...........

pr

-HOURS.

REPOS

prlllnl dlf Jluntl~ ~ 1!81
thea I peft I( RaCCOOII 'fwP.· (alao
ii:JIOIIII In 1111 .... cla71 ~
EthaiJithl '1'llp. )'
llclleomb'• fann, ~
the

•

DAY-N-NITER

HUGE

SALE

....... ,... 5\t..

•, •

· 3 DAYS ONLY

Ewiiii.To

·•
•

Will. Be ~n Middleport

PLACE OF

:1

0 I

OF COLUMBUS

21,

SALE I

' t'
1

GRAVES PIANOS &amp; ORGANS

PIANoS &amp;ORGANS ORGANS

HOICQJIIb Wll
born In Columbil
CoUnty, N. Y.· on
~eb. 17TTr• ~niall~~=llb: a
father wu Ze
revolutionary soldier, and
mother waa Tapbena Niles
Holcomb. Sam received IIUie fonnal
education, but it was through
leachinc that he had 118Ved up
enough money to come to Ohio. He
arrived at 'GalUpolll In January Of
1110 and llved lor two years in the
old blocll:houlewithRobert!Safford'
While In the employ Or Safford,
Holcomb had the occuion to saw
wood for the flnlt plank noor in
Gallla'a hiatory.
In 1102 Holcomb lllll'ried Mils
sarah Ewing, who W81 the claughtet
of IIIIOther famOUI ...,ty Gllllln by
the name ci llldlu Jtlla
thil Irion were born 10 children,
111111)' el wbam allo left their mark

ON APJIL t,

Space Saving
TRUNDLE BED
In M
or Pfne

however, votedforHenryClay.
In 1819 Holcomb and son built Vlnton's first mill for John Adney.
Therew81amillonthatsamespot

Head to Head

community.

SOME OF THE GREAT BUYS AT
BAKER FURNITURE'S STOCK REDUCTION
DESK

hunterl were IIUCCIIIilful in tracll:ing
down runawaya 81 long 81 Holcomb
waa lherlff. He uaed all the·resources at hia command to drive the

Public Notice

.....

"..

'

.....: 'I ..
I I.. Dllf,
I 111'1 I
drt
· ,•.,

*

.
Qlll AIIUAI.
VISIT TO
'
'

'

\

. '268
GRAVES PIANOS &amp;ORGANS

· . _ . ieadiutl
.
'

OHIO

�... ..... . .

__..
•

r

_

_.....,

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

.

Pag-A·B-The Sune(ay Times· Sentinel

~ ' •' ®alhpo[ig iliar~ . . ·told
~-='=i%;
bj n.nv• "V:abo• Hooper. B.
I

. ;.

,&amp;
&amp;
~ ·' -

~
·.

p

'

..

--:· .

Pomero.,.,..Middleport-Galllpoll•, Ohlo;-P..elnt Pluunt, W. Ve.
FIRST NAME ol both fatller and

.

-~.

'

. , "'

o·

.

.
6
i.uneni
,
terminates
.
2
cases·
,
&gt;' ,,.•' ·
'' '
'

'D •

, ,., .

.~

~;~ :!:&gt;~:..IJietila ~

,

.

1 •. •

=

~

Ra!phl!l.Stenrt,Pomeio)',$10111d '

1lcenle...

OlriltopherWolfe,'Riclna~IIICI
~·~=;

-· -:

Mrs. Hooper l'4oWftn. Ill C.flell CoUJI. lorfelfed' bclldl 'ln
eo.ty COlla,
failed todllplay
011 lrallllr; ~ lltepeovllly, 118.
• •
' · ty' B1•Cabell
:1:
Court"'....__.
•....lletMIIOelllllpln-. ,
·
•
s oo
commWIItY. ·
"=-if·'
' ·
Sunburf t21andcailllpllld• Marti dapC!Idlnnellt.
In one of the panic YWI When a
Fined by Judll hlrick O'Brien
, . Sa,.
_ _:,d ..,~:.-, .,' -o · · ....., .... . - ca'llbt'manthe Plabltloili
BvJ. Sa mueiPeeps
.
t
d H · ·hacl'to -reu•-......,11 ......... ...,...
-·--. ....._.._ ••0 ... ,_._.,..
· r
••. paymen
.. came ue, ~
.
"" ·-·• ,..._., •n,...,...... _.., ....... ..,......,....,.__.. ..__, J-'
1111 lull · o1-· Fred' • •
(iAUJPOUS
Healtll com- tually, Jim Myers knows about the . sellallhi!llllllellltolll&amp;kelt: ~)'oung ' and
Qleryl'"- -.....-...... """' ·-·-·~.. u ...... _....; ... Ul)l~- ;::;:::q,
•• d ........ •........
.-...' "'~""'ShaDe•....
frey DOcllar, ~y, .-llld Colla, Miner, Mlddleport, Jlllllutlcm and
"'
miasloner of Gallia County is Dr. two sons; Lewis Harrison was the , yoke of work OJ:en, a mllk ~·and ~..........,
...~ .,......,
. . r Llllllfe vehicle; Paulette Bulchllt', eolll,lnluffteltlltfulldl. ,
,
.•
Gerald Vallee, distant kin of Rudy younger, and M(S. Chafles D. hogs. Next year he couldn t make Nobel, Pomeroy, $10 and Clllts, Jm. Rt. 1, Rutlind, tllllld elllla, lpeed; · Farfelllnc bondl were Jamill F.
Vallee. Thwnblng through "Who's Harrison, 2250 s. Highland Ave., Bir-· the payment at all. He had bought it proper parting; Carl Hom. Coolville Rotlllf CoUrlll, 1U. 1, Rutl8n!l,
lf7leD. Rt. '1, ~ ••110,
Who in America," ol' Peeps found mingham, Ala. 35\ni, has the family from his brothe":111-law,John P. ~or· ~ ~~....~:., ~ $25 and COlts, tJn8 dayl tollfbMnent, DWI; re... J.IWmum, J.Grw Bot-'
only two Vallees:
tree of Lewis' descendants· she don, and had pa1d most of the prln. .,., · - _..,, ·-w'll wnuouw valid llceriae IJIIIPIIIded 30 days. OWl; • tom, and StaDiey N. I!'Jiathers,
·."'
_
(1) Bert Lester Vallee, a would like to have the sa~ in- cipal; In lieu Of f.otecloaing, Jordon ~IOO
-~•~ llhi&amp;Jer, I.angm~Ie, Ricky Wllaon, MlnerlyUie, f'll .00 Athena, f40,1o Ndl, lpeed; Mary
•
biochemist and MIT prof, was born fonnation about the descendants of' ga.ve Hooper a deed to a part of the. •
..., ~· f1&amp; saapended, 10 colla, five days confinement, ~ ~ f011leroY, P6.54!, mepJ. ,
June I, 1919, at Herner, WestPhalia, Lewis' brOther, Creed WUiiam . anginal p~chaae.
·. · , · , days ·~nt, seven ·days dayl BUIP'IIded· 00 opef.tor•a'llcen. parkin&amp;; Nella E. llyler, Palnetoy,
",
Gerniany. He's also a physician. His Harrison. But the !!!Yen daughters:
(Hooper a son, Jame11 B., tiom In suspended, llil monthl. probatlcJil,. se: Wlli'J'ell E. Smith, ,Athena, $2110 · ta5.110, np!red operator's llclnae;
home is Boston,
Jim Myers wants you to send him 1868, has told and .-,told the story, falsification; Betty J. . WIIIWilll, · and COlla three days cmflnement· Ronald Conley, Coolville, $380.ao.
,. ''
(2) Hubert Prior Rudy Vallee, an their names.
'
' andnowDenverYohOlaretelllngit.) Pomeroy, $25 and costa, ··apeec~. · license ~ 30 days DWI: OWl.
'
1 ·
orchestra leader, was born July 28,
'
'·
·
'' •
' '' '
1901, at Island Pond, Vt. He's a Yale
i:r&amp;cfuated, ·has starred' in seven
movies, was · a Coast Guard
OPEN DAILY 1Q.9
lieutenant senior grade In World
SUNDAYS 1-6
War U, arid is il member of the
Arilerican Legion. His home is
Hollywood, Calif., 90028.
While our health coriunissioner is
not listed in uWho's Who," he was
born in Ohio (Warren County). He
says that the name is French, and in
.the French language the accent falls
on'the doubl~ .

•

...

.B
:.'•·

...

..-

'*

On the road to Nashville

~

.....

GALLIPOUS - "We Consider this a
serious blllllness and if we don't trejlt it as
such, then we won't gel anywhere. It's no
longer just our "fun" bobby."
'l1lese were the words of Larry Elliott, bass
player, back-up singer for the Last Shot Band,
a group of musiclar!s-writerHingers, locally
based, which .is heading to Nuhvllle next
week with an eye (actually, eight eyes) on hitting the big time.
lbtrweek of June IH3 is "Fanfare" in Nashville, a tline when major and minor artists
gather to promote their work and themselves.
Two of the !land will go down June lOth. They ·
have an .appolntment with Steve Yates' ( of
''Steve Yates Band" ) agent - who also happens to be the agent for Don McClean of
4
• · 'Crying'' and ''American Pie'' fame.
lbe four musicians are Randall Mullins
. (lead singer, rhytlun guitar, banjo), Kendall
Mullins (double lead gulter, singer), Larry
Elliott (basB, back·up vocal), and Keith Our·
st, the youngest and grinning-est member of
the group (drwns) . Torn Morgan acts as
lighting and sound technician, road manager
and co-writer. Another grinner, he says of
himself, "I'm their chief critic. I'm awful
good at that." Three hold down lull·time jobs
aside froin their work in the band.
The group. members, it seems, have
"always played music." Starting as children,
aU four have been a part of one band or
another since they've been playing. And
·that's been a long time. Kendall and Randall·
- also known as the Mullins Brothers - have
often been in bands together, fonnerly a part
of the Argosy Brothers. Keith played for a
time with Froc Morton; Larry and Randall
have also worked together as the Soul
SessiQns around 1967.
The group fanned about two years ago,
waiting, as one member put it, "To get the
better musicians together." It looks as if
they've accomplished their goat
Listening to the four - five, with Tom ~ is
like sitting through a perfonnance of the song
"Yes, I Remember It Well ... " (from "Gigi")
- no one could agree where they lirst played
together. After 10 minutes of deliberation ,
they decided it was either an Elks dance or a
high school event. But whatever their start,
they've been together ever sinr•:t

~

BRUCE McGUFFIN, 91, died M~y
23 in a Huntington rest home, and
Wednesday (June 3) was the first
day people up here heard about it.
He fonnerly lived In Gallipolis. It's a
shame that someone who lives so
long must die almost forgotten, but
folk who live to be 9! generally have
no close survivors. Bruce McGuffin
had two brothers and two sisters
who preceded him in death. He
married Zena Brown and they had
three children; hill second wife,
Orlena, survives. Another survivor
was a step-sister, Mrs. Dennis
(Mamie) Spires, Phoenix, Ariz. He
was a captain•on American Barge
Lines.
·
BETTY B. SWANSON, 196 Fo•·est
Lawn Blvd., Marion 43302, comments on Peeps' May 24 column
about Frances Wetherholt's 1897
Gallipolis ordinance book and the
handwritten ownership clalm for E.
E. BlaZer.
"f think this Blazer could only be
Eimer Elson Blazer, who worked for
the Tribune in the composing room
- at the time 0 . 0. Mcintyre was
there," Betty Blazer Swanson wrote.
"I talked to Elmer Blazer's son, who
lives here in Marion, and he said his
father was there and it probably
could be he - since he always signed
his name as E. E. Blazer."
Blazer went to Marion, worked for
the Marion Star (of which President
Warren G. Ha(ding 'was editor and
. publisher), married a Gallipolis girl
: - Phoebe Mae Enos - in Betty's
Epworth Methodist Church.
This Phoebe Mae Enos was the
daughter of Brayton Enos, who
owned and operated the Enos-Hill
foundry in the Old French City. It
was this foundry that repaired the
shaft on the John A. Porter back in
1878, which this steamboat brouglt
yellow fever to Gallipolis. John McNealey of the electric company got
possession of the broken shaft and
donated it to go atop a marble shaft
on First Avenue at the middle of the
park's eastern side. There the shaft
stayed for years. Alas, now it Is
gone. Someone stole it.
CAP!'. GEORGE BLAZER was
sherifl of Gallia County at the time
of the visit of the John A. Porter, and
he caught yellow fever and died.
Betty.Blazer Swanson points out that
E E. Blazer was only five years old
at the time Captain Blazer died In
!878. Captain Blazer was bis father.
Be)ty has completed a family chart
of 1,085 descendants which shows
how they fit into the family. J{er
hUBband was football coach of Gallia
Academy High School in World War
II.
JERRY EVANS Miller sends a
passel of clipPings, relayed from her
cousin Louie in Ssn Francisco. The
first has weird names of businesses
from the colWIUl of Herb Caen, San
Francisco Chronicle. A boot repair
shop at 23rd and Mish: Taming of
·the Shoe. Another good'n' : Whee the
people.

THOMAS S. MOULTON, probatejuvenile court judge of Gallia County, will take over the presidency of
the ·Gallipolis Kiwanis Club Oct. 7.
[)em Hodge will be vice president,
and ¥JIIard Cassidy second vice
presldenl There's only one .new
member of the board of dlrectora Larry L Boyer. ~~~ bilard
memben: Ray Bl~ Millard
CauldJ, Charles GI'IUI&amp;, Robert
MacKIBle, · John · Taylor, and
~Tracy.

JAMES C. MYERS, 17! Por'-!th Rd., Gsllipcilla, wha.e
telephone IMabir Ia (114) 448-2148,
riDbJ to ~tile IISIIIII ~two lOIII

TAKE
ADVANTAGE
OfOUR '
A.PPAREL
LAYAWAY

..
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Tocldler'a, 2·•
lnfllni•a 9·U Moa.

Men's and lqs' Printed Pokl

Fun design p!inf!. CottoNpQiyeste~. ( 704)
Our 2.97, Jr. loya• •·7 Print Polo• .... ~

$2~h

706)

Our Reg.

•"

3.

Screen Print Tees

I

Misses' Summer·fun Tops

Screen print shirts for intents. toddlers. '
Solld·color polyester !cotton with·sport
logos. numero11. morec9·24 mos.: 2-4.

Collection of colorful SCI"" prints on 1
polyester/cotton knit or terry.

"What you're seeing is the responsibility,
behiild the scenes," explained Rand8ll
Mullins as we proceeded into the practice .
room. The room, probably ~ by 12 feet, was
filled with equipment and - after a few
minutes - with four musicians and one
manager completely immersed in
!Dicrophones, amplifiers, lead arrangemenlll
and guitar chords (as well as guitar cord• ).
And, after even a few more minutes, several
raucous admirers.
The five are writing some of their own 'i ;
songs - three so far - and plan on doing a lot
more. They are now in the process of
copywrlting those they've written and will
"further Investigate the recording aspects of
the songs we've written so far." The
songwriters of the group are Kendall, Randall
and Tom.
Gaining a steady popularity both In and out
of the area, The Last Shot Band recently completed a booking In CoiUIIIbus. They've played
all over the state and concentrate some of
their time locally. They are booked at the Eli.
tertatner in Point Pleasant the week of July 7
and will be at the park front as part of the
River Recreation Festival July 2. They also
frequent the Moose Lodge in Point Pleasant
"whenever we get a chance" because the
Lodge helped give them their start. ·
Being part of a band is working - ~ nd lots
of it. The group is "on the road again" a good
deal of the tinie, often working three out ci
every four weeks. They might work two
weeks every night and then have three or four
days off only to repeat the cycle again the
next week. With three of the four members
working full-time , it can be a grueling
schedule. But that hasn't dampened their en·
thusiasm.
They concentrate their efforts on numbers
which stress their unique vocal blends (un·
believable hannony! ), but their main con.
cern is pleasing their audience.
And if the group does make the "big tlme",
they don't want their Gallipolis fans to worry.
"The home town people have been extremely
sup.portive," says Larry. "We've had some ci
our biggest concerts on the Park Front. We'll
keep coming back."
And , no doubt, Gallipolis will keep asking
them.

-~-·lall3,., ggt o:c~
Picnic ClipS Or Cutlery
SO. 64-oz. hot/GOld drink cups;
24 plastic forks. knives. spoons,

2 $1
For

(709)
eM Reg.
94'

Pkg. 1.0 Paper Napkins
Our Reg. 94'

2 $1
fOR

Llm112 Pkg1.

CoRrie napkins· wh~e or col.
ors. l·ply. 13xl2. 25" eoch.

Umltl
Pfcgs.

$1·

(707)

Our Reg. (710)

Picnic Special

Pkg. 01 80 Paper Plates

white disposable
plates. Stock up tor

9"

1.09

.

.

75' Household Foil

paper

· Roll of 12 "x 75' aluminum fotl .

fun!

Monv household uses.

PraCtice, practice 1

CM Reg. '!J'

(713)

2roR $1

11 Freezer sticks
Box of 16 freeze.ond-eot
sticks in delicious flavors.

eM Reg.

435

·

(716)

I

• Save
10-ft. Clarden HoM
SO'll'l'o"' nytorwetnfcrc:ed QCI·
den hole. ~··1~1
.

Our Reg. 13.96

9.96

S.Y• Edlria(

Latex hou!at

SA~~7)

'*

Keith

•."".
SalePIIoe

By Sa/Jytmne Holtz
li.fostJ.M IIJrll.r.

•

Lorry

and seven Qk I of Solomon and
Po117 Dodd lllnfliiiD. '1bey nrellll

Nmm"tif
..
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....... ,....,,,.
matemal~,..,

... ~

.... 11111'1'1111

FNnklln ON l

f

'11111 cune to

•

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Watching.

''•••tlons

Randall

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.• l

�Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

·Artists $ho.uldp7an nOfJJ t~
enter .w.ork.in ]tily. 4 show
.

'

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not~US - RJcht IIOIJ II
In "the 1000 to tbiDk about entries

Film critiqye

·. ~aiders of the Lost Ark ·

,

'

• regularly. The artiat ·will deterthe sale ol at! work resulting from
mine hlJ or her status.
. this ahlblt · to help defray ex·
Annuli River Recnation , Mn. Thaler bu ann~
penses. ·
· ·
Fellllval ~bll to be beld on · that all entries wiD be judge.J and
Entries are to be deliver¢ to
:::!:,!~ 4, In the City Park
rlbbo111 awarded In each Riverby, 530 First Avenue. in
.. :
Gallipolis, from 10
category. Purchale prize a)VBrdli. Gallipolis, on Thursday, June 18,
. , a.m. until$ p.m: In cue of rain,
will be selected by the judges In
between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.,
theeJhlbit wiD beat Rlverby, the . . Qoopei'atlon with 111e purchaser,
Salwllay or.Swulay, JWle 20 and
!!!':~lbe P'l;eilcll~E~Iony at
•~tely 36 to 40 worg w)ll
21, between I p.m. •ilfld 5. p.m.,
- · ... Avenueln"""""'Ua.
· be aeleeted this year, based on and at the latest, Tuelday,: June
The French Art Colony inYI~
the 'Judilne, to be I!IBtall~ in Ike . 23; belw~n 10 a.m. and 3 p.m:
.11111111 to ~te In tbla ~ •. ' Galleries at Rlverby, home of the · June 23 at 3 p.m. II the final deadnual outdoor exhibit, presented In
French Aft Colony, for viewing . line. No more than five entries
COGplriUon wltb lbe Rever
durlnCJuly,startlngonJuly7.
.will be accepted per artist, and
AU . entries must have been
space requirements could
Recnatiol) . Festival. Although
the ,llhow comes prln)arlly from
produced since July, 19'19,andnot
nec'esaillite furlherUmltations.
the trktate area, no restrictions
prevluully edliblted In thls Show.
Entry fOI'IIl! are available at
ue placed on an artist's place of
AU . etitrlei must lie (ramed or
PJs , Riverby, or may be
· resldenre
·
.
matted Inc! securely Wired for
requested ' by phoning 44&amp;-1119,
ACconiiDB to JI!P Thaler who Is
hangihg,' Matted works shoUld he
oHG-4425 or 446-3834. The com;: · ' . ~ this ytllr•s Hhll!lt, ar·
CIIYIIred with, acetate, av~ble : pleted entry fonns may be hand
• ., tlats 11111 regiatet at either the
attheFrenchArtColonyiftheardelivered with the· art objects.
~illliilnal ,or amateur l~eJ
tilt has none, have a protective . French Art Colo~y jahels ~45t be
wllh amateur status divided ac.
backing and have a hanger at· , attached to all entries and will he
conlirqj'to adult, high school or
tachtM!. ·
·
· availableatRiverby.
elementary school level. 'J'he .
A registration fee of $5 for
Any artlat planning on entering·
pc'()fellllional
category
inclqde8
·
aduiiS
and
$3
for
children
through
this
exhibit on July 4, 1981, who
•
those
who
are
or
have
earned
age
16
will
be
assessed
to
all
enhas
any
questions, may call Mrs.
•
•
their
Bvtng
through
their
art
anrt
tranu
who
are
not
members
of
Thaler
for
deails. She Is urging
•
those actively lelling theil' work
the French Art Colony, A 15 per· .early registration and completion
and receiving commissions
cent service fee is retained for
of entry fonns.

.

Avenelle
and
\

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Leon Ranter ·
'
GallijJols

departing
SEPT. 12-19
Visiting:

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St. Thomas
San Juan
Cap Haitien
"Plan your vacation NOW
by calling or visiting:

-If you thought that fish
dering around Amity
menacing, walt.until you'rel ~~:!~!I
face to face with a remple "'
with wall-to-wall poisonous
peniS.
-If you Uked t)le way Luke
Hans kicked the Empire around the
universe and back, wait until you see
what Professor Jone~~ (HarriSon
Ford) doeS to the Nazis.
-If you enjoyed the cosinlc
fireworks created by the aliens of
Cl~ Encounrers, wait until you see
the power of God tear a hole in the
atmosphere and wipe out a squadron
of over-grown Hitler youth.
Set in 1936, ROTLA is the story of
an archaeologists attempt to find,
cl!lim and keep the Ark of the
Covenant-the mythical chest in
which the pieces of the Ten Commandments were preserved. No
small feat in and of itself; but, at the
same time he must stay one step
ahead of a band of Nazis who are
also in pursuit of the wholly arkthose who carry the ark into battleaccording to legend-are invincible,
you see.

~~~

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360 Second

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Gallipolis, Ohio

PRESENTATION - Cheryl and Randal Bailey are pictured 1D one of
their novel m1Dl8terlng presenlallons. Mrs. Bailey wU present the
program at a meeting of the Women's Aglow Fellowship to be held Tbun·
day eveoing at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.

446·0699
OTA 0134

•
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Novel presentation 1

SHOES FOR DAD
Under s35oo

POMEROY - Cheryl Bailey will
he the speaker at the June meeting
of the Women's Aglow Fellowship at
7p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Bailey is married to Randall
Bailey, pastor of the Rutland Church
of God. The Baileys are originally
from California and have ministered
in Germany, Scotland and England
• • and have also worked with the
. ~ military.
• • • Mrs. Bailey has been involved as a
. evangelist for 10 years in chur·
. · • child
: " ches, outreach ministries, junior
: ca!Jlps, camp meetings, children's
: "· clubs and crusades. She will he
•'' ministering in song at the Thursday
night meeting along with her other
presentation.
Reservations should he made by
noon Tuesday by calling Sara Winters, 44&amp;-7444; Jackie Zirkle, 992·
5859; Gloria Johnson, 742-2442;
Joyce Hoback, 9411-2325; Billie Jean
Dawson, 773-9123. Cost of a dinner
wiU be $3.50. Doors wiU open at 6
p.m.; dinner will be at 7p.m. and the
speaker will he presented at 8 p.m.

••

!'LATTER STYLE BULK

Sliced
Bacon

Hush PuPP,!tt,

merge your IHestyle
Everybody likes lo feel good about
the way he looks. Whether you're ort
to a show or get11ng ready for the
ortlce. A~d the way you dress Is an
important part of II. These Hush
Puppies• casuals have just lhe
right blend of style and com·
fort to make you look and
feel your best every
time you slip them on.
Made for todoy's lifestyles and priced for
today·s budgets.

·-

lb.

Box-0Chicken

I

lb.

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OPEN

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MONDAY
TIL
8:00 P.M.

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CA8ANNA II

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Wise

POMEROY - There will be a
rununage sale Monday, June 8, from
9 a.m. until 4 p.m. at the Grllce
_ EpiScopal Church.

SYRACUSE ~ Mr. and Mts. Carl
a1 Syracuae w111 celelnre
their 50111 weclclq ..Wverary with

w-

Aabury United Methodist Church.
The couple uk.s that gifts he Omit·
ted.

Ho-Med -Services
. 2415 Jackson Ave.

Pt. Pleasant,, W. Ya.

Mike Marnhout, Area Man..er

delivery &amp;pick-up with 24 hr. senice

Equipment We Carry:
Oxygen !concentrators &amp; tanks)
Hospital Beds
commodes ·
TraJitZI Iars
WhHIC...IrS
Walkers
Bruthllll Machine
·Suction Midline
AND MUCH MORE

We accept Mtcllcare, Dept. of Labor,
Welfare, UMWA I _private In·
surance upon approval.

.. we do ALL billing tor our pa.tlent$.

.....

AIOUTOUR

IIIVICI, C.ll 671 1116
I•

·Purex

II

64 oz.

Bleach . Btl.
'

675-6996
Medical Equipment Sp.Ciallsts

AlP CHILLED

8' OFF LABEL

.tJ4.

'

•

The cauPle wullllrried June 15,
IIISI In the Helth Methodllt a.ardl
II Mlddlepart by the Lata Rev •
Ek:lq... Tiley ..YIIIwo 10111, JICll
and Dan, and four IJ'IIIICicbilcl.
They .,.. bolb retired lelehen IJld
beJona to natie!nll, Illite and local
retired. telehe.._• auoclat10111.
W-lluaJitiO yemln whllt II noir
the Saulhem Dillrld 1D Melp County, Mn. w-lqbt • yem, 111x
JUll ill Middleport, 18 yean 1D the
Eulam Dillrict ..... two )'1!11'1 In
lbe Southern Dlltriet. Bclth - ac' ~ n•Dben al the 8yneule

I

ce

Btl.
'

--·------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilli~;;;;;;;;.-1

Vi

•

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Fedent

..,

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niRUMON~NEI

..
...•_•_••-•I_R_ate___
._
••_••_,Y_I_el.........__

...•

---------·.,,
3* YEARS
'

2* YEARS
Minimum Oeposrt ssoo

' .'

Minimum Deposit 5500

For thOse 1nvestor1 WhO pj="ef~r a

TM rate Shown below tor this
Certificate Is applicable this
per iOd and IS retatt&lt;l to tl'le
avera9e 21h 'fUr yield of
treasury securities. Interest Is
compounded da lly and Is J)a id
monthly , quarterly, stmi·

: ~

longer term this certlflcete earns
the same rate and Is issued uncttr
the Hmt reoulatlons n the 21h
year ceriUicate. lnternt Is com·
pounded dally and paid montl'tly,
quarterly . ~mi · annually , or an·
nuatlv. . .
-

•

.• ''&gt;

11.75% 12.65% .;

11.75% 12.65%

Annu•t Yield

Annuill Yteld

•fli1UII Rate

AucliOfl .

14.741% __j

THR UMON ., JUN E I _....

,

L - T H R U MON., JUN E I

Interest must remain on deposit • full ye•r ta •1rn 11nnu•l yield. There Is i
subst•ntlal penalty for premature wit!Kirawll ot Ctrtlliciltt funds . Minimum
Deposi115,1100 tor Monthly Interest .
~
EACH DEPOSITOR INSURED UP TO Slto.OH BY·THE FDIC, AN AGENCY OF
THE FEDERAL G9\IERNMENT .

8

~~

mo"' flom

..

- - -· uP,· ~~~!~ .':~ank
"'"......., . FD4&lt;:

___

CUT

'5D

"Cbj!t ~orria a1 ~te

.,.....,..,.,,OIIIo_
............lt:ll

flrem'*'IIJ

'90

11.1-cu. tt ,'
refrlger a tor
freezer

:zo.o-cu. ft.
upright
fr-zer

If jou are
hnina troubre ,
locating a ~alth Care
Supplier to help you

Kenmore al l fr o~tless
model wtt h aut Qn'latiC
I CE' m~ker St'ee l
she lves resrsl St~ rns

It"s ~ Kenmore• conventio nal -defrost
freezer with fu ll·
width steel shelvong.
White .

Wh1te

SQiveaprob,em,

Call us.
(614) 446-2206
CUT '45
Power-Mate'
canister vac
motor shuts oN 1t vac over-

heats

due to

oostruclron

Step-on onioN sw 11ch

'964"

L---"HX-•r7s•
BIG VALUE

DON1 MISS
THIS. ·.:.
SEARS BEST
PORTABLE
DISHWASHER

Z·lpltd,

l'OMEROY-The deadllne for

dlld llf Mno·llllllll Mer*ln, 11110

SWEET'JUICY

5.46%

'

I, Ba ITt, Mblny, 11'1 the carilp
dindlln. a.prtraUon II belnlhp.

SWEET MILD

ASk for · ~earnie! "

5.25%

Bill

nrgulatlons prohibit compounding of
interut. Automiltiulty renewable
liT matur i t~ a1 tne prelllaillnt r•tt.
The iiCIUil return to investors on
Treuury 's IIIIIs iS higher. ·

Me!i to. Sa'llings account Interest
- checking account convenience.

i · speed . 2 5· HP SUCIIOn

Ill allend the Big Bend
- IWJIII 11 CliDp JCia.bgta near
• &lt;i I ,JalyJJ.17,1aJuneta.
:. • _.., wbldl will be beld dilly
.- from I ~ Ill I p.m. II open to not
- oaqlh'!ICOUII. but lllo other glril
10 1tn11 and Move. 'l'rm..,ortiUGII Ill the caq~ llite II the

64 oz

Tre11sury

balance . write ctlecks as you

CUT

an open
boule
In the
IIOCial rocm
a1 .
lbe
Alllury
United
Methodiat
Owrd!
I~ .

at~fromZto4p.m.onJune

•
•

-

earns you 5 1 1•~ interest every
day on your total savings account

POMEROY - Garnet Wise ol
Pomeroy, is confined to Doctors
HOSplllil North, Room 376, Columbus
mi.

•

~ ~~~~~~~~

Ttlh Monty Mlrket Certltiute rate
is efleclive the diiy aftl!f' e•ch

hospitalized ·

..• Camp deadline
..
• set June 15
•
·- f'llllllrllllln

I' ::

Minimum Deposil$10,000

Earnle 's checking·"vings plan

Mr. and Mr$. Carl Weese

•
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•

••
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Savings and lAan Co. in Pomeroy.

.- Celebrate anniversary

Grocery Specillls

.

What's Your Choice?
,..
.. SIX MONTHS
ONE DAY

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

will meet at 6:30 Monday night in the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond

•

· Sole Monday

FREE

--

,• •
• ..

SYRACUSE - Dr. and Mrs. J.
Wilmer Lambert wiU he special
visitors at the Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene today at 7 p.m. Dr.
·' Lambert is the district superintendent for the Central Ohio Districl
Mrs. Lambert is the NWMS
president. Following the service,
refreshments will he served in the
fellowship hall.

POMEROY-The Refunders Club

•

.

Professor Jones is-as the ads
proclaim-the ultimate hero. Em·
powered with absolutely no super·
natural gifts, he is nonetheless a
hero of epic proportions. While in
pursuit of the remnants of history,
this guy is unstopable.
,
The lac! that' this charac!A!r's
ploits are unbelievable (Example:
unarmed and on horSeback, he takes
on a mobile division of Nazi troopsand wins) Is lrrelevent-the fact that
this film crea!A!s the type of hero we

To meet Monday

.

•

annually, or annuat tv .

FRESH FRYER PARTS

Grocery Specials

"Special visitors today

•

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va.
Linda Wilehrmann, R.D., dietitian
at Pleasant Valley H~ilal, was
notified May II that she had passed
her National Registration
Examination and Is now a
· Registered Dietitian. Ms. Wuehr·
mann, a native of Philadelphia, Pa.,
·is employed by ARA Food Service,
Inc. whose headquarters are also
located In Philadelphia. As a
Dietician at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, · she is esponsible for
nutritional management of the
patients•
She and her husband, John, are
currently residing in Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va.

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Passes examination

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, By l,arry F;wlng
would Uke to believe !ills what's im- sleazy.
With RAIDER&amp; OF THE LOST portant.
The film has the feel of a l.t:!D's
ARK (PG) Producer George Lucas Wandering around in a costwne Saturday aftlmoon serial, with the
(Star Wars, The Empire Strikes straight 011t of Bogart's wardrobe in best elements-there is daJI8er
Back) and director Steven Spielberg 'Treasure of the Sierra Madfe,' (you around every tum, a sinister charac·
(Jaws,Cl~.Encoun!ell)havecom- at! remember Fred C. Dobbs) IA!rineveryshadow-«thosec~ic
biDed their creative talents · to HarrisonFord's portrayal(sortofa suspense_ctramas.
. .
develop what may well he the m08! Hans Solo with braiDs) of Professor
With ROTLA. Splelherg and Lucas
exciting motion picture ever made.
Jones Is a· pure delight-It combines have created what has got to.be the
This film will bring you out of your the better qualities ol nobility and . hit of the summer flbn seas(l!t
seat in the first ten inlnutes and keep.--~~.:--------=--~~-'----~-_;_--.--. you there for the ne~ two hours.
From· cliff-hanger 'to cUff-haiqier,
'
ROTLA cOmbines the best elementa
,_.,_._,
':'.I~
of all the: filmB by Lucas and
'
.!!Pielberg,

'

Puerto Plata

The

S·cycle washer

CUT '80

Comes with Stars Dual ·
1\cllon•• agiLltor. While.

a.oeu,llll
~- Ia Te.IIIII , .
..
If Pl. t.111111t .._

rn 4iiiiM .. Sit Ill

.O.WTIMII

'317..

JO-In •

electric range

..

Se lf-cleaning oven. oven
wtndow. door lock. ~tor ·
age drawer and aial Clock
W~fe. Also 1n COIOI\ .

-ou•n.ofiiiiMr c dr•

'455" '

•WaR 1 CIIPR
m ! 'J
... r
IPI'irn

CUT '110

.,...........
1

,,II

Microwave oven,
J-stage memory

oSis;O ~ ...
•TIIdlrllll
•1'9 I 5 Put 'i
~ ;'I lllllllrlrPr Pt1F11'i
I' I ._...,,.,
I

You set the time an&lt;l pow,
er for mult iplt cooking

' ' ONLY -

•re gone we

able to order
dishwasher
molly sell
This is a disi~iii;iii
model.

stages . Cook with pro ·
gr.vnmaole recipes.

s-

•31:11; . . . .

•lut II , . .

•'f

Ill .......

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

. ........ I'

' l-1&amp;

I-·

•lllllf,.,
_...,.ciMII....,.•MonyKenmore-lsoroovaliol&gt;loln&lt;olorslt·o n•xtr•
•ICwltmirl.,_............ &amp;ACIO!Inallndrldellln prkos shown • ko ..,.k., hoOk-up txtrl. 'Prkts.,. air•riOg
.......... " ' - " ' ......... "MIC"' ...... '"'pi

e.l fill . . . . . .tllld lleflllll I'NCIIIy IValllllle lor Ule M advert bed.
s.ttsllldion GUMWitHd a&lt; Your M-y lock

MOst mrrchandise ilv,HIIblt
far piCII~ within a ~days

Sears

••
•

•

�.-·
•'

.

June.7, ltll '

I

Pomeroy-Middteport-Gatttpotis, Ohi.-Polnt'Pieasant, w. Va . .

. Page-8·4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

SHOP ·WITH·LOW•

•

• SM·OKED·
COOKED

Jim Williams

Heads
Century
club drive

Kimberly Sheets,
Paul Shaffer ·
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Jinunie F. Sheets, Crown City, announce the approaching marriage of
their daughter, Kimbelry Ann, to
Paul Ray Shaffer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. JerryL.Shaffer, Crown City.
The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate
of Hannan Trace High SchooL Her
fiance is a 1979 graduate of Hannan
Trace High SchooL He is presently
employed at Shelly Asphalt CoMpany.
The event will take place on June
13 at 7:30 p.m. at the Mercerville
Baptist Church, with Rev. Jim
Lusher perfonning the ceremony,
The custom of open church will be
observed.
·
Immediately following the
ceremony, a reception will be held at
the Hannan Trace High School.

"Shank
P.ortion'' .
CHAPALA 1FROZE,N

. 1Q.oz.
Pkg.

Strawbernes . . • .
OAILfS 1HALF GAL. BOT.

$ Q&amp;

57¢
.

Ill.

.

•

sl~~RB~~net Margarine 59$

NESTEA 1I~STANT ICED

Ju1ces. . . . .1 Tea MIX32-oz.can

99'
.
Trash Bags.. :

$2iB

THOROFARE 11k:t: PKG.

Coff~e Mate Creamer $1 n Elbow Macaroni •• Hb.68$:
Box
45~

Niblets Corn . .

can

Rhonda Haning
and Leslie Frank
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Haning of Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Rhonda, to Leslie Frank,
son of Mr: and Mrs. Alfred Frank,
Pomeroy .
. The bride-elect is a 9181 graduate
of Meigs High School and her fiance
is. a 1979 graduate of Eastern High
SchooL The wedding will be an event
of June 19.

To dedicate
addition to church
on Sunday
KYGER - The Little Kyger
cOngregatiOJ18l Christian Church
loCated on UUle Kyger Road at
Cheshire, will have a homecoming
and dedication.of the new addition to
the church on Sunday, June 14.
There will be special music and
dinner on the grounds. Many fonner
members including the Rev. John
Davis will attend. The morning worship service will be followed by
singing, the dinner and the
dedication. The public is invited.

Remember
.
GALI.JPOIJS Chapter O.E.S. 283,
~ONDAY

Regular meeting. Initiation and
covered dish dinner following in tbe
dining room. Bring covered dish and
table service.
KYGER CREEK athletic boosters
meeting, 1:30 p.m., at tbe hi&amp;h
school.

BUTIERCOOKIESorCOCONUTTHINS 77~
14·oz.Pkg.

POMEROY-The annual plcnic
and meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigll Chapter of the O.ughtm of
the American Revolution wW be
held June 12 at 8 p.m. at the home of
Mra. Dlniel'l'homas.
~for the picnic wW be
Mrs. J1111e11 O'Brien, Mrl. Thereon
Johnton, Mn. Jom Roee. Mn.
LBtry L. wu.y. The prG8I'IJil wW be
~by Mn. A. R. Knight who
wW . . "BetiJ "- and the ,....
u her tclplc. lllnrklw aad their
flmiWelart Jmlted to l&amp;taad.
Prfor ie tilt p6cl1le tllere wiU be I
IDIIDCII'III•Yiet for tilt lllte Nlnet
Reed, I diJ:tllf Jllllllber, II . .
)llddlepcn BID tW 1111', I p.11,
Tllepublle llllfDidtolltend.
.II

Pineapple In Syrup t;·

Murray Cookies

78
Whipped Topping ..6i~~· ~

. THOROFARE 1FROZEN

MRS. FILBER~'S 1SPREAD 25

1

Marganne ..... 2-lb. eow1

78~

$1.a8

CH,EF BOY·AR·9EE PEPPERONI

P1zza MIX

• • • •. 1·1b. Pkg.

$HU~TZ

.

98¢

PESCHKE

_

,

Heart 0' The Ham .
U.S.DA INSPECTED FRESH ,

•

·

Spnng Roasters . . . .

• .lb.

$1.58

SB"'

3-lbs&amp;
over lb.

"'

Wh.~l1;sC~tEUp Fryers ..... lb. 68¢
. I

U.S.DA INSPECTED FAMILY PAK

Fresh Chicken Legs ..... lb.

88¢

of$100.

Meats ...... 1~
ARMOUR t STAR"GREATFDRTHEGRILL"

Ku Ibassy

Rope style • • • • • • •
PARTRIDGE BRAND

Polska Kielbasa or Smoked

$1ji

Sliced Beef Liver. . . . . . .

1o.

$

li

$1 §§:

.

Thm Pretzels .... Hb. eaa

B

MIGHTY DOG

SIMPLE AND BASIC
BUYING GENERIC PRODUCTS IS A SURE FI RE WAY TO
SAVE MONEY ON YOUR GROCERY BIL[ ' GENERICS HAVE NO
FANCY PACKAGES. LABELS or ADVERTISING · INSTEAD
THEY 00 GIVE YOU SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS WITHOUT
SACRAFICING QUALITY ANO WHOLESOMENESS

.

69~

:

LUCKY LEf,,

MARZETTI
SWEET &amp; SOUR

Dressing
B·oz. Botlle

Apple
Juice

sac

ORTEGA

Taco Shells

3''L ().
. '·

Prll'
,.
,) ·.

72¢

POST

• • 16·C1. Pkg.

Mayonnaise ..

$

Box

a8~ 40% Bran Flakes Cereal 1'

8~

THOROFARE

1s.oz.Jar.?

U~CLE BEN'S

,

l·lb

Converted R1ce ... Box

.

Dog Food_, . •

34~

· All Varieties

6.5-oz. Calli

'

88
Window Cleaner .. t\: ~
'

· sa~

··,

AUSTIN'S

Half

CALI~ORIII

RED RIPE ·TOP QUALITY

Strawller.r la
ALL· •ll' OFF LABEL

Laundry Detergent . . .

9·1b.
13-oz. Box

$498
.
-

14-oz. BAG

Kraft Caramels. .... .... 98~
98•
Cream Deodorant . . .

ARRlD

1-oz. Jar

DEL MONTE

Pudding or Mixed Fruit Jt~~ns

THOROFARE

DAR picnic set

DEL MONTE I 3-VAR.

68~;

101k:t. Pkg.

•• lb.

GALLIPOLIS - James R:
Williams, president of the Central'
Trust Company, Southern Ohio
Division, at Gallipolis and Mid·
dleport, will chair the 1981 drive for
Century Club members on behalf of
the Gallia County Unit of the '
American Cancer Society (ACS) . TO
become a member of the ACS Cen- ·
tury Club means making a donatio~&gt;

'

SAN GIORGIO

GREEN GIANT 1WHOLE KERNEL

Butt
Portion

Bever~ges

·
ALL vAR • • • wter Bottle

~~CORMig&lt;-SEASONED 11r PlAIN 3.12 to 3.37-oz.
I
Jar .

Meat enderlzer . . .. . •

$1 ftR

u .

88$
67•
.

MRCOFFEE ,

THOROFARE

Tea Bags

I

I

I

I

I

}! Coffee Filters
. . . 1IJO.ct. Ptlg.$1
.

O·TIPS

Cotton Swabs . . . •.

88-ct. Pllg,

SUNSHINE

HI Ho Crackers .....

1-lb.Pak
Bonus

•

..VAR.

Colgate Instant Shave .. 11-oz.c.n

68$
88•

~~=lches ...•.•.. Jt!. 98• Ripe Pitted Olives
EAIIlYCAUFOANIA ·MEDIUM

kz.
. , •• Cin

,

Vlaslc Pickles
. ' . . ..•. 46-oz.,.,

THOROFARE·FANCYCUT

"taloupe

$141

Hb.

a

· kt. PKG.

•

69$
Plochman Mustard .•.••• ~ .

'

POLISH OR KOSHER

3
"1
Green Beans .. : . . • . . cane ·
84." Handi Wipes • • • • . • • . . • • 93$•

G~;ted Romano Cheese ~ etn. $1 U
1&amp;-oz, sQuEEZE some

48(

.. . . . . • 50-et. Pkg..

Full Pint

FULL FLAVOR

'

The Gallia County Century Club
was established in 1977. Ten donors
gave the required $100 and became ·
the Charter members of the locat
Century Club. Merrill Evans chaired· '
the first drive in 1977 and the second
drive in 1978, when the group grew ttr :
20 members. C. Leon Saunders was ·:
the 1979 chairman, with the numbeo :
of members growing to 32, and ir! •
!980 the Ceutury Club reched ~ :
membership of 37 under the leadership of Robert T. Hennesy.
:
Agoal of 50 members, to mark thl( :
fifth year of Century Club is the high ;
mark set for 1981, according to
Williams, this year's chairman; '
Many business and professional men
and women, either as individuals or
on behalf of their businesses, take a
keen interest in the goals and purposes of the ACS and en- ;
thusiastically give their $100 ' 5 •
become a Century Club mew .r. •
Each member receives an at·
tractive engraved plaque to dbplay
at home or in the office.
This year's chairman came to
Gallipolis a year ago as the .
President of Central Trust corn;
pany, N.A., Southern Ohio Division,
coming to Gallipolis from Marietta
where he was the Vice Chairman
and Comptroller for the Central
Trust Company, Marietta. He joined
Central Trust in their bookkeeping .
department, and throughout his 27
years with the organization, has held :
responsible positions in a number &lt;i
departments, qualifying him for his
position as chief executive officer
~nd President of the Gallipolis bank:
A graduate of Cleveland West
High School, the American Institute ·
of Banking, the Ohio School of
Banking and the Ohio School of In· .
stallmeni Credit, he attended
Marietta College. Throughout ~
'tareer he has been actively involved ,
in both civic and professional .
organizations.
.
While in Marietta he was
president of the Marietta Noon LionS
Club, director and treasurer of the
Marietta Chamber of Commerce,
director of the Greater Marietta
United Appeal, president of the
Washington County Arthritis Foun; '
dation, and member of the
Washin r orr County Heart
AssociatiOI, and Marietta Com:
munity Fo1·ndation.
Williw lllo and his wife Jennie are
now res' dents of the Gallipolis area .,
Assi.! .ing·him this year in his goal
of 50 Century Club members are
three of hls associates at the Central •
Trust Company: Randy Hays, ·
George Woodward and Harold '
Thompson, along with Gallia County '
AGS Unit Board members, the Rev ~ •
Luther Tracy and Cathy Bostic.
•'
Anyone interested In becoming
CenturY Club member on behalf of
the Gallia County Unit of the
American Cancer Society should
feel free to contact Williams by
calling 446-1902 inunediately. These
vital donations wil help to wipe out ,
cancer in our lifetime.
'•

.SALAD FAVORITE

Romaine Lettuce ... lb.

49$

4
$1
Green Onions
'•

ICY FJIESH

Bcha.

''

vas to begin

' f

.'

POMEROY - Vacation Biblr.
School wiD be held at the Zion Church of Christ June 8 through June 12; ., .
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
,
There will be classes from nursery, ;
age·throuih high school. Aprogram .,
will be presented on Friday, June 12.· ..
at 7:30p.m.
All chlldren are to bring a san- ;
dwlcb for lunch. Cookies and'
beYII'a&amp;e will be provided. A 'Ilene~
rdut will be held 011 Fl'iday lftel: ;
d• e

�Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipoliS, Ohi~Point.PttJsant, W. Vi.:

Page--B-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 7, 1fl1

Junt 7, lfll

Van Meter Houdtishelt. marry Club.4iscusses civic b~au!ification ..

Pomeroy.:...Middleport-G~IIipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

L

I' Tuppers Plains VBS set to begin

stars' ·

1·.

. .·
.
·
·
MIDDI.EPORT-c!VIC ~tlficat- picnic., f ·
,
.
· Rullaild FriiD!Ilf Qardel!erl tnfl{eter,Chester,COUBinofthebride. · ion and the ~blllty 11. con- . ~.: ·~requested~mern- ,VHIRcmemiJirlto'llt4ild.,_open
The attendants 11-ere attired in ~tructing a planter at .· tile In· bers ~der a clrlve to ~ meetlnundnoweu11Gw ..,..J4.
pink gowils of polyNter satin and tersection of Second and Mill on the rneinbetlhip and namea will be subFor roll call memberl illmld a
lace. The sleeveless gowns ' hac! "T" in Mlddl~port waa dlacuaaed at mltted . t the August meeting so that favorite bird. Mrs. Skjnner .ccmyotes of lace and A·llne skirts, with · Mon~ night II meetlnil of the Mid- thel~Mljmembencan bellatedlnthe mePted 011 the aceDent ....,_.,.
deep pink rillbOn ties. Tj\ey Wwe sllk .dleport Garden Club held at the 1981-42 program book. .
,
~ by 111'1. MIICIJ BartGa at
Dowers in their hair and carried home of Mrs. David ~en,
She ~ requtlled that members the MaY Open J11111iD1 wbere tbe
noaegaya of pink al)d Wbite flowers.
Syractl8e.
infonn ber.if they have a COIIImlttee , , MllcldlepOrt Amlteur Gardelln
The groom's atteildants were
Mrs. M. J. ~ry will drsw up plana prefenince for nnt yeir. , k, 1 were aueata. Mra. n.J4WIIIIIted
Todd Crew' Reynoldsbul'g, best for the planter and present to the . dlscuUion was held on conimltee. that die Aucuat picnic ~ will
man; Steve Stout, Middleport, Ron club. ·Sevetal years ~ the club respOnalbli!Ues and 881iC!lmeiltll be held ~lclliduled.
,
McGrath, Mason, W. Va·,, and Brent ~~tructed a large planter on the ' and it was decided that notification
Arrangmeentl of roeee in a ~r
Houdashelt, Pomeroy, ~uain Of the
T , but it was removed. Son!ethlng of changes in the program should be pitcher made Mn. Carl Hortcy, and
groOm. All of the male attenqan~. more suttabl~ for- the Intersection , give" to Mrs. Skinner or Mrs: Louise in a aeaahel1 made b7 Mill Nellie
including the rtngbearer 'wore wlllbedeslgnedbyMn.Fry. .
Thompson. '~;he club voted to Zerklew~redilp!aYed.
.
burgundytiiJiedOS.
·
Mrs. Arthur Skl!mer,. prl!lldent, · eliminate the , January, 1982
The program by Mn, Moni.IW88
A reception honoril)g the couple . asked m~mbers to submit Ideas for rneetUJg. Mrs. Willi~ Morris of Vie · Oli technlqdee that guaraqtee gOod
was held in the ch~h social room. projects following a discussion on nOIIIIQiinll committee 1-eported that arrangemenll. Sbe dilplliyed buic
Wedding bells 'love birds and ihe club~s responsibilltillS in the area she did not have a slate Of officers to materlala needed for !be mecllanlca
streamers ln ·' pink and ' white Of civic besutlficatlon and funding .
at this Ume.
of llfl'lllllllng and ~ted the
decorated the area behind the for such projects. It WBB decided
An lilvltatlon W$1. read from the comet method. tt 1111.
·
· bride's table which featured a three following the discussion that this wW
'·
tiered wedding cake surrounded at· bethegroup'llastyeartosponsora ~;;~;;;-~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
the base . by smaller heart-shaped summer pic~ic for ~ Pers~ Ad-.!1
More
cakes. The traditional miniature vocacy. T!tis year s piCRIC will be
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Houdashelt
comforta!lle
bride and groom were featureli on held in tile_ multi·p~ room of the
POMEROY- Teresa Van Meter, belong to her late great· the center layer. The cake was made Semor CitiZens ~nter ,on WedThf il Ev•r
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Purl Van grandmother Barrett, wore for the couple by Marge Walker of nesday, J~y 8. The club voted .to
''
Meter, Rutland, and Randy diamond earrings, the wedding gift
'
Bidwell,
and
Margaret
Edwards
of
r~d~on~a~te~$25~;for;;;re;fres;;;;hm;;en;ts;;;a;t
~
·
Houdashelt, son of Mr. and Mrs. of her parents, a new penny in her Rutland made the mints. Serving
Eugene Houdasheit, Union Ave., shoe, and a blue garter.
were Mrs. Irene Tom, Athens, aunt
Pomeroy, exchanged wedding vows
The bride's attendants were Talll' of the' bride; Louise Kelly, Columin an evening ceremony at the my Martin, Frazysburg, maid of bus; Roberta Dailey, Middleport,
Rutland Church of Christ on Aprill8. honor; Sue Kennedy Stephens, aunts of the groom; Mrs. Becky
Mr. Uoyd Grimm performd the Dublin ; Tanunie DeBord, Colum· Smith, sister of the groom,
double ring ceremony at 6:30 p.m. bus, Jenifer Harrison, Cheshire, Pomeroy, and Margaret Edwards,
Eggshell, Med. Brown,
2409 Jackson Avenue
following a program of music by bridesmaids; and Alvena Van and Joan May of Rutland.
Burgundy
OSLO
·
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Jane Wise, pianist, Vivien Addision, Meter, Chester, cousin Of the bride,
Mrs. Smith registered the guests,
675-61.74
guitarist and violinist, and Jud Han- a junior bridesmaid. Tara Erwin of · and handing out rice hags and
• TaJI Planning &amp; Return s
num, guitarist, and vocalists, Ms. Pomeroy was the flower girl, and programs were Tabitha Philips,
• Financial Statements
Rinaldi and Ms. Addision. Their the ringbearers were Travis Grate, Middleport, and Bryan Weaver,
• Management Advl sorv Service
300 Second
- Financial Planning
selections included "You Needed Rutland, and Victor James Van Syracuse.
.
Gallipolis
• Complete Bookkeeping
Me," ('Ice Castles," "I Won't Live a
The couple rll!lides 'on Main St. in
Services
Day Without You," "The Rose ," and
Rutland.,
Suririse, Sunset.n
The ceremony included lighting of
a unity candle from candles lighted
"Women are11't
by Mrs. Van Meter and Mrs.
alike.
Houdasheit.
The church decorations featured a
Ufe insurance
heart-shaped candelabra flanked by
programs
single hurricane candelabra. The ar·
ch was adorned with a large center
aren't alike."
heart with double wedding rings
used with wedding bells and love bir·
ds. The fiiy pews were marked with
nosegays of silk pastel flowers, and
candies were used in the windows.
The decorating was done by the
Ask me
bride's mother.
aboutlife
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore a gown of polyester
sheer and Venise lace. The fitted
bodice was fashioned with a high
neckline and full sheer sleeves with
fitted cuffs, ali accented with Venise
lace. The skirt was tiered and flowed
Spring Valley Plaza
Phon e 446-4396
into a chapel train. Both the bride's
chapel length veil of illusion and her'
blusher were trimmed with lace.
The ensemble was created for the
Like a good neighbor.
bride by Mrs. Houdashelt.
State Farm is there.
The bride carried a bouquet of silk
roses in pink and white made by her
Slate Farm life
mother. She wore an antique pin
lnaur1nce Company.
Homo OHico:
belonging to her late grea t,.
' ..... . .... c
Bloomlnglon . Illinois
grandmother Grueser, carried a
white lace edged handkerchief

TUPPERS . PLAINS · _
VacailonBibleSchoolwlllbebeld
at tile Tuppen P1alnl Olurch 11
Chriat. starting June 8, and con- ·
tinuing through Friday, June 12.
TbethemewWbe "Jesus, Your
Word Lives 1n Me! " and there
wtlJ be ciaaaes for all ages, nursery through adults.
· The ds~y schedule will provide
crafts and recreation as well as
learning experie~s · with the
Bible.
The ,, schooi wW meet each

SUMMER

'81

evenjng fonn' .7 untn 9 p.m. A
V.B:S.~wtlJbepresented
Swlday, J~ 14, at 7 p.m. in the

ch~. Mrs. June ·L. Wa~rs 11
the director. The public 18 Jn..
vtted.

Maf-e
a Dad's '

Sentinel
Social Calendar

Prese1

JAMES ROSS
.1
Business &amp; Tax
Consultant .

The Sunday Times.-Sentinei-Page--8·7

'"·

r.

~·

.

JOHN KIMBERLING Wl'l1l LIMO - Jolm KimbtrUq J1GN8 wllll 1111 Umouslne at the GaJUa.Melp

',

.

'

SUNDAY
Mike and Mark TutUe wW be
speaking . at the Tuppers Plains
·Church of Christ at 7 p.m. today.
There will be speciill muaic and the
. putlllc is invited.
· ·1
.
MONDAY
i.ADIES NIGHT will be observed
at the meeting Of the Twin City
Airport. llmberilul Ill pl-epariug to help wltb tbe Ohio . Shrine Club Monday at'7 p.m. at the
River Alnbow today.
club houae In Racine. All members .
and wives are invited to attend.

BY SALLYANNE HOLTZ

Gifts, gift wrap and thoughtful Falher's Day
cards by Hallmark. Put them all together
wilh your love to make Sunday, june 21
your Dad's best Falher's Day ever!
© liNIO Hallmtrtt caroa. Inc.

7~ r/~
42 Court St.

Gallipolis, Oh.

Closed Monday
POMEROY - Teaford Real l~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Estate, Second Street, Pomeroy,
will be closed Monday to attend a ·
Seminar at Buckeye Hills on continuing education.

The
Shoe Cafe

11

VBS to begin
Vacation Bible school wtlJ be held
at the Racine United Methodist
Church, Monday through Friday of
next week. Oa•ses will be held from
9a.m. to 11 a.m.

set

HOLIDAY POOlS
SWIMMING POOLS
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
'

nground and above
pool kits of any

~

RIDING IN STYLE- KlmberllDg rldel iD style iD tbe rear seat of biB

• Chlorinators •
IM,otors and Pumps • SafeKUI&gt;e" • Pool Ladders •
• Pool Games •
Base • Filter Sand •
Pool sweeps •
I••e:~~~:;;ticHose
• Cleaning
Equipment • Pool Paint •
Poolside Furn. • Chemical
Heaters • Solar Covers. •
Covers • Skimmers
Diving Boards • Slides •
Liners.
Buy all your needs from
local warehouse and save,

u-1ae. Tbe w!dte vel¥et eacues a televtsloa. Tbe sHver trophies are
to be peau awards at tbealnbow.

·~

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE. •.

THE CHURCH AND
THE SAVED
By William B. Kughn
Somewhat over fifteen hunpred years after the creation of Adam ,
the record tells us of the world ' s conta mi nation . The fruit of the evil
one was the favorife among men. Sin permeated the ea rth, covering it
witn the blanket of wickedness. As God looked upon the world and saw
1ts beauty marred, "if repented tile Lord that he had made man on the
earTh, and it grieved him at his heart" &lt;Genesis 7:6). He would deal
with him severe ly, sweeping The earth wiTh the broom of destruction.
However, rhe benginan1 evs of God overlooked not the gOOdness of
Noah ; therefore, He was going to make provisions for the sa lvat ion of
histamily .

.

The salvation of Noah consisted of his obeying God. He was to
build an ark and it was to be built according to the pattern of gOd
( Genesis 6•15) Tnere was but ONE ARK . It was made of ONE
MATERIAL, gopner wood . Ther e was but ONE WINDOW and ONE
DOOR . The family tnat entered nad tnings in COMMON , wearing the
fami ly name . They were delivered from the destruction by the
GRACE of God. and it required OBEDIENCE on the part of Noah,
"A nd Noah did according unto all that the Lord commanded him "
1Genesis 7 •6).
Again, man ha s chosen the fruit of the evil one to appease the ap·
petites of tne fl esn . Tne wor ld stands before GOd in an ignoble condl·
l ion , and He is going to destroy it once aga in. but w ith fire, " In flaming
fire tak ing Yengeance on !hem that know not GOd, and that Obey not
the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ " I 11 Thessalonians 1•8l. This will
be tne final destruction . But, as God was longsuflering In the days ot
Noan, so is He tOday . The wor ld stood ready and ripe for destruction,
but God gave tnem time to repent, " yet nis daYs shall be a hundred
and twenty years" (Genesis 6:3), I t was during this lime t hat Noah.
The preacher of righteousness, warned·the world and prepared the ark
( II Peter 3:201. It is not GOd's will to destroy man but to save him II
Timothy2 : 4).
.
The gospel declares !hal salvat ion is of GOd, and he will save tnose
who obey His terms of sa lvation. He nas established the CHURCH In '
this world that Christ purchased with his blood." .. . to feed the church
of GOd. which he natn PURCHASED wi th his own BLOOD " (Acts
20 :281 . The CHURCH Is the BODY ot Christ, "And hath putallthings
under his feet, and gave him to be the head over all things to the
CHURC H. wnich is nis BODY, tne fu lness of him that fllleth all in all
1Ephesians 1•22, 231 . As c nrist had one physical bOdy white on earth,
so He ha s one spirttual BODY . Si nce tn e spiritual is the CHURCH, He
has ONE CHURC H , " There iS ONE BODY ... " 1Epneslans4 : 4). Salva·
l ion being in Christ, II is in H is BODY the CHURCH , "T herefore 1 en·
dur e a ll lings for tne elect' s sakes, !hal they may also obtain the
SALVATION which Is in CHRIST JESUS With eternal glory" Ill
Tim othY 2:10) . Christ is the SAVIOR of the BODY," ... and he Is the
SAVOUR ofthe BODY" I Ephesians 5:23). Chr ist belno the SAVIOR of
the BODY the CHURCH and SALVATION being In HIS BODY the
CHURCH , the SAVED are ADDE O to the CHURCH "And the Lord ad·
ded to tne CHURCH daily such as should be SA VE D" &lt;Acts 2 : ~71 . The
CH UR CH Is as VITAL to GOd's plan In the saving of m an as the AR~
was In the saving of Noah!
1For Free Bible Correspo~dence CourSf Write ... ) ·

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Airshow
today
.GAWPOUS - There will be a
giant alrshow today at the GalllaMeigs Airport, Rt. 7, Gallipolis
(across from Pondorosa) . .
The show, beginning at 9 a.m. and
getting in full jetstream about 1
p.m., will feature numerous
daredevil fiying acts, hot air
balloons, airplane and helicopter
rides Iweather permitting), Army
and Navy aircraft, di$plays, exhibits
and surprise events. Prizes and contests will be underway. Airplanes
from 1919 to the present will be
available for scrutiny.
Food will be available from the
Gallipolis Kiwanis Club (II a.m.-2
p.m.), which will barbecue chicken
at the site; the chicken dinner costs
$3. Other eats will be avallable to the
. public.
Airport manager Larry Beaver
says if this year's show goes over
well, he hopes to make in an annual
event. Admission fee is a parking '
donation.

.

·,

By ED 8CIIlJYLERJR,
AP~Wrtter

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT, JUNE 1~ 1981

BUCKET

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$

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Cube Steak·...........

NEW YORK , (AP) - Slllllllling,
who beat Pleasant Colony in that
colt'• flnl career start, did it again
SatUrday, winning the !~·mile
Belmont Stakes and ruining
PleaSant Colony's bid for the Triple
Crown.
Pleasant Colony, winner of the
Kentucky Derby and Preala)ess,
could do no better than third on a
warm, muggy day as Highland
Blade finished second to Summing.
Instead of becoming thoroughbred
racing's 12th Triple Cr.own winnerhe was a 4.,'; favorite to accomplish
the feat - Pleasant Colony, the
leggy colt trained by Jolm Gampo,
·lMlcame the loth 3-yeaMld to miss
the Triple Crown by lOlling in the
Belmont
.
Sununlng, ridden by George Martens and trained by Luill Barrera,
got to the front with about a baH. mile to go and would not give up the
lead. Jorge Velallquez put Pleasant
Colony Into a drive on the final turn
and he moved Into contention in the
upper stretch, but he just didn't have
SUMMING PRE:VAIUI - Snmmtng (1), will) b) win. the, 1131b nmniDg of lbe Belmonl Stakes at
enough
to get the job done.
jockey Georse 'Mmfeu In the sllml.., beals ollt Beblaoat race track Ill Bebnont, N. Y. Salunlay.
Sununlng
got to the wire a neck in
Hlghla!!d Blade, with Jtclnlo Vuquez..,, at the flllilb PI-t Colony, wilb Jorge Velasquez In the Baddle, ·
front
of
Highland
Blade, ridden by
placedtldnl. (APLuerpboto).
'

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Valerine Cundiff

Celebrates
birthday
,
MIDDLEPORT - The first blr·
thday of Valerine Lynn Cundiff,
daughter of Greg and Vickie Cundiff, Middleport, was observed with
11 party recenUy at the Letart Community hall.
Refreshments .of cake, ice cream
aild Kool-Aid were served. Prizes
were won by Donnie Rime and
Aimee Manuel. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Roush, John Roush,
Mae Roush, Joyce Riffle and
chlldrell, Missy, Donnie and Monte,
Mf, and Mrs. Gary Roush and ·
•chlldnll, Jeremy, Brandy, and ·
Adam, Letart F•Us; Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Claldlff, Jr., Mrs. Rachel Citn-1
dlft, Mtlodl Cundiff, Mra. KarOn
'(:cmOIIy IIIII children, Brian and
SheiJ1,111d Becky and Doug Laven-

a.,Syrac••

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.................. Yldery .. f'lldiT• dllc.w campellllta, .. Jive IIJm.
aelltllelllle Ia he evelill lwtl1nJ&amp;IatJIUI. (AP lMerplloll).

Brown leads
Roth'. to title

Worthington

AAA champs

0

Gallja's Wolfe
fifth in state COLUMBUS - Con Wolfe of
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f1ftb iD lbe 1-.c.- low lu 'n iD
lba 0.. AA 111118 flnlla In &lt;lalllmbta ......,.
• llnwwudtlliedll :11.1..
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{

der Campo.
The victory for Summing, owned
by Charles T. Wilson, was his third
straight, his first in Triple Crown
competition. The son of Verbatum
paidU7.110, $'1.80 and$4. Pen-Y-Bryn
Farm's Highland Blade, who was
sixth in the Preakness, paid $11.40

and $5.60. Pleasant Colony was $2.80
to show.
'l'll!l victory was worth $170,580
from a purse of $284,300 and boosted
Surnming's!981 earnings to $344,506.
His career bankroll, which started to ·
soar after victories in the Hill Prince
on the Belnnont grass and the Pennsylvania Derby May 25 lt
Keystone,nowstandsat~.,.,ti.
_
Before the· race, Barrera, whose·
brother Laz won thia race with Bold
Forbes in 1976 and Affinned in 1978,
had said, "I beat the horse (Pleasant
Colony) once. I can ileal him again."
Barrera said his only doubt was
not the competition but the distance.
"If I can go a mile and a half, he.
won't beat us," said Barrera.
Summing went the I\', miles in
2:29 .. . and it was fast enough.
"No excuses," said the talkative
Campo, who is known as the Fat
Man. "It happens. Don't be sorry.
It's the name of the game:•
The defeat for Pleasant Colony
was the first for the Thomas MeDon
Evans-owned colt in four starts under Campo.
The victory for Summing, owned '
by Charles T. Wilson, was his third
straight, his first in Triple Crown
competition.

Czech, 19, wins French title

l'lldiW lint Ill lba llurdlll . .

5l8.
BAG

J!ICiitto . Vasquez, who finished
second last year on the rilly Genuine
RisiL Pleasant Colony was another
I~ lengtha back and five lengths in
fr~nt of Woodchopper, the secondplace finisher in the Kentucky Derby.
Before the race, Barrera, wbose
brother w won thia race with Bold
Forbes in 1976 and Affirmed In 1978,
had said, "I beat the hone (Pleasant
Colony) once. I can beat him again." ·
Barrera said his only doubt was
not the competition but the distance.
"U I can go a mile and ·a haH, he
won't beat 118," said Barrera.
Sununing went the 1'rio miles in
2:29 ... and it was f!ISt enough.
"No e1cuses," said the talkative
Campci, who is known as the Fat
Man. "It happens. Don't be sorry.
lt'sthenameofthegame."
.
The defeat for Pleasant Colony
was the first fqr the Thomas Mellon
Ev811S-()wned colt in four starts un-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Portsmouth edged Shelby S-4 and Parma Heights Holy Name whipped
Columbus DeSales H in the Ohio
Hilh ~hool Class AA stale basebaU
tournament semifinals Saturday at
Ohio State University.
Portsmouth, 27-3, 8nd Holy Name,
21-3, met later Saturday in the championship game.
DeslgnaJed hitter Eric Flannery's
single thro1J8h short drove in the
winning run for Portsmouth in the
seventh Inning.
Kel Parker opened the l.nnl!1g with
a double to left, moved to thlnl on an
infield emr and scored on Duane
Wales' double to center to tie the
~ at 4-4. After Trey Jakcson
wallted, Flannery rapped. his ganme-wlnnlng lingle.
JacU&lt;Jn, who llmlted Shelby to
.line hila, picked up the win to boost
his record to 9--2. Shelby starter
Iloujj Hummel, wbo relieved in uie
fourth and again In the seventh, look
the loss to drop his record to 111-2 as
Shelby closed out the seuon with a
HAVING A WORD'S WORn! - Loa Angeles zueladuringfourtbjJmlngatC.icagoSaturday. Valeo- 29-4 mark.
manager Tom Luorda (2) aDd catcher Mike zuela was removed ill the fourth. The Cubs woo the '
Dodgen'
Parma Heights Holy Name,
Scloscla
have
a word wilb pltcber Fernando Valeo- game, 11-5. (AP Laserphoto).
behind the four-hit pitching Jim Ehrbar, bunched doubles by Rich Sfrw:o
and Tony Magal.ski .md a single by
Kevin Joyce, along with two errurs,
to IICOI'e three ftiiiS In the sixth inI
ning to defeat DI!Sales.
DeSal!lll stranded eight.runners in
PARIS, (AP)- Hana Mandllluwa die two days earlier when she upset gradually the pattern changed. As
ending llll1e18011 with a 27-5 record.
came frillll belnd in both seta to beat Chris Evert Uoyd, the defending Mandlikova tightened her game and
Sylvia Han1k.a of West Germany 6-2, champion and the overwhehnlng drove act:urately for the lines,
Hanika became erratic.
6-4 Saturday and became the first favorite.
Fitness and accuracy are key facHanlka, the powerful 21-year-old
Czec:boelovlkil WOOI8Il to win the
tors
on the slow clay of Paris'
left-bander
from
Munich,
however,
French Open tennll tiUe.
Roland
Garros Stadium. Man·
didn't
make
it
easy
for
the
young
At 19, lhe led the youtltul
dlikova had both. She reeled off silt
CUehollovaklan cbarge am. the Czechoslovakian star.
Hanlka WUI the first seven points games In a row and wrapped up the
tenn11 COill'tl of the world. She
alread)' had wan the Australian tiUe of the 1111teh and took a 2-0 lead. But first set in 32 minules.
and II balhray tonrd the grand
llam
·. Sunday, another Czechoslovakian,
2l•)'eaMlld lVUI Lendl, dlallenge8
the ~ Swede, Bjorn Borg, In
the men'lflnal.
Mandllkova, daughter of Ut Olympic ~priMer, cleared her ostlffest hur-

.....

. ~CrGDcll, TlippaaPIIba
(

•

BORDEN.

KRAFT·

-1

Trojans
gain AA
fin
1·
_ as

Bologna.............: •.

GRADE AWHOLE

c·

.. ·

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

Etlis-Hansher

.
.
. The Sll!lday Times-Sentinel-Page--

upsets
Pleasant Colony

Sunda'J 10 am-10 pm

TUPPERS PLAINS - Final plans
have been completed for the open
church wedding of Lori Lee Young
and Michael Ray Harris at2:30 p.m.
on Sunday, June 14, at the St. Paul's
United Methodist Church, Tuppers
Plains.
The Rev. Richard Thomas will officiate at the ceremony following a
program of music by Susan Hannum
which is to begin at 2p.m.
A reception will be held in the
church social room inunediately
following the ceremony.

June 7, 1981

~umlning

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am·lO pin

Wedding .
plans made

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Ellis of 241 Uncoln St., Middleport, are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Teresa
Ellis, to Kevin Hansher, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Hansher, Columbus.
The open-church wedding will be
an event of June 13 at 2:30p.m. at
the Grove City Church of · the
Nazarene, Grove City. A reception
will follow in the church fellowship
hall. The Rev. Curtis Lewis, Jr.,
Grove City, w.ill perform the
ceremony.
The bride-elect's attendants will
be Oebra Ellis, matron of honor;
Usa Nash, Kim Hansher, and Kerry
Hansher, bridesmaids; and Amy
Killnnon, flower girl. Brent Park will
be best man, and the groomsmen
will be Gary Ellis, Jeff Melton, and
Kent Hansher, with Chris Cannon as
the ringbearer. Music will be
provided by Pam Van Hom and Betty Cotner with Sam Van Horn as the
vocalist.
Hostesses for the reception will be
Unda Bailey, Debbie Crump, Gwen
Melton, and Tammy Park.
The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate
of Mt. Vernon Nazarene College
where she received a degree in
elementary education. Her fiance is
also a 1981 graduate of Mt. Vernon
Nazarene College where he majored
in computer science. He is employed
by Batelle Memorial Institute,
Columbus. Following their wedding,
the couple will reside in·Grove City.

.

ml, 0 ., 2 . . . . .

IIIII DieD Ca!IINII,
~llll(l:lut).

�Pag..-C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midllleport-Gallipolls, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

June7,1N1 ·

.

Ohi-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Concepcion liomers twice .·
as 'Reds whip ·E~Po~, :6~3 :
CINCINNAn (AP) - He hUn't
been a one-tn1111 show. But ()ln.
ciilllati Reds llhortltoP Dave Celli-.
cepckin la perfOI'IIIlllg II hiU of the
leadinc one two I'IIJI1II'OIIud puncb in the National League.
Concepcion rapped two bomers
and drove In tbree I'Ullll Fliday to
defeat the Montreal ~ w and
jump 11/Jead: Of tel!imii1e George
Foster )'ith·a ,l~gue.lesdfug" RBI.
Fosterhas42.
.· ,
. , ·
"lfe's having a p~tty good Yliar.''

'

AUTI'LE TOO LATE - Cincinnati Reds catcher
Joe Nolan la unable to reach Montreal Expos base fiUio
ner Wlllle Moutsnez as he slides across home plale

'

1

wltb tbe first run of lbe pme for Moulrelllu the flftb
iDulug of a game Friday lu ClnclnnaiL• (AP Laaer-

photo).

Barker stops Seattle on 5-hitter
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
blister on his pitching hand.
AP Sporls Writer
Orioles 6, Angels 4
There's a school of thought that
Eddie Murray and Rich Dauer
says Len Barker is the best pitcher drove in two runs apiece and Tippy
in the American League ... and the Martinez posted his ninth save as the
headmaster is none other than Len Orioles snapped their Iongesllosing
Barker.
streak of the season at five games.
"Right now, I think I'm the best Murray doubled two runs across in
pitcher in the league. I feel no one the first inning and Dauer delivered
can beat me when I go out to the RBI singles in the fourth and sixth.
mound," Barker said Friday night Scott McGregor allowed eight hits in
after firing a five-hitter and striking ~2-3 innings, including a two-run
out eight as the Cleveland Indians homer by Bobby Clark, but won his
trounced the Seattle Mariners 11-1.
sixth consecutive game over Ca!iforBarker, 1).2, leads the league with nia.
a 1.82 eamed run average and 64
strikeouts. However, Detroit's Jack
Morris, 8-3, is the AL"s top winner:
He notched his seventh consecutive
victory with a three-hitter as the
Tigers blanked the MiMesota Twins
~.

Elsewhere, the Baltimore Orioles
downed the California Angels 6-4,
the New York Yankees edged the
Chicago White Sox &amp;-5 in 12 innings,
the Boston Red Sox deleated the
Oakland A's 4-1 , the Texas Rangers
nipped the Toronto Blue Jays iH in
12 innings and the Milwaukee
Brewers trimmed the Kansas City
RoyalsS.2.
Barker got more thsn enough su~
port from Jorge Orta, who drove in
three runs with two singles and a
sacrifice fly .
Tigers 2, Twins 0
Alan Tranunell hit his first home
run of the season in the sixth inning
for the only run Morris needed.
Tranunell connected off left-bander
Brad Havens, who allowed only two
hits in six innings in his major
league debut before leaving with a

run in the fifth inning, his 12th of the
season.
Ra1111er8 s, Blue Jays t
.Jim Sundberg raced home from
third with the winning run In the 12th
inning when Toronto shortstop
Alfredo Griffin ' committed his
second error of the game. Sundberg
singled with one out and alertly
dashed to third when four Toronto
players converged on Mario Mendoza's sacrifice bunt, leaving third
base uncovered. Sundberg ·scored
when Mickey Rivers' grounder handcuffed Griffin.
The Rangers tied the game 4-4 in
the . eighth when Billy ~mple
singled, went to second when Griffin
booted a potentional double play
grounder by Bill Stein and scored on
a sinl!le by Bump Wills.
Brewers 8, Royals Z
Robin Yount's leadoff triple and a
two-run double by Ben Oglivle keyed
a four-run eighth inning as
Milwaukee defeated Kansas City
behid the six-hit pitching of Moose
Haas. The Brewers were leading 2-j)
on Don Money's sacrifice Oy In the
second and Yount's home run in the
third when they wrapped it up in the
eighth against Larry Gura. Amos
Otis' two-run homer in the bottom of
the eighth spoiled Haas' shutout bid.

' ·

'·

a

lnsllf!lnce runs.

PARIS (AP) - Bjorn Borg of
Sweden topped Victor Pecci of

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~ the mound In the bottom of the
inning, · and It wu all the Reds
. needed.

''I want
to.belpyou
save··money on
homeowners·
insurance.''

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on 111

bands. Extra lOng
range ana """ MlllltlvltV.Out otrfocmull
black bow tvPtS ancl ot11er
oranas oecause It's englneerec! anCI dfSIOniCI
ov military radar specialists. MOunts ·on 11111 Vljor
or any place convenient.

lh"

CD

••

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•

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0

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PLYWOOD SHEATHING

4 Ft.XI Ft.
C&amp;C

FOR ROOFS
"
'' And
SUB FLOORS

~.

B: I

oli Satunl.ly and Sunday,

J-13 and If, at the Jaycees' W.t
Slate Park.
Entry tee 11 eeo, ph• two lllftbllla.

TNplllel will be awarded lo lint
t1ree places and all lint place team
1111!111ben.
For entry or lnfonnaUon, phone
any of thll fallowing : Rlc:k Douglas
(lit) iii:W7II 8allll Jeffers 717-1$37
orJaiiiWhltelit.l..,
Entry feel can be fllllled to John
White Reilly, • Richland Ave.,
· Athens, Ohio 467111.
Drlwinl will be Wednaday, June
18.

..

..

•

CM400

•

C1JS10M

needs.
Hours: ,10 a.m.-f p.m.

Dent triumph!!
~ lncland (AP) -

PHI Dent of Aallralla IIIII " TII!IIef '-7, W, 14-12; willie
Aultralla's Brad J:&gt;renU defelted
8W Scanlon 7...... In the lllllillnall
ollhl No! them Grill Courts CbaJD-

~~~==~~~~

oOrfr FORGEr [W) ,.,
011 HU DIY ~ MIE II .

--Arrow•

Aclmic powered by a dependable 749 ccDOIIC
fOUl' cylinder, four-stroke engine
with Pentroof TM combustion chamber and
four-into-four exhaust. Air-adjustable front forks
and lialogen lieadlight.

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

CM400T
ONE 1980 MODEL

·fiom Ciuett

Open
MondaY
till p.m . i

Some things In life are
worth sticking your neck
out for ... ~ut you won't
risk 1 thing With your
neck In - a Kent shirt by
Art"fNI. Why gamble wt.n Arrow's exKt neck
sizes and short sletves
will mHn smart comfort
In the warm aavs Shead.

'

CR-80

•1625
the 4001' a i).
!peed tranamiuion.
feature a dependable 4-ttrote enalne. pull-back handlebsl'B
anc1. CUllom ~ean~rvp tank.
them today!

see

ATC'200
'
'

'650

00

· NEW BIKE
CR2;0R ELSINORE .

plonllip.

Outlutlh~t

'1745

ATLANTA (AP)- 'lti!MD7 v.-.

Aline wl!nled workhont with a ~ar&amp;e frame ,
OHC four.ctroke e"llne and a
D•HP"d ll'llllmllaion with an automstie ·
chlldl. '

U.IIIIQJed IIINaib st.milll beat

Exp. 6/13/81

TEXTURED PRIMED SIDING
12" X16'
Wide Lana

1 torque)' lit cc

to I 7 1111 dlr .... IIIII I l-tlnU

.... at Ulln lbe IICOIId I'OU!III of 1111
...... fdlulaGGifaa.lc.
Rq no,d flrad a st.dy, . .
..., I'OU!III of • that put htm

--alontat IJI.

'

KEII'r

CR4.50R ELSINORE .+

Aworks type motocrosser with water-cooled
246 cc two-stroke engine and Pro-Link 1'M rear
suspension.

CB7.50

CUSTOM

The Arrwt Kent
comes In I WIGI
selection of

Hllcll, stripes
and plelcll thlt

Will amwnment
lftY IUit, lilY

'1150
'

Wllb a,.. lllt&amp;letoutr , wttll ProIMftl,_, 1 d!lllld pow•ed b)' Ul

x · ••u J....,.lWIIII•flllnl·

Sllnr Brldvt PWa

i

Stop in for all your gun
supplies end shooting

time.

"A~WAYS ON, YOU!IIIOI"

'

In lhl - · · semUinall,
lallmlry Culls tappedJIIIe Stratton W, M, ..7; wblle Sbanln Wllab
beat late IAIIInW, k

'

35 Coun lkntl

101'5 ELECTRONICS .
u,.,•-7
. ..... ''""'""·-a....,.....

nuuent

.,

,, . . . . .

A111ENS - John Wlite Realty
will apG!IIOI' an ASA s.nctioned
SenlorGirll (1'-11) Slow Pitch TOUI'

. ..
...

. ' ·,
.......
' .

2

CB750K

TO OPEN TUESDAY
JUNE9

.

Plan toumam~nt I

. ..

I ron ton, Ohio 45638

2

Iolii p.m. - T.l . Clnola 11.

'•

'

NO OTHER RADAR .DETEC rOR
LOOKS UKE THIS
OR PERFORMS
ASWEU

$6 4'6

•

Pro-Link ™rear suspension and a water-Cooled
122 cc read-valve two-stroke engine make this
an all out motocrosser.

CREMEEN'S GUNS

- !llpaow..J.,...U,B;Ip.m. - P.L &amp;n,..
ft.lllo llfiMI, I: I p.m. - II.J.J. llaml&gt;on va.
-.A;Ip.m. - LJ. Y-ft.lllilellos,
A;. p.M. - G.I.L. l"'llloo fl. G...,. I, B: I p.m.
- ~ft. a-D, ~: I p.m. Glwllfl. AII*,O...; l :lll,.m. - a- II
VI. a.tirt, ar..l.

4 Ft. X8 R. X'1." C&amp;C

keep it in the family!
know that when your
farm production is up. the
entire comm.unity reaps
the financial benefits. Thor's
why we feel that when we
help the farmers il') the area,
we're helping the entire comm,unity to prosperl When
you need farm financing ...
.--forneweq,~ipment, modem- ......
ization ... whatever reason
... stop In and ~ to us.

*1350

'2345

PARTICLEBOARD

SSS Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Course : 10 Weeks - Tuition $3.00 Per Week
Jerry Massie, Shodan
call 245-5411 After 5:00P.M. for Information

CR125R ELSINORE' ·

1,--""" nmM••
ffMI PAlM
Rrti"I IIICIMI!irc...r
.A.. __ ,

f :lllp.m. - -Jo,ln~,A ; fo JDp.m.

BUDORYU DOJO

A fully dressed, full-sized touring bike with shaft
drive, a 1085 cc liquid-cooled engine and air
suspension.

CUSTOM

vt.o,....a,

AT TH E

'4895 00

_....

Allilzcc DOHC fOUI'cyllnder custom. Honda's
exclusive Select-Range TM dual ratio
sub-transmission and shaft drive.

f :lll p.m. - J.G.J. lilala " · Addorillo, A; I
p.m. - I. I. ,.... n. - . A; I p.m. P.J. AddoYU!oft. - B: I p.m. - S.G.J.
-ltoii•Giwi i,A: lp.m.- P. L Dodpn

Fal'f!'ing is .a
fclmllyOffa1r•••
yours.&amp; ours!

INTERSTATE

CUSTOM

-,...-.

6:30 PM TIL 8:30 ·PM

GOLD WING

(.,'B900

GAUJPOLIIYW111 Lll.ti)UK
ICIIDll1&amp;

New Beginning Classes beginning Thursday, June 4,
June 11, and June 18.

Great looks and a powerful 627 cc four-cyclinder
engine highlight this numbie custom cruiser.

And offer you
the outstanding
B8t'VIc8

Paraguay,
6-1, 6-1, 7-S; while
Ivan
Lend! of Czecboslovakla
defeated
Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina, ~. s4, ~. 7~ . 6-2 in semifinal action at
the$611,000 French Open:
·

for lease. Also those that have oil and gas lea ses that a re due to e• plre
within yea r.

CB650
CUSTOM

GolD WING"

be eu8Jbl{ tO ~clpste .BDd all
Americap Lel!ilil· players must
. bring Written pel'llllallon frbm their
'i&gt;ost , Commander 01; , their .l!!!!ioo' .
coac~ 1n Ofller to try out.

8Qrg advances
· Freneh 0pen
m

To fultill futu r e. drilling program s in Galli a County, Ohio, please write
and be sure to mclude property location and acreag e that's available

'

·TRESE '1981 HONDASI

"Pitclilnglnthe. ~League

They've really

URGENTLY NEEDED
-OIL AND GAS LEASES

P.O. Box 328

CtEARANCE SAtE ON .

Reds ·will conduct ••h-voiit
~J;::-~'';.s:~~~
J'
hurt
camp at Lanca~Jter.June 11 ·· :w.==:::.':;
CINclNNAn - Atryout camp for
bssellal1 players will be conducted
by the Cincinnati Reds on Thuraday,
June II, at the LaliCaster High
School baseball field. The camp is
open to all boY!i from 18 to 22 years of
age. High .school sophomores and
juniors are espe&lt;ilally urged to attend .
Reds' scouting supervlaor, G~ne
Bennett, will be In charge of the
workouts which is scheduled to start
promptly at 10 a.m. Bennett will ~
'asslated by Reds scout Terry ~ar­
mer, Jerry Walke, Hugh Jennings,
Bill Black, Ed Trudo and Dave Bennett.
All eligible players· are requested
to bring their own Uniform, glove
and shoes. The Reds will furnish all
other equipment. In addition, each
player will be responsible for his
travelipg and living expense, if any.
unless signed to a contr:act with the
Cincinnati Reds.
Players must be 16 years of a~e to

TheSunda Ti

I

"'!be bill wu c8l'I7IDI ·P,ld
tonigla," aald Cmeepcl'lll, enjoy!JIIl
his I8CCIIId tWo-bamllr pme of 1be
-. .
•
'
Mario SoW, U, 1'11811* ed Ida
fCIUI1h victory In b1J lut lin
dedalcll)lbyllriklncout!O.Bekllta
ilo-hllter In the fifth ..._ CIW'Iflng
starter Steve Ragera llllllled a
cbeck-nll!8 sfaunder llnNb the
riglt llde of the lnfteld. , .
.

.aald Reds catcher Joe NGian. "Be's
not a -.man lliow. A Jot of 8UJI
ere bavlnc a good yell'. But he's
baviJIIlBDacepiona)yell'."
Colapclm, a1ao leading the
leque In cJonbl" and game-willlling
hlta before the pme Friday, bit •
·!wtH'un himer In the fourth to give
the .Reels 3-41ead, then mwppec~ a3.
3 tie In the sixth '!rith a aolo ~
F'oster doubled In ll!lt run In the
seventhasCinclnnatiaddedapairof

I

ADOHC lkalve flll!l'-cyUnder custom with
IUI*'bperformanceandbandlingfeatures.

HOND·A Qf RARDEN
OHIO

PH. 614-372-3112

�.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~Point Pleasant, w. Va.

..

For the record.
NATIONALIEAGOE EAsT
w L Pet ,oa
St. Loull
'l/ II' .1100 · Phliodelphia
29 . 21
.511
"
Montreal
'll Z1
.SIO 2"
13 21
.513
3\i
II 311
.311 ~ '&gt;
Chicago
u. !Ill .lSI 17

~~

• LooAngela
:.·, , CinclruloU
H~

··Atlanta
. San Francisco
"San Diego
.

. oucago

-

z

'l1
JJ

'0
32

30
!0
'll

25

ll
21

•1154

-

.5111
.51?
.51G

4M

3t,
7
7t,

.500

I

.115

Friday'• Gamet
t, l.oe Anl(eles 3

14

San Frandscu 5, Pittaburgh 3

Francim.~

al Pitbburgh

' San Dte)(u ut St l.ouill
lAIII AI!Mt'lt'll tl.t' Ch.iCIIMU
Nt'w York ~I HIJUI!h)ll, tn l

~~-re··Gamet·

HutWIOO at Phil
hia, (nl
Scln Dirt(o at Pitts gb, ~ n 1

• Only ):.ili\WII schedWed

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
I
W

"BIIltimore
· NewYork
Milw11ukee
B&amp;.:lton
Cleveland
, .· Detroit
, .•Tvronto

L

' Pet .

29 . 19

.604

30

34)

29
29
2:i

21
16

WEST

33
29

.oakland
Teus

'II

Chic1111:0
Cautornia
KallSilll City
Seattle

21
11
11
15

.600

21
21
30
Zi
"

.510
.lr&gt;O
.156
.510
.!IM

1.1

21
:JI
19

.600

-

1

~~.,~,:

4~

.!92
.517

a

.411
.3111

rr

33
.~
35
.34JG
Frkby'• Games
New York 6, Chicago 5, 12 innings
Detroit 2, Minnesota D
Milwaukee 8, Kansas City 2
Texas 5, TiJronlo 4, 12 innings
BaltimOre 8, Califpmia 4
Boston 4, Oakland 1
Cleveland 8, Seattle 1
.
Saadly's GaiDtll

Minnesota

GB

1
II&gt;
I

61,\,:
Ill&gt;
13
151&gt;

Chicago .at New York

Minnesota at Detroit
Milwaukee at Kansas City
Baltimore at Cal.ifumia

Boston at Oakland
.. Cleveland at Seattle
Toronto at Teus, (n )

Moaday's G1mts

Toronto at
New York
M.ilw11ukee
Detwit at

Chicago, !nl
at Kansas City, (n)
at Minnesota, fn)
Teus, (nl
Cle~~eland at CalUomia, (nJ
Boslun at Seattle, (n )
Only t~ame:~ xbeduled

1

.._,._

Na_.._Bol&gt;by
.

....

Sdunidl,

Phlladelphlo,

24; Otlwsun. Montreal, 13: KlJltpnan, New
;,york, 12; Fllller, CinciJUUlti, 12; Guer..,eru, U. Angeles, lfl.
~ STOLEN BASES: Rlines, Montreal, 45:
&lt;North, San Francilco, 23; Sc&lt;ltl, llon1\teal, 21; Srnith, San Diego 16; ~ Tled
'llh 11.
'\ PITCHING
(6 Decisions ):
Rhoden,
:Pitubur~~;h, 8-0, UXMI, 2.67 ; Carlton, Philt~ ­
,Jeiphia, r.t, .11119, 2.66 ; Camp, AU.nla, ~
;1; .&amp;ll, 1.40: Seaver, Cincinnati, &amp;-1 , .833,
'1:95; Valenzuell, l.al An8eles , S.2, .818,
f(90; Hooton, lD5 Angelt:S, 7·2, .m , 2.&amp;5 ;
~erson.
Montreal, &amp;-2, .714,
2.34 ;
~h, St.Louia. ~2 . .714, 3.10.
# ' STRIKEOUTS : Valenzuela, tAl Ange..... 10; Carllon, P!iiladeiphia. a&gt;; Solo,
9oc1nnat1, 74; Ryan, Houston, 61 ; Gul1\icksun, Montreal, $1.

•••

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•
=
'

'

,'

AMERICAN LEAGOE
n05 at ball ): Singleton, 8al·
.351 : La,., on!, Booton, .347;
, Baston, .348; Remy, Bolton, .331;
eke, BaltimOre, .lJI.
tRUNS: Hender100, Oakland, 44 ; Evans,
ad.too, 42; L.ansfont, &amp;~ton, 34 ; Carew,
Cllt\ifomla , 33: M~y. O.kland, 33.
( ftBI : EYif\l, lklstoo, 34; Armas, Oak·
.t, 31; Winneld, New Yori:_. 35; Oglivie,
ilwaukee, .12: lbomas, Milwaukee, 32; .
Wy. oakland, 32 ; Bell, Teus, 32.
r HtrS : L.anslord, Bosloo. 70 ; Burleson,
WUfornla, M; Armas, Otkland, M: Hen-~. Oakland. • : Oliver, Tew, &amp;e.
' OOUBLES : Annas. Oakland, 14; Paci~
lit, Seattle, 14; Roenlck~, H.lltimore, 12;
t;.n.font, Booton, 12; Miller, Booton, 12;
Oti&gt;. Kai\SIS City, 12; Hatcher, Miflo
~. 12; Oliver,_ Teus, 12.
t ;R!P!.F..'t Grlfftn. Torooto, 1: Bal.,.,
ehicll!jtl, 5: Lemon, Chlca~o, ,5; Cutino,
lft6nneJOt.a, 5; Hobwn, CaUJ'orma, t ; Ber·
Chic..~ 4; Hendenoo, oakland,

4 cyl., u~ . BelowwboleSale.

1976 CHIV. Y2

.
,. I

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I

:

i·

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a

·' •

••
TON 4x4, ........... '3615 · ''

35o,A.I.,AM·FM,Q,OOOmiles.

·

:..

1971 DODGE ASPEN ................. •3195
~ Or.,6cyl., A.T ., A.C.,' vinyl top (landAu) . Priced to sell.

1971 CHIV. NOVA. .................. '4195
· • Or., 6 c\lul., A. T., ,t..c. One owner, blue.
'

·!

'

.

.,.

1977 P.LIYMOUTH FU~Y • Q"···· ··•••·'1495
"'Dr., Priced to se11.

197s

1

cH•v• MaLiau
wAGON •••• ~.:1•"
.
1

•

'

'

'

GICO joins ice firnl .

.1.76 CHEV. Y2 TON 3 SPD ~ ... ~ ..... .'1495

,,.

-

.· Drop In or Call 992~2174

-

STRETCHING OUT- Ironton's Jim Morris slrelebes io get a UWe
extra distance to the Clau AA bo)'a' jump event of the state hlgb school
track meet In Columbus Friday. 'Morrla won the event with a Jump of
%2'91'..". (APLaserphoiO) c

Local bowling

See: J.D.' Story, Jimmy Deem, or Bill Nelson. T·llese
three artreildy to deal. .

'

SKYLINE LANES
Tea Pia HDIHII' RoU
Mea's!U

B. Till~ . Jr. '181, 254,137, 231; A. Mitchum 271,
248, 248; .K. White Z79, 236, 228; T. Jone:s &amp;: K.
Kyger 265; T. Kyger 265; E. Frye ZM, tl2; B.·
Maldens152: C. Lon!! 249; D. SOmerviUe2411, 2411,
232, 228; D. Gabrltsch 2tl!; A. Wallis Zf5; J.
~an 14$, 244, 2311; D. Sayre 244, 235; F. Burie
237, Dl; R. Mowery 237; B. Knox. IS$ !33; 0 .
Maynard131; L Palricl&lt; 131; J. Flirtidfd 134; c .
Bames233, 22'7, 225; C. Jona 211; D. Beaver 234,
233: D. MallonZU; B.Kelly121, Ill.

PH. 992-217.

AIR CONDinONING SPECIAL

w. .•••

D. Swllln 211; D. Cbeotmat213; M. Hunt 213; D.
R"""U 212, 201; D. Dobblno 210; R. CLonch 210;
A. Loo&lt;211'Ulli; M . ~lll ; N. Tencl!:&gt;JM;
B. Houduhelt 202.
.
Womea'slniN
D. Chestnut 554 ; D. Ruaaell5.f9; D. Swain 547;
B. Howlaahelt!HO; D. llobblllli31.

• Check Thermo Limiter

ONLY

Mea'•• .

B. TUI~. Jr. 710, WI, B'l1l,l!i6, 814; A. Mitchum
llil; 1161 ; C. Ba""' 1111; D. Sayre 11i, lltltl; T.
.JOneti 11411 ; K. While 844,1138; K Kyger 844; A.
Wa!ib 843; J. Bryant 1131, 618; E. Fry•131; C.
Dewltll37; R. E!Jia 133; K. Bragg lrt; GIG; J .
Fairchild 621; D. SomerviUe 621,618,103, 1101 ; B.
Knoxao&amp;.

GREASE JOB, OIL CHANGE &amp; FILlER
•
•
•
•
•
e
•

• Check Bolt Tension
• Check All Air Conditioing Hoses
• Check &amp; Clean Condenser

' .1Qt5

Addilional Parts, Labor &amp; Recharge Extra .
Offer Ends June 30th, lftl

Check All Fluid Levels
Check All Bells
Check Rea rend &amp; Greue,ll netded
Check Tire Prenure
Grease All FIHings
Up IO 5 OuariS Of Oil
Replace Oil FIller

•
1

-·

o 'ffer Ends June 30th, lit!

...

•

Tourney results
OliJoH. S. &amp;yoBuebtU
SUite TOIU'DimtDl
Al Ol&gt;lo State UDivenll)'
f'rlday'o Rmllto
ClaN AAA Semlflaail
WorthinKton 3, Boal'dma.n 2,1 fJ innings
Cln. ool&lt; Hill:! B, Willoughby Sooth 4
Cla11 AA Stmlillals
Colwnbus De&amp;lles vs. Cleveland Holy
N~~me, ppd., rain
Pun!unou.th Y!l. Shelby, ppd., rain
ct.ssASemifl•b
Col. Academy 4, Co!wnbiana 0
Middletuwn Fenwick 6, CrestUne 3

OhJo H. S. GlrbSoftbtll
Stat.r T•rumt~tl
At Aa~Dd Broobkle P.rk
f'ridlly'• Seatiftalls
CI.ASSAAA

Cin. PrincetiJil 6, Gahanna 1
Ta llma.d~ee 9, · Brurww!ck 0

better

is

to

GAWPOUS - The Galllpolls
dlflliGn of'Gieo lee Inc., a manufacturer allee in this community since
the early 110111, has joined LeiJUre
Time Ice, an International
assodallon of packaged Ice
manufacturers, ·according to
Division General )lanager John W.
Dillon.
,
The .Glco Gallipolis division
di.ltrlbtltea Ill lee in l-Ib. pac!lages to
supermarkets, convenience stores,
l'narjnu, lei'Vice stations, camp.
groandl and ratauranta 1n west
Vtrllnla, Ohio, 8lld Kentucky. The
company Includes among its
Cl(ltAimen IUCh major supennarket
chains aa KNger's, Foodland and
!GA.
"We
firmly convinced that the
asaodallon'a goal of eStablishing
Lelatn Time Ice aa a brand name
for. padiaged Ice will ~ our
sales in the areas in which we
marltet our product," Dilloo said.
"Evidence that the Leisure Ttme
Ice marketJnc program wor1ts Is ap.
parent In the growth in volwne of
11101'1! than 30 other aaaociation menr
ben In 17 states and Canada, n·
tendlnc from the eaat coaat to as far
wtllaa Wiuhlngtan, as far soitth as
Florida and aa far north aa Cranbroclk, British Columbia, Canada,"
he CGI4iaued.

are

r _______:_____._______,.....____~-:--,..--..,....:.....--------------~-:---

his laHul proposal, whlle designed
' ,to capture crucial votes In Congress,
has raised more questions about !tow
the econ~ would respot\d tO per·
sonal tax reductions.
. Reagan revtsed his tax' package ·
by lowering to 5 percent the ict'OI8, the-board reduction in individuAl tax
· rateg for this year and by movitig
back the effective date frtm July 1
to Oct. I. His original proposal called
for a 10 percent tax cut.
lmportanUy, the new prtlp0181
retains the proVision for cutting pe~&gt;­
sonal tax rate! for three yean . Most
Democrats in Congress have ad·
vacated a (W().year approach.
,
The · new package alao would
reduce bY about $50 billion over six
years the tax savings Reagan had
originally proposed for buainess.
That was done, In part, by giving
busirl~ smaller tax breaks on the

'Dillon said that like other Leisure
Time members, the Gico Gallipolis
division Is sellini its ice In packages
iniprlnted with the disj.inctive
Leisure Tinle Ice I011otype - an icemOWttaln top overlooking a
tree-lined lake of clear water.
' Leisure Time Ice was· founded to
inform coMumers of the advantages
of c~rnm~rcially·manufaetured
packaged Ice qver ice made In the.
home refrigerator, Dillon ·said.. He
Hsted these advantages as:
"Convenience In a society so convenience-minded it pays a premium
10 bave ib cheese sliced and In·
clividually wrapped; crystal clarity
to enhance the beverage's appearance as opposed to the
milkiness or cloudiness of
homemade Ice; alisence of taste
which refrigerator ice can abSorb
from the food odors In the freezer;
81111 slow-melting capability which
retains the true taste of the drink
Leisure ~e lee coots."
'
Gico's present management took
over the Gallipolis operatiun 15
years ago and
then has ex· .
· panded the packaged ice manufacturing capitcity of the Gallipolis
plant from 20 to 40 tons.
Gico delivers directly to retail
customers from Its Galllpolls plant
In four refrigerated trucks.
"The popularity of packaged ice
continues to climb, and after our'
record-breaking ~~&amp;les year in 19110,
we upect the trend to continue,"
Dlllon Sllld. "We feel strongly that
through the brand-name, Leisure
Time Ice, sales will be even higher
in 1981."

Democrats and some private
economists, on the other hand, have
argued that a three-year tax cut
would fuel Inflation because people
would likely spend a'targe portion of
the ·added Income. They also have
voiced concern about creating a
greater budget deficit.
. The moot significant revisions in
Reagan's tax~ut plan are aimed at
business - the ·sector of the
economy most likely to Invest a
major portion of its tax savings.
Consumers, on the other hand,
would benefit from several new
features In the Reagan plan, in·
eluding:
-Savings and investment in·
centives. The administration would
make pennanent the current temporary exclusion from income laKeS
of the first $200 in interest and
dividend income for individuals and
$400 for married couples.
-Retirement savings. The
ll)axirnwn deposit in Individual
retirement accounts deductible

from taxable Income would be
raised to $2,000 from $1,500. Also,
employees covered by company pension plans would be eligible for tax·
deductible deposits to such accounts
of up to $1,000 a year. Such employees are now ineligible.
-A reduction In the tax penalty on
married couples, starting with a
phased-in redltction in taxes paid by
married couples of $400 million next
year. That would be done by
allowing the lower-earning spouse to
deduct 5 percent of income up to
$30,000, or a $1,500 limit, next year.
In the following year the deduction
would be 10 percent, with a $3,000
limit.

The nation's financial markets
have been skittish in recent weeks,
in part because bf concern tliat
Reagan's tax cutting may lead :to
higher rates of inflation and larger·
than-expected budget deficits. Wo.rd
that the administration had scaled
down its plan was taken as a' good
sign for the markets, analysts said.

Forecasting unreliable as ever
of the job, ooe Wall Streeter,
Raymond F. DeVoe Jr. at B!'UIIS,
Nordeman, Rea I Co., has devised a
written test for certification as an
economic forecaster .
" Anyone caught looking at
another candidate's test answers
will be expelled immediately - on
the grounds of stupidity," DeVoe advises. ''Since correct answers can be
quite different according to the ver·
biage and sesquipidalian terglver·
sation (that's long-winded and
equivocal), copying from one
another is self-defeating and
stupid." •

market have recently hit aU-time
highs.
But many energy issues have
plunged40 to 50 percent or in just the
last six months.
Thus, it seems understandable
that forecasters these days are
couching their comments in careful
words. As one promln~nt and widely
respected analyst was quoted as
saying a couple of days ago:
"The negative influences may
overshadow the positives over the
next lew montl~, though not
necessarily consistently."
In view of th~ challenging nature

covered

since

depreciation of owner-occupied
buildings.
Initial reaction from the business
community was. anything but
joyous. The biggest objections were
from business organizaliol!S, which.
criticized the president's decision to
scale down his propos&amp;\ for accelerating «~wreciation· wrlte-o(fs. ·
Richard Rahn, chief economist of'
the U.S. Chamber of Corrunerte,
r.alled the changes •'a breach ol faith
with the business community."
But on Wall Street, reaction cen·
tered on the question of whether
Reagan's wllllngness to compromise
on his plan would undennine the
strength of his economic agruments.
The administration has said its
plan for reducing Individual tax
rates by ,10 percent a year for t~ee
years is needed to offset wage iii·
llation and Social Security tax In·
creases. It also has argued that
, people would be more likely to save
~ Invest the added take-home pay,
rather than spend it.

Heiskell awarded
CHESmRE- Jolm R. Heiskell, a
life insurance representative with
Combined Insurance Co. of
America, has received an award for
outstanding sales and service to the
public.
John Schott, life sales director for
the Great Lake States, said Heiskell
won the Initial award in the WCS International Life Sales Achievement
Club. The international club iB
named after W. Clermont Stone, the
company's founder and board chair-

man.
Heiskell became associated with
Combined as a representative and
his worlt In service to policyholders
earned him the award.

Po-sntlrWon'l FllfSPOI,
· Ever

I

CI.ASSAA

Kinsman Bll~er ~ . st. Marys 0
Jiimestuwn Greeneview vs. Warsaw
River View, ppd., reteheduled Saturday
~tl 9:30 .11.rn .
CLASSA
Ports. Cla.y 7, Hilisdale 2
Furl Frye- 13, Tri-Villa11e ~

1.71·11 ........
plus 1160 FET •nd
Old 1ifl

Pay-by-Phone ellmlnaies a lot of timeconsuming chores .. .flnding the
·
Fast
stamps, stuffing envelopes, driving to
the post office. All you have to do is
dial, pay and enjoy your free time.

!

To safeguard your account, you have
an account number and a secret
Safe
code that only you know. The code
number must l;le used in order to
make any transaction. And even if someone else
learned your number, all they could do Is pay your bills.

'

rn!,
1!'1•...

•

,

Loaded wllh extras.' .. · · · ·

" ~ArnNG

, HOME RUNS ' Thomu. MUquk .. , 14;
Booton, ll; Annal, Ooklancl, !2:
tl;oy, Sellllle, 11 ; Ford, Ca!Uomla, IG.
' STOLEN BASES' Hender&gt;OII, oakland,
Qul, S..Uie, :Ill; LeFl"':", Chicatfo,
, Bwnbry. Balllmort. 12 ; Dilone, Cttvt• 12.
~ PITCHING Ul Decialons) : Clear, Bollo!l. 7&lt;1, 1.111111, 3.12; Honeycutt, Teu~, H
.ISS. 3.71: O.Marttna, Blltlman!, t-2,
• 3.1t; MtG"t!'"'· llaltimoro, &amp;.I, .7111,
· Vuckovicb, Milwaukee, &amp;-a, .ne.
; Morril, l&gt;etrolt, 1-3, .m, Ul ; TOfo
- . Booton, r..z, .714, 4.10: Borbr, a ....
iolld, r.-2, .714, 1.112.
• I":RIKEOUTS' lllr11tr, Cleveland, 84,;
"'via, New YO&lt;!&lt;, 17; Flanopn, llllll·
~. 56; Blyleven, Cleveland, 51; Bums,
4?*•go, M.

.

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SJ •••• •119$

Racing results

The crowd of 5,632 wageredS5U,2l8,
ThbU.......,
NORm RANDALL, Ohio fAPI - Epic'j
B;aby, ridden by Danny Weller, won lhe festured

·

·

Ber·

ll ,lm.30.

•••tl

·2 or .. Glho.

1977 CHIV. MONZA •••••••• ~ •• ~,•••,. '16tl

enson, head coach, W a two-year con· tract.
COLLEGE
CHRISTOPHER
NEWPORT-Named
Glenn Rusell head basketball coach.
NORTH
CAROLINA·GREENSBORDAnnounced the ra~igr~~~tion of Robin J~
!!t!ph, women's basketball and , JOftball
roach.
·

&gt;

RUNS'

I

QUEBEC NORDIQUES- Signed . Christian Tanguay, right w!ng, to a three-year
ton tract.

FL6RENCE, Ky . (API - t.raa Gayle
stre11ked to a 2:00.4---6 victory Friday night In tM
Sl9,200 Kentucky Sires Slakes pace mile fur
fillies and paid UUJI, $.'1 .20 and $3.
t..dy Bonefiah plae&lt;d,$3.00 ond $3.48, and the
show horse, Glers Bonus, 13.60.
Judi Wllldo and Super Swinger combined M in
the di)IJb]e and the crowd of I ,501 bet a meeting
hlghlll3,3&gt;4.
Seli:tt.Duw..
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Raoy Lacy, driven
by Sam Noble UI, WOll the feature pace at Scioto
Downs 011 Friday night by a neck over Fresh As
Spring ir12 :014-6.
The winner paid 14.00, 12110 and 12.110 while
Fl'\!jh As Sprint~ returned t6 and $4.60 and thirdplace Dandy Doll Pflid $4.
The first race trifecta ~ IG-7-9 retumed

G

By ROBERT BURNS
AP Bu-. Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - President
Reagan's decision to cornpromi8e on

1977 POID MUI'Ii.AN ·•••••••••••••• ••
1977. PONTIAC Flinii"D••••••••••••• •Htl •
. The Sport¥ Pont)lt .
.
"
' . . ,
•

Tkaauk llSSiQnt coach.

Leaders

• HOME

'

CHICAGG CVIJS.-Plaeeil .
Bondi,
ouUieldtr, on the 21-Gay diaoblecl llll. a..
CMUed Ty Waller, wtftelder, from Iowa of
the American AalodaUon.
NEW YORK METS-Actlvated EW. V•
ll!lltine, ouUielder, OptiOned Ed Lynch.
pitcher, tn ndewater of the lntemaUbfu&gt;.

e1ghth race at 'MU:Uedown, running the mile and
·40yardsin l :fll-ti.
Epic's Baby Paid 16.40 to win, $3.3) to place
and $2.40 to show. Goodbyeyall pak1 s:uo to
place and S2.60tu:show.
TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGOE LEADERS
The third trlficta of 1-3-0 paid 1314.110.
,
NATIONAL LEAGOE
AFriday crowd of 3,910 wagered 1$75,694.
BAITING fl05 at b&amp;l.s! : Yountj:blood,
1New York, .357; &amp;w~i!, Huuston, .»4;
River DtWIII
, t-iadli.ICk, Pitt.!lburgh, .336; Easler, PlttsCINCINNATI fAP l - Sweet Grt~nny, Bogie
•burt!h. .3311; RCISe, Phllad&lt;lphia, .332.
Bu.'lter and Woodlake Princes head a field II II
"". RUNS: Collin!, , Cincinnati, .0; Schmidt,
"""""' tudliy in the 1211.11»-added "LnsanllvUie
)*llladelphia, 36; Rose, Philadelphia , 33;
thmdicap" in the ninth race at River Downs.
.,Rainetl. Montreal, 32; Dawson, Montreal.
Pt~ ce ful Execution, ridden by Charles Wood!;
011 : Hendrick, St.Wuis, 31.
· Jr., fought off twu challenges in the stretch to
f' 1 RBI : Cor~Cepcion , Cincinnati,
4.1;" Foswin lhe $4,1ll fe11tured eighth race Friday and
"'itr. Cincinnati. 42 ; Schmidt, Philadelphia,
PIIY S.1. 52.40 and $2.40. Silk Hat Harry wa!i
'"38; Garvey, Los Angeles, 36; Buckner,
.ec&lt;md. paying 12.110 ond 12.111. Hope For A PNe
was thirtllorfl.al.
' Chicago, 33.
~ _HITS : . R03t , Philade~phia, 67 ; Collill:!,
The 6-7 double of Worthyway and No Oracle
ndnnah, 63; Concepc1on, Cincinnati, 62;
pa id$56.110. The crowdof3,6I3 bet$439,814.
#lluwe, HOU!IIOO, 62; Garvey, Los Angelt!S,
• ' DOUBLES: Concepcion, Cincinnati, IS;
'IJuckner, Chicago, 16 ; Wastllngtn, At·
,.nta, 13; Jones, San Diea~o, 13; 5 Tied
;l"ith 12.
Rlct.1 1 TRIPLES: Reynold,, HOWJlon, 9;
ierds, Sam Diego, 7; lftl', St.Louis, 6;
~ernpleton, St.Louis, 6; Durham, Chicaco.

'

1979 lUlCK LISAIRI SORT$ CPI •sttl
1979 FIAT ITRADA ••••••• ~:~........191

'

NEW
YORK
YANKI:£8-Ao..unOed
tile raiiJialion of Lorry liobl, f&gt;l!liiic ,..
. laUonadlrtetor. t·
•
·

BLVES-SII!ned , Red

finance~---~___,.--~
Questions raise~ .on tax reductions

.

.

•IIAIIEIIALL

ST.LOUIS

.

SMITH NELI.
..
. ON MOTORS

Transactions .

'

usiness..,aDd

iiiiiiii

"t',,

BASIC.E'I'BAU
I
N•tiODII Balllr.ett.B Auociat.
. ··.'lt.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS- traded
Torn OweRI, ~ter, to the ·Indiana Pac- '
ers for· ,'a l!&amp;t flnt round dnft c~.
.
fWI'IIAU.
.
.
•
. NatlollaiFooiboll'CINC!NNATI BENGA~Signed Jim •
Hannula, offensive lineman.
HOOSTON OILERS-Slgned llml Wul&gt;
illfCion, defC!IlSlve back, and Joe Keys,
linebacker.
IIOCKEY
Natioull Hetby-l.eiP,e
BUFFALO SABRES- Announced ,tMt
~y Bowrn~:n, general manager, will
.,;.so !Wrve all heAd coach. Named Jim
Robert:~ auoctate roach.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Named Walt

. ~ Phi~delphia 111 AtllnLll
, Munt~!l\, iii Cincinnati

~

'(•

League.

Atllont. 4, Phllodelphia 1
·
. Cincinnati 6. Month!al 3
~ H~JLtitoo 3, New York ·o , .
, St.l..lltW Z. San 'Diego 1, "13 innin~ ,
.,
·
~y'• Gaintt
·• San

Buy. mo~..classified .~ds .

~~

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Pag-C·S

't

Ariens offers you a
complete selection of
lawn. garden, and

~

snow removal
attachments for Ariens
Garden Tractors.
You'll enjoy four

seasons ol waiting

tractor power' •

Remember the last postage inBettr&gt;r
crease? Five bills (that's not very
than
Stamps many) all ae each will cost90$ just
In postage. Well, Pay-by.Phone can
help you lick postage costs. It eliminates most of your
monthly bllliJaying mall. That's money In your pocket ...
instead of on your envelopes:

Pay-by-Phone Is easy as dialing your
phone. Just give us a call, tell. ua
whom to pay,and how much. That's
all there is to it. What COJid be easier?

1111JMASE.a.Liarl'
I

'

..,

Names salesman ,

Pay-by-Phone is always there when
you need 11...24 hours a day, seven
Reliable days
a week. You can call toll-free
from any place in the U.S. We'll even
set up automatic withdrawals for any monthly or quar·
terly fixed payment.
'

JAaaiON ~ 11lomas E. Elliott
M1 ' - ' 11 olnled a multkount)'
feet tl ••• for Jac:boo Lind' matt ... llcloto Fann Bureau
0 ; lllw ~on. He began
· the . . jab May 11 8lld coven
· JaJIIJtl, kloto, Pike, VInton,'
Ll•i iiN .... GIWa C.'GIIIIties.
'l'lt Wr• Caunl)' native retur-

This is. the best part of ail. Pay-byPhone is just one part of Pay-by·
Phone/NOW... our complete billpaying, NOW checking account with
no minimum balance requirements or monthly service
charges. Plus, there are no "per-Item" charges ao You
can use Pay-by-Phone 88 often as you Wlnt. Make your
bill-paying better by signing up today at your 011rest
Diamond Savings olflc:e. Pay-by-Phone Ia juat one ,are
way 'the Diamond Difference work' lor YI.)U I 1
•

'/WI af feld IIIII ..S IIIVIce to
illlrtlll W
ca•rrn. T1llil

IW

111 a aiiJilll 01t1o lftll' nearJJ •

ar

tt tttllltJ•rr-Ohloat.te

UIIIJAtl~,

tll'lliDI hill dlple In
lnlnlilldll tee. D1r1n1 hlalllt year
ln dilio be--'*' till af the
·lllp n.., tnn 1n tile eGUep af

qnxl a. 11tun1 m l'llllllll
'*-IX I

A

Ia
af

and

. MAKE ACOOL
HOTPOINT DEAL RIGHT NOW!
HOTPOINT

Cushion Belt

Po/ygl.s- Double

FlberQ/MS Belts

A71·13 ..........

pi\IIIUO FET lnd
oldttre

Tiompo RltdlaiDouble Steel BellS

PORTA·COOL~

AIR CONDITIONER
IPICIALLY PRICED I

c •ooo

BTU Ill 7 .5
Amps, 115 Volts r:J 2
Speeds Ill Ouick·M.ounl
panels 'I:!J Carrying han·
dl~ llJ Wood grain look.

HOTPOINT CLASSIC

IP~CIALL Y PRICED I

• 9700 BTU. 12
Amps. 1t 5 Volts • 3
Speeds • Energy -Saver
option • Venl control •
Oulck·Mount panels.

~~~bA

'50 DISCOUNT

·11 ·13~.

1'!111 St.IOFET •1"4
old tire.

P11511Df11S .......tll.
plus 1151 FET and
oldllr•

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

m•

P185180013
P195/7~14
P215/7~14

P205/7~15
P21517~15
P225/7~15

P235/1~15

M&amp;.IIO

$72.10
S72.110
S73.111

m.11

111.45

$1.95
$2.23
$2.49
$2.-16
$2.62
S2,79
$295

I

•',•

'

;

STORY &amp; STORY
AnOINIYS AT LAW

Steven L. Story

~

~nH.Story
236 W. 2nd., Pom4J!roy, Oh.(Formerly Meigs Gen.

OFFICE PH. 992-6624

Hospl~ll)

JtOME PH. 992·3523
'

OfFICE HOURS: MOfl..fRI. 8:30 lO 4:30
SAT. 8:30 10 12:00 NOON
· lv111111111 ly 'Appol~ttment

f'

______

.-:..._..

"

,

./

.

M:coun11 i-...c:IIO 1100,0110 by FILJC.

116 W. MAIN ST.

CIJOtT TI.MI
A'YAILML.I

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

Page-C-6- The Sunday Times·Sentinel

Agriculture and
\our community.·
.

By BRYSON R. IBUD) CARTER

Gallla County EKtenslon A~enl

.

'

.GAWPOUS - Weeds ~Y be twu to four inches deep. Such assure !ldequate amounts of nitrogen.
controlled m the garden and 10il materials Include weat.heted nitrogen for decompoliUon ~ ~
Sawdust and other wood .uta do
moisture . retained during the sawdi!St, peat; C0f!111C* and rotied rna~laiapplyhrotothreeiJCIUndl riot contain appreciable,amounlt of
.growing sef1401) by 11!1! applieaUon of .inanure. ~ materiala wiD IIGI - per 100 lqual'e felt oli-10.10' or a.J&amp;. toile materia~, Jli'OVided the 1IOQd
a ml!l~h. Mulches a~ maintain a · CO!IIpete 'with the plant till' a'YIIilab~ . 18 fertilizer or one-half pound per ' hil not been treated with a .,._, ·
more uniform soU temperature and nitrogen. '
·
SQU&amp;fl! fOOl of Dinte of loila, am- vall:ve. Cedar ahavlngi or awduat
redu«;e rot and mud splaShjng on
Ml!lchlng materials commonly rll01ilwn~,orone-f~pjlunll . may retard plent growt1j ....,..,, ·
· fruit.
.
.
· available .and most often used m. ot ~ ll!trate.
but thia cliaappea'l •wltblil a few '
· Apply rnl!lches after the wann- elude straw and grass clippings..
In th6'caae cif awduat 0r
weells after the woad lnddld tO the
season crops are well established. Organic mulches require nitrogen add 11111 pound ol ninte of soda, ' soil. Tile ehlef reason for lhl camUsually, this i.s sometiine d~g the, for decay and when spread on the ori&amp;-half pound of alnmoniwn ninte J1'IOnly oblerved hannful effect o1
month of June. ·Apply partially garden will compete with the plarilll or lilree'fourths pound fi am- sawdust or ahavlngi on CfCIIII II the
decomposed mulching materials for availaqle nitrpgen in the 10U. To moniwn lllllfate to aacb bushel of depletion of IOU introgeil.
rnatenal to prevent ~e of

shavmP,

Meigs
County
agent's
corner

ranee, West Germally and tha

hi.

I ~ '

,I

Load Range c
Tubeless

'

'

featuring
Annie

·

'

..

;our

1980 AMC EAGLE

'

•AUTOMATIC · -~

•AIR CONDITION
•TILT STERING

•"EW RADIAL TIRES
•DELUXE INTERIOR

•CRUISE CONTROL
•AM-FM STEREO WITH 8 TRACK

All Th• Features Can Be Yours For Only
. -USED CARS

1978 V.W. Rabblt ................. ~4695.DO

We Have The Biggest Selection
Of Used Mobile Homes In The

.1979 Ford Conversion Van ..~8995.DO

Area. If You Are Considering
A Mobile Home Stop By And
Look At Some Of The Ones
That We Have To Offer.
'

1978 Trans Am ..... ;...............!5995.DO
1979 Monte Carlo ...............~5995.DO
,

'

WINNER!

'63

7. 50- I~L T

load Ran

Tube

t

B&amp;S SALES, I-NC.

'

675-4424

CORNER OF 2ND &amp; VIAND STREET

Sl,JJFer

1979 Ford Fiesta
· air 'cond.; low ml1es

)

Was 15495.• NOW-

Load Range 0
Tube·tvpe
PIUS" ·" F ET

'81

..,.
••
r

TRUCK
. .TIRE SALE!

'\~~ ~~~\

ri-

____ ,.._~

1980 Ford -F-1 00 Ranger
1 owner , tu-tone paint _. p.s.,
11,000 miles, line-a-bed, overdrive
transmission
$ave

'4495.

1978 Chevrolet Monza
Coupe
2 door, air cond., auto., 4 cyl.,
36,000 miles

lull power, factory C.B., tu-tone paint
• Was 5995.• flOW
1

Tracker
A-T
•
1G-15L T

Save

s5144.

KDX 400 Dirt Bike
130 miles, ·
new replacement cost '2195.10

0

1910 Chevette 4 'Door
1 .owner, 4 speed
-

ROL 4 Ply
Plut 14.30 FET

-Nice Car-

Wranlfter RT

'99

'5695.00

1979-Mercury Grand
Marquis.

RV
BIAS-PLY
BUVl

750-16LT

1979 DODGE D-150

~~'\~t~\~
~ i~t\

geo

• YPe

$50.

13,000 mil~ : one owner · auto .. p.s.
• super clean - adventurer equipment

Save-Save-Save

,

31-1150-15

RWL4 Ply
Plus 54.53 FET

1ivc'!on Sure Grl

'P

•

'33

-

-

1978 tHUNDERBIRD

TIUCKI ON ORDER-

.

,,
'

I

'

'1595.
··········--····..

'iJutKS
IN 'STOCK
'

ram.

ONLY

Contrary ro Popular
Gossip fwo Rivers Inc., -Is "Not"
Golng_Out Of "Business". We're
.
Here. ro Stay And Serve You Our.'
line
'
....

l.ood700-rsn
R"!!lt C, ~!':'-II, NO •lWi£ NfiDr.'Z3D.FF:r.

··

•

POINT PLEASANT

BRING ABONA FIDE SIGNED PURCHASE ORDER IN ON
ANY COMPARABLE CAR OR TRUCK AND IF WE CAN'T .MATCH
00
OR BEAT THE DEAL, WE'LL GIVE YOU
........... .

I

.,

STOP BY AND SEE US, MANY MORE. CARS IN STOCK TO CHOOSE- FROM.

15,000 milts • loaded
- super sharp .

Custom.Xtra Grip
Hi-Miler

. Deep biting lugs pull through lm u~ or snoo.v
• . Wide tread design offers stabl•t)l
loo.v noise level

-

1979 CORVmE

Rib.Hi-Miler .

1':"-14 sat similar savintsl

·-

'c

'

CHEVROLETo.OLDSMOBILE

..

!·

'•

'

,TWO RI.VERS ·INC.,

OFFEJll

PIUS ,J ,l9 FET

TRUCK
TIRE

"52

.

'

,&lt;

'

. •· · ,

• ' '

'
GAWPOUS - TJI help you to ·ahead of canning day, so bring
have a safer canning season, you I gauge in and bave .lt tested before
shoulit really have the gauge the dliy you need it.
, ·
checked on your ~ canner
Another Item you mily want to
eaCh year. We have· 011' "tester" . take care of before canning day is to
checked at the University every get asupply of the citric acid that is
year I!J that it wiD be as accurate as recommended for canning tomatoes
pouible for checking your-gaug'lll in ,a hot water bat)l. (CrystaUine
when you bring them into our office. citric acid monohydrate i.s the full
lfy~pressurecannerhasaweight chemical name of ' the acid). '
that jiggles when the correct Tomatoes can he safely canned in a
pressure is reached, it does not need pressure canner, but if you ·'don't
to be checked, hoWever, if It has a want to can your tomatoes in your
dial to indicate the presaure, then It 'pressure canner, you'd best get .
should definitely be checked every aome of the acid tablets to be sure
year, juat to be sure lt'saccur8te.
tha acidity of the tomatoes wiD·be
Even If you are buying ·a new high enough to be safely canned iO a
pre88W'I! canner, the gauge should hot water bath.
be checked before you use it, chanHomemaker'• Camp 1981
ces are It will be accurate, they
The . aMual Southeastern Ohio
usually are, but we have checked HOI)IeJIIIIkers' Camp wiD be July 20,
brand new gauges that needed 21, and22, thiayear.lt will be held at
replacement. Of course, the store • Canter's Cave 4-H Camp. The cost
where you buy the canner will will be $2:UO. Thl8 year's theme is
replace the gauge at no addiUonal "Fun in the Sun in '81." Involved in
cost to you.
the PI'OI!ram are : Hiking and swimWe've had enough rain now, that if rnlng. Crafts wiD be. taught. Call
you have any garden at aU it wlll -your Gallia County Extension Office
soon begin to produce lots of nice at 446-7007 for further information.vegetables, ·and If you plan to can You don't have to be an Extension
them, you wiD want to be ready well 'Homemaker to attend.

-Strong n 1
· Durable S-~nb :_ord carcass
uead

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Homemakers'
elf.cle ·. Anybe~dy

'TRUCK
TIRE PAIR

H78·15LT

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· Long term de~~~~~ti'lon 'cord

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-Flat tread radius for long,even wear

'79

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'57

Europe has qvertaken tha United' ,
the world's
JIOI!lti:Y·:

States

. B&amp;S 'AUJQ.&amp; MOBILE HOME SALES

le9ill on CGrDtluten leids or tuea l1ll1tetl' that 'we a1re11!J have In
on~ oil or soybean product~ " Europe and IIGIJlil marbt. that we
Blodllllld lftlr returning fi-om
IUipeCted 'fnl&amp;bt be thnataled ·to
E\lnlpean lobr.
lillie estent...
"I lllir* the fact that thay 'talked
"I dint It's- well uilderstood by
about It and had an open, mind to them that .le are wrY mach emwb8l we ,. were 18ybjjj · liJ en- ~ . llld -~ njlt take .,tha eoncouragilqj, 1\e aald. . ·
.tlnued, growth In 8lpOI'tl that are

Extension Agent,
Ho111e Ecoaomlcs

Wdh .G·-TRUCK
Tres
For
Your
TIRE
WINNER! Ught Truck Or RVI

"W~dejiv-daclearanciCOIIclJe , deratGodlt."
n.uge,"
he aclcle41 "Everyone unBlock said major CCIIIUIIOdlijea at

m

,.

::::::=:·:·:5::~

By BETI'JE CLARK

Save As You Go ...

action," ,
'.

=-.. .:-J::.·:::=f!

~~~~""'* nun-F~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~;·~~~~~;~~~~~~~;~~;;;·~~~~- ~~ ~
NetberiMdi.

. ........ far ....;...~
llrill not
_..
'""""""~In their

,,

+.Y

Home Garden Insect
Control
,:To raise vegetables today without
having them attacked by a wide
, nge of insects is almost im(bsible. So, you'll need some sort of
!list control program and to help you
fe have a publication called "Home
Vegetable Garden Insect Control,"
liuitetin 498. Call us at 446-7007, or
M by our office at liill2 Eastern
Aye., to get your free copy,
;'Thl8 bulletin presents important
lllctll to the Home Gardener about
ljll«ta and inaecticldes that wlll
lp him control, safely and et·
iveiy, the more troublesome
_Use of this informatioo will
the Home Gardener in getUng
most from his pest control

-~~~~~ J!tP) ---: , .. ~ ~ two.weelc !rip, Block_ .,,h!jd!Hd without aoffle
~ !bat ~~"i::oc:k ia . ~ wll!l· qriculture leaders In Bloclullid.

'

Agriculture

Meigs Couty
POMEROY - Compost is a combination of materials that you, a~ a
home owner, have put together and
allowed to deteriorate or rot.
Refuse such as dead or dying plan·
ts, leaves, grass clippings · or
anything of plant origin, mixed with
a little fertilizer and soil, eventually .
are reduced to compost.
. So, this is a good way to get rid of
your refuse back in one corner of the
yard. What next?
Most horne gardeners know the
value of compost. After it has rotted
down - six months to a year, depending on the time of year the compost
pile was started, it is ready to use.
Because of its bulk, compost goes into heavy clay soil and other types of
soil and loosens them up. It fonns
the small particles into aggregates
a~d provides better aeration into the
soil. You get better water drainage
and this means better root acllon in
die plants you set In your garden.
•There is some fertilizer value, but
not much. The main value of comgost is that you have improved the
911il structure when you work it into
tlie top six to eight inches of soil. ·
r:u you have never built a compost
RUe, here's how you can start one.
Gather all the dead plarits and
• leaves from the past fall and winter
ljDd place them in an area out of the
of day to day activities. Start a
~ to 10 inch layer of such
rilaterials. Next, add an inch or two
ol garden soil over the top of the
~ material and sprinkle a few
handfuls of fertilizer over the area.
\Vet It down. Keep the pile moist but
~bt soggy wet. Repeat this
~rocedure with .the same materials
every time you have materials to
eompost. After a time, you'D have a
~ to five foot deep compost pile.
Turn it occasionally to aerate the
pue. After six months to a year, you
~an use the compost in your garden.
::cross Pollination In Vine Crops?
- CUcwnbers, muskmelons, pumpilns and squash do have similar
ifowth habits but are different
, netically so that they do not cross
pollinate . However, different
varieties of muskmelon, cucwnber.
· (l)lmpkin and squash can and do
e)'Oss pollinate and differences could
lie expected if seeds were saved
(iorr\ the mature fruit to grow the
bllxt year's crop.
1;Short Of hay? - If your first cut·
~g of hay loo!cs like it will be short
~ you will need more hay, consider fertilizing after the first cot·
ling is removed. If the crop contains
!iss than 20 percent legwne
(,!!lover/alfalfa), apply 60 pounds of
~ve nitrogen by putting on 200
Pounds of ammoniwn nitrate (33
percent nitrogen) or urea (45 per~nt nitrogen). Phosphorus and
potash can also be applied.

BlhCk eonfident Europeavt ·leaders 'understand •

•

BY JOHN C. RICE
Exteosloa Agent

•

7 1ft1

Julll7, 1911 .

'

•DI4MOND JUBILEE
U11lted Edition
·'tan power - 0111 owner · low milts •
' em clan

. Save

�classifjed

D

June7, 1981 ·
The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-:_

·1

'

·.~

PoleS ,pressure for reform,
Soviets push for control
Western diplomats have interpreted the release of four of
,, the dissidelits Friday as a government attempt to reduce ten·
~ion as the Communist Party prepares for a congress in July
·on proposals for major reforms in the Communist system in
Poland• The Kremlin is thought to be scrutinizing political
d(:velopments.' in· Poland more closely now than at any other
time during the last 12 months because of the congress. The
Sovi~t leadership "doesn't like the trend" in the selection of
delegates so f~J.r, one Western diplomat in Moscow said. If this
continues, the Soviets may feel they have no other choice than
direct action to retain influence over the Polish leadership the
diplornatsaid.
'

, USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY-AWAY
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A 111'4 D.,...""... 1 tUG $1nice
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JUNE 9 WHILE

PRICES IN EFFECT SUN., JUNE 7

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21'12 Inch

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super for backyard bar·be-ques .
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positive Drld adlustments for better heat control. Removabieieas.

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BRONZE tiJOKS

Water Grim lin
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WllhHaiiiJit

.....1144 .

SAN SALVADoR, El Salvador (AP)- Govenunent becoming victims of El Salvador's left-right political
lroopf backed by artillery and air strikes fought tbeir violence.
way uptheChlcontepec Volcano Friday in an operation . Reporters were barred from fighting area, but they
almed at dlllodging • about 500 leftist guerrillas, counted 30 trucks full of soldiers and equipment along
tbe road leading up to tbe mountain.
mjlltary apokesmen said.
In tbe area around San Vicente, 45 miles northeast of
. Otber rebi!Gn:ed anny unita - alsq witb air cover pushed a aecond operation to break tbe back of .San Salvador, government troops went IntO action
guerrilla atrongholda in the central part of tbe country . 'f!lursday to intercept guerrilla groups headed north.
A military IPQblman, who uked anonymity for
security reuons,' conllnned the two operations were
under ny and said the guerrillas were fighting back
but he relased to give lnfonnatlon on C88118ltles. ·
Are111eildenta said there were dead and wounded in
the fighting.
.
More tban 1.* troops baCked by artillery and mor·
lanl IUI'rOWided the volcano, alx miles soulh of tbe
capital, late Wedneaday and started mOYing up tbe
slopes at daW1J Thunday, re&amp;ldenls in tbe,areasald.
They too uked not to be Identified for fear of

In WSBhington, the Pentagon announced the withdrawal of six Navy speclalista from the contingent of
U.S. non-combat military advisers the Reagan administration sent to El Salvador earUer this year.
The withdrawal leaves 50 American military advisers in EISalvador.
The adviaera are part ol an $85 million militacy aid
package to help tbe junta fight the leftist insurrection
which together witb left.right violence has claimed
23,000 Uves in tbe past 19 months.

PATROL - . Salvaderaa army patrol advances
aloag tbe IDOUDiala patb put tbe llody ol an alleged
cuerrWa durla&amp; a . CGUDierlalurgeaey operation
carried Ia die bDiy area oa Saa Vlce1le, nortbeul of El
Salvador receatly. More tban 1,500 troops, backed by

beavy arfillery, warplaaes and bellcoplen, surroaaded a guerrtlla stroagbold Ia and around Chlcbootepee

voleaao, six miles outside Sao Salvaodor Wedneeclay
and slarted moving up tbe slopes at dawn Thursday Ia
the twiHiay operation. (AP Laserphoto) .

Syria condemns Habib
mission, Israel denies
missile report

IOfN I " tundiY NQi. AdlustAble
lo~ted d l ~ldlt'l . uror bill poclllt.

FLY PORT

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.in El Salvador
OR

Reg. S1.38

•
'

·Governm~nt troops battle
-·.guerrillas on volcano
.

SNAP

•

to
from prlloa
members li lbe dllllidelat
Confederatloa of lodependeat Poland wbo are charged
wltb aall-afale aellvlllee, peDdlng furtber appeals ol
tbelreases. (APLaserpboto).

..,

SHORTSniAND
SUNSUITS

HARDWARE DEPT.

3MAN
INFLATABLE
BOAT

VOTING- Membens of Polaod's Solidarity Uolon
YGie oa a pruposed waralag strike, over dlaldeDIII bekl
Ia prisoa, darlq a·meetiDg 1'Jiunday Ia Bydg01zcz,
Polalld. ta Wuuw Friday, die Supreme Court decided

WARSAW, Poland. (API - Poland's embattled developments in Poland more closely now tban at any
government is eaught once again in lhe cross-fire of other time during the last 12 months because of the
domestic protests and Soviet disapproval after congress.
The Soviet leadership "doesn't like the trend" in tbe
releasing four dissidents from prison.
·The Polish Supreme Court on Friday ordered tbe selection of delegates so far, one Western diplomat in
release of Leszek M(lC!:ulski, one of lhe most prominent Moscow said. If this continues, the Soviets may 'feel
anti-Soviet activislB in Poland, and three of his lhey have no otber choice than direct action to relain
influence over tbe Polish leadership, lhe diplomat said.
associates pending tbeir trial for anti-state activities.
In Geneva, Polish labor leader Lech Walesa told 145
The Soviet news agency Tass denoimced lhe release
delegations
of lhe International Labor Federation tbat
as "tbe latest retreat to counter-revolution."
But Polish workers dismissed tbe government's ac- "Poles are capable of settling their own internal af·
tion as Inadequate, and about 20 hunger strikers in six fairs, by lh_emselves and between lhemselves." While
cities continued lhe fast they began May 20 to get jailed most of lhe 2,000 people crowded into the hsll applauded Walesa's remarks vigorously, the Soviet
dissidents released.
·
delegation
looked on in siienee.
Depuly Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski, speaking on
In
Washington,
State Department spokesman Dean
Polish television, suggested Friday tbat lhe hunger
Fischer
said
the
United States has received " un·
strikers were trying to destabilize lhe country bY.
confirmed reports" that Warsaw Pact nmneuvers may
exaggerating tbe problem of political prisoners.
"There are only a few (imprisoned dissidents ), but soon begin in and around Poland.
The Warsaw Pact ended tbree weeks of maneuvers
from tbe press reports it would appear tbat Poland is a
terrible police state in which thousands are moaning in in and around Poland on April 7, leaving in place field
jails for tbelr conviction and tbat one has to put 1o communications gear that could be quickly activated
whole country on its feet to free lhose lhousands of to support military intervention. Western diplomats in
Moscow said the Kremlin may be near to making a
prisoners, like In some bloody dictatorship,'' he said.
decision
on whether to intervene.
Western diplomats have interpreted the release of
Moczulski, leader of the Confederation for an In·
four of the dissidents Friday as a government attempt
to reduce tension'8S lhe C9mmunist Party prepares for dependent Poland, or KPN, was arrested last Sepa c9ngress in July on proposals for major refonns in tember after he allegedly told a West German
magazine interviewer tbat Poland should pull out of
tbe Communist system in Poland.
The Kremlin is lhought to be scrutinizin'g politieal tbe Warsaw Pact.

SITOP:4
· AC 011 CHAMPION

'!r

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Syria condemned the
U.S. peacemaklag mtuion today, and Israeli military
SOUI'cell denied an ABC News report that Israel moved
missiles Jato southern Lebanon as a bargaining COUJlo
ter to S)'l'lan ml-tles In the eut.
The Syrian sova1111811t newspaper Tlshrtn called
U.S. envoy Pldllp C. Habib's tbree-week shuttle Ialit
lllll1th "mere~¥ a million lor rela)'inlllraell clenJan.
dl," and Uld If the new trip "II only a conllnuallon ~
the flnt one, he will not be luctler, and Syria ill not concerned wltb it.
"1belefore, tbe Habib lllillai\'R should be limited to
lnel • - tbe - who lltarted the crlsia wtlh

Lebanon.
Syria deployed its missiles in Lebanon April29, a day
after lsraeU jets downed two Syrian helicopters near .
tbe besieged Christian city of Zahle, 30 miles east of
Beirut. Israel demands the missiles be pulled out, but
Syria has refused.
.
On Friday, ABC News quoted U.S. intelligence SOIII'ces in Washington as saying the Israelis had placed
missiles three-qUarters ~ a mile into Lebanese ,
territory. But today, military sources in Tel Aviv ·
~edtbe~-

Israel keeps an open border to Lebanon and helps
Olrillllan militia forces in southern Lebanon but has
conslltently denied it maintains combat troops or ar-'
llnallllld ......... "
Tile papir allo Nlltnlld SJria'• .-rtian li lis mamenta there.
The foreign ministers ~ Lebanon, Syria, Saudi
rllbl to Jll'l*et lllllf ........ llnell "qpwlkln."
Aralil
and Kuwait were to meet today in tbe Lebanese
"We do hlwalal Ill palllltiiiiUII to IJiand nrm IJid
a-.
a1
Belteddln to dillcuBB the fighting between
cWIIIlwwhw - '..t wtwlll C*1IIRIJ•tha'llwltb
Syrian
IIOid1en
and Labanele Christians that spawned
_.. . . . 1 r;r,"'l'llllllthe
lll'leJI.Syrian
mllllile ~-ouh outaUon. At 1eut aeven
bailll • eo a I ntta al lilt llllilb million, ,
people
were
ld1led
in flgNing Friday.
!~": *Ill DI!Ntelllllld lll1ler u. ...
The Syrians have a 2Z,D-maa ,army in Lebanan to
fllltfal-lllfll~•ao•••
pallce
the l!tlll-ftre tblt ended the 197$.'16 civil war
. . . . . . . . . . ..,,lallOiplW•--Iilnew
I ,.
batWWi file .. thDII and Christiana. Bill the
dlarp lilt llfrialll bave become an ~
11111111t 11 ' 1i ' dturrm ill a..ll Anllla Sunday
cupallon
1n117
b.a an ..,_,b.s them beciUe u.,
... ., ...................... trip
are
too
cloleb'
llljlpQl'!ed
by lll'lel.
...... lllll to . . . Ardla, lnll, .,.... and

......

·•JJmled

Olrlllt'••

•4

.•'
'

�''
W.Va.

Predict contract approv~ ·
!

~

'

' By G,G, rem u:
~laCed PreA Writer

'

'

\

WASIJINGTO~ (AP)- Miners In .
easlei'IJ and midweslem coal fields
voted Saturday On a ~ lo end
their IO.week-old lltrib, with United
Mine Worte~ leaders pred(ctlng
Jlllllllll8 by Ill&amp; 180,000 union members llho sharply rejecled an earner

· ·

Mlnera taced ralll aa they voted at

. earlier JII'IIPIIIi8L ,.

manr

'

that mille operators IIIUit pay

Cll .

non-union coal tile)' buy..., lncbldes

a $1~ bllck-lo-wlllt ~- for
'miners. Ovei'all, I .It . would nile
wages
berjefllit br fl.l J*'CII1I;

.m
One

hi8

a

·OSlf head .explains ·why he ·quit
'

•

Ray returns to prison life
,

0AK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP) -

:' James Earl Ray, stabbed 22 times

: py: fellow

inmates in a prison law
' · library, has been discharged from
' Oak Ridge Hospital and transferred
' to the infinnary at BMJShy Mountain
: : P~tentlary, officials said today.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
UMW imil the BCOA. Here miners llae up to cast their
State University President Harold
baUots at Dixlaoa ill Wise County, Va. (~ Laser- R. Enarson says he decided to leave
photo) .
the top job at the state's largest
university because of ongoing
pressures in dealing with some
pow11rful Ohioans.
"You wear out your welcome,"
said Enarson, who's resignation is
nessee for failing to pro~ Ray, his
Spokesmen for the hospital and
effective Aug. 31. "I think it' s true
the prison said Ray was returned to
client.
that you build up criticism, and they
the prison infirmary overnight.
· Lane said he and Ray have
just get tired of one's personal
Meanwhile, Mark Lane, an at.
discussed filing a civil suit aga,l nst
style."
..
tomey who was present at the
the state because of the attack,
He said frequent requests for
Guyana mass suicides, said he
which left Ray with 77 stitches In his
special . admissions 'favors conprobably will sue the state of Tenhead, chest and arm.

RATIFICATION VOTE - The voter turnout was
heavy Saturday as members of VIrginia's UMW
l)lslrlct %8 voted op the proposed cou1r11ct between the

'

I

tribuled to his ·decision to step down
Enarson would · not !J81De the ·
after nine years.
callers.
"You would be amazed at the
"Any president worth his salt
number of calls I've gotten through would do the same thing I have done
the years from very powerful people · in fighting toe infection of
in this state. A president haa to favoritism," he said.
protect the integrity of the univer-• The 62-year-old Enarson said that
sity," Enerson said.
·
over the years, ius relationship "*tth
" It Is at nsk every time some per· the OSU Board of Trustees · has
son of power tries to gain an ad· faltered .
,
vantage for his own son or daughter
"I always believed the job. of
.... It's not. only downright corrupt, president encompassed a certain
bUt it puts a lot of people of political amount of freedom, a long rope on
strength ahead of the dlsadvanlaged which to operate," he said.

ones," he said.

..· "-:-----------------~-------~-..:.__--....;,.,..­
.....
•

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&gt;

~

· ciassifieds
........................
..... . . , . ... ...

_

'·' '

~

Card of Thanks
Darst

The Budd J unior

family wo.u ld like to thank

all those who he lped us in
our t ime of need during the
loss of our loved one. We
wish to express our ap·
preciation to our families

and friends , the pall
bearers. Rutland E .M.S..
the Ewing Funeral Home,
The Buddy Fife Singers,
• The Ash Street Freewill
: Baptist Church. Also to the
ladies who prepared the
food . For those who sent
1
flowers and cards, we
•1 thank thoo;e who ca lied on
us or visited or were just
thinking of us on that day.
• To those who helped in any
way God Bless YOu All.

We

wish

~veryone

to

thank

for their con·

cern and thoughtfulness

during
ment.

our

bereave-

The Mae Belle Burton

Family

I THANK THE
LPN'S, ALL MY
CO·WORKERS &amp;
FRIENDS
· AI The Gallipolis
Development Center.
Sincerely,
EVELYN FIELDS
; 2 ·

3

Community Flea Market, Beautiful 5·6 week old kit·
While Church . Upper tens to give to good loving
Flats. Come one, come all. homes . All colors. Long
Saturday June 6th .
and short haired. Litter
trained . 675'6145 alter • :3()
pm
ROGERS
PAWN &amp; COIN SHOP
Kill ~s . 675-m6 or 675·
5955.
601 Main 51.
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va., old
state liquor store.
6
Lost and Found

675-4378

Culloden Nursery
5pring Salel
West Virginia's
'' Greatest Nursery''
Beautiful
Canadian
Hemlocks,
Scarlet
Maples, Sugar Maples,
Pin Oaks, Japanese and
·Chinese Crabs, Green
Ash, Purple Plums,
Pink Dogwood, Bradford Pear, Upright &amp;
Spreading Evergreens.
All nursery Slock is priced to sell. 25% off Rainy
Day Purchases.
All sizes ol flowering
trees guaranteed to
bloom th is Springl
Designing &amp; Planting
Services,
Free
Estimates. Nursery Is
located 1 mile out
Charley's Creek Road
on the left between
Wesleyan
Camp
Ground. Only 13 miles
from New Hlgn. Mall.
Trailer load deliveries.
5cott• Bluegrass sod
available .
743·"96
•

In Memoriam

anvmore, just peace . We

will meet someday on thai
golden shore. SadlY missed
by you wife, Tillie and
children
and
other
relatives.

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supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Oavls Vacuum
Cleaner, one ~all mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
.u6·0294 ..

. '

NEW GARAGE OPENING
·. Automatic transmissions
and all sorts of mechanical
repair and ma 1or and
minor auto bodY repair.,
See James Smith or Tom
Mastars or caii4l.4·77S7 .

"

4

Giveaway

Carport Sale 82 Burdelle
Addn. Fri., and Set. Girls
size 6 to 8, todler boys
clothing . Hobby horse, doll
house, c 4 rtains, and lots of
misc. items.
·Yard Sale, 2 Family SaiiJr·
day, Vllllage of Cheshire,
Electrical
ap·
Ohio.
pliances, books, shoe
skates, misc. Rain cancels.

Lost, near Portland, black
&amp; white male foxhound .
Tuesday,June 9 only,
Call843·235.4.
dresser,chest,
some
glassware,bov's teenage
7
Yard Sale
clathes,games,Chrlstmas
GIGANTIC YARD SALE free . Lots of misc. Items.
June 4-5, Thurs. &amp; Friday, 100 High Street. 911114.
lime 8 to 6, Rt. ·588 near
Rodney . Hoover sweeper,
fans , small chlldrens 1
Public hie
clothes, glass fire screen, _ __!I~A~u~c:!ll~o!!n_ _ _
grass trimmer, Avon B &amp; S, Clearing Out Sale·some an·
many household Items.
tlques, glassware, dish·
washer, trash compactor,
Yard Sale· Frl . &amp; Sat. old sewing machine, por·
Roush Hollow Rd . at Eno., table TV, couches, chairs,
Ohio. 10 Ill ? Clothing and tables, lots of Odds &amp; ends.
Wilsons Farm on Flal·
misc. Items. Rain cancels.
woods · Rd. oil Rt. 7 above
Pomeroy, look for signs, at
2 Family Porch Sale 86 Five Points, Sunday &amp;
Pine st .. Gallipolis. 9 to 5, Monday, June 7th &amp; 8th 10
Fri., Sat., &amp; sun. Jeans, to?
'
tops and misc.
Yard Sale 1 112 miles oil
Rf. 7 on 218 on the left. Wed.
and Thurs., June 10 &amp; 11, 10
to 6. ,Recliner, TV stand, 4
matcl\lng II res · &amp; whell,
clothi11Q, lnfanll on up, and
.
.
misc., Gallipolis. .
YARD SALE - Thurs.,
June 4 and Fri ., June 5, 9
a.m. til?? Davis r.esldence,
Rose Hill . Men, women and
children' s clothing, toys,
tools, metal stepstool and
many misc. items.

Auctlon·SI. Rt. 2, Gallipolis
Ferry, WVA, every Fri .,
7:30. New &amp; used mer·
chandlse . Auctioneer
Howard . Beesley. Rogers
Furniture a. Auction Barn.
9

• 1 PAY
highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, lewelry, etc.
COntact Ed Burkefl Barber
Shofl, Middleport.
•

~

ATTENTION LADIESIII
Hotlp pay off those unwanled bills working
evenings from 7: 30 to 10:30
p.m . 11 a !ashton stylist.
&amp;rn $8.00 to 110.00 per
hour profit. ldotal far
homemaker wit~ family.
CIII992·:W41 from 9-6.

.. . . . ..
............
...
.
".
~5
....
---...

\

' "

'

Jobs Overseas-Big money
fast. $20,000 to $50,000 plus
year. Call 1-716·842·
Ex1 .27A7 .

--- ----

Have lmmedlalely opening
for one experienced gymnastics Instructor. Apply
immediately at the
Gallipolis
Municipal
Building, 518 Second Ave.

11

Physical
Development
Specialist, B.A. Degree In
Physical Education, adap·
tive Physical Sducetlon
from an accredited College
or University . Physical
Education Certification,
Ohio Department of
Education,
Validation
M.S.P.'R., Ohio Depart·.
ment of Education. Plans,
develops and lmpelments a
program of
physical
development baHd upon
the needs of handicapped
persons from 18 months to
65 years of age. Salary
$10,100 to SU,300 BA
Degree, $10,908 to $16,908
MA Degree, beginning
August 24, 1981. C911tact
Loren D. Phelps, Surrln·
fendenl, May 25,198 . All
applicants Include : Appllcatioo of employmen, 1
copy of official college
transcript&amp;,
1 page
philosophy al education,
and complete resume. PO
Bo• 14, Cheshire, Ohio
45620.

PART OR FULL TIME to
lease land tor Oil and gas
development. Pay based on
per acre leased, withdraw
'----------,---------~
commission for those who
r
qualify . Must have c ar,
write Stanley . Energy
9
Wanted to Buy,
9
Wanted to Buy
Development, PO Box 328,
wanted swarms of Bees, would like to buy car· lronton,Oh-456Jll. ,
Call alter 5PM, «6·1052, burator for a 1972 Scout II,
Gallipolis.
6 cyl. Call 256·6826, Nor· Babysitter needed, 2 older
children in vlndnity of At.
thup, C)h.
Ul. Call after 5 446·41127, 1
WANTED TO
BUY:
Gallipolis.
GOLD,
SILVER , Old furniture and antiques
PLATINUM, STERLING· of all kinds. Call l&lt;enne!h
COINS,
RINGS , Swain, Gallipolis, Ohio 256· Homemakers-make $50·
JEWELRY,MISC. ITEMS . 1967.
5100 a week·sparetlme «6·
ABSOLUTE
MARKET
7895, Gallipolis .
PRICE GUARANTEED.
furniture , copper and
ED BURKETT BARBER Old
brass, kettles, split hickory 8
Public Sale
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT , baskets, stone Iars with
&amp; Auction
OHIO 992·3476.
names. «6-:W25.
HARLEY-DAVIDSON, pr·
eterably older model, but
will consider new model If
reasonable. Must be In
good condition, in the $1500
to $2500 price range. Call
992·5006.

SWAIN '
AUCTION BARN

HARPER · HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO., 11th and
VIand Street, now buying
metal~
(copper, brass,
aluminum , lead, stainless
steel , balferles and
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, catnip ~nd sassalras) .
want to buy good used 10 am to 6 pm dally. Also
baby furniture . Must be In Flea Market on Saturdays.
good clean condition. 992· CAII675-58611 .
6786.
BEDS·
IRON, gold,
BRASS,
old
furn
iture,
sliver
dOllars, wood ice boxes,
stone Iars, antiques, etc.,
Write: M.D. Miller,
Rt. 4,
Complete
households.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992-7~60.

Wantlld to IJW
1

PuDtlcSIIe

Wt 1111 1nylhlng for
1nyllody II " ' l&gt;uctlon
ltrn or In , .., honM. For
lolormltion lftd pickup
M,..ke call JU.IN1.
Salt Ewry Slltvrdly
Nitllt1111.m.

SWAIN

~r===~~~=:::;:::~

AUCTION SERVICE

K t - Swlln,Auct.
car- Third&amp; Ollvt

• 1----:=:-----..J
· Hog~,
W. Va.
Rl. 2 ·
AUCTtON
BARN

hie enry Sit., 7:to
p.m. Complete •uctl011
service. Public auctiOIIl
&amp; consignments tlktR
II hem. AUCIIOIINr,
Lonnie
. Neat

l-:::==:':":u:ct:ton:::==:i~':'4:·H:7:·:71:1l:·===~

CASH for your diamonds,
gold and sliver, elm rings, II
wedding bands, sliver arid
gold . coins . Tawney
Jj!Welers, 422 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

Help Wanted

Public Sole
&amp; Auction

COMPL£TE

DISPERSAL
of the

ROBER1S
HEREFORD
FARMS
Elizabeth, W, V1,
FRIDAY, JUNE 19,1911
!O:lOA.M
Sale to be held II·
Ulllted Llvesfock
Sale Company, Inc.
MineriiWells, W. VI,
.Selllng41t HNd.t '•
Sales Mgr. Coleman
Mgt. Serv.
500Salt
WtSIIitld
Road
ChlriOIIesvllle, VI.
10&lt;1/171-4344.

~~========±========~!

PUBLIC AUCTION
10: 01 A.M.
SI&gt;TURDAY, JUNE 1J,1911
The personal ~~~::;~ 01 t&gt;drt1nne FNnc:ll te be
sold at public .II
Location: west tnc1 of HI,..
rlsonvllle, St.

prGipiC!tve

DWI1tn. Mulf

be en the Middleport·

- Pomuoy aret, aat1ry
MIIOIIGnlllla. Phone 9925G71fler 5:30PM.
BE A WINNIRI liNt In, ttallonl work vour _..
~oura
dtmonatrttlng
MERRI-MAC toyS. glfll.
and hiiiiiiiiiCOI' lllml. We
Mid party pllft dlmOft
atrii'Otl In tltla IINI· High
commlnlon. No In·
vaatment, no dlll-lng, no
calllctlt\1. Cell IIIII f,..

J:"lt..
I
-1.

Mixed Beegle, male, has
had allsholl, very gd.wlth
children . 1 yr. old «6-2164.
Male Doberman, «6-1511,
Gallipolis.
Two biiCk mete kittens io
giYI IWiy, · 446 ·4152,
Gallipolis.

THU;;~A~· ,.~-;;;

~::~·· I~H~~~~~~~i~~tji

Buy I&gt; I WlloiOIIIUnd B,eiOw
EVERY
....M.
No matter what kind otlluslneu you aretn we IIIJve
somethlnt for you.

Come and buy your suppllos for gill allopa, liN
!Tlarkets, retell auctions, genertl merchlndl•,
yard aatu or your OWII per-•tuee.
.

.

Futniture, 10011 of 111 klndl, 10y1, c1rpet, IIVItlg
room suites. atsnea, 11m111o 111..... ThiN will 111
several trucklotdl of hiW merchandise.
Term11 C11~ or Ctledr wltll """""1.0.

.. MAIN

AUCTION lAIN

REGISTERED NURSES
lmmedia.te opening ICU full time 11 to 7
nurse, with experience in ICU, ccu is
preferred. Excellent benefits, pension
Jan, long term disability &amp; hospitaliza·
·
· tion. · · ·
Salary commensurate with experience.
Contact: Teresa Collins, RN

VETERA~S

MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 1-614-992-2104

""''II!',)PIIC,

13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
Here isa job you will like - Dealing with people and
SURANCE
been
can·
serving their linancial needs.
'
lled?
Lost
your
I'
Ol,.nltor·'s
Llceno;e?
Phone
Good starting salary ... excelleD! training program
.. . earlY advancement ... exceptional benefits ... all
those and m_o re are yours with Benellcial.
SANDY AND BEAVER In·
We need tnlinees for position of' Branch Manager
surance Co. has · offered
now - high school gradu1tes or equlvalen!. Phone
services for fire Insurance
Mr. Ratcliff to 1rrangilor confidential personal in·
coverage In Gallia County
terviaw. Call 614·444·2765.
for almost a century.
-!IENEFICII&gt;L FINANCE INC.
Farm, home ·and personal
41Und Avo., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
property coverages are
An Equ11 Opportunity Employer M/F
av1ilable to meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact
•'
Full -lime,
live - In Opportunity Is yours lust Kail Burleson, your neigh·
Houseman- tor group tor the asking. ASk your bor and agent.
home In Gallipolis. Ohio to Beeline stylist and she will
, work with persons with be ilaPPY to help you loin
mental retardation. Send the lleellne world of 15 SchoolslnstructiOII
resume to John Lehew, PO fllshlon and success. Phone
Box 906, Gallipolis, 011 992·3941 belween the hours SUMMER SCHOOL IN·
45631. Buckeye Community of9·6.
STRUCTION · Does ' your
Services Is an equal opchild flee!l extra help?
portunity employer.
program tor
NEED someone to instill Review
or
math .
c~rpet. Must have own reading
Presbyterian Church . Call
The Gallipolis Recreation tools. Call675-1317.
446·4052. Prepare for
Department Is -lng an
. experenced person to IHch Babysitter , shift-work . classes now I
Its ~·s Conditioning
claiUI, 1nd ~lbly some Phone 675·"40.
u
RldloTV
other classes. ClaiMS will
I CB Repair .
he Tuosdays and Thur· 12
SltUIIIOftS Wlnted
sdaystrom 6·1 PM 1nd ::_._.!=====~ RON'S TV SERVICE
morning c1111 from ID-11 W1nted: Baby sitting, Specializing In Zenith .
AM. If lnter.-ted, IPPIY al preferred In my home rates House Calls. Now servicing
the Municipal llulldlng, 511 h.GO per hr. Must provide Motorola Quazar. Call 1·
Second Ave., Gallipolis or transportation. Call «6- 304·576·2398 or «6·2-454 .
25114. Gallipolis.
call646-1719.
17
Mlscelllneous
S1U.OO to $500 -kly dOing Repair or remodeling
mailing work . No .ex· work, flooring, dOOrs, wall Slone's welding &amp; small
parltnct required.. A P· paneling, ceiling, or floor engine repair, lawn
mowers, cnalnsaws, etc.
PLY : Circle Saios, P .O. tile, siding, 992·275'1.
IOIC 22&lt;1·0, Rlc~mond Hill,
Nebo Rd .. 379-2636.
NYIWI.
wnt dO roots, OOod rates,
wanted to Do
GET VALUAIILE training free estimates. Call after 5 11
·
•• 1 young bullnoss parson atP92-5125.
HAVE YOUR Hoove ~
1nd earn good money plus
- r repaired at Em·
some .g-t tills IS I Sen· Hen 'room and board 1nd •
plre Furniture, Clll «6·
tlnel route carrier. P - laundry and care In my 1405.
Ull right IWIY and get on private home, tor the
lht eligibility list at 992· elderly,. w.!-11022.
2156or992-2151.
, W.mwd: IICifMOIJe to bolrd
cats tor lht Meigs County
Humtne Society w~lle
tJot:nes 1re IGUGhtlor them.
ca~es.
11~ boxes,
rnlldlcellon,
, lnd litter
•r• aupptled. Yau need
gOGct dflft ' ' " clnn
, building or room, Where
: you can ,mw antm1ll to

DelluQue.

23

D.J.'s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR · On Neigh·
borhood Rd., ell makes ser·
vlced. Specializing In Lawn
Bo~. Blades sharpened.
Call' «6-~5 aller. 5 p.m.
Pick .up and delivery
available.
To do babysitting In home;
Spring Valley
Area ,
Gallipolis, Oh «6·6574.
Cake

1;

Wanted: will do babvsit·
ling In your home. 992·5974.
Reallsllte- General

2 bedroom house, large fot,
full size basement. 992·7791
weekdays aller 4..
Six room house, basemeht,
garage. 1.2 acres. ROll!
Hill. Upper forties. 614·678·
2513.
NEW CABIN or small
home, completely lur·
n1shed, $3900. Call «6·03!Q.
32

Mobile Homes .
lor Sate

PRICES REDUCED· u~
mobile homes and trav~l
trailers.
TRI - STAT E
MOBILE HOMES . CA'LL
«6·7572.

gas furnance, good c0f'l4.,

Decorating,

~;;;;;;;;~~;:;;;;;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ specializes Wedding cakes,

TRAIN TO BECOME
A BRANCH MANAGER

nowt 1._511-Nn, or

Four Tiger kittens, eight
weeks old. Phone «6-0974,
Gallipolis.

WENDY'S INltRNATIONAL, INC.

'

wrllt: MI!RRI·MAC 101

Pt. German Sheperd puppy, 256·6345, Gallipolis.

ing thai the customer is pleased with the ~uality ol
our pr~uct .'·'
·
Don will be the first to tell you that the ·WOrk is
hard, but he's also aware· Hilt "the awards tor ttird
work go hand In hand with a sense of accomplish·
mentand the OJipol'f!lnlty to advance.' '
·
•
Stop In 11 Wendy's Old Fashlonlld Hamburgers
In Galllpollsan~ say hello to Don WesHall , A line ex·
ample of a professional on the way to the top.

' '

Help Wanted
11
WANTED · Lease men, to
lease oil and gas proper·
ties, Gallla and surroun·
ding counties. Inquire to
Great Bend Oil Inc, 269
Lower
River
Rd .,
Gallipolis . Call «6·4285.

Two Story House ind lol on
Broad Run Rd. 882·2407.

Homos for S.le

5 mob. hOmes, will sell uC.e
or all, already set ulf in
park-underpinned, and. lOt
HOUSE FOR SALE 3 Is available for rent. Priced
bedroom, full bao;ement, at $3,000 to $8,000. 1·186·
Immediate possession «6· 3258, in Jackson, OH . .. ..
3748 or 256-1903. In city
limits, Gallipolis .
1981 Fairmont 14x52, 2 lldr ..

Don came to Wondy'sloilklng for the opportunl:
ty to advance, and he's done ju~tlhot. Don itarled

. . . . . . . "'\""?'

wanted burnt out trailers
lor the root &amp; alum. siding.
c,ll 311-9973 after 5, Bid·
well, Oh.
Gospel Singing, Hannan
Trace High Schogt, June
6th, 7 to 9. Special, Etarnal
Youth group, Mercerville,
011.

Your Wlndfs M......, In GaAipolis

Oh. 45674.

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

Yard Sate

7

DON .WESTF~

Manager..
·
DGn enjoys .dealing with the public and "know·

Alo .Grande

THREE bedroom house,
familY rC!Om with fireplace, .
full basement, all ap·
pllences end draperies.
675-1~2 after 5p.m,

5 room home, bath, all elec·
trlc, 2 years · old, 5
acres,$26,500 . Bud Challln
ll
Homos lor Sale
Road, Pt. Pleasant. 675·
5 ROOM house, •• 1828.
Chl.l llcothe Rd., only $3,5Q9.
Call «6·4038 or «6·1615.
Will consider land contract
at 10 per cent. Gecrges
Creek Rd. 3 Bdr . quality
brick home, basement, 2
fireplaces, gas heat, 2 car
garage with approx. '12
Acre lot and barn . (50's).
Serious inquires may call
collect-1501) U2·7.U7.

through the ranks 10 his current positiOII as Store

RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE&amp;
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
Direct~'( of Public In·
formation Cmember of,
develofl!llenl te1m1, 12
month position effective
July 1.
Minimum qualifications
is bachelor's degree In
journalism or public
relations/ or evl~ence of
equivalent experience.
M~st hlive demonslrat·
able writing skills. Ex·
perienced In layout
. design, graphic and
marketing
(photo ·
graphic desirable) .
Before June 25, send Itt·
ter of appliutlon,
delalled resume, which
Includes 3 recent
references. 1nd 11m pies
of soli developed
maiOfials (copies oc·
ceptablel to co -

'31

Homes for Sale

'

-as a M1n1gtment Trainee and advanced himself

Box 969,

Giveaway

..............
·-·· ··---······

Ritc:tlve . lull pay 'while
receiving
lpproved
pllarmocology lrlinlng.
Full-tlml positiOIIS fOr
,L.P.N.'s.
Excellent
stanlng ulary - M.~
of, 4Gc:S per !lour plus f,..
lngt lltMIIIs 12D.I% ).
1n-slrvice ortlnt111oio
following employment,
CONTACT: .
l
·
Ptr.onnel.,pilrtment
'
. G11llpOIIs
Developmental Center
GallipoliS, 011. 45631
TelipiiOnU14-446-1642
Affirmative acilon/e·
qual opportunities
employer.

College, Rio Grande,
4

,I

LICENSED
PRACTICAL'
•. NURSE

ordinator of Personnel,

Permanent HaiEr:t R
tce m,. ovvsail.sl COL LIE and coonhound
1 1 01
Professional
Puppies. 992·2770.
Center . A.M.A. Approved.
Dr. referrals. By ap·
5 week old puppies. Mother
pointments only. 675·623~ .
is an miniature collie. 992·
3615 evenings, and 992·3325
LONELY
Christian daytimes.
Porch Sale 1310 Ohio st.,
Singles. Meet Christian
Thurs ., Fri., and Sat.. Crib,
singles inyour area. Write
plypen, baby clothes, toys,
Southern Christian Singles 3 playful7 week old kittens. clothes, new crafl items
Club, PD Bo• 1823, Sum- 742·2-460
and misc . Items.
mervill e, SC 2'483 or calli·
800·871-9850, 24 hours.
4 half beagle puppies.
Homer Bowen, Tuppers CARPORT SALE Fri. 6·
'PM, Sat. NPM, 128
PIANO Lessons. Lucy Jane Plains. Across from bank.
English Rd.
CLEAN
Bulmer. Harttord, WV 882·
ITEMS, prices cheap I.
2395.
9 puppies, part beagle,
adult grey cat with millen Yard SaleS Family, Friday
Farm Museum, Sunday, paws &amp; variety of kittens. and Saturday 9:0CI-3:00,
June 7th . Old fashioned Calllco &amp; variety of colors. 2008 Marquelle Ave.
chicken noodle dinner. Long &amp; short hairs. For In·
Price $3.00 adults, $1.50 formation call992-6505.
child. Starts 11 :30 AM.
Free entertainment. Rt . 62 3 klnens, 1 large cat. 742·
N, Pt. Pleasant.
24.52 .

in loving memory of mv
dear husband, Carl 0 .
Gheen. of whom God look
with him one year ago
today, June 3rd, 1980. We
miss your smile and your
loving. ways. God knew
your works here on earth
were done and he prepared
a ·place lo you where you
won' t be sick or hurt

3

Announcements

'GALLIA Cleaning and
Rent·A·Meid Service Inc.,
Free Estimates, bonded,.
lnsvred, phone 245-9234.
Cleaning by t h e - · mon·
thor contractual.

·•

miner Who ~eted pemge
contract.
during
the ~ Greg ~ It
UMW !&gt;resident Sam Church, af- . bebacltloworkonffonday, endlnga
local
9908in
nor111er1J Welt Virllnla,
ler lfllve!lng througb'· coal country walkout that- began MarCh 'II and
said.
regaining
the ~. · wbleh
all week preachllig for the pact, con- has been marked by ShoOtings at·
tlnued to say be expected the raDk non-union mines and other sporadic was not In the March .conti'let . .
•
.
·and file to vote favorably. Many violence. ' •
·
· ·. .· the key to~ctory.
"That non-urilOn COlli ill ,what
local Union leaders, thllllgh not all,
During
six days of ·travel,
echoed that sentiment.
Church Often heard cbeers In areas killed It the last time," he alld.
Opposition haa not dwlndied comJ.B. Trout, a UMW executive where he !lad been heckled as
pletely,
however. Church wu ltlll
board member from Pikeville, Ky., "Sellout Sam" when he fought for
heckled
and jostled by miners In
predicted passage by hili members passage of the other pact turned
MteeHng,
W.Va., on Thursday, and
In District 30; · where the earller down by miners by more than 2-tosome
miners
were cOmplainb)g as
'proposal was 'Voted 'down 2-to-1.
1111Brgln March 31.
"I\ thlnl[" the ,people are pretty
One union lOcal In Birmlngport, they went to the poDs Silturdjly.

pact

'. '

31 .

Profossl0111l
S.rvlcos

23

'
The· nelr offer l'eiiCinS a l'91lltf

locals In Kentucky • and West
Virginia, and II was overcast In
western Penilsylv,i nla. The downpour in West Vlrgi!lia has been going
on for aev~ral days, leaving'
areaa fioodild.
• .
If the
Js ratifi~, n\iners could

They'll Do It Every Time

Ala., voted Friday and IPift'OVed the
new offer ~- It had rejected the

satlBfled with the epnlract," he IIBid

Saturday.

I

H!!f Wlnl!d

' .

'

' '

11

TheSunda

675·2588' or 675·1553, Pl.
Pleasanl, WVA.

Professional

Services

COMMERCIAL and In·
dustrlal
photography.
Phone «6·2909 or «6·7226
after 4 p.m.
INCOME lAX AND AC·
CO.UNTING SERVICE .
Call 4~6- 7068 for .ap·
poinlmeritanytime .

FO SALE BY OWNER
l Bdr., tam . room
w/ slone fireplace, L.R.,
D.R., carport, beautiful
localion on large wood·
ed lot. About " ' mi . from
town. Clly schoolS. 154
Woodland Dr. 446-3948 .
Call tor a ointment

Large 3 bedroom home, 3
living rooms, for!Tlai dining
Plano tuning and repair, room, 2 built in kitchens, 2
Love your neighbor tune baths, 1 with shower. All
your · Plano. Bill .War·d, fully carpeted. Lots of
wards Keyboard . «6·4372. paneling. Large swimming
Gallipolis.
pool In back. seen by ap·
1.~'---'-------- pointment only. 9'12·2o404 af·
"'"'"'u TUNING and ser· ter 4 p.m . Large recreation
ell makes-. ••d and laundry 00
r m.
models.· Call Bob Grubii'"af
Formerly with
Beautiful three bedroom
Keyboard .

E ana v welding, paint
body shop. Georges Creek
Rd. Gallipolis, «6·9304.
CITY
With GAllipolis motors 3 RIVER
BOOKKEEPING Services
yrs.
· At H &amp; R Block office, 27
Sycamore St., Call 446·0303
Will do day caruervices In on Tues., «6·2575 after 5
my hOme call «6-0566, and on saturday.
Gallipolis.
FOR all your photography
Want to do babysitting, In needs go to Tawney studio,
my home, up to 6 yrs. old. 424 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis,
Inquire at 1622 Chatham Ohio. Passports, family
Ave. belween 'AM &amp; 5PM. photos, weddings, and com·
mercia! photography.
Gallipolis.

HAUL gravel, llmestlllte,
coal, etc . Dencll Dunlap.
Phone67H215.
ELECTRICAL Plumbing
and Healing Service. No
lob too small. 10 years ex·
perience. Low rates . Ph.

11'12·2533.
Carpentry and remodeling
and rooting . 576·2989 .
Will · do babysllllng
5:00PM675-3745.

till

Tree work wanted, will do
prunnlng, topping, and
lake downs. 675-6682 and
«6-1735.
;::.~

21

:.:

:~:

Business
opportunity

Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heal, central air . Call
985·4145, 9'12·2571 orl-687·
6429 .
Racine, 2 plus bedrooms,
bath , storms,
choice
location, out Of high water,
garden,
workshop .
$30,000.00. Shown by appf .
1·614·235-6569.

Reduced from appraisal of
S45,7o0. 3 bedroom, 2 batn,

"'A Ellt Stilt St.
,

Atflenl, Oh.
P~. 594-U43

1&gt;·1 Meigs Co. 11 At.,
m/1, loctled In Pom..-oy
With public w1ter end
•valllble. Owner
flntnclng poulble.
,._, Pometor - Good
bull~!ng tile for commertlll uee. Totll ol 3
1011. Approx. 1 Ac.
TermiiYIIIallte.

A·l Pwu•oY :._ 3'11 Ac.

Good llulidlng lilt for

....
-

'*""fiMitCitlg poul-

or .,.,.

Owner

lots of cabinets and closets .

Bog master bedroom,
garage, 10x26 rear porch ,

PARENTS OF BALLPLAYERS
This 4 or s bedroom one story home is located be·'"
tween grade school and high school. If you are tired
of driving your children to ball games, practices
and school activities, this house is for you . Shown by

appointment. Call RAN NY
STROUT REALTY 446·0008.
Real Estate

outbuildings.

All minerals on good
gravel road . want just
$27,500.
NO LONGE~ CAN YOU
DEPEND ON MONEY ,
BUT REAL ESTATE
WILL STI&gt;Y WITH
YOU.

/-1 n' I ''Jfl I I
1'(, ·o~d•

General

INSURANCE
428 Second Ave.
Cali 446·0552 Anytime .
See Us. For HUD Properties
Equal Opportunity Housing

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

16 E . Second Street

house and

af

LIFE

Headquarters

Phone
H~· ·614
.... )-992-3325

BLACKBURN

Broker -Auctioneer

ousing

t~~~~~:.Ui
·"'

2 bdr. mobile home-large
wooded lot, near Tycoon
Lake, will accept down
payment with 10 percent interest, «6-4313 , GailipoGs.-

Real Estate - General

Permanent hair removal Vz acre. Low utilities. Clean
Professional Electrolysis and top cond. Leaving stale
Center, AMA approved, $39,500. 992·5704.
Dr . referrals. By ap·
polntment only 675·6234.
Real Eslale- General
Real Estate- General

112 ACRES - Good cal·
tie farm with barb wire
fences. 6 room ranch
Artcralt Concepts now
type home, bath , full
seeking managers and
basement, furnace, 3
counselors. Exceptional
we lls, 1 dugged, barn
earning program, well
and
some
t imber .
established company with
$70,000 .
exclusive products. No In·
SMALL FARM - 31
vestment, delivery, or
acres ol real nice laycollecting Involved . Crall
lngland . Will even make
experience not required.
a n ice deve lopment with
For Interview call256·9348,
water and electr ic
Gallipolis.
·
available. Located on
nard road . $1600.00 per
PACESETTER FASHION·
acre.
S Oilers a highly profitable
ROOMY Large 7
and beautiful Jean &amp; Spor·
room familY home. 3·4
!swear Shop of your own.
large bedrooms. 1V,
Featuring over 100 brall!ls·
baths, central air $.
Levi, Calvin Klein, Jor·
heat, st. drs ., w indows,
dache ,
Lee,
Chic,
and large garage w ith
Wrangler· many
more.
storage . SS9,900.
$16,500.00 Includes In·
BUILDING LOT - 1.66
ventory, Installed llxtures
acres
on Stale Rf. 124.
&amp; ill'shop training. Can
Dr illed well with pump,
open '!Yithln 15 days. Call
septic tank and electric
anytime for Mr. Summers
Pads for trailer 011
at (214) ~7-6442.
almost. level land. Only
$6,500.
NEW LISTING - New
22
MontY to Loan
home, lurnished . 3
FHA·Vf&lt;·Convenllal Home
bedrooms, forced air
Loans, Columbus F lrst
furnace, bath, equipped
Mortgage Co., &lt;163 Second
kitchen, carpeting, tully
Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh., «6·
insulated, st . drs .•
7172
wdws .. on large lot. Can
move In on completion
of sewage and sale. Only
$35,000.
Rul Estate General
NEW LISTING - Han ·
dyman' s special. 5
rooms and bath. Full
'basemen!. natural gas,
city water and level lot.
· Asking $3,000 .
NEW LISTING - 53
acres In Olive Twnshp.
with good (lid farm
Jim-Owen&amp; co·. Inc.

REALTOR

7214.

Modified A-frame with 3
bedrooms, 2 bj&gt;fhs, car·
peted, stone circular
fireplace, spiral stairs,
utility room. Private . 8
acres. 992·7741 .

ranch brick home in Raum

c &amp; F Cleaning Systems.
Babysitting In my home. Offices, resldenllals, car· total electric, carpeted,
large kitchen·dlnlng and
992·6567. Middleport area .
pets, Upholstery, windows, living rooms. Dishwasher,
floor, and general cleaning.
«6·27838 loS PM .

245 · 92'8 2,
NEW 3 Bdrm . home w· $9800 . 00,
•
basement and garage in Gallipolis.
Plantz Subdivision. 545,000.
«6·0390.
CLEAN USED MDBC!.'E
HOMES
KESSEI:. cS
MOBit..E
For Sale tiouse and lot in QUALITY
Vinton, Oh. Reasonable HOME SALES, o( 'M i.
price, land contract WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT .
35. PHONE 446·3868 or oWo·
available, 245·5818.

NEW LISTING
Beautiful 3 bedroom
home with r iverview,
WBFP, full basement
with garage and
workshop, garden area,
large lot, many other
features. Assume this
13%, APR , $29,800.00
loan, with $5,000.00

down , approx . 29 years

to pay.
P &amp; I
$300.20/ month. TOTAL
PRICE $34,500 .00.
NEW LISTING Southern District - 10
minutes to new bridge,
approx. 12 acres land to

must sell
four BR home. Two
I
fine kitchen. ~··· ~ •
throughout, heat pump, new paint inside and out.
See this one soon. City schools, Green Elementl!lry .

be sold in 1 acre lots or

whatever

siie

you

choose. Starling at
$6,500.00 lor road Iron·
!age lots .
IN TOWN - 3 bedroom
home on

Union, full

basement,
or igina l
woodwork , screened
back porch, large lot.
ASK lNG $27,000.00.
NEAR MINE NO. I - 3

bedrooms, part base·
ment, In mis ranch
home on approx . 2 acres
land . Storage build ing.
$32,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - A 2
story frame home with
H bedrooms, dining
room, llvino room, Iaroe
kitchen, and has new
carpet
throughout .
Home com es with

several rooms, full of

almost new furn iture.
Must see to believe.

$42 ,600.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
-

Do some extra work

on this 4 bedroom home
and en i oy the fru lis of
your labor for only
$16,000.00.
REALTOR
H~nry E. Cleland, Jr.
.
"2-6191
Associates
Roger Turner "2·5692
Dollie Turner "2·5692
Jean Trusst11949·2UO

A~-w

•u." It' n
llNI.IIIft- General

BMR 396 - New llsling,L :shaped frame and brick
ranch. Three BRs, 15x21 family room with brick .
fireplace, buill· in kitchen, 11 x14 dining room . There
is much more to be said for thi s f ine hom e. Give use ·
call for a private showing. Gallipolis sc hools, Green
Elementary . S60s.
BMR 391 - Just In time for boat ing season, we ari '
offerill9 a 2 bedroom SOxiO mobile home w ith river
frontage , located at the edge of town. $12 ,900.
OFFICE SPI&gt;CE lor rent, downtown. Just right fo~
professional person.
BMR 336 - With some TLC this one could be •
showplace. 2800 sq. fl. living space on nearly six
acres. City schools.
'
BMR )39·F - You be the judge on the value of this
older home and 30 acres nea r Rio Grande. Owner
must sell.
IMR 371 - Restricled build ing lot in city school
district. 0.64 of an acre. Ca ll now .
BMR 310·F - Excel lent farm or comm er cial pro·
perty . 100 acres more or less . Located near Rodney·.
OWner will consider financing for qual if ied buyer .

.

BMR 3&amp;2 - Frame ranch with lour BR' s and a fu ll
basemen I located on Route 7 north of Cheshire. This ,
:
home Is priced well below replacement cost. ·
BMR 316 - Quiet country home on '12 a cre lot. In·
eludes 20x20 barn wlfh loft and partial basement,
You will en loy this one. $29,900 .
BMR 3&amp;11 - Well cared for home close to town . In'·
eludes family room wllh firepla ce, 3 BR's, living
rm., and more. On flat lot. $39,900.
BMR 1Jt - Two story home In Gallipolis. priced to •
sell a1 only 129,900. Callfor deta ils.
• ·
BMR H2 - Now Is your chance to live In town for

leu than $40,000. Three bedroom home nea)G.A.H.S.
IJMR m- The house hn recently been remodelejl
Inside 1nd out, has basemen!, heal pump for year
1rouncl comfort, five mobile hOme pads, lots of Iron·
tege on Rou'- 7 plus an eQUII 1mount on the Ohio
Ill-. Tllls-couldbelmoneymaker. CIIImw . •
~

IJMR Jt4 - Just Whit the Dr . ordered . 7 acr• 01
lend wtlh 1n Older mobile hom•. Loll ot wood tor lhll
WIIOdburMr. L.t thiS 0111 be your VICIIIOII spot.

.,,.,

IMR 1M -

OWner seys setll

=r:t':"W:.."""':: ::'~.rtllht
ntct
lltuiMd Gllll . , . .
t( •

• """

1101'11 . . . . . . . . ltl'lllllll "'
w~~~Wabltf. C1tt - ·City 1C11o1111.

Is

�MaiiiiiHemes
tonSale

32
For S.le 12&gt;165 2 bdr.,
lnoblle home, good cond.,
53,950.00; &lt;146- 1339, Bidwell,
OH.
.
1m SChultz trailer 12&gt;165,
exJ)IndO In living room.
central air, total electric,
'woodburner, washer &amp;
dryer, 2 bdr., lumlshed,
110,500. Nice outside
storage building, ...,rate
dining room, underpinned,
located on a rented lot. Is
reedy to move Into. &lt;146-6339
or ~ 0346 after 5PM,
Gallipolis.

1•x70 two
two baths,.

NOTICE

.New 191114' Wide
~.995

2 bdr. trailer for sale 367

noo, Chelhlre.Oh.

Call lmmectiately

1971 mob. home, J bdL.. I
112l&gt;alh, nice Shape, S.C,-4011 .
67H230, Pt. Pleasant.
By owner 4 bdr. hOme.
large LR, F Ft, fully car·
peted. full basement with
large wood burning stow, 2
1/2 lOIS, City SChool, priced
reduced .
U6 · 0276,
Gallipolis.
12 x 65 mobile hOme &amp; large
lot in suburbs Of Racine, In·
eluding
stove and
refrigerator, dinette set, all
new wiring,
storage
building. 111000 Call 367·
7811 .

D&amp;W

(Jim Elliol!l '
1!1. tJ North
Jackson, Ohio
21H752

lr:===~;:===:;
Since It59

198114'

1973 Crown Haven, 1•X65,

Wide

~795

three bedroom, new car·

pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x..._
two bedroom, new carpet.
1972 Champion, I:IQO, two
bedroom, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12x60, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12&gt;&lt;'0,
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; S Sales, Inc., 2nd and
Vl~nd Street, Pt. Pleasant,
WV PhOne 67H42A.

Esla. Inc.

Call AI Your
Leisure

1968 Great Lakes mobile
home. 2 bedroom. com·
pletely furn ished, very
good condition, $5500 . 895·
9946.

Eastern Ave.
Phone 446·JS47

2110

I
·6 rm. hOUel · tor rent.
Inquire at 911 Slcond Ave.,
Gallipolis.

5533.

VACANT
WANTED -

j '

USED 'Mobile Home. 576·
2711 .
1971 Darian 12 x 65, 3

1cres, m•st be under
REALTY - .444 1011.

-

.

BE ENVIED
bedroo1m brick
!AbOUt one mile from
Gallipolis on Lower home In · a very
Rl-Roadl ·
desirable location Charm and splendor are close to Holzer Hospital .
yours In this spic·and· This home has a formal
span all brick. three entrance, a large lfVIng
bedroom, two and one· room, a nice large kit•
half bath home with • chen with formal dining
large living room
area and garage. Th._
overlooklnf tile Ohio home Is situated on 1
R lver, family room with
large well landscaped
beam ceiling and a ' lot, with chain link fence .
.fireplace/ Florida room,
in backyard. Also net.
two car healed garge gas hoot and central air.

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities available, SJOO.

finance,

with electric driveway

call after 3 p.m ,. 256·6413.

or larger . Call 675·1241 af·
ter 5 pm for appointment.

brick
ranch offers lots of IIOOd living for your
growing family '. 3 BR's, 2'12 baths, large
kitchen &amp; LR , formal dining rm. , 2
fireplaces, wood burning stove, cent.
air, garage, full basement with family
rm ., bar &amp; laundry. Located on approx.
2 acres on State Route 5S. between
Porter &amp; Eno. Priced to sell al $59,500.

•

:
•
•

OWNER SAYS "SELL" !his lovely 3
BR ranch. Special features are 3 baths,
comlelely equipped kitchen, large din·
ing rm., .. ft . laml ly rm. with WB
fireplace, 2 car garaoe, rec . rm .• laun·
dry. lots of landscaped, over 1 acre of
PERRY TOWNSHIP - 78 acres. 15 A. land In the Crouse Beck Rd . area.
Si mms Creek bottom, balance rolling Green Grade School &amp; Gallia Academy
pasture &amp; woods. nice modular home, high school . Shown by appointment .
large barn, several other bu ildings, lob.
base, corner of SR W &amp; tile .Vernon MORGAN TOWNSHIP - Small but
nice, 2 B R home Is only 2 yrs. old 8.
Woods Rd .
clean as a pin. Perfect for a small faml ·
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted ly weekend retreat or hunting lodge.
bulldjng lot. 1.22 acre, nice wooded set· Situated on 36 acres of Morgan Lane
ling, city schools. S5,900.
Rd.
LOG CA 11 N - Very unique, old hand
hewn 1011 beams, sleeping loft, large
stone fireplace, modern barn, 14 acres
woods, located In the Wayne National
Forest, 20% down.

INGALS ROAD - Approx. 73 a cres, 25
A. Raccoon Creek bottom land, balance
pasture &amp; woods. Old house &amp; buildings.
INCOME PI!OPEI!TY - Rio Grande, .
mobile homes presently rented, water,
gas &amp; se~r available.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% - campsites In the Woyno
National Forost. S lo I acre tracts wood· LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN·
'ed land, good hutnlng . Prices start at CHER plus 78 ACREs of land In
$3,500.
Cheshire Township offers lots of good
living for your growning family . Home
CHUHtR E- ROUSH LANE - l-ovely Is just like new with 1438 !lq. ft. of living
3 BR ranch, p;, baths, 16x24 LR with area plus an attached garage. 2
WB fireplace, completely equipped kil· spacious BA's, 2 baths. 18x27 LFt, 10x2•
chen, lovely carpet throughOut, full kitchen with refrlg .. dlsp., OW, double
basement &lt;pertly finiShed!, nat . gas oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays in
. . heat, cent. air, garage and patio.
laundry. Land Is mostly rolling
JOHNS CREEK ROAD Near pastureland with approM . 25 acres
Mercerville &amp; Crown City Mines, 1973 ~d . Call for appointment.
Duke Crown Royal mobile hOme.
• 14'x65, 2 BR, wood burning stove, flat START RAISING I GRAZING, 132
lot with well, bargtln priced. Call about acre pasture farm, mostly rolling &amp; hll·
ly grassland with approx. 10 A. wooded;
this one.
lots of springs, p;, story nome has S
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE S11 rms., &amp; bath, Iaroe barn, tobecco base,
- Remodeled home lnclueln 6 rms. and fronts on 3 roads in walnut Township,
bath, carport,
stove,
refrlg .,
dlshwaShar, almost 2 acres of end prlc· CLAY TOWNSHIP - Raccoon Creek
frontage, 1'12 story home, • rms. &amp; bath
ad for quick sale.
down, upslalrs unfinished, good barn,
MOTEL FOR SALE - Loctted by Slate garage, shed, near Blue Lake, city
Route 7 (Eastern Ave.), 17 unlit, good schools, askingS.2,500. ·
lncomt, ldetl Mom &amp; Pop optrttlon, PRICE REDUCED TO sSt,IOI.MII Ill%
largt restaurant building InclUded flnenclng IVIIilble. L·shiPed riiiCh, 3
(undlr IHse), vaiUibtl rtll ftlltt. IR's, II; balftJ. LR with ffreplect, den
ShOwn bV -lntment.
with flreplact, torm11 dining, ICIUipH
•·
LOW DOWN PAY MINT_,.,. LOAN. kitchen, g&amp;/1111, c:orntl' IGI.
ASSUMPTION - Pltntz Subdlv., 3 or 4 RIO GRANDI ARI!A - ltlo Centtr·
8Ft's. 14X30 LFt, 12dl family rm, &amp; point Rd. ~':rv Rlellltl jiPProx. 7S
much more. lmtl1edlate pollftlion. acres wood I ~-:- .tronfl on 2 rn.• cdtm!Y
1
Cell tor eppointmtnt.
water liv•l-·
mev help
finance.
PrleMIO
1111
et
....
per ICrt,
IVANI HIIGHTJ - Auume 91;,.
Loa~ - NICI I~ I10rY heme ofNn 5
rms., bMfl, l!lllmllll, carport • ntt.
gaallHt. Belllttfrttto-thla-.

owner

eva~f~r~~t~.'~

PEACHES
~~b. s~x Pl:ANTS &amp; $1 00.
., · • •• '
.

all pool supplies and ser·
vices for exlstlng~. pools.
.
&amp;DoUzp.
For details and directions
IU ft
to local display, 446·132•. ,, jl,...,.-"+." - - - " - - - - . , . 1 , - - - - - - - - - - - '·.

W\u•·ro'·E·.·S $220 FLOWERS

'

PRICE DROPPED $10,000 - Owners
must sell now. A lovely • bedroom brick
bi ·level . Has a nice equipped kilchen,
2•h baths, large family room,
w/ fireplace, central air, 2 car garage &amp;
large yard with pool, 9'1&gt;'!1. mtg .
assumption . Excellent neighborhood
off Rt . 35. 60's.

Owners
sell and willing to
finance a qua
buyer with as little
as 10% down. A well planned brick on •
acres. Has 2 fireplaces, large family
room. • bedrooms, 2'12 baths, nat. gas,
cent. air &amp; 2 car garage. Also barn &amp;
kennel . Price Reduced to$69,900.

~=~~~;~E:~U

SELL NOW- PRICE
A
- Top quality 3 bedroOm
brick home In Spring Valley Subd. Has
fireplace. equipped kitchen, formal din·
lng, 2 baths, huge living room, full basement, nat. gas heat, cent. air, 2 car
garage&amp; lovely landscaped yard.

1

10 1J'!4 ASSUMPTION - 2 yr. old,
I
energy efflclent3 bedroom
on 3.8
acres. Has woodburner, lOV2" .nsula·
lion, Anderson windows, 1'12'baths, cen·
I
tral air &amp; heat pUmp. Located near
ASSUMPTION Im· H.M.C. $.49,900.
.
I mediateMTG.
Possession - Spacious • or 5
I fireplaces,
bedroom brick spilt. Includes 2 NEAR 1110 GRANDE - comfortable 3
2 baths, huge family room, 2 bedroom home with full basement
I edlargelot with
patios, plusa private 3 acre wood· located on Ftt.
still in city school
pond. Make u.s an offer.
dis! . Heswoodbumer
Insulation .
I OWNER WILL FINANCE - A finance.
2 car flat lot. 139,900. Owner may help
qualified buyer on this 10 acre mini
I farm
located 8 miles from town. Nearly
3 bedroom home wlfull basement . OWNER MAY HELP FINANCE I 2newforced
air furnaces I 1 Is a wood· Cozy 2 bedroom hOme in village of Rio
burner)
large family room. New barn Grande. Has extra Insulation
1
throughout, nat. gas heat, built· in kit·
I &amp; large garage. 139,900.
chel\ cabinets, utility room 8. large lot.
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUS· S20's.
ED - owners must sell . Their loss is
I.your
ga in. Lovely 3 bedroom brick
szs,ooo - 3 bedroom home In Rio
In a great location in Green Grande . Has F .A. nat. gas furnace, new
I frame
SChool Dist. Has 2 baths, family room, h.w. heater, full basement, dining
woodburner. formal dining, 2 car. room, large porch &amp; yard. Just a IIHie
I garage
&amp; large fenced yard. 1 year pain! will do wonders.
hom~

~and

&amp; good

&amp;

&amp;

Buyers Protection.

MAINTENANCE FREE HOME - Nice
3 bedroom ranch In a good location In
Gallipolis School District . Eal ·ln kit·
chen, gas heat, central air, llal lot.
S40's.
BITTERSWEET DRIVE - 3 Bedroom
h0"1e located In City School Oist. In·
eludes equipped kitchen, Jilt baths, nat.
gas heat, garage &amp; large fenced yard.
LOW S.CO's.
s~.tOG - A 'lot of hOUse for so IIHie
money. A spacious 3 bedroom brick
wllh attractive family room
wi fireplace, large lfvlng &amp; dining area,
eqUilllled kllchtn, full basement, nat.
gas heat, garage &amp; landScaped yard. 2
mllea from t~.

DELUXE MOIILii HOME- This Inn .
extra nice &amp; new 1•x10 deluxe home
with expan~o situated on'"' e~reln nice
country seH!ng . Includes 2 lildroorn, 2
bath, fireplace, bullt·ln stereo, centre!
al r, sundeck &amp; J)llio dOOrS. Equllllled
kitchen w/mlcroweve. Near · Rio
Grande. OnlY 126,500.
ltiiiBAYVtEW- TopOl tha line 1.1117D ••
mobile home with 7x24 eliPindO.
bedroom, 1'h bath, centre! air, bullt·ln
SIWrto. J)IIIO doors, ICIUI~ kitchen,
dining room. Locafec! In ·oreen SChOol
Dlst. Car rent lot. Sl9,oiCIO. ·

UNUSUAL QUALITY - Hlllll qut,llfy
HAS IT ALL I - There'sl)olhlng ltck· workmanship &amp; m1ttl'lel Ml't -~:::..c· i
l~g as to quality features &amp; Workmen· bulldihg this A .bedt oom briCk
Ship In this 3 yr.old 1100 sq. ft. brick. 3 Spotltu InteriOr, 2 1111111. full
lull btths. centrtl vacuum, Intercom. ··mtnt, 2 flreplect~.· 2 a• 1111' ...
built· in booklhelvet. lovely flrtplact, acres near tewn . This home Is U
c'"t. tlr, 1xfralnsulatl0n and ovorslrtd old &amp; looks-·
2 car garave. In additiOn there Is 2Ax26
shopw/overheeddoOr. All thiiOIIIecn
In Ltne Bella Estalft ~ Dl RDCMty.
COUNTRY PLIAIURI - AIICI the
plttsure will bl all YCJUr1. Prlvell 3
tcreiOCitiOn In Green Twp. 3,,. 110111;
I!Niint. free hOml with fUll btlllllelll.
H• familY room wlfll'lpf~. woecf.
burner In living NOIIJ, 2 car ..,.....
MYtrll fruit • nut trwl. NICe lrll tor

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

If you want to get a real run for
money. buv a Gravely.
Ever); tractor and mower
•••,..__ i&gt;built to last a long.
long time .With features
like sturdv steel ·
cunstru'ction, all·gear .
transmissions. and
dependable Briggs &amp; ·
Stratton br Kohler ·
engines, No wonder
.. ._~,m~::Gravely tractors are
stillt·lmina·str,ona even after 25
labor.
Come test drive one soon.

.

2

bedroom trailer on
Bulavllle·Addlton
RD.
Phone .w6-6583, Galllpcills,

2 bdr. mobile home,
BUllVIlle Rd. ·46·343~,
Gallipolis.

....

Mobile home for rent, 3
.bdr•• completely furn., 4469669, Gallipolis.

·Many more ex·
tras . Call for details.
1470
CHARMING TR I· LEVEL
leOo SQ. FT. PLUS
Large living room wit~ fireplace, d ining room with ·
Sliding dOOrs to a concrete patio, modern eat·ln kit·
chen, large recreation room on first level. Utlllty
r90m, 3 bedrooms with plenty 01 closet space, 2'h
balhs, air conditioned, slorm doors and windoWs. 2
car finished garage.- level lot IOO'xJOO', lots more.
Call tor Info.
'
I«S
B,UY THIS HOME
FROM OWNER WITH $2,500 DOWN
And low Interest role on balance with owner, 2
bedroom cottage within 5 minutes of Silver Bridge
ShOpping Plaza.
I 260
SPACIOUS OLDER l!OME - s:JI,tOG
Large country style kitchen with lots ot cabinets.
Three bedrooms, bath and large living room, level
yard on state route, rurol water and 3 wells. Cell tor
your appo i ~tmenl .
1414
d~lcer.

911t%

Ave., .4
, formal dining rm .,
complete
with disp., OW, com·
pactor, refrigeraTor and range, 6
fireplaces, garage, new alum inum
siding and storm windows. Shown by
appointment only.

abovegrouhd'r--~~
' "--~~-----i--------~--------,.
!!"mediate 11

~·

Lots &amp; Acreage

Veterans. Lot size one acre

'Gravely, 12 liP wheel
model, new. ssoo. Below
list. Outdoor Equipment,
Jet. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph .
.f46-3670.

-rl=f$100 '

POOL;S &amp; SER·

REAL ESTATE

Business Buildings

Lots for sale · Rt. 2 north at
Flatrock, Warner Hills
Estate, 1·3 down payment
required . Balance firanced
by owner at 12 percent.
lower rete for Vietnam

'I

CUCUMBER~

., . . . ~

evenings.

will

,:c.·=·=·

, ••.. ~-.cc.L·c:i""\.,.ccc." ...

$310 por acre. ST'ROUT

.........

33
Farms fOI' Sale
By Owner Ss acre farm
with 9 room hOuse. barn,
and minerals. Morning
Star Area . 165,000. 9•9·2630

owner

'
B•ss Guitar SIIJO, buill In
dishwasher $25. Call ~·
8681, Gallipolis.

L~l,jlf '

·.WISEMAN

down,

HP
Muskln
·.112
filter/pump, usec:l . 2 yrs.
367-o507.

up to Jlt

bedrooms. 1972 Crown 1'--------~------...;;_.__,
Haven. 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Real Estale · General
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1~12 Invader 14 X 70,. 3
bedrooms. 1972 N.ashau, 1~
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B v. S
Sales, 1nc. 2nd and ·Viand
Sl$. Pt. Pleasant, WV .
'·
Phone 675·442•.

35

Lb.

Pony saddle and bridle SID.
CheSt type frMzer tilL
Junior golf s.t 115. 675-....

LOW INTEREST ASSUMPTION- Ex·
cellenl construction. A quality 3
bedroom L·Sh.aped brick, nearly 1800
!lq. fl. of living soace plus basement.
Fireplace, family room, 2 baths, nat.
gas, cent. air &amp; 2 car g~rage. Beautiful
3112 acre plcture!lque setting that In·
eludes 112 owner in large pond. 1 mile
from H.M.C.

•

2 1011162, Crlwn

Oh or Ph. 61..UHNO.

1976 14 x 70 Windsor mobile
hOme. Has MW hot water
tank.
Underplnnlng,b
locks, central· air . con·
djtlonlng, .an&lt;hors. , con·
crete SI"PS Included. Large
front bay window. Very
good condlton. Call · 992·

year protection

JOHN!»N'S
MOB.ILE HOMES
INC.

Bantz. Rt.

REAL ESTATE For S.le I
acre of ground with small
trailer over lOoking Ohio &amp;
Kanawha Rivers. In city
Limits $16,000.00. Call 6755173 or 675-604,

JONES Bar &amp; Club, West
Columbia, for sale or lease,
nJ·9110.

Mason County, 15 miles
from Ripley, 8 acres, 1977
F ieetwood mobile home, 3
bdr., 2 full baths com·
pletely furnished, stocked
pond, fruit trees on paved
road. $29,500. HSHGS.

,.J.!liiOIII.

1200 mo., wrltl'. whllnl .

on rented ·
acre
bUutilul lawn &amp; garden,
city water &amp; sewer, all
electric will hold mortgage
with renonable down. Call
675-6704.

34

Large inventory

~

"-"'R•t .

2 bdr ., I bath, onJ' IICIW,
11 mil• lOUth Of

br,

Financing available

1975 Viking 12x60 all elec·
lrlc 2 bedroom. Partly fur·
nished. 9'12·7•79.

41.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE,.

REMODELDEDIIIEMODELEDI
This 3 bedroom aluminum siding house and barn sit·
ling on a 2 acre more or less, Is located In Ohio
Township. Priced 118,900. see by appointment only I

fo 3
or
2 or
home In
Middleport

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lois, nice size building lot' with all ulllltill
there. Lot size 101.1 by 171.2. Better get 'um now.

1411

~

CABIN 3 OR 4 ROOMS
Fishing, vacation, 1 or 2 bedroom cabin located lac·
lng Raccoon Creek and Blue Lake . Nice Iorgeed lot. Make vour lite a year around vacation. Call
usnow.
·
1366

HOTS GREENACRES
LOU 21 , Sidewalk, 75'x14.
Lot 1 23, Vacant II' frontage by 14' depth. Priced to
sell .
IUI·IUI
WOW II
what you can get on a land contrtct at , . Inowner reduced the ·price 17.900 !rid I~·
=~~·~11:,
. T~h~la2three
bedroom spotless. elr
I·
""'-'living room, eat· in Mlkhefl. .
I'OonJ and -lng room. Metal 11ar111
:;:~~~hilled gar•, . all furnitUre lnclw.ct.
you need in one purchase. In city schOol

~
!

ALL types of granite, mar·
ble, and bronze memorials.
Display Jot on Main St. Pt.
Pleasant Granite' .;om·
pany. Phone675·5.548.

.···'

.
·'

. ( •,

~

Sp!cetorR'"t

44

SMALL houll tor rtnt, 57
Olive St. 1 bedroom, un·
tumllhed. no pets,.depoOIIt
required, '$170, mo. 4467116. After 5 .w6-«&lt;of5.

secluded private trailer lot
In wooded area. Ideal for
that summer outdoors.
Contact Brown's Trailer
Park, 992·3324.

NEWLY REMODELED
2nc1. floor Iff. epart.,adUits
only, 1¥1 pets, Clll 446-0957,
729 Second Ave .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

992-7.79.

'·

MOdern mob. horne,lurnl.,
1n clfY, cent. elr, 1 or 2
edultlonlv. A46 cmt.
FURNISHID Efficiency,
IllS. Ulllltlel pd. Shirt
bltll, ...._..llllfltl' 7 p.m.

Middleport, OH.
Air Conditioned
2300 Sq. Fl&gt;
Office &amp; Sales Art~"
6,000 Sq. Fl. Storage
fetlced
In Yard Storage
1
, Conllct: Jim Thomas
ttH611

~~~=2=ou~~tbll~ldlllga.
Appro~. ,......
• .,.,. hiiii!Wiy.
o . t..._,..
- ft1r

=

lilly this ~CiPW01Y. c.u-::,r.

26' TROUT.WODD travel
trailer and . camp site on
Ftaccon Creek. Close to
Ohio River. 1500 doWn.
Owner will finance. 614-256·
'
GOOD
USED
AP · 1216.
PLIANCES • washers,
dryers,
refrigerators, EASY credit available now
ranges. Skaggs Ap· to purchase furniture,
pllances, 1918 eastern televisions, or appliances.
Ave., 446·7398.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675·tn3 .
For Sale, Sear Kenmore
w:~~~rc~a~nd
dryer, ~·
I n =, NEED severalltemsoffur·
i:c I Phone
nlture,
appliances,
televisions . . Big discounts
for quality purchase .
Modern Maid portable Village !'Furniture 2405
dllhWIShtr. Butcher block Jackson Ave. 675·1173.
top, 5 yri. old, 367·05117.5

REALTY

FURNISHED Apt., 2 IR,
pd. Orll child
tccephbte. &lt;146-..16 alter 7
p.m.

GRAVELy.TRACTOR
SALES

·a. SERVI(E~·

and Receive a
FREE
50" MOWER

I

. "Manning Roush i owner"

210 condor St.

·

woo

PH. 992·2975

REALTY,' INC.
Office446·1066

Russell D. Wood-Realtor-Broker ..
.
Evenings 446·4618
Ken Morgan-Realtor-Broker
Evenings 446-0971

2 bdr. lpartmtnl aci'ON
park. 1175 mo., par·
tlellv turn., dep. &amp; ref. req.
or 446-01121 In
Gelllpolls.

NESTLED WITHIN a resllu l wooced
lotthis 1973 mobile home I like new) will
make you an ideal weekend retreat.
Located adjacent to Tycoon Lake and
you can buy il all for only $7 , 50() . ~·-

from

•*"

"'.
.· .
..,
IDn CndiJ, .••• 446-3636

.

2 lldr. uniUm. epertmlnt

~

'

.•
CanldaJ, • • 4~ 3636'
·Susll! Glllm 'nf' 245-5201

In Vllit..'i. 011, on Meln St.,
- · dep., 245-SIII.

Pt. PIHNnt.

f;l ill l (f :;:,.u.
'
·'iNF~ c.~~~· · •11/ti. .,.,,, '"'
"''!'!. ~r lf; •I'J,':' Vtr~:. '

CAN~DAt

Sla. Willi'

1 Bedroom 1pt. 111 utilities
palcj. a7H104 or 6PH316,

(ilwl'f"l,rll.'lll-f:.
tilt/'. :rr ,,_,.J, rr•'ll
)f•rl- (~frlfftllll•rt.t• r'tlll'ltr·t,

.'

\

.,

25. ~lilt r$t.t G1lpalis, Ohio

ONLY tl,710.M

SUitable for de""IOf)llltll! or camping 101 on o.vki
ltOid. Call tor details.
lUI
lt ACUS M. OR L.
IIIOc:k f1GCne with 3 btbedldilro'*lll!'lll.'" 11¥1111
room, lll'ln kitchen, 000c1 w.tl, '-II

a N.ew
Grave_ly Tra~r

RHI Estate ..;. Gtnertl

,.,

WOoded lot, tlm01t an tcre, 200' of road tront111

· ~~Y

3 house tra iler axles with

tires and tongue. 9•9·2368.

H7l

BRICK RANCH
Three bedroom brick ranch within walking distance
to Hannan Trace schools . T·his hOme has a large
back yard, some fruit trees, bullt·ln kitchen and din·
lng room, carport, front and back porch and II
reasonably priced .
1432
ENJOY I ENJOY I
This splc and SJ)In 12'x60' 3 bedroom Academy
trailer. Also 3 outbuildings, stove, refrigerator, all
goes on .61 acre Jot for the low, low price ot 112.'100.
Calland see today.
Hit
DON'T FENCE ME IN
Give me land, lots of lend, #I ecres more or leu with
clean 12'x70' mobile hOme, large llarn, with 20 A.
tillable, approx. 3500 lbs. tobacco base and pond,
Bonus! Older 7 room hOUse could be remodeled goes
with the property. Live In one While you remodel the
other II you wiSh. Low 30s.
•
1417
I ACRES
Within 10 min. dri"" to downlown Gallipolis. City
School System . Has hookup for mobile home, Gallle
Rural Water, eleclfic and septic tank,.nlte light on
pole, 200ft. frontage on Graham School Rd. Timber .
Building sites. CALL NOW.
1477

Coppertone stove with
dOUble oven electric. Coppertone refrigerator to
match, I year old, good
commode, air conllitioner.
7.2-2187.

THREENIWHOMES
DESIGNED WITH YOUR FAMILY
INMIN~I . .
'
•Gntll Aerts Subdivision
•TIIr• Bedrooms
1 , ,.

•z Full a.t111

.

i

• ...., Pump, c•. Air

,

,

·r

j

\',. ~

·

•lnii'IV laYIIII C~~t;,)ctlon ; /16. .
,....,lppld KltCIIIn : 1
·~ty
•Finllllld 881'1111
.
'i! _f \-'t'

t·

•Fvtt

·'

••'

'·

J, '· '

111 ACitiS - !rom m,t city.
Modem r•nch heme. lUII'dWOOd floors, family room,
lull basement. Ctn. air cond. Beautiful garden area,
lg. strawberrY J)llch. Good barn, shed. Horsa ring.
City schOOII.
0 j" WHITE ROAD - S55.f00 - Brick, colonial
roneh 3 BR, 2 full baths. Fully 'equipped kitchen, lots
01 cabinets. dining area . Beautiful pluSh carpet.
Drapes, fireplace, 2 car garage. Pleasant country
surroundings.
TRAILER PARK NEAl! RIO GRANDE- 140,000
- OYer '6 IC~ 5tr•ller peds. one 1970 12'x6S' full(. .
tumlshed, cen. air. Office bldg. Good ln-l)'nen .
Will Mil on lend contract with 112.000 down PlY·
men!.

.

'

OWNIII WILLING TO FINANCE', $5,000 -nand
1"" lnlerftt on ballnce. "Homey" 3 BR, large kit·
chin • dining area w/knoltlng pine paneling,
alumlniltn aiding, covered concrete patio. Conve·
llfenttY 111C1Wd tn sillilY loW! lot IIIII boasts gardeli
IPICt 111111 lhtny perenltl shrubs .ncl te-n. lm·
medllltPDIII.IOn.Ut-Justtllted.

'

YOU HAVE BEEN LOOI&lt;ING FOR A'
BARGAIN .•. Here It Is!!! Owner anx·
1ous to move to Florida. Price reduced
from 60S to SOs. Economical hot water
heat, gas fired , wood\)urning fireplace ;
3 bedrooms, full basement, garden
area possibility of extra bu ilding lot, 2
car Garage, electric opener. Oon 1 1 walt.
Call to see this one today !! I

'.
I

�he

TheSund~y

54

54

Misc. Merchanlse
For Sale Ring neck &amp; sliver
pheasants, Honda XL very
gopd cond. 300. 4#·0159,
Gallipolis.

Misc. Merchlndlse

Florida · Holiday cer·
mfg.
tiflcates. 5 days and 4 WONDER STOVE
nights, delux hote.l or by United States Stove Co .•
motel, on east or west coast wood and coal burner with
with tree admission to blower, Gallipolis Block
Disney World. Call446· 1079 co .• call-446·2783.
after 5. Gallipol is.
Rebounder·total health ex·
Sears tent 8x12, SSO.OO . cerslze .
H6 · 3358 .
Pioneer Super tuner AM·
FM 8 track car stero, 7 yr. oil! 1/ 2 Ar,blan horse,
S75.00 . Call 446·1079 after 5, S700. 8 yr .ol~ black and
Ga llipoli s.
white gaited paint horse,
SI&gt;OO. 1973 Honda XR·75,
Horse for sale, 3 yrd. old 675·2249, PI.Pieasanr.
bay, 1200 lbs., harness &amp;
saddle broke, exc. riding BIG discounts for cash anq
horse. Saddle, harness, carry at Village Furniture
work bridles, and riding 2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
bridle all for $650.00. Also 1773.
FARMALL· B tractor-runs
very gd. cond., SI&gt;OO.OO. 388· Spring Special
for,
9354, Bidwell, OH .
upholstering furniture .
Richard Mowrey Sr .,
owner. 675·4154.
~Q!ld Water Well Drilling
riiaC1'tlne..inc Iud in g a II tools
to own you r oWn· business. MASON County's largest
Also utility trucK with pipe selection of f ine handguns :
ra ck. 446·8508.
Colt, Smith &amp; Wesson,
Ruge r and others. At
ICE MACH INES flakes &amp; Health Aid Pharmac y,
cubes. Upright REACH IN New Ha ven, WV 882·2005.
COOLER &amp; FREEZERS .
Used but In e)(C , cond.l 8000 BTU EMMERSON
RADCO
1·304·523· 1378, Quiet Cool. air conditioner,
Huntington . Additional anitque 6ak bedroom su it,
equipment.
other antiques, 675-6161 .

88 OLIVER diesel, 1969
Volkswagen. 882·3239.

GOOD SOIL
DELIVERED

~AACI-IINERY

and Tool.
New lngensolf·Rand 5 HP
a ir compressor on a 60 gal .
ta nk . $1245. Call collect 304·
766·6244.
'

CALL BETWEEN
8 A.M. &amp; 5 P .M.

446·1142

GALVANIZED Cu lvert,
$2.35 'ft . up. Br idge, etc.
Steel , JOe lb. up. 925-0884.

REDUCED
PRICES

ONE Low Boy trailer,
single a xle, S250. Call 895·
3879 .

ON AU.
SHRUBS AND
ROSEBUSHES

IN STOCK

&amp;J POMEROY

.......:. ·LANDMARK

Dog Pen 4x4x1 2, while tall
bow. Phone 675·2668 after 5,
Swin

Se t.

Pleasant.

675·3278,

Pl .

Pi ckup truck too l box, ex·
cellent cond ition S100. Out·
doorsman over cab pickup
topper. S300. 675·3905 .
14 ft . lowboy trailer. Phone
675·6912 .

INGERSOLL-RAND
AIR COMPRUSORS

3 P tH 60 Gal.

•1175.0
Low

u

KACH ·ALL portable metal
buildings, sizes 4ft.M10ft. to
12ft.x40ft. Gallipolis Block
Co., 1231h Pine St., tall~·
2783.

Ford 1 1/Z ton, PllrfiY 1917 XL Ford har=·· -2·
4 spci . trans,
.IJI!.
restored. After 4 PM ·37919HI7'
.
' 1
2761,
Galllpolla.
. '

55
Building Supplies
ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
tels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0 . Coli 245·
5121 .
Building with -rooting &amp;
siding, slightly damaged~~
factory . all parts ac ·
c ounted for . All structural
steel, carrys full fa ctory
guarantee .
Smallest
building approx. 600 sq. ft .,
will sell cheap, call Alfred
MancowsKi 1-800·248 ·0065
or collect 1·517·263·8474.

I NAUHM
rJ 1

r

~A( I
Yesterday's

I

..
. .
................
AutGt for Sale

n

II

XI I I )oF(. r·,.,_.Monday)
.r I lJ

1972 Datsun, S300. 441·,8S48,
Gallipolis•.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
Dachshund.
lndoor·outdoor facilities. AKC
Also AKC Reg. Dober· Pomeranian an Poodle
pups 895·3958.
mans. Call441·7795.
JUST opened·The Fish
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2101 Jef·
fersor\ Ave., Pt. Pleasant,
675·2063 . Rabbits $4.00,
Parrots S89.95, Gerbils
S2.98.

l~7===;,M~u=sl;c~al;===
Instruments

__

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

. ..... . ,

0

I

. . . ......

&amp; tl~·estaelc

61

1969 Dodge Dart GTS .-440
Engine. Asking $1,850. Call
anytime at949·2123.

Farm Equipment

1974 Monte Carlo 350 with
79 Massey Ferguson 200 D. headers, new II res .
Bulldozer diesel , 7 ft. $1200.00. 949·2602.
blade, wench, 151 hours.
Call256·1345.
1970 Catalina Pontiac, air
condlionlng, $350. See at
John Deere side delivery 304 and one half Spring
hayrake, side mounted, Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio.
mower to fit Farmall Super See after 5 p .n\ . William R.
A or 140 tractor. Call 4-46· Thoma.
9485 alter 6PM.

Picking up a plano in your
area, looking for respon·
slble party to take over
payments, ask for cre~it
2 Black Doberman pups, 1 manager for details, call
male, l female, exc . collect 592-5122.
pedigree, S150 each, 256·
Front end looder with large
1269.
Picking up • plano In your tilt bucket. lias own pump,
area, looking for respon· heavy duty, good cond.,
AKC Reg . puppies Bassett slble party to take over easy on &amp; off. $5110 call 379·
hounds, S150 · and up, payments, ask for credit 2196, Ga Ill polls.
Schnauzers, S100 each, toy manager for details, call
Pomeranians, S200 and up. collect 592·5122.
4· row
International
One rare
chocolate
53 series, rear
Pomeranlons, S350. Also For sale Splnet·Console cultivator,
mounted, gd. cond :, 675·
adult Basse!! hounds, sso. Piano Bllrgain
3913, Pt. Pleasant.
675·2019, Pt . Pleasant.
WANTED : Responsible
party to take over lOY.! mon·
Lovely &amp; lonely Gordon thly payments on spinel Four 15,00 gallon tanks
Setter, medium size, one plano. Can be seen locally. located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
Year old. Also &lt;hi•no·rd ·l Write credit manager: ea ch. Phone 1·304·422·2781 .
Midwest Music Co., PO
collie mixed breed puppy , Box 537 , Shelyville, Ind.
Humane Soc iety, 992-6505.
41176 ..
Oliver Cletrac dozer. 4
cylinder d iesel . Runs gOod.
AKC registered Springer·
$1200. 24~· 3972.
Spaniel pups. 4 months old. 58 Fruit
1 female, 2 males. Liver &amp;
&amp; Vegetables
TROY· BILT ROTOTILLE·
white. Call Harlan Webb, .
Mansfield, OH at 1-419·589· Strawberries-pick your RS, Dlscounls l Immediate
own Mon . thru Sal . 9AM to shipment. Coil 17031 942·
7024anytime .
8PM . Closed Sundays, 3871 or write lilckory Hill
sorry no checks. liappy
Rt. 1 Box 390 A
AKC German Shephard liollow Fruit Farm, Nursery,
pups, IIOod lemperment, Gallipolis Ferry, WVA, 516· Fishersville, VA 22939.
excellent bloodline. 1·304· 2026 ..
62
Wanted to Buy
675·2415.

1111 8

· •Bac~hoe

tiiCII'ICI~ Cort-

Crtlt, ttwm Windows,

_,.,., __

.

wooclburners
Installed.
'

1564.

. ~A~L :
PauiSitmafi--.992-HM
Pat Mllchell-742·2562

-

CUIIIEMI -fAST DICE

Trucks for Sale

1973 ·Chevy pickup. Runs
good. Danville. $500. 7«1·

3035• .

73

1978 Kawasaki motorcycle,
1000 LTO, 4 cyl.1 call 675·
5079.

All types of roof work,
new or repAir gutters
and downspouts, guHer
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed.•

AlHENS SPORT
CYCLES

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
. 94.9· 2160 .

18 .t wheel dr., Bronco, one

owner, low mileage, exc.
cond., 256·6532, Crown City,
Oh .

Effectl·ve 4•6•81

" Beautiful, Custom
BuiHGarages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949·2101 or
949 2860
· No sunday Calls
3·11-tlc

MON. thru SAT 9 tQ. S
1

1978 SUZUKI PE·175, IIOod
condition. Phone 675-4012
after 4:30.

slres
"From :lbSCI"
SMALL
)

Utilitr Buildings

r

Slzoslrom 4x6 to l2x4t

1975 lionda 550 4 cyl,' nice,
$995. 895·3579.

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .
Ph. 614·M:I-Z591
6·15-ttc

1973 11 foot Marlin Itt boat,
455 engine, 390 h. p. Berkley
tel, low hrs, In very good
condition. $2600.00. 992·
6763 .

R!. 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742-2455
5· 11-tfc

Boatsancl
Moton far Sale

MEQIAIIIC &amp;
BODYMM ·
ON DUlY DAILY
PH. 304-773-9521

10 fl. aluminum boat with
Stars trolling motor with
forward·reverse and low· .
medlum·hlgh IJ)ttids, one
paddle. 2 lackell,
net,
one seat. PhOne 675-1169.
$225. firm .

one

:11

u.r

.,I
1

·
'•
'

SPACIOUS LIVING at a modest price,
3 or 4 bedrooms, formal entry, living
room. family room, den, formal dining,
bath, large kitchen. Fireplace . Full
basement. Owners will help with finan ·
cing. 149,500.
I 722

ASSUMABLE LOAN - Brick &amp; frame ranch with 4
BR , form a l dining, family room with fireplace.

GOOD CITY LOCATION - Cozy 3 BR ranch with
full basement an~ large fenced lot, low utilities, on·
ly
132,000
21 ACRES - Lovely rolling land, 3 bedroom home,
large barn, good storage building, gOod buyer for

.

m,ooo

CLOSE TO TOWN - GOod 2 BR mObile home In·
eludes range, refrlgerolor and approx. 1h acre.
$9.500
93 ACRES - Vacant land seven miles from town.
Cheap lnve~tmenr.
S19,SOO

.

5 ACRES - Nice wooded land, excellent buldlng .
site In the country only 3 miles from town .
111010

E-gs Call
Pltridl Snlith, Alloc. 367.0228
Darin. lbiiR•, Rlalbl, 44N5I
Jlllnflllr,llh
J

RESIDENTIAL

553,000

IN TOWN - Frame home with garage, fenced In
lot, price includes f~rniture .
528,000

992·5682

5·1-tfc

RUTLAND - Owner Is ,willing to help
with parr of down payment on litis well
maintained 2 bedroom home . Base
ment. Natural gas · heat. S)orage
bUilding. Nice large lawn. S24,900. /1702
LET YOUR TENANT HELP WITH
PAYMENTS - See !his 6 room house.
Modern, reody to move into. 3
bedrooms, living room with fireplace,
full basement, 2 car gerage. 4 room .
apartment. 3 milts below Gallipolis.
1mmedlete possession. 145,900. , 11771
THIS 15 A COUNT·RY CH~RMiiR - '
large rooms. and belli. Almolphere,
location makes II 01 the bnt. Rich
garden, 3 bay garage with 4 rooms,
bath llpar'tment evallllble. l'enced In
101. Fairfield Centenary Rei. Green

i'wp.

.

1779

- Eltlllnt Cedar
3 bed!'l!llflll, Wllk·
In balement
diCk lncl

,,..

IIIUit ... lll

INVEST~ENT PROPERTY - 1 acres,

one of !he few nice onn left on Rt, 35
west of Holzer Medical Canter. Who will
be the successful one?
1710
NEW LISTING - :~c3AGE - 45.08
total, rolling, half w
, hllf pasture,
approx , 1500 en acre and located 'h m lie
off Route 141.
17U
ACRAGI- 5.25 acrn of nice land, Has
rural water, urOblc ..,.lc lenk, enct
l&gt;lrn. o - r Wllllltll on land contract
1111111 down payment.
1 Mf
DO AS YOU .. ~IAII on 11111 «&lt;IC,...,
Drilled well. Stlpk: ·~an~~. Garage.
White Oak RoM.
t ttl

Farm Ponds ·Land
Cl~rln•· Roads.
Call:

lox 6f. "ort!IIMI. OH.
1'11.110-4911

PUWIS
EXCAVAniiG

. SSM Mlllltllr.

Serving tile fol owing
'fownahlfll: Lebanon,
IUf1Dn. Lltart, Olive,
Orlfllll, ..lllbury, Bedferel, Cllelter, Salem,
ki!IIO. Rutlencl ana

,..,._

Tralll Pickup In
TlltYH.... Of

COMMERCIAL
BIG BUSINESS OPPO.TUNITY!
Gallla County's largest and oldkl cOuNTRY LIVING WITH HUNTIAI
Gardtn Center anel F l - &amp;hop. DELIGHT - 50 acres plua, 3 bedroom
Everything gon : tr-. ahruba, hOme; living room, kitchen! dlnlftl
greenhouse. entire inventory. ~II all· room, bath alljl utility area. ncluclad
SA 1$j 1110 1 room Cottage, 1 eulbUIICJJnt.
ling on 1'12 acre, more·or lftl.
S..loutbuyerscallloday.
1711 ,lobacco baltand tlml!er.
,

an

RESIOf"rj riM

m

J

'

.. ,

'

t·

EWING
MACHINE
GENE PLANT
.
1r~~~r:J.servlce.~ll ~kn.
Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
AND SONS .
II
The. Fibrlc Shop,
deep . atream extrlcllon.
Free nil metes, rtHOIIIble Plumbing • Heettng · Air Pomeroy . Authorized
rain. Scolllguard, 992-6309. conditioning. 300 Fourth Singer Sales .a nd Service.
we 5harpen Scissors.
Ave . Ph . -' "· 1637 .
RINGLE'S
SERVICE:
Complete
building, SOUTHERN SERVICE JACK'S REFRIGERATJO·
remodeling, repairing, co. . Heating . mObile N. air condition service,
large or small lobs done tf· home furnaces, electric hoi commercial, Industrial .
flclently. Phone 675·2018 or water tank repair. Call of· Phone882·2079 .
675·~.
.
flee, 446 · 3008 n ight,
emergency ·no. 367· 7131.
85
General Haulln'
LOC.KSMITii
Service .
LIMESTONE, gravel and
Residential, autornottve, J P Plumbing &amp; I-I eating, sand.
All sizes. At RichardS
Emergency service. Coil Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367·7853 .
and
Soo,
Upper River Rd.,
M2·2079 . .
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 4-46·
D. . C. contractors Plum· 7785.
H &amp; 0 CONSTRUCTIOJij . bing, electrica l, heating,
Remodeling, and repairs . roofing, aluminum and JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
Commercial and reslden· vlnvlsldlng . 675·1240.
water delivery . Call 256·
tiel. Phone 675·6357 .
9368 anytime.
Exc1vatlng
13
CONTINIOUS no leak gut· DOZER · backhoe; dump NOW iiAULI NG house coal
terlng, custom made for
&amp; limestone tor driveways.
your home. For free truck. Call-446·&amp;7.
Call for estlmotes 367·7101
estimates; call ADVANCE
OOZE
R
work
·
excavating
,
SEAMLESS GUTTER
WATER
land clearing. Call-446·0051 . DILLARDS
AND DOOR. 61H91·8205.
DELIVERY Service. Call
4-46· 740-t.
HARPER Halstead; lawn c &amp; v Inc .. Backhoe ser·
mower repair and shar· vice. 985·3549 or 949·28_22.
JONES BOYS WATER
penlng service, 10 a.m .·6
SERVICE, call 367·7471 or
p.m . 675·5168.
COMPLETE SEWER IN ·
367·0591.
STALLATION &amp; backhOe
DAVE'S appliance repair, service for the .. Racine·
washers, dryers, plum · Syracuse sewer district. Mobile homes moved,
bing, electric, general han· Dozer. work If needed. 949· licensed. and bOndid . 576·
2111 or 516·4398.
d.y man. 576·2921 or 675-5619 . 2293.

s

a.

Lawn mower repair. 615·
6416.

EDWARD' S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing 1!!.7,.--...:U""p"'h"'o"'ls:,te::.:ry:.&lt;..._ _
insepllctank. 675·1234.
TRJ STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
BACKHOE Service. Larry 1163 Sec . Ave ., Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 441· 1833.
Sidenslricker. 675·5.58C.

COOK'S

vice,

Television

Henderson,

F &amp; K Tree Trimming ,
stump removal. 675·1331.
T and R building,
remodeling, also papering,
carpet Installation, and
general
home
lm ·
provements. 675·5689, 675·
5304.

az
5-6·1 mo. .

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

CARJ~~~;;w~~ING

I~:=========i=========~ Phone
Cor.446·3888
Fourth or
and
Pine
446-4477

2 used No. 150 New
Holland round lily
balers, both In ex-'
cellent condition.

5·14·1 mo:

·

992-2471

·or

SERVICES"
- Adclons and
remodeling
-'Roofing 1nd gutter
work
, - Concrete work
- Plumbing And
electrlcal-rk
I Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG II

992-621 s or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

BUYING

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS

'121' to 'lr'
For S II ver Dollars

-D&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Home Wiring,
Residential &amp; Commer·
cia I.
Licensid Electricians
Guaranteed Work
446·:1458

INSULATION
Blown Ctlulose
Insulation
Estimates Free
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO.
PASQUALE ELEC.
441-oiOU or 446-2716
D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
Home Improvements.
l'liOm addlllons, siding,
eiiCirlul &amp; air condi·
llonl'lt- ancl Insurance
clalrrl reports:
Guarlnteed work. Free
Estimate. 441-3407.
l'ranh Rosa tonst. Co.
Rampdellng repair, new
construction, 111 types.
FrHnllmelts, all work
fully
gueranteed. ·
Ruidenllal, commer·
clll, Industrial 1nd min·
lng, electric work .
MSHACtrt.

DIN NY

CHAIN UNK FENCE
FREE ESTIMATES

Ken Soles
245-9113

Mllldllpllrt, Oh.
Ph. "2-1116

ortt2·7515

4·17·tfc

southeastern Insulation

ing, cf!lulose . Free
e s timttte .
Work

guaranteed &amp; Insured.

Also home improvement. ·oave Hager &amp;
J!ly Hancoctc, Owners.
44&amp;-8605-446·2637

.Stripping
and Refinishing ·
:1s couhst.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Coii44Hif6
or 4.U·3010

Homelmpr.ovemtnts
Nu· Prlme
Windows,
dows and
Covers,
Mobile

Replacement
Storm Win·
Doors. Pallo
Carports .
Home Ac·

cessories.

1'01 .....

IITIMATaS
Conllnueus Gutbrlng.
Roofing, H - Pelnt-

~:;~lnk'

~·

Free.

Estimates.
691 Miller Orive
446-2642

C&amp;W
CONTRACTORS
Speci1llring In Contrele
Roofing &amp; Remodeling
Hometmprovaments
Exterior &amp; 1nlerlar
Vinyl Siding and Soffit
Residential and
mtrclal. Work

1Tag
6 Food tish
10 Imitates

t4 Collecl
19 Kilo
21longlh.
width
22 Steak order
23 Wardrobe

24Assens
26 Cotton
Iabrie

30 Su~oi1
32 Dons

33 Placet

Bill's

68 Greek tetter
69 European
mountains

7t N-aper
paragraph
73 Seaman

pl.
t35 Cui

75 Meddle
77 Wloe person

137 Cheers
t39 Longllude's

70 Playground
game

78 lne)(penslve
80 Approaches
81 Crafty
82 Broke

suddenly

84Tines
86 Pounding
Instrument
87 Part icular
89 Tennis
slroke
92 Biemlsn
95 Betimes
98 Clean
99 Cyllndr~al
101 Doctrines

40 Pllh

103 London

41 Ginger's
co-star
42 GOUiosh

repa1t1
104 Social

44 Trade

t05 Certain
108 Hectogram:
Abbr.
t07 "1- a

46 Former
Por1YIIuese
boint

47PU11
prod110t

48CioM, Ina

way
60 Portllnlng
Ia I tailor
52 Hawaiian
'M'. .thl

Noncy57 Exist •.
51t5oirtll

59 Toll

eo sungoc1

62 PnewMd
M Slilcy
5lt PlnoTreo

Sl.

130 Slop
132 Carrots'
companions
133 After-dinner
treat
134 Compass

34 Summer In
Paris
35 Type of
collar
37 Cooking lal
39 "Harper
Valley - "

53 c - .'s
150
55 DotOCIIYO

REESE TRENQIIrtG

CALL416-271t

ACROSS

28 Fencing
thrust
29 The sun

BILL'S

Blain Milhoan

..5-3965

·· SUNDAY PUZZLER

&amp; const. Types: blow·

Rio Grande

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED ·
•Water
eGu
• Electric • Sewer
Lines Installed.
Pll. 367-7560

&lt;;HARM- COMFORT- LOCATION
- $29,5110 for this 3 bedroom home wllh
an excellent view of the river. Living
room, family room, equipped kitchen.
Divided basement. Large deck. Low
healing bills ..12 of an ocre.
11 7N

ACREAGE

CAT~

~TRASH~

•;

interest rate.

Pll.

J&amp;R

&gt;'

NICE TO COME HOME TO brick &amp; frame
ranch with 3 bedrooms, family room with ~lreplace,
beaullflil carpet, 2 car garage.
/11495

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m.-5:30p.m.

Y". lxperi"ce

Pomi!'IY• OH.
tn-Z174

OFFICE 446-7013

·

RESIDENTS

ROGER HYSDl'S
GARAGE

MOlORS INC.

1242·44 N, High Sl .
Columbu s, Ohio 432DI

WE NEED OUICI&lt; SALE - BriCk
ranch 3 vrs.old. 3 BR, l'h baths, 10rm11
DR, super kitchen, most all appliances
included. Clean, excellent condition.
Over 2 acres land overlooking lilt Ohio
River.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffell Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call-446·2107.

12
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263 Anytime

&amp;Commercial

Call742· 3195
or992·1680
2-B ·tfc

U.S. Rl.lO East
Phone 614-662-3121
'Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush liog
farm equipment dealer.

and any In house
chonges thai have to be
made. Back hoe and
doser service available.
"2·2036
5·20·1 mo.

SMITH IIELSON

ADAMS-BARRE CO.

A JOY TO SEE but a grealer joy to
own. This spacious ranch has 3
bedrooms, 2V• ballts, bulll· ln kitchen,
•family. room, recreation room, full
basement, central air. Garage, Profes·
slonally landiiCaped lawn, plus much
more. Rio Grande,
·
/1694

2096. ..'

DEW-ITT'S PLUMBING .
·AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
PhOne ...... 2735.

Phone 675'2250.

KAUFPS PLUMBING
AND Park
HEAnNG
St.

Residential

SALES &amp; SERVICE

sewer line connections,

Radiator lptelallst
NATHAN BIGGS

A GENTLEMAN FARMER - Oh! so
beautiful new brick ranch. 3 bedrooms,
heat pump/ 2 car garage, basement.
Beautiful acres · 25 or 48. Development
or farm . Chance of a lifetime . 2 miles of
Gallipolis .
1616

245·9561 .
of
Interior
work ; etc,;
paneling,
ceilings,
flooring,
plus
exterior work, roofing,
shingling, any size . and
shape. 30 years expenence
·In carpentry . References
provided upor request. m 6293
·

s~stem .

AREA
Don't wall. Contact Ohio
Valley Plumbing for

SERVICE
,fl'fllll tile Smalltsl
HNier Cora to the
Largeat Radiator

294-3591

BAIRD &amp; FULLE.R(8 °
REALTY · ...,o,·

91f2%

For all of your wir·
ing needs .
Let George Miller check
your present electrical

'

PHONE ;

I. J

FOR .BEST . In . Car1111t
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Stearnway. Call 614-441·

EUGEN.ELONG

f

RENTALS AVAILABLE

1

Plumalnt .

&amp; Heatln'

~~~~~~~~~
ervi ces OfferPr•-:::-=-=--=--=J....::::::::=~~~===.,
MASIN TEXM:O RACINE-SYRACUSE
. . I)GGS .

-,::=:::;~~:;:==

5-24·1 mo.

(

HJ S0"-20-lO H.P. .
HA60"-25-60 H. P.
HE:60''-45·80 H. P.
All Models Available

LEO MORRIS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

(Similar savings on 1 Ph)

c.,

SANDERS
CON·
TRACTING, ¢arpentry
• E lectrica I work
WOOD SHOP . Cabinets,
work &amp; painting, concrete,
• Roofing work
picnic . ta~les,
porch landscaping, 4-46·2787.
13 Years
swings, most.wood produc·
.
erl'ence
ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis. INSTALL fireplace facing
Exp
Call-446·2572.
or chimney, dry will,
' Greg Roush
WEATHERALL CON· plaster, stucco, free est.
Ph. 992·7583
CRETE . quality and ser· Slmulatid brick or stone,
Greg Burdette, call '615·
vice, call675·1582.
6·3·1 mo .
6357.
PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
rooting, some remodeling. HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
contractors • Build, siding,
.
20yrs.exp. Call388·9652.
remodel, concrete, roofing,
BING'S CONCRETE CON· free estimates. Call col.,
STRUCTION · Specializing 614-259-2814 ask for Charles
in concrete driveways, or Mike.
Siding
sidewalks ,
patio,
Roofing &amp; Gutter
basement, garage floors A. I. DUTY &amp; SON, Home
· Remodeling
and etc. Free estimates. 1,1 builders, spec ialize in
Serving Your Area for . years experience. Ca!l 367· small convenient homes,
20Years
7191 .
plans available, moderate
Does your house need a price, free estimates, 614·
256·1352 .
Free Estimates
faGe lift? Or lust a little
makeup? Coil me &amp; I'll
Call Collect
have 11 looking young again INTERIOR and exterior
14 322
Ph. H
In no lime. Will do all types painting, Mark White, coil

MIU£R .__.,,
nuniU\
SERVICE
ROTAVATORS ..

Farm Buldm'. gs

1978 XL 350 Honda, ~-00
675·6878.
'

75

dow for 611&gt; fl. GMC or CALL 446-2801 for termite,
Chevy truck, $325. Call \188· roaCh, b.lrd, rodent,_
9334afte•6_p. m.
spiders, fleas ·and oilier
small Insect control. Free
1977 BO~AJijZA · travel estimates given. ·A 101;11
~ompany
locoed
In
area.
Bill
trailer,
35 .fl. New
long, eawning,
. tip· Gallipolis
out
·room
deluxe Interior, . full bath, Thomas.
call388·8646.
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, corn·
merclol ond rnldentlal,
free ntlmetn. Call 256·
1182.
11
Home
lmpA~vements

UftlaiADD

ALL STEEL

75

remodel·

ing,

~~~~~~~·9~·~m~o~.p~d~.n~=~~~~~~=~~~7.5~·~8-~2~m~o~-~pd.;·~~
4

197t lionda 750K, 5,000
miles, extras, excellent
condition. $1,750.00. 992·
6763.

L-11 &amp; Davl HaHhlll
OWMn·Operators

-barre

'PH. 992·7201

tensive

TOPPER,

fiberglas~ with sliding win·.

;==~~=======m:o:·::~;:::::::;:==~====~~==~~~~~~==~·
&amp; Alumi.n um
SU PERI0R
BAILEY'S SlllES VinylSIDING
VINYL
322 N. 2nd Ave.
' BISSB.l.
PRODUCTS
Middleport,_()hio
·
SIDING
CO
NEW STORE
'

1980 Honda ex 5110, Shaft
drive water cooled with low
miles &amp; extras. 992·2722 af·
ter6p.m.
·

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

1977 JEEP WAGONEER,
42,000 miles, air, PS, PB,
1979 Dodge' Colt Hal· rear window defogger,
chback, A/C, FM· AM power rear window, .c
Radio, 4 &gt;pd. 615·1170, Pt. wheel drive, exc. cond.
Pleasant.
Call388·9334 after 6pm.

TRUCK

H.·L WHITESEL.
.
CONSTRUCTION
ROOFING ·
New Homes • ex ·

Closed Thursday
.

1980 JEEP CJ·5, 6·cyl. , 4·
spd., exc. cond ., call 4-46·
1211 .

·Calli Pint
Equipment

o:.

uoo.

7~

'

~£....._.,)

• Exca.v allng
•Septic Systems
• water, sewer &amp;
· Gas Lines
• ,Dump Truck
•Trencher
· Licensid &amp; Bondid

~~~;;;:~='=·=7·=1=m~· ~;::=====~~~~~=:::~;.;~5;·2~l=·l~fc~~
ROUSH'

1975 Volkswagen Super
Beetle, AM· FM, sun roof, 1915 Suzuki TS «XX With 3700
miles.
992·5623.
$2800, 675·2976.

MORRISON ' S Auto sales .. 1919 Ford Bronco, 302
lienderson, WV . Phone 675· engine, 22,000 mile.s, am·fm
8 track, excellent con·
1547 or 675·2881 .
dillon. 615·5065.

WANT TO BUY Old fur· 1977· Cllmero, ac, ps, pb,
nlture and Antiques of all new tires, air shocks, gOod,
kinds, call Kenneth Swain, cond., $3500. 675·4377 after
256·1967 In the evening.
4PM.'

Kltcllen Ullillett, belli

. '

.s.,

1979 Dodge Colt Hat·
chback, AIC, FM · AM
Radio, 4 spd . 675-1770, Pt.
Pleasant.

J&amp;F
OONTUCTING

rtn1odell,.. roofing &amp;
gu'*, aldlag &amp; plumb-

1977 Mustang ·II . Ghla, ex·
cellenl condition, 31,000 FOil Sale1975 suzuki Motor·
miles, 304-675·2205 after 5 cycle'- faring, ex. cOnd,,
p~ .
6;000 miles. cell 245-5039,
BidWell, Oh.
OR T'RADE
1978
Plymouth Horizon . 675· Susukl120, exc. cond .. on or
6275.
off road, $4011. Call441'11653,
Bidwell, Oh.
1967 Rambler, gOod con· .
dillon, $250 or best offer. 1978 Honda 750 exc .• cOnd., .
675·1915.
4000 miles, $1,100 call 3792411 .
1972 Volkeswagen Super
Beetle, ,runs good, new 1973 CB 750 Honda, axe.
paint. S1«10. 195·3911.
cond., 256·6659, Gallipolis.
2317 Mt . Vernon,Pt .
Pleasant .
Lots of 1978 Yamaha 500CC Single
miscellaneous, baby stuff, cullnder. 2,100 miles. Exc.
cond. $1,200.667-6569 after 5
Tuesday 9·4 June 9th .
p.m.
,

2· 1971 Datsun station
wagons, 1 runs, 1 for parts. 1977 Dodge 1;, ton stepside 6
1973 Oldsmobile. 992·6362. , cyl .,· 4 speed, 6 ft. ol9,000
miles. P
am·fm ·8 track·
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675· good tires. SUOO. 949·2288.
2722 or 675-5571.
1978 FORD '14 ron •·wheel
1977 DODGE pickup, slant dr ive, 675·1121.
6, automatic, PS, PB,
51,000 miles, 4 tool bins, 1913 Datsun pickup: Call af:
675·2318.
.
ter 5 pm 675·2032 .

1971 Plymouth Fury Ill call
after 5:00, 675·3413.

1974 CJ-5 Jeep, «1.000 IICtual mlln. very good c:ondltlon;a.ooo. 675-4327•

·.

1976 Chysler Cordoba, •low 1979 Pontiac FOf.r;~la Su'n·
miles. gOod cond.. 1111 ).!lrd, -4 cyl engln,e, 4 ~
wheel, cruise, priced right, transmlnlon, posltractlon,
4-46·8661, Gallipolis.
miles. d75·1420 or 675·
2940. '

66 Chevy .Jl, new !Ires, with
Soy bean seeds. $8 bu~hel. 74 model engine, godd
cond., 245'5575, Rio Gran·
675·3905.
de,Oh . .
.

Prix.

1970 Chevy Jl'npalai 350
automatic, goOd conGitlon,
S500. 675·1714: '

Purebred siamese' kittens.
Wormed. S30 - firm . 992·
3539.
THE FJSii TANK and Pel
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave .
675·~ Guinea pigs S7.99
and 10.99, Porokels $14.99,
Zebra Fish S12.95, Gerbils
$2.91. Open 11 ·4.

Gran

Phone 675-5075 btfore5 PIJI·

'

DRAGDNWYND . CAT·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CF A
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cars. Chow pup·
pies are here, white P~r·
sian &amp; Himllayas k11tens.
Call446·3844 after 4 p. m.

1977

MIS IJILDING

1965 CiJ5 Jeep, metal' top
S3000. end cloth top. S1200. 67$-

Trans AM 13800.00; Ph.
446·11369AM to I PM.

Jumbles: VIUA
CLEFT ABDUCT WHALER
·
Anawer: What'• 1 nervous aorcere11 called?A "TWITCH"
,

STrawberries pick your
Six beagle puppies. 742· own, bring container 245·
3007.
5410.

Oil

'ms.

t.xJ

rANGOLl

) I

bull. ···~.
3 matched 11111r Geese S10
pair. Baby Goallngs S3
1981 red Chevette, 2 door
each. 675-!016. •
automatic, with , side
chrome and carpeting, still
'
'
' '
under warranty. $5,000.
Buffalo, WV., 937·202.5.

ROBERTS IROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 ~r. wrecbr
Nt'VICt. "Big or lmlll" we
tow them alii 2332 Eutern
"'v•., Galllpplis, Ohio. Day
· 4-16'24-45 Ill' . NlgM · ·446:
PAINTING • ,R nldentlal
4792.
.
and commercial: Interior
' &gt;
and exttriOr, mobile hOme
E lo V WELDING Pain'! lo roof$. Free ntlmales. 17
Body Shop, Georgu Cree~ yrs. exp. wllll, referencn
Rd. Gallipolis, 446·13CW, tor· call367·nl4or:!67·7160.
mally with Gallipolis
Motors, 3 years.

.Business SerVices

3 WEll broke hOrus. 1941

'1970
INTERI'MT1NAL
SCOUT · 4.' W· D, $1800., also
5 acres UP R1. 35, Three
mile R\1., $12,000. Call 576·
2'184.

IZ

11

Llvntack

Insect

Camera"

t08Nerve
network

110 Owing
111 Compass

pl.
112 Evergreen
tr_.
1t3 Vogelable
1151tdan river
1t7Fac:tl
119MO

120 COnfllgrallon
121ReleVanl
124F•IIIIO
1:Hl Unuplralad

127E-oeo
¥iclorlouo

121 See '¥"ph

opp.
140 Prevalent

141 Winter
vehicle

t43 Brlilsh
¥ehlcle
t45 Speck
1461nstruct
148Bogged
down
150 Foot lever
152 Fill with air
153 Garment
15_. Emerald Isle
15e Weirder
157 Playing
cards
158 Simple

t59 Dispatched'
160 Taut
DOWN
1 Ren l
2 Appon lons
3 Voles
_.Compass

pt.
5 Limbs
13 L..A.'s State
7 Harp, Cock-

ney Slyie
8 IriSh dance
g Breaa1wortc
10 Macaw
1'1 Cronies
12 " ... - I saw
Elbo"
13 Compass

pl.
14 Swlu

-

mountains

18 Spirited

90 Not these

horse

91 Generate

20 River duck
23 Quote
25 Pierce
27 Fruitcake
ingredient
28 Hurries
3 t Epochs

92 As written:
Mus.

93 Assuage
94 Article

96 Praise
97 Belgian
river

33 Buckel
36 Want

tOO Scale note
102 Antlered

38 C~orle ss
40 Meadows
41 Fall short
43 Olstol1
45 Earthquake
46 Ceremony
·H Transaction
49 Marv., and

animal
105 Ma)oltyl
109 Greenl.n&lt;l

Maj0f5

51 Tenants'
pa~ents

52 Becomes
aware of
53 Fast)lonable
54 Strip of
WOOd
56 Ranch
hands
59 Ga"e
60 Be furious
61 Matured
63 Mos1
profound
65 Cravats
67 Bitter vetch

69 Above
70 Diminished
gradualty

72 A monlh
74 Baton
ROl!ge's St.
76 Pronoun
77 Chair part
79 Haweilan
rootstock
83 Munched

85 Mother 86 Dock
87 Ballet bird

....

-

112 Fish limbs

113 Twlalecl
lt4 Cheopiy
gaudy
11EI Units

118 Winglike
t20 Special
attraction
121 Evergreen
I roe
122 Sewing

needs
123 Shade

125 "The Arab ~
an Nights"
lad
126 Chief
t27 Spouee
129 Soil
131 Wooden

pins
t32Fold
133 Small
omount

134 Fill wllh )o)'
136 Pool
138 Cubic meter
140 ROdenlo
141 Mix
142 Wlthorad
144 Encounter
t47Lowillln&lt;l
1411 Po!Hion
.149N-

151 Exlat

t5 Meadow

88 Stteel ol

153 Samarium

18 Ooclores

gillS
89 French
article

155 Nlton

17 SOla

symbol
symbol

�Pomer.oy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohlct-Polnt Plusent, w.

Pag-0·8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

va.

June 7, '"'

Area students Win scholarships
RIO GRAND~ -' ,Six area high ·
schol studenbi have beeJi named .
wirinenl of in-dlBtrlct scholanhlps at
Rio Grande College. The students,
residenf4, of Gallla, Meigs; Jackaon
and Vinton Countlf4, wiD receive full
tuition awards for four yeal'll.
The value of this academic
scholarshlpmayapproxlrnate$7,000 ,
over the life of'lhe scholarihip. In order to maintain the award, studenta
must meet high acadjlmic standards
throughout their degree programs.
The scholarship winners are
Chorles Cecil, son or M;r. and Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs, Donald HammOIId, NorthGalltaJiighScllool,wboplana .•
fnmSouthwlllamHighSchool, who tomajorlnelementaryeducation. ' .
planS to 1JI&amp;Jor In Engllah; Ronal
Lynch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hennan
Chrla Moore, a 8f11duatlng ·lllllior
Lynch, from Gallia Aeadem)' High from Gallia Acadlm)' High Sd¥lol,
School, who pl&amp;nll to major in is tlli recipient of ali Atrrry ROTC
but! ness . management; Lori .Scholarp at Rio Grande College.
Preston, llaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chrla is 111110111! the flnt reclplenta li
James Preston, from Kyger Creek a two-year, full-tuiUon award. The
High School; 'J'homas Saunders, son ROTC ~ is bein8 offered for
of ThQmas Saunders and Sue Wise, · the first .time ·at Rio Grande and
from Haman Trace High School, · ~fall qurter. · . .
'
who, plans to stuf!Y. pre-la'l(: and
Moore plans to study buslnesll
Margaret Thutotl, dilughler of Mr. rnailagement. He is the IWil of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles 'fhaxton,' from andMrs. GeneMooreofGallij19lls.
•,

Paul Cecil,
Vinton
CountyinHigh
School,
whofrom
plans
to major
ac- 1r;;::~;:~~~::;:;::==;========;;
counfing; Ronald Harrunond, ~n of

ELBERFELD$

Seven
members

ROOM.
DIVIDER •

in line for
Jaycee award

FIRST PLACE -Two Meigs County citizens were
presented 10.speed bicycles Thursday olgb! for hovlog
won first place In the aoooal hike-bike, (bringing In the
111061 money through sponsors who contributed to the
Meigs Assotlatlon for Retarded CltlzeDB on their
beball). They were Krtstl Hawk, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs: Harold
and Marc

of Mrs. Che,.YI Fry, Rutland. More than $10,000 was
pledged in support of participants In this year's hike
bike and over $8,000 hos been turned ln. Shown with the
first place winners are Carol Layh, a staff member of
the Meigs Community School, and MaDDing Webster,
president of the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation.

HOME
ENTERTAINMENT

GAWPOLIS - According to
Gallipolis Area Jaycees' President
Phillip Allie, members in running
for Jaycee of the Month for the month of May are George Woodward,
Stuart Coronel, John Hudson, Jeff
Icard, Pat Deacon, Roger Walker,
and Bryan Evans.
All local Jaycee members are
urged to attend the regular meeting
Monday night, and bring a prospective new member. An election will
be held for the purpose of filling the
vacancies for two local directors.

CENTER

SALE PRICE

Deer dies in wreck
POMEROY-A deer was killed
Friday at 11:20 p.m. on SR 338 when
it ran into the patli of a vehicle
driven by George Albert Hill, Rt. 2,
Racine, the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department reported. There was
moderate property damage.

Plan hymn sing
POMEROY-A hymn sing will be
held at the Hysell Run Holiness
Church Sunday, June 14, at 7:30p.m.
The "Joint Heirs" will be featured.
The public is invited to attend.

IN WARM OAK FINISH
Hevealot of tl'fthg1 around your house

that ere difficult to store •ttr~etively
end convenlentlv? Here' a your lniWirl
A1 room divldars or w1ll un ih, CIYfd
Etogoreo till me bill . And me bill you'll
'pay will hi surprisingly low.

Special meeting set
MIDDLEPORT-There. will be a
special meeting of Middleport Lodge
363F&amp;AM Tuesday, June 9,al7 p.m.
Work in EA degree. All masons are
invited to attend.

OTHER WINNERS - Pictured are some of the top
winners of the 1981 bike bike held In Meigs County this
sprlog for the benefit of tbe Meigs Assotlatlon for
Retarded CltizeDS. Winners brought In the most
amount of money through sponsors wbo. donated
money In support of various riders In the bike-bike. In
the photograph are front, I to r, Jody Wells, Jeff Miller,
second place, tape decks and radios; Mlehoel Kloes,

ODNR sponsors
jWle workshop
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Depart·
men! of Natural Resources (ODNR)
will conduct an environmental
education wor.kshop June tr.-19 at
Camp Francis Asbury west of Rio
Grande in Gallia County.
Teachers, group leaders, camp
staff, counselors, resource persons,
volunteers and other interested per·
sQns are invited to participate in this
workshop designed to help educators
plan their environmental programs.
""Techniques to be learned during
t~e workshop can be used in the
classroom, on the school grounds, at
camp, during field studies and

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

third place, radio; hack, I to r, Andy White, stereo
headphones; David Karr, fifth, a savings boad, W..
ners not pictured are Ruth ADD Fry, girl third place
winner, and Sue Zano, girl fourth place winner. Prizes
were awarded at a reception held Thundlly olgbt at
the Meigs Community School. The reception was sponsored by the Meigs Assoetalloo for Retarded Cltlzeas to
thankallthesupporlersoftheblke-blke.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

Air 'conditioner; tilt wheel, cruise, power door Jocks, luggage rack, woodgrain,
custom Interior. Driven only 17,802 miles. '81 Buick tradl!'! A reference car. Must
'see to appreciate.

1980. PONTIAC
GRAND PRJX
blue exterior
dark blue custom
air cond.. AMI
t=Mi4to•rH&gt;. Rallye II
'wh&lt;H!Is, rear defroster.
Only 14,615 miles.

1
CUTLASS SUPREME

2 DR. . .

White exTerior wllh
matching Landau top.
Dark blue custom cloth
Interior. Air cond., AM ·
FM,
wheels.

CHEV.
MOillE CARLO
Burgundy finish wit
custom cloth, spill
seats, air cond., Rallye
. wheels, AM· FM stereo.
D~lven
only 11,640
miles. Sharp I

CALL (614)-992-2104

or

(30~)-675-1244

throughout
the supervisor
conununity,"of said
Donna
Szuhy,
the .~-~~~;;;;::~:;::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i:;;,;::~
Education Section in ODNR's Office
" In the post 15 years , we 've had ten mailmen, live
o£ · Public Information and
new r ugs and one refrigerator . A Frtgtdatre."
Education.
During the five-day program, par·
ticlpants will 'use thinking skills to
investigate natural and built environments, develop leadership
'!i:llls for working with small groups
and miew materiasl lhot focus on
environmental concepts and

BONNEVILLE 4 DR.
This economy coupe Is
inside and out.
air cond., auto.
trans., Rallye II wheels,
new radial tlrn, special
ac~entstripes .

Ebony black with
custom black clOth In·
terlor . Only 26,600
miles. Air cond, AM·FM
stereo, power w l - .
till wheel.

''"'

THUII.~!RBIRD
Thll Mil Mept Bird Is
c1ee11 IIII'OUIIIOUt. SPill
cruise, , _ rldla
Landlu top.
Prletf ICCOI'IIIfllly

-t.

11,....

Special emphasis will be placed on

,Oriented )li'OI!ram new to Ohio. ·
• .for Information, or to register,
call the Recreation Office of Bob
Evans Fanna at (614) ~. The
t40 rqlltration fee covers all costs
ol the workihop, Including food,
fGdCing and hlndout materi~la.

'4495

lEW CAR .
FIRAICINC
fRIGIDAIRE
Hill TODAY, HIRE TOMOIIOW.

AS LOW AS

1

MoTOIHOMI
26 11. Dodlt ~ula, ltllllad wltll-...lpmtnt
and fully Hlf Clllltl..... rtef MIYII!Wil air,
cruiH CIIIIIDelrt,~A·M-P... tr•ck. IVXIU.ry

-

.Veterans Memorial
M*!BSI~Ruasell

Tucker,
llallll; Mary Deren berger,
Pomeroy; Gladys Bennett,

....,.

. 'DIIaiARGES-Rath Gardner,
Jllllllrt Delonc. Lula Phlllipe•
.j,

BAKER FURNITURE .,
.992-3307

Nll'ltl Second Ave.

1979 CHEV.
CARGO VAN

trans.

1977 FORO

Hpoed, Marlin blue.
driven only 30.197 miles.
Expect the best.

ProJect Learning Tree, an activity·

Front

•4M5

1978
RABBIT 2 DR.
'

awareness.

CAPRI·

This hatchback model Is
· powder blue with con·
trasting vinyl inlerlar.
2.1 titer Y-6, air cond.
AM· FM l ·lnck, 1uto.

1980 CHEV.
CITATION
4 DR. SEDAN

'""' MI... Mutt

1976 FORD
PINTO

...

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