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-.
Confession testlmony gz.v en
t'age-12-The Daily sentinel

•

In his statement, Yoho said, the
de fe ndant said he then drove the car
to a Marshall University parking I1JI
where he abandoned it, threw the
keys and gloves down a Huntington
city sewer · and proceeded to wa lk
home to Chesapeake.
The statement Yoho read also
revealed that Mayes used the $300 he
had received from the victim in the
following manner : $100 went toward
the purcha se of a bla ck leather
jac ket, $50 was applied to a motorcycle and the remainder was used to
buy some clothes, fix up his truck
a nd purcha se some beer a nd food
Yoho said that the statement
whic h he read to the jury was signed
by the defendant. former deputy
P a r sons, TroopeBackus and Yoho
himself. He further testified that
nothing had been left out or nothing
had been added to what the defendant had sa id during the s tatement.
Upon cross-examination , Nibert
estabhshed that whi le Yoho had as ked Mayes why the deceased ga ve
him the $300 , he had never outright
as ked him why he killed Jotumy
Wamsley.

He asked Yoho if he was aware
that the state police had contacted
Ross Johnson. Yoho said he was.
Nibert then asked Yoho if Johnson
has said that Mayes .told him that
Wamsley had threaten'!d to kill him.
Yoho said he was not aware of such a
statement.
''Therefore ,'' Nibert asserted,
"you did not ask Mr. Mayes if
Johnny Wamsley had threatened
him. did . vou ?" Yoho said he did
not.
Nibert then asked the state
policeman to review the statement
by Mayes he read to the jury during
direct examination by the State to
see if he had asked Mayes his motive
for shooting Wamsley. " It's not in
this one," Yoho agreed .
" You did not ask him (Ma yes)
why he shot Johnny Wamsley , did
you'" , the defense attomey charged.
" Don't you think that 's imoortant ?"
Nibert. who established through
questioning Yoho that Mayes was
held at the state police office in Huntington for nearly seven hours, durmg which time Yoho satd there were
two lags during which the defendant
was not questioned at all - once for
approximately two hours while the
police were waiting for the arrival ti
another officer, and once for 45
nninutes to an hour when Mayes appeared to be sleeping - furtheasked
Yoho, who had read the 3 ·~ page
typed statement to Mayes on the
morning of November 4, if Mayes
told the officer that he had some dif-

Jmwph 1- _ Roush
Joseph F . Rous h. Sr. , 31, of Mas on
dted Wednesday in St. Ma ry's
Hospital in Huntington.
He was employed as a coal miner.
He was born Feb. 28 , 1950 In Mason
to La wrence I. Rous h of Ma son and
the late Lillian J . Ca mp be ll Ro ush .
who dted in 1977.
He was prec eded In death by hts
wife, Amta Cheryl Riffle Roush in
1976 ; two s iste rs, Jen nifer Lynn
Young ;md Be verly Kay Roush .
Survt v&gt;ng are, in addition to hts
fa ther. one daughter. He ather Lynn
Roush and son , Joseph F . Rnush. J r.
of Mason; five brothers, John R.
Roush. Gallipol ts, Ronald L. Roush.
U.S . Army in Gcnnany. Larry E .
Roush, New Haven . Michael L.
Rull.'ih, Puint Pleasant . Timothy R.
Role:5h, Mason ; ri ve sisters , Mrs.

Rona ld 1 Cathyht Ze rkle, New
Ha ven . Mrs . J ack • Cecil I Johnson,
Metropolis. Ill. . Mrs. J a ck 1 Bett y 1
Fox , Clifton , Mrs . Robert •Judy o
Gibbs, Syracuse , and Mrs. Glona
Harbour, Mason.
Services will be Saturday at I :30
p .m . at the Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev Be nnie Stevens a nd
Rev . Cass Hutchison offici a ting.
Burial will follow in the Ktrk land
Memonal Gardens.
Friends may ca ll at the fun eral
home Friday from 3 p.m . unt il 5 p.m.
a nd 7 p.m. un til9 p.m.

IJannv Woolcork
Danny Floyd Woolcock, 52 , New
Haven died yesterday in Jackson
General Hospital in Ripley .
He was hom October 15. 1928 in
Proctorville, Ohio, to Nellie Floyd
Woolcock, Logan , W.V., and the
late John W. Woolcock .
He was employed a s Environmental Engineer at the Philip
Sporn Plant and was a member of
the St. Paul Lutheran Church in
New Haven .
Surviving are, tn addition to his
mother, his wife, Coraletta "Silty"
Woolcock, Ne w Haven : two sons,
Danny J . a nd Cra ig Woolcock both
of Morgantown; two daughters,
MisS Christy Woolcock, New Haven
and Mrs . Danella Coper, St.
Albans ; two step-sons, Lester M.
" Skeeter" Ohlinger, Racine, Ohio,
and Timothy L. Ohlmger. Ashland,
Ky .; one step-daughter, Miss Jill A.
Ohlinger, New Haven .
Funeral services wiU be held at
the St. Paul Lutheran Church in
New Haven on Saturday at 3 p.m.
with the Rev. George Weirick officiating .
Burial will follow in the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Friends may c all at the
Foglesong Funeral Home in Mason
on Friday from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m.

Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS-Fred B. Miller,
Pomeroy; Mary Frances Bowers,
Reedsville;
Sylvia
Zwilling,
Syracuse; Gerald Glen Jacks,
LangsviUe.
DISCHARGES---Edward Burdette.

Marriage license
Ricky D. George, 22, and Robin A.
Harder, 18, both of Rutland, applied
for · a marriage 'license in Meigs
&lt;;oUnty Probate Court Thursday.

flculty reading. "Yes, that's why I
read it to him," Yoho said.
In his re-direct examination, Prosecuting Attorney Morgan asked
Yoho if Mayes had told him that he
shot Johnny Wamsley because
Wamsley had told him he " wanted to
leave this world." Yoho replied in
the affirnnitive and further said that
Mayes also told him he did it "to do
him (Wamsley ) a favor."
Morgan asked Yoho again to read
the statement regarding the $300.
The question, Yoho said, was
"Why did he give you $300? " He
then read Mayes' reply: " For
shooting him."
"At the time you took (the defendant's) statement," Morgan continued, " did Dexter Mayes ever tell
you that Johnny Wamsley threatened him ?"
" No, " Yohoanswered.

was going to ' 'pull his eyes out."
Radliff, the flnt witness ciaUed by
Defense Attorney David Nibert In
the murder trial ol the 111-year-old
Mayes, who confessed m the morning ol hls ·NOV. 4 arrest to shooting
Wamsley to death, at the victim's
request, and accepting $300 for the
" favor," told the jury ol being with
Wamsley one evening when Wamsley was "doing some drugs."
Wamsley said he was going to "pull
his eyes out," Radcliff said, because .
" it said in the Bible that it was a sin
to lust after men."
Asked by Nibert if Wamsley told
him he lusted after men, Radcliff
said yes. He further said he successfully talked Wamsley out of In- ··
juring himself at that time.
Nibert began questionlrlg
Radcliff shout Wamsley's in·
volvement with drugs, an objection
raised by Mason County Prosecuting
Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr. led
to a discussion at the bench.
Following the discussion, Circuit
Judge Clarence Watt ordered the
jury to leave the courtroom before
aUowing Nibert to continue with his
line of questioning.
Although Nibert's remaining
questions of the witness were not
heard by the jury, and will not be
considered evidence in this trial,
they were entered into the record.
Nibert continued to question Had·
cliff who said Wamsley had told him
he once hired a "hooker," or
prostitute, to help him go
"straight." Radcliff, who claimed
he was no longer involved in drugs,
said he himself had purchased drugs
- including marijuana, cocaine,
speed, and quaaludes- from Wamsley several years ago.
Radcliff also told Nibert that he
was not aware that Dexter Mayes
had ever worked for Johnny Wamsley at his resturaunt.

WAMSLEY PRA YEO DAILY
A young man who once worked for
Johnny Wamsley in his Fifth Street
Italian Resturaunt in Huntington
testified yesterday afternoon that
Wamsley, the victim of bullets from
a .25 automatic pistol allegedly fired
by Dexter Ray Mayes on Oct. 15,
1980, routinely prayed before
opening his business each morning
and talked about his religious beliefs
" all the time."
It was this "constant" obsession
with religion and his involvement
with drugs, according to James Edward Radcliff of Chesapeake, that
led Wamsley to tell him one evening
some time before his death that he

Frances D. Spencer, 50, 35100
Lakewood Road, Pomeroy, died
Thursda y at University Hospital,
Colwnbus .
Mrs. Spencer was preceded in
death by her father, Lamar Dickinson and one brother.
She ts survived by her husband,
Jack Spencer; one daughter, Vickie
Spencer, Colwnbus; her mother,
Marie Dickinson. Hinton, W. Ya .;
one brother, Charles Dickinson,
Gaylord, Mich .; one sister, Kathleen
Woods, Del Ray Beech, Fla .
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Pomeroy
Methodtst Church with the Rev .
Robert McGee officiating. Following
services here the body will be taken
to E . M. Meadows Funeral Home,
Hinton for services on Sunday .
Burial will be in Restwood Memonal
Gardens, Hinton . Friends may call
a t Ewing Funeral Home at anytime .
In lieu of flowers the family asks
that donations be made to the
American Cancer Society .

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating two thefts
which occurred Thursday .
David Carsey , Racine , told
deputies someone broke into his
residence between 8 a.m. and II
a.m . Thursday. A television, stereo
and shotgun were reportedly stolen.
Entry was gained through a side
window .
Investigation is also continuing in
the breaking and entering of the Pat
Morrissey residence, Long Bottom ,
between 9:30a.m. and 11:4(1 a.m.
Thursday .
Missing are two televisions, two
jewelry boxes and jewelry, a tool
box, a bench grinder and three unsigned insurance checks .
Anyone seeing suspicious vehicles
in these vicinities at these times are
asked to call the sheriff's depart-

.

The Pomeroy Police investigated
nninor accident Thursday at the intersection of Second and Mechanic
Streets. No injuries were reported .
Anna S. Grueser, Pomeroy was
traveling west on Second Street and
was attempting a right hand turn onto Mechamc when struck by a car
traveling behind driven by John
Michael Wheeler, West Columbia.
There was minor damage to the
Grueser car and none to the Wheeler
vehicle .
No citations were issued.

·570 W. Main
Ph. 992·2556
Pomeroy, OH
"Located at the End of the Pomeroy -Mason Bridge"

LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . .. ........ 4,014,000.00
Tinne and savings deposits or individuals,
partnerships, and corporations ............... . ............. 21,328,000.00
DepositsorUnitedStatesGov~ent ~· : . . ..... .. ...... .. ........ 14,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United States
921 ,000.00
Certified and officers' checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. . . . . . 143,000.00
Total Deposits . . .. . .. .. .... .. . ..... . .. , . . . .. ... .. . .. . ...... 26,420,000.00
a. Total demand deposits . .. .. . . .. ... , ..... . ..... 5,012,000.00
b. Total time and savings deposits .. . .. . ........ . . 21,408,000.00
All other liabilities
:P.1 ooo oo
TOTAL UABIUTIES
26 1973 1000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common Stock
a. No. shares authorized
16,000
b. No. shares outstanding
16,000
(par value)
400,000.00
Surplus .......... .. ....... .... ..... . .. . .... ... ... ........... . 600,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves .. ........... . . .. ..... _.... .. ..... 1,264,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ................. .. ...... .... .... . 2,264,000:00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL . ... .'..... ' ..... . .. .. .. . . .. . ... . ....... 29,2371000.00
MEMORANDA
Time certificates of deposilll in
denominations of $100,000 or more ,. ..... ,. ........... ... .. .... .. 657,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month ending with report date
Total deposits .... ... ...... . .............. . . . ......... ...... 26,564,000.00

One run was made Thursday by a
local emergency unit according to
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service .
Middleport at I :03 a.m. was called
to Palmer St .. for Robert Rinehart
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
This morning at I: 59 a .m . the
Pomeroy unit was called to Osbome
St., for Charles A1eker who was
tak en to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Plan work session
A work session will be held at
Eastern High School Monday at 6
p.m. by the Eastern Athletic
Boosters to prepare equipment for
the up-coming fair and football

season.
The regular meeting will follow
the work session at 8 p.m.

I, Roger W. HyseU, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition has been prepared in conformance with the In-

struction lssil~ by the Board of Governo., of the F~eral Reserve System and
the State Bankmg Authonty and 15 true to the best of my knowled~eand belief.

.

•

tmts
Vol. 15 No . 25
JS Cents

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

We, the undei'Signed directors, attest the comctness of this report 'of con·dition and declare that it has been , ~eil by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief has been prepared In ·confoimance with the inStructions
by the Board of Govern9rs of the,'FedeM!l Rlise,rve System ~nd the State
Banklng.Authorlty and Is true and correct.
Correct-At~: Fre&lt;IR. cBrsey, Jr:
Fennan E. Moore- Dlreciors
Leslie F. Ful~

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9 Sections, 66 Pages

Sunday, Aug . 2, 1981

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Gallia EMS vacates
Volunteers' quarters
By KEVIN KELLY 11od
County Commissioner James
LARRY EWING
Saunders said he met with the volunGALLIPOUS - 'The Gallia Coun- leers following their Friday night
ty Volunteer Emergency Squad, . m~ting and was informed they
Inc., by voting not to disband late voted nottodisband.
Friday night, triggered a chain of
EMS Director Jimmie Evans said
events that will lead to the removal the volunteers were allowing the
of the county funded EMS from its EMS crew to stay in their Jackson
current location on JackSon Pike to Pike building until Tuesday or Wedproperty controlled exclusively by nesday, when the squad's new home
the board of county commissioners.
at the old county engineer's office
The Volunteer vote came in near the senior citizens center will
response to a demand made Wed- be ready for occupancy.
On Saturday, Evans said he and
nesday by the county corrunissioners
that the organization either disband, the squad were sorting through
or they would move the operation to equipment and preparing it fortrans building-also located on Jackson sport to the new EMS station. Most
Pike-which formerly housed the of the equipment, according to Saunengineer's office.
ders, was the county's, including
County ,officials said Saturday new radios in the ambulances.
"It's no big deal," he said. "We
morning they were confident the
move would in no way hamper could replace everything they (the
operations of the EMS.
volunteers) had for a maximum of

$500."
Emergency calls can be made to a
new nwnber, 446-3126, and will be
monitored through the sheriff's
department. Until a phone is installed at the new location, runs will
be dispatched through Evans' office
iJJ the courthouse.
The board of commissioners-by a
two-tl}o{)ne vote-moved last Wednesday to transfer the operation of
the EMS unless the executive board
and membership of the volunteer
organization disbanded within seven
days.
Due to conflicts surrounding the
regular EMS staff and the volunteers, the commissioners had been
considering moving the squad out of
the present building and into another
location for the past several weeks.
The EMS station being vacated by
Continued on A-4

i

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ij~'\;,.{~ . ~{~ '

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James Oiler will remain .at
North Gallia High School
am not agreeing for the other
teachers. I don't want others to feel
they're doing something for me . I
wantthem to do it on their own."
If the settlement goes through,
Oiler has agreed to disnniss his
grievance filed July 9 against his
transfer to Kyger Creek Junior High
School.
At the time of the filing, Oiler
reapplied for his fonner teaching
position in line with provisions of the
teacher-board master contract.
According to Toothaker, the junior
high teaching position at Kyger
Creek becomes vacant and will be
posted Monday.
Stephen Saunders, a Rio Grande
graduate, who taught last year at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary, will
remain on ltle staff at North Gallia
High School.
.
Roberta Zdepski, president of the
Gallia County Loc;al Teachers'
Association said,"We're happy an

By DALE ROTHGEB Jr.
OVP News Editor
GALUPOUS - A North Gallia
High School science teacher who last
month filed a grievance appealing
his transfer will remain at his old
school.
In a joint announcement late
Friday afternoon, Dr. Gary
Toothaker, Gallia County Local
Schools superintendent, and James
Oiler, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, reported a
settlement had been reached in the
month-long situation.
Oiler will retain his teaching
position at North Gallla if some
voluntary movement In other class
areas at the school are completed .
Toothaker said a settlement could
be made in this manner because a
math vacancy now exists at North
Galli a.
BOth men agreed final settlement
was contingent upon all parties involved being happy. Oiler said, "I

agreement could be reached before
~chool starts, so classes could begin
without any interruption. We appreciate the effort of the adnninistration to solve this problem
before the beginning of the school
year,n.
Oiler, who, according to a letter
delivered June 29 by Toothaker and
board member David Carman to
Oiler 's wife, was notified of the Iran·
sfer according to the master contract between the board and
association.
Given as reasons for the move
were improvement of the science
program at Kyger Creek by filling a
current vacancy with an experienced and highly trained
teacher, and to generate an opening
at North Gallia allowing the district
to hire a teacher .a ble to fill some of
the vacant extra curriculum duty
assignments.
Continued on A-4

F'o reclosures quadruple in .Gallia
described; that its mortgage lien
upon the above described real·estate
be foreclosed an&lt;l said real estate
sold according to the statutes and
procedures in effect ... "
The above is typical of the
language tlsed in suits' filed in Common Pl~:BS Court seeking foreclosure
of real estate and sale of property .ln .
yeats past, the frequency of •filings
of such suits was rare in Gallia

By LARRY EWING
Tlmeo-Seotloel Staff Writer
GALUPOUS - A foreclosure action:
" ... Plaintiff demands judgment
against Uie Primary •Defendant in
the amount of... ..that the mortgage
set · up by Plaintiff herein be
declared to be valid arid su~l!ting
and the first and best Hen upon !he
above described real estate herein

County. There were only seven actions of foreclosure in 1977.
During the · past four years,
however, the number of foreclosure

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MOVING OUT - Members of the Gallia County
Volunteer Emergency Squad, Inc. and the county's
emergency medical service were busy Saturday
separating the equipment of their organizations . The

county unit will be moving out of the volunteers'
Jackson Pike building this week . Second from the left
is Joe Burger, president of the volunteer.;' executive
board.

Columbia Gas to close ,
Middleport office Aug. 6
MIDDLEPORT ·- Columbia Gas
of Ohio announced Sa turday, cf.fectivc with the close of busineSE
Thursday, Aug . 6, all requests for
service and infonnation concerning
ga" company operations previously
handled at the company 's Middleport office should be directed to
the Gallipolis office. The Middleport
office is being closed.
Telephone inquiries by customers
in the Middleport areas still will be
answered through the same

tclcphunc numbers. t992-5192 ur 99?.64641.

For the &lt;'Onvcntcnct• of Columbia 's
customers in Middleport, a new bill
pa yment station is ava ilable at Dutton Drug Company, 122 N. Second
St.. Middleport. Payments will alsu
continue to be ac,.,ptcd at Swisher
and J.uhse Pharmacy, located at 112
East Main St., Pomeroy, at any
Colwnbia Gas uf Ohio authonzed
collection agenl'y , or :::tt the

Gallipolis area office, •459 Second
Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio45631 1.
Emergency calls on Saturdays,
Sundays, and holida ys, or after
re~ular business hours, 19 a.m . to
4:45 p.m . 1, will be answered a s in
the past through the emergency
number listed in the telephone directory .

There will be nu in•crrupllun of
grts scrvi cr during lht transh~ r uf
u~ratiuns , Columbia S£tid

Corttin~!!d on A-4

Inside todJJy• • •
o 0 o • o o •

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· ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

TOTAL ASSETS . .. ............... .. . . ... .... ... .. .... . . . .. . 29.237.009.00

runs

ELBERFELDS If( PQ:MEROY

WITH FRIES •••••••••••••••• sl69

ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions . . . . . .. . . . . ..... . .... 2,415,000.00
U.S. treasury securities ... . . . ........ . ...... . .... . . . ........ . 5,478,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . . .... . ....... .
. . 2,619,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdtvisions
in the United States . .......... . ..... .
. 3,244,000.00
All other securities ... . . ......... . .. . .. .
. .. 30,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell
. . .. . . . . . . . . .
. .. .... ........ 500,000.00
a . Loans: Total (excluding unearned income 1 .... ... 14,330,000.00
Less : allowance for possible loan losses .. .. . . . .. ... .. .. 96,000.00
Loans, Net . ..... . . . . . .. . ... ... . ............. .. . ... . .. . . ... 14,234,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . . .. . . , .. . . . , ... .... .. . 355,000.00
All other assets . .. ...... .. ..... .. .... . ..... .. .. .. .. ..... . .... . 362,000.00

SIDEWALK
SALE
·-CONTINUES
SATURDAY &amp; MON.
DAY
.
'

SIRLOIN ••••••••••••••••••••• s1 29

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domes tie Subsidiaries, at the close of
business June 30, 1981, at state banking institution organlzed od operating under
the banking laws of the State and a member of the Federal Reserve System.
Published, In ae&lt;ordance with a call made by the State Banking Authorities and
lu the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

\

Federal Reserve District No. 4

ll

Sutton Township Trustees will
meet Tuesday, Aug . 4, at 8 p .m. at
t he Syracuse Municipal Building.

SPECIAL Of THE WEEKI

J'The Far'mers Bank &amp;
Savings Company

( :hc·ck minor wreck

Mt't'ls Tuesday

Kilpatrick on the lot of teachers, A-2

are 'loosening up'

REI.IEF STATIONS- A new outdoor batllroom fadUty, for men
and women, IJ under CODAtructlon at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
'l1le much needed facWty IJ loeated at the end of the senior fair
bulldlug. Shown worklnl! oa the new addition Is Deunls Parker. Tbe
fair wW be held Aug. 18 lbrougb the %2.

State No. 223X

Mavin E. Murphy

Enlt'r~c·ncy

tomato
plants can
how!

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF

ment.

Mavin E . Murphy, 67 , Rt. I , Reedsville, died Thursday morning at St.
Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg after a brief illness .
He was born in New Straitsville,
the son of the late George and Emma Schutz Murphy.
He was a member of the Quarter
Century Club at the Ohio Fuel Gas
Co., where he was employed 29
years before he retired in 1979.
He is survived by his wtfe Hazel
Wtnn Murphy at home; four sons,
Edwa rd of Tupper Plains and Bob,
Gary and David, all of Reedsville ;
a nd one daughter, Mrs. Marty
Wtlliams. Coolville.
Also survived by four brothers,
Melvin, Glouster; Marvin, Tuppers
Plains ; George, Pennsboro, W.Va .;
David Colwnbus; two sisters, Louise
Keith. Glouster and Judy Phillips ,
Chica go; and nine grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by one
s on, Martin .
Funeral services will be 2 p.m .
Saturday at the White Funera l
Home, Coolville, with The Rev .
Robert Sanders officiating .
Bunal will be at the Maplewood
Cemetery , Glouster.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime .

.Bitterness remains in baseball circles, C-6

r--------------------------

Meigs County
happenings•••
Deputies
investigate two
theft complaints

Frances D. Spencer

Defendant takes stand in murder case, D-8

When

1

Area deaths

July 31,1981

-

.

(Continued from page I)
reply : " For shooting him."
Mayes' statement revealed that,
following the s hooting , he threw the
gun off a bridge into Crab Creek ,
drove to Ross Johnson's house inj
Huntington, told him what he had
done and went with Johnson to an
a lley between Sixth and Seventh
a v e nu es wh e re h e burn e d
Wa msley's testimoni"l book .

Frld~y,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

)i '·

RECIPIENTS - Five Carleton
College Scholarships were awarded
tu students I residents of Syracuse 1,
who are attending college or, who
wUI be this fall, Friday night. Thl'
scholarships were awarded by the
Carleton College Board of TrusteC!I
to Sonia Ash, Tonia Ash, Mary
Slavin, Jack Duffy and John Frank .
Each was presented scholarshifl" In
. the amount of $500. The money for
the scholarships Is derived from inlerest drawn on money received
1$25,0101 from the sale of the
CarleiOO College property. Pictured
are, front, 1-r, Herb Parker,
president, Sonia Ash, Cart Wceoe,
treaaurer; back, 'l:onla Ash, Mary
Slavtu, Jack Duffy, JohD Frank and
MIIIOII Varlill, seCretary. Tbree .,.
!leen fll lbe Carktoa College Bollrd
,Ill Truatees, aloog with Robert ,
WJAAett and Kathryn U~allel Crow,
. mat!e .up the sclmlanblp selectio.i
oommfttee.

'

\''

�..

'&lt;!t:·~i• · ~·; ,..,...':'"""\ t~""7"".i""l' .. l.,...._,..,.,..,_,.,~--· ""C!t,.. t ·~ll",.,_..,, •.•.,....r- ... , ...
-~
,
·'
-.... ,, -· -~
~- •
'

..

Commentary and perspe'c tive

Auti;~: lfil

Page-A-1

.Casting a negative lightk===ta=rry==Ew=ing~~

ted me with a T-shirt bearing the
visage of a remarkably homely
bear. I donned the T-shirt and off we
went.
In my inning, I rehashed a
familiar platter of complaints. Tests
of student achievement reflect
steadily declining scores. The
periodic "national assessments" of
student progress provide a bleak
picture of our nation's classrooms .
High school seniors, by the thousands, cannot solve simple problems in
science and mathematics. Vandalism is rampant. When the bored
students are not smoking grass, they
are falling upon one another with

junbaJ! 'times- jentinel
A Oi\"ision uf

H~5 Third

A \T . . Ga llipoli s. Ohio
16141 H6-1341

Ill Court St.,

J'Hm1·ru~ . Ohh'

161419!12-1156

ROHFHT 1.. WI NC F.TT
Publisher
PAT WHITEIII· II •
Ass1s la nt Pu bltshl'r· l 'n11l n ol1 ,

,..K.' l it

Ill'!" I I 1'\ ~n · "d' ·"mo•d . Tho· I ~ hnu l d tw h·" th;w !1111 " .. rn, lunj.! .\II
I I" ,-,l•tinl! and nm -.1 til' '&gt; ll:n•·rl '&gt;'ilfl namo ·.. ull!ro ·,, &lt;~111 1 tdq1hnno
uumt,. r \u liii'IL'llt'rllt'\IIT' "'lllrt J!Uhh~ho · rt I din' 'horu hl h~ · 111 ~ ~~~~~ t; ~ • • • · :llhlrt· " IIJI!
•--uo·• . " " ' l,..r, .. a :rlr h• ·•
I t 1"1

lo ·tl,

f •

,oro

~ 11hv ·

Sense, cents and nonsense

switchblades. Meanwhile the
teachers have gone on strike or gone
to a union meeting, or maybe they're
out campaigning for Jinuny Carter.
So goes the widespread perception of
American education today .
That was my inning. My purpsoe
in this column is to give the teachers
their inning.
On the matter of tests : To compare the student test scores of 1980
with the scores of, say, 1960 or 1950 is
to compare rabbits and horses.
Twenty or 30 years ago the
scholastic tests were given chiefly to
upper-class white students who were
college bound. Things are different
now. Today the scores inevitably are
affected by the participation of
thousands of minority youngsters
from poor families where the home
envirorunent, to put it mildly, is not
cond ucive to scholarly achievement.
On the general quality of
teaching: What, the teachers ask in
exasperation , do parents and stale
legislatures expect or a teacher? If
teachers were permitted simply to
leach - to teach in the old-fas hioned
way - their problems would be
fewer. But legislatures and local
school boards have heaped one
responsibility after another upon the
school system , for driver education,
~ex
education, drug education.
heal th and nutrition education,
cafeteria management , race
relations - you name it, the
teacher's task includes it.
And thinking of school boards :
Yes, there are some good people on
school boards - m en and women
whu understand the teachers'
problems and want to help solve
them. But such members are outnumbered by the incompetents,

academic decisions. And if their tac- arbitration on contract disputes.
The NEA presidents had a comtics appear excessively militant, it is
only because the tactics of con- plaint against columnists and
ciliation and persuasion haven't editors: Why do we report only the
worked.
bad stuff? If public education has a
All for teacher strikes: The strike poor image, aren't the media in part
weapon increasingly is seen as a responsible for this? There are good
weapon of last resort . The 1979 statistics in education. The perschool year began with 190 strikes. centage of drop outs goes down, and
The number dropped to HI in Sep- the nwnber of high school gradua~
tember of 1980. There surely will be goes up - but the public doesn't
a rash of strikes next month, and in hear much about this.
some cases they will he long and bitWe had a long and lively sessionter. But with declining enrollments catharsis for them, education for
and diminishing public support, the me. Old bears should be baited more
teachers would rather seek binding often.

know-it-ails, budget-cutters and
plain blockheads who know nothing
about the schools and will not take
the time to learn. The teachers want
some 1mput; they say they have little or none.
What about the teachers' union, as
a union' If it weren't for their union,
they contend, teachers would still be
living in the fashion of Miss Dove
and Mr. Chips. They would be living
on beans and respectability, and
that's no way to live . Only because of
the union have teachers won better
salaries. They are beginning to
achieve professional participation in

L

·

Tobacco boycott FBI's giant motor fleet looks like
may hit NorthCarolina a bag of lemonC!::========
Ja=ck=A=nd=e=rso=n
By Lowell Wingett
WASHINGTON
Those
If Senators J esse Helms and John East could unscrew their eyes from
automobile
chase
scenes
that
are
the keyholes of the nallon 's bedrooms long enough to look at their own state
featured
nightly
on
television
might
of North Carolina, they might see a disaster approaching. I mean a tobacco
be hard for the FBI to duplicate in
boycott!
real
life . If an agent should gel inI didn 't know anything about it until last week when I was at the tobacco
volved
in a h1gh-speed chase, he
counter of one of the largest drug stores m Gainesville, Fla . I heard the lady
might
wind
up calling for a two
in line before line before me ask the clerk for a carton of Barclay King-s1zed
truck.
cigarettes.
An internal Justice Department
"' These are ma de 1n Kentucky ," I heard her tell the clerk. " I have
always smoked Winstuns but I'm not buying any more cigarettes made in audit report shows that the FBI like
most other American car owners
North Carolina until that state ratifies the Equal R1ghts Amendment ."
I was so startled to have a boycott erupt nght in my face that I ordered has been ripped off by auto
mechanics . In ils pursuit of the bad
Barclay Kings, too . They tasted fine and now I, who have spent some fiftyodd years contributing to the welfare of Win,ton Salem, N.C., have joined guys, the FBI operates the thirdthe unknown lady m Gainesville in her boycott. I'll bet Eleanor Smeal, class motor nee\ in the government.
But apparently the G-men seldom
preside nt of the Na tiona l Organization of Women, would be proud of us. Ill
under the hood.
check
knew he r address I would send her a copy of this column .
"
Inadequa
te maintenanee and
As Senators Helms and East know too well, tobacco 1s King m North
repair
practices
have Jell a nwnber
Ca rolina . It's also the ace, queen, jack and the ten s pot. Not even United
of
bureau
vehicles
in poor emergen~
Stales Senators can buck a stra1ght like that. Helm• and East will have to
cy
response
readiness,"
the auditors
turn their attention from the abortion bill and the Chastity Bill to bringing
that
"
other
vehicles
warn.
They
add
their state senators in line with what the big boys in the tobacco industrv
may
have
been
operated
in
an unwant . What they 'll wa nl1s stale legislation to head off any boycott the NOW
safe
condition
."
organization m1ght bring agamst their products. In short, they"ll want the
Every beginning driver learns
EHA ratified in North Carolina. The alternative would be damage to the
that
he should get an oil change
state's tobacco products markets that might last for years.
I am not suggesting that Eleanor Smeal is advocating such a boycott.
What I saw in Gainesville might be an isolated incident but NOW has less
than a year 1,0 gel the ERA ratified in three more stales. It is time for the
NOW f~rces to get the lead out and start playing hard ball One of their best
weapons is boycotting the 15 sta tes which have not ratified the amendment.
One of the most important tuncRallies in 181 cities across the nation , sponsored by NOW, were held
ea rly in July to raise $15 million to be used to obtain ratification of the amen- lions a writer has is to provide blurdment before June 30, 1982. The ERA 1s a sunple amendment to the con- bs for other writers' books. The
stitution which means that women will not be more or less equal than men. 11 blurb business is one of the biggest
states '"Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by in the country, and it is now
estimated that 30,500,226 book blurbs
the United States or by any state on account of sex."
There is nothing in that declaration that even hints that women must use are produced every year in the
the same public restrooms as men or that it would approve the breakup of United States alone.
Everyone has seen book blurbs in
families , approve homosexuality, force women to be drafted or any of the
advertisements
such as, "Hym
other fantas ies spread by the Right Wing Activist Phyllis Schlafly, of Alton,
Golderweller
has
written another
Ill., and her Stop E RA forces. The Supreme Court has already taken away
·GOdfa
ther
,'
"
or,
"'Not
since ' War
Mrs. Schlafly's most telling argument by rulmg that women cannot be drafPeace
'
ha
s
anyone
caught the
and
ted into the armed forces.
Thirty-five states have already ratified the amendment. NOW is spirit of the women's liberation
movement better than Sandra Bitter
focusing their campaign for ratification on six of the remaining states Illinois, North Carolina, Florida, Missouri, Oklahoma and Virginia. Of these has in 'I Hate You, Marlon Brando.' "
states, North Carolina and Flor1da are most susceptible to boycotts.
There is a rule in the publishing
The average Good Ole Boy, who makes up most of the state Senates, has
business
that no book can be printed
to be clubbed over the head by his constituents before he'll do anything difunless
the
publisher receives 20 blurferent than his granddaddy did . It is up to Mrs. Smeal and her workers to
in
its
favor
.
bs
make his constituents hurt so they'll make him hurt. North Carolina relies
For
the
public
unfamiliar with
heavily on tobacco so all Mrs. Smeal has to do is pass the word to NOW memhow
book
blurbs
come
about, I think
: bers over the country NOT to buy tobacco products made in North Carolina
can
be
of
service.
When
a book is
I
: until the ERA is ratified. The economic reliance Florida places on the tourist
about
to
be
published,
the
author is
industry also makes that state a push-over for a NOW boycott. Don't be surasked
by
the
publisher's
publicity
prised this fall and winter if placard toting NOW members are picketing in
of friendepartment
to
provide
a
list
front of each of Florida's many attractions.

You scratch my

A word t"o Mrs., Schlafly as her followers: There is nothing in the ERA , - - - - - - - - - - . .
that prevents them from being subjugative to men. Although they may feel
lfiS.I
.· they are inferior mentally and physically, they are constitutionally equal if
!HINI&lt;
· ERA is ratified.
50.
·
Senator·Helms, in addition to being the most repressive Senator ever to
/
··: stalk the hallowed Senatorial halls, is also chalnnan of the Senate
· Agriculture Committee. It was this "committee which cut off money for milk
: for babies, school children and school lunch progriiiJIII but voted to keep the
: $91 miUion tobacco Support Program. Another Senate CDmmittee has voted
.. an N,OOO,OOO appropriation to warn Americans that tobacco is a killer. All
: quite consistent with the way the political minds of the muppets in the u.s.
: · Senate workS.
::
The last time women won a victory over the chauvinistic male was when
.; Eve beat Adam to the Apple. If Mrs. Smeal and her NOW melbbers psend
: : their ~ and money wisely in the next eleven months, perhaps they can
:. chalk up a second victory.

which was 900 pages, and I had dropped it on the floor. I could never gel
lhe pages back together in any kind
of order.
Kransky found this unacceptable ,
and said he had taken his ~ase to the
Author's League, charging, me with
refusing to give a fellow author a
book blurb, wh1ch is considered one
of the most serious crimes a writer
can commit.
A few days later the Author's
League ruled in Kransky's favor,
and I was forbidden to solicit book
blurbs from any member of the
league tor my next book. This was a
cruel blow ileeause without any blurbs, my publisher saw no reason to
advertise my book.
I rifled through the galleys of " The
Fingers That Couldn't Walk
Through the Yellow Pages" and
then sal down to write the blurb :
" Kransky has done It again." I sent
it off special delivery to his
publisher.
Unfortunately, this was not the

Now when I receive the galleys, I
am laced with a dilenuna. I don 't
have time to read Kransky's book,
but obviously under the rules of the
game, I have to provide a blurb .
Otherwise when I write a booR"Kransky won't give me one for my book .
About five boolr• back I had
neglected to giv~ Kransky a blur~ on
his less than bestseller, "The Sexual
Myth of the Seat Belt," and I ran into
him at a party. He was very miffed.
I explained.the reason I didn't give a
blurb was tlu!t his publisher had sent
me the typewritten manuscript,
liS, P11fYE%C¥1.,
fiDAI1 'tW AJ.SO

ASe 7HAT7116

~MifiHTIJE

TllUer

formation, that a series of steps
have been taken to improve auto
care and that computers are now
used to keep track of vehicles in
need of maintenance.
CUIJNARY WATCH: President
Reagan's cutbacks in government
spending have not stopped some of
his Cabinet members from lunching
'" luxury, with full culinary
privileges. Here are some examples:
Transportation Secretary Drew
Lewis is spending about $100,000 a
year to pay five Coast Guardsmen to
work in his dining room. Attorney
General William French Smith has
$80,000 in his budget for two cooks
and an assistant. Connmerct
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige maintains a private dining room at an annual cost of $24,000.
Transportation officials argue
that the secretary's dining room is in
reality a "mess" for about 60 uppe_rechelon employees who pick up their
own tabs.

hardback===
Art=B=uc=h=wa=td

ds, preferably well-known , who will
say something nice about the work
before publication.
The publicity department then
sends out the galleys to people on the
list. "Waldo Kransky bas asked me
to send you the galleys on his Ia test
book, 'The Fingers That Couldn't
Walk Through the Yellow Pages.'
Would you kindly send us your comments.' "

I~ .
l&lt;aJIN~

/

work.
The FBI is supposed to mvestigate
oU1ers who cheat the government.
But the auditors found at least one
agent - in Chicago, of course - who
allegedly had used an FBI credit
card to make personal purchases.
This malfeasance has gone "unnoticed and unchallenged by the
FBI," the auditors charged.
They were also skeptical of the improved gas elficiency claimed by
field offices in New York City,
Mobile, Ala., Knoxille, Tenn., and
New Orleans, La. The New York office, for example, claimed its agents
drove 1.8 million more miles, yet
used 118,000 less gallons of gas in
1979 than the previous year. That
would have been a 61 percent improvement in fuel efficiency.
Footnote: FBI officials told my
associate Tony Capaccio that the
audit doesn't reflect the current
situation. They said that the conclusions were based on outdated in-

every few thousand miles . The
auditors checked 160 FBI cars at
random; 18 had been driven between
15,000 and 30,000 miles without an oil
change; another 66 had gone 9,000
miles without fresh oil.
Likewise, engine tuneups were
widely ignored by the G-men. The
auditors found 77 cars that had not
received their checkups on time. In
the chicago field office, tour vehicles
had averaged 28 months of hard
driving without a tuneup.
The investigation also uncovered
"a high rate of duplicate or
repetitive repairs." Yet in "only a
few insta nces " had the FBI
''received the corrective repairs at
no additional charges."
An examination of the books tur·
ned up a $500,000 discrepancy in expenses for the auto fleet in 1979.
Again, the Chicago office was
singled out for failing to police " improper or questionable credit card
purchases" or gasoline and repair

1/M.. YES,

I 6UES5
I (UH.[).

\

r~.
JIM~

only book I bad received that week. I
bad, in fact, gotten 14 galleys rt
books in the mail. Each required a
different favorable quote, which
wasn't easy since I had no intention
of reading any of them .
I may not have made such a great
effort, except that I have a new book
coming out this fall, and I have been
soliciting blurbs for myself. I knew
the quality of the blurbs I would get
was dependent on the quality of blurbs I wrote.
I spent aU last week working on
book blurbs for friends' books. It
took me a day to come up with
"Dynamite!" for a book on dieting,
but only an hour to come up with
"Eat your heart out, Norman
Mailer" for Maynard Bowditch's
new biography entitled, '·] Never
Knew Marilyn Monroe, Either."
There Is some talk I may be
nominated for a National Book
Blurb Awal;d this year. I hope so,
because It woul~ really kill Kr11nsky .

No one really Ukes "bad" news.
Some dlalllte it more than others,

however.

.
1

-Recently, when we ran some AP
stories concernine hpusing industry
problenlll across the country, certain real estate agents complained
that the articles, in their j'Pinlons,
weren't really newswortliy. They
felt the content cast a negative Ught
on hornebuying.
-A few months ago, a nursing
home in nortbem Ohio burned,
killing a number of its residents. We
ran the story, A local nursing horne
complained that such stories were
misleading. 'nley felt the content
cast a negative light on nursing
homes.
.- A couple of weeks ago, when a
local teacher appealed an attempt at

OTTAWA (NEAl Despite
generally successful efforts to paper
over the differences among the
seven leading Western industrialized nations, a growing
schism in one crucial area separates
the United States from its allies.
At issue is the broad and complex
array of relationships - military,
economic and political - between
East and West in an era when
"neutralism" iB becoming increasingly fasionable throughout
Western Europe.
Although President Reagan successfully pressed for inclusion of one
aspect of the topic, East-West trade ,
on the agenda of the recent
economic summit here, most of the
other heads of state at the meeting
clearly did not share his concern
about the threat posed by the Soviet
Union.
The Economist, an influential
British public affairs magazine,
recently offered an exceptionally
blunt assessment of the current
situation :
"The relationship between
Western Europe and North America
... is in the early stages of what could
be called a terminal illness . The
aliiance has been in trouble plenty of
times before, but this time is the
worst yet.''
After belatedly acknowledging
that the U.S.S .R. has been substantially strengthening its military
establishment, especially its
strategic nuclear capability, for
more than a decade, the United
States is seeking to match that expansion.
"The Europeans," notes The
Economist, " bave tended to mutter
that the Soviet buildup may not
mean what the Americans think or,
if il does, that the Americans will
have to cope with it."
U.S. military expenditures last
year were the equivalent of $644 per
capita or 5.5 percent of the gross
national product, compared with
$437 per capita and 5.2 percent of
GNP for Great Britain.
West Germany, France, Italy.
Canada and Denmark all made substantially smaller commitments.
ranging from $115 to $410 per capita
and 1.8 to4.0 percent of GNP.
"Neutralism" - the concept that
the proper political role for Western
European countries is to riosition
themselves midway between the
United States and the Soviet Union
- already has a sizable following in
the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgiwn
and, to a slightly lesser extent, West
Germany,
Europeans blame the recent spate
of U.S.S.R. military adventurism on
the United States' abandonment rt
detente, an approach to East-West
relations that provided a measure of

We know full well that when we
write certain types of stories, we're
going to catch hell from certain individuals or groups.
If it happened, however, the
people are entiUed to know.
There iB no qualifying condition
that can be imposed on that dictwn

control over the Soviets through a
system of reward and punishment,
incentives and disincentives.
The United States, they argue,
must bear most of the responsibility
lor its decision to replace detente
with shrill rhetoric and a confrnntational posture that presume
the worst of Soviet intentions.
Each of the European participants
at the summit conference here paid

lip service to the problem of a continuing Soviet military threat - but
all stressed their inclination to give
priority to arms control negotiations
over rearmament.
The most notable exception to that
rule was French President Francois
Mitterrand, who personifies the fact
that democratic socialists in virtually all nations embrace an extraordinarily intense dislike of

Berry's World----,

Page- A· l

Today is Sunday;'Aug. 2, the 214lh day of 1981. There are 151 days left in
theyear.
·
Today's highlight in history:
On Aug. 2, 1934, Adolf Hitler became dictator of Germany when
President Paul von Hindenburg died.
On this date :
In 1610, the English navigator Henry Hudson entered the Canadian
body of water now known as Hudson Bay.
"In 1824, one of the world's most famous thoroughfares was opened New York City's Fifth Avenue .
In 1914, Gennany invaded France, Belgium and Luxembourg, a nd
Russia invaded Germany.
And in 1974, former White House counsel John Dean was sentenced trr
one to four years in prison for his admitted role in the Watergate scandal.
Ten years ago : The. U.S. said it would support seating Communist
China m the Umted Nahons but would oppose the expulsion of Taiwan.
One year ago: A powerful explosion ripped through the main railway
station tn Bologna, Italy, killing at least 55 people.
Today's birthdays: writer James Baldwin is 57 years old . Actress Myrna Loy isV6.
Thought for today : A rich man's joke is always funny . - Thomas
Brown, English writer ( 1830-1897).

On the other hand, U.S. attempts
to impose stringent restrictiosn on
trade with Eastern bloc nations,
especially in the area of highteclmology items, received a cool
reception at the summit conference.
Conference participants noted
that the United States was attempting to discourage trade in nonstrategic items at the same time
that it was opening negotiations with
the Soviet Union lor a new long-term
agreement governing the sale of
vast amounts of American feed
grains to the U.S.S.R.
West German Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt, rebuffing U.S. criticism of
his country's plans to purchase substantial quantities of natural gas
from the U.S.S.R., noted acidly that
" they haven't offered me American
natural gas.''

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COATS
DRESSES
BLOUSES

40%

OFF

SHORTS &amp; TOPS

30o/o OFF

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
in the stale of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1981 published m res ponse to call
made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United Sta tes Code, Sectio n 161.

"What if pro football players go on strike this
year, too? - DON'T EVEN THINK THAT!!"

Charter number 9815

.-:==========================._j
300 Second
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis

=
Ill

lit
lit

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---+
lit

.--..
Ill

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~

ID

~

DRESSES/COA
::to
..

... ~

come to State Farm

. TM·IS .WEEK:

for our rates.
They llay for
our aervlef!."

300 Second Ave., Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, OH.

Consolidatmg domestic subsidiari es of the

homeowners

OUR MONEY MARKET RATE IS

. ..

... THRU MON.
15.040.% .·AUG. 3 '
Phone-43~'

,

This certificate allows you, u an lridlvldual, tciltalft- a .
.l!lgh lntir••t .rate ;wfth 'a ·shor:t-term liquidity. 26-week .
matUrity, 110,000 minimum deposits. Federal rewula-·
tlons prohibit compouodlng of interest. ·Automatically •
renewable at m~turlty at ttre prevailing rate.

,.
'

'·
'

'

~ .;.i·

'' ·~

'

...

\

'

·'

,..

•

--+

c

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0
IIll
I

National B(:lnk Region Number 4

Statement of Resources and !.labi li ties
Cash and due from depository institutiu11s .
U.S. Treasury securities
.....
Obligations of States and politi cal
subd ivisions in the United States
All other securities . ..
Federal funds sold and sec untie s purcha sed
under agreements to resell
loons, Total 1excluding unearned i nClllllC r
Less : All owance (or pus.sible loan losst•s.
Loons, Net .... .
Bank premi ses, furniture and f1xtures . and
other assets represe nting bank premi ses .
All other assets .... .
TOTAL ASSETS ...... .

Thousands
810' 000 .00
1,907,000.00
1.109,000.00
. 8,000.00

1.71Kl.OOO 00
..

.... .. . . .. .. . .. 134,000.00
14 000.00
15 090 000.00-- -

2.441,000.00
. . .. . . .. .. . 10.279 ,000.00
. . 15,000.00

TOTAL LIABILITIES lexcludingsubordinatednotcs anddebenturesl D .7 18 ,000 no
Conunon Stock
a. No. shared authorized 5,000 1par value 1
b. No. shares outstanding 5.000 1par value 1
12!&gt;' 000 00
Surplus... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . ... .
125 '1100 00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves . . .... .
. ... 1,122,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ........ . . .
1,372 ,000 00 - - TOTAL IJABILITIES AND F.QUITY CAPITAl. . .
15' 090,000.00
Amounts outstanding as of r eport date
Time certificates of deposol in denomin atiOns
of $100,000 or more . . . . . . . .
. ..... .....
. ........... . . .
. . 411 ,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days r pr calendar month 1 ending with report date :
Total deposits ........... ... . ..... .. ........ .. . .... . .. ............ 13,790,000.00

I, Gary P. Norris, Cashior, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and cor·
rect to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Gary P. Norris
July 28, 1961
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of rcsnurcc' ami
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our kn•·wledgc and
belief is true and correct.

'

'

John Wolfe
':ross - Directors

-.;harles D. Yost

..

•

t

~1 ,525, 000 . 00

. 117,000 .00
. ... 9.408,000.00

Demand deposits of individual s.
prtnshps ., and corps.
Time and savings deposits of indiVIdual s,
prtnshps ., and corps .. . .. .. .
Deposits of United States Government .. .
beposits of States and political
subdivisions in the United Slates
Certified and officers' checks
Total Deposils ........ .
Total demand deposits
Total time and savings depos1ts

Ea

IJJ

• •

REPORT OF CONDITION

"Many

Sprint valley Plno

,,

·r,-,.v;-·-~·~··- ., .. , .., ...1!"'"",.1 r&lt;' ,_.... ~~ ,..,;~ ..t -!.i

Today in history.

Soviet conununism as an integral
part of their fundamental political
philosophy.
And only Mitterrand, among all of
the heads of state gathered here,
was honored by a warm and widely
publicized invitation from Reagan to
visit the United States later this
year.

..._...c

"lUCK PEROliE

/

Umb.

without placing a barrier ( censorship) between the people and the
truth.
Thera is no such thing as
withholding lnfonnaUon for "the
public's own good." Such censorship
may well serve the interests of a few
indlviduala; but, It iB never in the
best Interest of the general public.
&gt;
In those instances when we make
mistakes-errors of fact-we are answerable to those erred a~ and
our general readership. There iB no
greater--If
occaalona lly
unavoidable-sin in this business.
In preaenUng accurate accounts of
news events and issues that some
special interests would prefer to go
Wllloticed, however, we answer
solely to Diogenes.

,....~

700.

1&lt;081Nr

-In mid-July~ we ran a special
report on the. result of the recent
reappraisal in Gallia County.
Generally speaking, the result will
be that most people will be paying
more in property taxes. With
nwnerous tax levies to be placed
before voters during the ned
several months, some questioned
the timing of the article . They felt
the content cast a negative light on
the proposed levies.
In none of the cases lillted above
were there any charges that the

"facts" of the stories were in
anyway erroneous. The complaints
were based solely on the basis that
we published the stories.
I think It can safely be stated that
there are few who actually like
reporting such things. But, as
professional journalists, we have no
more discretion In whether to report
or nol to" report when confronted
with the facts than does a doctor in
deciding to remove a gangrenous

"'f'"

Is alliance terminally ill ?~==R=ob=err=w.=a=lte=rs

15/¥,

.... ..._

a forced transfer by the system's administration, we ran the story.
There were protests. Some members of the school board felt the content cast a negative light on the administration.

...

Aug . 2, 1981

Times-Sentinel Op-Ed

Sunday_Times-sentinel

The teacher's
James J, Kilpatrick
lo~==================~==================~~
SAN DIEGO - A couple of months
ago an invitation came to me from
the National Education Association
The invitation read, in effect, please
come to 'I bear-balling party in San
Diego. You be the bear.
It was an offer that could not be
refused. Over the years I have said a
good many unkind things about
teachers and teaching , especia lly in
regard to test scores and teaching
strikes, and it seemed only fair to
give the teachers an opportunity to
return the fire . Besides, San Diego 1s
a lovely city. Thus I turned up a few
days ago before conference of the
NEA state presidents. They presen·

.... ·- .. ...

,.

�••
Page

A-4

Pomeroy

The Sunday Times- Sentine l

Middleport

Aug . 2, 1981

Gallipolis , Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Aug . 2, l981

0 1"ler. .. -=====:::.:.:.:.:..--------

MIDWAY QUIET - The midway of the Gallia

bustling with activity prior to the opening of the 32nd

County Junior Fairgrounds "·as quit&gt;t Sa turday a f·
temoon. but by this time Monday the area will be

annual fair . Fair activities will run through Saturday.

Gallia . ..

1

Aug . 8. (Times-Sentinel photo by Keith Wilson/.

Continued from page AI I

owned

Appoi11trnent of the advisory com-

the advisory board wo uld work .
On Wednesday, Evans mel wi th
the commissioners and repealed his

pr ope rty . The volunteers hold a 35year lease on the bu lldmg. F'or the
county to utilize the facility for the
operatton of its EMS. it has lea sed-

mittee was made last week. when

contention that increasing tension

the count y ts housed in a buildin ~

be unhappy about evcr)1 htng ...

con stru cted

by

the

Saunders adrled .

organ iza t ion

on

coun t y

back

volunt eer

on one-year con tracts

1

the

1

stru cture from the vol unteers.

If the volunteers had voted to

disband . employee problems were
schedul ed to be himdled by a fourmem ber advisory board. consislmg
of two fulltime and two parttime
squad membe rs. Saunders S&lt;J id he
was Informed friday mght tile two

board would d1s band conhngenl
upon the a ppointme~n of the ad-

parttirners appoin ted by the count\

visory boa rd were den ied, howeve r ;

conunission board had noi been ll~­
f on ned of the acti on.
" Th£'y r the volu n lc~ rs 1 see med to

Foreclosures.
act wns lias more than quadrupled .
In 1980. 36 suits were filed . As of
Wednesday, 37 actions of fo reclosure
had been filed wtlh the Gai!Ja County
Clerk of Courts Office thls year.
Everyone associated with these
(jcl!Ons sees the drastic increase as
an economic s ign of the timt:s .

· People are havmg more and
m llre di ff1 r ult y paying off mortgages,"

Currunun

Pleas

Judge

R1chmd Rodert ek smd Fri day. "and
lending ms tit utions are bei ng more
in for·eclosmg defctulted

a~gresS l\'e

accounts.·
" Thcsl' a r en' t \'Cry pl ea s&lt;::~ n t sui ls

to be mvolved With ... the Judge added.
If ·-

the res ult of a heanng bt:&gt;tween thC' conunon pleas court judge
dS

&lt;tnd th e part1 es lllYO!v ed in the act1on

- a defend a nt is found to bP

Jn

default of a loan. a per iod of "equity
of redrmption" 1s gra nterl by the

During tha t three-tu-ten da}

CIJU r t

pcnod. the defendant is given on opportumty to p&lt;:~ y·nff lhr dt•fault ed
loan . If tht:&gt; note i.s nut redeemed, e~ n
order of sa le is issued .

which the defendant

tn

operati on .

·when you're in open conflict all
vi ve, " Evans said .

was hampering the operation of the
sen!lce.
Reports the volunteers' executi ve

and , a spokesman indicated the
f'Xf'Cuti v e board ha d me rely decided

to not meet fo r two months to see t1

. ·----------------------------------------------! Continued

from page AI i

c ia ! condition we' re in." the she riff

number of replevins 1recovery of
goods a nd chattel I , executions, an d
smal l claims--has for ced the
shenff's department to assign four
employees almost exclusively to the
processing of the paperwork in-

added, " is that the number of
warrants betng issued for bad
checks has tripled in the past six

months ...

'All of the actions have to do with
lymg up people's property," Hartenbach said. " it takes a lot of

ders of sale , the total lime tnv olved
tn proeess ing a foreclosure is ap-

VINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Mter an order of sale IS 1ssued by
the court . the property must be ap-

l'lrt 'fl lr

e

Kahn's
-=ali Reg. or Thick
I ""'" "'""~-''"'" !
Deluxe
Club

S} 49

a ~ a tn st

..

F'tve yeors later. the sheriff sa td.
that total has risen to one or two a

Zipper Dress Boots

VS I ~

J l!)..80J

,\ \l ulllltwd ra \t ·\l ~Jl&lt;l]&gt;t·r
l' ul ili~ 1 wtl
,.,u [I Snnd.r\ . 8:!~
,\\ 1 11\1• . lr\ till • tllll&lt; ' \
( ·,•rnp.t 1 1~ . \-tu II i! I " 'di.J .

l
I
'

I

l"hu •l
;1llt·1 l'ulilr , litlli :
[no -" l 't • 11tl , ., ,~,..

re~oluttonary

ClASH OF

m TIT a.s

.t i i 1011111"P•\ . fili i" [ •,, , t f )ff ro'

~krr r l w t
]);nl•

Tho· A' ''" r.tlo •ol l' ro·~~. lnl, olld
l'n ·:;~
'' ~·"" lot ll"ll il! k l tlw
~ t" ll ' l'·tfi" l

,\lll!··r w;w
,, ~~ "l 'i ;i\11111 ,

\ ;ttl

l'uh ll~ li rr ~

·\d\'1'1 ' \ i~ ll\ ).!

•1 1.11

1\ :·;ulli;tll l. 17117 Wo ·~ l
Sll h " :\11k H1•:11l. S111 1t· :!14. ]l+'l rn rt .
\l wltu:.u L -U!Oi;..
Ht·trn•.-.. t' li];t\11'&lt; ' .

01\1' "'' III II I
11r11· ~ · · " r

sr ~&lt; a.t-; &lt; -~ "'".

$4 -Ill
s ;~:~ Hn

\tto,lo:ll:&gt;

Wllt'rt'

II)' tnat i po.•rrmiiPd u1

hll\111 " I"CI I"r l\'1" Si"I"YIIT

I!&gt;

:m utdth·
Tht· Stllltla l

Tuw ·~ · St · ll l t lll '~ 11."111

STARS

PB

$20

11 n1 l.oo..•

~1 ,\11 . S l ' RSC " RII"TIO~!'i

S2fl.IIO

Orlt•n•ar .

Sll .OO
IJ1 .$ij

·

•'

. ..
011111)' and Sunda)'
tM!Inand Wt·sl Vtr.rlnia

,..

Stx ri,unlh ....

:.•

'One year . ...

..
,•

IIO.r.D

Tiln't' ll \lllllh.'l .....

Rain Oui.JI Idt· Ohlu
and Wt•!!l \' lrglnia

Six nwnth.-. .
Thl'l'l! rnnnths

$:18.00

. . . . . 1211.00
Sll .OO

Visa

Store

CAN

Entertam wrth Georg•An S1atp or g1ve e1 grear gr! r ro tnat
someone very specr al We oNer !l"le oest value to you lor

H•.:.

cnm alchcd do rab•;•ll sly;•ng and Old world desogn We proud ly

69'

o!ler Georg•ar. State ro you at substantral sav •ng s Tak e
artvanrage today a•1a save

Hou n :

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE

$1.29

Tues., Wed. Thur .
&amp; Sa t. till

Master Charge
Welcome

3 LB .•

~"• Cr ~ day use 15 a pure tOy

Mon. &amp; Fn . til 8 p .m

&amp;

SHORTENING

Cornpiemenr ~o u r Georq ra11 S1atr. ':Jmt:Jrers 1"\ tl/"' P"'IeSt'
del1ght1u1rn1x:ur P of ,tern s ro , n : o r ·.v eJ ~ r s·.,. ,e
!r a~ . tro fl el egance ann soph1S IJC a!r on
Georg,an Slate 15 su re :o aa(J charm ~o any occ.JSrtJr. anc
yflu ii oe proud !O serve I rom these t! erns Part ieS -::.n.:ii:.k.S or

$ 59

10 oz.

Run your own business
and make as much profit
as you apply yourself to do
so. Become an independent
route carrier. Applications
are always accepted.

ortho~·d tc:

l1rm to pil lo w '&gt;Oil

m

1 1 · Atr Ba ltle s· prov1Ue e vP.n wetght dr sflrbultnn

helo ehmruat t "' hamm o c k

elfecl

1 1 S tah le tnlet~or l empt!F , IIut~ doe ~ N O I
wa rr an tee r1 10 r

f f!ljllllf'

~

lVf

0 Pr o v 1des the feel ol a waterbed - wtfhoul the

1 1 Ll\}htwerght . rnf laled or detla te d - portrtlle an&lt;1

eas•ly stor ed
[ J C~ n be USt! d wrlh
or platform

bm ~ j.HIOQ waterbed frilm ~

'

.

Tribune 446-2342
Daily Sentinel 992:.2156
Register 675-1333

, rt":&gt; J&gt;o •IISihlt: fu r ar h ',o lll "o.' flil~ 11 \l' llls mm lt•

Stml\;t l Onl)

PLUS
DEPOSIT

accesso ru~s A

JAR

u. tn fl ales rn 3 10 5 mmutes w•th a c antster type
vacuum 01 ha rrd ryer

11 R1( "F

.% \' t 'l lb

~" ~uh:-;t · npll"n ·'

BATTlE BEYOID THE

&gt;y~ a r s

$1 Oil

$}19

siHP sysle-m . ..

1J HPa vy yauye p ol yvrnyl

SUl.~KII'TIII:'\o f{ ,\Tt- ~\

lh r'arrlt•rur \lu lur Ruut.Ont ' IU't'k

1 1 Alljti S IS h o m

oz.

CRISCO

69(

AvaJiable ent1re promotbn

of Our Many Bargains
Now and Savel

PG

Feat.u!te4

P "~ l ; o .: • · ]Mit! .II (, ;,] ltp••ll .', I Jilt• • ~ :rli,l l
[ " ;il \ "l t "d ol ~ ~tT " Ild I l, r.-.-. 1\ \; llit ll j' 11\, illt · l

16

Completer Items .

Not All Sizes In All Groups
All Sales Final
. ' No Lay-Aways
No Charges

SUI • THUR AUG 2 - S

SPRING AIR,.
''SUPPORTAIR''
the

f.rm~IH! ~ l lllf! - !-- r nftnrl

PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
&amp; MT. DEW

Group of Men's Nunn Bush

NEW FROM

week . ' · ,\nd , tl' s going to get wor se,' ·

Montgomery added .
" Another indi cati on of the finan -

.

:·.

$}59

BOTTLES

. court. said Friday that whe n he first
total one or two a month

CAN

SUGAR

~ Rnchor Hocking

$}Q • $}2 • $}5

Summer
Sandals

MARK HAM ILL HARRI SON FORD
BILLY DE E IMLLIAMS

order of sale has been ISSued by th e
entered offi ce, orders of sale wou ld

oz.

JACK FROST PURE CANE

Glassware by

Black or Brown $50.00 Value

AIR!

16

5LB.
BAG

Spring &amp; Summer Shoes

in the

~1\1

whost• office ha s the res pon sibl!tt y of
car rying out the foreclos ure afttr &lt;:~n

LUCKY LEAF

LARGE SELECTION WOMEN'S

Q t1 10

·s LEEP

GALLON
PLASTIC

2% MILK

Weeks1 and5

·sALE

NOW THRU AUG. 13

1. ·, l.,o·(ond Av r' rtur'
l,diii OOk,

BROUGHTON'S

Iced Tea

•

PRE-INVENTORY

•

NOW

found to be 10 defau lt end w1th the
publ tc sale of thetr property.
Shenff James M Montgnrnrry.

'1

16oz. Pkg .

89

~

The French C i1y Press

the property.
The frequency of those sa lcs-

L'i .

Each week we will offer one of these handsome tumblers .
Georgian Slate, a classic sophisticated shape and color in
heHy proportions . Historical in background. elegant in
design. The smoked gray color enhances parties, lunches
and adds a special extra to candlelite dinners. Durable.
strong Georgian Slate is dishwasher safe and keeps its
good looks and charm day after day. Start your set of
Georgian Slate today .. . for home entertainmen1 at its besl.

One Group Men's

Afle r the sale . the money must be

~ ro'v\1 h

Weekly Feature Items

APPLESAUCE

properly must be sold for at least

with a st tml ar

'1''

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

snld at publi c auct ion from the

collected and then dislnbuted to

SUPERIOR

SOUTHERN

tKf!:.JSMOKES

12 oz. Pkg ,

NOW

Le t1 er-Legal &amp; 11x1 7
While You Wait

4

SLAB
BACON

BIG RED

BOLOGNA

steps of the cour1house . By law.

al o n ~

69~

441&gt;-959~11

PHONE

1-:i.-

,---------------+

two--tht rds of tis appraisPd val ue.

FRYER
PARTS

Beverage

WIENERS

. &lt;:OLO\' · .
•

GROUND
BEEF
GOLD KIST MIXED

'
o

Glass

Reg . or Jumbo

pn nsed . the sa le ad vertised for

those parties havmg o clrilm

g~

FRESH LEAN

KAHN'S ALL MEAT

three wee ks. and then the property
t.s

69~

Ice Tea

BY THE PIECE ONLY

time ..a nd we catch a lot of hell over
it. ..

proXImately a month and a-ha lf.

Weeks3and7

,--------------+

volved .

According lo Chief Deputy Robert
Harteobach, who coordmates the or-

Beverage

Weeks4and8

MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30

16 oz. Pkg.

Blevins whoHospital;
was taken
to Veterans
Memonal
Middleport
at
12 :22 a.m. for Gertrude Pellegrino to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport al9 :38 a.m. for John Diehl to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Feature

Juice

JOHn$On$

p()MEROY - Five runs were
made by local emergen'i units
friday according to the Meigs CountyEmergencyMedicaiService.
Pomeroy at 11 :55 p.m. Iransported Aaron Hysell to Veterans
Memorial Hos pital; Middleport at
:i :30 p.m. took Joe Rowley to
Veteran s Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 4:20 p.m. for Arlin

The comunissioners voted 2-1 in
favor of moving the squad out of the
volunteer' s building. The dissenting
vote was cast by Corrunissioner Lonnie Burge r, brother of the volunteers' pres iden t, Joe Burger.
The Ga lha EMS has been in
operation since June 13, 1979, when
the county en ded its association with
Sout heas te rn Ohi o Emergency
Medical Serv1ces 1SEOEMSI .

This Weelcs .,

Weeks2and6

Enwrge ncy run!'

the time, a n organization cannot sur-

from the volunteer 's executi ve body

According to Judge Rodenck . approxima tely 7:i percent of those
cases

between the regula r squad staff and
volunteers was hindering EMS

the commis.o;ion wa s infonned that if

such a body were named , the volunteer or~amzalion would dis band.
Eva ns had repeatedly told the
comm1ss1on he felt interference.
especially in personnel matters,

taught math last year under a temporory certificate, was moved back
into the EMR post because he failed
to go back to college for classes
necessary to teach math.
Commenting on Saunders, the
other teacher involved in the
original transfer Toothaker said
Saunders· had done an outstanding
job at Bidwell-Porter last year and a
transfer Involving hlm to Kyger
Creek would not have helped the
computer program there. ·
" I'm glad this matter is over so
we can concentrate our efforts on
the lmmediate problems facing the
dlstrct - the 3;5 mill bond issue for
new elementary buildings set for an
election Sept. 29 and the recentlyannounced Joss of revenue from the
merger of Ohio Power and Ohio
Electric Companies, owners of the
James M. Gavin plant, the district's
biggest taxpayer," Toothaker said.

By· transferring Oiler to the post,
Dr. Toothaker S&amp;ld he felt he could
solve three problems: the coaching
situation at North Gallla; the improvement ol the science program
at Kyger Creek; and the filling of the
computer teaching vacancy ol Mrs.
Rutz by Oiler since he had worked
with computers at North Gallia.
Toothaker 5aid the board was
made aware of the entire situation
after Wilson had agreed to accept
the teaching-coaching job.
: '1 am convinced we followed all
the procedures according to the law
in this matter and could have won if
we had gone to arbritration, but,
because we had a change in
openings at North Gallia, I felt, and
had promised the board I would lind
the best solution possible".
Toothaker said the opening
developed when Bob Hamilton, an
EMR teacher in previous years, who

w. va.

Johnson's Supermarket Presents

(CmtlnuedfrompageAI)

Oiler appealed the transfer on the
grounds that no teacher will be
'' ... transferred
arbitrarily,
capriciously or without rational
basis.,,
His objections centered around the
fact that as a teacher with 13 years
experience, he has worked hard to
develop the science department at
North Gallia into one of the best In
the county, and that he was being
transferred to a posjtion of junior
high instructor without any junior
high experience.
Toothaker, who had no comment
on the issue prior to the settlement,
gave the following explanation for
his decision Friday.
North Ga llia was in need of a
basketball coach which meant the
administration had to do some shifting since the best qualif1ed candidate, Bruce Wilson, had agreed to
take the coaching job and accept a
teaching post at Bidwell-Porter.
Toothaker said he interviewed
three finalists for the coach1ng
position but the others didn't
measure up to Wilson's credentials.
According to the superintendent,
at the 1irne, he decided to look at
other alternatives besides the EMR
teaching position at North Gallia.
One al1ernative was the junior high
science job at Kyger Creek, which
had been recommended for improvement by the 1981 inspection
team from the North Central Accreditation Assoc1al10n for Secondary Schools and Colleges.
In additwn, Mrs. Aileen Rutz ,
another Kyger Creek teacher, had
resigned to accept a position in the
Gallipolis City Schools.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

PREMIUM QUALITY

ICE CREAM
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SIZE

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,,

�Aug . 2. 1981

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

Aug. 2. 1981

Five people suffer
senous mJunes

. I.

Suits filed in plant crane accident
Grange and the Quarter Century
Club of Columbus and Southern Ohio
GALlJPOlJS - Golden Ray Wat- Electric.
son, 77, of Rt. 1, Crown City, died at
Funeral services will be held at
7: 30p.m. Friday at his residence.
I: 30 p.m. Tuesday in the WaughBorn July 8, 1904, in Guyan Twp., Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with
Gallia County. son of the late the Rev . Mike Berne officiating.
Charles E . and Minnie Moore Wat- Burial will be in Mound Hill
son. he was a retired fanner a nd em- Cemetery. Friends may call at the
ployee of a nickel plant in Hun- funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Monday.
tington, W.Va.
He married the former Gertie
Velvie Smith
Clary on Feb. 20, 1925.
Also surviving are two daughters,
pORTSMOUTH - Funeral serMrs. Charles (Clarabelle ! Thomas vices for Velvie Smith, 86, Portsof Reynoldsburg and Mrs. Frieda mouth, who died July 29 were held at
Erwin of Columbus ; two sons, 2 p.m. Saturday.
Harold of Crown City and Byron of
Born March 14, 1895, she was the
Reynoldsburg; 11 grandchlldren and
daughter
of the late Joseph and
nine great-grandchildren ; a stepRebecca Fife.
mother, Sylvia Barry Watson of
Surviving are two sisters Bessie
Scottown ; a brother, Garrett of
Henry of Gallipolis FerT)"&amp;lld Iris
Eureka Star Route; and a SJSter, Farley of Lesa~e. and a brother,
Mrs. Garnet Sheets of Gallipolis.
Ivan Fife of Eureka.

Golden R. Watson

Three sisters and a brother also

preceded him in death
He was a member of Good Hope
Church and the Mercerv&gt;lle Grange
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in Mer cerville Baptist
Church. Burial will be in Ridge Ia""
Cemetery. Fri ends may call at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . today .

Paul Cro,·pr
GALIJ POLIS - Paul E. Grover,
75. of Rt. 1, Bidwe ll ' Porter community!, died at 5:40 a.m. Saturday
in Holzer Medica l Center.
Born Apnl 15, 1906, Ill Morgan
'l'wp ..

Galha County, son of the late

.J erry and Belle Irwin Grover , he
retired from Colum bus and Sout hern
Oh1o Electnc Co. m 1971 after JO
years servi ce.
He marri ed the fanner Virginia
Schwalde r . who s urvives, on May J,

1931
Also survi ving 1s a daughter , Mrs.

Darrell

1

Clara I Da y of Bidwell ;

Dana A. Covert
POMEROY - Dana A. Covert, 62,
Pomeroy, died Friday in the VA
Hospital at Chillicothe. He was
preceded by his parents, Charles
and Hattie Nelson Covert, a brother.
Or ian.
Surviving are his wife, Pina, a

daughter, Sharon Johnson of
Ra cine, two grandchildren ; three
sisters, Mildred Hubbard, Syracuse:
Ethel Johnson, Columbus, and
Leona Sickles of Robson, W. Va .;
two brothers, Donald of Pomeroy
and Charles of Creston C1ty, Calif.,

PT. PLEASANT - Two Point
Pleasant men have each filed a $2
million suit in Mason County Circuit
Court as the result of a crane accident at the Mountaineer Power
Plant near New Haven on July 31,

In separate claims, Timothy I.
and Rose Marie Smith and Faron
and Cindy Lynn Blessing are
seeking damages for injuries
sustained by Mr. Smith and Mr.

1979.

Veterans Memorial

To end marriages
One suit for divorce and another
for dissolution were filed Thursday
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Paul D. Clay, Rutland, is asking
for a divorce from Katherine S.
Clay, West Columbia.
Randy McDaniel and CarolS. McDaniel, both of Pomeroy, and
Theresa L. Warner, Middleport, and
Jeffrey L. Warner, Pomeroy, asked
for marriage dissolutions.

Marriages licenses
GALIJPOLIS - The following
people filed for marriage licenses
this past week in Gallia County
Probote Court.
Henry T. Swick, 31, Bidwell,
hospital aide , and Linda L. Tremper. 36, Kerr, homemaker.
M•rk E. Haner, 19, Gallipolis,
salesman, and Tarruny L. Shriver ,

19, Bidwell, bookkeeper.
William W. Barry, 20, R10Grande ,
unemployed, and Margie E. Garrett,
18, Patriot. at home.
Mabel. a sister, Florence and four
brothers , Ambrose, Leo, Joseph and
Tony.
Surviving is a sister, Louise Davis

ADMISSIONS - Gertrude
Pellegrino, Middleport ; Joseph
Rowley, Middleport; Dennis Tlllis,
Rutland .
DISCHARGES - Mary Harbrecht, Bonita Ingles.

ber of the B1g Bend CB Radio Club.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home . Burial will follow m Wells
Cemetery. Visitation w1ll be held at
the funeral home after 1 p.m. today .

Hoharl J. Rauh

1 - - - - - - - - - -- ·- -- - - - -

••••••••••••••••
I!OR£ HOURS·

POMEROY - Hobart J . Raub . 73,
Pomeroy, died Friday in Veterans
Al so prcccdmg him in death were Memorial Hospital. He was the son
of the late Nicholas and Mary
two brothers.
He was a member of Grace United Gr e user Raub. He was also
Methodist Church . the Springfield preeeded 1n death by his wife.

three grandsons ; and a sis ter . Mrs.
Mervin 1 Helen 1 E rwin of Bidwell.

Mountalner site - then the 1301
project - at the lime of the accident
loth suits name as defendants
the Union Boller Compm~y, Central Operations, Appalaclllan
Power Company, Ohio Power,
American Electric Power Service
and Harnlachfeeger Co.
The suits each charge that on
July 31, 1979, the men were being
transported In a skid bos attached
to a crane which "negligently failed

•••••••••••••••••
JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
•• THIS WEEK'S •
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SPECIAL
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Office Hours by Appointment Only
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HOURS
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a tilll
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Sat.
8
til12
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THRU
••
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CARRYOUT
••
• 709 First Ave.

of Columbus, several nieces and
nephews. Raub was a veteran of
World War II.
Services will be conducted at 10
a.m. Tuesday from Ewing Memory
Gardens. Rev. Father Paul Welton
will officiate. Calling hours will be
held at the funeral home after I p.m.
Monday.

several meces and nephews. He was
a veteran of World War II and mem-

..
in Its proper per f ormance,
causing the skid box to fall 120 feet
to the ground.
Smith Is seeking $50(!,000 in
special damages, - $~00,000 ln
compensatory damages and $1
million In punitive damages as the
result of pennanent lnjurlea to his
arms, legs, back and bead. His
wife, Rose Marie, is seeking
$100,000 damages.
Blessing and his wife are seeking
like damages.
Both suits demand a trial by jury.

Bleulnc, both worklne at the

1
Hurryl Sale
ends August t4.

Fn.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

DILES
Hearing Aid Center
H4 \\. Lnion St.- Atlwns. 0.
D-69741

St·lt&gt;rtion. St'niC"I'-

12oz.gg~
Pkg.

or Consultation.
Bast•fl On :J2 '\Pars· Experit·nC"I' And/Or Rt·fl'rral To Appropriah·
'Vh·diral Sp.. dalists:

1

CUT'70
Kenmore" 5-cycle washer
large-capacity model.
2 speeds. 4 water
levels. Dispensers for
liquid bleach. fabric
softener. White

Phone t6l41 594-3571

RE!_g. 5420.99

'34Q99

Kenmore 11.Fabric Master dryer
Hear shuts off when
laundry reaches level
of dryness you preset. Wrinkle Guard•.
White, electric.

Reg. 5320.99
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news

Pomeroy

Is Meigs County's
Only
SINGER APPROVED
DEALER.
we
set
the ·..

STOP IN
TODAY

fabrks

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Microwave oven Color TV
3-stage electronic memory. plus temperature-sensing pro~ .

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Crayon
Moccasins .... , ........ uo
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Electronic tuner w1th

pushouuon selector. 19in . diag. meas picture.
h't•q .
&lt;:.-IO') .YS

The :100
Ave.
Man ·
Shoe Cafe L.arayette
Gallipolis. o.·

'390"

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BE CHERISHED
v.·nrc or Call tor BooJ&lt;tets Showing Memorials in Full Color with
~.,zes

and Price srated.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
POMEROY, OH .
Leo L . v.1ugnan, Mgr.
Ph . 992· 2581:1

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MICROWAVE AND DISHWASHER

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-· .

Ph . 11:18·1:1603

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$9950

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Your choice only

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2% MILK

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Valley

Bell

2%
MILK

CUT '40

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Carpet cluner

Dishwasher

Reg.
$179.99

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i'e f;ould Easi~ Sell·This Suite, and Oth-rs Like I~ f~ Much More,
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DOOR CHEST
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Power Spray cleaner is Und.rcounter model
great lor cleaning car- with solid-staie touchpets, rugs . uph9lstery. sensitive controls. UJhitP

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W e Se rve M e ,g .. Go/l io a nd Ma son
Coun tie s O n A Regular Ba s is

Irene Wright, 51 , Ray, $34; Gerald
Davis, 28, Worthington, $25.
Clifford R. Messer, 34, Gallipolis,
$26; Jeanette Smith, 32, Columbus,
$26; John W. Weethee, 55, Gallipolis
Ferry, $26; Charles A. Bradshaw,
27, Bluefield, W.Va., $27 .
Cheryl L. Fisher, 20, Crown City,
$27; Alicia J. Dial, 24, Goshen, $28;
Eugene E. Dodson, 32, Lincoln Park,
Mich., $34; Paul R. Spence, 42,
Jacksonville, Fla., $34; Thomas E.
Daniels, 26, Bidwell, $63.

HOLIDAY POOLS
SWIMMING POOLS

CLOSED SUNDAYS

For Ht•aring Aid

Terminate 19 cases
GALUPOIJS - Nineteen cases
were terminated and three continued Friday in Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
William T. Johnson, 22, Gallipolis,
charged with DWI, fined $300, sentenced to four days in jail, driver's
license suspended for six months
and placed on six months probation.
Charged with disorderly conduct,
Richard L. Henry, Gallipolis, case
dismissed.
James D. Henson, 21, Gallipolis,

nrst
we get

THE FABRIC

e

GALUPOLJS - Five people were
dltion was available Saturday morseriously injured in a tw()oCar
ning.
collision in Kanauga early Saturday,
Pasaengers in Martin's car taken
according to the Gallla-Meigs Post
to HMC Included:
of the state highway patrol.
Sandra Herman, 21, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
Four of the injured were admitted for a concussion, was
hospitalized and one treated and listed in fair condition. Dennis Mitreleased, a Holzer Medical Center chen, 25, Rt. 2, Bidwell, also adspokesman said.
mitted, was reported In fair conThe patrol said a vehicle driven by
dition with facial cuts. Venetia
Lonnie McCoy, 25, Rt. 2, Bidwell, Miller, 20, Gallipolis, was treated
was southbound in a high-speed .and released.
chase with a Gallla County Sheriff's
The patrol said the accident is still
Department unit at 1:55 a.m. on Rt. under investigation, and no charges
have yet been filed .
7•
McCoy then crashed into a vehicle
driven by Ricky L. Martin, 23, Rt. 2, Check accident
Bidwell, which had just pulled out of
POMEROY - Meigs County
Fifth Avenue. Both cars were
sheriff's
deputies investigated a
demolished in the crash and Martin
traffic
accident
at 4:05 p.m., Friday
and his passengers were reportedly
on SR 124, west of the bell line in
hurled from their vehicle.
McCoy and Martin were both Salem Township.
According to the report, Dwaine
taken to HMC by the Gallia EMS,
E.
Allen, 28, Hysell Run, Pomeroy,
where McCoy was reported in fair
was
traveling east on SR 1241n a 1977
condition with fractures and a chest
International tractor-trailer hauling
bruise.
coal. As he was going up a grade the
Martin was admitted to HMC in
SWEEPSTAKES WINNER- Estella Layue (left) of Gallipolis Is ,
engine stalled. When he shifted
presented wltb a Thomas Cook-Automoblle Assoclatioa of America · serious condition with head injuries, gears the brakes would not hold and
and was later transferred to St.
(AAA) travellers check by Bill Esbeaaur of the Gallipolis AAA oft lee.
the truck drifted back into the ditch .
Mary's Hospital in Huntington.
La~ was winDer of the office's sweepstakes cOHipoDBored by Cook aad
Damage was sustained to tbe fifth
No information on Martin's conAAA .
wheel and trailer .

charged with open container, fined r-;~;;;:~;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;1
$20.
Charged with fo11owing too
closely, Sharon L. Turner, 24,
Gallipolis, forfeited $30 bond.
Tom L. Christy, 41, Athens,
charged 'with failure to display valid
registration, forfeited$35 bond.
Charged with expired operator's
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
license, Karen J. McKown, 26,
Gallipolis. case continued to Aug. 28.
lnground
and
above
ground pool kits of any
Clyde R. Porter, 48, Gallipolis,
type.
charged with speeding, case conFilters • Chlorinators •
tinued to Aug. 10.
Motors
and Pumps • SafeCharged with assault, Shirley Gif&gt;.
tv
Ropes
• Pool ladders •
bs, Gallipolis, case continued to Aug.
lights
•
Pool Games •
20.
Po.ol
Base
• Filter Sand •
Forfeiting bond for speeding
Automatic
Pool Sweeps •
were:
Vacuum Hose • Cleaning
Gary D. Liebing, 26, WinstonEquipment • Pool Paint •
Salem, N.C., $27; Gordon L.
Poolside Furn. • Chemical
Graham, 39, Prmceton, W.Va., $29;
Heaters • Solar Covers •
Winter Covers • Skimmers
Experiences given
• Diving Boards • Slides •
liners.
MIDDLEPORT - Dr. R. R.
Buy all your needs from
Pickens, vice president of the Midlocal
warehouse and save.
dleport-Pomeroy Rotary Friday
night described his experiences in
Hours
flying at the weekly dinner session.
10 til s Weekdays
Next Friday evening Rotary mem10 til2 Saturday
bers will be the guests of Dr. Pickens
at Mason Airport, when he will take
868 CAMDEN RD. .
members lor a night.
HUNTINGTON, W. V.
The meeting was held at the Heath
United Methodist P,urch, Mid429-4788
dleport. Ladies of the church served
the dinner.

Mon.-Tbur.&gt;. 9 am til 9:30 pm .

e -

-7

The Sunday Time·s-Sentinel-

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

_.

�'"&lt;,.d'",.,..~ ( r ....,._..... " '

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Poinl Pleasant,

Aug . 2, 1981

w. va.

Police probe two auto wrecks
GALLlPOUS - City police Investigated two accidents which occurred Friday.
Two cars were slightly damaged
in an accident on Pine Street Friday
afternoon.
According to police, Rhonda K.
Stover, 19, Gallipolis was waiting to
turn left from Pine onto Second
Avenue. At the same time, Gloria D.
Fulks, 53, Crown City, was pulling
forward Into the intersection from
her parking space on Pine Street,
and they struck each other.
No citations were Issued.
Audra E . Haffelt, 66, Crown City,

was puWng from her parking space
on Third Avenue Friday morning
when she struck the left rear of a
parked c:ar owned by Russell L.
Taylor, Gallipolis.
Haffelt's car received moderate
damage. There was no report of how
much damage Taylor's car
sustained.
Gallipolis Fire Department
responded to a car fire on Pike
street in Kanauga early Saturday

The

morning.
A 't975 Plymouth owned by Lonnie
McCoy, GallipOlis, sustained no
damage from an engtne fire ~used

.Aug. 2, 1981
.The s
Times -Sentinel-

by an electrical short, the fire deparbnent reported.
The Gallla County Sberlfrs Deparbnent is investigating a theft at a
Boy Scout cabin on Dan Jones RDad.
According 'to a caretaker at the
cabin, a troop flag and an American
flag were taken. 1'tme of the theft Is

Tomatoes, Tomatoes,.-Everywhere!

unlmown.
City police cited two persons ·
Friday: George F . Dray, 21,
Gallipolis, aggravated menacing
and Barton D. Bradshaw, 20,
Gallipolis, improper passing, no
motorcycle endorsement, and attempting to elude an officer.

-

is out in the field picking tomatoes, too .
Early in the morning , they are out picking
tomatoes, putting them in baskets and setting
them aside.
Later an employee drives by on a tractor
and the bushels are placed on a flatbed pulled
by the tractor.
They are then taken to a building at the
front of the Hill's fann . The tomatoes are
placed on a conveyor belt, where employees
sort the tomatoes and place them in baskets.
They are then packaged and shipped by
truck to Pittsburgh , everday, Sunday through
Thursday .
Harvesting tomatoes is definitely not a nine
to fiv e job. Whatever tomatoes are picked in
one day, must be sorted, packaged and shi pped that day to prevent the tomatoes from
spoiling.
This means they are often workmg way mto
the night.
Along with the tomatoes, the Hill 's a lso
grow peppers and corn . But tomatoes is their
big business.
Every year the Hill's harvest an average of
20,000 Ill-pound baskets of tomatoes. which is

By Jeff Grabmeler
Times-sentinel Writer
LETART FALLS - For six weeks every
sununer, Kathryn HiJI sees red.
But it's not anger - it's tomatoes. Thirteen
acres and 70,000 plants worth.
From the beginning of July to the middle of
August is tomato harvest time at the HiJI 's
farm in Letart Falls.
And Kathryn is in charge of the operation.
Her husband Virgil is a towboat captain on
the Ohio river and is gone during harvest
season about every other year.
This was one of the years Vi!' gil could not be
at the farm for harvest.
But Kathryn has no problem supervising
the tomato harvest - she's been harvesting
tomatoes since she was in sixth grade .
In the 21 years she's been married she has
not yet missed a harvest.
" That's a Jot, isn't it?" she asks, as if the

Must Make Room For New
and
- - Fall
- Winter Merchandise
- -·-

-

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS

50%0FF

answer isn't obvious.
clerk Bob Berry, rlgilt. At center Is Senate RepubUcan
secretary Howard Greene. Tbe House version must
now be recoucJled with the Senate version of the
budget. 1AP Laserphotot.

Second honeymoon underway
Meanwhile, the 27,000 inhabitants
SOUTHAMPTON, England !API ficials said the plane would refuel in
- Prince Charles took the controls Portugal and the prince would pilot of the tiny British crown colony of
of a red, white and blue plane Satur- the plane for most of the 1,000-mile Gibraltar were busy setting up a
day to fly Ills bnde. Diana, to . JOurney, including the tricky landing royal welcome and parade with all
the pageantry.
Gibraltar for the second stage of the on Gibraltar.
honeymoon ,
a
two-week
Earliertoday, thecoupleemerged
Mediterranean cruise aboard the smiling and waving from their
royal yacht Britanma.
secl uded llldeawa y at the BroadlanAs the royal couple d!sappeared ds estate, where about 3.000 specunto the a ircraft. the new Princess U!tors waited in a light drizzle to cal- To end ntarriage
of Wales turned back to wave and ch a glimpse of the prince and Ills
give photographers another view of w1fe as they left the well-guarded .., ri ling for dissolution of marriage
her white and turqu01se print silk mansion.
in Ga llia County Common Pleas
The four -car procession to the air- Court are Linda L. Eskew from
dress. Her white coat was slung
casually over her shoulder.
port slowed to almost a halt in
Richard E. Eskew. both of Rt. I,
Charles . an experienced pilot, villages along the eight-mile drive to Gallipolis.
waved from the controls as he taxied give cheering villager a better view
A divorce was granted in court to
the turb().prop aircraft to the end of of the future king and queen in a
Joy A. Waugh and Kenneth M.
the runwa y at Easlleigh airport . Of- black, glass-topped Rolls Royce.
Waugh.

8~1 )te~ond ~-, ..

ON ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE
'5.00 RACK
RESTOCKED I
Come Seell
INFANTS 5-8

SEEING RED - Kathryn Hill loads anotber bucket
of tomatoes onto tbe tractor's flatbed. She says picking
tomatoes Is her "hobby" for six weeks every summer,
from the beginning of July tbrough mid-August. This

year she Is In charge of the harvest at the Hllllann,
because her husband Is captaining a tugboat on the
Ohio River.

Shoes

$}0D!IR

ENTIRE STOCK

She and her three children , Jarrod, 12;
Tina, 16 : and Dwight, 20, do much of the work.
She also hires several employees to help out .
" Jarrod is in charge of driving the tractor ,"
she laughs.
Sure enough, the 12-yea r-old can be seen
dwarfed in the driver's seat of the large fann
tractor, hauling overflowing baskets of
tomatoes to be sorted and packaged.
Kathryn is not a sideline supervisor - she

enoug h to make anyone see red .

Kathryn takes it all in stride . though .
"Harvesting tomatoes is my hobby," she
says, and it's hard to tell whether she's joking
ur not.

"Some people take up golfin g or bowhng .
Me, I pi ck tomatoes ."

$ 00

GIRLS 81/z-4

PAIR

Girls' White Patent Shoes

eritage house
OF SHOES

225 N. Second

Middleport

Come By And See
Us Before You Go
To The Falr••••

,

Pho,., 4146· UO~
C.ollo pol'

Me~'s

Group

B

Harvest time

Final Summer Salel

BY THE POUND - Senate Budget Committee
Chairman Pete Domenlci of New Meldco. left. grabs a
ropy of the House passed budget deUvered to the
Senate side of the Capitol Friday by House reading

o.a

L

SAVE ON

HARP AT WORK .,... Jarrod Hlll, 12,
unhooks the flatbed fuJI of tomatoes. so
they can he taken off to be sorted and
packaged. When Ibis flatbed -Is empty,
there wRI be many more trips out to the

field before Jarrod ran
ti.a day .
Jarrod, as weJI as Kathryn's other
children, Dwight, 20. and Tina, 16, help
tbelr .mother during harvest time.

ALL

DINEnES·
FLEXSTEEL

JARROD'S JOB - Kathryn caJls 12-year-old Jarrod the ofllrialtra ctor driver for the tomato harves t O(k'ratinn. Here
another natbed of ri(k' tomatoes is ready to be pac ka~erl and

IN STOCK

sent by trurk to PitL•burgh. These 100 or so buckel• are just a
miniscule part of the 20.000 Ill-lb. baskets of tomai•H's that tht·
Hill family harvests ear h year.

TABLES
Regular 1149.95

SWEEPER

Regular 11580.00

WITH TOOLS
Regular 1159.95

SORTI N(; AND PACKAGING
- A {·onvt•yur hell t•nntinuously
mnvt•s bushels and bushels uf
tomatoes pa st thc sl' t"\\o·o employees. Their jnh is to sort the

Plenty Of
Free Parking

tom atoes, putting tht•

SLEEP
WHIRLPOOL

White
Only
Refrigerator
Regular
1699.95

SOFA

White
Only
WASHER
and
DRYER
Regular 1879.90

CRAFT

employees hy the end of the
tom~ln harvest. Each day they
must package all of the tomatoes
thai have been pi&lt;-ked - whi&lt;-h
means at times lh t·y work " ·e ll into the night.

Regular '983

1 ONLY

.,

,,

Regular 1000.00

of loma toes will pass hy lht•st·

BRASS AND GLASS

MICROWAVE
. .OVEN

,,

noes

bt• shippt.'fl. Thirll't'll acres worth

1

DINETTE

WHIRLPOOL

SETS ONLY

~ood

in haskl"ts su(·h as tht• nne shown
on the lower ri~ht. and gt• ttin~ rid
of the rotten tnm atnc!i. Lah·r. a
top is put 011 eac·h uf tht• baskt•l...,
and they arc luadt•d nnln truc·ks tn

YOUR

CHOICE
.,

~

Regular '699.95

$499

95

'
•

'~'

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~ ·
.'

I

�Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

Aug. 2, 1981

Engagements. '.

-Hansons renew vows
·· ·35th anniversary

Holleys celebrate anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil c. Holley of
Meadowbrook Manor celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary Sunday, July 19, at the home of their
son, Kenneth Holley and family on
Fairfield-Centenary Road. ·
Grace was asked by Mrs. Virginia
Morris. A potluck dinner was served. Those present for the occasion
were Mr. and Mrs. Virgil C. Holley,
Mrs. Virginia Morris and son Keith
of Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. James
McCown of Riverwoods, Ill.; Mr .
anil Mrs. James Holley, Kellie and
James of Charleston; Mr. and Mrs.

STORE HOURS:

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, O.
Donna Smith

Smith-Watson
POINT PLEASANT - Mr . and
Mrs. Paul E. Smith, of Point
Pleasant, wish to announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Donna
Renee, to Michael Watson, son of
Mrs. John Lane of Galllpolis and Mr.
Charles Watson of Bidwell .
Miss Smith is a 19n graduate of
Point Pleasant High School and
recently graduated fr&lt;m Marshall
University. She is employed by AJT
palachian Power Company. Her
finance is a 1975 graduate of Galla
Academy High School and is currently employed by Beneficial Finance
of Ohio.
The wedding will be an event of
Sept. 5 at Trinity United MethOdist
Church in Point Pleasant. The
custom of open church will be observed.

'

\

GRADE A

'~i&gt;

..

•

I

·k

Whole Fryers....... ~~

'

CRISPY SERVE

$}09-

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••••
LB.

Sandwich Spread

-,

Ord~Hoover
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. BoDby J . Ord of Syracuse announce the
upcoming marriage of their
daughter, Leslie Jaye , to Andrew
Morgan Hoover of Colwnbus, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell W. Hoover,
Jr. of Pomeroy.
The wedding will be Aug. 23 at 2:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Methodist Church
with the. Rev . Robert McGee officiating. Followmg the open wed·
ding, a reception will be held at the
church.
The bride-elect Js a 1978 graduate
of Southwestern High School and a

Those present were Mr. and Mrs.
David Laufer, Barbara and Susan,
Mrs. E. D. Laufer, mother of Mrs.
Hanson, Mrs. David Snowden, Mr.
and Mrs. George Hout, Rev. and
Mrs. Albert MacKenzie, and Mr. and
Mrs. James B. Blank, Christopher
and Andy .

~Old

English family will meet
for Livesays 25th anniversary

LB.

$

Historians report that the Livesay
family originated in Lancashire in
northwest England and the name is
first found in a family setting in
early 13th century England.
"We are expecting cousins from
all parts of the nation," Livesay
said. "We do a lot of serious resear·
ch but we have time for fun and
fellowship, too. There's a wonderful
spirit of family warmth and commit·
ment at our meetings.' '
All Livesays are invited to attend
this meeting.

.Members of a family whose roots
iry this country go back to early
c&lt;&gt;lonial days will meet in Salem,
Va., Aug. 6-a, according to an announcement made by Randall
Llvesay, Rogersville, Tenn .,
ptesident of the organization.
.. The Livesay Historical Society has
scheduled its annual meeting for the
1-J(,liday Inn in Salem, located near
llilanoke, where members of the
)lational family association will be
observing the 2!ith anniversary of its
fqunding . ·

Round Tip Steak.~

$

BUCKET

Mr. and Mrs. james Hanson

: :Mr. and Mrs. James H. Hanson
ci\iebrated their 35th wedding an.niversary by renewing their wedillng vows at St. Peter's Episcopal
f=~urch on July 19, with the Rev.
Albert MacKenzie officiating.
' ·A small reception ws held at their
home. A brunch was served.
•

199
8
Round Steak ........ ~ ~
USDA CHOICE
69
Andrew H oover

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Spires

.
..

HOMEMADE

]aye Ord,

Kenneth Holley, Kenny and Angela ,
Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson of
Charleston; Mr. and Mrs. Curt Shipton of Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Eppler
and son Billy of Clay, N. Y.; Mrs.
Jamie Mulllns and daughter Mary
Jo of Charleston; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Morris of Colwnbus, and
Jasper, James and Steve Johnson of
Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Holley received
many gifts and cards, including a
card from President and Mrs . .
Ronald Reagan.

!MEIGS COMING EVENTS!

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT., AUG. 8, 1981

USDA CHOICE

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpoll$, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

..•

...

229
Cube Steak..........L!·.

SUNDAY
EICHINGER REUNION Sunday
at Meigs County Fair Grounds. Dinner at noon.
BEEGLE REUNION Sunday at
Meigs County Senior Center,
Registration at 11 :30 a.m., basket
dinner at 12:30 p.m. followed by
short business meeting and
program . All relatives and friends
are invited.
HAYES..YOUNG-HOUDAY 57th
annual school reunion Sunday on the

old Holiday School grounds. Basket
dinner at noon. Everyone welcome.
WEBER REUNION Sunday at
Reedsville Locks and Dam. Basket
dinner at noon . All relatives and
friends invited.

DAVIS REUNION I descendants
of Orlando and Kathryn Sheline
Davis) Sunday at Forest Acres
Park, New Lima Road, Riltland .
Basket dinner at noon. Relatives and
friends invited.

Couple given party
for silver anniversary
KYGER - Mr. and Mrs. Rodney given by their son and daughter-inE. Spires, Kyger, celebrated their law, Rodney Jr. and Beverly Spires,
silver wedding anniversary Sunday. at their home on Little Kyger Road.
July 26.
Guests attending were Muriel
Rodney, son of Muriel Spires, Spires, Irma Bales, Joseph and Rita
Kyger, and the late Dennis (Bud)
While, Marie, Denise, Julie and
Spires and the former Patsy Jean Steve Spires, Tim Spires and friend,
Doerfer, daughter of the late Henry Lora Sargent, Rodney Jr., Beverly,
and AJda Doerfer were married July . and Starr Spires, Melissa and Swn26, 1956, by the Rev. Sherley Woods mer Darst, ail of Cheshire Route;
at his parsonage in Chehire.
Henry and Mary Doerfer, Millfield,
Mr. and Mrs. Spires are the paren- Oh.; Diana and Daryl Wears Jr ..
ts of two sons, Rodney Jr., Little
Bidwell Route and Lavina Meaige,
Kyger Road, and Timothy, at home, Gallipolis Route.
and a daughter, Mrs . Daryl I Diana
Sending a gift was George and
Lynn ) Wears, Kyger. They have two Rhonda .lr'Jarkin and sons, Jeremy
grandchildren, Starr Renee Spires
and Josh'iia, Cheshire.
and Daryl Wears, Jr.
Many pictures were taken as well
A family anniversary party was
as home movies.

DR. GEORGE W . DAVIS
OPTOMETRIST----

THE 20/20 NUMBERS GAME
The tenn 20/20 refers to the
size letters which the average
eye can read twenty feet
away . In most standard vision
testing, you read the familiar
Snellen eye chadistance of 20
feet. The upper number of the
fraction expresses this
distance. The lower number

identifies the size letter you
were able to read at 20 feet the
lin e which a normal t!ye can
read at 70 feet.

Often, this test is g1ven by
you look into a

that their child has perfect VIsion because he scores a 20/20
on this vision test. All 11
measures is how well cr pour.

ly the child sees at that
distance. Ana that's ali. Pr&lt;&gt;blerns with near vision. eye
coordination and focusin g
&lt;.~bility

havin~

Homecoming today

Family plans reunion

LONG BOTTOM - The annual
Long Bottom Community
homecoming will be held today at
Long Bottom United Methodist
Church. A basket dinner will be
featured at noon, followed by the
program at I p.m.

RUTLAND - The Nicholson
reunion will be held today at Forest
Acres Park,. Rutland. Dinner will
begin at 12:30 p.m. All relatives and
friends are invited to attend.

mac hine which creatrs the

same condJtions optically. Th e
results rou~hly sunilar tu
those of the Snellen chart.
However, parents should not
be lulled into the impression

a re cunon~ the many

problems NOT dJscovered m
th1s test. Only a professional
eye examination will protect
I he pnceless m1racle of sight.

*******

111 1hP llll(&gt;r e ~ 1 o l

be!ler

.,1~ 1 0n

I rom the oll~ee ol

George W. Davis, O.D.

458 Second Ave ., Gallipolis
Phone 446-2236

senior at Ohio University. Presently

she is employed as a s wunmin~ instructor and lifeguard at London
Pool in Syracuse.
The groom-elect is a 1976 graduate
uf Me1gs High School and a 1980
graduate of Ohio University with a
B.S. in communication. He was a
former employee of WMPO. Middleport, and is currently employed
at WBNS.FM Radio in Columbus.
Stephanie Ash of Syracuse, sister
of the bride will serve as matron of
honor. Bridesmaids will be Lee Codner of Syracuse, sister of the bride;
and Dawn Barcroft of Hurricane,
W.Va , cousin of the bride.
Jay Hill of Pomeroy will perform
the duties of best man . Ushers will
be Dale Hensley of Cincinnati and
John Ross of Columbus.
Laura Hoover of Pomeroy, sister
of the groom, will be pianist and
vocalist. Lori Huddleston of
Gallipolis will register guests.
Hostesses will be Rita Slavin of
Syracuse, Tene Barcroft of
Hurricane, W. Va. and Shirley
Hlnennan of New Plymouth, Ohio;
all aunts of the bride.
Following the wedding the couple
will reside at 441 E. Town St. , Apt.
205, Columbus.

Montanez returns home
POMEROY -Agustin Montanez,
Jr., has returned home to Aricibo,
Puerto Rico after spending two
weeks with his grandparent, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Abies of Pomeroy.
Agustin is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Agustin Montanez. Mrs. Montanz is
the former Carolyn Allman of.
Pomeroy.
Agustin left Puerto Rico June II,
with the Boy Scouts and traveled to
Canada, Niagara Falls, Michigan,
Maine, New York and New Jersy
before coming to Pomeroy.
While here he visited Ohio University where he intends to enter this
faU.

SOUTHERN

Peaches............. ~
DARI FRESH .

.

2% Milk...........~~~~ 1

69

IS

..'

•

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

Chunk Tuna .....6~5.~L.

~

129
· Ice Cream ........~.G!~ ••

COUPON

HYLAND CHUNK

DOG FOOD
25 LB.

BAG

$349

l

$' 1 '4t~'
.
One Pe.r 'i:ust.omer.

, 5LB.
'

BAG

L i m'it

•'

•

Every tim e you order a delirious
Wendy's boneless breast of chicken
sandwich. we'll give you a &lt;:hirk en
card. Collect two cards. and on your
next visit, you gel a Wendy's singl e
hamburger or K oz . chili.lree ' Or. you
can count on a free chicken saudwi&lt;-h.
So start counting your chi&lt;'kens.lt ail
adds up to some great eating at Wendy's .'

...

.

SUGAR

SHORTENING

~.

..•

AND COUNT ON
A HAMBURGER, CHILI, OR
CHICKEN SANDWICH, FREE!

COUPllN

FLA VORITE. , ..

CRISCO
3 LB.
CAN

$

BORDEN'S ELSIE

'

C&gt;VVNEH
··
IN THE ST. C&gt;RE

Remember when you could go shopping and come
away with a feeling that you ·re important?' ... The
·store owner let you know that no one cored about you
mor~ than he did. That lime hasn 't been forgotten In
Gallipolis . we ·re pr.eporinQ for the future. but we
believe things like integrity shouldn t change. You con
still find the owner there ·e very day to tell you about
value and quality . We don 't just offer products ... w~
offer our reputation and that's something that do_esn t
end with the sole ... It begins with It , and you con t put
o price tog on that.
Historic, charming Gallipolis . . its closer than you
think

·,

Cottage Cheese.~4.~.

Mnacle Whip....!~~~.

THE

'

i ) :.
I

3.LB• .

CAN'

1
/

" ; I
.\ ~ l
I

Powell's

AIN'T NO REASON
10 GO ANYPLACE ELSE..

I;

· &lt;.." ht•t •s t• ;1nd hun ;lh l t·xlril .

•.. l

' I •· I ·.\• ,,.,

h.:. •

�•
Page

B·4

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Suchoza, Chesko wed

.

Oonald-N; Json.Edd)' relationship.
They, iUJe remainder of the
rangers •nd a bevy of flnlshtng
scl¥&gt;ol bejlutlea spend most of the ·
play puriuing each other. The4:::
quest for llannony Is complicated by
a cra&gt;;ed i Indian, Yellow Feather,
who haS sworn to " have his way&gt;:.
Sunshine.''
The play is set in Colorado, where with LiiU~ Mary.
LMS, a inuslcal comedy developed'
a . troop of forest rangers tromp
around the Rocky Mountains in pur· as a spoof of operettas and
vaudeville, is a fine piece &lt;(
suit of truth, justice and women.
Little Mary (Sherry Woodruff) is lighthearted melodrama - hoaky as·
proprietor of the Colorado Inn-the hell, but lots of fun.
LMS will be presented by OVST
mortgage on the joint is about to be
foreclosed, of course. She falls in Auglllll 5-9 and 12·15 as dinner
love with Capt. "Big Jim" theater al the OU Inn. Reservation
Warington (Matt Griffin of information may be obtained by
Gallipolis )-theirs Is a Jeanette Mac- calling 5!14-5010.

By Larry Ewing
Tlmes-Seatlnel Stall
ATHENS - Dudley Do-rig~I is
~Uive and well and living in the body
of Matthew Griffin during this month's presentation by the Ohio Valley
Swnmer Theater of "Little Mary

/

Wt

It-

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., AUG., 8, 1981

lilt Jttllil to liotl ~ 10 II !IMtllllilltf. -

nei- Page-B-5

All this wee
you'll enjoy
Pennyfare's

Little Mary Sut1tshine

.

The Sunday

llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Review

•••
\

Aug . 2, 1981 -

w. va .

ttM to-.-. till rttptlltlblt IWiyJIIIIIP~I"Iwl(cttfllllnlfl.

Super Bonus Buy Coupons
-----

--~

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE. . ,

:;nn

THE PHYSICAL BODY OF CHRIST

BRIDGEVILLE - Karen Bernadette Suchoza and Henry Bernard
Chesko II exchanged wedding vows
in a double ring ceremony at Our
Lady of Grace Catholic Church in
Bridgeville.
Parents of the bride are Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard P. Suchoza of Me·
Murray . The bride is also the grandda ughter of Mrs. Philip Meier.
Pomeroy , and niece of Mrs. Phyllis
Knapp and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Meier, all of Pomeroy. The groom is
the son of Helen Chesko of Clifton,
N.J ., and the late Henry B. Chesko .
Father Harry Nichols officiated
the ceremony. Nuptial arrangements were performed by Mariann
Dav idson on the organ. There were
readings by Carolyn Podbesek , the

Whitehead, Hensch
exchange June vows
ATHENS - M1ss Juli Deanne
Whitehead, daughter of Mr and
Mrs . Ernest Whitehead. Reedsville,
a nd Waller Michael Hensch, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Hensch of
Mayfie ld VIllage, exchanged wed·
ding vows in the Helen Ma uck
Ga lbreath Chapel on the Ohi o
University Campus. Sunday, J une
21, at 2.30 p.m.
Ronal d Laughe ry. mimsler of the
Belpre Church of Christ, perfonn ed
the formal wedding ceremony
b.-fore th e chapel altar centered by a
sil \'cr cr oss and two li ghted silver
ca ndles. A vase on eac h s ide of the
ca ndles held an arrangement of r ose

&lt;:tnJ pink roses. orch1d daisies and
baby's breath. Flanking the al ta r
we re

two

seven-brcmc hed

ean-

delabras holdm g pink tapers with
crystal globes _ Flowers on the &lt;.:&lt;:t tl·
delabra s and pews matched the
al~r nuwt· rs.
Nuptia l music was presented by
Dr. E ug ene Wi ckstrom , ur Ka ntsl,
and Jeff Schneider. vocalist. Organ
se lecti ons precedin g the cerem vny

111cludcd Bach's " Jesu. J oy of Man ·s
Desiring," Love Them e fro m ·· The
Gudfather. .. " Na dia 's Theme."
·Your Sun~ ." Vocal st·lection.s were
" Never My Love ... · I Need You ...
· F.n~ rgrPr n .··

and ··Sunnse, Sun-

se t. ·· Purcell' s ·Trwnpet Vnlun tar~ ··
wa s played fur the

Hensch of Cuyahoga Falls. Their
gowns of pink Q1ana feat ured A-line
skirts and spaghetti straps on one
shoulder. They wore matchmg chJf·
fun capes. her other attendants, Bet·
ti e Bow, Athens, and Cindy Ritchie,
Tuppers Plains , wore suede rose
gowns and Suzy Goebe l and Teresa
Smith , Reedsville, were attired in
orchid gowns identically styled to
those of th e honor attendants. Each
a ttenda nt carr ied a casca d e
arrangement of pmk and rose
miniature ca rnation s. orchid daisies
and ba by"s breath .
bride. was the flower

g~rl.

She wore

shoulder long dress with rufncs and
a ribbon bow with attac hed sil k
fl owers in her hair . Ring bearer was
Frankie Pa lm tsa no.

n e ph~w

the

fu ll

Bi shop sleeves and the pleated A·
line sk1rl was a fl ounce of cr ysl.ill
pleats and ban.ls of chant1l ly.
Her ve1l of fingertip ill uswn wa s
l'dged w1th Venisc lace attach ed t u Ci

latti ce bndal cap of seed pearls . She
ca rri ed a casca de arra ngernent uf
wh1L e roses. p ink miniature ca r nations, urchid daisies cwd baby 's

breath .
The brille 's honor attend ants were
her Sister, Jean Frydman of
Highland Pa rk , Illinois, and Jane

ADDISON - Mr. and Mrs. Philip

~ruom, who wa s attired in a gray

RichanJ

tuxedo

man . Groomsmen and ushers were

Aiex Comella and David Grinnell of
Mayfield Villa ge, Mark McLeod,
Mentor, Don Fi nkle, Tucson, Ariz .,
and Jim Nemecek of Ma yfi eld
Heights. The men of the wedding
party were all attired in light gray
tu..xedos with dark gray trim .
dL'r gown of po!yestt-r with lace trim

Cathy Agnoli, niece of the groom and
Sue Huang and Stacey Merrigan,
friends of the bride.
Serving as best man was David
Antoniuk of Clifton, N.J .
Ushers were Doug Ebbott, Kevin
Guta, Paul Pigman, Tom Sanders
and j$arl Suchoza, brother of the
bride.
A reception was held at the Green
Tree Holiday Inn . Cindy Bouchard
handled the guest book .
A 1975 graduate of Peters Townsh ip High School, the bride
graduated from Bucknell University, with a degree in mechanical
engineering. She is employed by
Fisher Controls in Corapolis.
The groom is also a 1979 graduate
of Bucknell University holding a
degree in meclianical engineering.
He is employed by Dravo Corp.
Following a wedding trip to
D1sneyworld. the couple will reside
mlmperial.

.Juscph R. S1sson, Pomeroy, and Mr .

and Mrs. Vern C. Well . Shade .

(co mplete) physical body of Christ used as the i nstrument of lrfe

E l don 1Gay 1 Gaul, Chester ; Sam

Radford , Rock Springs; Mrs., Neva

Paterna l

great-grandmother

&lt;i?l.aful ,'1{;'/1 'f!ltuu-1.

of

TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Bailey of Tuppers Plains ,
·announce the engagement of Mrs.
Bailey's daughter, Lena Sampson to
Bruce Riffle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Riffle of Chester.
•
Miss Sampson is a senior at
,
Eastern High School. Mr. Riffle is a
:: ~ 1m graduate of Eastern High
'v School and is employed at Bissel
;: l- Siding Co. Wedding plaru; are in·
""! .• .c001plete.

Pkg

At
Gallipolis

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

SUPER BONUS BUY COUPON

. nn fare

AT
I'ENNYFARE ONLY. IMT
ONE. VALID Tl!RU SAT., AUG. I, 1911.

WITH THIS COUPON &amp; '10.00 PURCHASE

Campbell's
PORK &amp;BEANS
1-lb.

Can

~
ONE $10.00 PURCHASE SATISAES PURCHASE REQUIREMENT ON ALL COUPONS REQUIRING PURCHASE

'f!/tu'.)/

Bulavllle Road • P.O Box 308
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631
Sundav Mornong
B1ble Study t : )0

Wl!ilne,doily
Evemng
1: 0(1

5unday EVPn1ng
Wor""P ';:00

Ro1d10
""Men.i getrom
the B1bte··
Doiity · WJEH

ll : SS.AM

"The Church with the Message' '

1s

Eulalah Bennett of Vinton.

Buying Generic Products Is A Great Way To Save Money On Your Grocery Bill. Generics Have No Fancy
Packages, Labels or National Advertising, But They Do Give You Substantial Savings Without Sacrificing
Quality And Goodness.
HERE ARE JUST AFEW OF OUR MANY GENERIC ITEMS

Wedding guests were regis tere d
by J.inda Welsh of Mount Vernon . An
&lt;::~rrangement of f ern, baby's breath

and pink rosebuds were used on the

6
5¢
$1
28
Peaches . . .
Coffee Creamer
Potatoes
79¢
89¢
33¢
Froz. Orange Juice Cone.
Kosher Di lis. . .
Pork &amp;Beans
$1
08
$1
69
$1
88
Disinf. Cleaner
Stuffed Ol1ves
Salad 011. . . .
69¢
$1
49
79¢
Spray Starch .
lnst. Orange Dnnk
Tuna lno~~-~~~i~:rter
Fab.p~ft. Sheets$1.29 Bbaking Soda .. 35¢ S~ladB~~s~i~g $1.19
Cle~~ser ... 33e L~~ird Soap ...89¢ SP~9hetti ... 79e
99¢
$-f 29
59¢
Liould Cle;anser
Cone. Fab. Softener I
Barbecue Sauce
2· 9¢ ·
59¢
$1
39
C.ut-Green Beans - · Marshmallows
Tea Bags. ... .
·lrai~~ Sran $1 ~29 Hd{QOcoa Mix 994 P~P~~lTowels 49¢
Juices~$ R~~rBI~d~~.E~~ .59¢ Wt~~~·~'St~es 2.89
2g.0z. CAN

registry ta ble.

A reception followed the ceremony
at the Oh1 o University Inn . The bu f·

16·oz. CAN SLICED

22·oz. JAR NON·DAIRY

I

fet table wa.s centered with a fi ve·
b r anched ~:ii l ver ca nd e labrum
decorated with orchid daisies, pink
Cilrnatiuns. and sp rin~cra t i. The
nine-tiered wedding cake was

designed and served by Nancy
Roush of Reedsvil le . The cakes were
lopped with fresh nowers In the
bnde's culurs . Top tiers were joined
by filigree stairways w1th a bridge in
the center eunla ining r eplicas of the

12-oz. CAN

32-oz. JAR

28·0Z. BOT.

15·0Z. JAR

15-oz. CAN

• • •

15-oz. CAN

48·0Z. BODLE

I

I

party . Two fountams of or·

I

27·oz. JAR

I

I

,

6.5·oz. CAN

I

Who wants
a fair-weather
friend!

wtth a major in accow1tin K. He is an

,
'

a-oz.

(For F r ee B1bl e Correspondence j:ourse write ....

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

ter tiers and the side tiers with pink
tapers were placed on white Roman
colwnns. From these cakes the
filig1·ee stairways reached the table.
A cake placed Ill the center of the
table was lopped by the bridal keepsake of an mverted brandy snifter
filled with an arrangement of hearts
and nowers.
The bride is a graduate of Eastern
High School and a June graduate of
Ohio Uni versity with a bachelor 's
degree in Special Educalion. Hensc h
is a 19BO graduate of Ohio University

Sampson, Riffk
will exchange vows

upon

stemmed white roses.

wcddi n ~

qt

CREAM CHEESE

the earth doing the will of His Father . He,had ONE PHYSICAL BODY!
God has been precise in describing His body so that the world cou ld
r ecognize Jesus.
Christ is eternal and existed before· His coming to the world. He
was t he Word , ''In the beginn ing was the Word, and the Word Was with
God, and the word was God'' &lt;Jno. 1: 1) . His birth was miraculo~s in
thar He was d ivinely begottethe Holy Ghost" (Mtt . 1 :20). conce1ved
and born of a virgin ( lsa. 7· 14, Mtt . 1:21·23). Christ being dillinely
begott en is spoken of as ''the only oegotfen of the Father'' or '' the only
begofton Son" (Jno. 1: 14, 1813: 16, 1 Jno.4:9) .
Chr is t's v irgin birth, without the concurrence of man, was the
mea ns by which to c loth e Him with a fleshly body so as to conduct His
m 1ssion on ear th ( J no. 1: l4l . He was to come through the lineage or
seed of David " according fa the fl esh" (Acts 2:30, 31; Rm . 1:J, 9 :5, II
Cor . 5: 16; Col. 1 : 22 . 1 Tm . :J : l6) Christ, in the flesh , " increased in
wisdom and statur e, and in lavour w i th God and man" ( Lk. 2:52) .
On 1wo occasions, God proclaimed Christ as His Son. The first one
at Hi s baptism (Mft . 3: Ill. and th e second ·one on me mount of
transfigur ation (Mtt . 17 :5) God, also, spoke a third time glorifying the
name of Christ Uno 20 :28,39) Th e proclamations from God confirm·
ed that it was th e duty at all to hear Cht;"iSt as God's authority from
heaven .
Chnst ca me to the world to do the will of God and to finish His
wor k uno . 4:34; 8 : 38; Heb . 10 .9) In His ministry , the seeking and the
sav1 ng of tn e losr &lt;Lk 19: 10), He : (I) - Fulf illed all righteousness
(M ft .,3. 15 1: (2) -- fulfilled the le~w and the prophets (Mtt . 5: 17) : (3 )took 1he old law ( tirst covenant) out of the way so as to establish the
new law (second covenant), th e gospe l {Heb . 8· tJ ; 10 :9). sea ling the
new tes tam ent w it h Hi s bl ood (Mtt . 26: 28}; (4) - became the author of
eternal sa lv ation ( Heb . 5:9) ; 151 - became a merciful and fa ithful high
pries t ( Heb . 'J. : 17, 18! : (6) off ered His body a 5-acrifice for sins &lt;H eb.
10 10, 12 : 1 Pet . 1: 18 ·20; I Jno . 1 :7J : (7) - - condemned sin in the flesh
! Rm 8 3), des troy ing the dev il 's power over death (Heb. 2 14) ; and
t8) reconciled th e Jew and Gentil e in the one body, slaying the enmi
Ty lhereby (Eph . 2: 16; Gal J ·28l
Anyone who deni es th e coming ot Christ in the flesh (-HIS ONE
PHY SI CAL BODY) is an anf1 chri st" (I Jno . 4:3) an..:-" " dece iver" (II
Jno n
continu ed .
·

chid water were used under the cen-

Lena Sampson,
Bruce Riffle

Philadelphia

" Body" is from the Greek "soma " and means fhe whole
&lt;co mplete) body as tne instrument ot lif e. It is used to denote t~e whole

Owens ~~-~-~-

Mr. and Mrs. Arlen 1Bonnie
Smith i Owens of Toledo are an·
nouncmg the birth of a son, Nicholas
Arlen. The baby weighed eight pounds, 11 ounces and was 21 inches long .
Maternal grand~rents are Henry
and Juanita Smith of Jackson.
Maternal great-grandm other is Ger·
trude Adkins of Oak Hill.
Paternal grandparents are Arlen
and Mary Owens of Rio Grande .

Seyfneli. Pomeroy : Mr . and Mrs

r

AT
' PEMNYFARE ONLY. 1MT
ONE. VAlli TltWU SAT., AUG. I, 1911.

Rick I Gaul. Addison, an-

Grandparents are Mr. and Mr'
Richard E. Gaul , Chester : Mr . and
Mrs. George R. Sisson. Rock Springs
and Mr. and Mrs. Denver E. Well ,
Ht..•ml uck Grove.
Gn:at Gra ndpan: nts &lt;He Mrs.

Th e bride' s m nther wore a Iaven ~

fl oral design . .She ca rri ed three l ong-

I

nuuncc the birth of a daught er.
Audra Krislynn on May 23 at
O'Bleness Memonal Hospital,
Athens. The infant weighed six puu nds and II ounces and was 19 inches in
length.

Edwa rd Hensch II. Cuyahoga
Fa lls . served hi s brother as best

Il p~yedcra~~lffoo~tha~dct

e nhctnC'l'd

Gaul------------

uf th e

F:scurtcd tuthe alta r by her fa ther
&lt;ind give n in marriage by her par ents. the bndc wa s atti red Ill a wh1tc
orga uza gown wit h an Empire
tmdi LT tmnmed w1th Veni se and
chan tilly bee. The neckline feature d
a high F: nglish net yoke with Sch1ffu
l' lll brtHdPry . Deep r uffs uf Schi fn1

By William B. Kughn

Couples announce area births

a pink Qiana and chiffon off-the-

and a corsage of white rosebuds. The
groom· ~ mother was in a beige gown

ern hro1drry

Kathryn Suchoza. sister of the
bride, was the maid of honor.
Bridesmaids were Kimberly and
Krista Suchoza , sisters of the bride,

Miss Sari:l h F'rydmctn, niece of the

··octe

procL'SS IUnal and Bcet huven ·s
tu.Juy" for th e rece.sswnal.

bride's aunt.

••

WITH THIS COUPON &amp; '10.00. PURCHASE

Mrs. Henry Chesko II
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hensch

---.

SUPER BONUS BU Y COUPON

accountant with RCA in Circleville
where the couple is now res1ding
Out-of-county guests included
fn ends and relatives from Lufkin,
Tex ., Tucson, Ariz., Highland Park .
Ill. , Wheelmg , W. Va ., Pompano.
Fla ., Rockville, Md., Mayfield ,
Dayton , Mount Vernon , Chillicothe,
Wilmington, Pa inesville. Bay
Village, Circ lev ill e , Beverly,
Massillon, Lanca ster. Athen s .
Parkersburg and Belpre.
The groom's ~rents hosted the
rehearsal dinner at the Athens Coun·
try Club on Saturday evening.
Guests were members ol the wedding party and relatives of the bride
and groom.

From all you read and hear, you mar~ have
gotten the idea that nobody in town i~
lending money ... or, if so, lending i l1
"reasonably ." We really want to se. arate
ourselves from that idea . We don't I nd
money to things. We lend money to eople.
Our policy is a simple one: If you' ria
serious person with a·need to borro money
for any good or' logical -reason, we w nt to
talk to you. That's what we're here r.
. "
'

.

Expect more from Ohio Valley Ban~ ... not
'
just in good times. But all times.
I •

Bane in hospital
Charles M. Bane, Eu~ki,jstar

26-oz. BOT.
..

64·oz. BOTILE

I

'

16.0z. CAN _

16-oz. PKG.

•' ·

,,
•'

100·ct. PKG.

I

'

Route, is a patient in Room 326 in St.
Ann's Hospital, 1555 Bryden Rd.,
Colurnbllll, Oh. 43205.

18·oz. BOT.

'

\

�Pom eroy - M iddlepor t- Gallipol is, Ohi7r- Poi nt Pleasa nt, w. v a .

Mercerville

&lt;A ug. 2, 198 1
T he Sunday Ti mes·Sentinel

Browns win
'Fame' tilt

to be

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Secondstring Cleve land quarterback Pa ul
McDonald rifled two second·half
touchdown passes to Ricky Feacher
Saturday , leadi ng the Browns to a
24-10 victory over the Atlanta
Falcons in the opening e xlubition
game of the Na tional Football
League season.
McDonald, a left· hander from
Southern California, passed 29 a nd
37 yards to Feacher to lead
Cleveland to its first victory in 12
years in the annual Hall of Fame
gane.

Houck d.

Campbe!I
member,

POME ROY - F inal pla ns have
been completed for the open church
wedding of Susan Marie Wnght ,
daughter of Mr. a nd Mrs. George L.
Wright, to Keith Thomas Ba iley, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Ba iley.
The wedding will be an event of
Saturday, Aug. 8 at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Churc h on 112 East
Main St. , Pomeroy. Music wlll begin
at 6 p.m. with organist Lori Wood
a nd vocalist Linda Eason.
Maid of honor will be Velvet
Swisher, Middle port , a nd the
bridesma ids includ e J ane Sisson,
Melody Hoschar, Cathy Blaettna r,
all of Pomeroy: Paige Cleek.
Racine, and junior bridesma id ,
Sherrie Southw orth, Pomeroy . Bren·
da Wright, Pomeroy, will be the
flower girL
Best ma n wi ll be Ketth Kra utte r.
Pomeroy, a nd the ushers include
Jeff Ridgway, Dav id Ridgway, Scott
Hysell , all of Pomeroy, a nd Mark
Kummerer, Col w nbus.
Teresa Ca rr, Nelsonville, will
register guests, and Todd Hysell ,
Pomeroy, will be the acolyte.
Following the ceremony a recepbon will be held 1n the church social
room . Hostesses will be Angie Ma r·
cinko and Bre nda Hysell , both of
Pomeroy

Open Daily 10·9
Sundays 1-6

:tl'o.'
~- :

r:

' .

_,&amp;.

-~

save
over

§l

'2

"&gt;:

'A'f's:aa
?
~
$!5 :;·~ ·

Misses'
Fall Tops

( 102)
Our Reg 2.24

1.78 (~g~Bog

93!h

Fiberboard Storage Chests Choice Of Fun Size Candles
Mrlk cnccorote M"&lt; v Way' or 3 Muiketeers'
?.~:;,~ers~ the greatest name 1n peanut ~·C?"O yl

All-p urpose chests •n wooagro,n o r floral
o rrnt Underbeel cnest 1n wooagro'n Save

REMEMBER
SUNDAY
16TH ANNUA L Cochra n Re uniOn
wtll be he ld Aug . 2 at Fortiftca tton
HilL
HOM ECOMI NG al Crown Crty
United Met hod is Ch urc h Aug. 2 at 10
a .m. Morni ng speakwg will be
Pa~tor Richa rd Graham ; afte rn oon,
Rev. Warre n Woodya rd . Spec ia l
singmg. Basket lunch at noon.
ENGE ir BRUCKE R RE UN ION wil l
be at the VFW picnic a rea Sunday .
All rcatives a nd friends are invited
to attend .
THE WAUGH REUN ION will be this
Sunday at Kmg's Cha pe l Church.
Everyone wclcomr.
OTHO SMITH Famil y Reunion Aug
2 at Vinton Pa rk .
HOMECOMING a t Bell Cha pel Cornmunity Church. Singmg by Tay lor

11xll"

(105)

1.47~~r217

6 Terry Washcloths

Absorbent cottJolpoly ester Wh1te and cotor s

Glassburn accepted
into Association
Jane Ann Glassburn, Bidwell, ha~

been accepted as a junior member of
the American Hereford Association,
a~rding to an announcement by H.
H. Olekenson, Executive Vice
President of the AHA.
The • Ame·rican Hereford
Aasociation, headquartered in Kansas City, MissOuri, is the world's
largest beef breed registry

(106)

Suntono , S/ M

$

78

MIIHono

M/ T

Our Reg 121
Nylon 'Panti·all'
Panty of1d hose 1n Q('.f:
Cottof"' pane l ~ J ve

(107)

3Doys0nly

11 9'f
•

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Steam And c&gt;ry Iron
L~ vents ceA1erea cora

contour r-a"''Oie Save

\.01
1o~noouse Clat~e~
o&gt; ot ova
\6 Ol b

cr ac ',(.er~

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( 111 )

. \:,.,.., .
Lrm rt 2 _ _ _ _. .
: ~ : l•'lU"Il

L IM ITi

1.68~?;~ee

Re v.

Denver McCa rley will preach. Rev .
Everett De la ney invites the publi c.
" THE MESSE NGERS" fro m
Wellston wil l be featured at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church Aug. 2
at 7:30p.m. The public is Invited to
attend .
MONDAY
AMERI CAN lEG ION Lafa yette
Po•t 27 will hold their regula r
business meeting Aug . 3 at i : 30 p.m.
at the post horne on Bob McRorntck
Road . All mem bers are urged to a t·
tend.
KYGER CREE K Htgh School Ba nd
will rehearse Monday at 9 a .m . at
the lugh school band room . Band
bOOsters meeting will follow a t approximately 11 a. m. to discuss band
camp and meet new band director,
Clarence Barber .

org•!'IZ&amp;tlon,

'(our
Choice

~tv Of fOOIIO

POMEROY - Andrew and La ura
Hoover. children of Mr . and Mrs .
Wendell Hoover a re hosting a r eceptiun in honor of Lheir parents' 25th
wedding anni versary .
The couple was marned Aug. S,
1956, at Glenwood Methodist Church
in Colwnbus .
The recepti on will be held Aug. 9
a t Pomeroy Uni ted Methodi st Chu r·
ch. Friend!; a re invited to stop by
between the hours of 2 and l p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoover request no
gifts.

·

Oblo buUI!lng Sa,turday. They are (left to right), Morris " Red" Badgro,
George Blanda, Wlllls Davis and Jim Ringo. 1AP Laserphoto I.

Cleveland's victory came before a
record Fawcett Stadiwn crowd of
23,921 and millions more on nati onal
television. It was only the fourth
triwnph for the Ame rican Football
Conference in the ll·year rivalry
with the National Football Con·
ference in the game.
The NFC has won six ga mes, with
one contest ending in a tie.
The Browns a nd F a lcons, defending di vision al champions and an·

'Blanda greatest clutch player'--Davis

Strr pes. s011Cl
colors vane-

Area couple
will observe
annzversary

cmd Journeym en quartets.

FooTBALL HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES- The 1981 class of InducteePIDto the Pro Football Hall of Fame pose lo lront of tbe Canton.

-t,· .

$1

( 112)

SAVE

66~

{11 J)
Our Req
99c

Crest Tooth paste

"Cookout" Napkins

~obr , c so ftener W · f ~ b i~.; ·

6.4 oz Re g u lar or

~~~. tor w111 tenes5 Save

Mint .

Pkq of 140, wh rt e or
desr q n 2 ply .

64·oz. · Final Touch·

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
CANTON, Ohio (AP ) - AI Davis
called George Blanda the greatest
clutch player in the history of the
game Saturday when the Oakland
Raiders' ageless wonder was in·
dueled into the Pro Football Hall of
Fame.
"Blanda inspired a whole nation.
He had a God-given killer instinct to
make it happen when e verything
was on the line," said the Raiders'
manager general partner who
presented Blanda for induction.
Also joining Blanda in the 1981 en·
shrinee class were two members of
the great Green Bay Packer teams
of the 1960s, defense end Willie Davis
and center Jim Ringo, and oldtirner
Morris ".Red" Badgro, at 78, the
oldest metb~i' &lt;ifthti'sport's shrine.
, f:ollowlhl!:, .~ ~iment, the
Cleveland Browns -~nd the Atlanta
Falcons met in adjoining Fawcett
Stadium in the first exhibition game
ofthis season .
Davis ticked off the remarkable
heorics of Blanda in 1970, when his '
throwing or kicking helped Oakland

Regu lar or D•c t

-...
!,~
j;

2 L•ter bo ttl e

I

Pepsi or 7-Up

again."
Blanda ranks as professional foot·
ball's all·tirne scorer with 2,002 poin·
ts and completed more than 4,000
passes in his 26-year career, the
longest ever. He holds 21 championship game records and played
with the Chicago Bears and the
Houston Oilers of the old American
FootbaU League befort Davis
picked him off the scrap heap as a
39-year old .
"Without Davis, the Raiders and
their wiMing spirit, I wouldn't be
here today . There is one word how I
feel - pride," he said.
Grambling College Coach Eddie

Robinson, in presenting Willie Davis Philadephia Eagles despite a strmg
for enshrinement, said the Packers' of injuries and illnesses mcluding
great was the complete defensive mononucleosis.
end.
" I feel I was c reated," he told the
" For 10 years, Willie was the stan·
" I wasn' t a very good
audience.
dard of excellence by which defen·
athlete.
Without
my teachers of the
sive ends were judged," Robins on
past,
I
would
not
be
here today."
said of the first Grambling product
Badgro,
who
had
to wail an un·
to reach the shrine that now num·
precendented
4S
yea
rs to be en·
bers llO players.
shrined,
said,
"
this
is
absolutely
the
"Today , I'm very gratified a nd
in
my
life.
There
is
no
greatest
thrill
very proud at !Ius momentous OC·
cassion," said Davis, who played in way I can express my feelings ."
six National Football League title
Badgro, a three-sport star at the
games and was all pro five of six
seasons in the 1960s, when the late University of Southe rn California,
Vince Lombardi was buiding the played professional basebaU with
the St. Louis Browns and football
Green Bay dynasty .
with the New York Yankees, the
His lugh school line coach , Willard
New York Giants and the Brooklyn
Davis Rinehart, remembers con·
verting Ringo from a fullback to a Dodgers . He ca ught the fi rst touch·
center. " He had two left feet. He down in the league c hampionship
couldn't run, but he liked to block. game in 1933.
He had an innate desire. Jimmy
Mel Hein , a charter member of the
always wanted to be the best," said
Hall
of Fame and a Giants' team·
Ringo's presenter .
mate
of Badgrow , presented his
Ringo, now an assistant coa ch
longtime
friend . " He was a ver y
with the New England Patriots,
6tJ.minute
football plyaer ,"
strong
played in 182 straight regular season
He
in
said
of
the
tw&lt;&gt;-wa
y end.
~ames with the Packers and the

Ratzfy new pact
CIDCAGO (API - The executive
committee of the Ma jor Leag ue
P la ye r s
Asso ci a tion vot e d
unanimous ly Saturday to ratify the
a greement that ended baseball's 5lf.
day strike .
Player representatives from a ll 26
major league clubs a ttended the
three-hour meeting, wluch was con·
dueled by Marvin Miller, executive
director of the union.
" The vote by the executive boa rd

•

PHILADELPHIA I AP J· Pete
Rose refuses to cry over spilt milk.
Rose, the Philadelphia Phillies'
first baseman, insists he won't use
the recently settled baseball strike
as an excuse if he fails to catch Ty
Cobb as the top hit producer in the
history of baseball.
The 40-year.old Rose showed up
Saturday too late for the team
workout in preparation for the post
strike opener Aug. 10 against the St.
Louts Cardinals.
The first question he fielded was
whether the 5CM!ay strike that will
cost the Phillies' 55 games precludes
his erasing Cobb's r~rd of 4,191
hits.
"I can't worry about the nwnder
of games we missed," said Rose,
who needs just one hit to pass Stan
Musial's National League record.
3,630. He lied Musial with a first in-

ning single off Houston's Nolan
Ryan the day before the strike.
"I 'm not going to use that (the
mi~ games l as an excuse ... If I
get close enough to Cobb, Johnson &amp;
JohnsOn (Band· Aid company) will
keep me together long enough to
make it," Rose said.
Rose said the strike over compensation for free agents was
necessary, pointing out he was a
product of free agency, The Phillies
signed him in December, 1978, after
Rose played out his option at Cirr
cinnati.
Rose visited the Philli es '
clubhouse accompanied by his girl
friend . All the players had left. He
stopped to talk with some media
people, then plcked up a towel and
left.
"What's the matter, did you run

out oftowels'" Rose was asked.
" Nab , I need il to help wash my
car," he retorted.
Rose disclosed he worked out daily
in Cincinnati during the strike, He
hit off pitching machines, and got
some live throwing from former onetime Cincinnati teammate Freddy
Norman.
Rose said he's ready now for the
Aug. 10 game in which he is expected
to snap Musial's mark.
"This week will be boring, " said
Rose of the preparation for the new
season. " It will probably be like a
vacation."
Rose said he hoped to be a
designated hitter in the Aug. 9 All·
Star game at Cleveland, assuming
the DH will be used in an American
League park. He has been in 15 All·
Star games, setting a record of

playing fiv e positions.
Rose was asked what he thought of
the proposed split season idea ,
which would divide the schedule into
two halves, the winners meeting in a
playoff to determine who reaches
the NL playoffs . Ma jor league
owners will decide Tuesday in
Chicago whether to use the idea
because of the shortened season.
Rose said it was okay if a team
winning both halves gets a bye into
the lea gue championship series. He
doesn't like the idea that s uc h a
team be forced lo play the second·
half runnerup,
" That's strange. What rewa rd is
there in that for us if we win both
halves and have to play a mini·
series? 11
The Phillies would be the fi rst ha lf
winners under this formul a

&lt;,

•

•

IN mE SWING OF THINGS - Bostoa Red Sox star hiller Jim Rice
takes a swlag at batting practice Saturday afternoon when the Sox met
for the first time alter the baseballs trike was called. The Sox plaoned a
three-hour workout at Feoway Park In lieston. (AP Laserphoto).

will begin Aug. 10

'

PT, PLEASANT - Hidden Valley

~·--

Sun. thru Tuea. Only

sOle Price

96•

lave On 12·oz.• Gumout'

Helps cleon,corburetor !fuel system
'IJI Of

was unanimous, and we recommended adoption of the agreement, ''
said Miller_
The player representatives now
will return to their individual clubs
for a vote by r a nk·and·file members
of the association .
The season is scheduled to reswne
ne:rt Sunday, Aug. 9, with the All
Star Game in Cleveland, foll owed on
Monday by reswnption of the

Tennis tournament

w,

I

'

rally for six straight victories in-the
closing moments .
Blanda, who became a hero of the
geriatric set by playing well past his
48th birthday, receive&lt;! a standing
ovation from the crowd surrounding
the steps of the Hall of Fame.
Blanda moved to the microphone
after his introduciton by Davis and
paused dramatically.
· " I'm not nervous," he told the
crowd. " I'm waiting for the clock to
run down to 2 seconds so I can score

~~:~~~;:.it~.:~!t~~~~~~~~~~~~

in the fint half, with Brian Sipe and
Steve Bartkowski quarterbacking
the squads,
However, neither Sipe nor Ba r·
tkowski had the success of the lessheralded McDonald, who did not
throw a single pass during regula r·
season play last year.
Sipe, the NFL Player of the Year
last fall , Jut 13 of 2S passes for 140
yards. Bartkowski, who threw a
league-leading 31 touchdown passes
for Atlanta last season, hit 10 of 21
attempts for 139 yards. However,
neither threw a touchdown pass
Saturday.
Fullback Cleo Miller a nd reserve
runn ing bac k Charl es Whi te
provided the first·half offense for the
Browns . Miller ran 10 times for 98
yards . White scored the only touch·
down of the first half , a 1-y ard run in
the second quarter that gave
Cleveland a 1().3 halftime lead.
Don Cockroft opened Cleveland 's
scoring with a 2()-yard field goal late
in the first quarter for a 3.{) lead.
Atlanta's other scoring came on a 3ya rd run by Mickey Fitzgerald in the
second qua rter and a J3.yard field
goa l by rookie kicker Mick Luckhur·
st.

Pete Rose won't use strike as excuse
if he fails to beatTy Cobb's record

of

86\A

-Pag~-C-1

•

age group will be played on Satur·
day and Sunday the end of August at

Country Club is currently accepting
HVCC.
entries for the First Annual Open
Interested participants are ur~ed
Tennis Tournament scheduled to
to contact Frank Capehart a t 675begin on Aug. 10.
9739, Eustace Wilson at 675-2875,
The tournament will be open to
Dan or Angie King at67:&gt;6278 .
players living within a 30 mile radius
of the Hidden Valle)! Country Club, .
Frush meet Monday
Singles, doubles, and mixed doubles
will be played for me~t and women,
GAWPOIJS - All freshmen par-.
provided a m inimwn Of eight entries ticipating in Gallia Academy Hlgh,
in each category .
School football are to meet at 7 p.m;
Each category will be broken into Monday in the locker room a~
;
three age brackets: !!0 and under, 31 Memorial Field.
Freshman
he
lmets
will
through 49, and 50 and over.
distributed
at
6
p.m.
TueSday,
Entry fee will be $5 per person per
event with all matches tO be played .pracUce scheduled for 7 p.m .
HVCC courts, between~ p,m. and .same day.
' Anyone interested in being a ••••""·' ·~., ... ,
9p.m.
·.Contestants may enter once only man or varsity GAHS
in each category of play and may . maDilger ·may' attend a meeting
6:110 ·.p.m. Monday in the
'play doim In age groups.
The finals in each category and room.

at

'·

•

•·

�·-- - - ------ -------·

.

'
Page-C -2

The Sunday Times-sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis,

Ohi~Point

Pleasant. W, Va.

Aug. 2, 1981

Aug . 2, 1981

Pre-season conditioning underway for area grid squads
weeks are just for conditioning with
full scale combat scheduled around
the middle of the month.
Summer certainly went fast, particularly for those prospective high
school athletes who will be sweating
It out from now until November, no
matter what size league or school
they participate in.
In the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference (SVAC ), new coaching
staffs have been assembled at two
schools, Eastern and Southern.
At Eastern, Archie Rose, Long
Bottom, an Eastern graduate and
longtime assistant coach has been
elevated to the head coaching
positJon, succeeding Buddy Moore ,
who resigned after guiding the
Eagles to a co-championship in his
first year at the school.
Rose, a graduate of Ohio University, served under former Eagle
coaches Moore, Joe Mitchem, Spike
Berkheimer and Roger Kirkhart.
According to Rose, Eastern is expecting between 35 and 40 players to
participate in fuotball this fa ll.
The Eagles have been conducting
a voluntary conditioning program
and will begin mandatory practice
Aug.3.
Eagle assistant coaches this fall
are George Gagai, fonner assistant
at Trimble a nd Ironton St. Joe, and
Mike Dou glas, Reedsv ille. a

DEAN OF SVAC GRID
COACHES - John Blake will be
entering his lith year as head
footblal coach this fall at North
Gallla High School. He thus
becomes the dean of football
coaches in the league .
By DALE ROTHGI!::JI,Jr.
OVP News Edltor
GALLIPOUS - It's hard to
believe, but, football season lS
almost upon us again.
Practice officially began for most
Ohio schools Saturday. The first two

graduate of Ohio University who ser- pionship enroute to one of the best
ved in the junior high system last
football records ever posted by a
year.
Highlander grid team.
Dennis Eichinger, the school's
Well, after taking command of the
head basketball coach, will be coor- · Bobcats following nine years as a
dinating the . junior high program
varsity assistant under coaches
this fall. He will be assisted by Scott
Dick Adams and Jim Sprague, sufWolfe.
fered through a 4-6 overall record
At Southern, Attorney Bill Porter and 1-4 slate In theSVAC.
and Darrell Dugan have taken over
Hannan Trace's Larry Cremeens
the footba ll program. The district's
will be entering his sixth year as
head coach.
board of education elimina"ted the
head football coaching position · Mter winning it all in 1979, the
Wildcats dropped to second place
because of a financial crisis.
last year behind Eastern and SouthShanng the duties last season
were Mick Winebrenner and
western.
Howard Caldwell.
In a big showdown at Mercerville
last Oct. 31, Southwestern came off
Returning for their second year as
head coaches are Jack James at the field with a 22-{) victory.
Southwestern and Deryl Well at
Overall, Southwestern had an 11-2
Kyger Creek.
record and 4-1 mark in the league.
James, a graduate of Miami Trace
Returning for his lith straight
High School and Ohio State Univer- year as head football coach at North
sity, enjoyed a highly successful Gallia High School is Midd)eport
freshman year. James' squad tied resident John Blake.
with Eastern for the league chamBlake, a graduate of Middleport

High School and Marshall University, became head coach at North
Gallia after serving as an assistant
at Southern.
Going into thia season, his Pirates
have compiled an overall ~2
record, but have not captured an
SVAC championship.
Commenting on the league, the
veteran mentor said,"We have
made a lot of progress in the last 10
years. With the recent adoption of a
neiv constitution, the addition of an
all sports banquet and Most
Valuable Player trophies provided
through the news media, I feel this
has helped make a better league."
Blake's Pirates began physical
conditioning Saturday will be start
two a day drills around Aug. 15.

"I'm ready to go,", Blake enthusiastically said dUring an interview last week.
Another interesting and close race
should make things exciting this fall
for SVAC fans.

Stoc kto n

and Haner hit safely . Harrison , Marchi and Rager hit safely for the
losers.
In l'riday·s first semifinal game,
B1dwell defeated the Red Sox, 11-7 .
Glassburn was cr edited w1th the
win . Bosti c was charged with the
loss. Glassburn had a tnpl e and
double and Calliha n a homer for the
Pira tes. Williams had a double for
the losers.
In the nightca p. Andy Howard
tossed a ne&gt;-hittcr as the Rio Grandt'
team downed the Yankees, 14-0.
Ward was charged with the loss.
For the winners, Rees had a single
a nd double. Ca ll had a home rur..

ga .fiS
I

SOUTH ORANGE, N.J . tAP I Dick Stockton advanced to the
semifinals of the $75.000 Mutual
Benefit Life Open with a 6-4 . 6-! vic-

senn·r.·nals

tory over !&amp;-year-old Jimmy Arias
at Manuel
the Orange
Lawn upset
TennistOJ}-seeded
Club.
Orantes
Gene Mayer 6-3. 6-3 in their quarterfinal match

The only new face on the basket-ball scene this winter will be that of
Bruce Wilson, Gallipolis, at North
Gallia High School. Wilson, a former
athlete at Gallia Academy High
School is a graduate of Morehead
State Unlvenity . He fonnerly
taught and served as reserve and
junior high school at Meigs High
School.
Wilson, who replaces Paul Pettit,
will be following in the footsteps of
his father, Cliff Wilson, who served
as the Pirates' cage boss In the early

1960s.
Returning basketball coaches are
Carl Wolfe at Southern and Keith
Carter at Kyger Creek who are the
dean of coaches on the hardwood.
Both will enter their ninth campaigns.
.
Beginning their second year Will
be Dennis Eichinger at Eastern;
Uoyd Myers. in his second stint at
Southwestern; and Mike Jenkins at
Hannan Trace.

The runners-up in the Friday competition tied in points with 3,992
each, but tbe Canadians took second
with 312 perfect bullseyes to Great
Britain's 306.
The victory was the sixth straight
Pershing Team win for a U.S. rifle
team.

LATE SHOPPERS
SENIOR LEAGUE CHAMPIONS- The Kool Kats
captured the 1981 Girls Senior League softball championship following Friday's 17-12 victory over the
Sluggers io a post-seasoo playoff game on Memorial
l'ield. The Kool Kats finished the season with a ~2

mark. The Sluggers were 11-3. First row, left to right,
are Kim Janey, Julie Allen, Kristen Carty, Crissy
Riehle, Lettie Stewart, Jill Miller and Kim Stutes.
Back row - Coach Jay Saxton, Paula Russell, Debbie
Kuhn, Amy Smith, Jo Anne Stewart, Jo Ellen Oliver,
Stephanie Carter and Coach Ken Caudill.

Kool Kats outlast Sluggers, 17-12, cop title
GALUPOLIS - The Kool Ka ts
defeated the Sluggers. 17-12, on
M emona I F Je
" ld F n"d ay evening to
capture the 1981 championship or the

girls' Senior Softball League.
The teams had linished regular
season play last week with identical
11-2 records. The one-ga me post-

Gallipolis Recreation Department'S'
leaguechampion.
Crissy Richie was credited with
the victory. Teresa Combs was

We stay open two to
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2-Jp HI ~lf"H' t l S Will!
;.~lp

.r '1~&gt;'11

!(,.,

psyched more,
with
autographs
and all
." people taking
Does be identify with Rocky'
Certainly, says his manager, Bob
Rooney.
" There has always been a Rocky
thing in boxing," Rooney sa1d. " The
movies just made people aware of
it."

p 111 -Camp Creseendo
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"The biggest thing that we can
learn from the baseball players is
obvious . that unity is the key ,"
said Diekim, the Browns player
representative to the NFLPA.
" The baseball players stuck
together through some rough times
and I think it paid off.
" There was some grumbling by
some players, but basically they
were unified. They desere a lot of
credit," he said.
The major issue in the baseball
strike was free agenet com pensation. Perhaps the biggest iss ue
in football is that the players want a
larger share of the NFL team's
gross receipts.
l'ootball owners are expected to
sign a new contract with television
networks soon. Currently, each NFL
team is paid more than $!i million
bythe networks and that figure is ex· if.
tl
dt ·

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KENT, Ohio fAPJ - Cleveland
Browns veteran offensive tackle
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!rom the recently settled baseball
players' strike.
The basic agreement between the
NFL Players Association fNFLPA )
and the league owners runs out next
July a nd the possibility of a football
players' strike exists.

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WAITING IN 'DIE WINGS - Cleveland BroWDB qurterbadt Paul
McDonald lofts a pass during a practice session recently at the team's
training camp at Kent State University near Akron. Unforlwllllely, for
McDonald, most of the passing In his short term wttb the Browao have
come only in practice as McDonald plays backup for premier NFL qurterback Brian Sipe. (AP Laserpboto) .

BASEBALL

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- C-3

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CLEVELAND (AP) - In some
select IJoxing circles, the name Nino
Gonzalez is familiar. Outside of that
elite group, the name rings no bells.
His is a story told and retold every
year in the boxing world; it is the
same story immortalized by actor
Sylvester Stallone in Rockies I and
II. For Gonzalez, the ending will
arrive Aug. 9.
That is when the 22-year-old street
fighter-turned-truant officer from
New Jersey will get his hour in the
spoUight, opposite widely known
Panamanian boxer Roberto Duran.
·'I am going to beat the man,"
Gonzalez says.
l'ew outside the Gonzalez camp
believe that. The fight is billed as the
comeback for Duran, the sneering
30-year-old who took the WBC
welterweight title from popular
Sugar Ray Leonard in June of 1980,
only to lose it back in a controversial
rematch last November.
Duran lost the fight in the eighth
round, retiring because of stomach
cramps. Promoter Don King,
engineer of his comeback, needed to
find a respectable fighter who posed
only a moderate threat to Duran.
Gonzalez, with 24 victories in 25
professional fights, fit the bill.
" Now, if he (Duran) loses in the
ring, he loses like a man," King said.
And if Duran wins, he'll be within a
fight or two of a third bout with
Leonard.
But Gonzalez has no desire to be
anyone's stepping stone, and he
knows a victory over Duran would
give him national recognition and a
realistic shot at a championship
"one or two fights down the line."
He served notice that he is taking
this one quite seriously by breaking
the jaw of sparring partner Gil
Rosario last week.
"Tiiat happens all the time, " said
Gonzalez, who sparred with Duran
prior to the first Leonard fight "I
got my nose broken three times
sparring."
Unlike Rocky, who punched meat
m a storeroom while preparing £or
his first big £ight, Gonzalez' training
facilities are first·rate. He ahd
Duran are hoth practicing in what
King calls " the world's largest
tra ining camp" -a ring in the concourse of the 52-story Terminal
Tower in downtown Cleveland.
Here, Gonzalez is treated as
. Duran's equal.
"I love it. It makes me feel good,"
said Gonzalez, feeding on the at:tention of hundreds who watch his
workouts. " It makes you get

CAMP PERRY , Ohio (AP) -The
United States scored 3,996 points, including 331 of a possible 400 petfect
bullseyes, to defeat Canada and
Great Britain in the eighth firing of
the Pershing Trophy International
Team srnallhore rifle match.

Rio Grande~ Bidwell
gain tourney finals
GAI.LIPOLIS - Rw Grande and
Bidwell scored semifinal triumphs
in the Gallipolis Little League
Baseba ll Tournament on Memoria l
Field Friday even ing
The two teams met at 6 p m
&amp;.tunlay in the champi onship rontest.
In Saturday's consolatJOn game.
the Red Sox defea ted the Yankees,
21-7, for consolati on honors 1n the 12team, single elimination tourna ment
sponsored by the GallJpo li s
Recreation Department.
Haner was credited with the Red
Sox victory. Bradbury was charged
with the loss.
i"'r the winners. Bosllc, Williams

Gonzalez
predicts
•
VIctory

Americans cop
Pershing Trophy

Red Sox finish third

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�Aug . 2, 1981

Offense ·t op priority in
Cincinnati Beilgals' camp
By JOE KAY

middle of the field but wasting 'opportunity after opportwJity as it
neared the end zone.
" It was strange," said tight end
Dan Ross. " We would move the ball
the length of the field, and when we
got to the ~yard line, we couldn;t
mQve.

AP Sporto Writer

WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP )
Resuscitating their offense, par·
ticularly the passing attack, is the
Cincinnati Bengals' top priority in
training camp.
As an indication of thei r
seriousness, the Bengals have installed a new drill at the end of practices this year. Quarterbacks throw
long passes to receivers who make
over-thHhoulder catches.
Offensive line coach Jim McNally
has been working on pass blocking
techniques with a line that allowed
1/ quarterback sacks last season.
Coach Forrest Gregg . wants that
number trinuned to 20 to 25 this
season, an average of fewer than
two per game.
"Offensively , we didn't play well
enough (last season )," Gregg said at
the start of camp. ··we didn 't put
enough points on the board. This is
our No. I priority."
The offense was a mystery last
year, moving the ball well in the
STRETCHING OUT - CinCinnati Bengals
end Dan Ross loosens up during a recent tra ining ca mp

says
the end of last season. l AP Laserphoto) .

Thompson heads Canadian Open
OAKV ILLE. Ontario 1 AP I - The
ques tion was add ressed to Le ouard

Thompson.
'Did you do anythmg differe ntly
today than you did yesterday '" he
was asked.

" Yes ... Thompson replied w1th a
big grin. ··] hit it 10 le" time' than I
did yesterday ..
That translated mtu a 9-u nde r-par
62 . wh1ch gave t he hus ky vt:·teran a
fou r-stroke lea d Friday in the
second ro u nd of ~e $425.000

Canadian Open GoU Champwnshi p
He scored st•ven birdi es and an

champiOnshi p.
·I can 't imagme som eon e
shooti ng fi2 on th1:-~ gol f C"Ourse under
these conditions," Nick la us sa id.

" That' s phenomenaL..
Peter OosterhUJs of England and
Lon Hinkle. eac h w1lh a secondround 69. shared second at the tour·
name nt 's ha lfway point at 138

Mark Hayes. w1th a 67 in the
wa rm , sunny weat her. wa s a nothe r

shot bac k atl39.
Nickl aus. who bJrdJed the last hole
fur a 70. was ti ed at 140 wi th Larry
~l·lson

a nd Bob Eastwood. ;.JpJson

eagle. didn' t make a bogey. didn't

had a 69 and Eastwood matcl1ed pa r·

han.~

;1

nnl~

a " 5" on h1s card. mi ssed

one green and made bin.lJ e then•. It

Turn Ki te. 72, and Bruce Lietzke.

went to a 77 and was at l46. Masters
champ Tom Watson shot 73-145. Lee
Trev ino. a three-time winner of this
event, was i 0-144 , and U.S. Open
champ Da vid Graham was 72-142.
Thom pson , who hasn' t won since

U!k10g his second Tour title tn 1977,
had the ball more than 20 feet from
the cup only twice, and birdied both
of those holes .
They came m a string of fi ve consecuti ve ··3s" he scored on the back

nm e. It started with a par on the 12th
and was full owed by an eagle on the
131h. where he hit a 3-wood second
shut tu with in 18 inches of the flag.
llr holed a sand wedge shot from the
rough for b1rd1e un the 14th, par red
the 15th a nd dropped a 60-foot putt on
the 16th.

ma tched the low scnre on t he PGA
Tour th is year and wa s, by twu
s hots , the course record on the 7,060-

;o. topped the b1u roup at 14 1.

ya rd Glen Abbey Golf Club layout
wh1ch has been subjected to sharp
cn licism fo r the conditi on of Its fa ir·

Kathy Young gaining confidence

wa ys

And Thompson was quick to admi t
they we re less than p42' rfect.

·The fa~rway s were a little bit
long," he said " You had to play for
a JWTiper nn every shot. I had a fluf ·
fy lie on e very fai rway shot.

·] Just happened to be pid&lt;J ng the
right c lub a nd the ball wa s bouncing

Fi rs t-round leader P hi l Hanc uc k

DANVERS, Mass. 1 AP 1 - Vic·
tory-starved and winner of only
$32.000 in three yea rs on the Ladie.&lt;
PGA tour. Kathy Young figu res she
is fin ally gainm g th e confidence

necessary to challenge the super
sta rs fo r top money

·Tm growin g up a littl e bit.
matun ng a little b1l and gettin g
more confi dence ... the 2&amp;- yea r-old

hole, $1 :;() ,000 Boston Five Classic on
the 6,008-ya rd Fern croft Country
Club course .
"Th1s is my best score ~ ever ."
said Youn g, whose previous low was
69. " I can 't even remember the last

time I played a round w1thout a
boge y 1 also never have been tied
for the lead a fter two rounds since I
turned pro."

the n ght way . Everything happened
just right. I hit some good shots and
got some good breaks ...
It prod uced a 3&amp;-hole lola1 of 134 .
eight shots un der par for two tn r s

fo nne r Oregon juni or cha mpion sa id

Ca poni , the only four-tim e winner

f nday after the finest round of her

on the tour !h1s year and only $40,000
shy of joining Kathy Whitworth as a

over t he course in su burba n Toronto

at Tucso n. fi red f1 vc birdies without

tha t Jack Nicklaus des1gned as a

&lt;-l

permanent s ite fo r this na tiond!

ca reer .

You ng. whose best fmi sh in 21
tourna m e nts this year has been 16t h
bogey en r oute tu a 5-under- par 67
and a l te w1th vete ran Don na Caponi
fur the halfway lead at 137 in the 72-

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AND
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" We're all athletes. It won't take
long ," said Duane Kuiper, the Indians' second baseman and team
captain. " It 'll only take five, six or
seven days for position players to
get ready. For pitchers, it might
take a couple of days longer."
Pitcher Wayne Garland, the Indians' player representative, said he
thinks more time is needed.
"We've been out six weeks. I
would say it would take us a
minimum of two weeks to get ready
without someone getting hurt .. .
jeopardizing their career or the rest
of the season."

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vertising."
Adding to the contest's glamor will
be a pair of other major sporting
events that will make the weekend
one of the most star-studded in
Cleveland sport. history.
On Saturday, Aug. 8, the Pittsburgh Steelers invade for a
National Football League exhibition
game against the Cleveland Browns.
The next afternoon , former
welterweight boxing champion
Roberto Duran makes his ring
comeback against Nino Gonzalez at
Public Hall , a few blocks from
Municipal Stadium.
The All-Star game foll ows on Sunday night.

"We're the filling in the sandwich.
We're the delicacy," said Murray
Goodman, a spokesman for fight
promoter Don King.
Others are less convinced of the
wisdom of compressing the All.Star
activities into one day.
"For the best interests of the
people, I wouldn't have an All-star
Game," said Indians pitcher Wayne
Garland. " There are people who
have planned vacations around the
game. What do they do with these
tickets•"
"City-wise, it might have been bet·
ter to have it here next year,"
agreed second baseman Duane
Kuiper. " But it's a nice kickoff for
the 'second season.' Plus, this is a
nice weekend for the people of this
area, with the Steelers-Browns, the
Duran fight and the game." ~
Up to 70,000 fans are anticipated
for the football game . Public Hall
can hold 9,000 people for the fight,
and about 2,000 tickets remain for
the All-star game in 76 ,685-seat
Municipal Stadium.

Beasley hopes to end hex today
LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP~- He's been
at it for nearly 20 years now, but AI
Beasley of Willoughby has yet to win a
race at the Mid·Ohio Sports Car Course.
He's hoping that this might be the
weekend that his luck changes.
"It's very frustrating," said Beasley,
55, who serves as director of public works
for the city of Mentor when he's not
racing sports cars as an avocation. "The
car does so well at every other track,
even some pretty good showings at the
national championship run-offs every Oc·
tober, but when we get to Mid-Ohio
something has always prevented me
from winning."

Beasley will be among more than 250
amateur sports car drivers competing in
the Sports Car Club of America Red Roof
Inns national championship points races.
Practice and qualifying on the 2.4 mile
Mid-Ohio course began Saturday. The
nine 45.6 mile races will start today at 9

a.m.
There will be 21 classes of cars in the
competition. Beasley's is the only one
that took part in Mid-Ohio's first national
race in June of 1964. The car, a 1964 Bobsy
built by Jerry Moog of Medina, has undergone several major changes over the
years-but It bas yet to carry Beasley to
victory on the Mid-Ohio course.

SIGNS OF THE TIMES - A local sign company
employee slarll the task of changing the s&lt;hedule for
the next homo game at Cblcago Cubs Wrigley Field
Friday, after the announcement of the 50-day-old

baseball strike had been settled. The Cubs are
scheduled to play the New York Mets when the season
resumes Aug. 10. ( AP Laserphoto).

Reds in Michigan for workouts
CINCINNATI (AP ) - The Cincinnati Reds are off io the University of Michigan to retrain for the
resumption of the baseball season
with Mayor David Mann still yelling
for the rent.
Cincinnati's mayor claims the city
lost $1 million because of the
baseball strike. "That's a ba llpark
figure, no pun intended," he said of
lost gate receipts, parking, U!xes
and concessions.

"We don't want blood, just what is
coming to the city, because the city's
debt to the stadium bondholders stiU
goes on. We weren't relieved of
having to pay our bondholders
during the strike," Mann said.
A handful of Reds players worked
out informally at Riverfront
Stadium Friday afternoon . The club
began a six-day training program
Saturday at Michigan because
Riverfront Stadium is booked with a

jazz concert for the weekend .
Reds Manager John McNa ma ra
sa1d he wasn't sure how prepared his
players were to reswne play.
" Naturally , it's going to be a
unique thing. We need to sit down

exhibition games with the Califorma
An ~e ls un Friday . Aug. 7 and Saturday. Aug . 8 in Anaheim. They'll
resume the season at Los Ange les
with a three-ga me series with the

Dodgers Aug. 10-12.

a nd see what a nd how much ea ch in-

dividual has done on h1s own. "
" I'm physically ready to play."
sa1d second baseman Ron Oestc r.
"The liming fo r hitting is the thing.
That will take a while to get back to
where it was . You can't get your
timing back until you play ga mes.
I'll be ready to play in 10 days."
Pitcher Tom Seaver said he's been
throwing but needs to toss to batters
to get sharp again . " It's going to be
hardest on the pitchers," he said.
"The batters might be a little slow
too," sa id Reds pi tching Coach Bill
f ischer. "' Maybe that will help us ...
The Reds will train through Thursday then fly to the West Coast for

Ne ither the Reds players nor
manage ment had seen deta ils of the
ten tati ve agreement. but they
thought both sides would ratify it.
Cincinnat i President Dick Wag ne r

said he is opposed to an effort to
divide the season into two m ini-

seasons, with a post-season playoff
between th e two c ha mpi ons a nd wiU

seek to stop it next week when
Na tiona l Leag ue l ea rn owners m eet .

" I don't ca re for it one iota. We' ll
try to defea t it ," Wagner said.
The strike gave the Reds' J ohnny
Bench and pitcher Bill Bonham time
to recupera te .

AT

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~ean more like $2 million," said Indians spokesman Bob DiBlasio.
Other benefits, though, will make
up for the lost dollars, according to
Mayor George Voinovich.
may not be as well organized,"
Vomovich said, quicldy adding that
the mere fact the· game is being
played in Cleveland will bring the
city " millions of dollars of free ad-

I

LIGHT BIRCH

SCOTTSDALE

By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Some are
grumbling that this All.Star Game,
thrown together in about a week,
won't have the luster of past
baseball classics. But officials of the
host city and the Cleveland Indians
. argue that an irilpromptu Ali.Star
Game is better than none at all.
" It's a privilege to have the
greatest players in the game playing
in Cleveland," Indians President
Gabe Paul said after baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announced
Friday the game would take pla ce
Aug. 9 as a precursor to resumption
of the strike-interrupted season.
Reduction of the contest to a oneday event, rather than the
traditional three-day break that had
been scheduled around July 14, is
likely to cost Cleveland's struggling
economy several million dollars, offi cials said.
A three-day affa ir could bring the
city anywhere from $4 milli on to $8
million, while the Aug . 9 game " will

AND
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" In the last four games, we played
exceptionally well ," Ross said. " We
just started to jell.''

The Su nday Ti m es· Sentinei- Page-C· S

milli onai re m LPGA pr ize money,

TRUC
B' Fl ee t s,dc , a 1r , au to. 50 I 1IN c n q •nf',

Anderson said. " The cornerba cks
are going to be quicker than they are
used to. They'll have to adjust. "
The Bengals are counting on a
healthy Anderson plus a more experienced offensive line to
spearhead the attack. Plus, the cl ub
has learned the system installed in
Gregg's first year, a nd seemed to
gain confidence by winning three of
the last four games.

MEIGS COUNTY CHURCHES OF CHRIST

CLEVELAND lAP) - The
Cleveland Indians will fa ce their first game action in nearly two months
when they host the Pittsburgh
Pirates in an exhibition game Thursday at Municipal Stadium.
The Indians will then travel to Pittsburgh for a practice game Friday,
the clubs said.
The Indians' first formal workout
since players went on strike June 12
was held Saturday,, although a handful of players worked out at the
Stadium on Friday.
"I don't think the ballplayers are
going to be too far out of shape,"
Manager Dave Garcia said. "I Berti
Blyleven's been working out several
days a week. I wouldn 't be surprised
to see him go nine innings his first

.

SCOTISDALE

But quarterbacks Ken Anderson
and Jack Thompson threw just 17
touchdowns between them.
" I can't say that we want to throw
more ... But we're interested in
being more efficient at scoring,"
Gregg said.

" They 've got som e techniques,"

w. Va .

Clevelanders say classic
'better than none at all'

applied the pressu re playing ahead
of Young. T1ed with Carol Mann a!69
after the opemng round. Caponi shot
a GBforher 13i

$1.000 DISCOUNT
t1

Anderson said that the rookies' adjustment to the pros will determine
how big a part they play in the offense.

''We got so nervous and tense that
we forgot what we had to do. That
really hurt us."
Oddly, the Bengals were one of the
most passing-conscious teams in the
American Football Conference last
season. They put the ball in the air
510 times, trailing only San Diego,
Cleveland and Seattle in the conference.

Indians to
host Pirates

I

ST OC K

To that end, the Bengals made
star college receivers David Verser
and Cris Collinsworth their top two
draft choices. Both made fine catches in an intrasquad scrinunage
last weekend.

Pomeroy- Middleport- Ga llipolis, Ohio- Point Ple asant,

BACK
- Loa Angoles Dodgers pit·
cher Fernando Vale112Uela strelehts to tie shoe laces In locker room at
Dodger Stadium before taking field for practice. With the baseball
players' strike settled early Friday, several Dodgers came to the stadium
for an Informal workout. Full team workouts began Saturday. IAP Laser·
photo! .
'

Remember: The Gallia County Fair

Clippers lead cut to

August 3rd thru 8th

6Ih games in IL chase
By 'l'he Associated Press
There's a pennant race again in
the International League. ·
The Syracuse Chiefs surpr_ised the
first-pl~ce . Col\lffibus Clippers 4-1
Friday nightto cut the Cl_ippers' lead
to 61 2 games over secpnd-p)ace
Richmond: Meanwhile, the Braves
blasted the Toled~ Mud Hens 12-2. •
· Elsewhere, the Tldewat.er ,Tides
and Pawtucket ' Jted Sox .split a
double-header, with Tidewater' wlnnihg . the first game 1.0 and
f awtticket the second contest 3-2,
and the, Rochester Red WingS
delated the Charleston Charlles 6-1:
. Bl'IIVII 1!, Mud Helll t· ~
Brett Butler hid five hit.s and
S4eve Hammond lllunmered three
dOjlblel far Rlcbmand, wlilch IJed Ita

--liah-aflthltl.
Tolly llriJIIIIJl'll hla . flllb
~ .... lo' IO W · for the

.. _ . Rldl WilUiml, N, wu the

loot.

.

AND

Clippers 4, Chiefs I
LaiTY, McCall allowed twg hit.:&gt; and
two walks as he went the distance
for Syracuse as the Chiefs defeate&lt;!
the Columbus Clippers, 4-2, in International League baseball Friday
night.
Marshall J:Jtant hit his 21st home·
run o( the year for the Clippers' only .
run in ijle fifth iMing,
' ~r Brion Ryder; 8-4i, gave up
four rims on ;,u: hits in four innings.
J.J. cannon led the Chiefs' atta~k.
l!attlng two-for-two.
Red Wlap I, Charlles I · • ,
Tom Chlsril ~red a run and' batted )n three lliOR for Rochester .
Ror;tall!t gOt lollr I'UIII bi.lbe first
1nn1na on ~ by J6lln Sbellby, l
ond t'hllln at .mel• by Mike

and DaiiN wuu.ma.

.
up' two

Rochelter plclleil
In~ 1'111111 In the -'II wileD
Wlllllml dou+d In Tam 11111111
Chllm singled to~ Shelby.

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SPRING VALL£Y

�Aug . 2, 1981

Aug. 2, 198 I

Pomero.v

Middleport

The week in Reaganomics

Gas company to
conduct survey

REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS - Tbe Senators,
with a !f-3 record, captured the regular season IItle In
the Gallipolis Recreation Department's UU!e League
baseball program this summer. The Senators made II
to the quarterfinals in the post-season tournament
before bowing out last week. Pictured above In this
Brenda Wilson photo are, first row, left to right: Shan-

non Mayes, Jimmy Morrow, Patrick Parsoll!i, Scott
Long, Matt Barcus and Jeremy Spencer. Second rowDavid Long, Sean Long, Joel Spencer, John
Malezowski, Mark Berklch, Robi Young, Sean Harris.
Rear - Bobby Erwin, Bob Spencer and Ralph Young .
Not pictured- David Bloomer and Shane Johnson.

Bitterness remains after strike
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
Not even the a1r of optunism
preva iling among baseball people
after the tentative settlement of the
players' strike can erase the fact
that billerness over the S&lt;Hlay
walkout remains
"Thi.'i was the most insane, inane.

assimne stnke I've ever seen," said
Jerry Reinsdorf, chairman of the
Chicago While Sox. " I don't think we
got anything aside from a one-year
extension of the con tract. Another

year of peace.''

·1n my view, we lost, " sa1d Barry
Foote. a ca tcher-first baseman with
the New York Yankees. " We gave
up something we had rfree agency
without professiOnal player compensation l and lost money .

"Purely from the way it was han·
died, it wa' obviOus they ithe
owners) formulated a strategy and
stuck with it. no matter the cost."
" I don't know why it couldn't have
been settled m one day," added
Yankees reliever Rich Gossage.
"Somebody - I won't say who wasn't willing to work at 1!."
If it had been up to San Francisco
Giants outfielder Bill North, both
s1des would have worked up an
agreement before the strike bega n.
" I would have told them to sit
down and not get up until they set·
tied it." said North. "If they had, we
might have been back to work 49
days ago."
"There certamly wiU be some
ha rd feelings," added Buddy
LeRoux, c&lt;&gt;-owner of the Boston Red

Sox. "One of the sad things is that
management and player personne 1
have been drifting apart for years ."
But their negotiators finally drifted close enough to work out a dea l
and, on Aug. 10, the season will
reswne. Whether it will pick up
where it ended on June 12, when the
strike began, or whether the season
will be split into two parts, with winners of each section advancing to
postseason action, hasn't been determined.

" I like the idea (of a split

season)," sa1d Toronto Manager
Bobby Mattick, whose Blue Jays
Wt!re in East,
last place
in lhe behind
American
League
19 games
the
Yankees. " II gives us a fres h start
and the Blue Jays are suddenly in a
pennant fi ght."

BACK TO WORK - Texas
Rangers' pitcher Doc Medich has
his first workout at Arlington
Stadium since the end of the 5&amp;day-old major league baseball
strike interrupted by his fouryear-old son Mickey Friday afternoon. The Texas Rangers will
reopen their season Aug. 10
against the New York Yankees In
New York. Mickey seems unwilling to let his Dad gel hack to
the business uf baseball. I AP
Laserphoto 1.

GALLIPOUS - Homeowners in .
this area are being offered a.residen- '
tial energy survey by Colwnbia Gas
of Ohio, according to J . M. Koebel,
Gallia-Meigs manager for the gas
company.
Tile survey will · demonstrate opportunities to help reduce energy
use in the home .
A description of the survey, and an
application coupon, will be mailed to
Columbia customers beginning Aug.
3. The mailing will take place over a
21-week period to help equalize the
number of requests anticipated by
the company which serves more
than 975,000 residential customers in
Ohio.
The home energy survey provided as a part of the con-

HAPPY FAN- Julie Allbeimer, 10, of Plymouth, Mass., fans out a
series of tlckels wblch her father had just bought Friday at Boslon's Fenway Park. She, like many others, expressed a certain amount of joy that
tile major league baseball strike was belug resolved and she could once
apln enjoy the Boston Red Sox. I AP Laserphoto).

•

SAT., AUG. 8, 1981 9 AM • 4:30 PM

Gallipolis City Park

Racing results
T hli llf'down
NORm RANDALL, Oluo ~ API - J ockey
1\nil.a Tomlin rude ··If Ann Can " to victory in the
ft·utured a llowa nce at Thistledown un Friday.

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The Ole Ca r Club, Inc . in coopera tion With th e
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,--T-he~···-cu~w~d~nr~3.~80~3-w=a~~"~'"~l5~1~'·="~'_ _j_':========================~

The Commercial and
Savings Bank

' College.
Thecourseofinstructionconsisled
of one resident summer session of a
July 19-24. Members of the
whom are officers in

Federal Reserve District No. 4

·-··-

of Gallipolis in the Sta te of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of
business on June 30, 1981.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository insl1tut1ons . ..... . . .. .
. 2,621,000.00
U.S. treas ury ~er u rities .
. .. 7.1 13.000.00
Obl rgatlons o£other U.S. Governrnent
a ge nc u~s and corporations .
. . . ....... .
. :1,7:19,000 00
Obligations uf Stales and politica l subdiVISIOns
in the Un1ted States .
. ... 8,686,000.00
Federal funds sold and secunt1es purchased
under aJ,!reemenl-i to resell .
. . 3,400,000.00
a . I,oans : Total 1f' xcluding unearned income r
.. .. 17 .~58.000 . 00
l.t&gt;ss : a llowance for possrblc Joa n lusses .
193,000.00
l .ua ns. Nd .
(7. 76:;. 000.00
. . 947,000.00
. 8.11,000.00
. . . 45,102,000.00

Alluther assets .
TOTAl. ASSETS .
Demand deposits of mdivid uals ,

LIABILITIES

partners hips, and corporations . .

.. .......... . 5,637,000.00

Time and savings depOSits of mdil&gt;idua ls,
partnerships, and corporations .
Deposits of Un1ted States Government .. ... .
Deposits of States and politica l subdivisions
111 the Un ited States . . ......... .

... 30,865,000.00
. .. . . ....
4,000.00

r:ertifird and officers' &lt;.: hecb; .

Total Deposits . .
. .. .. .. ..... . . .
" . Tuta l dema nd deposits
. ..... .. .
b. Total time and sav m ~s deposits .
Ft·dera l fund.s purchased and securiti es
sold under agreemenL'i to repurchase

1.197,000.00
. . . . . . . 271,000.00
. ..... . ... 37,974,000.00
. . 6,903,000.00
31,071,000.00
2.000,000.00
. . . 529,000.00
40 ,50:1,000 00

Al l other liabi lities .
TOTAI.I.f ABII .ITIES .

Undi vided profits and reserve for contingenci es

~par

va lue l

I. the undersigned official do hereby declare th&lt;it this Report o ';ondition
1incl uding the supporting schedules 1 is true to the best of my kno" ·dge and
belief.
Wayne L. Niday
Executive Vice President &amp; Cashier

'

I

The tax-cut plan encountered the
greatest resistance. 111ere are fears
that reduced federal revenues,
coupled with increased military
spending, will add to the federal
deficit, Increasing pressure on in·
llation and high interest rates. There
are also questions as to how COD·
swners will use the tax savings,
scheduled to begin Oct. 1.
The tax cut will be implemented at
a time wl\en many economists
believe the economy will be
recovering from its current slwnp.
"To think (consumers) will save
when a lot of them are now using
savings to live on is more of a dream
and a hope than a reality," says
Albert E. Sindlinger, whose Sin·
dlinger &amp; Co. Inc. samples public
opinion and makes economic
forecasts. "I'm afraid a lot of it (!he
tax cut) will go to pay bills. "
Jeffrey B. Edleman, a retail industry analyst at the investment
firm of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc .,
says the tax cut will help Christmas
sales, the biggest contributor to
retail profits. But he says the.tax cut
will provide retailers only with " a
modest plus, not a significant
change."
II there is no relief from current
high levels of interest rates,
retailers will find it increasingly
costly to stock shelves and cunswners will have difficulty affordmg
purchases.
Industry, with new investment mcentives from the tax bill , also is
waitmg for interest rates to come
down before adding to plant and
equipment. Borrowing costs for
business continue to set records.
This past week, Mountain States
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co, a subsidiary of the American Telephone I
Telegraph Co., sold long-tenn bonds
AI a price to yield 16.26 percent Illteres! to investors. a record for a
large issue of securities holding the
hi~hest credit rating.

JOANM . MAY

Named
manager
POMEROY - Joan M. May of
Rutland has been named manager of
the Rutland branch of Bank One of
Pomeroy .
May joined Rathburn 's Bank .
which lat er became Pomeroy
National Bank and then Bank On e.
at age !G . She subsequently was employed by Colorado National Bank in
Denver. Colo.. and the Bank of
Douglas in Tucson, Ariz.
She returned tu Pomeroy Na tiona l

Ba nk in 1964 and was made assistant
bran ch manage r in 1972.
A graduate of Rutland High School
and the Ohi o School of Banking, Ma y
has curnpleted course work for the
basic and standard certi ficates fror n
the American Im;li!ute of Bankmg .
She is also a member of the Na twnal
Association of Bonk Women .

May is a member of the Church of
Chnst in Rutland where she serv es
;:ts secrett:Jry-treasure r nf the church
&lt;J nd treasurer of the Sunday sehoul.

She is a member nf the Middleport
I,ndge Order of Eastern Star and the
Royal Oak Dance Club. She also se rved as secre ta ry of the Me igs County

Tuberculosts As:;octatiun .

Economist Robert Sine he at the investment firm of Bear, Stearns I
Co. , says too much is being made of
the taK cut and its impact on the
economy .

She a nd her husband Bruce reside

in Rutland. They have two childr.,n,
Debra McCall. a Hutland kmcit'r~arten teacher. and Mic ha el. a
petrulcwn ellgint'er in

l ..&lt;:~ fa yctll• ,

I.a .

POMEROY

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FREEZER SALE
CONTINUES
ONE MORE WEEK!
GET A

FREE IllES I 'ERN.VEST
.
.

MEMBERS HEAR REPORTS - Dllflald M. Robblson (Iell), manager . of BuCkeye Rural Elecbic
Cooperative, Is seen wflh Clyde B. Walker of Thurman,
the cooperative's •ecretary-treaaurer, revtew 1980

'

with purchase of 4 WRANGLER RADIALS
Save money on a set of
four Wrangler All Season
Radials ... and get this
western s tyle vest free . It's
made of leather-like suede
The color is buckskin tan .
and there 's a full shepherd

branding and stitching are
dark brown . Get yours 'fre e
with purchase of four
Wrangler All Season Ra dia ls .
Or. buy two Wra ngler
Radials and pay iust $10 95
Stop at any participating
Goodyear Store or dealer
for complete delalls .

I

$

J

Balanced whetts
smooth your ride,

even tr!!ad._...

a..

·. ·

.FMC

I &lt;fOOl Wli&lt;cl Clf•O

alld Cr.cvtnns r.11tiJ

Pllts II'NI D1l
' tiOflll S&amp;~VItes
tdri ~ neeited

• lr!SIICCI all four 111e~ • ~~ CiSICI
c~mtlet and frte,•n lo PIOOOt ~'Qnmtrll
'Inspect sust~ens•oo 1n11 SIOOitriQ 5 ~ 5

.

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AU. YEAR

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Mt,lfS Tire Center
(Ftrmert, ...

n: so DON'T.MISS our

• tern s • Most US cars me 1moons

COMPUTERIZED

,,

242 w..
&amp;

NEW
FORD GRANADA
4-D00R'SEDAN

'

• $3!!HEEL
help promote lenf.

DISCOUNT
OR
FREE
ICE CREAM
WHEN YOU BU
A CHEST-TYPE OR
UPRIGHT FREEZER

You11 never see prices on '81s like this again.

COMPUTERIZED
WHEEL BALANCING

Reduced
vlbnitlon

$50

operaUn1 ~ of the Galllpolls-based cooperative
cluriallls BDDaal meeting July 18. Nearly 150 people altended the meeUng, held at Buckeye Hills Career Center.

·Cash incentives·from Ford help us save you hundreds.

S39.95 VAUJE\
;~;;;:;.:~.
theytastl
~::.:.::~:::::..::::=:..._-1

,,

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condition (including the supporting schedules) and declare that it has been
examined by us and to !he best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared in
conformance with !he instructions and is true and correct.
Correct-Attest: Phyllip L. Pope
Donald L. Crance
Charles E. Holzer
State of Ohio, County of Gallia:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 25th day of July, 1981, and I hereby
certify that I am not an officer or directorof this bank.
My commission expires June 25, 1983. Sheri A. Shelton, Notary Public.

,

&gt;

.,

!XXJ,OOO.00
. . 2,997,1100.00

and nther cap1ta l rese rves . . . . . . . .
. ......... . .......... . 702.000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . 4,599,000.00
TOTAL l.IABILITIES AND
CAPITAL
...... . . .
. . . .. ... 45,!02,000.00
MEMORANDA
Time certificates of deposit' in
denominations of $1011,000 or more . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . ..... 2,274,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days 1or ca lendar month ending with report date
Tota l depoSits . . . . . . . .
"1,104,1100.00

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• Gas-saving economy with easy-rolling radial construction
• S treng th . p lus the cut and bru1se resistance of stee l
co rd be ll s
• Sel f-c leamng tread . . . avoids plugging up in mud or snow
• We race and w in on Wrangler Radtals

a. No. shares authorized

. ....... .

By STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - The United
Stales is about to embark on Its first
major change in economic policy in
50 years, trying an untested theory
aimed at reviving the economy
while holding down inflation and interest rates. ·
The major stumbling block to putting President Reagan's economic
program together, the largest tax
cut in hiatory, sailed through the
House and Senate this past week.
Some differences between the House
and Senate versions must still be
resolved, however.
But if all goes as expected,
Reagan will have all the ammunition he asked for in his fight to
rebuild the economy: a three-year
tax cut, a curb in the growth of
federal spending, relaxation of
federal regulations of business and a
Federal Reserve Board devoted to
monetary restraint.
"We are making progress. And if
we keep working together, we can
reach that new era of prosperity we
all want, ' ' the president says.
Will the prescription for economic
recovery be a success•
"We don't know," says John 0.
Wilson, senior vice president and
director of economic policy research
at the Bank of America. " This has
never been tried before."
And the White House promised no
quick fix to the nation's economic
ills, with spokesman David Gergen
saying the economy would not ''turn
around on a dime ."
Since Depression days, the gover·
runent has fought unemployment by
increasing spending and cutting
taxes, and has fought inflation by
reducing federal spending. But the
combination of high levels of both inflation and unemployment that
began in the 1970s has thwarted that
strategy.
Reagan has embraced supply-side
economics. seeking to design reductions in tax rates that would
stimulate investment, savings and
productivity, and accompany that
with a curb in federal spending,
government regulations and
monetary growth to keep inflation in
check.

LANDMARK'S

Wrangler Radial... All Season,
All Terrain, All Wheel Position

EQUITY CAPITAL
.

_

.......

Save Now On These
Rugged Radials
for Your light
Truck Or RVI

Cormnon Stuck

1800
b. No. shares outstandmg
1800 .
Surplus
. ...... .. .. . .. . . .. . . ..

Announces
retirement

Graduates banking school
ASHLAND - C. Leon Saunders,
vice president, cashier and trust officer for The Ohio Valley Bank m
Gallipolis, was one of 50 students
who graduated from the lOth annual
session of The Ohio Trust School.
Graduation ceremonies were held
July 24 at Ashland College.
The specialized school was sponsored by the Columbus-based Ohio
Bankers Association, in cooperation
with the Centre for Economic and
: Business Education 1i Ashland

State Bank No. 983
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

Bank premises . furnit ur t.'cmd fixtures. and
other dsse t.s representing bank premises .

servation plan developed by the Ohio
Department of Energy - is voluntary . It is intended to help
homeowners add comfort to t~}r
residences while saving money by
more efficient energy use.
The cost ofthe survey is $15, which
is to be sent with the request coupon.
The survey included a 93-point inspection of the home by acetified inspector who will carry proper idenPAUL D. HALLEY
tification. While on the premises, the
inspector will compile a report on
energy-saving measures that ca n be
applied to the home.
In addition, the inspector's report
will include estimates of material
and installation costs of the con·
servation meas ures, plus an GALUPOUS- Paul D. Halley,
estimate of the energy savings.
formerly of Gallipolis, Ohio, retired
recently from Standard Oil Co. Ondiana 1after nea rly 28 years with the
company.
Halley joined Standard in 1953 to
$4,639,000, or 58 cents pe r share, in develop a new program of industrial
the same period of 1980. Sales were hygiene and toxicology for the
$100.2 million compared with $85.5 protection of the consumers.
million in the 1980 period.
Before joining Standard, Halley •
E. P . Comer, president and chief had been associate director of inexecutive officer, said sales were a dustrial hygiene with the West
quarterly record and reflect con- Virginia Slate Department of
tinued strong demand from steel and Health, where he also initiated that
aluminum customers.
state's first program of air pollution
The lower gross margin in the control.
second quarter of 1981 compared to
At the time of his retirement, !he
the sa me P.riod of 1980 reflect the program Halley had developed and
failure of modest price increases to directed for Standard's corporate
offset increased labor and raw world wide operations, including all
material costs.
of its subsidiary Amoco operations
inc luding
petrol e um ,
petrochemicals and minerals .
A graduate of Ohio State Universi ty, Halley became engaged in 1942
in the relatively new profession of in ·
dustrial
hygiene. Halley served as
the trust departments of Ohio banks,
president
of the American Industrial
were chosen for both their
Hygiene
Association
in 1972 and in
knowledge and eKperience; along
1980
was
honored
as
the
recipient of
with W. Emory Trainham, director,
in-service management education, the association's Cummings Award
at As hland College, who conducted a and Currunings Memorial Lecture at
lecture on " What 's New In the association's annual conference
for outstanding achievements a nd
Management. "
contributions.
The curriculum included estate Hall ey and his wife, the former
planning fundamentals; personal Frances Walker of Porter, reside in
trusts administration and agencies; Homewood, Ill . He is the son of the
decedentS' estates administration; late Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Halley of
investments · and securities; real Neighborhood Road. He is the
·
t
t
property; taxatJon ;
rus brother of Mrs . Paul I Bessie I Mcoperations; employee benefits; cor- Nealey of Gallipolis, Mrs. Erman
porate trusts; and new business and 1Virginia) Cremeens of Northup,
and Ellis Halley of Powell.
public relations.

Foote earnings on rise
EXTON, Pa. - Foote Mineral Co.
reported net earnings of $2,231,000
fur the second quarter of 1981, compared with $2,493,000 for the same
pe nod in 1980.
After provision of $238,000 for
preferred dividends, earnings per
common share were 28 cents compared to 31 cents per share a year
ago.
Sales were $52.0 million compared
wi lh$41.1 million in the 1980quarter.
Six months' net earnings in 1981
were $4 ,587,000, or 67 cents per common share, com pared with

The sunday Times· Sentinei-Page-C· 7

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

'

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POMEROY LA~DMARK
. MAIN

.

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•ifJ
\

. .0

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.

.

~AI,;~

w. CARSEY, MGR .

992 -2181

Drive A Little, sa.ve A Lot.....:Free Deliverv. Within 75 Miles.
we Servi~e Your Hotpoint App 11an~es
Store Hours : 8 : 30·S:Oo-Mill Closed at ~ : 00
Serving Meigs, Galli• &amp; Mason Count•es

I

\

�Ohio-Point

Page-C-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

Plea~ant,

Aug. 2, 1981

W. Va .

Homemakers'
Circle

Meigs County
agent's corner

ft•uluring
Annie An~btody

Ry RETIU: CLARK
~:xtensiun .\gent.
H•tmt· E(·•mumi,·s

GAWPoUS - Are you gelling
too little or too many nutrients and
calories in the foods you eat? You
can answer this question through an
activity planned for the Gallia County Junior Fair. Would you like to
know more about what nutrients are
in the food you eat' Do you know
what protein, carbohydrates, fat,
calories, vitamins and minerals are
and what they do for your body'
There will be an opportunity for
vou to check the foods you eat in one
24-hour period. The computer
program ca lled " Dietcheck" is
sponsored by th e Gallia County
Cooperative

Extension

the fair.
The form to complete is
reproduced below. To save time, fill
it out as accurately as possible
before you get to the fair. Be specific
on the amounts you eat. For examle,
if you have a hamburger, list it as
follows : I beef patty, 2 slices tomato ,
lettuce, I slice cheese, I bun or 2
slices of bread.
A charge of $1 for each Dietcheck
will help defray the cost of the use of
thecomputer.
If you don't plan to attend the fair,
or if you would like to sav emore
time, you may mail your form and
the $1 charge to the Gallia County
Extension Office, P .0. Box 339,
Gallipolis, Ohio45631. We will return
it to you by mail fair week or the
week following the fair . Extra forms
wil be available in the Activities
Building at the fair or from the extension office ( 4~7007) .
See just how well you are doing
with the foods ·you eat by partlcipatmg in the Cooperative Extension Service ''Diet check "
program .

Service.

Anyone can participate who is interested by filling out a fonn
providing information on foods you
have eaten in a 24-hour period.

The information will be fed into
the computer terminal. which will
be operating on Aug. 5, 6 and 7 from
12 noon to 9 p.m. tn the Activities
Building at the Gallia County Fair. A
computer printout and directions to
help you understand what the orintout means to you w1ll be returned to
vou at the fai r by ma1lthe week after
PI••·~ pr~•,Mo· t~r f..l

", ,

EXAMINE TOBACCO - County COIIlllllsaloner, LoDDie Burger,
I right), examines a stick of burley tobacco with Gallla County Ell1enslon

Agent. Agriculture, Bud Carter, and Summer Extension Agriculture
Asslslanl. Mike Shoemaker at recent county commissioners day at
Ripley, Ohio.

H1· BRYSON R . 1RUit ('ARTER
i;ct lli~ ( ' uunl~ Exlt'nsiun Ag•·nl

"'' ""'•' " '"

GALUPO US -

I'' '
OIJ"T ,ul.\' IIH.ll ltU m' f ' III I I I II \t I &lt;I~ UI'Ij\, nt
'lf l ST 11 '\\1' T tll- ~- 111 . 1 ""'I"' , I" ' IIH\4 \TI"'

wt:

P l ~t" ,

"lo· ,.,-.- , f

· ~·

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missioner.

f'/ . 11~~~ At.: oil~ TKIJI.I70RI.

'"'

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....

r o M • tt JLI"H "

Jnd1u

pc~l

l'rl ~" I 01

]

\\l iGHT _

Burge r,

ac-

missioners from throughout Ohio
met fo r their annual meeting and updating in agriculture.
The group toured the Southern
Branch of the Ohio Research and
Development Center. The branch
does research on white burley tobacco, forages, beef cattle, tree fruits,
grapes and other related proj ects in
the area . There are 21 active research projects being conducted by 26
sta ff members.

_

p.,~,ch

, ,,,tt,

~ ~!tAll

N[Oi l: M
~0~

U.RGII:

OffiCE

ONlY

U ~{

! ~:;:!~~

~ -~'; --I- Coot

'
Q

Lonnie

on a visit to our research fann at
Ripley, Ohio July 23. County Com-

' I I I(. HT -~ '" '----

'

County Com-

companied Mike Shoemaker and me

h ... .. ..

-

-

I

-: ;- -- ~ ---~

•••

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----------1

Corrunission ers visited research

plots where Extension specialists
and research personnel discussed
tobacco research, the latest in
soybea n var&lt;eties and Mexican bean
beetle control , conservation of soi l
through proper tillage, small fruit
research featuring thornless blackberries and interseedings of forages.
Also. Harriet Stivers, president ,
County Corruniss ioners Association ,
opened the afternoon program with

.,
·, .

remarks from the association. Dr.

George Gist, Associate Director ,
Cooperative Extension Service, in-

troduced guests , following a
welcome by Robert Howser. chairman, Brown County Conunissioners.

Talks included Pride in Farm ing
by representatives from the Athens
County Extension Service: Pride in
Toabcco, Jim Wells, manager.
OCES. Ripley: and Pride in Extension Service. Dr. Hoy M. Kottman , dtrector, OCES.
The 1982 County Corrumss1 oners
Day will be held at Wooster on June
17 - the opening day of a four-day
open house of the IOOth birthday of
the Ohio Agricultural Research and
Development.

- ~---

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classified

AGronomy Field Day which we held
at the Jim and Matt Saunders Farm
last Tuesday. Approximately 40
people attended the afternoon
sess ion and somewhere between 50
and 611 people crowded under a small
tent at the evening session to hear a
discussion on Johnsongrass Control.
We had an opportunity to get in the
held in the afternoon session and
several people waded through the
mud during the evening sess ion.
Our spea kers pointed out that
there are a nwnber of ways to con-

wheat means more feeding of will
to livestock.
Where does this leave the price of
com? lam not sure.
StrawbeiT)' lowers - both eaters
and growers - are in line for some
good things soon. New varieties are
coming on the market that offer
such advantages as great taste, high
yields, disease resistance and allsummer production.
One ·of these new varieties,
Earlyglow, has been on the market a
couple of years, according to Robert
Hill, Department of Horticulture.
~·s a very productive variety
developed in the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's breeding program at
Beltsville, Md. It ripens as you
would expect very early in the
season and has an attractive berry.
It has a high yielding protential and,
best of all, II is just about ideal on
that strawberry shortcake or in the
freezer .
Another new variety just hitting
the market is called Scott to honor ,
Donald Scott, a strawberry breeder
at Beltsville for a number of years.
Scott was made conunercially
available this year. It ripens in the
Guardian season, is resistant to five
races of red steel, has excellent
qualities and promises very high
yields, says Hill. He thinks it will
become one of the leading varieties
in this region, eventually replacing
Guardian, which is now popular.

Jolm C. Rice
Countyu Ell1enslon Agent,
Agrieultllre
POMEROY - The world and Its
complexities. How do you predict?
How do you plan ? Take' com and
wheat, for example. I received the
following infonnation.
The report, as of July I, placed
com yields in Ohio and 85 bushels
per acre; U.S. at 95.9 bushel per
acre. If this yield prevails the U.S.
c&lt;im crop would be 7J billion
bushels creating a tight supplydemand situation with an upward
pressure on prices.
As everyone knows, weather conditions in the next six weeks can
change the size of the com crop. For
instance, last year the July report
estimated com yields at99.3 bushels
per acre and adverse weather conditions resulted in the 1980 com crop
averaging 91 bushels per acre. In
1979, the July estimate was for
average yields of 95.8 bushels per
acre and we ended up with 109.7
bushels of corn per acre.
We have a bin busting wheat crop
of a 2.8 billion bushels - 19 percent
above the previous record. Even
worse, the entire increase in tf.S.
wheat output is soft red winter
wheat. The soft red crop is up 611 percent. Ohio yields were estimated at
50 bushels per acre. Not only do we
have a big crop, but a low quality.
The big crop with lower quality

WASlllNGTON (AP)- The Reagan administration

The administration was examining demands presented by the union, but Lewis made clear the government
was not prepared to broadly expand the wage and
benefits offer tentative agreed to June 22.
"At a time when President Reagan and Congress are
working strenuously to control federal spending and
reduce inflation ... we cannot yield to demands that
would contradict all our best efforts for reasonable and
sensible fiscal policy," Lewis told reporters.
Accusing the union's leaders of showing "a disregard
for the pUblic and disdain for the bargaining process,"
Lewis said the rejected federal package was "fair and
reasonable" and amounted to more than twice what
other federal employees will receive.
At a news conference, Poli said he expects the 15,000
controllers that belong to the Professional Air Traffic
Controll ers Organization, Ill approve a strike volE if an
agreement is not reached . The vote is scheduled for
Sunday midnight. Strike approval was not given during
negotiations on the agreement last month.
"Our people became much stronger as a result of
what they saw in that contract and realized what they
will have to do to get a better one," Poli said .
A strike could force ca ncellation of half of the
nation's 14 ,200 daily scheduled corrunercial fl ights,
although FAA officials revised their figures Friday
and said as many as fiv e of every seven planes might
fly under a contingency plan using 2,500 supervisory
and nonunion controllers. Industry sources saw that
estimate as optimistic.

is trying to head off a Monday strike by air traffic con-

trollers, but a federal mediator says the two sides are
'' light·years apart."
The air controllers union surprised the goverrunent
Friday by announcing that it would strike at 7 a.m.
Monday If an agreement is not reached during the
weekend.
Talks between union President Robert E. Poli and
Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis were scheduled
to resume at 10 a.m. EDT today .
A nationwide strike could ground half of the nation's
regularly scheduled air traffic, cause widespread
delays in flights, and losses of tens of millions of dollars
daily to the economy.
Mter meeting with Poli briefly Friday afternoon,
. Lewis told reporters that he was "shocked" by the
union's demands and said their proposal would cost the
government "in excess of $600 million " a year. The
union put the figure at $490 million, but still a far cry
from the $40 million offer put on the table by the goverrunent.
The strike deadline was announced two days alter
the controllers rejected by a marein of 2()-to-1 a tentative agreement reached last month just hours before
another strike deadline .
"The situation does not look good at all. We 're kind of
light-years apart,'' Moffett told reporters alter
Friday's brief meeting between Poli and Lewis. He
said he saw little chance of a settlement over the next
two days .

The tough 2-cycle

Post would have a significant impact on Johnsongrass Control in the
future . We were able to show excellent results from th~ use of this
chemical and its effectiveness wa!S
dramatically shown where we had
turned off the sprayer and allowed
the Johnsongrass to grow without

SUPREME ..19"

Jirn and Malt don 't mind people
wking a look at the plots during the
gro\1.'-ing season . We have a large
sign out at the road and then plot
signs are located in each of the plots
showing the chemicals we used .
Our thank&gt;; go out to Jim and Ann,
Matt and Noreen, the cooperation
and effort that they put into this
project ·

WASHINGTON iAPI - A Senate-House comm ittee
worked into the ni ght to write a final version of
President Reagan's tax-cut plan, hurri edly agreemg
on dozens of issues but saving until last the bi ggest
dispute - how deeply to reduce oil taxes.

PUSH
MOWERS

chemical treatment.

The Senate, anxious to start a fiv e-week recess,

stayed in session until 2:30a.m. Saturday, hoping to
give the finished product a final vote. They were
scheduled to return at 6 p.m. The House wlll add its approval Tuesday and send the measure to Reagan for
his signature.
Although the conferen ce committee had to dea l with
numerous diffe rences between the Se nC:tte and House
tax bills. the most important matters were settled in

AT

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
CHESTER, 0.

.

CONTROLLERS TALKS - Robert E. POll, right,
president of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers
Organization. and Transportation Secrelary Drew

Lewis leave the Federal Mediation and Conciliation
&gt;en:ice in Washington Friday. I AP Laserphotiil.

Tax cut specifies
hammered out
in comtnittee

-

new experimental chemical cailed

D

Air traffic controllers,
administration
'light years' apart

trol or suppress Johnsongrass in

soybeans and point ed out that the

985·33oB

Top of the line
WORKING ON TAX CUT- Members of a HouseSenate conference committee worklnK to reconcile the

•

different lax cut bills passed by both houses meet at the
Capitol Frlday. IAP Laserphoto).

llix breaks for the oil industry over the next Ill years .
The House version has $46 billion
Senate liberals promised that if the fin al cumpromise contains significantl y m ore than $20 bi llion for

oli producers and royalty-owners, they Will
launc h
a
filibu s ter
that

cu uld

deli::iy the impending vacati on .

Among other items. thc conference agreed to .
- Increi:lse a tax credit for child-care expenses in-

curred by working par ents. The credit is now for 15
percent of the first $2,000 of ex penses for one child,
$4,000 fur lwo or more. The bill a llows a credit of 30 percent of the first $2,400 expenses 1$4,800 fur two or more
children 1 for famili es with incomes of $10,000 or less.

advance. The proposed th ree--yea r , 25 percent , across-

The credit deel ines gradually as income r tse!'i, drop-

the-board reduction in personal tax rates and a big tax
reducti on for business were the same in both bills and
thuswerenotdebatable.
,
Also in the final b1ll were a special deductiOn to

ping to 20 perel'nt for fam ili e~ with $30,000 income or
more .
The cunferl.'es rejerterl a SeniJte provision that would

reduce the "marria ge penalty'' on m illions of working

We had a considerabl e amount of
ra in just pnor to both our aftern oon
and evening sess ions of the

" I

Aug. 2, 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

couples, automatic tax cuts each year starting in 1985
to partially offset inflation, elimination of estate taxes
for all but a re lative few of t he nation's wealthiest
people.
Just before midnight, Rep. Dan Roslcnko wski , D-fll.,
chairman of the conference. broke up the sessiOn so the
Se nate a nd House delegations could meet separately in
pnvate rooms to seek a settlement of the oil questi on.
The Senate bill incl udes $19.9 billion worth of special

l1ave extended chil d-ca re benefit' to famil ies with incomes so low that t11cy pay no taxes.
- l.ibcralizt• trcillment of tax-deferred retirement

plans. Current la w permits a worker tn de lay taxes unti l retirement on up to $1,500 .se t a!-&gt;idc eaeh year in a n

Indi vidual Retirement Account. But a worker covered
by a company pension pla n is barred fr om the deduction . The bill lets any worker set aside up to $2.000 a
ye&lt;ir . A wu rkt•r covt'red by a company plan cou]d use
the deduction fur an IRA ur for the company pension.

•

•

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1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme
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Disposable Lighters

GALLIA MACK
STATE ROUTE 7 - NORTH
CHESHIRE, OHIO
(614) 367-7317

Remember''We lulld The lest
and S•ll Til• Re•f"

Terminally ill
•
cancer patzent
marries in Dayton

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.•

'-

I

DAYTON, Ohio !APJ- It was a celebration of life
Friday night when Mary Malchow, a 26-yeaHid ter• minaUy ill cancer patient, was married in a traditional
ceremony toJobn Hempfling.
"She ill ,such an inspiration," said Carol Matter,
-spokeswoman for, l'fljami Valley Hospital, where the
nurses In the oncology·unit literally gave the' wedding.
''The emphasis here is on a meaningful life, not approaching death,"' she said.
"I've been to a lot of weddings, but never one like
this," said ·a tearful cecil Malchow, the fathl!r who
gave away the bride - the last of his seven children to
marry.
·
The bride, who has been bedridden for month!! since
~ wu · tOld • nothing 1p!ore can ile' rP\e for her ,

prayersforMary 's cure.
The Rev. Jack Schwarz presided over the traditional
wedding in the hospital chapel. The nurses furnished
the white carpet, the white and yellow decorations ,
flowers and pictures: One nurse's mother baked the
tbree-tlered cake. Others fixed the bride's bair and
gave her a manicure.
"Our nurses are a special breed. We get to know our
patients very well. Mary 's been on chemotherapy two
or three years . There was not progression in Mary's
case. This time, when she came back in she was completely obstructed. Medically, we can't do anything
else, but we ~an do this," said her nurse, Helen Tobias.
Slfo!. W!'S ·overcome durin~ the ceremony and had to
,
·
: leave briefly. • · 1
i'nHical!y, Wellied.
·
'
· ·The couple fell in love whjle bvth were students at a
.:'She bed the ~ rimiGve all the tubes and stood tecbnlcal scjloOI. Jfl!ll"plling, 29, has stood by his wife ,
!Jiiooq~ the whole WeM!nk aillf ~on." ~aid Ms. remaining at her bed almost constantly.
•
fM\W. . ', · · ·
'I"
··•
'
"When they were ~old thre was nothing more we
Tl\elilpl\uile their feltllagaJnst the oddi, ~ ~ coilld ' dO,
decided to get married," said ·Mrs.
in~ted the 100 ,or 19'llillll to c:ome 'liack t'ii·iileir fint
T~
·
' lni!IVII'III')! at,~Greenmont Oak Park Clltui:h. ·I
"W•"·Yll h84 ,bedijde , weddings before . but we've
II,Gipit!ll Prill h'nt ~R JOrcllll, 11thoi!e d do~Wie4 never ha&lt;l a tradiUonal,fomJ&amp;I wedding lllie this. ~
the Cllldelabru. for the l!'eddlng, joined them in lllelr · hospital furniahed three cues of champagne," sa1d

they

,

.·~
......_,

"We at M1Uiil
'lilt

:

.

1

'

. .,I , .

~

• ,

••- u.·''

.•

IUD. ~·~tulf,

.

)'011, our best ~ tor 1 .Nunes. arranged to Jl\OVe Mary's roommate to
I! bf:1tt1e ell~ t9 · another 10 the eouple could be •lone for one night, she
.

HOSPITAL WEDDING PLANNED
Mary
MalcbOw has her fingernails done by nune Mary Murphy at Miami Valley HO.pital this morning In
preparation for her wedding tonight to John Hemp-

•
Ring. The wedding will be held In ihc hospital before
150 well-wishers. Miss Malchow has been told by
physicians that sbe Is losiq her two and one-baH year
battle with cancer. lAP Laoerplloto) .

�Page-D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy - Mtddleport-Galhpohs, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va .

.'

Aug. 2, 1911

'
Pomeroy- Midd

Appointment sparks reform move ~

They'll Do It Every Time

. )!

By ROBERT E- MILLER
Auoelaled Preu Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - GOP
Gov. James A. Rhodes' latest appombnent to the Public utilities

Senate President Pro Tern
Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland,
said " Jon's a fine guy, but I don't
know what expertise he bnngs to the
coinmisslon." He said the Kelly appointment to the three-member
agency, which IS being compared to
that of Democrat Michael Del Bane
m 1979 by Rhodes, IS further evidence that Ohio's laws need to be
changed to set "some basic
qualifications "Del Bane had been a
lodgtune state representative, but
was widely regarded as lackmg
knowledge in utility matters, a complamt which has now faded.
Van Meter sa1d state law now contams only vague reqwrements
whtch say generally that commisstoners should be honest and
fatr He sa1d he thinks both K elly
and Del Bane meet those standards.

Commission of Ohio (PUCO) may
g1ve impetus to growing demands
for major refonns in the important
utility rate-making agency.
Not that anyone thinks Jon F .
Kelly, a likeable, 29-year-old lawyer,
ts lacking m integnty or mtelligence. And his conftnnatwn by
the GOP-controlled Senate seems
assured. But when Rhodes annoWlced the appoinbnent of his own
legislative aide as PUCO chatnnan
Thursday, there were various complaints by members of both parttes
that Kelly has almost no expenence
in the complicated area of uttllty
rate regulatiOn.

.

---

"But I don't think the PUCO Is
place for on-the-job training,"

SWAIM
AUCTION BARN

the •- .

said.

he:•..
\.

Henry W. Eckhart, a former :~
Democratic chainnan of the
~
llllSSIOn, was sharply critical of ~'
Rhodes for making "another •'
political appointment" to the PUCO. :
Eckhart said he thinks the Kelly ap. .
pointment and the publicity about ~t : •
will draw attention to his own effort .'.
to revamp the corrurusston.

eom-

He is chatrman of the Committee';:
for the Direct Election of
&gt;
Conuniss1oners whtch wants to
a ballot proposal to have them ~t
ted by the people. Eckhart may not .'
get enough stgnatures in time w !
make an Aug 5 deadline for putting '
the 1ssue on the November ballot.

because it can't alford to make modifications to the
lateSt Louis plant requtred by the Federal Clean Air
Act. In 27 ~ears of production, more than 170,000 ears
have been turaed out of the St Louis facility. I AP
Lascrph oto 1

446 0294

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG
Open1ng
soon
speCial tz• ng 1n al um1num
ca ns. alum 1num s1d1ng,
sheet &amp; cas! alum , copper
w1re, brass. rad iators, and
auto batfe r tes Watch th• s
paper tor loca t •on and
grand openmg Rosenberg
Recycling, 140 Co lu mbus
Rd , Athens, Oh 4570 1 Call
593 7477

- -:Anno u n t emflJls?
Card of Thanks

CAROOF TH ANI&lt;'::&gt;
In th e l o&lt;.\ o t ou r LoVl' d

One Perhcl ps 1100 c;cnt
.1 IOV('Iy c,lrd or ~ .11
qUH?fly
10
tl
ch&lt;Hr
Perh.lp &lt;; you
!.Cn f 1 l uncr,ll '&gt; pr .l y II
&lt;.0 wr \rlw
rf !her e
Pcrh.lpc; you &lt;; pok e thr
k1ndc\l word ,1\ rl ll y
lr• cnd
woul d
\,Jy
pcrh,lp'l you w e lt not
thl'r l' .1 1 .111 1u o., t pny cd
lor
u c;
th ~ t
d ~v
v. h.lf CYe r you d1d to
co n&lt;.o ll• our h(,lrl&lt;; wt
th ,l nk
Y OII
'&gt; 0
Vl'ry
m uch
V'l h,ll evrr thf'
p.1rt
V.f' w . ~ n
to th,ll1k
Veteran-.
Memor1ill
Ho~pll.:~l
Pomeroy
Health
Care
Cen
t er
Dr
Tell e
Dr
fl.~ 1n ~ f11:0 i d

R ev

Interested '" Metaphy 1cs
re l 1g1ou s SCience
Study
group form.ng Lt fe ca n be
be tT er Contact 446 0975 al
ter 5
ATTENT ION LA D IESIII
Help pay off those un
wanted
bills work 1n g
even1ngs from 7 30 to 10 30
p m as a tash1on st y I 1st
Earn S8 00 to $10 00 per
hour pflaf1 t
Id ea l f or
homemaker Wtfh f amily
Ca ll992 394 1 from q 6

--

Au q '} "!

4

~----

__§_I v ~ w _!!_

--

ANY PER SO N who has
any th1 ng to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to
ott er any oth er fhmg for
sa le may pl ace an ad m th1s
co lu mn There w ill be no
charge to the adver t 1ser

J.1c k

7
mo
old
Ge rman
Shepherd
female , to a
goOO home Ca ll 367 0697
K 1liens

t o good home 7
week s old Call446 9311)1
2 fema le pups to g1ve away
Ca ll 4.46 4551

Announcements

l

-~-~

f 1nn• cum our fn r nd &lt;,
,1 nd n(',qhbor &lt;; tor !h e
bC'.H•t•fut tt ow erc; l oad
,lnd
c 1rd \
fh c
.£l. m l r•c 1n
l c q . on
L 11 lyN tl f' o&lt;. t 1! th r
p,l ll bP lrtr '&gt; th t Mccoy
Moon r llnl' r ol l Hom e
t he E mergency Squads
of G." lh a Pomeroy or1 nd
Ma son
r1 nd
blood
donors and .1nyone who
helped '" or1ny wor1y May
God Bl ess You
VPry Smcer ely
l h• f nt.n.. F.1m1 1y
oiR n.,•, l&lt;rnt

0 1REC fOR

-

SWEEPER
and sewmg
mach• ne repa 1r parts, and
suppl1es
P1 ck up and
del•ver y, Dav•s Vacuum
Cleaner one ha ll m11e up
George s Creek Rd
Ca ll

Auq ; 9

I

Announcements

J

Author.ty rcser...-es the
r1q ht to ac cep t or r e1ect
ony or il l l b1d S
J OHN P RODERUS
Dl RE CTOR

0AVID L WEIR

LEGAl NOTIC E
The Bo ard ot
Com
m• ss • o n ers
Gal l1fl
Metropo litan
H ous .n q
Au tn or• ty w ill open sea led
bidS .ct t the1r off•r P Rt 2
Apt , 14 B1dwell Oh10
456 14, on Sep tember Y 1Q8 1.
at 1 00 PM tor .n surance
coverage
Spec lf1ca t•on mc:1y be ob
ta lnt•d from the H ous•ng
Author•IY D•rector John P
Roder us, 446 025 1
T he 'Board of
Com
m1 Ss •one-rs of the Ga fl •a
H ous.nq
M c tropot•tan

Pomeroy
Aeru~.
2171
F 0 E Second r ead.ng of
new by laws Man Aug 3.
1981 at 7 00 p m at the
Aert e
Attent .on all f und ra1s1ng
gr oups such as churches,
sc hool s cl ubs Make 40%
profit!
sell• ng from
kits For m ore •nfo ca ll ~2
3561
AMWAY d1str1butor For
the wonderfu l produc ts of
Amway call304 773 5040

year Old dog Ml)(ed
breed
Pos~1b l y
pood le
Female, spayed
shot s,
house tratned or w 11! st ay
outs• de
Good
wdh
ch •l dren 992 55 19 after 3 30
or 91)11 3562 anyttme
Pupc•es 6 week s old 992
5838
WHITE Santy ch1cken , 304
895 3972
DOG half doberman
882 33 43

304

DOG ha l f St Bernar d 304
88 2 2425
---~-~-

6 _ ~.!!_a nd FOU_!I~-=

Classified Pages rowr tht'

Lost 1n tne VICinitY of
Bunker
Hill
A
wh 1te
Samoyed
Husk•e
Dog
Reward
offered
Ca ll
Sher •ff Proff1ft

folio\\ ing tt·lc·phmw •·xrhang•·s ...
Galila Co Ar ea Code
614
446- Galllpohs
167 - Chesh~re

388- VInton
24S- RioGrand e
179-Walnuf D1sf
2S6- Guyan D1st .
641- Arablol Dtst

67S458576773882895937-

HIM·--

SO. HE

~s

ORPEI?S AHP
ti06S ?t:&gt;
7HE8ACI&lt;

STEPS --·

CLEVELAND ( AP) - Prest dent
Reagan says hts postbon agamst
busmg has been " pretty plam ," but
he has not ye t conunitted hunself to
supportmg an ant1-busmg constttutwnal amendment proposed by
U S. Rep Ron Mottl, D-Ohto.
"I' ve been agamst busmg I thmk
11 was an experiment wtth worthwhtle mtent, but tt has proved actually t o cr eate more bitterness and
trouble tha n tt's resolved," the
prestdent sa td m an mtervtew at the
Whtle House wtth the Clf\·eland
Press
The mtervtew, conducted last

week, was published Friday
" When you fmd probably as grea t
a proportiOn of black parents as
whtt~ parents who are opposed to 11,
you wonder where the support for 11
ts comtng from," Reagan satd.
" Wtlson Rtles, supermtendent of
educabon in Callforma, a black, IS
one who sa1d 11 ts demeamng and insultmg to suggest that a black child
could learn only tf you stt him between two white ones."
Of Mottl 's amendment, Reagan
satd, "I haven't had a chance to read
11 yet But l et me JUSt say, obvtously
my philosophy has been pretty

plain."

Collect
593 -3566
or 593-3516

FEA THER BEDS WAN
TED, ANY CONDITION .
MISC , BOX 65, AURORA,
IND. ~7001. GIVE OIREC
liON WILL CALL SOON .

THI NAVY

.

Me1gs Co Area Code
614

LOST pet calico ca t, she
answer s to the name of
Prectous, last seen .n the
v•mc•ty of 27th Street of
Po.nt Pleasant Reward of,
fered 304 675 1588

992 - Mtddleport
Pomeroy
98S- Ches t er
343- Porffand
'l4 7- Letart Fall s
949- Ractne
711- Rulla nd
Mason Co W Va
Area Code 304
Pt.. Pleasant
Leon
Apple Grove
Mason
New Hav en
Letart
Buffalo

Coo n
hound
tra.n•ng
walke r
B lack ,
wh1te
female
Waterloo Road
Phone 304 458 1083 or 458
1687
7

WANTED to buy Junk
&lt;!ars. scrap metal , and bat
terles. Call 388 930J

·j

Wanted used p1ano bench
'" fairly good cond Call

~W4

BEOS·IRON, BRASS, old
turn 1ture. gold , silver
dollars, wood tee bOxes.
stone jars, antiques, etc ,
Complete
households
Wnte MD Mtller. Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992 77fil

''I wonder tf he's waffling on me?"
asked Mottl, who earlier this week
voted for Reagan's 25 percent, threeyear tax cut instead of his own par- • ·

ty's vers1on

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Calha County

In M e1gs County

446-2342

Yard Sale

7

YARD sa le July 31, August
1st &amp; 3rd 403 24th St ree t
YARD sale Fr1day and
Sa tu rday, 148 South Park
Dr•ve, 10 ? Cloth es. bOOks,
m•sc,
Aug ust 5, 2415 J efferson
Ave 9 to 9 Dtshes, som e
c h1 na wha t nets , p1ctures,
books, mtsc 1tem s Prt ced
to se ll Glor.a Russell
Carport sa le. 504 Maple
Onve, New Haven He1ghts,
Mon x Tuesday, from 9
a m to 5 p m August 3 and
•rn
Yard Sale 297 Wn ght St ,
Pomeroy Tuesday , Aug 4
&amp; Wed Aug 5 from 9 6
Woodburner,
e l ectr1c
st ove, portable elec tn c
hea ter, ch a1n saws, hand
tools, square da nce outfits,
and much more!
Yard Sa le Aug 3,4,5 10 6
2 tam•ly , all s1ze cl othes,
fu rn1ture, baby furntture
1660 L •nco ln
He1ghts ,
Pomer oy

4 t am1ly yard &amp; mov 1ng
sale August 3 &amp; 4 8 4 Up
per Syracuse on 124 near
Tack le Box
G 1gant1 c Rummage Sa le
School cloth es m en and
womens clothes, and m1sc
1tems
43 Cou r t
St ,
Ga ll ipO li S q 00 AM to 4 00
PM
Ya rd Sa le Buck R 1dge Apt
78 Beh1nd Spnng Va ll ey
Ctne m a, Monda-y 9 4 Very
good sc hool c lothes
Yard Sale Mon &amp; Tues 3 &amp;
4 On Fatrfleld Vanca Rd
Just
oft
Fa1rt1eld
Cen tenary Rd Watch for
s1gn~ Love seat, •ce box,
several an11qu es, and
many more 1fems
Trash &amp; Treasure Yard
Sale Au g 3rd &amp; 4th, lOAM
to ., Bob M cCorm1 ck Rd
Ga llopol os. Oh Off Rt 588
or Rt 35 160
• Fa moly Yard Sale Aug 3
6 Clothes. vaccum cleaner,
turntture, twin size bed.
and bed cloth on g 9 S
Dnveway sale 403 Lasley
St Pomeroy Aug 3 An
t1que collectable 1tems,
dtshes, glassware. utensilS,
sma ll
furniture .
and
c toth 1ng

Yard Sale

Large
Yard Sale
493 Broadway
Middleport
Aug I, 2 &amp; 3
Yard Sale Ra.n or Shme,
Woodward 's must sell
house and 3 plus acres
Tools, furn1ture , and m1sc
Sa t Aug 8, 9 00 to 6 00.
Sun 10 00 to?., 2 m 11es out
Neighborhood Rd , nght of
Kl•cker
YARD SALE, Monday,
Aug 3, at Gnff1n's Grocer-y
10 Kanauga, 10 00 to ? 3
Family Among 1tems sold
Will be a Seth Thomas man
te l clock Ra 1n cancels
Garage Sa le Sat thru Man
day Rt 35, 4 motes W of
HMC , turn r~ght on Rodney
Hdl. 1/2 ml 4th house on
nght Gas range and house
hold 1tems CHEAP
3 Fa mil y Yard Sa le Fr1 &amp;
Sa t 1837 Chatham Ave,
Ga ll .polls

)

t~--~~
67~~·~~=3--~-~~1

Yard Sale 810
second
St • ModdlePOft. August 1 8
Bedding, linens, pans:
dishes ,
appliances.
clothing, toys, furniture
lotsofmlsc . Comesee
'

8
Yard Sate
2 fam ily,
Rutland, N tcmsky restden
ce Tue and Wed Aug 4 and
5, 9 4 30

- -- - - - -

Yard Sale Chester, next to
f~re house Thu r and Fn,
July 30 Aug 1 9 5 tv and
m1SC
Yard Sale, Aug 4 and 5 '
from 10 4, 34705 Wholes Holt I
Rd , Rutland Clothes. toys,
d•shes and new weaved
rugs Ra 1n ca nceled Watch
for S1gns
MOVIN G sale 1905 North
Matn
1 antique maple
bedroom su1te, 1 set
washer &amp; dryer. 1 18 cu. ft
upnght, refngerator, 1 13
cu ff freezer, 1 dt nette set
other m tsc
July 31 , Au gus t I , 2 9 7
M eta l detector, fhtngs for
home n car and c lothes and
mtsc 4th Street , Mason
YARD sa te 2320 Jefferson
Ave Pt Pleasant, Thur
sday, Fr~day &amp; Saturday

Yard Sale, Mon 8 5 Bill &amp;
Mt ck ey Hoback, E lm S' ,
Public Sale
Racme Men's, women's, 8
&amp; Auction
c hildren s
c toth1ng,
g lassware, toys, small fur Neats Au ct1on
Hogsett.
n•ture
WVA Rl 2 E ver y Sat 7 00
PM
{ Consignments
taken
}
&lt;w•ll
buy furn•turel
8
Public Sale
Lonn1 e Neal 367 7101
&amp; Auct1on

ESTATE AUCTION
TUESDAY, AUG. 4, 1981
10:00 A.M.

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

Challeno•no
pos1lton/
d•verse responsibilities
Ass1st"!nt Direc tor for
Program 1n pnvate, non
pr of• t ,
c omprehensive
famil-y plann1ng agency
servtng 7 countv Southeast Need reliable babys1tter
Ohto area . B S. degree 1n for 2 chi idren References
Educatton, Social Work, or requtred, good pay, ctty
Nursing, mtntmum 2 years schools Call446 2714
supervisory e)(penence
Proven
managemnet MANITAINENCE Local
ability Need energetic per
manufacturer is seekmg
son wtth demonstrated ma1ntatnen ce man ex
initiative, communication pene-nced 1n electncat ,
skills, ab1litv to anal-yze botler, general and preven
and ut1ltze data as a tahve ma•ntalnence Send
management
tool
resume
detail1ng
e)(
Knowledge
of
rural. pertence
and
salary
prevent1ve health care requtred toP 0 So)( 219 c·o
des.rable.
Demonstrated GallipOliS DallY Tribune,
abtlity 1n planning, im
825 3rd Ave. Galltpotls
plementing , mon1toreng
and evaluattng serv1ces
POSITION AVAILABLE
delivery
Must
work
Subst
•tute Teacher for
closely and cooperatiVely
Gu 1dtng Hand School Must
wtfh the E•ecut1ve Dtrec· have a val1d teach1ng cer
tor Require organizatiOnal
from the Oepar'
ability will! people [ paod ttftcate
ment
of
Educat 1on
and volunteer)and ftscat
1n
resources to serve 4,200 Responsibillttes .
teaching absence betng
patient•
plus respons•ble for providtng
educat•onal/c ounseltng se
rvtces for several hundred aducational programm1ng
for groups of students
area residents Super-vtse 6 Salary·
$35 per day
offtce s1tes, 8 cllntc sites.
Availability
August 24,
Athens·based, require car,
contact Mr Oavo d c
time flexibility for evening 1981
Ratlofl,
P 0
Box 14,
and weekend clinics and
Cheshire, Oh 45620. (614 1
meettngs. Submit resumee,
inc lude
at least two 367 0102
professional references .
Real Estate - General
Kay
Atkins,Executive
Direc tor, Planned Paren
thood of Southeast Ohto, B
N.Court St. Athens, Ohio
..S701
Deadline . August
15,1981 Equal Oppartumty
Sundav. Aug 2
Employer
2-5 PM
298 Mulberry Ave
CLERICAL matl agents
Pomeroy
urgently needed by the
hundreds for 1nsert1ng
sales material into en
Ntcely remodeled J
velopes. Permanent part or
bedroom house close to
full ttme opportuntty . Ex
hosp•tal and town
perience unnesessary Ex
celient 1ncome potenttal
Information, send setlalf
Call Daryl
addressed, stamped en
591 5004
velope Sylvesler, Box 96,
For oeta11s
Ch1cago Hgts , IL 60411

.

TO BE SOLD AT TRADING POST
Front&amp; Cedar Sts ., Oak Htll, Oh10
THI S WILL MAKE YOU A GOOD INVESTMENT•
Trmber, Stram, Su•table for upland game-hunt 1ng·
trapptng
PROPERTY AUCTION'
STARTS II ' JO A M .. AUGUST 8, 1981

}iARPER
HALSTEAD
liALVAGE CO. 11th and
V•and Street. now buy1ng
lnetals ( copper, brass.
•luminum. lead, stainless
$teel . battertes
and
radtators, gmseng, yellow
root, catn tpand sassafras)
lo am to 6 pm da1ly Also
Flea Market on Saturdays
'AII675 5868

AUGUST 8 &amp; 9. 1981
10% Down, Balance m IS Days
Appro,.tmately I m1le mfo Galha Coun1y on State
Route 233 89 acres, more or less , t1mber makes 1t
very su1table for upl.and game A s1ream runs
across 1f wh1ch makes 11 very suttable for hunttne
and frapptng . 2,725 feet road frontage

Old furniture, stone tars.
~opper kettles and other
types of antiques Phone
~ 3925.

.

Th e Auct.oneer Serv1ce wtll be under the d1rectton
of Colonel" J1m C. Swam "
Local Phone Numbers 682-7767 or 7761

PUBLIC AUCTION

~1th the Army Nat1ona1
Suard. you'll have a part
(jme job with full time
lteneftts. You will anend
l)'alnlng one weekend each
month and two week5 each
1ear. Benefits onclude low
C:ost life insurance, ex
eellent pay and a free pen
!~jon plan. Plus. the Army
couard' s valuable technica l
st:hooling wi II pr~pare you
tOr a well paying civil1an
t!'b. Call675-3950.

MONDAY EVE., AUG. 3, 1981
6:00 P.M.
Movmg out of stale so Wtll sell the follow 1ng 1tems
Loctt ted at 238 Lmcoln St. 1A Middleport. ohiO
behtnd Pat Htll Ford
HOUSEHOLD
Wes t1ng house automat1c w asher. dryer and 18 cu
tt Upr,ght deep freeze, stereo w / record player
am/ lm radm and 8 track tape player coffee table'
l amp tabl e, room d 1v1der, gas cook 1ng stove '
refn ge rator, S1ngle bed, chest of drawers, upr 1ghi
sweeper bottle gas barbeque gnll , ch tld 's toys, new
Ca rn1v a t glass collecteon, m1 sc dishes, pots and
pans, tab le and 4 cha!Ps, a nd baby car seat
OWNER - BILL HYSELL
Terms Cashw1th Pos1tn1e 10
Dan Sm1th
J1m Carnahan
949 2033
949 2708
" Not re s. ponsrble tor acctdents or to ss of property ,"

SATIJRDAY, AUGUST 8
STARTING AT 11:00 A.M.
ANTIQUES - FURNITURE
FARM MACHINERY

2 tam 1ly Men , women,
c hlldrens clothes plus
m1sc
ttems W 11t start
Man 8. Tues morning at
8 30 a m till 5 p m , and
Wed t oIll p.m In Pomeroy
bes1de Powell's Super
Value Cal1992 3661
Y ' rd Sale Aug. N ·5. One
m1le north of Chester on St
Rt 7 Turn left onto co. Rd.
82 One mile Watch for
sogns 8 6 dally
Huge yard sale, Mon, Aug
3 Tues, Aug .t Hudsons., Rt
338 at Pearl St, Raine,
Ohto. Sewing machine
c ab i net, canning Iars,
school clothes~ misc .
Fove
lues
Joan
Lima

9·5.

family

yard

Stewarts on New
Rd Walch for signs.
NOt

TRAINED
mediCal
secretary, local physican' s
office. P 0 Bo• 276, Pt
Pleasa nt. wv 25550

w.

N EED A JOB? Ever
- lhought of working on a
lowbOat? The river in
dustry employs thousands
Df men-women
Recleve
• lOp wages. Many fringe
llenifits. Free room and
· iioard, medical and dental.
,.ransportatlon paid. l\lo
• 2elocatlon. Work JO days·
stay hOme JO days. CRF.,
Inc., Box 121, Dept. 2&gt;10,
Elonlphan, MO 63935 For
raster service send selt ad·
· aressea stamped envelope.

l.ee Johnson
Auctioneer

epoeltl-.

A VERY SPECIAL PLACE
1mmaccul ate hom e
tn lovel y prtvate sett1ng cons•sttng of 7•,• ac r es
Ho me 1S 14x70 m ob1te home completely enclosed
wtth roof and full length front porch and ca r port
Two add lftona l rooms on r ear - one w 1fh stone
II r epla ce and th e other w1th a woodburner Ther e 1S
a n1ce s1zed barn and two other budd1ngs Just thr ee
miles lrom Rac1ne on blacktop road Pnced 1n tow
$40s, and owner Will help W1th f1nan cmg Ca ll
coll ec t lor more 1nformat1on or app o1ntment

STARKEY REALTY - Athens , OhtO
Loretta McDade - 592-2419

Rea t Eslale - Generat

m. ApprOICimetely

41 1-t a yura otd.

, ljOfh

PrestOn Mustard, Aucttoneer
H . N. Humphrey, Auc11on!ler
Jolin MIIC"'II, AuctioMe•
Torry Loyd, A,t. Aucll-1'

or Loss ol Property '

Fpr
lm·

Gitlllpoiil

tton ~·hi~ Ill

Ave., , Gallli!OIIa&lt;

•

J,

leiY , et

IIIIIIY

INE: ~t' ·!2,

•
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EVANS Day Care Center,
K •ngs Dr1ve, Evans, wv 1S
now acceptm g applt cattons
tor enrollment Opentng
August 17, ages 2 1hrou gh 5
Tea cher Becky Sharp,
phone 304 372 5398

Will do housekeep tn g or
babys ttflng or stt wtth
elderly tn hospttal or home
Call446 9623 alter 5 30

Tkt

w.~tman

J m

Coct1r~ n

Broker

4h J79t Eve
U6 7881 E "t

lllssoc~oll e

8

Hatnton

J

Cl~d c-

II

AHOC

44&amp; 41 40 EVf

W a lker Auoc 14S S176

Tom Hol~ll'n' Assoc

OWNEf:' WANTS OFFER - WILL
HELP FINANCE
Attract 1vC' 4
bedroom br 1ck on 4 acr es w1th creek
fronta ge 1n Kyg er Cr eek sc hool s La r ge
f am il y room 2 ttrep l aces 21 1 baths
equ•pped kllchen , nat gas hea t cent
a1r '1 car garage barn &amp; kennel B ~ 0 0
mtg assumpl1on 60's

l88

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~760

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k' r S81l - 2 ACREs - Great loca t• on .n
Gr een Sch D• st w 1th lots of road Iron
taqe on Rt 588 2 stor y 3 bedroom home
.n good con d Fam• ' Y room, equ •PPI?d
k i iC ~ le n dnl1 ng room 11J bath FA 01 1
&amp; NOodbu rn•n g fu rnuces plu s an ex
cc11en1 g ar den area 50 s

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·~- ~.~~~

,_.,., ~- ~--,... ~".."" ......... I

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OWNER'S SACR IFIC E - YOUR GAIN
You w ill f• nd very few ba r gn ms os
good as th •s I yr old 3 bedroom home .n
Northup Has n• ce tc:1mily room wood
burn er l¥ge ba th &amp; 8x16 stora ge bl dg
Bnck &amp; v 1n yl 5•dmo Owners W1ll take
6°o down paym en t

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NE W LIS fiNG -

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-"~"'~ II

Poss 1bl e Y0 o Ass ump
t. on
Owners must se ll Very attrac
l• vc t y decorated 3 bedroom hom e near
rov.n Has v1nyl Std1ng 2 f1rep taces
n1_ w cr~ rper new del ux e k1tch en 2
hath s lu ll bilsemen t fa m1ly room re c
r oom N at gas cen t a1 r &amp; 'l car
CJMaqe Low 60 s

r

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OUTSTANDING BR ICK RANCH
1
b lo c~( I rom H M C Nes tl ed on r) larrJe
lot w1th exce ll ent v1ew fh1 s att rtlc t •vc
3 or 4 bedroom home •nc tudes 2 brlth s, !
!• r eplac es large fi'l mi iY room d e n hc~ s
• had exce ll ent care &amp; m,l •ntenancc ll. tn
one of I he best neighborhoods

I

nr2t
Ploutz Realty

·Tr=r-:

S2S-S27 Rechtand Av e
Athens, Oh
594 -4211

Located 2 m1l es we st of HM C on Rl

35

Follow

TH E WISEMAN AGENCY 446 3643

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LO VE LY BRICK - RIVER VIEW
6
yr old 4 bedroom br 1ck home south o f
town on Rt 7 I ncludes equtpped k1t
chen formal d 1n•ng, family roo m ,
t 1rep lac e 2 baths baSl'menr &amp; 2 c ar
gar aqe A ver y enNgv ef1 1C1enl home
w 1th low heat.ng bd ls 3 4 acre yard w 1fh
spectacu lar vtcw

FARM ... S6 ACRES - BeautofUI pasture and
meadow land, some wooded Fenced Good barn
and other outbldg N1 ce 3 bedroom home, ftreplace,
knotty p1ne panet.ng 1n ltvtng room. k ttchen has
built m oven, counter top range and 'dlshwasher C1
ty sc hools Green Elementary Appro)( 3 miles from
Gallopol os JUST LISTED! $94,000

G~Jiam; 1Assoc. 245-5208

COUNTRY ESTATE - 16 acres, 4 bedroom bnck
r anch . den. b•llrard room , ttn1shed basement w1th
e)(tra kitchen. bath, bedroom and pr1vate pat10
Plush carpet , beautifull y decora ted Owner wd l
cons•der trade for smaller home Over $100,000

157 ACRES - 579,500 - Cattle larm , approx 90
acres pasture. fenced . Good barn, other outbldg.
600' road frontage, city school district. 6 m1les from
Ctty.

.

APARTMENT HOUSE ~ us,OOO - GOdd locatoon on
citv . Seven apartments plus 3 mobile home pads.
Call for comP,Iete detao)S

,

DOWN BY THE OHIO - EKc~toonal home. 1 ,2~8
sq 11 be~utifully decora)ed ltvong area plus full
basement .•Onty 4 years 61d 3 bedrooms. format o1n
lng k itchen haSTange, retnoerator, 5nack bar, but
cheblock counter lop. Fully carpeted except kot
chen. Wood deck. Over an acre with r iver frontage
$39.900.

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NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUS.
£D
Owner"' mu st sel l Ttle1r loss 1s

your Qil•n Lovel y 3 bedroom br 1ck &amp;
tr ,lm e 1n .1 great locatt on 1n Green
Sc hool D• st Has 2 bat hs, ta m 1!y room
woodburner
t ormn l d •n mg 2 ca r
QMclQC .&amp; large fenced yard 1 year
Buyers Pro trc tton

l121!,
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J£ RRY

Sr

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Qunl•lv built 3
bt'clroom br• ck r anch oil Rt 35 3
bedroom s new br•ck firep lace .n l•v•ng
room lorm Cl l d 1n1ng eQU•PPf'd k.rt chen,
n,11 QrlS ce nt ,11r ( lOw ulll b1I ISI new
roof &amp; '} \ M qara ge N1 ce cvrnN 101
'u s
CENTEN.O.RY
Owner s amuou~ to LOW INTEREST ASSUMPTION
Ex
se ll th1s redecorat ed ma .n t free home
constru ctton
A
quai•IY 3
1 c 11 er• l
on Rt 141 Th• S J bedr oom hom e has l)£'droom L Shc:lPCd bn ck . nearl y 1800
new v •ny l s1d1ng new nat gas I urn ace ~q 11 of 11v1ng space plu s bilSCment
new h w her:ller new eaves carpet
F1r f' pl ncc family room , 'l bat hs nat
etc A very n• ce &amp; clean lam11y hom e LM S cf'n l a 1r &amp; ")car garaqc Beau tiful
40' S
31
,'\ere p•ctu r csque ~ett.ng that 1n
cluacs 1 , owner .n Iar oe pond I m ile
LOW LOW OOWN PAYMENT &amp; MON
THLY PYMT - Owners W1 f11 ng to I r om H M C
f1n ance th ts home for as !title as sa 000 16U ACRE FARM - FR EE GAS
One
down Th•s 1117 stor y home has a ol the bes t overi'ltt I arms l1 sted tor sale
bed room s, f•r ep la ce ea t 1n k•tchen , full Gr eat tocJ t1 0n on Rl 325 &amp; Rou sh Rd
basement &amp; garage Locr'!ted m.nutes w• th toads ot rd trontaq c 50 acrcs pro
from town ott Rt 7 $J.4 900 l mrned 1a tc duct •ve c lnnd tob.Kco ba se barns and
possess•on
s 11o Has be en ope r al ed as d a ~rv
bus 1ness RemodC'IPd hom e W1 lh new
.IMM ED IATE POSSESSION
New qas fur nace (fr ee heal) Good loan
cedar home w 1t h a lovely v 1eW J
nssump110n
bedroom home w tlh ea t •n kll chen, dm
ing ro om , master bedroom. loll •s 21'
DELUXE MOBILE HOME.
Th1 '6 1S.an
cathedral ceil1ng, woodbur ner plus a cxt rn n1 ce • new 14x70 dduxe home
acre new p1ne se tt 1ng Low JO 's
w 1th c...: pando "''! unfed on 1 1 ncre .n n1 cc
country se 1t 1nQ Includes I bedrooms 2
REDU CE D
TO
"O,O OU
ba t hs fir ep l ace f)lJIII •n stereo central
• Unbel1eveably ppr •ced '1 story home 1n cu r . sundeck &amp; P"' 'o doors Equ,pped
town Needs some repatr 3 bedroom s. 2 k t chen w l m•crowave
Ne,u ,,o
1
baths, family r oom, basemen t, na t gas Gra
nde Only S/6 500
heat and 2 lar ge lots Bette r Hurry 1
RFNTAl
tN V F.'::&gt; rMENr
Rto
Th ere s noth.n g lack
HAS IT ALL•
Gr"'nde V.t l agc tol€lii'Jn
L 1v1• .n
ing as ro q uality f ea tures &amp; workman
sh•P tn lh1 S 3 yr old 1800 sq It br. ck 3 downsta .r s &amp; rent upsta1rs Each h ns l
full ba t hs, central vacu um, 1ntercom, bed r ooms k1t chcn l• v•nQ room &amp; b,1th
but It 1n bookshelves, love ly f•replace , Full basement . n,1 1 q r~s heat qar,ntc
cent ~ 1r , ex tra .nsula tton and overstzed plus 211? lots 30s
2 car garage In addtt1on th er e 1S 24)(26
shop w / overhead door All th1s on 1 acre
ns, ooo - 3 bedroum hOme m R 10
fn Terra Bella Estat es north of Rodney
Grande Has F A n:"!l qas furn.l cc. new
11980 BAYVIEW - Top ot the lone 14x70
h w heater. tult brl'&gt;C'mcnt . d nng room ,
mobile home wtth 7)(2• e)(panelo 3
large porch &amp; yarcl Just n l1111c pitt nl
bedrooms, 11!2 baths, central atr, built
Wtll do wonder s
tn stereo, pat1o ('!OOrs. equtpped k ttchen,
d1n1ng room Ltl&lt;Ca ted 1n Green School
A
6 ACR ES N EAR RIO GRA ND E
Oost car rent lot $'9 ,400.
qu 1et sccrltc 1oca,1on tor ' h 1 S 2 bedroom
block home w / tull basement Has wood
MUCH ADMIRED BRICI&lt; - A very
burner, we ll &amp; '1 lar ge barns An ex
spec1al 3 bedroom brtck ranch l ocated
ce llent place for horses 529.600
In a great location along R t 588 H as
full basement , family room. 2
i22 000 - 9~o ASSUMP'rtON -- A
ftreplaces. 2 baths, 2 car garage &amp; love
bedroom hom e on lower Rt 1 Has
IV 1 ac yard Call for appt
equtpped k1t chen, familY room,
basement, nat gas heat ($33 ouoc-•1
OWNERS MOVING TO WISCONSIN ~ ­
91 ' rrver fron tage, mob tle home hookup,••
Attractt ve redwood home 1n Woodland
plus over J~ acre Must see
Or. 3 bedrooR'Is. 22' rusttc famoly room
prec18fe Good cond
w/s tone fira•r &amp; 1h acre Low 1nterest

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B.RAND NeW KING SIZE RP.NClH - \600sq. II llv
lng area plus full baM-nt. 3 B~. 2 fUll baths, k1t
chen hal range, dlsh~nt.r, lg. enough for family
dlntl)ll. Fam11y J OOm. D'tck. You can clloose ~our
, favorl\e carpet colors. Aosumab;.. mortgage
I $65~000. .
~
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Your Ptano rust1ng '"sum
mer Hum 1d1ty? Free tn
spect1 on w1th tunmg Lane
Danoels 742 2951 or 1"12
2082

OPEN HOUSE
TODAY 2-4 P.M

"HOME OF THE WE;E "
has given this
hOme tender loving ca~ and II s~s. 3 BR ranch
has large famlty room ; flrepjace, bul t·in bOOk case
Eat· in kitchen with raiJIIe and r~fcl · Fei)Ced back
yard with beautiful 110\1/e,.., shrubber y and garden
Few m jleslrom city. $0,500.

rt r,r Wk. mual be

ProfessiOnal
Serv.ces

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REAL ESTATE AGENCY

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ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY 'S FINEST FARMS Beaut1ful rolhng mel.ldows, frontage on Raccoon
Creek, 154 acres, 60 t1llabte, 80 pasture, rest t1mber,
2 pands, 1050 lb. tobacco base Good ba rn s, other
..TUtbldg Very nice 3 BR tri level home has large
eat· i n kitchen. familY room $187,000

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FHA VA Convent1ai Home
Loans, Columbus F.rst
Mortgage Co , 463 Second
Ave. Ga l lipolis. Oh, 446
7172

Loretta McDade
!'192-2419

! ' tART·TIME

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Monev to Loan

22

STARKEY
REALTY

25 LOcuST ST., ~lPOLIS, OHIO

1 • ··-------------------•
&gt;
RECREATI
, fN LEADER Need person
' ~ assist Olre&lt;:lor In set·
~ng- up classes ~nd ouper
flslno , proor1m1 . AP:
llf'OXImltely .20 ,hr. per
~k year round. AAuslbt
-~at lofst ~~ years Old, wllh
~~experience Working with
t.~
o' p 1 I • r ~
' YM)'IAST-ICS
IN ·
' STRUCTOR Exper~ed
.O~mneatlcl• ln; truc:tor
10r yur round!

TV serv•ce calls Call 991
6776 or 1"12 2034. Also used
color TV for sale

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

Ron CanadaJ, Realtor, 446-3636
AudreJ Canad~i ~ealtor 446-3636

Susan

Would like to do baby sot
t1ng •n my home Any hours
acceptable Call446 9319

----------------,
WISEMAN
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REALlOR•

my home. locall!d
school dl
have
references. Call ~-81&gt;95

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PHONE 446·3643

CANADAY ,
REALTY

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SANOY AND BEAV ~R In
surance Co has o fered
services for f1re .nsJ ance
coverage tn Ga ll• a County
for almost a century
Farm. home and personal
property coverages are
avatlable to meet 1n
d 1vidua l needs
Contact
Le w1 s Hughes. agent
Phone 446 3318

General

Real Estate - General

}----~-------------: ._ady tor part-time work In
, Jewerly Store Inquire at
• 22 2nd Avt!., GalliPOliS.
experience
; {tetail
, llretered.

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

sale.

----Real Estale -

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

THURSDAY , AUGUST 6, 1981
10 : 30 A.M .
LOCATION: 13 miles above Henderson.
West Vtrgtnta, on U.S . 35.
33- DAIRY COWS - 33
This sale consists of 33 mature Holstein
Datry Cows in various stages of lactation .
There will be approximately 15 heifers
from 200 to 800 pounds. Records wi II be
announced on sale day .
Terms : Cash
Sale by Order ol
FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION

&amp; Wed., Aug. 4 &amp; 5,

45631

Need reliable baby Sttler
lor 2 cnildren, ref req.
~ood pay Call ~- 11652

PUBLIC AUCTION

~

n1ce
bedroom
tra1ler Ltke new Carpeted
and turntshed 54.000 985
4133

Omu~

CPN 11-1 shift Competitive
wages&amp;. excellent beneftts
(;all Arcadia Nursing Cen
toer, Coolvi lle 667·3196.

Yard Sale Aug , 3 &amp; .4 4th
&amp; Pear l, Rac1ne Ctoth1ng,

d•shes, beehtve radiO, etc
Ra1n or sh•ne

MANAGERS Assostant
managers and clerks for
Conv1ent S'ore
Please
send resume to Gas Plus,
Box 334, GalloPOIOS Ohto

~oc•al work pos1t1on part
t.ime at local Develop
• • mental Center advocating
• f1&gt;r developmental disabled
individuals. Must have
IISIBA or relaled ex
,enence Send resume to
Muriel Ranum, Suite 112
bso
Sin Ave • Colum
lous, Oh -43212

Loc.lted 311 mtles East of Jackson on old Rt !$,
w-.tch tor S1gns
·
·

12 x40

OPEN HOUSE

C::ook wBnted for new area
r-estaurant.
Exceplional
"'partunoty for qualtfoed
person Write Box 316,
~alii polls

.

Help Wanted

11

Gold, silver , sterltng,
1ewetry, nngs, old cotns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
.ber snop, Mtddleport 992
9476

PROPERTY AUCTION

PUBLIC AUCTION

The personal property of the lat e Sa m and Neva L
Ba1as Wi ll be sold Located 1n Tupper s Plam s, Oh1o.
from SR 7 go West on SR 681 thr ee tenths mtle
W&lt;ltch lor sale s1gns.
HOUSEHOLO
6 pc bedroom su1te Fr •g1datre elec tn c ra nge and
r etngeTV. p latform rocker , ll v .ng room su•te, cot
tee and end table s, book case, lamps, clocks. p•c
tu re~ stands, rad1os, 4 pc bedr oom su 1te, 5 pc
bedroom su1te metal clothes press, Hoov er
sweeper. m eta l ca b•nel dt op led l ta bl e. m apl e table
and &lt;1 cha1rs , t ans ca rved ca b.nel, m1sc ltnens,
d•s hes pots and pans
MISCELLANEOUS
Hu m•dl fl er , luggage, o•llt ghts, work tab le grmder
hand tools g~r den equ• pment , l 1ke new A ll ts
Cha lmers m ower and cu" tvator
Co1se 1¥2 1473
Frank Porter - EJI!ecUtor
Jtm Carnahan
Dan Sm1th
949 203J
949·2708
Term s Cash With POSI11\Ie 10
LUNCH
" Not responseble for acc1dents or loss ot property "
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE Th1s IS a very good and
clean aucfton They were refir ed from th e servtce
See you at the auct1on•
At

s.

992-2156
In Muon County

7

11
Help Wanted
INFORMATION
on
Person to assist in ca re of Alaskan &amp; overseas em
older man. Morn1ng tm ployment, excellent tn
portant ,
other
hours come, call 312 74 1-9780 ex
negotiable Could live in , ten t1 on 917
Cheshire call367 7549

Insurance

D.J 's LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Nelgn
borhood Rd , all makes ser
v1ced Specta ll zlng 1n Lawn
Boy
Blades sharpened
Ca ll 446 4425 af ter S p m
P1ck up and del1very
available

Insurance

13

Needs someone to do
weld1ng on truck Phone
304 67&gt;-3734
Lot &amp; traoler woth 2 added
Very
rooms 10 Ractne
n1ce Call949 2836

13

Part time
Posit1on
AVailable Ceramics In AUTOMOBILE
IN
structor Must be certified SU RANCE
been
can·
In ceramic art and able tol,c~e~l~l,f~:r·s Lost
vour
Instruct a class. Respon ,
L ocense? Phone
1
slble for
pre · class
preparation, teachi ng, and
worktng with volunteers
Cermamic
Instructor
POSition will be 4 hours per
week· -tw o hours
In 16
Radio TV
structlon time and 2 hours
&amp; CB Repair
related activities hourly
wages Will be $5 25-per RON ' S TV SERVICE
hour
Send resume to Specializing In Zen1fh
Gallla County Coonco l on House Calls Now serv1cino
Aging, P.O . Box 220 Motorola Quazar. Call 1
Jackson Pike, Galllpalts, 304·576·2398 or 446 245-4
Oh ~31 or call 446 7000 tor
an application Appllcation t~7:___ __,M"'-"is,_,c,e"l"lae.n,e"o"'u"'s_ _
must be received by Man· day, August 17, 198 1. 3 pc living room su•t. good
4 OOPM
An Af ftrm afive condl,ton W111 sell cheap
Act1on Equal Opportun•ty Joann Kautz. 985 3831
Employer
11
Wanted to Do
1- -- - - -

BABYSITTER , references,
prefer tn my home Phone
30-1-675·2275

Opportunity IS yours tUst
for the ask1ng . Ask your
Beeline stylrst and she witt
be happy lo help you iOt n
the Beeline world of
fashion and success. Phone
992 3941 between the hours
of9 6

CHIP WOOD. Poles max
d•ameter 14" on largest
end S12 50 per ton. Bundled
slab
SIO 50 per ton
Oellverd to Ohoo Pallet co,
Rock
Springs
Rd ,
Pomeroy 992·2689

Yard Sale-

Yard Sale, Tues , Juty .c, 9 ,
5
M a1dens, Broadway ,
Racine

lmmedtate open1ng for
LPN woth Pnarmacology,
11 lo 7 30. Excellent star
ting salary. Contact Judy
Holley RN, Ptnecrest Care
Center,
ca ll
4467112
EOE

Good used Spinet and Con
sole piano's Call 614 773·
5125.

.;
Mottl, who represents Parma and :
part of Cl eveland's west Side, Said'
Reagan telephoned several weeJta~ :
ago to sohcit hts vote on the tax cuta. ~
Mottl satd he asked if the presidel'lt "'
would support the amendment an4
sa1d Reagan told him, "I don't see
why not. "

The Sunday rtmes -Sentmei - Page- D-3

11"------H~el~p~W~a~n~l~ed~---

Reagan still opposed to busing

Pubhc Not1ce

-- - -Pubhc
- - -Nottce
---

7tl TELL

WANT TO BUY Old fur
nlture and Anllques of all
kinds, call Kenneth swain,
256 1967 in the evenings .

PUCO
pearl..

Classifieds

Rev H 17 13

AT HIS

OA&amp;ICE

Ke"'tth Swein. Auol
Corner Third &amp; OIIYI

Help WAnted

If'S NOT JUst A JOI,IT SAN ADVINT UIIl

LAST VElTE - An assembly line worker puts the
finishing touch es on the last Corvette to be made at
General Motors' St. Louis plant. GM ts shifting production of the sports car to a plant m Ro101ing Green, Ky

NOTICE TO
CO NTRACT ORS
STATE OF OHI O
DEPARTMENT OF
T RANSPORTATION
Co lumbu s, Oh1o
Ju l y24, 1981
Con tract Sa les Legal
Copy No 81716
UNIT PRIC E
CONTRACT
Seated proposal s wtll be
re ce•ved at the otft ce at th e
D•rec tor of the Oh10 Oepnr
tment of Tran spor l afion
Columbus Oh•o until 10 oo
AM . O h10 Standard Trmf'
Tuesday August 18 198 1
for •mprover1en ts 1n
Parts 1 to 35 •nc l us •ve nrf'
off ered&lt;'!!:. one contr act and
wtl t be cons•Ciered on the
bas rs ot th e Total il mount
b•ct
Parts 1 tl'lru JS
Athens Gall•a Hock •ng
Me•gs Noble V1nton and
wash.r·"lgron Count •es. Oh•o
on br•dges on
var.ous
rou tes and !:.ell•ons by
Cl e ~n.ng and pa •nt.nq
F1 e ld
Pa.nt. ng
of
EI(!SI •n y Steel
The date sr t tor com
pl et .on at th •s work shall be
as set forth m th e b• dd. ng
proposal
Ea ch b1dder shrt lt be
req u• r ed to file w1Th h•s b•d
a ce rt.t• ed ~_ h e c k.
or
cash•er 's chf'rk tor an
ilmoun t equ al to f1ve per
cent ot h1 s btd , but •n no
even t more l hn n 1il l y
thou sand dot Iars or a bono
tor ten per cent a t l'lt s b1d
pnyable to th e D •rf'c tor
B•dders must apply on
l he pr oper term s
for
qunl,flc af•On at leilst ten
days pr1or to th e date SC'I
tor opcn.nq D•ds •n ac
corddnce w i t h Chilpler 5515
Oh• o Rev •sed Code
Plans and specl li r,li• Ons
are on l1l e 1n the Dep.1n
m ent a t Tran sportrlTI On and
th e offi ce ot th e Otsl r1 cl
Deputy D•r ec l or
Tt1e D•r ec tur re :.e rve s
th e r.qnt to rr1ect .1ny and
ill I bi d')

-"M:WES

711t!JWELL

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE

II

w. Va .

Part · tlme
Position
Available craft Instructor
Must have experience In
making crafts and In·
structlng participants 'hOw
to.' Responsible for precla5S
preparation,
teaching, working with
volunteers, and assisting
a Navy B01ler
with craft displays Craft
1an
An expert on
lnstruclor position will be~
l
•
h.ipbooa!·d
equipment
that
hOurs per week--2 hOurs In·
structton··2 hours related prod uces steam for proactivities. Hourly wage will pu l sto n engmes and for
be $5.25 per hour . Send generatmg electnc pow e r
resume to Gallla County
Council on Aging, Po. Box PhySically demandmg At
-141, 220 Jackson Pike, the heart of sh 1p operat10n
Gallipolis, Oh &gt;1.5631 or call
Navy trammg and
446-7000 for an application.
fits Contact your loca l
Applications
m~st
be
received
by
Monday , Navy recruiter for dela 1l s
August 17, 1981, ~=PM. An
Affirmative Actton·Equal
Call Athens
Opportunity Employer

WRY

We 1111 •nrtt.lng for
•nybody at our Auction
a.rn or In rour home . For
Information and pickup
Mrvtce call 256-1967.
Solo Every S.turct.y
Nlghtot 7 p.m

'j

llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

I1

1

II
I

1
1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I
I

�•.

•

•

"
The Sunda
23

31

Professional

Services

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh1o-Pomt Pleasant,

T1mes - sent1nel
Homes for Sale

31

for Sale

3 bedrooms, full basement
&amp; garage Suitable for
den In Middleport W ,OOO
992 7370

your

Ptano

Btll

Ward,
wards Keyboard 4-46 4372,

Gallipolis
GALL lA Cleantno and
Rent A Matd Servtce Inc,

Free Esttmates, bonded,
msured, phone 245 9234
Cleantng by t he week, man

thor contractual
Complete Auctton Serv tce
stock r educ tiOn close outs
estates farm equtpment It
vestock real es tate Ltcen
sed and bonded tn Ohto,
and West WV Bud McGhee
Auct ton and Real Estate
Co Ca l l for terms 446 0552
or 4-46 0818
428 Second
Ave, Gall tpolts, OH, 45631

Estate

NEW

CABIN

home 1

or

small

c:om pletely

n15hed $3900

~a 114M

fur

0390

House Wtfh acreage for
sa le, 3 or 4 bdrs, full y car

30-4 675 554-4

$8,000 992 6 U5 after 5 p m

1981 14' W1d e

33

call At Your
Le1sure

2112 year old rust•c home, 8
acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
ca rpet, t1mber , pnvate

992 7741
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad

year protect1on pia

d•t•on, 3 bedroom, fam•IY
room w1th ftreplace cen
tral a1r, basemen t, 304 675

Large mvento ry

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOMES
INC.

Prrce reduced on 3 bdr
bnck house loca ted 5 mtles
tram town S-47,000 plus
balance of loan Ow ner ts
mov.ng out of to wn Ca l l
446 0633 , even mgs

By owner' " town One m il e
from school. sc hool bus, 3
bd r bath , ea t rn k1f c hen,
LR on ma rn fl oor, full
f1n1 shed basement w 1th
family room, 4 bdr and
bath Carefree stee l Sid tng,
.... nat gas, 2 car detached
garage Near golf cou r se
Call
446 1223 fo r ap
po.ntment
$6 00 cash down payment
w tll geT you 1nto th1S
pr es t•g•ous
home
Assumeable 8 per ce nt
mortgage 4 or 5 bedroom .
$.45,000 Call 446 0494

4 bdr Trr leve l l rv 1ng room
w• th wood burner, drning
room k rt che n 1 112 baths,
large ut .t.ty roo m '1 car
garage wellmsulated, n tce
landscaped l ot tn exce llent
neighborhood , c •IY school
W rll fr nance fo r quallfted
buyer Phone 446 4167
4 room house rn Crown
C1ty good srze lot n •ce
1oca t1Dn , $6,000 Call 256
67 14
Li te Esta te ConS1Sf1ng Of
fa rmhouse wrt h acreage
Fur ther rnlormat•on call
992 6747 after 4 00 p m
La rge 2 story stone home,
well 1nsulla ted w1th 3 large
bed r ooms, one fu l l bath ,
2' = ba th s fo rm a l a• n •ng
room, newl y remod eled k 1t
c hen bullt•n tnctudtng d•sh
wnshe r
basement w tt h
work shop, 2 ca r garage
w rth w ork shop large gar
cten 2 por c hes 548 Grant

Sl

M,ddleporl

$59.500

Want .ng qu•ck sa le t o se t11 e
estate Call 614 384 6309 for
appo1ntment after l p m

POMEROY. 0 .
992 · 2259
NEW LI ST IN G
lup
per &lt;:&gt; Pt ,:11nS
Nt•Pd rl
burldrnQ srte or lot tor
mQbrl(' home ArhiHtQh
A&lt;l d rTr on
AI! ulrlrlr f'C:,
pluc.. o;Pp tr c 56 000 00
N EW
LISTING
frctrl•' r &lt;;r t r clos1
to
Hctrr rsonvr le
I ,Krc
Sl 000 00
NEW
LIS T IN G
sou th ern
Dl &lt;&gt; fnc1
Ou1 stnndrnq condr t ron,
sp.l c rou s 3 bl'droornc.. 7
s to r y
ocrm,tslonr
hou SC' on rl 120X 1\0 10 1
F ron rly room l b,l ths
} Crlr
LOVf' l y ynrd
Url r Qr
l rnr'::lhlCl
t),l srm c nt S-58 qoo 00
~O UTHE RN
SC HOOL
DISr
I }5 A mobrlf'
t1oml' srtr litndscnpc&lt;:l
ONLY $J 000 00
EDGE OF TOWN
Ap
prox 1 , ~cn~ to t wrth 1'
sl ory 4 bedr oom hou&lt;; c
por ch l u ll rnsu l ,ll on
$7B 'iOO 00
PEARL
STREEl
Out stnnd tnQ home wrlh
J bed r ooms su nn y krt
che n f r~mrly room rtrr
condrtroncd
•nc:,utntC'd
lilrC' lot S4'J 600 00

CLO SE

Pr tees reduced on al l
mob•le homes and travel
trarlers
TRISTATE

MOBILE

675 2933

1 I

tB

S300

3 bdr hOIJse lor rent and 3
rm . apt utilities paid. Call
675·510-&lt;1 or 675·5386.
'

$5,400 Call 388 8139

road

frontage,

water. $21,500

Furnished efftc1ency apt.

If 1nterest

Air

42

Houses for Rent

and references Call after

4 00 446 3545

LAND
up to 500

acres, must be under
UO(I per acr e STROUT

5 room house near mme no
1 446 3037 after 6 p m

Lots for sale '" 2 new sub
d1V tS10ns 1n Ra c •ne V11lage
On v me St &amp; Yell ow Bush

REALTY - 446·0008

2 bedroom house on 1 i!!lcre,
Rt 62 S 6 m1 1es from Pt
Pleasant, reference i!!lnd

Rd 949 2340
By own er, cho•ce lot •n
Ra c1 ne
60 X ISO
Ut11!ty

Ge ner&lt;l l

depos11 Phone
8322 or 263 2669

bu,ldmg S5,000 00 949 2801
ac res

Flatwoods

1 614 263

3 BEDROOM house,

Rd

no

Children,
references
requ •red, 304 675 3318

BY owner, 3 apartment J bdr home, l arge tam1IV
house on appro&gt;&lt; 1 acre
r oom , SJOO permo Call446
L1ve 10 one, rent others to 4754
make your pay ment Can
be converted stngle home
C1ty water, will cons1der 4 bedroom, all carpet,
land contract 675 1883 9 S stove, refrig , unfurniShed,
pm
l mile from town, city

I 112

bath, front den w1th wOOd
burnrng firep lace, pat.o
aw1ng ,
skt r f• ng , ap
pllances, d.n.ng roo m table
and cha•rs No other, ltke
new furn.ture
SIO,OOO
Johnson Mobtle Home
Brokers new I rstmg 4.46

sc hools

3547

- -- --··- - For sa te 1974 F r eedom
mob1le
home and lot
llOx250
Located 2 mt
above Henderso n WVA on
Rt 35 W111 se ll togeth er of
Phone 675 4310
sepa rate
after 6PM

Real Es t.ate -

12x60
E lcona, exce ll ent
co nd prrvate lot Ca ll 256

road, t1mber Phone 1 614

1972 12X50 OaK br ook Mobile
home , $4,000 Ca It 446 0952

42

41

Houses for Rent

Ava ilable August 1 3 bdr
home w•lh ftreplace, •n
cou ntry C1ty schools, $250
per mo For appo •ntment

ca ll 256 9363

Genera l

Real Es tat e - General

Ontu~
--r'21

Prt ce d l or qu •ck sa te 14x70
W.ndsor cenTral a rr and
underptnn.ng $8 000 Ca ll
446 6642

'

t979 LIBER l Y mobile
home , 14 II W1de total
elec lrt c 304 675 5444

Real Es tat e -

2 bedroom trader for rent
Brown s Tra•ler Park 992

271 1
2 bed room central a tr , fur
n1shed, large private lot 20'
added a room, water
sewage paved $150 Phone

Mobile

home located in Portor
Area Air cond, dep . reQ.

Call367·7101
2 bdr trader turn, gas c1nd

water lurn , $225 per mo ,
S100 dep , no pels Call -!M4745
Trailer for rent turn1shed,
w1th trailer space
For
work tnQ couple or elderly
141 Racoon Trader Park

Call379 2&lt;169

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

No pets Deposit &amp; referen·
ces required . 2 miles oo
S. R. 1-43 992·3647

Equal HOUSing
Opportunity

m

Furnished

3

apartment .

rooms and batll. Real
clean. No pets Deposit
required
2'137 before ~
pm

45

Furnished Rooms

1 bedroom or 2 bedroom

Nt ce unfurn

garage apt

s150 per mo. plus dep., Plus
utilitieS Adults only

Nn

small tra11er weekly and
monthly rates, air con
d1t1oned rooms by week,
ca ble TV Mary R Trader

Phone

Apartment

tor Rent

Garage apartment. 3 room

Apt for rent m Middleport

and

bath,

washer·dryer,

Deposit required 992 3190

clean. no pets, dep req ..
adults only Caii446-1S19

Efftc•ency apartment for
rent 1 mrkmg person

2

room

furnished
A~r

Adults

apt.

cond.

and

private entrance Call .4.46

01611

Apartments 675 5548
SMALL furn1shed apart
ment, no pets, references
requ.red, 304-675 1365

2 BEDROOM. unlurn,shed
apartment and 2 bedroom
furn•shed apartment, 304 -

APARTMENT

for

FOR LEASE

and

bath.

gOOd

tocat1on, ref and dep req

Cal14-46 7482 mornings .

COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY

very reasonable, 304
3356

~2

:=:=====;==.;=:==.====
Antiques

53
~--..!'=="--­

Bassett Oak, S6-49 ,
Bassett Cherry , $765 Bunk
bed complete w ith mat
tresses. 5250 and up to
5350 Captain's beds, 5275
complete Baby beds, S89

guns, pocket watches, and
com collections Call 551
3411

sept1c

dryers,

refrigerators.

ranges

Skaggs

Ap ·

Eastern

detrostmg

USED brown and while
liv•ng room c ha1r $15 See

at 769 Brownell Ave , M1d
dleporl

992-6611

adults

only,

no

--

Re.11 Estate -

and

Back Hoe Serv1ce , located
3 miles back of Jackson on

St Rt. 93 Call286·5930
SWIMMING
POOLS:
PRE-SEASON
SALE .
$999 .00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at$999 00 Price .ncludes pool, deck, fence,
flltPr ,
liner , and tn stallatlon under normal
ground condit•on
Free

(614) 4-46 2342.

Colt automat1c, engravmg,

$200
Johnson outboard
motor 9 112 HP , $450 Call
.W,-0494
Baby bed mattress and
bumper guard, $40 Men
su:e 9 new roller ska1es,

$10 00
500

Riding lawn mower 32' m

shop at home serv1ce Call
1·800-624 8511
EASY cred•t available now
to purchase furn1ture,
televisions, or appliances

Any

quantity

2 BEDROOM

SlH

trailer

on

MadiSon Ave 304 675 2535

IJr ,q•tl e Lovscv - IYI
16 S I

Rose Wall ace

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY
OFFICE 446-7013

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South

tables,

VIRGIL B. SR.-~ A! TO•
216 E. Second Street

Nonb

Eall

Soutb

came South does go to game

Pass
Pass

3'1
Pass

Pass
Pass

4•

hold a stngleton your hand
possesses good offensive
poss1b1httes
West opens a d1amond
East takes h1s ace and pla ys
the ace of spades Had he
underled 11, West would be
able to g1ve ham a ruff and
the kmg of clubs would produce the setttng trtc k As 1t
IS South makes the game
Not playmg hmll ra1ses
North would respond t wo

I.

J

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
A New Jersey reader
wants to know. what a
ltmtl' raise IS In one sense
any ti me you ratse your
partners suat you are maktng a hmu bsd The term 1s
not necessary when refer·
nng to such b1ds as a smgle
raase or a ra1se to game
Everyone knows thal th e
Misc. Merchandise

bedroom

26'

992 72"'

TROUTWOOD lravel

u. s

3312 m1 North of Pomeroy

su1te,

JACK FROST

LARGE
TREE RIPE

SUGAR

PEACHES
•220

5LB . BAG

$1.49

60 LB . BALE

6 LB . BOX

$17.75

haul,ng

HALF RUNNER

5 LB. BOX

GREEN
BEANS

RIVER
TOMATOES

Weave

39~

'1'0

scope

LB.

ASSUMABLE LOANS

576

WOOD REALTY, INC.
Off1Ce 446· 1066
Russell D . Wood-Realtor- Broker
E venmgs 446· 4618
Ken Morgan- Realtor- Broker
E venmgs 446-0971
Mose Canterbury- A ssoc1ate
E venmgs 446· 3408

BMR 396 ~ New hst•ng , L shaped frame and br.ck
ranch Three BR s, 15x21 tam 11y room With br1ck
I .replace, built •n k1tchen, 1h&lt;l4 d1n10g room There
IS much more to be sa1d for th•s fine home. G1ve us a
call for d pnvate showmg Gallipolis schools, Green
Elementary S60s

CLOSE TO KYGER -

NICe ranch w'th full base

ment J bedrooms. carefree vmyl s•dmg, large lot Of
1 14 ac res ca ll today
111042

1971 Dar ran 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven 14 X 65 W1th 8 X 10
expando, J bedr oom s 1973
Utop•a 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms
1972 In vad er 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 'l bedrooms B 1 ,. s
Sa les, Inc 2nd and V •and
Sts
Pt
Pl easant
wv
Phone 675 4424

Y BRI
Se ttrng pr ett y on 5 a ac r es nt cely lan dscaped Lot s
of space a nd charm adorns lh•s 4 bedroom home
Forma l l •v •ng room rt nd d rn.n g large modP.rn k 1t
chen tull basement ltr('p la ce tn f amrly room 2 car
garage atta c hed Wo rksho p and a barn Thr s hom e
re fl l•c t s. ll'nder lov1nq ca r e &amp; tr ue va lue Shown by
app t

NOTICE

COLONIAL 81 LEVEL

NEW li STING
Love ly 3 bed roo m r anch , format
d 11ng, w1fe approved k1t chen lul l basement, 16x37
1ngro und swtmmrng pool Netghborhood Rd
111556

BMR 371 - Restncted bulldmg lot 10 Cltv school
d1stnct 0 64 of an acre Call now

UPPER ROUTE 7
Bloc k bud d •n g tJ nd lot, ca n be
used for et t her r es td ent• al or c ommerc1at purpose

BMR 380-F - Excellenf larm or tom m crc 1itl pr o
pertv 100 acres more or less Loca t~ &lt;J nc ar Rodney _
Owner Will con~1 d e r tmanc,nq for qua lified buy er

LAND CONTRACT
1969 Monarch 12x65 mObile
home 2 bedroom s, prJrf1al furn• shed, .41 acre. close
to tow n
$9,500

BMR 386 - Qu1et country home on ,,., acre tot. In
eludes 20x2o barn wtth loft and part1al basement
You Will en,oy this one $29,900
•

EUREKA
Bu•ldtng IOf Wl1h septi C tank and
wa ter ca n be used for mobtl e ho m e
56,000

BMR 392 - Now 1s vour c hance to live m town ror~ ·
less than S40 ,000 Three bedroom home near

RIO GRANDE -

4 bedrooms , format ll vt ng room, w b fi r eplace,
mode rn k• tc hen and d1 n tn g a r ea, 2 full baths
Sp ac•ous fam 11y room , w b f.r epla ce, t,., balh ,
utllrty room a nd 2 crt r garage! Gas hear. ce ntra l a 1r
Shown by apt only' Loan assu mpt 1on

New 1981 14 ' W1de

Ntce butld1nglot, 78x160

$5,600

LOTS -- 2 tot s on Arnold Onve at B1dwell. 53 acre

- $4,000, 67 ac re - $4,500
5 ACRES -

NICe rolhng land on Floyd Clark Rd

Beaut1ful bUt ld1ng s1te

S1S,OOO

AS TIME GOES ON

You w il l be pay mg more &amp; more r ent Why not bu y a
home? Loan assumptton, payments only 1387 oo 1n
clud •ng ta xes and Insura nce 101 1% 1n1erest. 3
bedroom ra nc h, large eat 1n k1tchen, 1tv1ng room
Home compl etely carpeted Very n• ce S•ngle ca r
garage Nort~ up area Pr. ced tn the .40's

Call I mmed1ately

s ACRES - Nice wooded la nd , excellent butld•ng
s•te 1n the country only 3 m1les from town
1/10'20

ISO ACRE FARM -

Evenines Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367.0228

INVESTM E NT PROPERTY
6 acres ot woodland only 1 m•le south of R10 Grande

on St Rl 325
OALLAS " J M .. LOV E, AS SOC - 446-2627
BONNIE STUT ES. REAL TOR - 446 -4206
JAMES STUTES, ASSOC - 446 2885

(J•m ElhOtt)

Rl 91 North
Jackson, Oh1o

286·37!1

Has good barn, lobacco base,

t1mber and large pond, good locat1on

'

O&amp;W Estates, Inc

CONVENif'NrLY LOCAT E D 33 m,lcs YOU HAVE MAOE Sl 000 00 by wa'l 'ng

Darvin Bloomer, Realtor~ 446•2599
John Fuller1 Realtor 446-4327

-0021

G A H.S.

loge on Roule 7 plus.an equal amount on the
R1ver Th1s one could be a money maker. Call

COMPLETE AUCTION SERVIt::E
WE SELL IT All
REAL ESTATE &amp; CHATTELS
BMR 375
Pnce greatly reduced on lhos 3 BR t&gt;nck
ranch S1luatcd on large llallol Cml tor details!
New L15lmg , Close 10 town

on lg tlal lol mcludes detached 2661x~2~6.if!;,~~o ~~~:!
18x36

in ground

anxious

k'i~i~:~:~~ if~.

bllke un1

nice

.
''

1

ly rm with woodburnmg lir&lt;opl•lce.

s~ , ooo

over tin acre $59,900

BMR 393 - The house has recently been '~r~[i~~~j
•nside and out, has basement, heat pump tor
around com tort, five mobile home pads, Jots of

BMR JY8

NEW

baths,~,-, ••. ·

to~ll .

pool· Owner lr

3"- Ne~~~~~~:~~~~l:!'?i~~~:~~f~~~~~~=~~

IY being used as
BMR f!lmlly.
single

. ....
/

,\.

• v

trance lot, 2 bedroom s, 2 bed r oom~. 'J
baths. w1th carport and covered por ch

MIDDLE!&gt;ORT - Large brick 4 bedrms .. d1nlng,
gas fireplacu. 1'12 bathsr cen1ra1. a'r and heal, sl
drs and w1ndpws. 2 potches. garage with room
ove}. N 1c,e corner,lof. $59,900
BRICK 'RANCH ..:. Wirn full basement and tam11y
room. 2 balhs, birch 1&lt;11chlin, dishwasher, disposal
and ran~ 2 car garage and lg . lot. View Of Rt. 7.
Asking $75,000:
•
I

}

'

'

.,

'

'

BRA,.D NEW' - Furnished l bedroom home, For·
miC~ bath stove; refrla.ralo&lt;( carpeting and plenly
1
ofcl-tl. Lovely klt, on !acre. ~$.000.
•
'· '
COUNTR'i -53 acrn In tiiJve Twp 110r
houle, SQ'ftiiJtd porch, 3 w•ter
llid IDti llf ~ tlmller, All

oo

MOBilE HOME IN VINTON, has en

BU\L'DING LOTS - 31 on waler line and blacWiop
'road. Slopmg well drained and reasonable .

I ,

f

304 1-43
puffed

M1sc MerchandiSe

Phone 615 2y63, call afler 5
pm

p1 es
$75 up
Shots
wormed, Beagle female
registered Phone 304 743
8002

SIAMESE

k1ttens,

882 3596

Chow
pupp1es.
CFA
Htma layan , Pers•an a nd
S1amese k1ttens Ca ll 446
3844 after 4 p m

mans Cal l-IM 7795

$30

2 s1lver male poodles, 10
weeks old, all shots Cal l

MUSICal
Instruments

57

E legant
Baldwtn
p•ano
be1 ng P• cked up 1n yo ur
area R esponstble person
may assume low monthly
payments F or 1nformat•on

call

collecl

614 773 5125

Ask for c red•f manager

RealE strtle - General

STROUT REALTV

COUNTRY , YET CONVENIENT Great fa mily hom e with 3 BR , 2 baths,
J5x:l7 LR w1th gas f•repl ace la rg e
modern k 1tchen w •th range, self
clea n•ng oven DW and d tsp laundry
rm w1th washer and dry er, part base
ment, l arg e covered pa t10 , garage a nd
over 6 acres of land at th e edge of town
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY sh ould
desc nbc thts love ly 3 BR bnck r anch
Spec•al f ea tur es are a larqe LR &amp; dtn
tng rm equ 1p pe d ktl chen. 11 1 b at hs
laundr y, quality ca rp et, ce nt atr &amp; a n
overs1zed 2 ca r gar age Loca ted on U 5
35 Wesl &amp; show n by a ppo1ntm e nt
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Re str1 c tNJ
burld rng lot 1 22 ac r e nr ce wooded set
lmg, c 1ty sc hools S5,900
L OG CA BIN
Ve r y un•que old h nnd
newn tog beams sleep1ng lol l, 1arge
stone fireplac e, modern barn, 14 acr es
woods loca ted .n the W ayne Na tt o na t
For est. 20°o down

$3 100
CONVE NlENT
LOCATION
Mulberry Ave
Nca r shcoo ls, shopp
1ng etc t story home otter s 4 or 5 B R s
2' 7 ba lhS 17 X25 LR tr.mly rm wtth WB
stove co mpl cl ely equ1pped krt ch en and
a 1,1rq e screened rn por ch

F A furn ace , 50')(24Y lot, 1dca1 beg•n
nc r home or r ettrem cn l home lor

$15.000 00
BUSINESS PROPERTY along V"'e 51 ,

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - 10°/o LOAN
ASS UMPTION P lants Subd•v 3 o r 4
BR's, 1«1 x30 LR l2x30 famtl y rm &amp;
muc h m ore I mmed tat c pOSSC'SS to n
Call f or appor nt ment
EVAN~ HEI G HT S
Ass u me 9' 1°o
Loan
N1ce 1' 7 story home a lt ers 5
rms, b a th ba~e m en t, ca rpor t B. nat
qas h ea t Be the fi rs t to see th• s one

JOHN S CREEK
ROAD
N ear
Merce rvill e and Crown C•ty m rnes 1973
Duk e Crown Royal mobt le hom e
14'x65', 2 BR woo dburn rng stove, fl at
tot w•t h well. barQa•n priCed Call abou t
ti'11 S on e
MORGAN TOWNSHIP
SmaH but
n•ce, 2 BR home ts only 2 yrs o ld &amp;
clean as a p1n Perf ect tor a sma ll famr
ty, weekend retr eat or hunt1ng l odge
Sr tu atcd on 36 acr es at M org an Ume
Rd
tNGALLS ROAD
Approx 73 acres
15 A Raccoon Cr eek bottom land,
balanc&lt;&gt; pilsture &amp; wood s Old ho use &amp;
build•ngs

also has 2 bedroom apartment and a 1
bedroom home '" rear All th ee r ental s

FOR RENT - 2 b edroom apartment
ad 1acenf to golf course Refqg &amp; range
furnished , adults only , no p ets

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN
CHER plus 78 ACRES of land m

tor only 538,SOO 00

Chesh.re Townsh1p offers lots of good
I!V1ng t or your grow1ng tam•lv Hom e 1S
1ust like new wtth 1438 sq ff of IIVmg
area plus an attached garage 2

PERFECT

space, rear entranc e from serv •ce
alley, i!!IISO Stde door entrance RenteQ
apartment on 2nd floor , lrd storv
stor.!Qc. Call for more tnformahon

LOCATION

lor

small

business or remOdel and move 1nto
Located on
the main corner 1n
I

cre am

AKC

DRAGONWYNO
CAT
TERY
KENNEL, AKC

All tor 525,000 00

Ewlngton. lot SIZe, approx 56' x170'
Buy th iS property now lor s~o.ooo oo

COM/VlF.RCIAL BUILDING 1n down
1own Gallipolis, 3,795 sq II ot lloor

LOOKI~G FOR A HOuSE TO RENT? GIVE US A CALL

OWNER SAYS
thi S love ly 3
BR ranch Specral tea t ures are 3 baths,
compl etel y eQ Ui pped kitchen la r ge drn
rnQ rm' 44 ft fam il y rm w rth we
l rr-cp lace 2 ca r g&lt;~rage rec rm. l au n
dry lots of l and scaped, over I ac r e ot
t.lnd rn the C rou ~e Bec k Rd area
Gree n Grade Sc hool &amp; Ga ll•a Academt
Hr gh Sc hool Shown by appo1ntment
ROOM TO ROAM
ThiS lovel y bnck
r.mch off ers lots at oood l1vtnQ f or your
qrow1nq famil y 3 BR s. 1' 1 bath~ large
krtchf'n &amp; LR . formitl dtn1ng rm , 2
l rrcp l aces woorj burn1 ng stove, ce nt
.trr qaritgf' full ba~eme n t w •th family
rm bar &amp; lau nd ry Loca Ted on .:~p pro x
) .t l rcs on St nc Rou te 554 b etween
Por ter &amp; En o Pr rced to se ll a t $59 ,500
COUN rR Y SET TIN G ONLY 1 MILES
our
2 BR 's b ath LR . k1tch en full
basement
(p&lt;H I I y ftn rshed
wtfh
ltrcpl nceJ
carpor t
covered
patro
un,lii&lt;Khed ga r .1qc w ttn ce lla r lots ot
trl'es nnrl ma ture lcllld5 ca prng lar ge
qMd c·n 1 l acres

JHJ ILDIN G OR MOB1LE HOME SITE
App ro x 51 • acr es tocft ted on th e
G• ,,hilm Sc hool Rd . co wa ter , over 300
11 rd fr ontage Gnee n Grnde Sc hool &amp;
G .tllr&lt;~ Academy Hrqh School $10 900

IN COME PROP E RTY
R10Gr.tnde 4
mobriP h o m e~ pre sen tl y ren l ed wa1cr
q,15 &amp; scwf'r avatlclble
r w O M IL ES OUf STATE ROUTE S88
Remodeled hOm L• rnc ludes 6 rm s,
;uHJ hdlh
cnrport, stove
r cfr ig ,
d rshwasher a l most 2 c1cres ot land c:t nd
pr1 ccd for q u rck Sc'l i C
Approx 8 ac r e~
OHIO RIVER V I EW
wooded l and n 1cc butldnlg sllc county
w,l tcr l oca ted on Route 7 ap pr o:x 5 mt
!&gt;out h ol town \6 ,500
RIO GRA NDE AREA
R10 Center
p01 nt Rd (C herry RtdgeJ rt ppr ox 75
,1 crcs woodland front s on 1 rds co unt y
wa ter avatlable Owner may help
lrn.1nc e P r. ccd 1o sc II ;d S400 per n c rc
JA Ct&lt;SON COUN TY fARM
IOh
rtcres M I L , appro )( JO A ti\ l ,lble,
bi!lancc pas tur e &amp; woods n rrf' ')s t o r y 7
rm home new 40xHO m etal harn
c:,cvn al other budrt.n qs must s..-- 11 so on
(,1 11 for oth er dct nrt s

5o 1 ART RAI StNG H. GRAZ ING
13~
ilcrc pas t ure l arm mostl y ro llt ng &amp; hi!
ly qrrlSSi ilnd w •t h np prox 10 A woode d
tot s of s.pr rng s, tt 1 story home h as "
rm s &amp; ba th , larqc hrtrn tobacco basr.
l rontso n 3 roads i n W,1tnu 1 Town s 111p

CLAY TOWNSHIP
Rd ccoon Creek
front age, l'h st ory .4 rm s .a n d br~th
down. upsta1rs unft n1shed, qood barn,
gar age, sh ed , near Bl ue Lake, c1ty
sc hools Ask•ng$42 ,500

FARMER'S FARM

-·

GaUipolis

''

One of Guya n

Townshtp's t1ncst 106 acre m t l, flp
prox
45 A
tcr tt le bottom l and,
balapas tur e &amp; woods N• cc mod ek•t
spa"ous BR 's. 2 balhs. 8x27 LR, 10•24 che n &amp; fam1l'( rm 14x l8 LR, attachNI
kt tchen with refng, disp , OW, double garage , mans S6xl04 , also Included tS
owen &amp; range, washer &amp; dry er stays m 20x2i. steP. I gara ge , workshop &amp; se veral
laundry Land is mostly rolling pasture sheds Owner •s rettr•ng &amp; Will he lp
la nd w1lh approx 25 a cres wOOded Call 1 f1nan ce
for appotntment

.WOOD. REALlY,. INC.
32' Loe.u stSt.

on two lots.

',1

to r th1 s ( l1ke newJ mobtl e home
s•tu ated on 100 x200 loT ncar Ty coon
L a ke Ideal weekender perm an ent or
summer home
p tcc r edu ce d to
S6 500 00 B\'fter SeC' th1 s one today 11
PRICE R E DU CE D on thrs 3 bedroom
IF YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKINv fora hom e and 1 acrr&gt; ol land s1t ua t ed I' 7
co mbtnatlon home and bu s •ness ap
mil es north at Ga ii •POI• s on Rt 160
portu"•ty , we have 1P Lo cated •n down
sma ll barn 1n r ear co nta.n s works hop
town Galltpol•s and zoned commerctal.
and ~Mage, 1dcat toca t1on tor t amrly
bUT w•th r es 1dent 1al usc too N •ce , nea t
Pr• cc r educ ed toS59 .500 00
1.42.4 sq ft home w1th bus•ness budd rnq
yer~r old modern
m r eclr Owner Will he lp ftn a n cc, or 3 BE CROOM , I
ltnancc en t1 r ely w•th 30°o down homf', s•l ua tcd alonq Upper Rrvcr Rd
C r ee k
Sc h ool
O t.;, tr1ct
payment Th•s 1S a qua lity p~t'!ce of r ee1 1 Kyqcr
ov('rlook,ng the bcaut•ful Oh to R1ver
PStat c Let us show 1t to you today t t
a nd pn ce d for on ly S4S,OOO 00
1 ACRE LOT located a long Kemper
A REAL BUY IN VIN rON
2
Hollow Rd Rural w ater available
bedroom home sttuM ed along Rt 60,

north ot Ho tzcr Hosp• tit l adtact'n t to
StatC' Rt 160 3 bC'droom. m odern homr .
w l hClrdwood floo rs anc.l par t bCl scmcnt
70 acr(' lot tn cludcs 12'x 12 stor aQ('
bu1ld1nQ PRICE $56,200 00

older home and 30 acres near R1o Grande Owner
must sell

Phone

$35 00, 30-4 675 1758

L 0 CAT I 0 N - 620 4th Ave .4 BR
11 1 oa th s, l arge LR, torm al d tn1n q rm
com pl ete k!l chen w tth dt sp DW com
pnctor, r e fr~gerator and ra n ge
l
ltrepta ccs
garage, new rt 1um.n um
srdr ng a nd storm w rnd ows Shown by
appotntment only

BMR 139 - Two s tory home '" Gallipolis pnced to
sell at onty $29,900 Call for detailS

BMR 339-F - You be lhe 1udge on lhe value of lhiS

wormed

POODLE GROOMING
Call J udy Taylor al 367
7220

PERRY rOWNSHIP
78 acr es 15 A
Srmm s Cr eek bottom balan ce r o lli ng
past ure &amp; woods. n1ce modu lar h ome,
targe barn, severa l other bulld1ng s
tobrtcco ba se. corner of SR 141 &amp; th e
Vernon woods Rd

fronlage, located all he edge of town $12,900

months, boxers , fawn
black mask $100 Shots and

LLASHA Alphso
house
broken, good w1th c h•ldren,

Pets for Sale

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLF
zooo down
Camps 1tes rn the Wayne
Nat rona I Forest 5 to B acre trac ts wood
ed ta nd good hunT1n q Pr1 ces st art at

Real Estate - General

BMR 391 - Just m lime tor boattng season, we are
offenng a 2 bedroom SOxiO mob1le home w1th nver

AKC red rust Doberman , 7

Phone 675 I 80S

BMR 390 - Owner says sell 1 Owner 1S W!ll1ng ro
help any qua hfr ed buyer W1t..., - low tnterest land
contract so that the·
s n1ce clean home
Situated on 13 ac res ~~ ~ .... nght for a rtding
horse or two, also t:rtUUQh room for ratsmg next
w•nter 's b eet c~111 now C1ty sc hool s

446-4206

Poodle

S6

OUI

su1table tor
or
garage

•,...._-.0

12X 40 n rce
bedroom
tr a der Ltke new Carpeted
and f urn• shed $4,000 985
41JJ

tr y a takeout double With
both other su1ts and a good
opemng bad If he d1d East
West would probably pia}
and make rour spades bu t
the hmn reuse has shut them

trailer and camp s1te on
Raccon Creek
close to
Oh 10 R1ver SSOO down
Owner w tll fmance 614 256

an

pups 895 3958

each, 614 4A6 9720

Boardmg all breeds, clean
mdoor outdoor fac•l1t1es
Also AKC Reg
Dober

D1~on

Dachshund,

Pomeranian

Call245 Sl2l

Guns of all kmds and gun
cabmet. will sell cheap

ny , Berkshire wood stove

Dark pine cab•net 9419 2437

BMR 189 - Owner transferred and has found a
home 1n hr s new area, and now must sell th1s fine
tour BR home Two full baths, f1ne k1tchen Carpet
throughou t, hea t pump, new pa1nt tnS1de and out
See th1s one soon C1t',1 schools, Green ElementarY

Bu1 ldmg matenals, bl ock,
bnck, sewer p1pes, w1n
dews , lintels, etc Claude
Wm1ers, Rto Grande, 0

Sears used coal furnace

Wh1le spool bed , J C Pen

Used color TV 22" screen

- Gr('rll •nvestmc nr Buy lh1s dup ll' x tor
only ":.~ o.,Oll 011 clown OwnN ttn a n c•nq ,11 I:J 0 o Ask1nq
prr&lt; 4 \I/ ~l O Curn •n t rent il l $I dO PN unit

Bu•ldtng Supplies

HILL CRE ST KE NNE L

Orange floral lounger, new

$275 00. 949·2145

1~1

5S

d1amonds East maght ,.ell

54

AKC

bloodlme poodle and pup

Ferry

S50 Call446 0087

Real nice Remington BDL
25 06 nile, mOdel 700 w'lh
power

ONE MORE WEEK

992 6375

Od furnace,
work shop

North of

Excellent tor
mowers 992·3904

12

because tn general when you

THE FISH TANK and Pet
ShOp, 2101 JeHerson Ave
675-2063 , PI Pleasant New
hours Now open on Wed
Open 11 -4 Mon lhru Sal
Fr. hours116

Lima beans $8 00 bushel
You piCk th em
Cec•l
Moodespaugh, Galllpol•s

Low slung utility trader

BMR 388 - Well ca red tor home close to town In
eludes fa m •lv room wllh t1replace, 3 BR ' s, hvmg
rm , and more On flat lot 539,900

on

Phone 30-4

19657 h p Wheelhorse la wn
&amp; garden tractor w1th 36"
mower Very good cond

BURSON'S MARKET

Rd 47598 Rl 1

Caii446-0SS2 Any!• me

p1 eces

POMEROY
LANDMARK
FREEZER SALE
CONTINUES

~~::;;::~;:":;"~::;:::~1:;"~~~"';,~~~~~=1
I 54

200

p lywOOd, S60
882 2424

JUmp ratse He bas a good
hand, but not enough for

5 ft sl1d1 ng pat10 door,
slandard he1ghl Call 367
7657

Ractne at sawm•ll Carmel

428 Second Ave .

prox

Wesl Highland While
Temer AKC puppies
Smal l, smarl , and VERY
RARE. M . $250, F $350
Ca ii367·06U

ava1lable

Slobs for sale

14)-992-3325

TRAIN set, complete, ap

rng b1d You say " Partner.
yo u must bid agatn "
In the la5t 30 years
advanced standard Amer1
ca n bidders do not play that
bid as a force, but do play 1t
as strongly mvJta11onal .
Today's North band 1s a

Well

Openmg l ea d t

der warrenty Also shop
hair dryer Call 304 675
3638

~ood example of thts hm1t

1216

stereo &amp; stand, 2 buffets,
etc. Call 992·6709 after 6
pm

REASONABLY
PRICED HOMES
&amp;
FARMS ARE ALWAYS IN DEMAND . IF
YOU
NEED TO SEll, CAll
US
TODAY . WE HAVE PROSPECTS THAT
NEED TO BUY

Rea l Estate - Gener.ll

t K &amp;I
.Q98&amp;

2

AKC Doberman pups. Red,
black, and tans Call 4-46
1562

Fruit

5721. Open daily till9 p m

LIFE

.A QJ64

deluxe

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming
AKC Gordon setters ,
English Cocker Spaniels
Call446 4191

&amp; Vegetables

Retail &amp; wholesale Bob's

Call

Slle

Phone 675 2039

Market, Mason Phone 773

General

tB

cut Call379 2721

K1lchenete, coffee &amp; end
Apartment lor rent

Call 388·031 9 after

peaches Now thru Sepl 20

Housing Headquarters

Broker· Auchoneer

t-\f.Ho'

State

Yellow Freestone canntng

Equal

992 -5908

SOUTH

Leroy

-

1 bedroom apts. available

• K 10 7 S 3

Good top or frll d•rt, will
del1ver
anywhere
in
Galllp011S· Bidwell
area

Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave, 675 1773

Real Estare- General

--

•• 2

t A

• 10 8 7 3 2

In

Programmable Accountmg
Machme Good cond Call

WHIRLPOOL

door refrigerator with tee
maker, gold color , still un

baste standard Ameracan
you art making a game forc -

.9

Lowest pn ces on Bemco
bedding 1n the area . Call
for pnces V1l1 1age Fur
niture, 2605 Jackson Ave ,

525 00 load Call
Caldwell-446 4851

county approved. lolal
we1ght 300 lbs , haul In
pickup truck Ron Evans

Opportunity Housing . Call
992·7721

pets, 304-675 1452 or 675
29'16 afler 3

and

player wbo makes such a b1d
placing del1n1te close hmats to both hiJ a\inJmum and
mulmum strength
Now, assume your partner
opens one heart and you
Jump • to three hearts In

EAST
tAQH
•to s 2

.KJ 9~3

New Open1ng Aug 7, LSV
VUM ant1ques, glassware ,
pottery, furn1ture, lots
more In Tupper5p1ains

tanks .

••J

WEST

675 1773

Open 9am to 7pm. Mon
thru Fn, 9am to 5pm , Sat
446-0322

Office &amp; Sales Area
Fenced In Yard Storage
contact J•m Thomas

•u
1'
• QJ 9 i

remedy , tradition for cen
furies, 1f works . For com-

large. Al so,

3 m11es out Butav111e Rd

2 BEDROOM apartmenl1n
Mason,

supplies

I I II

. 1061

plete Into and receipt send
ATTENTION :
(1M · loday self addressed slam
PORTA NT TO YOU I Will ped envelope plus Sl.OO to
pay cash or cert1tied check S R A Co , P 0. Box 2114,
tor antiques and collec Gallipolis, OH 45631
tlbles or entire eslates
Nothmg too

sell

NORTH

gas and coal

stoves. VW parts, cabinet
doors, ell heater, electronic
equipment, phone 30-4 458
175-4 or 458· 1831.

11

QUAZAR portable TV , stallation 4-46 132-4.
electric lighter or 9 voll
battery 304 675 4042 after
' HAY FEVER' HOME
5.

Call614 367 7209

6,000 Sq. Fl . Storage

upstairs 5200 plus utilities,
S100 dep, lease, and ret
req Call446 49'13 .
at Riverside Apts

'.'Ice,

guitar cases,

Explaining the "limit" raise

RATLIFF POOLS 8. SER ·
VICE , Complete sales. ser

pine finish Bedroom suites

Hotpo1nt

2300 Sq. Fl.

First Ave loci!!ltion, fur
n1shed Apartmen1s, one
bdr down stairs or 2 bdr

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

52

refngerator , ex
cond
Panason1c tape deck w1th
AM- FM
radio
and 4
speakers Flexsteel couch
and 40ft aluminum ladder

Middleport, OH.

rent,

furn1shed or unfurn•shed ,

Household Goods

pliances, 1918
Ave., 446 7398.

Air cond1t1oned

3 rms

or,

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers,

For Lease

pets Cai1446 8067 .

44

......

"'

Electrolux carpet·shampo·
oer, floor polisher, 6 box's
flea market. 1971 Yahama
175
good condition for
$175., 1 electrical guitar
and amp solid state GA-410
Phone 304·675 1179.

DEEP well pump and lank,
Maytag wringer washer,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773

S42 Bed frames, $20 and 54
MISC. MerchandiSe
$25 , 10 gun Gun cabmets, o:!._....!C~~~~===­
$350 , d1nette chairs $20. S•egler Fuel oil heatmg Cast ~ron t ub, $50 Phone
4-46 774G
and S25. Tappan gas or stove. $50 992 7285
electric ranges, S285
USED
.
Ranges ,
Burrough's
L6000
refrigerators , and TV's
750 &amp; 1,000 gallon plasti c

For rent tra11er spi!!lce for

49

-·

ANTIQUE poster bed,
white spool bed, J c Penny
Berkshire wOOd stove, 30-4
675· 2039.

I he ~un d ay r1mes ·Sentmei- Page-D·S

Va.

BRIDGE

BIG discounts for cash and

dr chests, 549 4 dr chests,

Space for Rent

Park, Mason, WV
304 773 5651

'

.,,.

NEED severa l Items of fur
n 1tur e,
a ppllanc e s,
televisions Big dlscounll;
tor quanity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675·1773.
ci!!lrry a1 Vlllaoe Furniture

HOOVER Portable washer
&amp; dryer, 11 ke new, 30-4·67 5·
6504

full or twin, SS5 , firm , S65
and S75 Queen sets, $185 5

m

apt.. upslairs In Rac1ne. In
formation call 6U·423·87;'51
after 4 p m
I

.I

Tromm Construction

Mattresses or box sprtngs,

SLEEPING ROOMS • and
light housekeeping apt ,
Park Central Hotel
46

••

Carpenter tools and
mlsc. household Items tor
sale. Band saw. Radial
Arm saw, Motor ized Mllre
Box, Aluminum Trim
Brake,etc. Fri·Sat. 9·5.
New Lima Rd. Rutland. AI

w

56

Misc. Morch1ndise

54

Housellold Goods

1 30-4 743 5077

Lot &amp; tra iler w•th 2 added
room s m Ra c• ne Very
n•ce Cal l 949 2836

USE 0 Mob ile Home
2711

For rent 2 bdr

675-5571

OR RENT almostnew14x
70, 3 bedroom , 1 112 baths,
s•tt•ng on mce lot, r eady to
move •nto Phone 304 576

1'}7 2096

WV Phone 675 4424

TV

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments . 992-5434 or
5914 or 882·2566.

51

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ol·
loman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from S275. to $695 Tables,
S38 and up to S109. Hlde·a beds,S340 , queen size, S380
Recliners, $165., S295,
Lamps from $18 to $65 5
pc dinettes lrom $79., to
S365 7 pc, Sl89 and up
WOOd table and -4 chairs,
S350 up to S495 Hutches,
S300 and S375., maple or

INSURANCE

Pi!ul Pcrry - 797 22tl0
Lelia Pologhoff - ) Y3

Genern l

2 bdr lrailer Roush Lane,
Cheshire, Oh Phone 1·30-4·
773 5882

Two 2 bedroom house
trailers tor rent, furn1shed ,
1 w•th central a1r, goOd tor
work1ng couple or couple
w•th 1 ch1ld $150 per month
pl us depos•t ~75 4088

RMiph or V1Ck1r. Coe

CA l l U S TO BUY OR SEL l
Na nc y Jcls pe r s - Assoc •nt c
P H 843 107S
V .rqtnt a Hcly mdn - Assocrilfe
PH 985 419 7

197 3 Crown H aven, 14x65
th ree bed roo m new ca r
pet 1971 Cameron, l4x64
two bedroom , new carper
1972 Champron, 12x60, two
bed r oom new ca rpet 1976
Cameron,
12x60
two
bedrooms bath &amp; 112, new
carpe t 1970 PMC. l2x60,
two bedroom, new ca rpet ,
B &amp; S Sales In c, 2nd and
V 1and St reet, PI Pleasant,

992 5858

fromRI 2 6754088

6Y6 IUH l

l B R hom e re mocJelf'CJ rnsrdC' Ha s
C H r ~ r F k'
r enlr n l A C hn'&gt;r-nw n t screenPd rn porch es se ts on
J ,1(( (' 5 wllh ou lbu rl d rnqs &lt;
lnd &lt;l smnl1 pond A ISQ
ll.r., ,1 l ull 1rn rl1 r hookup spnce S39 900

$5.000 Ca ll 446 6641

For rent, ~ J x 50 2 bedroom
mob1le home Rac1ne area

Two bedroom house tra11er
on Ashton Upland Road
$150 plus uflllttes
and
damage depos•t 3 m1les

®

A 1 Appro x 18 AC mil m
Pomeroy
Loca led on
North St tust off L 1n
coi n H ill Se wer a nd
water
ava•labl e
Owneflnanc•ng poSSible
AJ
M e.g s
Co
tn
Pom eroy 11 lots con
s•stmq of a ppr ox 3' 1
AC
Possr bl c owner
ll nancrng
Bob &amp; Ktlfy Lr1ndrum

IUPPFR '1 PLAIN ~
Writ ~f'pl l B R homC' w rlh
q,lr,lUf' ,1nct ,l lilrqP tol Pr cr'd rn the low 30 s

a .r con d ,

Call

367 7811

906A Ei!sf Stat e St
Athens, Oh
Ph S94 3541

New J R F&lt; bi leve l g1vcor, you ,1 m ,1 11ng fl cx •btlrly
YO l r ctcsro n tower leve l l or rl 41h or eve n a 5th B R
or posc:, rt; lc I 1mrly roorn Lrlundrv Mea and c1 Jrd
bn lh rllrrridv plumbf' d Vr Srl u5 ~unday Aug 2nd
bc Twet•n 1 uo 6 00 on Rt 55 1 Lf' l us. help you W1T h
nee; ! dVFi tl rlblc l rnr1nc 1nCt lh r5 br ,l Uflful home 1S
ctosr to POWl' r Plan: ~ H OI IN Hoc. prlal a net tn c&gt; co,11
n1r nc",

2150

I( !

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

only 992 5738

2 bedroom Mob1le Home 1n
Ra c1 ne S175 month, $75
depos1t Pay own utiht•es

J 1m Owen &amp; Co. lnc .
REALTOR

1972 lnd • mobtle home
12x60, 3 acres of land 18 x36
garage $12 ,000 or bes t of
fer Ca ll 388 874 7
73 Sc hult z 2 bdr
12x60.
tota l e1ec t r1c, ce ntral a1r,
S7 ,000 Call 256 1265 or 379

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

3324

---!
i..L..

••

mo ,

2 bdr mob1le home
-1M 7440

WELCOME TO OUR OPEN HOUSE

1975 Cameron 12x60, 2 bdr,
front k1t c hen , refrtg and
range , gas furn ance, ex tra
door off kttchen, carpet,
S5,995
Johnson Mob tl e
Homes Brokers 446 3547

per

263 8322 or 263 2669

CENTRAL REALTY

6033

$350

secunty dep required and
re ferences Call «6 0.49.4

20 ACRES on bla ck lop
FOR SALE t3YOW NER
You s.n·e the r eet l es fr1tc com mr 'V:&gt;10n by rn\lc&lt;, tr nq 111
th rs so hd bnclo: r~nch lO mm utcs lrom downtown
G,ltllpohs 11 1 mile from Holl er Hos p rlcll on Route
160 J bedroom s 1 fullllrlfh s 3 c;u qc1rr1qe wtfh rolcc
tri c openers L,uq e tamdy room wrlh cory wood
burn1nq llr epl rlCC' Also i ('cl lunnq ., p,lCIOu s lrvrnq
room ,1nd l over c1r Crl Fu ll y drvrd cd b,He m c nt 1 ll
.lCH' S 11o1 could be &lt;.o ld sc pcH.lt c ty l Mu ch more•
C.l'C rl l od,ly ' C.lll &lt;l i b .liii,I_J lOr rlppOrntm c nf Or -141)
11~1 w d .nk lor Mn t-1 rnq

&amp;

t~~~~~======t~=~~~~~~==4 2Adults
only 992·530-4 .
bedroom apt. Adults only.

even• ngs 446 2928
call
446 4775 I rom 9 7 or

3 bdr House on Jay Dr
$350 monlnly plus depos11
VACANT
WANTEO -

conditioned

51

lWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR TME ELDERLY
NOW RENnNG

====!o~la_f_te_r_7_P_M_.- - - - -

rural

•

, . ,..., •

INQ.UDED

wOOded land, w1lh plenety
of

S~co for Rent

46

ALL UTIUTIES

Furnished Apt , 2 bdr.;
$220, utilities pd. one chi I~
acceptable Call 446· &lt;141&amp;

45 acres for sale by owner,
8 m iles from town Hannan
Trace Sc hool D•stnct, n•ce

A~rtment

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
2nd floor furnished et· Park, Route 33, North o1
tlclency apt . 72'1 Second, Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
Gallipolis. Adults only , no m-7-&lt;79
pets. Available now, call
446 0957.
TRAILEf\ U&gt;aces tor rent.
Southern \/alley Mobile
Duplex, 6 room, 1112 bath, Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
3 room turn apt. Call .w, m -395-4
0952 .
TRAILE
pace 3 miles
from town unction 2 &amp; 62 at
.-----....,--~--..lold Y, Pl. Pleasant, 675
32-18 .

2 bdr apt , partly furn .,
$175. state st., Gallipolis
across from park . Dep.,
ref , water paid. Call -1463919.

$10.000 992 5368

992 6191
ASSOCIATES

.-..

available,

all

41

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSE L 'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOMF SA LES . 4 Ml
WEST GALLI POLI S, RT
J5 PHONE -1M 3868 or -1M
7274

S70.000 00

Jean Tru sse ll949 2660
oott•e Turner 992· 5692
Roger Turner 992 5692

Creek,

6 acres With well between
R10 Grande 8nd Vmton ,

2

Ni ce sta rt er hom e 5
r oom house l bed r oom,
basement
brg
yard

REALTOR

Raccoon

2630

Re.al Es t a te -

TO TOWN

Henry E Cleland , Jr

on

2 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd
close lo Rt 160, S4,000
Phone 446 0390

Gal lipoli S CALL 446 7572

17x60 Monark

REGENCY APT. INC . -~
bedroom ,
kit•
chenfurnlshed, carpeted,
bills partially paid . $200
mo . Excellent nelg~­
borhood, 675-6722 or 675510-&lt;1

3,5' - _,L=oto=s..:&amp;:.:A
:.:c=-r,_,e,a,.v.,e_ _
LOTS - Real nice campsite

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh1o-Point Pleasant,

for Rent

4&amp;Q')(66'x16' for

ca ll after 3 p.n1 , 256 6-413.

Farms for Sale

HOME S

1978 70x l4 . 2 bdr

for $4,892

$6,26-4. 70'x125'x16' tor
521.499 FOB factory Call
1 800·8-18· 298811117 p.m.

A ug . 2, 1981
44

ALL stee l clear span
building sale 40'¥-IB'xU'

55 acres, n1ne room house,
barn, m1nera1s, seclu ded,
good hunting Mornmg Star
area $65,000
Add1t1onal
101 ac res available 949

2110 Easter n Ave.
Phone 446 · 3547

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

In

BY owner 140 acre farm 35
Acres creek bottom, ap
prox 1mate lv 70 pasture,
rest rn ttmber, 1 story
house, 2 large barn s,
severa l out butldmgs, large
tobacco base, 01 1 and
m meral nghts, drill•ng 1n
area 4 Miles off Rt 35 on
gravel road $110,000 304

F1nancmg availabl e

379 2343, a fter 6PM

BY OWNER 4 bdr , sp l1 !
leve l l1 v .ng room &amp; d 1n.ng
room comb .nat 1on ea t 1n
k 1tche n lg family rm , 2
1/ 2 bat hs located 1n Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool pnv 11eges, $75,000
lrrm Kyger Creek School
Drstr1c t Shown by appt
on ly ca ll 446 9403

located

w. va.

down, owner will finance,

peted 2 barns, 379 2258 or
New 3 bar house W1tt'1
garage and ful l basement
S45 000 Ca II 446 0390

home

Business Buildings

utilities

Older home '" country on
2 3 acres, 4 bedrooms,
bath,
garage, centra l ly
located to all 3 m 1nes W1ll
cons•der land contract 1f
sold w1th1n nex t 1 weeks
$17,500 7 42 2502

31

KIRKWOOD

Camp con 1e y, E xtr a n 1ce
a nd clean Phone 30-4 895
3967

mond R rdge, 304 675 3648

Homes for Sa le

12x60

Mobile

HOUSE for sa le on Red

31

1974

mObile home, all electric,
excel lent condltton, $7,500

2
large
bedrooms,
remodeled , new ch1 mney
Loca ted m Harnsoov•lle

1542

Real

34

lor S,_al'-"•- - -

1971 DARIAN , 2 bedroom,
furnished S6 , 800
Un
lurnished·S5,800. Call 30-4773 5600 after 5 p m

bus1ness, on lf" acre with
pool. fenced yard, &amp; gar

Ptano tunmg and repatr,
Love your netghbOr tune

Mobile Homes

MObile Homes

Aug. 2, 19iJ

\1

'

�Aug. 2, 1981
Page-0-6-The Sunday Times- Sentinel
Porn eroy - Midd leport- G a II

51

Fruit
&amp; Vqerables

~reen

QWn

Ai ls Chalmers 3 pl. hitch
corn planter. 2 row . Good
cond ition. $150.00 . Paul

beans. pick your
16.00

Peach

bu .

Raynor

Life

Orchard, 5 miles

Success

Rd . Reed-

sville, Ohio 45772 .

l!elow Ga ll ipolis on Rt. 7,
~·.1807 .

FARMALL

to

donate

C

lra otor,

plows, disc. drag harrow,
ha y rake , cu lt ivators,
mower.
wagon , 304-522 -

DONA TIONS·anyone who
wishes

fresh

vegetables to the Church of
God, Rt 2, Sunday Dinner

7577 . All S2200,

and Benefit sing, plea se
contact Rev. Preece, JO-t·

INTERNATIONAL

675·5826 or Dl•ie Ashwor th
675-6121. All donations are

mall Cub with mid mount
bailing mower. 5 ft . cut.

-

..

- --

Far ,

- _ ·---'- ____R_!!~ Es-t.lfe- -

SALE

TR,6 1975 Classic Con·
vertlble, low milage, body
and

$2300 .00

In

mint

79 K5 Blazer loaded with
extras, must sell or take

$1868.55

over payments. Call «6·
92-"1.

1978 Dodge Omni, 4 dr ..
245·5617 .

$3000 .00

1974 Window van, 351, V,8
engine. auto. tra ns.,

PS,

PB, 73.000 miles. Contact
Holzer Medical Center,
Purchasing Dept., .4.46·5345.

1- 830·E 8 hp Elec. Start
30" Cut
51325.00 S11SO.OO
1- 830 8 hp Hand Start,
30 " Cut
$ 1195 .00 $1000 .00
2- 830 B hp Hand Slart 80 Models
30 " Cut
$900 .00
1- 1130- E 11 hp E lee. Start 80 Model
30 " Cut
$1100 .00

Wanted to buy Lincoln
MK5 , will
take over

payments and lrade 1976
Monte Carlo, Caii446·39U

~I_!

~!JJJMID~THATICRMII:EDWoROGAIIIE

II
~
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter 10 each square. tO loon
lour ord1nary words
.

1979 Z28 Camaro. 350
automatic, T Top, Power
Windows, Rear Defogger,
AM FM radio. 992·7570.
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675,
1574 or675·2881 .

THIS EQUIPMENT
ALL NEWNO DEMOS

3384.

© 1976 FORD Granada,
good condition, phone 304,
675-3641.

-

[]

I I I

r)

power,
low
mileage,
beau, i ful
19H LeDorado Cadil la c, all
power ,
low
mil ea ge ,
beautifu l ca r ins ide and
out, must see to appreciate.

614-376,7209,

71
Toyota
wagen ,
automatic transmission ,
good cond ition S600. Phone

1 Jumbles JULEP
FAUNA SHOULD DISOWN
Yesterdays ·
1 Answer What they sa1d when the laundry mac h 1ne

79 FORD Mustang, 4 cy l,
air con dit ion ed, power
steering, sun roof , may
cons ider tra de ln of Older

eng . automatic, air con·
dUioning, ste reo , AM· FM 8
tra ck, one of a kind, 34,000

1977 AMC delux Hornet
stationwagon, ex . sharp,
reduced below who lesale,

$1,995. Call«6·7109.

14 YO UN G roosters . $1 25

each, JOH75 516• .

72 P lymouth Duster, good

Stationwagon. 9 pass .•
power brakes, auto., power
steering. Asking $600. Cali

937 ·2875

446"2826.

71 Chevy 4 dr ., 6 cyl., one
owner, good cond . Ca ll 446·

73 Grem l in 6 cy l. , Au,o,

3384.

with air,
work
car.good
$250.t ires,
Call good
446 ,
7649.
1974 Chev . Monte Car lo.

200 BUSHELS barle y,
phone 304·67B086

bed,

good

73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
1979 Jeep Wagoneer 4 dr.
Ful l equipped, auto fran .
Built in CB. Cruise control.
AC. 4 extra tires on rim .

$6,500. Call Hn 117 afler 5
pm ,
FOR sa le assume loan , 79
Jeep Cherokee, call after 5,

30073-9154.
Motorcycles

pm . Helmet included .

roof, runs good . 51900 .00 .
992 7897

1974 Honda 350, needs bat·

1969 Pontiac F irebird. 6
cy l , standard shift . SSOO.

99H525.

negotiable . 99B816 afler 5

t ery . Excellend condition .

Ridden very little . Phone
30H75, 5085.
76 Kawasaki , K 2400, must
sell, make offer Phone JO.t·

Autos for Sale

67B504 .

71 Ford LTD, 4 dr . station
wagon . very good running
shape an d tires . New
exhaus t system . Priced to

7 LOT 5GREENACRE 5
Lof Sd'J l S1dcwa llo, , 75'xl48 '
Lot" 23. Vilcnnt 88' lrontrtge by 148 ' depth pr1 ce d TO
se ll
• JJ4 11 3Jl

ONLY S1,700.00
wood(!(! toT, r~ trn os t &lt;H1 acre. 700' ot ro ad front Rgc
Suitabl e for deve lopm ent or camp,n g l ot on Dav1 s
Road Colt tor de trtd s
" 4Jtt
DUTCH COLONIAl
Sty le, bea ut y, charm , comfort
all dcscr +bes this
home , 4 BR . 21 1 baths . equipped ea r in k i tchen ,
family room w ith f ireplace. forma l li ving i1nd din
ing r oom Yo u won ' t bel ieve th 1s hom e un iE&gt;ss you
see it tor yourself Make your appointment tod ay to
walk in to th e entrr.ce of one of the most lovely
homes tn t he area
~ J22

1 ACRE 7 BEDROOM COT TAGE
Nice comforrab le home wiftl niCe la rg e shade trees,
concrete front por ch, lots of fruit trees (appl e.
cherry, ~lum and peac h), grape arbor , raspberry
viMs·. g,o od garden land , a ll leve l . In Green Twp .
Rural water. 2 ca r garage, fuel oi l F .A . furna ce.

' .

Basement, barn approx, 16'•24'. PRIC ED IN THE
S20's.
t 491

Watch this paper for location and grand
opening .

1975 VW Rabbit very good

cond .. $2000. Call 245·5077 .

Re.:.l Es1a le -

------ Generoll
-

Auto Repair

4792 ,

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any calar,free pickup
&amp; d e II very In Ga Ill po II s
Hammond

Body

Real E stale -

f er, needs work . Phone 30.4·

882 2821.
1980 Yamaha 650 ~pecial
1800 miles, best offer after
5, call 304·675·6376.

E &amp; v Body Shop want
your car looking new? Call
«6· 9~ Georges Creek Rd.
11

Gutter,
Roofing, Remodeli Ro?m
Ad -ng ,
ditions ,
Drywall
and Repair
Call :

Free estimates, reasonable

travel
self -

awning,

ex·

cellent condition. Call 992·
3102 after s,oo p.m. _ __
1975 Maple leaf fifth wheel
travel trailer. A.C .. fully
self contained. Very good
cond. Call evenings 61~"8-43"
2064.

"

Model small

farm , barn , machine shed, chicken
house or used for devel opment. Ranch
type 11ome, 5 rooms a nd bath . Strong
spr ing deve lopm ent, or·rural water is
avai lab le. Close to Rio Gran de .
H837

882·2079.

be drooms, kitchen, dining room , fam i ly
roo m , bath, utility room and storage
room . Land l ays well with some timber
and stocked pond .
N758

tering. custom made for
your home . For free

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

'

'

, ,I

11

Home
lmprovemenh

FOR BEST In Carpel
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway. Call 614·~·
20'6.

RESIDENTIAL

ACRE

E

COUNTRY LIViNG WITH HUNTERS
DEL I GHT
50 acres plu s, 3 bedroom
home, l1 11 1nq room, kitchen, dining
room. b!llh and uti lit y area. Inc luded
rllso I r oom co tt age, I outbui l di ng ,
tobnc&lt;o base a nd timb er .
· i/777

NESTLED IN THE SHADE TREES --

Lovely rriodular home . and llf~ acres.
Home has many amenities, ex tra large
master bedroom. 3 bedrooms total 2
full baths, tots of kitchen cabinets. f~ r'"·
mal dintng area, firepla ce, plus flue tor

1\'!0BILE HOMF:-;

~~~~~~~~~t=======:=:::~;sJI~~~~'E~~~~ ~ouvtf~~

1-

PROUOLY V.f OFFER
Th1 S new el l! br 1ck home somC' 4 m dcs
trom G.1 11 ,pol 1S ,n Crf'c n Two 6 r oom s.
3 BR . 'l b r1 1 1i ~ . ill I nP.w opplicln ccs. '}car
Q.Hil c.w . thc rm op anr w1nd ows. 1nsu1 .1
t1011 IT' 1fl r f' ii ii1Q , 6" und('r IIOU Sl' 6"
OVN q,1raqc Wf' ll buill $60'S
"!100
SEE MOM'S E YES SHIN E w hl'n &lt;;he
sees the inside ot Th1 s modern . clea n '1
or 3 BR hou!.c Moncv savinq we ll built
llr ep lace II ol so hils full bclSc m en t
Well tnsuta tcd I 10 nc of land GardC"n
SJ5,000 It' s you rs
11 eo •
PRIC E REDUCED plu s l.t ~0 CON ·
TRACP Small u ldC'r horne . QOOd con
d i t 1on J bedr ooMs, r bo th, dininq roo m .
l lv 1nQ room . k1f c hen w1th stove and
n :f r 1qer ator . utll 1t y room, ca rport and
n ice front por c h Located tn Cheshire .
Mak e us an ott er
"7Jt
MARt&lt; OF QUALITY lnv it tng 3
bedroom ra nch . 2111 baths , ful l
basement with beautiful family r oom ,
plus recrea t 1on room . Man icured lawn .
A 'ruly l ovely home . 60's City schools. /I
8
0
7

!NVESlME Nl PROP !
ry
7 acres.
one ot the ! ('w nice on.
11 on Rt . 35
west at Ho lzer Med1 Ccll CL' .lfcr . Who w i l l
be the success f ul one?
11 780
~F

llF R f iN llNC IN G
3 aUf'S
loc ..ll cd at Rodney S.S.OOO ctown 10° 0 1n
tcr es t Crlll todny tor mor e Cllllcli ls " 69!
J .G C R f ~

Most n il leve l, It !l obi(•
qr ound , so m e su1 t able tor cab1n or
house SJ,OOO
, t121
LAND CONTRACT - Own er will do the
f1no1ncing on thi s 22 acres. 2 older
homes . 3 well s. Tobacco bas e. All
min~rill nghh . Owner witt possible con·
sider tr ol d i ng . 522,000 .
' .¥826
NE E D LAND ? - 30 acres of vacant
~and . 15 ac res wooded . 15 acres of ro ll
~~g pastu re . City schools . No r estric·

l1ons . $15,500,

OHIO

~IVER

FRONTAGE

$ 15,000.

N775

RESIDENTIAL
PRICF.OlOSELL
·lnthclowJO'sis
t his ? bPdroom homP . A k i t chen any ,
wornc1n wo tcJ be proud to own . Garage.
8 c1S1· mr•n t Ltlrqc l ilwn . 4 miles from
HM C.
11 812

J.6

aurs. 3 hf'clrooms. I bi1Jh, living room ,
k1lC hc: n, pM t b~lscm c n t. Priced in the

home is not worth the ask ing price. 2
bedrooms, basement. Large storage
area . Own er willin9 to help with Clown

payment Rutland. $24,900..

: :1 ,

1702

'1:

1 ..

lltG llUSINESS OPPORTUNI TY !

s

ROGERS
PAWN &amp; COIN SHOP ,
601 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant, w. v •. , old
stilte liquor sto;e.

-U&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Home '"'iring,
Residential &amp; C-: nmercial .
liE:ensed Eledrician5
Guaranteed work

mower repair and sharpening service. 10 a .m .-6

p.m . 67B868.

446 . 3458

~;:=====~====~+==========~
DENNY

GOOD SOIL

CHAIN LINK FENCE

DELIVERED

FREE.ESTIMATE5

Rio Grande

Nf W l

I ~ I'ING

flf

LL6MY LANE .

u sc (1s ,, , 4 bedroom home or 2 'J
bedroom i1 p fl r.tm cnts. Live in one and
rent fhc other . Nice lOt . P.11io. Pri ced in

....

the S401s.

.

1 80~

Free estimates, all work

fully
guaranteed .
Residential, commer·
cia I, industrial and min·

ing,

eltc1ric

work.

47ft. Working Heigh1

PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Thtrd Ave .

61H46·2716

MSHA Cerl.

house c alls. Quazar,
Phone 576,2398
Motorola,
and
or ~· 2454 .

- - -- -

Rt . J, BoKS4
Racine, Oh .

·:. ·-

Ph , 61H4J 2191

L---------------~ -

10 7 ti c

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. F.ourth and Pine
Phone ~ · 3888 or 446,«77

lHE PHOTO
PLACE
- Portraits
- Weddings
- Anniversaries
- Passports _
- and Now, an i m pressive, complete line
ot wedding and anniversary invi1ations
and
accessories .
Reasonably
priced ,
quick service.
- Look
without
obliga,ion.

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7853.
D. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical , heating,
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting .

675·3376 or 675·12AO.

It.~===~~§~===~~=========~rlllBACK HOE Complete ser,
vice. French City Mobile
Excavating

C&amp;W

BILL'S

Home Improvements

Nu~Prime

Windows, Storm Win·
dows and Doors. Patio
Covers.

Mobile

CONTRACTORS

Repllcement
Carports.

Home

cessories .

Ac ·
Free

Estimotes.
691 Miiter W:llUI'- - -1
446·2642

Specialiling

in Contreta

Rooling &amp; Remodeling
Home Improvements
Exterior &amp; Interior

Vinyl Siding and Solflt
Residential and com·
mercia I. work insured.

367-0194 or 367·0427
or 446·63!Q

Homes Inc. call «6,9340.
Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

DITCHER Complete s«r,
vice.

Water

lines,

and

drainage

sewer

ditches.

109 High St ., Pomeroy

French City Mobile Homes,

Inc . call ~ · 9340 .
Dozer work . Small jobs a
specialty. un7SJ.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
~·4208

Service.

Nu-Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; d~~Grs

6,28 1 mo .

~=========~
C R Mash
•

•

~ GENTLE~AN',f ARMER

Custom Kitchens, Ap·
pltanc cs,
Custom
Bathrooms, Remod chn·
g, Plumbing, E lec tric,
Hea ting .

·Larry

Siden ·

slrlcker. 675-5580.
14

Aluminum &amp; vinyl .

Free Estimates
992-6011
992·7656

Electrical
&amp; Refrigerallon

Sidlnt
Howmet Polio Covers
Howmttscreen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum ullllty .
bulldlnes
"1 Mlller1&gt;rive

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All type s of rool work,
new or repatr gutter~
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .
All wcrk guo1ra nteed .

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer

Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric . Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

Free Est tmat es
Reasonabl e Price s
Call Howard

~EFRIGERATIO·

IS

94n862
949·1160

_-::._ AddoiK t~nd
-~-- remocl.eting

dnd Hom e Mo1mtenance
• Roofing of all types
e Siding
• Remod eling
• Free estimil fes
• 20 vr s. expcnence

·~ -R Qoling. end gutter
work

, '&gt;-Connetework
, ,-'- Piutnbfngand
eledri~al

work

IFre&amp;Eslima tesl

__•

V. C. YOUNG II

._

TOM HOSKINS

::..

Ph 949·2160

:::.

.~ ~:11 -62.1$ or992-73lq

WORK

WANTING TO BUY
SCRAP

wes t

• Backhoe
• Ex:cavatmg
• Septic Sys tems
• W ater, Sewer &amp;
Gas Line s
• Dump Truck
• Trencher
L1 ce nsed &amp; Bonded

· PULLlNS

rop pr;ces paid lor it&lt;llo

bodtes. !&gt;Cr.lp iron ~nd

fXVACATING

ol
~t .

f .11rq rou nds on Old

CONTRACTING

Farm Ponds - Land
Clearing,- Roads .
Call:

Iron &amp; Metal)

7'"t·~·, ~ .,

J&amp;F

.•• CAT :&amp;:6-C

(Pomeory Scrap ,

992 ·'2478

or

JJ

Mon . Fr~ . ~ · JO to ' ' oo

.·Blaine Milhoan

Ph. Yn61..

985:3965

After Aug . 3

PH. 992-7201

-

7·26· 1 mer. .pd .

"

7. 15 I m o.

5 21 tlc

'} 4 'ttc

General Hauling

Mlu.ER ......".
SERVICE

Oh! so

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways .
&lt;;all for estimates 367-7101

For a II of your wir·
ing needs .

~ones

your present l'lectric.l l
system .
Residential
&amp;Comm erCifll

Let George M11J£(.
Boys Water Ser~lce.
Clll367-7471 or 367·0591 .
WATER
SERVICE .

r.~eck

Call742-3195

RESIDENTIAL
POSStSILITIES

L ar~r.

two story home in need of sOme
pa int and repair . Four bedrooms, large
k itchen, d l n tng room, l ivinQ room wi.th
t 1r e l ilcc and family roo m . L arge lot and
cwrdcn space. Good che ap. Poss ible ~
land con tract.
N7S9

'·

Frciin the ' Smollest
Heater core to lhe
Urgestlla\'i•tar
·J'

'

••dlotor Sjteclallst
NAT,.AN,Ii!GGS
3S vrs. Exlierlence

., or ~ f'OR ·nl• ~~
W1.·ll t il n ~ (l tor
honw otf ~r s your t ~·un t l y more~ tqr the
rnont.."f. J bf~d ruon 1 ~, h.tftt , tbrmrd dl'1
inu room, bast · rr~l'h t C h o~1n link l cnc't'
~t~rroun&lt;ts Y•) rd . t&lt; io (.r ,1 n ~ " · S4J.IItl0
'
, 1'14

siYfit NELSoN.
MOTORS INC. ·

'

POlfltrO•• !)'fi.
\•
"1·217C .

t

,l'h.
.
H ·l,fc

'•

SUNDAY-PUZZLER

:
l...=;;~~~======~~~
... .
..
AC ROSS
t Fold
6 Increased

by
10 Smoke and

log
14 Pter ctng
11ght beam
19 Retreat
2 t Grale

22 Rabbtt"S
retsltve
23
24
26
28

Conflict

Erottc
AccompliSh

Hold
29 Male turkey
30 Part ol a

forest
32 Trap

33 Auclion
word
3-4 Cypnn01d

ltsh
35 Geramt' s
wrte
37 Fall guys
39 Anger
40 Pump

· tretand

132 AfAcan

"'CO\mtry

70 Craze
71 Nobleman :·
73 ~alnca~- _ · ·
grbuiJ
.;: •·
75 ~Jgna_te4 ·_
Whimper -~ ·
78 C"oice parr ~·
80·8Miard shet :._
81 l-amprey

n

861h)ury

device ·

14:L~Ollow ,

datlleltve

taSruon

-.

89.Anger
. .
.. 1&lt;451nsect
92 wading bircY - 1&lt;4&amp;:Hotds In
95 Growmg oul&gt; ' ..ftigla regard
oL
- ~ -· · 148-Sedtch wnh
98"SHarpen - :- _ ·
words
99 ait&amp;ance4- :.0,~ • ISO~ miti s

101 Landed ·- .' -,- 15n&gt;Ubi&lt;
property

_-

nMfers
153 A\18fage
15"4 Discord

~~

t03.1sotated

rock
104 Cl'loose

gOddes s
~

tOS Civtltntury

I 56 &amp;rushes

42 Pmtecl•og
too th
44 Washed

syMbOl
.....
t08 Transactton ·

hghtly
46 Halt
47 Sow

110 Actor

4 tHad

48 - the Red
50 Amassed
52 Prcctous
mel a!
53 Conjunction
55 Walked on
57 htst
58 Harvest
59 Support ·
60 Fla .·s n elghbm

62 Once
around the
I raCk

64 Weaving
machtne

66 leurontc
deitv

68 Hebrew

mon1h

""'"•
159 P,.Oak
SUddenly
160 Wesl Aln lnte
OOWIV .

·

Wallach

'*"

1t t PrOnoun
1t2 Actress

T)IM!r Moor111
113 Comt(:"9'

~

' ' t t. .

~

-Mias. Ken :.. ·

liS .tbeloeus:~-

·._. ,
.-uu

1\7 Leflall
I 19-Printet''s.

&gt;
....

~-

. mtlasure .
•
120 Yehide . ·~ ..
t 2t chief
~

J T&lt;lfk idly
2 b1Fus truti S
3 light colton

,lfl&gt;fle
4 Ai'4Bf island
-5 Jog
6~an

Juan·s

. ~d
~.

1 Mal8y
eucutrve . • ,
~bf?On
124 Certain
8 [mploys
126 PBrl ol f.!ft:e· ".
9'Wurtting dog
127 Frame ol ...,, . 10 ~
_..ind
•· ~ ·
128 LIIS't $1K _..... ..

IIAes o1 . :

· ~t

.-J ·

130 ...... • - ·'~
· Mig~~

B7 Breed of

20 Tran s-

hall

· _.

money

t:rfTrogtcat
139 tUtban
140 Cbun:; h
· bef\ches
1&lt;41-Aain and

er" Lanternt·e· _,.;

85 Rumor
86 Burden

16 Blemtshed
17 Omttled

tree

82 E•-seriiiC'e· .
man
.L
e-4·Enthusia•·

14 Alight

15 Siamese

t:J.J -Srtcll -carry · trqfdevlces
134-[vtiryone
135 Units

106 NM;ket
15 Jl P&amp;ssover
symbol
. .,,
meal
107 Nepluniutn .... · . 158 Femtntne

69 ISlands o"

*

bnautitUI new bri ck ranc h . 3 bedroomS,
tl(,'at pump, 2' car 9arag,c , basement
~ r.il ufitul acre s 25 or .t8 . Deve lopment
nr lilrm . Chance ol a litetimc . 'J miles ol
Gil tli pol ic; .
~· 686

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Plumbing

I

/..

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

&amp; Heating

CALL BETWEEN
8 A.M. &amp; 5 P.M.
446·1142

AERIAL BU CKET
TRUCK SERVICE

" Beautttut , Custom
Suitt Garages"
Ca ll tor tree s1d1ng
es timat es, 949 ·2801 or
949-2860 .
No Su nday Calls
3 11 II c

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and

12

t;::=========i::=========j
Remllcleling repair, new
construction, all types.

BISSELL
SIDING CO•

HARPER Halstead, lawn

1 63~

S10's.

. --.
.-

.t·H · tfc

J,IM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery. Call 256·
'1368 anyiiiJie.

FARM

INV ESTMENT

Utility Buildings
Stzes from 4x6 to 12x40

. "YOUNG'S
CAR~ ENTER
SERVICES"

Ph . 992-5016
or 992-7505

cOildltlon service,
col)lmercial, industrial.
Phone 882·2079.

G.l lh rl County 's larges t and oldrst
Grl rd( ·n Center rmd Flower Shop .
fv ••r y th 1nq . gor.!:. : t r ees, shr.ub s
arrcnhouse, entir e inventor y . A ll si t '
TtnQ on Jl 'J aCre, m or e or less, on SR 35.
Serious buyers t il II todclY .
71S
,.

2

b edroom mob il e home in excellenr con·
dit1on . Most a ll furnit ur e good condition
and tn cluded i n sa le. Rural water
ava i lable. 10 'x30' cov ered patio. Lot
SIZe 110' by approx . 400 ' to water edge.

. HON f. 't'~U C tc:lf. DR!V[ overlooking
t he rt vr ~ r 'J stor y older home and

YOU BE THE JUDGE and lell me is
you don't think thi s well maint ained

(;

a cr e of nice I&lt;Jwn . Home inc ludes 1
bath, tiv i nq r oom , k i fc hen, dining room ,
ut i lit y close t , rurr. l wo ter and own sep
ti c sys tem . Loca ted tn KC school
d 1Sir ic1
1756

1119

RESIDENTIAL

I

SET UP AND READY to ·m ove into.
1972 l -4 x65 2 bedroom m ob il e home and 1

SMALL

6 15 H e

PH. 949-2285
Locate d at Maplewood

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
I 01 NG

AND DOOR. 614-698·8205.

I·JACK''S

H EY " N ATUI-&lt; 1 LOVERS "

Pu t you r qrcPn thu mb to wo rk on thi s
4 3&lt;10 cl rrcs En tOY C01J('IIry l l'll flQ 1n IIH S
3 hcdroom homf' locrHcd on sta te
h 1qhw.1y OHwr .l ltr,l c l10n&lt;; (lrt• n JO' by
&lt;I ) ' Wi l ko; buii (IHliJ . IOI)..l r (O bclSC', plu S
m or f'
11 1:10 l

Sizes
" From 30x30"

•.
~==========·
~
7~
·
~17~
·
~
l~m~o~.~~::::::::::::::::::~~~:;~
,~
;P;o~·~;;er~e~y~,;o~n~
.
~
;:~~================7~5~tt~c~
~
2
~

BACKHOE ana Septic tank
1978 Palomino pop·up cam,
per, sleeps 6. Phone 773·
51146 or 882-3525.

...'

Lo ·rs
THE ss
We ll ca
for
hom e ott er s yo ur family m or e tor th e
money . 3 be droom s, bath . to rmal din
1ng room, base m ent . Cha1 n llnl&lt; tence
sur r ound s yar d . R1o G rande $43,000
1774

Farm Buildings

• ~Tr ansmiss ion
. Repiitr
. ·. -.,Hrs.: Mon .- Fri .
"'o 9. a.m :-5": 30 p.m .

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE -

Lake in R ac ine.

CONTINIOUS no leak gut ,

A PRETTY VIEW surrounds this h'ome
with 31 acres of n ice land . Home has 2

.1

NEW li STING PERFECT IN VESTMENT · Dupl ex with an in town
loca t1 on . I s1d f' tea tu res 2 bedrooms, 11 7
baths, forma t d1n1ng room, klf chen The
other side I bedroom. bat h. 11 v m g roo m
~ 809
and k1tchen Pr ,ccd 1n t he 30's .

ALL STEEL

Repair~·

mo. pd.

Trash Pickup lit,
The Village of .
b
Mi ddl eport • O ·

Construdioo
APPROX. 5 ACRES -

8-2· 1· mo _

6·3- lmO.

...:Auro·and Truck

4 p. m . to 11 p.m.
A II Day Saturdily

Service.

LOCKSMITH

Residential , automotive .
Emergency service . Call

Frank Rose Const. Co.

contained,

THIS ONE! 3 or 4
bedroom s. Fo r ma l d inmg l lf2 b a th s
K1 fche n comp lete with d iShwasher and
disposal Garage . Concrete driv eway
Low hea tin g bill s. Centr a l a 1r, Pa fto ,
fl at lot . ctt y sc hools.
#724

;-·

949 2710 or 94n806

,.. ; GARAGE

Free Es tim at es ,
Cd ll Collect
P h . 843· 3322. "" .

• Steel • Aluminum •
Castmg • Trol iler Hit·
c h es
•
Metal
Filbricattons .

· ~onday - Friday

245-9113

1976 Call388·8132.
Fold up Apache camper.

General

23 11. Skamper
trailer, fully

A

For Information Call

ROGER~MYSELL'S

EUGENE lONG / , 13"~

E~erlence

-~ ·

Siding
Roofing / Gutter
RemOdeling
~ervt ng Your Area lor
10 Years

BARNETT'S
WELD SHOP

rates. Scothguard, 992·6309.

Ken Soles

Camping
Equipment

19 II. Coachman self con·
talned, $1,725. Caii24H496.

NEW LI STI NG -

~-

Ages 3 and Up
Adult Classes Otlered

. . ..;. Grl!fRoush
. ! ·-::pJt: 99'2-7583

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

ROBERT MASH

1977 K2 Kawaski, best of "

' Special' Just In time for
lhe fair. A 1974 PIIY Mor
Camper·lraller . Electric,
water hook·ups, sleeps 4,
outside antenna, 12' por·
table RCA TV. Call416-9663
alter 1:OOPM.

HOME - Th 1S a tr r act 1ve J bedroom
br1ck home is wa tting for you ! Im mediat e possess ion, 11· 7 baths 2 car
garage SJ4 gas budget . Centr a l n1r
Poo:&gt;s lbll tly a t loan assumpt 1on, 91 , o_o 1n
t er esl. C1t y sc h oo ls. !.56,500 .
NSJS

Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups

VINYL
SIDING

Now Taking
Enrollment For
Septemler Classes in
Racine and Middleport

.:e:tec:frical work
· •~ooctiog work
· 13 Years

Water-Sewer·E lectric

Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7S60

Mobile Home roof painted
for winter, S35 you supply
paint. Will also do pipe In·
sulallng, Call Ken Mannon
at 446·5577 or 256·1932.

196'1 Chevy dump truck, 1
and one·half ton, 4 speed
trans, 2 speed rear·end,
19~ Ford, 4,000 Industrial
tractor,
loader
with
hydraulic bucket, both In
good condition S2800. each
or SSSOO. both. Phone 304·
882·3110.

Shop, 221 Mill St. 379-2782 .

lt.ll6 t\UitH l iM ! 1 I'D
f ult v
e&lt;tutppcd
On e
ow ner.
lo w
mll c,lgc.
good co nd . 'i.J&lt;ltJ'l
44 6· 15·-16
(h.lrles N c. 11
tl ox 421, G.llltpoli 'i

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

County Certified
Rousrt Lane

73 Grand Torino parts.
Phone 304-773-9595.

area ,

F1 sh 1ng . vnc at.on. ! or 1 bedroom cnb •n loca ted
tac1 ng Ra ccoon Cree k and BIII C L£1k C N 1ce tan;~e
wood ed lot Make you r Ide &lt;'I v r-nr .1rou nd v accli&lt;On
Ca ll us now
• J66

BU Y THIS HOM E
FROM OWNER WITH 1o2, SOO DOW N
And low 1n t er es t r,ltC' on balan ce wtlh owner , 'l
bedroom co fl ;:~qe wilh1n 5 m1n ull'&lt;; of S1lv e r Bn dge
"260
ShoppmQ Pl aza

•HoiWIIt•r T .anks

FERRELL's WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
malnta ln ance
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.
'

2 NEW tires &amp; rims for
small pickup, 31J.f·895·3Ul.

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker
service. "Big or small" we.
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Oay
~ · 2445 0&lt; Night , ~-

Price

OB IN 3 0R,ROOM S

SPR ING VtlL L EY SUB DI V I SI ON
Vi'lcClnl tots. r11ce S.lll' IJuil(il ng l ots w1 t h a ll u111111eS
t her e Lo t SIZC 10 1 1:! by 111 'l Bell er get 'u rn now
II 4S6
COUNTRY HOME
I n Qh ,o r own sh•p sets on 2 Acres. mor e or tess, ha s
a l um inum S1d ing 3 bedr oom s rtnrl brun Pr 1ced
5 1~ . 900 Sec by appo1nt men t on l y
• 47]

.1111'191!\

Gene's Carpel Cleaning,
deep stream extraction .

17

condition .

L d r ge ll v m y room w1T h l 1r ep lacP, d1n1n g room w1th
sl 1dtng doors to con&lt;rc te pat 1o. mod er n ea t 1n lu t
chen . lnrge rPcreat 1on room on ltr sr leve l Ut ll 1t y
room . J bedrooms w1th pl enty ot c l ose r space. 21,
ba ths. a.r cond,f•oned , sto rm door s a nd w1ndows 7
cr~r l1n1o:,hed qa r age , le vel lot l OO ' xJOO ' lot s morf'
Cc'l ll t or 1nto
1146S
t. HOM E TO BE ENV I E D
(About on e m1te I rom Ga ll1p0lt s on lower R t'ler
Ro,ldl
Chn rm nnd sp lendor &lt;1 r e ·rour ~ 1n 111 15 sp 1c and span
tl ll br1 ck. thr ee bedroom. l wo and one hil l! bath
nome wll n lclrqe l1v1nq room ovrr took,nq the, Oh10
R1v er , t am1 l y room W1 l h beam . CC'1 I1nq and 11
t 1rep lace. F tondn morn . two car nrn ted qa r &lt;'!QC w1 th
clc c fr 1r dr1veway d e 1ccr Mant mor e (' )llfc'I S Cal l
l or detrJil s
11470

8ACRE 5
W11hin 10 m1n dr1v e to dow ntow n Gal l1pOl •s C1 ty
Sc hOOl Sys te m H., -:; r1ooku p l or mob1I C home. Ga ll ia
Ru ri'l l W a ter. elect r1 c and sept1 c Tank , n1te l1 qhl on
po l e. 100 I I front aypon Gra ham Sc hool Rd T1mber
Build1n g si tes CALL NOW
11477

• DI\PDUIS
•o•,nw•!"'"

7 24· 1 mo . pd

1977 Suzuki GS 400 . E• ,

IBOOSQ , FT . PLUS REDUCED

DON ' T FENCE M E IN
G111e me I &lt;'I nd . lots Oil and , &lt;19 acres more or less w1 th
c lertn 11' x70 ' mob ile home . larg e barn , wil h 20 A
f il lfl b le. aoprox JSOO l Os toba cco bene an d pond
Bonu s 1 O ld er 7 room house cou l(l be remode led goes
wilh !h e property L1ve 1n one whtiC' you r emode l the
o th e.-ifyouw ,sh LowJO 's
11487

Wntler\
eDrytr'

Improvements

buy

cellent

CHtlRMING TR I LE VE L

LOOK AND SEE
Wha t J miles from Rt I nea r Kyqcr Cr eek Plant hil S
to off er you . 'l acre s morP or IE'SS.] J bed r oom house
W1Th l am il y room or F lor •d a room , buil l 1n ca b1net s.
stove, r etr,g erator . g arbage d1sposa 1, lreezer and
st ove 1n basement , wa sher &amp; dryer a ll goes More
turnitur eava ,lab leatadd l ll onn l co&lt;; t Low50's IISOO
BR I CK RANCH
Thr ee bed room bn ck r anc h with1n wc1lk1ng d1Si ance
to H annan Trace Sc hool s Th1 s nom e ha s a large
back yard , so me tr u 1t tr ees , built 1n kil chen and d1n
1nq room . c,.npor t, Iron ! rlnd bac k por c h and 1S
reit sonob ly pr 1ced
• 4 )2

~

Home

11

running

cond ., S700. Call «6,2544.

74

11 hatc hback.

1ces

Septic Tanks

&amp; Accessories

service ,

•

Call 446·7383 .

4 sp. 2Smpg, red with black
interior . New radials, AM·
FM Craig casse tte. Sun

after 4PM weekday s.

304,88n5&amp;3

Aluminum Siding
Sheet &amp; Cast Aluminum
Copper Wire
Brass
Radiators
Auto Batteries

1974 Chevy 3/4 T truck with

For Sale 1973 Chevrolet

condition . $250 . Phone 304·

sel l at S600 00 , Cal l 3888140

Tennessee Walker, mare,
bla ck, very gentle Phone

(Approximately 2• cans p~r lb. I

For sale 1979 Bronco ex.
cond .• tow milage, $5,700 .

fla t

T FaRSpBFia liB A

Look w h at yo u can ge t
on a lr~nd c o ntrr~ c t at 9°o
1ntcr C's l Owner reduced
th e pr1 ct.&gt; $7.900 and IS
a nx1ous to se ll
Th1 s
thr Pf' bed room spottp ss.
&lt;'!1r cond il1 oned home
~as
l
baths.
li'ling
storaq e bu1 1d1ng. heated
QMage. al l f urn1ture 1n
eluded Eve ry i h 1ng you
need 1n one p u r chllSe I n
CIT',.- se houl d1 Sir 1ct 11 &lt;l 07

Aluminum Cans

Times- Sentinei- Page-0· 7

REESE. ~
TRENQIING'
SERVICE

992 -6323

Hay &amp; Grain

71

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL. MAKES

Auto Parts

wrecker

Fam i ly milk cow, gen tl e
jersey . $550 . Ca ll 256 ·9348

or 256 1523.

s,-eclallzlng-· ln

automobiles, radiators and
batteries. «6-7717.

197~ Mustang

W0W 1

OPINING SOON

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, euto repa lr,

modeL 30H75,3978.

69 Z28 . 99N647 .

COU NTRY LI V IN G
tiT IT S BEST
tl4llcre'&gt; More or less
(Free N at Gas .J
Step 1nto one of th e
c lcn nes T farms i n an
1dea l 1oca t1 on
Thr ee
good SIZed bedroom s.
larqe l1'11ng room sunn y
ea T 1r"l k 1tc hen and bot ll
Tobac co ba se. gu s lr asc
and 1ree gd s ,=,It goes
w1 th 1f
La r ge barn .
ce llar
hou se
a nd
c h1 cken house Call to
day t or m a nv more ex
tr as
~4 83

SERVICE
Call Ken Young

~olfitt,

76

1ycoon went bankrup t-"' All WASHED UP..

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

J

XI XI )

w: va .

Business

SALES &amp; SERVICE

(Answers Monday)

gooc cond. Asking S800.
Please call 379·236&lt; .

Call 446·6305,

1966 Triumph Bonneville
motorcycle, completely
chopped . custom paint.
Serious Inquiries Oflly. Call
between 4·10 p.m . 843·2971 .

1

304"458"1609.

SOLUTION

Cr oss -bred, m ilk cow just
fresh , ve ry gentle, 5625 .

Now arrange the orcleel letters to
lorm the surprise answer , as sug gested by the above cartoon

~EAD

Print answer here [

iI .==========~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

64

!!'"!' ~OME
PEOPLE E!i-EF'Of':'E
THEY EAT.

1910 Kawasaki 550 LTD.
Please call 992·3093 after
5:30p.m.

• 'I:'

'

JoJ\j

ILANGAR!
~ I I

6219.

miles, 30U75·6373 .

1974 LeDondo Cadillac, all

Willt s T . Leadingham, Realtor. Ph . Hom e44 6·'1S39
Ph y lli ~ Loveday , Phon e 446·1130
Eun tce Ntehm , Phone 446 -1897
Joa n Boggs , Phon e 44 6·3294
Norm a Lee Ktnnert, Phone446 -7121

Uves1ock

J~ v

high transfer case, $1,000.
Serious ca llers only JO.t-675-

Servl"ces Offie~.10d
t:========::!=========~
Rosenberg Recycling
.

8etz Honda Will be Closed
tor vacation· Aug. 3 thru 8.
We will open August lOth.

'

IDOMBEY!

59 WILLIES In good shape,
rag top, 4 chrome wheels, .t

·~·

1980 Kawelkl KEHoo
cond., 500 milts, """· Cell
416-7311 .

. ~.

,

LEBEL

7JPGRAND Tor ino, for par ,
IS, $150. 304-675·6219

~eye~

74

1979271
Honda CB 750-K . Call
446

rJ............
..... .. _...r..
.....

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

1978 Honda 750, 7,000 milts.
ferrlng, crash bars, back
rest, new tires, exc. cond
Call only If Interested;
11,500, 3118-'1110'1 .

1978 KING Cobra, 302 cu.

1975 Grand Prix model LJ,
loaded . Call even ings 446·

~GRAVELY

IU

t&gt;yHonriAmcldandi!oi&gt;LH

71 Chevy .t dr ., 6 cy l. , one
owner, good cond. Call 446-

6313.

•
•
•
•
•

Autostor

cyl. engine w ith low and

au to., PS, exc. cond . Call

RIDER

Geni~a l

mechanics

cond ., $3875.00. Ca ll 245·
9118.

$1715 .95

1- 82212 hp E l l s o ' - o
50" MOWER
&gt;J0/1 .00

7T

_

RIDING TRACTOR

Allis Charmers W.C. trac tor , gOOd cond . Riding horses Ca ll 379·2761.

Athens, Oh;o S3 ,000.00
each . Phone 1·30.0,42n78l.
..

LIST
1-546010 hp Elec . Start
40 " MOWER
52848 . 10
4-5240 8 hp Hand Start,
30 " MOWER
52147 . 20
1- 5260 8 hp Elec . Start,
30" MOWER
$2350.70

3«1.

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located abOve ground at

1969 FORD L TO, ~ dr., 429
auto,, I'S,PB, air cond.,
62,000 actual miles. Runs
good. One local owner . Call
388·9996, evenings .

CONVERTIBLE TRACTORS

Endloader fits Ford or
Ferguson
tractor, si de
mounted mower for Satoh
tractor, farm uti lity dump
tra i ler . XL
100 Honda
motorcycle . Phone lO.t·895·

F arm Equipment

)1
Autos for Sale
Fa&lt; sale 1975 VW Rabbi!.
Call"-46-7022 or 446·8122.

fi:R
SAV'INGS

$2,500. 304·675·2835.

very muc h apprec iated .

61

I

61
Farm Equipment
International tractor, 3 pt
hitch, John Deere Manure
Spreader on rubber, hay
rake on rubber, 2 boHom
drag plow u ln. on rubber,
1·22·250 rille with scope .
Donald Weaver , Harrison·
ville, 992 ·2085,

lnslrumenh
WANTED : Responsible
~blrfV lo lake aver law mon,
V PIIYments on spinet
Plano. Can be seen loca lly
Write Credit Manager :
P.O. Box 33 Friedens PA
1~1 .
'

ipol;;isr:·~O~h~i~o-=i.P~o~in~t~P~I~e~a~s~a~n~t,TW~.~V~a~.~~~~~=:'l=~~~~~~~~~~~::A:u~g~.:2:,

1
: 9:8:1:

~ courny

n \.Ab'f'rinlh
1a Co-·

. ~com

13'Eiil'lll

18

Reno'late

gresses
23 Tret: trunk
25 Time peu od
27 Pantry
28 Hen 's home
3 1 HerOIC even I

33 Havtng
shoes

36 Arr ow
38 SuperciliOUS
per son
40 Walk
41 Ashes o f
seaweed
43 Li ll ie
leaguer ol

a sort
45 Slumbers
46 Hor ses·
home

47 Shortly
49 Oucll. hke
b trd

5 1 Stop
52 Class1hes
53 Actor
GUinness

54 German
slale
56 College

butlding
59 Fo r estalled
60 Fest1ve
6 1 Arabian
seaport

63 Gill
65 Protecltve
dilth
67 Female ruH
69 Near
70 Heaung umt
72 FEIII inlo
disuse
74 Both ot
76 Nl 's rtv&lt;11
77 l-4ard
workers
79 Wrong
Prel
83 Cr avat

dog
B8 lasso
89 E•tsl s
90 leased
91 Redacts

92 Chteken
93 Dtscovers
94 Football
pos

~

"........

-..-.-.
.
...

....
......

96 Story
:
97 Emerald 1Sie ..

Pronoun
102 Ptl cher
pari s

100

10~

•

Mount a1n

lake
109 Bumpk•n
11 2 Servant
113 Goo ot rove
114 Passage-

...
,..
,4

ways
116 PrepoSition

..
•

11 B Support
120 Talk ed
12 t Seed

•
•

con latners

.

...

•

~

·.;
~

122 AemO'/CS
t 23 Temporary
sheller
t 25 Empower s
126 Modest
127 Cut s
t 29 Aflernoon
par11es
t 3 1 Slum bers
132 Board game
t33 Edge::;
134 S tra~ghtoo
t 36 Poses. tor a
portrait
136 Untidy
140 Equal
141 Flat board

·fl

~~!';~e

~

Ordmances
Before
Wager
Intel
Edtble seed
Pronoun
Senor 's
language
Abbr

-'
:

t4 2

144
147
148
t49
151
t 53
1S5

......
•
~

•
r

•
·•

:~
~
l!6

,..

:
...
•
,_..

'i

'*
""'

�Pag-D -8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~

Pomeroy- Middleport- Galli

@allipolls 1\larp

tleep~. • •
n~·

.J . Sa mud Pt&gt;l'U!\

GALUPOUS - It was in April ,
193:i, in the Masslilon post office that
Laylin D. Rutt, 19 Vine St , got the
autograph of the leader of Coxey's
Anny. JacobS . Coxey was nearing
his 82nd birthday anniversary at the
time, and Rutt was 31 years of age .
Some of you young people never
heard of Coxey's anny, but if they
are careful students of American
economic history . they' ll know that
the army was an outgrowth of unemployment in the "gay" ntneties. Gay
meant happy and joyful in those
days.
COXEY UVED to be 97 years of
age, promoting all that time his goal
of government-printed money to
retire mternational debts and
promote peace. The "general"
orgamzed the histori c "March on
Washington" in 1894 , which was the
90s' equi va lent of the demonstrations and riots of the 1970s and
1980s. However, therl' was no vi olence attached to Coxey's March on
Washington .

Plane Captain in Navy aviation, and
the article has the headline ,
"Without training, P. C.'s ai·e not
qua lified." Glenn Evans had been
stationed at Lemoore, halfway between San Francisco and Los
Angeles, and while he is not mentioned in the writ.,.up, he has been m
a Captain School which runs from
two to six weeks . The course teaches
hand signals, cockpit pre-entry
check, prenighl mspection. and
questions that officers will ask at the
Qualification Board. All Plane Captains attend a training meeting
every Monday for three hours.
HOBE WJU&gt;ON'S brain child, the
Souther n Ohio Lillie League
Ba se ba ll Tournam e nt , was
scheduled to start Aug. 3 al Slammer Field in Wellston - the 25th anniversary tournament. The first one
was held ml956 in Gallipolis.
LEO KI NG , Box 222, Rt. 2, Bidwell
45614 li ves on SR 160 a couple of
miles north of the Holzer Medical
Center

L. D. RUTT was a friend of

Coxey's mel and chatted with him if
not dail y nevertheless the two got
together frequently . He and most
educated people knew that Coxey
wanted the government to print
$500,000,000 in paper money to put
4,000,000 unemployed men to work
on the roads. And 1894 roads, with as
few automobiles as they had then.
differed radically from 1981 roads.
Anyway, . when Coxey arrived m
Washington at the head of his army
it nwnbered between 600 and 1,000;
they marched to the east porlico,
.where he started a speech - started,
we say, because Coxey was arrested

and

jaiied

fo r

20

days

for

He's a retired teacher,

having done his last teaching at North Ga llia and finall y al Hannan
Tra ce. He ha d an extra ordinary e x-

perience on June 3 in roiumbus. Hts
sun, J . B.. has a used-truck sales
shop on Mound St. a nd Leo was
there, visiting .

WANDERING TO the back. Leo
was c utti ng brush and weeds when

he ran into a couple of boys,
proba bly 15 and 16 years of age a nd
weighing 135 or 140 pounds apiece .
Leo King chatted with them, ol&gt;served that were good clean fellows,
and then he went ba ck to his brus hwork . The job done. Leo and the boys
walked together for aboul30 yards.

tres pass in g~

RUTT RETIRED as a school
teacher in Ohio in 1967 . his last classroom:; bemg at Crown City 1 mne
years 1 and at Adda ville 112 years J.
But he taught three man: yt!ar.s 111

West Virginia : at Apple Grove .
GLENN A. EVANS , 20, graduate
of Gallia Academy Hig h School in
1979, will fly to Subic Bay in the
Philippine lslanrts lhis coming Monday morning - that's tomorrow and then he wi II fly to the ai rcrafl

carrier

U.

S.

S.

Kill yhawk

somewhere in the Indian Ocean . Ht"
is the sun of J. Robert Evans.
Gallipolis. and Verna C Eva ns,

Gallipolis. A good picture of Glenn at
work was at the lop of Page B of the
Gulden Eagle fur mid-July, a page
labeled "Squadrons." Glenn 's a

KI NG TURNED right and they
proceeded ahead when abruptly Leo
found himself on the ground, and he
fe lt a sensation of somethmg heavy
abov e his left ear. He put a hand up
to his head and brought it down ...
With a handlul of blood in il 1 He saw
there on the ground the fra gment of
a bn ck. When Leo got ba ck to the
shop. J B quickly closed the place
and look his fath er to Ml. Carmel
husptlal. where they took three stitches

111

hLs herl d lace ration.

MARGARET BRIM has tutored
Leo P. Kmg m art. and the sales
record he a nd other seni ur artists

Ohio-Point P

'Mayes says Wamsley
By Lance Oliver

PT. P!.£AsANT - Dexter MSye!i
who took the stand in his own murder !Mal Friday testified that he
killed Johnny Wamsley because his
own life was threatened and he was
scared.
Defense anomey David Nibert
called his client to the stand at the
beginning of the proceedings at the
Mason County Courthouse. Mayes,
20, presented a detailed account of
the events leading up to the shooting
of Wamsley, a fanner Point
Pleasant resident living in Huntington al the time of his death.
Maye s also described the
mysterious, unidentified blondhaired man who was allegedly a witness tg the killing .
Ma yes stated that early in
October Wamsley ha~ri)Bched
him in Huntington and asked if
Mayes knew anyone who would do a
"to shoot
favor for him somebody' ' Mayes testified that
Wamsley offered $300 for the
killing, and Mayes said he told
Wamsley. "I'd do it. "
The two met again on Thursday,
October 9, said the defendant, but
Wamsley told hlm the kllllng could
not take place that day, and paid
Mayes $50.
Another meeting was arranged
two days later, Mayes staled, and
the two rode in Wamsley's van to
what was later the scene of the
shooting, the abandoned Mae
Moore farm next toRt. 2 near Crab
Creek in Mason County. Wamsley
produced a .25-caliber automatic
pistol and the two practiced
shooting the gun. Wamsley then
gave Mayes another $50, Mayes
said.
The final meeting took place on
Tuesday, October 14 in Chesapeake,
Ohio. Justafter7 p.m., Mayes said,
Wamsley arrived at the meeting
place, a gas station, and another
man was in the van. The third
man, described by Mayes as about
6' -2" tall with "long blond hair
below his shoulders had bumps on
his fa ce.
The blond man, who Mayes said
he had never seen before nor seen
since that day, rode in the middle
seat of the van and Mayes rode in
the front passenger seat.
The three drove to Gallipolis,
Ohio, where Wamsley dropped off
Mayes at the Burger Chef. The
other two men left, Mayes testified,
and Mayes ale at the Burger Chef,
walked to McDonalds and ate
again , then walked up and down the
street until the two men returned
over one hour later.
Wamsley then drove to the scene
of the crime in Mason County,
Mayes said, and the three got out of
the van . Wamsley gave him
another $1110, Mayes said, and a
testament book which he told
Mayes to read.
Al that point, Wamsley told him
that the victim was to be to be Wamsley. himself.
..
Maye s testified he said to
Wamsley , "I couldn't shoot you.

John. You're my frlenc!."
Wamsley gave Mayes "a dirty
look," Mayes 11$d, and held the
pistol In Mayes' face.
"U you don't shoot me, I'll shoot
you," Wamsley allegedly liBid to
Mayes.
Meanwhile, May€!1 stated, the
blond man was standing by the van,
"grinning."
Wamsley got on hls hands and
kne€!1 and asked for fO seconds to
pray. Mayes said he was I!C8red
and confused, so "I turned my head
·and I shot hlm."
When be turned, Mayes said, be
saw the blond man running toward
Rt. 2. The defendant testified that
he then got into the van and threw
the gun into a creek as he drove to
Huntington.
In Huntington, Mayes said be
described what had happened
Ross Johnson, a 16-year-old Huntington hoy who testified Thursday.
Under questioning from Nibert,
Mayes disputed several facts
contained ln the official statement
taken by officers of the West
Virginia State Police after his
arrest on November 4.
The official statement indicated
that Mayes told police that Wamsley told him while in Galllpolis on
the day of the killing that Wamsley,
himself. was to be the victim.
Mayes said in testimony that he
didn't know Wamsley was who he
was to shoot until they were outside
the van at the scene of the crime.
The statement also included a
description of the men throwing
some pape!'ll out the window of the
van on the day of the killing. Mayes
testified that he knew nothing of

to

Fair in 1892 featured band,
balloon ascensions, horses
~~~~n a:c~~SiOna

or

course.

the

merry -go- round

.....

~
... .
;

was ever popular,

making $10 every
hour The most
popular
skill
game
was
Sands
"knockmg off the coon" in which a
player had six throws to knock sluffed raccoons out of a tree. The editor
of the Gallipolis Journal remarked
how much better the city beys were
at this game than the country
fellows;
"Some of the country beys can't
much more than hit a bam door and
about six throws lames their arms ."
S. G. Keller exhibited some corn
that year that was 20 feel long in the
stalk. Said Keller :
"You couldn't reach the ears on
horseback ."
THE BIGGEST excitement on
Thursday at the fair happened when
a refined looking woman saw her
husband swindled out of $10 at the
shell game. She yelled for the police
while the shell worker tried to get
away. Other shell workers grabbed
the woman.
With a ferocious backhand the
"lady" laid out one of her caplol'll
an&lt;l took off after the shell worker in
qpestion. The latter ran into the
sheep tent where he attempted to
hide. However, he wasn't able to pull
the wool over this woman's eyes and
she soon had her man, who later had
his life spared when the police
rescued him.
TONY WEST of Rodney hitched a

stee r tu a buggy and strutted around
the grounds giving away rulers from
one of the local stores. Wrote the
Journal :

" The steer looked HS proud as a
militia general with a white cockade
in his hal."

fl was a little bit loo much for both
Tony Hnd the steer when some joker
threw a dead snake up on the wagon .
There were rulers everywhere'
Tony was back the next day when he
was hypnotized by one of the sideshow magicians. The mesmerist
threw water, soda pop , and even

whiskey to try to bring Tony out of it.
No one ever was sure if he e ve r did
snap out of it. Of course Tony always
had acted as if he was 1n a trance
anyway .
WITH TOTAL PRIZE money of
$1,800, the horse races were exciting
and dangerous. On the fourth heat of
Thursday's second race, two sulkies

collided and the one driven by Doc
Vin.son went into a somersault. In
that same race another sulky
crashed through the retainer fence
and charged into spectators who
were parked in their buggies on the
infield. The sulky careened off Captain Martin's buggy (breaking a
wheel from the latter) and came to
rest on top of another buggy. Several
broken bones and lacerations
resulted.
Horsemen blamed poor track con·
ditions for the accidents as the track
was not nearly wide enough, nor did
the track make a perfect circle at
the ends. To top it off the river side
of the track was lower than it'should
have been; not to mention the fact
that spectators crossed the track
even in the midst of a race.
TilE FEMALE marching band
was a sensation'! Not too many
women in Gallia County had ever at-

:=.i~·-iti

!beMayea•===~=
pollee 1
Wamaiey
beeallll,
It wu

n.

waitress
Pluunt IDa Ill the
Sheldon aald
Wamsley aDd a
wblte hair". .
the bar at tile PoiDt
the night be·... .
She od 1.• ,t
from picture~' .

poUce, but aile-could

b!OIId man. '

~-::~~~~

have a scarJ,:.
Also ca~ &amp;a the
Edmund Sattle, 1
psychiatrist
another
le!ta on
Suttle
motortaskliaad
near normal, ld 1111
verbal comprebelllioll,
reading, were l!ll1y 'IS
with 100 as ayerage.
Suttle eltimated

SOUTH FRONT &amp; CEDAR

•sECOND' SIXTH ANN

AUCTI
The Auction will begin
and at 1:30

Over 5100,000 in merchanfiM willlllli~•lld 'Wfl
will be held at the Village Tr~ding ft!JI!tli)

-=

Terms of the auction will lite cash or dDratvl

N Master charge or Visa, butfue to tftfl!lll.tllt
-

f

of 3%. All sales will be fiML Fire81fts
state and federal laws.
;.

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.

by
that WUllam

thlt per-

"quick to

othens."
that Mayea
and hla
ilnll.mod and
rlsl!:·taller who
action.
a program
Community
office In
that

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lisJings For August 2 - August 8

t.llmony, ¥8Jea
blond man 'lilb

VILLAGE TRA

TIIERE WAS A balloon ascension
each day . A woman went up with her
poodle dog. As she drifted toward
the cornfields along the Ohio River
she would throw her dog out with his
parachute open and the dog would
come floating down in the field . The
woman would come down in the
sa me vicinity. On Friday, however,
a gust of wind caught both the
woman and the dog and pushed them
toward town .

.

UnderAid ·
Sheldon
man's
wil.
noticeable feature,

ELBERFELDS IN

the park .
The wild west show was entitled
··custer's Massacre" and was performed on Saturday. There were
real Indians and cavalrymen all
over the grounds , beginning on
Fnday. The traveling show ,.,_
enacted the Battle uf the Little Big

t.tt!Velaled tba t :
"tqleratln8 :

on Mayes,

MONDAY STORE HOURS

each e vening also gave concerts in

About 1,000 people left the
fairgrounds to get a closer look . The
dog's parachute landed on a sand
bar at the head of Gallipolis Island
while the woman hit the Ohio River
a bout up to her hips. There was a
swift current and things looked bad
for both woman and dog, who, in
their own way, cried out for help.
Several skiffs quickly were put out
mto the water and the two perfanners were rescued to the applause of the several hundred who
had uathered on the river bank.
IT IS INTERESTING to note that
in terms of the livestock the most interest was on the chickens. Brahmas , Phymouth Rocks, Langshans,'
and Brown Leghorns were the
judge's favo.ltes. Then there E . F.
Mills' prized shorth9m cow, which,
like a real perfonner, won the ribben and 20 minutes after the show
gave birth to a full call.
Some of the fair officials were
worried on Tuesday when they saw
Frank Melbourne, the celebrated
" Rairunaker," come strolling onto
the grounds. Sure enough it rained
on Tuesday but on Wednesday
Melbourne was gone from town .
Perhaps the fair board p.~ld the
"Rainmaker" to take his show to
Athens CoQ~~ty .

Wlllllley,
Wlllllley
ulted me

Plus special closeouts, odds anti ends,

templed lo play horns . The girls
st&lt;Jyed at the St. Charles Hotel and

"dull

-·
Jm. :·
saidol !hat

~7-

badqreM

SAVE 50% A

Horn .

BY JAMES SANDS
GALilPOLIS - The main attractions of the 1892 Gallia Co unty
fair were a wild west show, horse
races. a female
.,

II

thlt Mayea

ELBERF
SIDEWA
CONTINUES

have chal ked up attest to her success. Both King and Anna Gales
Whitr sold pamtings a t the gov~r­
nur \ a rt s how in Columbus. and
Kin~ sold ~mo ther one at Rio Grantil' .

W. Va .

"had
Wamsley was
his probi.em
said Painter,
before he
appointment.
Clarence
Adkins, both
were present
allegedly oolfml In Ritter

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