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                  <text>•

Friday, september 18, 1981 •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--12-The Daily Sentinel

GOP leaders

I

(Continued from page I)
House, where Democrats hold a 52vote margin.
Reagan was able to keep House
Republicans in line and attract
enough Democrats for victories in
earlier budget and tax-cuttir~ bat·
Ues.
But House Republican leaders
consider the president's latest
proposals, as one GOP aide said,
"politically undoable."
House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill
Jr ., · 0-Mass ., declared that
Democrats " don't intend to let hun
wreck the (Socia l Security )
system."
The House source said Republican
leader Robert H. Michel of Illinois
indicated he would " like the orportunity to offer the administration
counter proposals."
Reagan decided to seek the ad·
ditional cuts after proJections
showed the deficit for fis cal 1982
would be far a bove the ad·
ministration 's $42.5 billion target.
Michel and Senate Majority
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., RTenn , are e&lt;pected to meet Monday
to discuss the matter .
Meanwhile, a group of about 30
moderate House Republicans - the
sell-described " gypsy moths" from
the Northeast and Midwest - told
reporters Thursday that they may
a ba ndon Reaga n's package of
budget cuts unless the $2 billion
reduction m 1982 military spendmg
Reagan decided on last weekend is
increased to $9 billion.

I

Deputies . ..

,------------------------,

: Area Deaths :
I

Baker said Thursday that he expects an effort in Congress to increase the figure to $3 billion to $5
biUion.
Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., a past
supporter of Reagan tax and budget
cuts, said he won't support the latest
reductions unless Reagan also
moves toward monetary reforms.
Kemp favors a ret urn to the gold
standa rd.
Sources said the cost-of-living
delays would affect :
-social Security pension and
disability payments, from July I,
1982, until Oct. I.
- Railroad retirement pensions,
from July I until Oct. I.
- Federal workers' pens ions,
from March I until Oct. I.
- Supplemental Security Income,
which gives cash assistance to the
needy, elderl y poor, the disabled ,
the blind a nd other low-income
people, from July Ito Oct. I.
- Veterans' pensions. from July I
to Oct. I.
- Feder a l employment com·
pensation for injured fed eral
workers, from March I to Oct. I.
- Food stamps, from April I to
Oct. I.
- School-lunch c hild nutntion
programs, from July I to Oct. I.
- Benefits for retired coal miners
suffering from black lung disease,
which are not due to increase until
Oct. I anyway.

Committee.

• •

(Continued from page I)

1Continued from page I)
was traveling east on the parking lot
a t a high ra te of speed. He struck
two vehicles as he attempted to go
between them. The vehicles are
owned by Frank S1sson, Pomeroy
a nd Angela Harmon, 17, Rutland .
VanMeter was identified by
several witnesses. He left the scene
and wa~ located later in the evening.
VanMeter was cited to Meigs
County Court for a hitsk1p that occ urred Wed nesday on sq 7.
Howe ver, he was jailed for the Thursday incident when he was unable to
post bond . He will appear late r in
county court .

'

Catherine Stt'wart
Catherine H. Stewart, 54, Mason ,
died early this morning at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Born August 18, 1927, at Broad
Run, she was the daughter of the
E lmer R. Ohlinger and Bessie Ed·
ward Ohlinger, New Haven, who
s urvi ves.
She was a member of tbe Christian
Brethern Church and the V.F .W
Auxiliary Post 9926 of Mason .
Surviving in addition to her
mother are her husband, Alfred
"Skip" Stewart : a daughter, Mrs.
Nancy Hesson, Mason : four brother,
Richard and Dalla s Ohlinger, both of
Mason, Robert and Strawford, both
of Letart; one sister , Mrs. Jani ce
Stanley. of New Haven ; and one
grandchild.
She was preceded in death by a
son, Raymond " Tim " Stewart, who
d1ed in 1979 .
Funeral services will be held a t
the Chnshan Brethern Church a t
1:30 p.m. Sunday with the Rev .
James Lewis officiating. Burial will
follow in Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
F unera l Home in Mason from 2-4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Saturday. The
body will lie in state one hour prior
to sennces at the church.

Sunday tournament
The annua l Jaymar Golf Club
Tournament will be held on Sunday
only rather than this Saturday and
Sunday. Only 18 holes will make up
the tournament instead of 36 as
originally planned. The late tee off
time will be 12 noon Sunday.

fund from which basic state services
are fina nced.
The Bourneville Democrat said
the move was designed to insure that
the House would send a balanced
budget to the Senate.
Richard G. Sheridan , LBO director , had told Shoemaker's com·
mittee earlier that his economic
forecasts showed the Rhodes'
budget was $257 million out of balance
But William D. Keip , direc tor uf
th e o ffi ce of bud ge t and
management . disag reed Thursday .
Keip sa id his earlier projectiOns
were on target and that he would not
revise what he called the con·
servallve estimates contained in the
budget. " We' re not changing," Keip
sa id.
Democrats gave Shoemaker the 10
votes he needed to win approval of
hi s amendment.
But
three
Democ ra ts including Rep.
William E. Hinig, New Philadelphia,
the curnrnittee vice chairman joined six Republicans in opposing
it.
Republicans argued that it was too
early for the committee, which has
wrapped up the first of an expected
two weeks of deliberations on the
bill, to consider such a change.
" I would like to suggest that it 1s
premature," said Rep. Robert E:.
Brown, R-Perrysburg. He tried to
table the amendment, but h1s motion
was ruled out of order.

Solidarity day, D-1
'

Local emergency units answered
three calls Thursday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 10 :16 a. m.Jhe Middleport Umt
took Louise Cornell from Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments to Pleasant Valley
Hospital: Racine at 12 :19 p.m. took
Florence Deeter from Valley Bell
Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and she was later transported to the
Holzer Medical Center. The Turpers Plains Unit at 7:36 p.m. took
Ray Powell from the fire station to
St. Joseph Hospital , Parkersburg .

To conduct revival
John Sauvage, Lesage, W. Va ., son

of Mr . and Mrs. John Sauvage of
Syracuse, will conduct revival ser·
vices at the Syracuse United
Methodist Church beginning Sunday
and running through Sept. 26 . Ser-

Roger Luckeydoo , Middleport, $5
and costs, insecure load ; Bruce
Runyon, Bidwell, $157 and costs,
overweight.
Forfeiting bonds were Gary Johnson, Oak Hill, $35.50, slngle axle
overload; Elvis Peck, Racine,

. ..,

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tmts

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"•1. 15 No. 321981

, Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis- Point Pleasant .·

~t:opyrighted

TOE TAPPING MUSIC
The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Kitchen
Band was on hand Thursday at Vaughan's Cardinal, Middleport, offering
entertainment to add zest
to the "FaU Beed Roundup" being held at the store
today and Saturday and
next weekend. Also on
display is the antique
grocery
wagon.
Youngsters will be given a
ride in the wagon today
and Saturday and will be
given a brief history of the
wagon. A pet show will be
held on Saturday at 4 p .m.
on the parking lot. Prizes
will be awarded. A
coloring contest is also
being held in conjunction
with the "faD roundup."
To add to the festivities
Vaughan's Cardloal has on
hand a young heiler. The
animal, for youngsters to
see, will be on hand today
and Saturday. The animal
did show its face but
wouldn't smile for anyone.
With the animal is Don
Vaughan. (Bottom photo).

--~Gallia
•: -

percent sales tax throughout the
By LARRY ~lNG
county.
~~ ,,
Tbnea-SutiDeiStaff
That directive carne following a
• OALUPOIJS · - Faced with a
morning
review of all county
ftpldly dwindling 19111 budget and
bodgeta
specifically
designed to
lorecasts of greatly reduced
"cut
where
every
possible."
ievenues in 1!182, the Gallia County
Fric!ay morning's budget review
l!oard of · Comml8sloners directed
lihe.prosecutliig attOrney Friday to was Inspired by a Tuesday meeting
tesearch the legal procedure with the' budget .commission during
teq~ to impose a .5 (one-half) which the Gallia corhrnissioners

.

All Middleport Village funds
totaled $432,797.21 as of Aug. 31 ,
Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
Receipts, disbursements from
each fund and the end of the month
balance on each, respectively , include: general, $13,270.75, $10,503.99,
$13,105.61; stret lights, no receipts,
$1,036.40, $9,019,15; ce metery,
$1,652.118,$927.54, $920.77 ; fire equirment, no receipts, $295.06, $4,155.48
deficit : swimming pool, $920.50,
$3,461.69, $1 ,112.41; fire truck, no
r eceipts,
no
disbursements ,
$23,306.64; planning commission, no
receipts, $12.56,$204.95 : street main·
te nance,
$4,625 .54, $5,270.64,

vices will start at 7 each evening and
there will be special vocal music
each evening. A nursery will be
provided. The public is invited to at·
tend the services.

PTO meet set
The Chester PTO will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the school. Grandparents night will be observed and
plans will be made for a fall carnival.
\.uest speakers will be Mary Rose,
lunchroom supenrisor, and Richard
Roberts, superintendent of the
Eastern Local School District.
Room mothers are needed at the
school and those interested in ser·
ving are asked to call Pat Schaekel
985-3981, or Roberta Ridenour at 992:
3555. Child care will be provided at
Monday night 's meeting. The
meeting is open to all interested per-

• •

ne 1; ,, , f. mer ic,,
f'nd ··

1

n ·, • ·

n1

By KEVIN KELLY

'I'Imei-Sealillel Slaff
GALUPOUS- After returning to
work Friday, Gallia County Sheriff' •
Department employees Saturday
started calling ln sick agaln with the
· beginning of the midnight shift.
With tho,e reports of illness, the
department returned to the staffing
situation it had experienced for two
days last week - Sheiiff James
Monteornery, his wife, who works as
the department's matron, and Chi~
Deputy Bob Hartenbach.
The department is still answering
only emergency calls, but as Norena
Montgomery put it Saturday,

Hospital news. • .
Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Amanda Morris ,
Pomeroy: Clarence Hill, Syracuse:
Velma Reynolds, Middleport: Am·
ber Lohn, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Russell Eshe~nan,
Fred Smith, Pauline Taylor, Wilbur
Whaley.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUG. 17
Joseph Bray, Virginia Brooks,
Mrs. Michael Buckle and son, Effie
Buskirk, Timothy Caldwell, Orville
Dearth, Michael Dillinger, Mrs.
John Goolden and daughter, An·
thony Haner, Bernia Hardin, Jason
Hatfield, Rufus Hill, William Hobstetter, Carol Houchen, William
Howell, Sr., Ireland Hunt, Richard
Jeffers, James King, Erin Kitchen,
Myrtle Loumenhouser, Ruby Mc·
Coy, Melissa Nance, Scotty Pollock,
Clara Proffi!J, Rbea Rainey, Mrs.
Charles Reed and son, Leona Roach,
Melvin Sargeant, Jack Stewart,
Donald Gaborn.

•

$2.00REFUND

11

We've been very fortunate,

II

No major problems have been
reported to the department si~e the
"black-and-grey flu" sickout began
at midnight Wednesday.
Deputies and dispatchers returned
to work all day Friday, and special
· deputies were on hand for protection
at all county school footbBII aames
Friday night

in·the-mell when you buy •ny 2 H•nes"' therm.t underwear garments.

It you're going to work or play o utdoors lhis winter.
you'll be need ing Hanes thermals . The special
1nsulation of Hanes 2-layer fabric holds warmth 1n .
kee ps cold out. Buy any 2 Hanes thermal garments
and get a $2.00 refund in-the-mail! For a l1miled time
o nly. See details in our slore.
TOPS $5.89 BOTTOMS $5.89

ELBERFELDS IN PO~~~qy

Inside today. . •

Hanes makeB you feel goocl,.tall und!H'I

• ~ deat~~s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . A~D-u

Buillesa •.......•• ., •.....••• , •.. .. ........•... A·'I. ,
ClassUied. • . • • • • • . • . • • • • . • . • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • c-3-t
Editorial . •. ••. . . . . . . •. . . . . . ••.. ••• •. . •. . . ••. A·!-3
F"&amp;tm:•••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••.••••

A department spokesman said the
sheriff's department policy on sick
employees shows the employoe in
question must present a doctor's ex·
cuse if he or she is ill for two consecutive tlays.
The sickout is apparently a protest
by sberifrs employees over 16 announced layoffs and tbe refusal
earlier this week by the county CO~&lt; I·
missioners to speak with a fivemember negotiating committee Alva Sullivan, Pat Bailey, Stan
Miller, Carl Stewart Jr. and Preston
Mustard - representing the employees.
The commissioners said last
Tuesday they woUld refuse to
recognize the American Federation
of State, County and MWJicipal Employees (AFSCME) as a bargaining
agent for th.e employees, who agreed
to unionize Sept. 6.
The committee issued a statement
Saturday rebutting a statement
made by Commlssioner James
Saunders \O WOWK·TV news last

review tile language of a possible half·pt'l'cent countywide sales tax. Tbe commlssionen are apparently
leanlag toward establlshln&amp; the lax to ball the county
oat of Its present fiscal crisis.

~··~·~· ...:.·
;...........................A-4-1 .
••••••••••• ' •••••••••••••••••• .•. D-1
~;;;Ji~l~·
.•... . .... ~ -..................·.......... c-~4
.,

.1

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . , :·. ;. 0\. •

"

lllilerl

week.
"Corrunissioner Saunders was
quoted a statlng the _commissioners
have been more than fair with
Sheriff Montgomery because they
have given the sheriff twice the

&lt;I

CHURCH OF CHRIST
DATE: SEPT. 20 thru 25

•....-.....:: .__ ._.,AICIION'

•.ul •.-r, •NEW LR ~ TIENI
Pu1 NEW LIFE' IniO
~
theolilr OOI:i&gt;lo!&lt;- -"'"Ill lliklnd!
NEW LIFE PiQOI•iW . . ocwt¢1111 Sundly

1/0Uf- -

que1ttion for the commircl'ioners : hou· ('Nn you find any rom·
/Htrilfon betwePn }llt·ksnn 11n.d lisllia NIUnliPs •. .}st·h:mn County ha• Iiiii&lt;' industry, while (iallia ha• thret' largt• industrial
fJiants . .• lt Hf,o has tw11 tHtUJer l'lantH, inrluding t;nvin nr
Cheshire, the largest in the area . .. To fiUt it .• imflly, (iallia is the
nwst dynNmif' t'fJUnty in .'fnutht•HHiern Ohio, 11nd the fa."ltf:•HI !(TOU'in!( ... Hatltht" Hhf:•riff bf.~f.'n ~it'PR hiH uril(inH/ rt·! f/UPNI of
$41J9,()(}(), th&lt;• shPriff'• detMrlment ""' hnv&lt;' UJould not bP
reducPd to 12 OVf.'rUiftrJ..·t'd Pffl[lloye~~. who havf.~ contributPrl
11lmo•ta• many hours as u•hatth&lt;'y hMIW bePn f'Hid for ... lt is 11
stu/ .~tutt• of affainJ that the t·onuni."'Hiom~rH hatw refH.'wd tu INIJ..·
to thf~ (~mp/oyt~t•H, 11nf.l by rluin~t ,.n/hf.'Y ,,,...,not only f'iuHinJ{ tht•
door on UH, l1ut on thf' very rwopf,. who fiUI thPm in offil'l•. " From n HIHif'menl i:uutvl by n fir;••·mf~mber rommill••t•
"'1'"'1Wtllinll the t•nrflloyt'~'"' oftht tth«'riff'H depHrlml'nl.
1

in lull.

__ ....,...__ _...,..

~cwa: ' S

DHrtng · llld

othjln say the
overdue, and will
have the desired •fleet of b9osting
l&lt;ai.JIIOINi'ly tu revenues by many

Jll"*ap 'Is lllilg

u'~Bula.:...

n·a ·wnSU1&amp; ...,, ,,.... IIMiftl lhEit
l

budget of Jackson County's sheriff's
department, while Gallia has half
!be population.
·"We, tbe employees of the
sheriff's department, have one
(Continued on A-4)

Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, ordered the
to pass.
Meanwhile, several other com- legislative probe after noting a
mittees of the two houses will series of Columbia rate hikes which
proceed on other legislation. Floor he said seemed buncbed too close
sessions have been sWipellded until together.
A major Issue in the bearings are
tbe full membership is called back to
quarterly hikes, or adjusbnents,
vote on the tax hike-budget bi!l.
The House Public UUllties Com- Columbia is pennitted to make,
mittee, looking lnto contrOversial without utilities commission
rale hikes by Columbia Gas of Ohio, bearings, in order to recover the inInc., will hear Wednesday from creases it has to pay its pipeline SUJ&gt;William A. SpraUey, Ohio's con- pliers.
On Tuesday, the House Ways and
sumes counael. Spratley will
review for the panel the llndlngs of a Means is expected to recommend a
separate investigation, requested by bill lncreasing monetary penalties
the governor, ln which the public for late payment of property taxes
utilities commlssion allo hili par- and making other administrative
ticipated. House Speaker Vernal G. . changes ln property tax laws.
Endorsed by the County
Treuurerl Asi;Ociation of Ohio, the
bill by Rep~ Frederick H. Deering,
D-MonroeviUe,
J!ermlls
partial
.
\
payment at cllae or ilellnquent taxes
w1t1t biterest imposC!d,on.thie·balance. Ctimntly, tax bills \nust be paid

GOSPEL MEETING

EVERYONE WELCOME

purposes," Conunissioner Lonnie
Burger said, "but I'll go along with it
for county operations."
When the county was examining

methods to finance the construction
of a new wing for the courthouse
destroyed by fire last January, the
imposition of such a tax was one orlion the commi.ssion considered. The
legislative body opted to attempt to
raise the money required for con(Continued on

Rhodes'$1.3 billion tax zncrease
fafleS firs.t solid test this week

J,JII~tylle •• ~ • • • • . • • . • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • B-l~::JJ

$360.50, DWI; Johnny R. Sellers,
Racine, $37.55, failed to stop at red
light: Ronald Johnson, Ironton,
David Cardwell, Parkersburg, and
Wanda Shuman, Akron, $40.5 each,
speed: Earl Bryner, Marietta,
$35.50, overwidth.

Commission President James Saunders said. "It seems we have no
other option."
"I Willi opposed to it for building

•

o-z

The NEW UFE 'bJth Courses for 1981-1982

JS Cents

A Multlmediil Inc. Newspaper

·GatHa depUties' on-again, off-again
sickout continues; statement issued

PomfniJ
Flower Shop
'f'l". ;o3&lt;1 or YY"! s

According to the budget cornmission, a reduction ln outaide sources of revenue, · such as state and
federal grants, is primarily responsible lor the dectine ln total revenue
receipts.
"We're going to take a hard look at
imposiJljl the
sales tax,"

r

wuLQ~

water, $9,264 .02, $9 , 108 .06,
$42,158.91; water meter trusts, $265,
$273.119, $7,906.48; water tank, $1,000,
no disbursements, $143,4ll3.25.
Receipts for the month totaled
$94,990.07 while the total disbur·
sements amounted to $90,962.72.

were advised the county faced a
fiscal crisis at the end of this year
and throughout next year.
The budget commlssion told the
corrunissioners that if current
projections hold through to the end
of this calendar year, Gallia County
will enter 1!182 with a carey--over
balance of sllghUy more than $500 a ca\Ty--over balance of between
$200,000 and $250,000 is considered
neceasary by financial officials to
malntaln county operations througll
to the opening of first-half tax boob
. ln late January or February. ·
Friday morning's search for the ·
required $200,000 unccivered a
maximum of approximately $85,000
that could be cut this year, according to Commissioner Paul D.
Niday.
"It's not going to be enough," he
added.

· The commissioners were adVilled
by the budget commlssion on
Tuesday this year's amended certificate was down $168,000 from what
had been anticipa~ tn· J~.
The amended certificate refleets'the
accuracy of a projection, made at
the first of each year, of the total
amount of revenue the county would
receiv~ throughout tbe fiscal period.
COIIllllissioner Niday said Friday ..__ _.;;
that-a\ this point in the budg~ry
PONJ)ERS POSSIBLE SALES TAX- GeUla COUDty
pr':1 for 1982-total budget Conunfllslollen Paul Niday, James Saunden aDd Paul
req
from ~ty offices ex~ _Niday _.here Frlclay ,riU!e revlewhle next year's
anticipated revenue by $748,000. ·
· ~ ·INqet- autherlzed ~tor Joseph Cabl to

l tm~t'l.a_rlll in D~n.

sons.

Loshia failed
Mite bell,
Middleport,
and 1rr==::::;;::~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::~~
costs,
to give
audible$10
signal
when passing: Gloria Roush,
Rutland, $23 and costs, speed; Er·
nest Ashby, Marietta, $20 and costs,
AT
speed; Don Groesbeck, Newton,
OH., $24 and costs, speed; Edward
Johnson, Pomeroy, and Charles
200 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Ohlinger, Letart, W. Va., $22 and
costs· each, speed; Woodrow Engle,
Middleport, $10 and costs, assured
clear distance ; Mike McDonald,
Middleport, $10 and costs, stop sign;
EACH EVENING AT 7:30
Helen Williams, Clifton, $10 and
Sunday Services: Morning 10:00, Evening6:00
Evangelist: Maurice Barnett
costs, fiilled to yield right of way;
Phoenix, Arizona
Virgie Bryant; Hurricane, and Danny Artrip, CQiumbus, $21 and costs
each, speed; Russell Burns, Long .
Bottom, ~ and costs, no muffler;

'

News briefs.

$1,534.16 deficit: street levy, no
receipts,
no
disbursements ,
$10,242.26; federal revenue sharing,
no receipts, $1,260.23, $5,701.57;
HUD, $58,000, $53,278.97, $5,359.49;
general bond retirement, no receiJ&gt;ts, $225, $17,587.77; sanitary sewer,
$5,992.18, $5,309 .49, $9,345.44;
sanitary sewer escrow, no receipts,
no disbursements, $149 ,030.15;

t Sections, 78 Pages

Sunday, Sept. 20, 1981

commission considers sales
tax
.

'

Village funds total $432,797.21

Meigs County happenings
Enwrg•' ncy runs

Pt. Pleasant wins third, C-2

Quality ·education, A-2

Judge terminates 23 cases
Sixteen defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Ralph Young, Lewisville, $26
and costs, speed; Debra Turri!~
Athens, $10 and costs, left of center:

.Horne . ~ealtb . Week, B-1

Reagan addreues throngs, D-1

H '

.

milllOII!I Of dollars.

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Commentary and perspective

I

Times-Sentinel

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Sept. 20, 1981

,,

para noid bunch, a lways fearing the
worst, and this is perhaps un·
derstandable; the worst is or·
dinarily what they get. Thus Hwnan
Events perceives Dr. Bell's new
conunission as "stacked in favor of
the education establishment," with
only two identifiable conservatives
among the IB members.
So indeed it a ppears . The com·
mission includes a se&gt;rtet of doctors
of education ; a dentist from Girard,

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Sense, cents and nonsense

The president's
•
vacation
By WWELL WINGE'IT
I thought President Ronald Reagan would think a long tirne before he
ever took another 30 day vacalwn or allowed Congress to do so.
While the President got in his winter s upply of wood at his mountain top
ranch in Califorma , things kind of went to p&lt;&gt;t back in Washington.
Co ngressmen, exposed to the insidious influences of their constituents back
home, returned ill a belligerent mood . Not only Democrats, who have little
reason to be happy, but Republicans . Let's say they have had time to reflect
and ta:k to the home folks about their hasty action on the budget and tax
bills . Most of the Republicans have been venting their spleen on tbe bad boys
on Wall Street who have had the temerity to let stock prices fa ll while their
Bo.s was ill California The Federal Reserve is in their bad books because of
high interest rates and there have been vague threats of reorgamzing that
body .
All things considered, it wa sn't exactly a happy homecoming for the
Reagans when they r eturned to the White House. It didn't take the President
long to sense the mood of Washington ha d changed while he was away. He
railed Ius Cabinet together to try and find the reason. I unagine it went
something like this:
PRESIDENT : " I railed you fellows in to fwd out what put starch in the
backbone of those spineless jellyfish in Congress. When I left here a month
ago, they were meek as Jambs. Now they are threatening to pass laws 1
never even a uthorized. They' re even talkwg of killing !he sale of AWACS to
Sa udi Arabia . What's been happening, George ? As Vice President you are
supposed to be in charge when I'm "way. I intend to find out who's tu
blame."
VI CE PRESIDENT : " It beats me, Mr . President. l know it' s no fault of
JRine . I've been so busy deregulating I haven't had time for anythmg else.
"oweve r, I'm happy to rep&lt;&gt;rt deregulation progress. We have now
.deregulated the Clean Air Act back to about tbe same air quality we had 10
·:JOr 15 years ago. In a few more weeks we'll have it back to 20 or 30 years. We
· &lt;ire making about the same progress in other fi elds too ."
: • PRESIDENT: "That's I me, George . General, how's things at Slate'!"
:: HAIG : " Everything's fme at State. Of course, we still have those little
troubles in El Sa lvador a nd Angola, but they are all under con trol. Mr.
President, l a m happy to report that, for the first time in years, the Russia ns
ami Cubans are as confused as we are over what we are going to do.''
PRESIDENT: "No trouble there, eh? How are thm gs g01ng in Defense,
Casper?''
WEINBERGER : " As far as I know, everything is fine . I haven't had
much time for anything lately but warding off budget cuts Stockman has
been trymg to make. Can't you get him off my back, Mr. President? "
PRESIDENT : "How about that , Dave? Have you been harassing
Casper?"
STOCKMAN: " You know our mandate, Mr. President. We promised a
balanced budget by 1984. Just because I wanted to trim defense a little bit,
Casper acts like it's his salary I want to cut."
PRES IDENT : " The way these Congressmen are yelling, I' m afraid
we'll have to trim defense a littl e, Casper. You can close a few bases in some
of the states. Be ca reful though . We have to keep our eye on 1984. "
STOCKMAN : " I have been trying to sell Howard Baker a nd other good
m ends in the Senate on impoundment giving you authority to withhold 10
;percent funding on programs you don 't like. Of course, we' ll have to cut
·Social Security, Medicar e, Welfare and schools again. "
·:. PRESIDENT: " I don't know whether Congress will go for that old Nixon
imp&lt;&gt;undment gimmick again but you can try . How's everything in Transportation, Drew?"
LEWIS : "Everything's fine , Sir. We have everything under control. or
~o urse there are fewer planes flying fewer passengers but at least we have
~own the Unions they can't dictate to Transp&lt;&gt;rtation. We won' t be caught
sl\ort the next time, though, We are now studying a plan for bus trans. P9rtation. We are alternating the schedule of drivers and ticket agents. The
: arivers sell tickets one week while the agents drive, then the next week they
- ~nge. We should have been using this system with the Air Traffic Con: trollers and Pilots months ago."
:: · PRESIDENT : "Good thinking, Drew. I supp&lt;&gt;se everything is fine at the
freasury Department too, Mr. Regan?"
. REGAN : " Yes, we just watch the money roll in and roll out. The only
trouble is after Oct . I there will be more rolling out than in. The new tax cut
and high interest are certainly fine lor us rich people but hard on the
treasury. We are the only ones left with any money to loan. I can't understand the stll!!k market though. They certainly are not trading the same
way they voted last fall. A good thing I got out of the market when I did. I'm
.sure that if Stockman keeps whittlin!l away at the entitlement program
; ~ ~ turn o~t fine. He might try lowering the Poverty Level figure. His
\ autllorltY tq.do that was hidden away in the Budget Bill nobody in Congress
.
! bothered to rel!d...
pRESIPEN:r: " I'm sorry but we'll have to cut this meeting short. I'm
~ glad ,YOU all report ev.erything is fine and everything under control. For a
· : while I
foolish Idea that things were coming unglued. We'll flllish this
· · ~ 18ter. Now that I know everything is O.K., Nancy and I leave in 30

Kan., active in national school·board
affairs ; a former chairperson of the
Virginia PTA; a gentleman who won
his master's degree in health,
physical education and recreation ; a
Harvard professor who served five
years on the U. S. conunission to
UNESCO ; and a former president of
the American Association ol University Women, always a bad sign.
Yet anotber member is A. Bartlett
Giamatti, president of Yale, who
distinguished himseH earlier this
month by a really asinine assault
up&lt;&gt;n the Rev. Jerry Falwell. On
down the line is Gov. Albert H. Quie
fi Minnesota, well-remembered
here as a patsy Republican in the
Charles Foster of the Foundation lor
Teaching Economics, and Mrs. An·
nette Kirk, wife of tbe conservative
philosopher Russell Kirk . You kind
of wonder what a nice girl like An·
nette is doing with a gang like this .
The conunission includes five
wo men, two blacks and one
Hispanic. It will be headed by David
Pierpont Gardner, president of the
University fi Utah. His name
arouses no particular bubbles of
gassy indigestion. Dr. Gardner is a
close friend of Secretary Bell, and
the two together might produce a
useful report. But as every child in
Washington knows, the members fi
any given commission are immaterial; what counts is staff, and
this conunission' s staff will be
headed by Dr. Milton Goldberg, a
career educationist. Thus we may
reasonably expect a final report
drafted in Educationese. It will have
to be translated into English, and the
report eventually will wind up, like
99 percent of all such reports,

gathering dust on a high dark sheH.
Tbe effort will take 18 months and it
will cost $785,000.
It seems a pity - for Secretary
Bell's purpose is absolutely sound.
His department operates on a $14
billion budget Eighty-two percent of
tbe money goes into programs for
learners,
handicapped
slow
children, poor readers and ordinary
sluggards. Only 0.1 percent Is aimed
at the bright children in our public
schools - the truly gifted and talented kids who have excellence in their
genes.

In proposing to find means for in·
spiring and cha llenging the bright
ones, Dr. Bell is risking a howl of
"elitism/ ' but he is an audacious
fellow and can take tbe bellows of
outrage. His avowed purpose is "to
enhance quality and excellence." He
means to encourage "the highest or·
der of literacy and academic competence." He wants to see " special
emphasis on writing with clarity and
profundness , m astery
of
mathematics, spelling, basic scien·
ce. economics, and principles of
goverrunent in a democracy." He

hopes to see foreign languages
restored to their old imp&lt;&gt;rtance in
our public schools. He wearies of
mediocrity in education and he longs
for tol&gt;'flight teachers capable of
nurturing to!&gt;'flight students.
My guess is that every area of in..
vestigation assigned to the commission already has been thoroughly
explored. It ought to be p&lt;JSSible for.a
couple of good librari-,'111
minimwn expense, to pull ~ether
every paper ever written on how ex·
cellence in public education is won
or lost

i\u

.· ~ '

(

0~·-:Ed

"Budget commission recom·
mends measures to offset current
deficit" - Feb. 8.
"Gallia Sheriff may not be able to
live within budget"- Feb. 15.
"Budget cuts, levy defeat will for·
ce closing Guiding fland.:.Phelps" March5.
"Impact of Soutbem Ohio cuts
enormous"- March 8.
'' Area needs super project to keep
economy moving" - March 15.
" Library levy passes, Guiding
Hand fails"- March 18.
" GHS requests $100,000 lor
operations" - March 25.
"Merchants discuss proposed
sales tax plan with county" - May

" Gallia county voters reject courthouse" - Aug . 26 .
" Others seeking tax levies react to
overwhelming courthouse defeat"Aug. 'n.
" Sheriff seeks s upplemental; ad·
vises personnel, services will be cut
without funding" - September 2.
" Gallia Sheriff lays off deputies"
- Sept. 6.
"Gallia deputies move to
unionize" - Sept. 9.
"County offi cials will not
recognize union" - Sept 15.
" Officers call in sick"- Sept. 16.
" County faces fiscal crisis" Sept. 16.
... and, we've still got three and a·
half months to go.

19.
"County board to try again tor
bond issue" - May 20.
"County commission seeks 2.5
mill levy to rebuild Gallia cour·
!house" - May 26.
"Property value up 43 percent in
Gallia"- July 19.
"Tax payments slow-Mills" July
19.
"Gallia to lose $76 million next
year due to p&lt;&gt;wer plant merger" July 30.
"Six more Guiding Hand em·
ployees to lose jobs' ' - August 10.
"County's reduced valuation for·
ces millage increase for prop&lt;&gt;scd
levy"- Aug. 25 .

"

·;

For reasons not clear even to the
Associate Justice Potter
· Stewart (regularly referred to
:· during his confirmation hearings as
: "Justice Potter" by Senator
· O'Mahoney), the hearings before the
Senate Judiciary Conunittee have
never been published. I
. acknowledge my debt to Mr. Stewart
(and to his former colleague, Justice
Byron White) for help in getting hold
of a typewritten copy of this
singularly important transcript.
Important because although it was
in 1959 that the hearings were held,
they are probably the most recent
hearings held concerning the
qualifications of a presidential
nominee to the court at a time when
the country, and derivatively the
Senate, are strongly divided on a
single issue. Today it is the abortion
decision. Then it was Brown vs.
Board of Education, the decision in
which the Warren Court
(unanimously) ruled that
segregated schooling was a denial of
rights under tbe 14th Amendment.
Now the Stewart hearings were
unusual in a second sense, namely
that Stewart had been silling on the
Supreme Court since October, 1958,
-~ former

~~~:i:?
·

~

'M\AIING -liND'* MIRRCR COM~ WITI-IIT, Rl'*'f?' #'

Now Congress itseH may grt in· screened and given clearance. The
situation is made-to-order for
volved. Rep. Pat Schroeder, [).Colo.,
covering up any mistakes or over·
is considering legislation that will
sights by DOE personnel.
force DOE to clean up its act.
As one high-level DOE study
- DOE relies almost exclusively
notes, the government's nuclear
on private contractors to run the
plants should provide "an exem·
agency's nuclear plants . The conplary nuclear safety program." Yet
tractors are even given the respon·
tbe various investigations show that sibility for handling critical safety
DOE is a sorry example for anyone · complaints and accidents. This
to follow. Some of the findings have
reliance on private contractors, inbeen reviewed by my associate
cidentally, makes DOE's pious
Lucette Lagnado. Here are tho profess ions of concern over
highlights:
" national security" laughable.
- A principal difficulty seems to
- The department has not had
uniform safety regulations that
be that, unlike the private nuclear
plants, DOE 's are not subject to in·
must be observed by a ll il&lt;i con·
tractors.
spection by safety experts from the
Nuclear Regulatory Conunission or
- OOE's failure to exercise strict
control can lead to serious conflicts
the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration. DOE bureaucrats
between the demands of safety and
would prefer that " outsiders" not ~ e
production. An employee ,at a DOE
allowed to check on their per·
facility in Colorado complained that
formance, citing primarily national
a "glove box" had been con·
security reasons . This is obviously
laminated. These are tbe sealed
nonsense. There's· no reason NRC
boxes from which workers can hanand OSHA inspectors can't be
dle radioactive materials safely

the CIA.
A lobbyist from the American
Petroleum Industry would be split·
ling a bottle of Dum Perignon with a
congressman from tbe House Ways
and Means Committee, while at the
next table a lawyer and one of the
Watergate defendants werP trying to
work out a way of staying out of the
Allenwood Penitentiary.
RobeJt Redford would be in
another corner watching how Bob
Woodward ate, in preparation for his
role in "Ailthe President's Men." At
the next table Jack Anderson would
be talking to a whistle blower in the
Justi.:e Department, near two FBI
agents who were picking at their foot
but really trying to overhear what
tbe two men were saying.
The role l .playedas a patron of the
Sans Souci has never been properly
understood. I ate tbere everyday
and had the same table. It was the
equivalent of Bernard Baruch's ben..
ch in Lafayette Park. When people
in the John!son, Nixon, Ford and Car·
ter adminislriitions needed advice
they knew where to find me.
I am still not at Uberty to confess

what decisions I was in on, but sui·
fice it to say that when I held court at
the Sans Souci, the inflation rate
never rose above five percent.
people could purchase a decent
home for S40,000, banks were
begging the public to borrow money
at 6 percent, Social Security was
safe, and the United States had twice
the military might of the Soviet
Union .
Without revealing any confidences
I can state the recognition of the
People's Republic of China first
noodled at my table at the Sans
Souci, and the Camp David talks
began soon after the Egyptian am·
bassador asked to split a chef's
salad with me.
Wh~n Roger Stevens ran out of
money to complete Kennedy Center,
I told the waiter to put whatever he
needed on my tab.
This is not to say· the Sans Souci
was all work and no play. Some of
tbe most beautiful women in tbe
world could be found dining there in
hopes that one of us would become a
chapter in their memoirs.
But that's another column.
Needless to say there was

~

/

from outside. It took the contractor
three da ys to correct the problem ;
the delay was allegedly due to reluctance to disrupt production . DOE
didn't even investigate the episode.
- DOE officials insist that they
get immediate and total cooperation
from contractors when safety
problems arise. But this definition
would hardly cover tbe situation at
DOE's Richland faitity in the slate of
Washington . On a routine inspection,:
DOE safety personnel discovered:
that some 11 Swnp alanns" - which:
alert workers to tbe presence of
radioactive water - were not'
working. This was brought to the at·:
tention of the contractor in Novem··
ber 1978, again in January 1979, and
yet again in April 1979. In Novem-·
ber, a leak of contaminated water
went undetected. It wasn' t until
February 1980 - 15 months after tbe'
matter was first brought up - that:
the contractor finally got around to·
correcting the faulty sump alarms. '

i\• , '
1,&gt;

PRESIDENT: "Back to California."
I

"

For Hearing Nd
Selection, Serv·~·
or Consultation, ., .
Based On 32 Years' ExperienceAnd/Or Re.terral 'r~ App~~riate
·
Mediciil SpecJalists:

Phone t614) 5.94·3571
'

'

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'

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'

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We Sitr.. Meigs. Golfla and Moson &gt;'
Counlles On A R_ltiJUiar Bas It

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,

Sept. 20, 1981

Letter to the ediior

•

•
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A concerned community
We tbe people of Gage community
would like some answers concerning
the death of Craig Fisher. He lived in
the community for a number of
years, was an outstanding athlete
for Gallia Academy Gridiron. Craig
was well-known and liked by all. H
be would see you in need of help he
was always there to lend a hand. He
always had a smile on his face.
It's been over six weeks . We think
as taxpayers who are concerned
abo ut what happened to our friend
should have the right to be informed
of what's going on.

(Note: When this letter originally
appeared in Thursday's newspaper
it incorrectly carried the name ol
Carolyn Haislop as tbe primary
signer. The letter was circulated and
submitted by Mary Fallon, Rt. 2,
Patriot, Ohio. Otber Gage co~
munity residents who signed tile let·
ter were : Gary Fallon, Shell'l
Fallon, Larry Fallon, Bernfee Woojl,
Sandy Taylor, Dale Taylor, Dorothy
Sheffield, James Sheffield, V.
Fallon, M. C. Tackett, Garnet McNeal, Fred McNeal. )

Today in history.

••

Today is Sunday, Sept, 20, the 263rd day of 1981. There are 102 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Sept. 20, 1519, Ferdinand Magellan set sail from Spain on a voyage ·
that took one of his ships around the world, history 's first global circum·
navigation.
On this da te:
In 1960, 13 newly independent African nations and the former British
colony of Cyprus were admitted to United Nations.
In 1963, President John J{ennedy went before the U.N. General As.serrr
bly to propose a joint U.S ...Soviet expedition to the moon .
In 1974, officials in the Central American country of Honduras put the
estimated death toll from Hurricane Fifi at eight-thousand.
And in 1977, Vietnam was admitted to United Nations.
Five years ago: Sweden's Social Democratic Party was narrowly
defeated by a thre... party non-socialist coaliti on.
One year ago : deposed Nicaraguan president Anastasio Somoza, slain
three days earlier in Paraguay, was buried in Miami.
Today's birthdays: Fashion designer James Galanos is 57 years old.
Actress Sophia Loren is 47 .
Thought F or Today: Time cools, time clarifies; no mOOd can be maifl..
tained quite unalte red through the course of hours. - Thomas Mallll, Ger·
man writer (187:&gt;-1955).

. - - - - - - ·--·-

- ----

There followed co nsiderable
rhetorical skirmishing.
Senator McClellan. I can only say
that you would uphold and sustain
that decision form your answer.
That is tbe only way I could interpret
or evaluate an appraisal of your an·
swer.
Mr. Stewart. I understand .
Mrs. O'Connor would do well to
read these bearings, concerning
which more next time.

Pre· Sliced

BOLOGNA

LB,gge

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GROUND
CHUCK
LB .$

59

SAUSAGE
TREET

YELLOW
ONIONS
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CO':UIBIAG~S

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swer.

667, PBB!!Ild by the General
and signed by the Governor.
Program to be entirely administered by
the Ohio Department of Taxation.
Eligibility requirements for homeown·
ers, renters, and housetrailer residents:
• Annual 'lbtal Income $9,000 or less for
· 1980i and
• Head of Household, or Spouse, and
• Age 65 or older in 1~81, or
• Penn~ently and 'lbtally Disabled
(any age)
·

444 W. Union St~ - Athens, 0.

•

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•

VIENNA

Hearing Aid ~enter

l

!la4.the

o

ARMOUR

DILE·S

••
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Application forms for the Ohio Energy
Credits program* are now available at
your nearest Columbia Gas office.
If you have not already done so, we
urge you to apply for this program. The
Ohio Energy Credits program provides
for up to a 30% Utility Service Heating
Discount for low·income elderly and
disabled renters and homeowners.
Every qualified citizen who wants to
participate and has not yet signed up
for the 1981-82
season mJill.

"I want you PR guys to change our image from
an enormous multi-national corporation to a li'l
of' sagebrush rebel. "

,••••

''

__ _.. . _. ,.

If you're disabled
or a senior citizen,
make sure
you're getting all the
~~energy credits"
you deserve.

n

•

~

I have not counted the words
spoken at the first session, but it is
probably about right to say that Pot·
ter Stewart sp&lt;&gt;ke about one percent
of the time. The rest was devoted to
an affable but detennined and
' copious wrangle among the
senators, representing three schools
of thought.
The chairman was James
Eastland of Mississippi. Tbe Brown
decision was only five years old, and
1959 was deep in the period of what
they called Interposition: i.e ., the
South, and its representatives, were
overwhelmingly conunitted to the
proposition th&lt;it Brown was unsound
constitutional reasoning and that its
dictates should conscientiously be
evaded until a better-minded
Supreme Court came back and
erased the damage. Such is exactly
the position of the majority of the anli·abortion group respecting Roe vs.
Wade.
Not long after a few preliminaries
were got out of the way (such as, Do
all Supreme Court justices have to

stressed as heavily as the right of
the witness to decline to answer
them . Senator Hollings withdrew his
original motion, the chainnan overruled a similar motion, and finally alter three hours during which every
senator plighted his troth to the Constitution- the question came :
Senator McClellan. The question
is, do you agree with the premise
used , the reasoning and logic 81&gt;'
plied, or the lack of application of
eitber or both, as the case may be,
and the philosophy expressed by the
Suprene Court in arriving at its
decision in the case of Brown vs.
Board of Education on May 17, 1954?
Potter Stewart. Senator Me·
Clellan, the way that queslion is
phrased I cannot conscientiously
give you a simple "yes" or "no" an-

come from Ohio 7 - Potter Stewa rt
was replacing an Ohioan), the
senators took their stand. Senator
Hollings of Missouri began by
making a point of order. It was to the
effect that no member of the Senate
should question Mr. Stewart on mat·
ters that had already been decided
by the court , or on matters under
consideration by the court, or on
matters that might in the future be
considered by the court. This proved
too much for any of a number of
senators, aU of whom took the
p&lt;&gt;sition that the wbole point of the
Fathers, in decreeing that a member of the court was given authority
subject to the advice and consent of
the Senate, was that a nominee be
prepared to explain as much of his
legal philosophy, including
historical judgments, as any senator
sought to inquire into.
At this point sentiment
crystallized in favor of a distinction
between the two positions. It was
argued that a justice under
questioning coul&lt;l on his own motion
decline (politely) to answer a
question, on the grounds that to do so
would be possibly to prejudice him
in considering upcoming cases.
However, the right of the senators to
ask those questions was to be

f ~ · ~ •-.....

AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE
FROM COLUMBIA GAS:

.•

.

but the Senate didn't get around to
examining him until April 9, 19a9.
And what an examination that was

Berry's World

something for everybody even if you
didn't orderfrom the menu.
'
The downfall of the Sans Souci was
not of my making. It was caused
when the Maitre d'Hotel Paul [)&lt;!
Lisle, had a fight with the owner an&lt;!
resigned.
What the owner didn't realize wa:i
that Paul was our leader, and our
security blanket away from home,
No matter how important anyone is
in the United States, be is still ner;
vous about how he will be' treated irt
a restaurant by a Maitre d'Hotel:
The. fact that Paul decided we were
worthy of having a table in hiS
restaurant, was the only assurance
we had that we were still part of the
p&lt;&gt;wer structure.
.
With Paul's departure; the San5
Souci became just another place I!(
eat, and I had no choice but to fold up;
my table and leave . It was a sad day: .
not only for me but for the country :
The downfall of the Sans Souc~
caused a tremendous Identity crisi"'
for the movers and shakers in the!
nation's capital. To this day· except:
for AI Haig, most of lis don'•t knoW:
who the.hell we are. ·· ·
•

.

. -~ ~~~
.·h
~~ . .I U-"
-•
1 l:c• , HAJG:·"'Whereareyou goingthistlme,Sir? "
. •.

'"

and
William F. Buckley Jr.
. t h e Stewart preced ent'-=======

i .

..

'- '•

:; o~connor

Jlevoi.~r======================A=n=B=u=ffl=w=al~a:

The Sans Souci, one of the great
meeting places of the power brokers
of Washington, has closed its doors,
a victim of bankruptcy . Those of us
who ran the country from il&lt;i
Naugahyde banquettes and booths
have moved on to other tables in
other rooms throughout the city ,
because even though a restaurant
closes, the business of government
must go on.
In its day tbe Sans Souci was more
a club than a restaurant One of its
attractions was that it was shaped
like a theater, with a stage at the en·
trance, so everyone who came in
could take a bow before being escor·
ted to a table.
On a good day, and there were
many of them, you could find Henry
Kissinger in a booth discussing
detente with Soviet Ambassador
Dobrynin, · or taking a hard line
against the Russians with Israeli
Ambassador Rabin .
A Pentagon Air Force general
might be seated at another table
leaking a story to columnist Robert
Novak, and placed a few tables
away, colwnnist Joe Alsop could be
seen leaking a story to the head of

•

ft was (is) a very
good year9~======·====La=rry=Ew=i=ng
As you might have noticed, we've
devoted a lot of ink this year to
Gallia County's financial condition.
Just as a matter of general interest we offer the following finan·
cial (and other related matters)
review - through our headlines - of
the first nine months of 1981 :
"Commission infonns depart·
ments they must stay wi: :lin
budgets" - January 6.
" County faces temporary finan..
cial crisis' ' - Jan. 8.
" Fire destroys 101·year-old wing
of Gallia courthouse" - Jan. 9.
" Problems mount for Gallia jail
.· officials" - February L
=: "County budget crisis is worse
:. than anticipated"- Feb. 4.

Federal nuke plants take safety
shortCUtS
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON 'l'be near·
disaster at the Three Mile Island
nuclear plant in March 1979 showed
how quickl y and easily a nuclear
factllty can go haywire, endangering
tbe lives of thousands. The public
outcryledthefederalgovernrnentto
ti ghten its supervision of the nation's
commercial nuclear power plants.
Unfortunately, there is a glaring
exception to this closer scrutiny the 8Q.odd reactors owned and
operated by the government's own
Department of Energy. Yet tbere is
strong ev idence to suggest that
DOE's nuclear facilities a re in
greater need of more stringent
safety procedures than even the
much-criticized commercial reac·
tors.
No less than three investigations
of DOE's nuclear plants have been
launched recently - one by DOE's
inspector general, another by the
de pa rtment's under secretary and a
third by the General Accounting Of·
f1ce, the congressional auditors.

•

Pau-A·:i

Toward excellence in educationb:=:==========J=a=mes=J.=K=iipa=m
=·=
ck
' WASHINGTON - On August 26
E;ducation Secretary Terrel Bel l an·
nounced the formation of a National
c'ommission on Excellence in
Education. Last week my brothers
on Human Events, the na tiona l con·
i;ervative weekly, Jumped up&lt;&gt;n him
ali spraddled out. Tbey smell a fish.
·could be. My brothers dwellw the
marshy swamps south of Capitol
Hill, where the sunshine of good
tidings rarely penetrates. They are a

· ··.- -~ · - - "':--:·~ -,-.;;·:-

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Good only at Barr' s

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�-Page-A -4

Pomeroy

The Sundav Times-Sentinel

e e

Gallia commission
I

(Continued from Page AI )
struction through voted millage the levy failed by a seven-t&lt;H&gt;ne
margin on Aug. 25.
The commissioners said Friday it
was their understanding the .5 percent could be imposed in two ·;.ays as a regular legislative action , or as
an emergency.
If enacted as an emergency
measure, the tax would go into effect
inunediately a nd would not be sutr
ject to recall through referendum
until the next general election . If the
tax were t o be defea ted through
referendum, it would still coollnue
_in force until the end of the ca lendar
year.

If enacted as a non-emergency,
regular resolution of the board, the
law requires a period of time be
granted during which the proposed
tax would be subject to referendum
through circulation of petitions a nd
a vote of the electorate.
Preliminary figures indicate the
imposition of a .5 percent, county·
wide sa les tax could be expected to
generate approximately $360,000 per
year .
The county will lose an estimated
$76 million in evaluation next year.
That loss will occur as the result of
the reapportionment of the property
value of the transmission lines serving the Gavin power plant in

·G allia deputies
i Continued from page AI )

m us t

questton for the comrntss1oners :
how can you find a ny com pa rison

between Jackson and Gallia coun·
ties? " the statement ask ed.
The committee said J ackson has
four independent poltce de partments, while Gal lia has but one

fulltime rGallipohsl and one part·
time fRio Gra nde! poli ce uni t,
leaving protection of the other
v1 ll ages tn the deputies.
Gallia s hares its highway pa trol
post w1th Meigs County. while
Jackson has tts own. the conumttee
continued .

Addttiunall y. Gal ha has a college
and a vocational career center, both
m Rio Grande. whrch attract students and people from other counll es.
the conunittee said.
" Jackson County has little tn·
dustry , while Gallia ha s three larg e
industnal plants," the sta tement
said. " It al so ha s two power plants,
including Ga vin at Cheshi re, the
largest in the area ."
The statement remmded restdents
Gallia connects two ma jor hi ~ h­
wa ys, U. S. 35 and Rt. 7, a nd also
links with Pomt Pleasant and Mason
County. The end result is more and
more people enter Gallta County ,
and the present sheriff' s depa rtment
can't handle the workload with 1t.s
present budget.
" To
it simply , l:allta ts the

dynami c

co unty

in

Middleport

Cheshire.
As a result, despite an estimated
43 percent increase in the appraised
va lue of personal prope rty
throughout the county, Gallia County's total value-for purposes of
ta xation -- will be less ( ap ·
proximately $28 million ) next year .
Commissioner Niday said Friday
the county's 1982 evaluation would
total $390,320,063. Total evaluation
for 1981 was $418 million.
The reduction in the county's total
evaluation will impact on the
revenues generated by all voted
millage. Each agency supported by
millage will receive revenue based
on the new lowe r county value,
ra ther than the current, higher
value.
County operations are expected to
lose between $250,000 and $300,000 as
a result of the reapportionment. All
other agencies will lose propor·
tionately as their revenues (based
on millage l are determined by applicationofthenewcountyvalue.

Complicating considerations of
the county's future budgetary
requirements are unoffical reports
filtering out of Washington that
President Reagan plans to seek the
total elimination of federal revenue
sharing funds for local governments
as a part of his. new round of cuts
designed to reduce the federal
budgel by $16 billion.
Gallia County will receive a total
$408,000 in revenue sharing funds
this year. Next year's total had been

News briefs

PT. PLEASANT - A contractor
who Is selling left-over asphalt for
driveways at reduced rates and then
increasing the price to elderly
throughout the county, has been
reported to the Mason County
Sheriff's Dept.
The department received a
complaint from Mrs. Marie Deal,
Upland Road, Ashton yesterday at
10:00 a.m . that an aspball con·
tractor had sold her asphalt for her
driveway at $1.25 per square foot
reduced from $3.110 per square foot.
The department reported Mrs.
Deal's driveway Is 55 feet long and
and eight feet wide and that the
incident occurred at I :00 p.m. Sept.
16.
Upon completing the paving, the

Board chairman to leave firm
TOLEDO, Ohio - Questor Corp. says its chairman, Pierson M.
Grieve, will leave at the end of the year.

,.

..U......
T

EVIf:RYTHINGABO~~

'fH IS NEW TRI NITRONe
ESPECJAJ.JY

GALUPOIJS - Gallipolis City
Police reported three traffic accidents Friday, two at the same
location.
The department said a car driven
by Clara B. Facemire, 63, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, pulled from Third Avenue
onto Pil,le Street at 1:07 p.m. and
collided with a car driven by J.
Williarn Spencer, 30, Batavia, which
was eastbound.
Moderate damage was reported to
the Facemire vehicle and Spencer's
car was slightly damaged .

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· GALUPOIJS - Eighteen cases
wpre terminated Friday in
Oilllipolis Municipal Court.
: Daniel 0. Roberts, 20, Gallipolis,
charged with DWI, lined $300, sentenced to four days in jail, driver's
license suspended for six months
]md placed on six months probation.
· : Each charged with reckless
Operation and fined $100 each were
Paula M. Plants, 22, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
)llld Keith J. Gilmore, 18, Rodney.
·: Tanuny J. Lahrmer, Rio Grande,
¢arged with petty theft, fined $50,
Six months jail sentence suspended
)llld placed on six months probation.

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'Formulate visit plans

Th e Dire ctor is equal to, or
more pow e rful than, original
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of se ve n s izes, 315 to 485 amp .
S42. 95 w ithout trad e · in .

--

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WASHER &amp;

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· MIDDLEPORT-Plans for entertaining the District Governor
9eorge F. Kramer, Zanesville, next
Friday evening were made Friday
:When the Middleport-Pomeroy
Jiotary Club met at Heath United

_ _ __j

with trade - in

MA TCI-ti NG
OAYER1

.Presbyterian
; The board ofChurch.
directors of the local
ptub will meet with the district
govemor at 5 p.m. preceding the
!'fgular 6 p.m. meeting. Rotary Ann
hight will be observed also along
lfjth loud shirt night.
·: Two new members, Tom and Paul
were initiated into the club by
Sdison Baker. President James
Sheets was in charge of the meeting
women of the church served din·
ner.

W ~ s he r

MOder Wl W5700.l

BEST

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Choic e of eight sizes, 390 to
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POT WAS HER"' DISHWASHEA 1

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Veterans Memorial

STANDARD
HEATER
BARBED WIRE

SPECIAL

Our premium barbed wire,
introduced to farmers of Ohio
many years ago and proven on
thousands of farms. Lies flat
when unrolled, doesn't kink due
to special reverse twist. 4 point,
15'h ga. high-tensile barbed wire.
80-rod roll
(24- 2838)

$ 2395

. ....

Glass·lined tank, top and bot·
tom heating elements, ad ·
,y s table thermostat, S· year
limited warranty . (21 · 1565)

52 GAL SPECIAL

•

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' .

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J

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.

SVBSCitrPTIONRA'I'ES

· ' ByC.rrlererM~oi'Roa~

OneMonth ... .._, ... ........ .. ... $UO
One year .•.• •. •.••.... .. . ... .. P2.10

~

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SINGLEOOPY
PRICE

1:
J"'

'

.

35Cenls

•

' " Nu :rublin'iplior'!J b)' mall permitted In
•" townii 'where hulne carrier servltt! Is

95
,·,I.

..

'

~

,~av&amp;tlabli!.
r
1• '111e ·Sundly l:I......S.nlinel wlU "" be
,:rNpbnlible r,w advance paymeni.S made

.

-.to carrier~. ' ,
.. .
. '
'
MAlt IIUIISCitiPTJONS

Not All Items Stocked In All Landmark Stores. we reserve the right to limit quimtities and ·c.o rr
.
.
.
·
. ec1 prm ngerrors.

POMEROY LANDMAR

! Dally Press Association MRd the
,. America:m New!lpaper Publi11hers
1!. A!'lUICialion, National Advertl!llng
~ Represcnlcltive. Branhalm, 17117 West
1
-t Nine Mile Road, Suill' 204, Detroit,
1 "~ Mlch~Mn,48015. •

r,. One week . . ............. .. ..... $1.00

· '·

Drive a little and save llot-Fr'ee delivery Within
'u
·
Yes, we service at.vour local Hotpoinl Dealer m es . ..
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill Closed at
p ;.,.,
Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Cou~ties." ·
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CALL @;

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Goad Thru Thurs .• Se pt. 24, 1981
IGI

SPECIAL OFFER!

Christian S. Neal, 16. Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was eastbound one mile
west of the Gallipolis city limits at
4:45p.m . when he lost control of his
vehicle on a curve and went off the
road, causing moderate damage to
the car .

.• ...THIS
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WEEK'S •
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WINE &amp; POP
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Mon. -Thurs. 8 till1
Fri. Sat. 8 til12

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No fee for Information:
Lee

check was written in the amowtt of
$800 on Sept. 16 to the contractor.
The department said that the
suspect contractor was seen with a
red Ford truck with a North
Carolina license plate. They also
said the truck had a white magnetic
sign on the driver' s side advertising
"Asphalt &amp; Paving, Driving &amp;
Parkin g l&lt;lts Patchwork." The
departm ent reported that further
investigation is being conducted at
this time.

ternoon.

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A Mullimedia. New!jpa~r

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(Wage Earner Plan)

"1' Member: The A.s::iocblted Pret:l!J, Inland

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~
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~

BANKRUPTCY/CHAPTER 13

: pusta~l! paid al Gallipolis, Ohio, tS63t.
• Enlcrt&gt;d as *--und class mailing m111ter
· ut PUiilCnly, Ohio, Posl Offil't!.
·

Glass· lined lank, adiust~ble
thermostat, safety shut-off
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NEW YORK
BROADWAY
OCT. 19-24

·r;..

night.
Gary W. Scott, 33, Charleston,
W.Va, was not treated for his in·
jury.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Scott was west·
bound on 3S at 7:24 p.m . when a car
driven by Ruth Cowles , 32,
Gallipolis, pulled from Buck Ridge
Road into the path of Scott's car and
collided.
Moderate damage was reported to
both vehicles and Cowles was cited
for failure to yield.
The patrol investigated a one-car
accident on Rl. 588 Friday af·

:
8
..

a~~ a~·,) I]~&gt;J a~?

Published each Sunday, 1125 Third
"' Avenue, by the Ohio V&amp;llley Publishing
.. Company· Multimedia, hie. Second cliiSS

GAS

30 GAL SPECIAL

·~

t..'i."?

•
·
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STANDARD
HEATER

rN~

·: Admitted--Martha
Roush,
Rutland; Pearl Games, Dexter;
Mary Derenberger, Pomeroy; Joe
Wllson, Shade: Lucy Spencer,
Pbmeroy .
.:Discharged-Penny Smith, Benny
Gtlmes, Joan Carnahan, Fred
I(isch •

With trade-in

__ :::w

by Thomas G. Leslie, 53, Eureka
Star Route, was backing from a
private drive at Third Avenue and
Court Street at 6:45p.m. and struck
the rear of a parked car owned by
Ault M. Amsbary, Gallipo~ ._.
cqusing slight damage.
'.Jd.,!lanwhile, the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department reported it is
investigating th~l~ft of a 1971 Ford
Torino owned by D.n-.:,ell Stephens,
Rt. 4, Gallipolis, sometime Thur·
sday night.
The GallipO!.is Fire Department
was called to Pinecrest Care Center,
555 Jackson Pike, · at 1:31 p.m.
Friday and found dust and lint·iq_a
cooling unit in one of the rooms set
off a smoke alarm.
Seven men were on the scene for
40 minutes, the report sa! d.
Also cited by police Friday were
James M. Bays , 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
defective exhaust, and Richard W.
Warden, 30, Rt. I, Point Pleasant,
and James K. McCarty, 28, JU. l,
Ewington, both for failure to obey a
traffic control device.

riiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~

and

•

ELECTRIC

Each charged with disorderly conduct and fined $20 each were Robert
E. Mount, Rushville, and James L.
Bledsoe, Baltimore.
Nancy L. Nitzky, 26, Gallipolis,
charged with speeding, fined $10.
Charged with failure to display
valid registration, David A. Russell,
23, Rio Grande, forfeited $35 bond.
Forfeiting bond for speeding
were :
Gary A.
Dannenberg, 32,
Pickerington, $27; Cameila K Carpenter, 26, Chesterton, Ind. , $25; Ar·
chie 0. Logue, 56, Rl. I, Bidwell, $25;
John 0. Bastiani, 23, Rl. 2, Patriot,
$26.
Dana R. Clark, 37, Rt. I, Bidwell,
$26; French J. Damewood, 55,
Dayton, $26; William B. Bawnann,
29, North Royalton, $28; Robert t:f...
Hannigan, 26, Emperance, Mich.,
$28; Kenneth C. Caudill, 18,
Gallipolis, $30; Richard K. Wuttkf,
04, Lyncbburg, Va., $30.

Jleed,

'4695

WATER ·HEATER SPECIALS

Facemire was cited for failure to
yield.
Officers returned to the scene at
4:16p.m. when a vehicle driven by
Darla L. Angel, 22, Gallipolis, pulled
right from Third onto Pine and
failed to see a westbound vehicle
dri·;en by Dancil 0. Hollman, 78,
Patriot Star Route.
Both cars collided, causing severe
damage. Angel' was cited for failure
to yield.
The department said a car driven

Judge ends 18 cases

FALL BATTERY SALE

MAKE
THIS
SIGN
YOUR
SIGN

Johnson, senior, Queen Tammy Wallace, senior, ex·
queeu, Andrea Hudson, candidate Mary Brumfield,
senior, attendanl!r Usa Sharp, lOth grade, Carla Treadway, eighth grade and Tabitha Duncan, ninth grade.
Hannan defeated tbe Birch Bears, 14-2.

Gallipolis police check accidents

0

SJ1 JACKSON PII&lt;E Rt 35 WEST
Phone 446 -4S24

GALLIPOLIS - A driver escaped
serious injury in a tw&lt;H:ar accident
on U.S. 3S near Gallipolis Friday

MISS WD.JlCAT - Flanked by attendants, candldates. and the ex-queeu, Tammy Wallace now reigns
as Miss Wildcat 1981 for HaDD8D High School. Pictured
from left to right are attendants Janice Mayes, seventh
grade, Penny Rainey, lith grade, candidate Lora

THIRD AVENUE

contractor requested $900 for the
job. The department said actual
cost for the paving should have
arnowtted to $550. Mrs. Deal told
the contractor that she had $500
when he asked how much money
she had. He then changed his
original charge for service to $800.
Mrs . Deal. 66, withdrew money
from her savings account ana
deposited it into her checking ac·
cowtt to cover the fee .
The
department disclosed that tht

Driver escapes
serious injury

THEPRICEe

.

~

\Paving contractor sought

&lt;Continuedfrompagel)

Questions to be discussed involve collective bargaining, sexual
harassment and mental health and mental retardation workers.
Sen. Howard Metzenbawn, D-Ohio, is to be featured speaker at the
banquet Sept. 26.

YOU'LL.LI KE

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business
insurance!'

The

..

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

Ohio,statement
and the fastestsoutheastern
growmg," the
sa td . rr~~~~~~~~~~~~
" There is no comparison between
the workload in Jackson County or
the amount of crime solved .' '
RI&lt;:K PERDUE
The statement also compared the
Spring Valley Plaza
shertff's department wtth Gallipolis
Phone 446 -4396
City Police, whose budget, appruxu nately $725,000, is more than
$300,000 more than what the she nff's
off tee was budgeted ttus year.
" We have nothing against the city ,
as we are sure the manpower they
ha ve a nd the money they spend is
necessa ry," the commi ttec said.
City pol1ce cover approximately
2.2 square miles while the county is
447 square miles. The city has four
cruisers. two of which are new every I
year, while the sheriff's office buys I
used highway patrol cars with 6[). I
70,000 miles on them .
" Had the sheriff been given his
onginal request of $499 ,000, the
sheriff's department we have would
not be reduced to 12 overworked employees, who have contributed
\11111 ......
a lmost as many hours as what they
have been paid for .
.. It is a sad sta te of affairs that tire
... ........ u
corrun issi oners have refused to talk
to the employees, and by doing so
Like a good neighbor,,
they are not only closing the door on
State Farm is tiJCR:.
us, but on the very people who put
; ,,,,. '"'"' '""''"""' ~o m p ., ,. . ,
~ ~··~ • O' h, "' ~ ~ ~ ""' '"Qi oo ill ·~o ·.
them in office," the commtltce concluded.
!

IIi polis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

Sept. 20, 1981

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va.

•111

Jlix.....U.. ..... .. ' .. ... .... .......
...,_mcrntlla .......... ....... 111 ...

SEE It AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STO.RE,
COMPUTER CENTER •.
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER
AND DEALERS .

THIRD AVENUE

GALLI POLlS,
OHIO

Financing Available

�...7"".,... • ~: . . . -

" ' .- -:-~;r - r - · - · -·-··~ 'r - · · ,... ~ . , . .. .. .

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Area Deaths

1

I
Page-A;l-

·Charles J. David

Sept. 20, 1981

~

MIDDLEPORT-CharlesJ. David,
64, died Friday evening at his home
at 40 Custer St. in Middleport.
Mr. David was a son of the late
Michael and Veronica Mayerschak
David. He was also prereded in
death by a brother.
Surviving are his wife, Esta
. Christy David; three brothers,
Michael David, Jr., a nd Paul David,
l!oth of Farrell, Pa .; Edward David
of UnesviUe, Pa.; a sister, Pauline
. llludrinick , West Middlesex, Pa. ,
and several nieces and nephews.
Mr. David was a retired employe
of !he Colonial Rubber Co. at Ravenna. He was an active member of the
Meigs County Senior Ci tizens and
belonged to the St. Anne's Catholic
Church, Farrell, Pa., and the
Emaculate Conception Church at
Ravenna.
Rosary serv1ces will be conducted
at 8 p.m. Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Funeral services
wifi be held at 10 a.m . Tuesday at the
Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy
with the Rev. Paul Welton officiating. Burial will be in the
Carleton Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime after 7 this evening.

Recession here--surprised? :

STORE HOURS:

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST•

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPTEMBER 26, 1981

MIXED

Fryer Parts.........~a.4

William A. Hughes
MIDDLEPORT- William Allen
Hughes, 81 , well known Middleport
reoident, died early Saturday morning at the Holzer Medical Center .
Mr. Hughes was born Jan . 19, 1900
in Gallia County, a son of the late Anct!l and Mary White Hughes. Besides
his parents he was preceded in death
by his first wife, Lulu Smiley Hughes
and two brothers, Glen and James.
He was a member of the Middleport First Baptist Church and
served in several official capacities
with the church. He was a 58 year
member of Siloam Lodge 456, Free
and Accepted Masons, Cheshire , and
wAs a past master of the group ; a
member of Royal Arch Masons
Chapter 80; Bosworth CounciI 46;
Ohio Valley Commandery 24: Mary
Shrine 37 , White Shrine of
Jerusalem; Valley of Columbus
Scottish Rite; Aladdin Temple, and
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Star, and was a past patron
ol that organization. He worked
!rom 1920 until 1968 with the New
York Central Railroad .
Surviving are his wife. Mary
Hicks Hughes; two daughters and
sons-in-laws, Alberta and James
Thurman Hellyer , Nelsonville;
Grace and Don Shamblin, Alexandria , Va., four grandsons; a granddaughter;
nine
grea t grandchildren; two sisters, Ethel
Maddux, Sabina, and Julia Witham,
Huntington, and two brothers,
Charles, Columbus, and Lewis ,
. Gallipolis.
Masonic rites will be conducted at
7:30p.m. Sunday by Siloam Lodge at
Ule Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home. Funeral servi ce~ will be held
at 2 p.m. Monday at the funeral
home with the Rev . Mark McClung
officiating. Burial will be in Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.

·
- Steven C. .Ebert (second from left) of
· Vinton received a $500 check recenUy at GalUpolls
. Foodland, Jackson Pike, from tbe Pepsi-Cola Corp. for
spelllng Pepal Spirit from bottle caps be colle&lt;!ted In a

Reports net income rise

GRADE A

McKEESPORT, Pa. - G.C. Murphy Co. reported net income for the
13 weeks which ended July 30 of
$1,353,000, or. 34 cents per share,
comparable with the $1,436,000, or 36
cents per share, for a comparable
period a year earlier.
Sales in the second quarter were
$185,737,000, down 2 percent from the
$185,768,000 for the second quarter of
1980.
For the 26 weeks which ended July
30, net income was $2,849,000, or 72
cents per share, compared with
$2,266,000, or 57 cents per share for
tbe first half of 1980.
Sales for the 26-week period
totaled $369,976,000, up 4.48 percent
over the $354,113,000 reported for the
comparable period in 1980.
· Net income for the 13 and 26-week
periods Included a gain of $506.000.

Whole Fryers...... ~~-.

w·1eners.............~K:~.

FRENCH CITY

12

oz.

Ground Beef.......L!·.~ 1

39

Ground Chuck....~~~l
BUCKET

Cube Steaks.......L!~2

.

59

~lothing

29

:.No motive found

s:.:
~
'

~ - ~TON, Ky. -

1
:
•

.•

No motive
been fOIIIId In the apparent

deldll
of a 27-year-old
Wlllllllllbat occurred late

niCbt or early Saturday mor-

~ /Judy Dennis was found at 2:45
...,._ In her leCOIId-floor apartment
·::.. M Dalton St., said a spokesman
'Jot Covington pollee.
••

Lettuce...........~;A~.
DARI FRESH

2% Milk ..........c:~N.•~.l

69

SUNSHINE CHUNK

Detergent .........!4.~ ••2
_ CDUP.QN

MAXWELL HOUSE

LUNCH MEAT

INSTANT COFFEE
'

99~

Salesman Joseph Mancini, whose
customers over the past 55 years
have included Clark Gable and Jimmy Stewart (who wears a 38 extra
long), isn't worried.
"Brooks Brothers change? Nab. If
it does change, they (Allied) are
going to lose out," said Mancini, a
white-haired 69-year-old (dressed in
a paisley bow tie, three-button pinstriped suit and, of course, a buttondown white shirt) .

Computer courses offered
GALUPOLIS - Leo Blackburn
president of Gallipolis Busln~
College, announced today that effective with the start of the new
term, Sept. 28, the school will in·
corporate computer and word
processing training into its associate
degree prQgrams In business administration, accounting, and
executive secretarial science.
A separate computerology ·
diploma course will be added to the
curriculum. The prQgrams have just
been approved by the OHio State
Board of School and College
Registration.

Lee Tyler, director of admissions,
said a total of 210 students were expected for the fall term. with
another 200 expected at the Jackson
and Portsmouth branches.
Steve Eisnaugle, director of eduction, said classes for the new term
are accounting (all levels), typing
(all levels), shorthand (all levels);
including legal and medical, office
machines, business psychology,
business principles, business math I
and II, comm~p~ications II, money
and
banking,
personnel
management.
and records
management.

. ;In fashion; bright colors and pattt;ms come and. go. So do suit lapels
•I

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10 oz.

'

$359

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires
26, 1981 '

nation's industrial production fn
August. tbe steepest drop since July
1980 at the end of last year's
recession.
The Fed reported that U.S. fal'tortes operated at 79.2 percent of
capacity ln August, the lowest level
1n almost a year. And the Commerce
Department said inventories rose U
percent for Ule nation 's manufacturers. wholesalers and retailers in
Jul
y.

recession."

Alan Murray , a vice president for
economics at Citibank, observes,
"the implication for recovery is kind
of gloomy."
In a traditional business' cycle, a
recession occurs as sales fall tnventories grow, production faDs' and
unemployment rises . But a$ Inventories of unsold merchandise are
depleted and demand tor goods
grows, the economy recovers as lactortes step up production and hiring.
But in recent years, the pattern
has been upset, characterized by ·
sluggish growth and high inflation .
Mrs. Shaber says. " This period of~
very stagnant economic activity has
gone on so long it is difficult to talk
about this recession being followed
by a period of recovery."
Growing concern over the impact
of high interest rat!!l&gt; on the economy
has increased pressure on the
Federal Reserve Board to reduce Us
tight-money policy. But this past
week, Fed Chairman Paul Volcker
said the nation's central bank would
not reverse course, and that any attempt to seek short-term relief from
high interest rates. would only cause
greater suffering in the long run by
MARTIN METZGER
spurring inflation .
Meanwhile, the Commerct! Depar· ·
tment reported that new construction of single-family homes fell
16.4 percent from July to August, to .
an annual rate of ~91,000 - the
lowest rate since the department
began keeping such statistics in
ATHENS - Blue Cross and Blue
1959.
Shield
in Central Ohio have a~&gt;­
Interest rates were also blamed
nounced the recent addition of Marfor a 0.4 percent decline in the
tin Metzger and Taylor Hoskins to
tlie Athens district office staff.
Metzger, who will be a sales
repr~sentative .
was formerly
associated
with
Nationwide InIll-month low.
surance
Co.
He
will
be residing in
Sinct! late April the average has
Waverly
and
will
cover Pike,
taken a drop of 187 points.
Jackson,
Gallia
and
Lawrence
counOther readings for the week
ties.
·
showed the New York Stock ExHoskins , a three-year employee of
change corr.posite index down 3.05 at
Blue
Cross of Central Ohio with ex67 .'ll, and the American Stock Experience
in both the claims ad·
change market value index off 30.72
ministration
and sales departments,
at300:33.
has
been
appointed
office supe;Big Board volume averaged 42.39
visor.
He
will
assist
metzger
in ser•
million shares a day, against 45.21
vicing
e~rolled
accounts,
as
well
as'
million the week before.
assisting
.
local
non-group
sub"In reality, there is no precise link
between interest rates and the stock scribers with questions about their
market," Zinder observed. "Both coverage or billing .
The Athens district office is
can and have risen together, and
located
at 1005 E. State St., Suite 2,
both can and have fallen together.
and
serves
Athens, GaUia, Hocking,
"Obviously, possible huge budget
Jackson;
Lawrenct!,
Meigs, Morgan,
deficits and the economic outlook
and
Vinton
counties.
Offict!
Pike
are playing at least as big a role as
hours
are
from
8
a.m.-4:30
p.m.,
interest rates as far as the stock
Monday
through
Friday.
The
phone
market is concerned.''
number is (614) 593-6'113 or 592-6232.

....

Two join
plan staff

Predicts activity trend .
NEW YORK (APl - Concern is
spreading on Wall Street that the
stock market's summer-long decline
might be signaling the country's first prolonged recession since the mid·

1970s.
Much has been made of the slide in
stock and bond prices as a vote of no
confidence in President Reagan's efforts to curb inflation and balance
the federal budget.
But several analysts have warned
lately that the stock market might
also be fulfilling its clossic function
of anticipating trends in business activity .
These analysts warn that it is
dangerous to assume that a decline
in interest rates by itself would
necessarily tum the stock market
around. If falling rates are accompanied by slumping production,
employment an corporate earnings,
they say, stock traders could well
respond to themwith scant en.
thusiasm.
AsNewtonzinder, marketanalyst
at E .F. Hutton, pointed out this past
week, some key rates have indeed
been falling since mid-summer
without prQViding any perceptible
benefit for stock prices.
The rate on federal funds, overnight loans between banks, has
fallen from about 20 perct!nt to below
16.
But the Dow Jones average of 30
industrials, which fell36.62 points to
836.19 in the past week, stands at a

..-..

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

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO
annOUnCeS· .
TAX FREE SAVINGS AC. CO

UNTS

STARTING OCTOBER 1, 1981
CALL US AT 446-3832 OR STOP IN
NOW TO RESERVE YOUR ACCOUNT
IT COULD BE THE HIGHEST YIELD
YOU HAVE EVER EARNED.

BIVERSIDE CONDOMINIUM LIVING
TERRACE

PRIVATE OWNER~HIP _ -:- -~AREFREE LIVIN~ ,......_
ALL UNITS HAVE~---....A ~BEAUTIFUL
VIEW OF
THE OHIO RIVER
" ~~--"
~:
~
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"..:;.

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----- ,,...----,r..,,.....

..: ~ ~

._

_..#

- ~}

Vi ....-..s ~4

Check lhese features:
Construction Building,

- ~_;

.·

high as~ets

4n.d-Pianniog, Soil
~c--..,~

Con_s~ltation :by

KOE~RQMPECHER
ARCtiiTECT.~
and
..
.
.

.

~

ttitofiSSIONAL
.

,

TREET

12 0~
CAN

that threaten to touch the shouider
and ties that shrink to strings. At
Brooks Brothers, such change for
change's sake doesn't even get
through the front door, past the
striped lies, green and yellow
sweaters and narrow lapels that
could have been there last year and the last 5ll years.
Brooks Brothers likes things the
way they were, are now and will
forevfr continue to be - classic.

Am_erl~ns will be added, to the
nat1on s jobless rolls by year s end.
" It's going to be tough," Yardeni
adds. "In April or May, people will
still be arguing if we're In· a

$ &amp;g

COLD POWER
C OUP O N

As announced previously , the effect of the change on reported first
quarter net income had been to
decrease net income for the periods
which ended April 30, 1981 and May
I, 1980, by ~93,000, or I~ cents per
share, and $585,000 or I~ cents per
share, respectively.
Sales thrQugh July were generated
from 440 stores in 1981, which is 17
fewer than in 1980. Of the total mumher of stores, 103 were Murphy Marts in 1981, compared with 102 in 1980,
and 337 were conventional stores
compared with~ last year.
For the 13 and 26-week periods
which ended July 30, Murphy Marts
contributed 60.3 percent and 59.4
percent of total sales, respectively.
The conventional store contribution
for those same periods was 39.7 percent and 40.6 percent.

~hangeablllty."

'~

49
~:~ ................••~~Food..........2~.l!·. ~- ·

Dog

BySCOITKRAFI'
As8oclated Press Writer
. NEW YORK ( AP) - Brooks
Brothers, that cradle-to-grave outfitter of of preppy America, is being
liuttoned-down about any -change its
~w owner will bring to the nation's
oldest clothing company.
• The directors of Garfinckel,
Brooks Brothers, Miller &amp; Rhoads
Inc. armounced Tuesday plans to sell
the ~mpany to Allied Stores Inc.
Brooks Brothers' Golden Fleect! insjgnla is part of the deal.
But at the Madison Avenue emporium and Brooks Brothers'
ej&lt;ecutive suite - both, as always,
teeming with three-piece pin-stripe
sUits, button-down shirts and striped
tjes - the change in ownership
Produced few ripples and little comment.
: , " I can't say anything about that,"
~id Robert Dawson, viet! president
of sales promotion (dressed, of cour~. in a wllite button-down shirt,
etc).
: : Change at Brooks Brothers, you
See, is as unfamiliar as blue jeans.
~ks BrQthers prQffers neither.
· . For 163 years Brooks Brothers has
~hewed "fashion," said Dawson.
Vogue magazine once put it another
way : "Setting trends by ignoring
them." Aild Dawson puts it this
W!'-Y : "The great strength of Brooks
l!rotbers hils been its relative un-

;Finn reports ·

GRADE A LARGE

or 13 cents per share from settlement of a restoration liability
recorded previously.
To comply with Financial Ac·
counting
Standards
Board
Statement No. 43, " Accounting for
Compensated Absences," the company has changed its method of accounting for vacation pay.
This accounting change affects
reported net income for interim
periods. For the 13-week periods
which ended July 30, 1981 and July
31. 1980, this change has increased
net income by $716,000, or 18 cents
per share, and $704,000, or 18 cents
per share, res!)l!!!tively. '
For the 26-week periods ending on·
the above dates, net income was increased $123,000, or 3 cents per
share, and $119,000, or 3 cents per
share, respectively.

firm retains image

·

Ina Belle Webster
GALUPOUS - Ina Belle We bster, 82. of Rt. 3, Gallipolis, died a t
~ : 15 a.m. Saturday in the J~&gt;-Lynn
Nursing Center, Ironton, having
been in failing hea lth fo r the last
four years.
Born Nov . 10, 1898, in J ackson
County, W.Va ., daughter of the late
Calvin and Medea Pratt Roush, she
was a member of the Church of
Christ at Millwood. W.Va . and the
Cora WSCS and grange .
· She married Hoyt Webster on July
: ~. 1915, in Jackson County, W.Va.,
:and he preceded her in death on
·March 24. 1964.
: SllrYiving are two daughters, Mrs .
: Melvin (florence) Gilbert of Rt. 3,
:Gallipolis, amL Mrs. Tony 1May )
· Rossmeier of · Milton Freewater,
:ore.; two sons, Paul of Kelseyville,
:Calif. and Pearley of Spring Grove,
~ Va .; five grandchildren, 12 great. grandchildren and one great-great: grandchild; three sisters, Mrs. Opal
;Gardner, Mrs. Josa Badgley and
-Mrs. Margaret Jones, all of
:Wellsville, Ohio; and two brothers,
;carl of Columbus and Elmer of
·.Millwood.
~ T1Jree brothers and a sister also
:preceded her in death.
·. FIIDeral services will be held at I
;p.IJI. Tuesday in the Waugh-Halley: wocd Funeral Home, with
: Evangelist William Kughn of. ficiating . Burial will be in Blaine
: Memorial Cemetery, Cottageville,
: w .va. Friends may call at the
; f1111er&amp;l home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m .
:Monday .
.,

promotion eo-sponsored by the · aoft driB firm and
Foodland. Haadlng the cbe&lt;!k to Ebert Is IJGn CbaUant,
AtbeDB Pepsi sales manager, wblle Mrs. Ebert and
Foodland manager Bob Eastman look on.

By STEVEN P . ROSENFELD
AP Buoloess Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Evidence is
~rowmg that the nation has slipped
mto Its second recession in as many
years and its eighth since the end rl
World War II.
New construction of single-family
homes has plunged to a new low, inventorles of unsold goods are piling
up, auto sales remain sluggish, industrial production is falling and
factories are operating at their
lowest capacity levels in almost a
year.
Commerce Department sources
say a preliminary estimate of
economic activity in the JulySeptember period showed a decline
at an annual rate of 0.5 percent ,
following a revised 1.6 percent
decline in the nation's gross national
product In the second quarter.
If the thircHjuarter decline holds
up in later revisions of GNP, the innation-adjusted output of the
nation's goods and services , the
slideof two straight quarters would
meet the general definition of a
recession, a!Ulough there was a
recession last year with just one
quarterofsteepdecline.
Whether the nation is in a
recession or not, economists appear
to agree it is unlikely there will be a
robust recovery from the current
slump, and that a marked improvement in the economy is not expeeled until the second half of 1982 at
the earliest.
"We're In for a long period of offagain, on-again high interest rates,
dampenmg the economy," said Sandra Shaber , senior economist at
Chase Econometrics Associates Inc.
Edward Yardeni, chief economist
at E .F . Hutton &amp; Co. Inc. , predicts
that between 500,000 and 1 million

NORTHERN

TOILET TISS.UE
4 ROLL
, PKG.

89~

. ·-

.ENGINEERS
- .. :
.
.
. ,.
.
for High .Quality -Spao'bu~ J)esign,
Super Ins~~·~ - Energy
.l;-ffi~ien~
Living.
. .
.
"

PLANNIED. I.UXUi:f AT A:' PRICE
·'

. Y·O U CAN :Af,ORD

�~~;;;::;:&lt;:;:;:;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;-;:;;:::::;:::;::::

--

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. • ";"'" .... • "' ; ""'.' _.. - ..

. . . ...

'

· Sept. 20, 1911

:

Man gets prison senience

'-

~.\ ~~1
...·~~rl
··, . .,

.'

Van Meter wu ·pven two ~en­
POMEJWY-Aidllrd VIII Meter,
tenes,
u inenuw to five years, to
1•• Tuppers Plainl, - illlll1tencildto
a pell8l inltitutl1111 wlltn he~ be _.... eencurnntly. His apIn the Meigs County Ccinlmerl Plea ~ Ftiday befWI Judie John
c. a.con follwed a pl"'«&lt;&lt;tenclnll
CourtFrid8y ~Van Meter earlier lllld ....-red In illvatiptlon.
The llllerlfrs departmellt also adthe common pleu court ..... tllteNd
pleu of guilty to bUI.I of!Dfann8U1111 vlaee tblt an aluminum boAt wa3
chllrctnc recelvinC stolen property recovered ft'8m the Ohio River south
of R8cine Friday, Anyone missing
and bl'e8tlng llld enteriJII.
IUdla boat may contact the sheriff's
department with identification ln-

rf .

't,t.,
'\..·

Revises contract

,
,

~$().member

BoDennakers' Unlan ·
Local358, said 1 Fridly ~favored
contract revisions pi'OpOiled by AmShip Chairman George M. SteinTHIRTY-NINE FRF..SHMEN bave eoroUed In the Holzer School of
Nursing at Rio Grande Collece for tbe falllerm . Piclured are (first row,
from leftl , Ann Bennett, Nursing Instructor, Katherine Bouess, Cynthia
Pendleton, Sandra Herdman, Wanda Mullett, Tera Denise Circle, Felicia
Browning, Sondra Fee, Elizabeth Roberts, Tlsh Hudson, Dorothy Matthews, Nursing Instructor . Second row, Bryan Joseph. Julie Vaoco,
Cheryl Houck, Rhonda Hughes, Amy Johnston, Mikeal Vaskowitz, Sh6yl

Massay, Alire Newkirk, Crystal Riley. Third row, Bonnie Martin, Sheryl
Evaas, Vicki Holzapfel, Unda McNeal, Yvonne Brown, Sheryl TolHver,
Bobbi Jo Parlin, Sherry Spriggs, Robin MIUer, Marilyn Cardwell. Fourth
row, Sonia Scott, Alllllnda Snyder, Debra K1Unosld, Brenda E\'ans,
Vicky Rathburn, Tereu ~. Pam Clay, Barbara McCaUa, Naacy
Koblrieser, Unda Ballard, Nursing Instructor. Absent when picture was
taken were Henry ADison and Julia Pasquale.

•
39 freshmen In
Holzer class
RIO GRANDE - The Ho~er
School of Nursing al Rio Grande
College and Community College
opened its second year last week
with 39 first year students enrolling
in the program.
According to Janet M. Byers,
Dean of the Holzer &amp;hool of Nursing, the nwnber of freslunen in the
program matches last year's enrollment for new students. She said that
there arc 60 students overall in the
Nursing department.
The second class in the Nursing
prlJgram will include~ cross section
of persons varying in age and experience. The overall program will
have five men enrolled in 198Hl2.
The lw&lt;&gt;-yea r associate degree
program will graduate students who
will be eligible to take the test for
registered nurses.
The incoming class will includt 29
, tudents from Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, and Vinton counties , whoee
residents get reduced tuition ra..,..
A levy in the four-counly area
finances part of the operational cost
of the community college which is
associated with Rio Grande College.
The students represent a number
of Ohio counties to include the
following : Gallia - Marilyn cardwell, Julia Pasquale, Barbara McCalla, Katherine Boggess, Yvonne
Bro .. n, Sheryl Evans, Nancy
Kohlrieser , Tish Hudson, Julie Vanco, Cheryl Houck, Rhonda Hughes,
Henry Allison; Jackson - Sonia
Scott, Bryan Joseph, Alice Newkirk,
Crystal Riley, Sheryl Tolliver, Tera
Denise Circle, Bonnie Martin , Brenda EvallB, Felicia Browning, Linda
McNeal, Vi cki Holzapfel, Sondra
Fee Debra Kalinoski , Amanda
Snyder, Sheryl Ma5say, and Wanda
Mullett.
Sandra Herdman;
Meigs Pickaway - Sherry Spriggs and
Vicky Rathburn ; Highland - Robin
Miller; Morrow - Cynthia Pendl eton ; Se ne ca
Mikeal

Yaskowitz ; Franklin - Amy Johnston; Scioto - Bobbi Jo Parlin.
Three students from Wesl Virginia
are new in the program. Teresa Lee
i Point Pleasant), Pamela Clay
iLetart), and Elizabeth Roberts
rPoint Pleasant) are the out-cl-state
students who have enrolled.
Three ne w faculty members have
joined the school. Ann Bennett of
Sciotoville, Dorothy Matthews of
Jackson, and Margarel Ehman &lt;JI
Gallipolis are the new additions to
the nursing faculty . Linda Ballard ol
Gallipolis, and Margaret Leedy of
Gallipolis make up the remainder of

the nursing staff.
The nursing program at Rio Grande c-onsists of a specially designed
tw&lt;&gt;-year curriculwn from the
preparation of registered nurses
with emphasis on giving direct nursing care to patients within a structured health care setting where
sup~rvision

. . ,_______,_,ome Health Wee

LORAIN, Ohio (AP) - Contract
revisions approved by boilermaktra
at the American Ship Bulldln&amp; Co.'s
Lorain yards have cleared the way
for the idled facility to resume jured.
production, companyoff!~say. . . - - - - - - - - - - Paul Blanchette, preaident:of the

l

.•

. flll;llllltim.
.
At 1 p.m. Friday a car driven by
David Weber, was heavily damaged
when lt strudl 1 deer on State Route
1241n ileedavnle. Weber was not In-

Sept. 20, 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page--

and

brenner III, 239-67,
·
Steinbrenner, also ·the O'lmer of
professional baseball's New Yort
Yankees, said this week that a shil!,
would be brought In for work 1810011
as possible if the contract was approved, a union official said.

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EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
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429-4788

FREDA WAUGH, known to regularly Us len to rock music radio stations, Is given home health treatment
by Linda Dyer, home health aide.

HOME HEALTH AIDE
Thelma Frazier
takes
Jasper
Oliver's blood
pressure. He
referred to ber
8li "the finest
feila in the
world."

Bossard Library
employs Cogan
GALLIPOLIS - Kendra L. Cogan
was recently hired as childrem and
young outreach librarian at Samuel
L. Bossard District Library.
Cogan will begin working at the
library on Oct. 1.
A Bay City, Mich . native, Cogan
received her associate arts degree in
liberal arts from University Center,
Mi chigan, and her bachelor's degree
from Michigan State University m
elementary education.
Her master's in librarianship was
recently awarded through Western
Michigan University in Kalamazoo.
Cogan has been affiliated with
young adult work in libraries in Bay
City and in Washington state, At the
Bossard library, she will work with
the childrens program and with
school librarians throughout Gallia
County . She will also coordinate
childrens and young adult programming through the extension department.

By Deb Fox
Timeo-Sentlnel
LUestyle Wriler
GALLIPOLIS - " The finest lelia
in the world ."
That is how Jasper Oliver, a
patient under the city's home health
program, described his home health
aide, Thelma Frazier.
September 20 through 26 is Home
Health Week for agencies in
Gallipolis a nd throughout the state
which provide medical care in the
homes of persons who are unable to
care for themselves.
According to Susan Elliott, R.N. ,
of the Gallipolis City Health Department, " The week is set aside as a
time for appreciation of work done
by home health agencies.
"Home health care makes it
possible for a patient to be
discharged from a hospital sooner
than usual and to continue to receive
necessary professional care whil e
recooperating at home.''
PersollB are referred to th e
program by hospitals or physicians
and all ages are eligible, she said .
"The department provides nursing home health aide, physical
therapy and speech pathology services to Gallipolis residents," Elliott
said. There are usually 13 to 15 persons recelvlng services from the
program.
Those under the department's
care are visited at least once a day
by a department member, Pat
Hogan, R.N. and staff member ,
satd.
Funding for the program is from
private payment, private insurance ,
Medicare, Medicaid and Title XX.
The staff of the local health department includes Elliott, supervisory
nurse , Gloria Young, R.N ., Hogan ,
Delmar Gingerich, R.N., Nancy
Mullins, physical therapist , Charla
Elliott, speech pathologist, Frazier,
Unda Dyer, home health aide, and
Bonnie Watson, secretary.
Members of the city comprise the
Board of Health and the Advisory
Board. Oscar Clarke, M.D., is
medical director of the local
program and Christian P. Morris is
health commissioner.
Staff nurses provide all aspects of
care, including lnjections, drawing
blood, bedsore care, diet tea ching
and teaching diabetics, Elliott said.
Home health care continues until
skilled care, that performed by a
registered nurse or therapist, is no
longer required by the patient, she
said.
Besides visitation by registered
nurses, home health aides also treat
patients in the patients' homes and
provide care services such as baths ,
brushing teeth and washing patients' hair.
Elliott said, " The philosophy of
the department is to provide quality
care in a patient' s home a nd involve
the family and patient in his care.
This enables each individual to
retain his digmty by assisting him to
live in his own home as long as
possible. "

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The following
people filed for marriaee licenses
this past week in Gallia County
Probate Court.

•. DNikl R. Cox, %7, Galilpolll,
:U. . . .t)'ed, aiiCI lUMadl M;

JtaiiMI, a, ().ell'plll,

I h)ed.
Hai'Qid A. VII lid lr., 13,
GaiJipolls, eleetrkiM, alld carol

Norrls 23, GaW~ nl~.
· ~ R. Skagp, 35, GaWpolis,

. 'inalntenance, and Deborah I. Null,
nursinl''"ftnt.
'':-a._C...Mk"eon,
.
;
operator,
I~ _; ;Birdltleld,
~re,
•

24

rial

E.

I ;, doler
24',

~ -. .. -&gt;\

Dauaherty,

47,

and Sheila

t-lfe.
·I

'.

B

-1

,

�20, 1981
Pomeroy

Pag_e -B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

sept. 20, 1981,

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

Wed&amp;ngs____________________

Historical group holds meetini
The Athens County Historical
Society and Genealogical Chapter
will meet September 20 at 2 p.m. at
the Athens Community Center, 739
East State Street.
The speaker will be William J .
Mcintosh, Ohio Genealogical
Society Trustee and State Chairman
of First Families of Ohio, according
to Beverly Schumacher, president.
The objectives of The First
Families of Oluo are to identify and
honor the memory of the earliest
pioneers of the state and to show the
proved pioneers' lasting mark on the
state they helped develop by
honoring their descendants, she
said.

Lowery, McKinney wed Junge marries- Phillips

The research and work lleCeS81lrY'
to discover the pioneers and their
descendants is intended to foster and
encourage increasing interest in the
people who contributed in any way
- great or small - to establislung
Ohio, and in Ohio customs, culture,
genealogy and history.
Mcintosh, from Clinton, Ohio, wlll
speak on the history af F.F.O., explain the requirements of mem·
bershlp and assist with applications.
The meeting is open to the public
and everyone who thinks his ari·
cestors may have been In the area
now known as Ohio by 1820 is encouraged to attend without
obligation to join, Schumacher said.

MIDDLE PORT - An Aug . 22 wedding in the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, united in
marriage Esther Ann Lowery and
Lewis Burdell McKinney.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
a nd Mrs. George Lowery , Route 4,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Burdell
McKinney of Middleport are the
parents of the bridegroom .
The 2 p.m. double-ring ceremony
was performed by the Rev. Robert
E. Robinson following a half-hour of
prenuptial music presented by
orga nist, Mrs . Robert Robinson .
Given in marriage by her parents,
a nd escorted to the altar by her
fath er , the bride wore a gown of
white polyester organza with a fitted
bodice and Victorian style sleeves.
The sheer lace yoke was trirruned
with rlunestones and pearls. Her full
skirt trinuned with lace floral appliques and rhinestones flowed into a
chapel train edged in lace.
She wore a picture hat trirruncd in
lace with a chapel veil of illusion,
and her mother's diamond earrings.
Her bouquet was colonial style in
green, yellow and wlute daisies with
ye llow
carnation s , white
stephanotis , and baby's breath tied
with yellow and wlute ribbons. She
carried a white linen lace trtnuned
handkercluef belonging to her great·
grandmother, wore a blue garter
and had a penny in her shoe.
Anna Jarrell in a maize polyester
gown with a lace cape served as the
maid of honor and the bridesmaids
we re Jo McKinney, sister of the
groom, Susie Cox. and Krista Smith.
All of the attendants wore identical
gowns with maize picture hats
decorated with yellow ribbon and
· da isies. The honor attendant carried
a white lace fan decorated with
yellow , white a nd green daisies aceented with ye llow carnations and
baby's breath . The other attendants
carried lace baskets of flowers matclung those in the arrangement af
the honor a ttendant.
Mary Beth Stein, cousm of the
bride, was the flower girl and wore a

Mr. and Mrs. Phillips

long white gown with a picture hat
trinuned in maize. She carried a
lace basket filled with petals .
Stephen Matthew Wood, nephew of .
the bridegroom, was the ringbearer
and carried a white satin pillow.
Stephanie Ann Wood, niece of the
bridegroom, and Cynthia Stewart,
daughter of the best man, dispensed
bags of rice.
Gregory Stewart of Rutland was
the best man and the ushers were
Tom Lowery, brother of the bride,
and Don Mullins, Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
For her daughter 's weddmg Mrs.
Lowery \\'Or&lt; a vanilla polyester
dress with a jacket and a white silk
carnation corsage. Mrs. McKinney
was in a lavender polyester dress
and also had a wlute silk carnation
corsage. The maternal grandmother
of the bride, Florence J. Robson,
also wore a white silk carnation corsage. Mrs . Gertrude Dittmar,
maternal grandmother of the
groom, was unable to attend.
A reception honoring the couple
was held in the church social room
following the ceremony. Dinah
Stewart, Marcia Cale and Debbie
Davis served. Jenny Whittington
registered the guests. The couple
took a wedding trip to Virginia
Beach. They now reside in Canton .
Mr. and Mrs. Lowery entertained
with a buffet supper at their home
following the reception for family ,
friends and out-of-town guests.

PAUL NORTHUP
MADGE NORTHUP

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Peddler's Pantry .
Second Ave.

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Ipolls

u o·weirs. and a silver punch
bowl. Highlighting the main table
was a three-tiered weddi ng cake
which featured a water fountain at
the base surrounded by the wedding
Oowers . The tiers were sepa ra ted by
white colum ns and wedding bells.
Topping the ca ke was a nosegay of
the weddi ng flowers . The cake was.
created by Mrs. Mar ge Walker . A
garland of greens held by wlute
doves decorated the wall behind the
table.
Following the ceremony , a re&lt;&gt;epServing at I he table were Letty
lion was held in the church
Wa lker , Mrs. Lisa Cal dwell , Anri
fellowship room . The tables,
E pli ng, and Susan Ade~nann. theY.
covered with wlute tinen and laee
were assisted by members of the
cloths , displayed white candles in a
ladies missionary fell owship of the
rs_il_ve_r_c_a_nd_el_a_br_a_d_e_co_r_a_L~&gt;~~
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! Escorted to the altar by her father
land given in marriage by her parenls, the bride was attired in a formal
~own of white organza with a cameo
neckline of Alencon lace and a sheer
yoke of English netting with lace accents and seed pearls which gave an
off-the-shoulder effect. The long
r hiffon bishop . sl eeves were
~athered mto pearl-trimmed lace
c uffs with button and loop clos ures.
Covered buttons and loop closures
perorated the !JP.ck of the dress. The
J!.-lme skirt, sprinkled with pearled
iace motifs, had a crystal-pleated
hemline ruffle. Another ruffle was
bised in the back to give a bustle ef·
feet to the skirt which ended in a
cathedral train . A derby-framed hat
~ith corded Chantilly lace and seed
pearl trim. satin ribbon loops and
!are fleurdtes on the front of the

accented by a wlute ribbon.
For his wedding , the groom wore a
white tailed tuxedo with a boutonniere of roses and s tephanotis.
Perfonning the duties of belt man
was brother of the groom, Jerry Eutsler. J . D. Jones, Rob Goble, and
Chuclt Derifield, all of Gallipolis,
served as ushers. The ringbearer
was Brandon Asllley Saunders who
carried the rings on a wlute satin
heartshaped pillow.

. A : r A : : : : O B J LE HOME SALES

beautiful ! Dress /
wi th the flair of leg· /
flattering high. high / 1
heels a nd sexy , ultra- (
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,

Song," "Longer / ' and " We've Only

fnuwers, and greenery arrangemerr

lace. The bridesmaids were Denise
Hoover, Napoleon, sister of the
bride; Karlyn Lange, Perrysburg,
and Nadine Wittenberg, Findlay.
Their gowns were identical to the
one worn by the maid of honor. They
carried wicker baskets filled with
white silk roses, teal tinted carnations, peach and teal accents of
small silk flowers with peach ribbon
and a crocheted streamers by pam
Weirauch.
Steve Kees, Hicksville, was the
best man, and the ushers were Darwin Junge and Daniel Junge,
Napoleon, both brothers af the bride,
and Mlck Robertson, Florida .
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Junge wore a lavender street-length
dress, while Mrs . Plullips was in a
pink street-length dress.

dare
to dress
with
flair!

.

brim, was finished with an a ttached
pouf veil.
She carried a queen's cascade
styles bridal bouquet designed with
two shades of pink, r ed , and yellow
carnations , purple statice, orange
lili es, s tephanotis . and baby's
breath . The bride 's only jewelry ,
pearl earrings. wer e a gift of the
groom.
Maid of honor was Ellen Charnbers , Gallipolis. Brid•smaids were
Annie Cook, Rio Grande, Susie
Gle nn, Ga llipolis , an d Betsy
Adelmann. McArthur. The y wore
white polye ster dress es with
spaghetti straps, a wide lace ruffle
over the bodice and a deep ribbon
encrus ted ruffle at the bottom accented the bridesmaids' gownS.
Th•y wore combs in their hair
fashioned with the wedding flowers
of silk . The y carried bridal lig,Its
adorned with the wedding nowers

GALLIPOLIS - 'lit• tirst Baptist
Church was the setting for the July
~evening wedding of Joy Lynn Hen·
derson and James Gregory F •Jtsler,
both of Gallipolis. The bride is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D.
Fredrick Henderson and the groom
is the son of Mr . and Mrs. James I.
Eutsler, II.
The candlelight , double-ring
ceremony was perfonned by Pastor
Joseph Godwin. Pre-nuptial music
was •presented by Mrs. Adelaide
Sanders, organist, and Pat Burks,
guitarist Vocal selectiol'l8 by Miss
Meghan Griffin were " The Wedding

Ti mes· Sentinel- Page-8 · 3

W.Va.

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

CONNIE WEEK SEPT. 21 to 26

''

POMEROY - Debra S. Junge,
Napoleon, and Robert L. Phillips,
Defiance, formerly of Meigs County,
were married on Aug. I at the St.
Paul's Lutheran Church in
Napoleon.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer B. Junge, Napoleon,
and the groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Phillips, Columbus. The
Rev . David Beu~ler performed the
double ring ceremony.
Music was provided by Mrs .
Florence Diebnan, the bride's aunt,
instrumentalist, and Scott Hoover,
vocalis t, brother-in-law of the bride.
Given in marriage by her parents,
the bride was attired in a gown of
white qiana with chapel train
designed by Kevin Kerr. It was
fashioned with a V neckline, sleeveless bodice and featured lace inserts
forming an attached cape. The back
was accented with covered buttons
and the entire dress was trtnuned in
white hand crocheted lace made by
the bride's grandmother, Mrs.
Emery Baker.
The bride carried a cascading
boijquet of white silk roses, leather
leaf fern with hints of peach and teal
and was tied with a ribbon bow and
crocheted lace made by the bride's
aunt, Mrs . Herman Fackler.
Diana Junge, Napoleon, sister of
the bride, was maid of honor and
wore a teal street-length wraparound dress with high neackline of

Henderson
weds Eutsler

Just Begun." During · the wedding
ceremony, Griffin sang " With You"
, and "Savior Like A Shepherd Lead
Us."
Adorning the altar were two brass,
nine branch tree candelabras
: decorated with light and dark pink,
red, and yellow carnatiol'l8, purple
· statice, orange lilies, white
: stephanotis, and baby's breath. Two
large vases with the same flower
·combinations were placed on the
altar. The brass unity candle ws
, adorned with spingeri fern. In the
· center of the single brass kneeling
bench was a wlute lace fan
:decorated with an arrangement of
:the wedding flowers. Hurricane lam·
' ps with greenery, nowers of the wed· .
·ding, and baby's breath interspersed
:the lamp holders' entire length. The
;hurricane lamps were used on the
·full length of the center aisle. The ·
!church windows held candles,

t

Mr. and Mrs. McKinney

Ohio-Point

, ,

•

.

Ph. 388-9619
11388-9061
Vinton at Junction 160 &amp; 325.

�Brings Real Value
Roll Top Desks

Truckload Sale On Living Room Suites!

"QUALITY FURNITURE AT INFLATION FIGHTING PRICES"

For this Gigantic E xpansion Sale we have received a truckload of living room .suites fo r y~u to choose
from . We have two piece suites and a ve r y large selection of beautiful three p1ece groups m bea utiful
antron nylon covers and plaids that have just arrived in time for this sale.

Due to the support, that you, our customers, have
shown us over the past 31 years, we have expanded our showroom space by another 2,500 sq. ft .
giving us a total of over 10,000 sq. ft. of beautiful
display showroom . We now have the building on
the corner , formerly the "Shoppers Mart"
building .

Mar-resist.ant 22" x 48" writing surface, fivE.
drawers plus locking file drawer make this desk
a useful addition to any home. Interior shelves
and stationery compartments for efficiency.
Coloni'al styling in Sugartown Maple finish pro1vidleSII
beauty. The DMI update of the classic Roll Top
desk. Drawers move effortlessly on dual drawer
guide system.

Ail fam ous brand names and made to last. Get yours while the selection is gr eat.

H earthstone

3 Piece Groups Range In Price From $288. To $1495.

ALL WOOD

'--~··l-'

PICK AWINNING COMBINATION

olw!M

'

•

Comfort and Charm Make This Our
Popular Colonial Living Room Group

Need A Desk ?

Don 't fail to stop in and see our beautiful display of
fur niture during our largest furniture sale in 31
years of business. We appreciate very much the
support you have shown' in us during the past and
we are going all out to give you the very best buys
in home furnishings possible. Thanks again and
hope to see you in our store during our Gigantic
Expansion Sale!
HERMAN GRATE, OWNER

Notice To The
Ladies

THE
SPO RTSMA N

GUN CABINET

'!'

\ ,

"-,

'

' '

THERE WILL ALSO BE GIFTS FOR
YOU GENTLEMEN AND ALSO THE
CHILDREN .... EVERYONE WELCOME!
32 • 1d

.? }

• Commerc ially proven in sell se rv1ce
la undne!&gt; • Gentle. ene rgy !!llic ient

dry.ng for pe rmanent pre!.!&gt; and all of

UAYTAG ECONO·MISER
•

As An Added

- -.. .

----

Bonus To Our
Already Low Pric~s,
With The Purchase
A 2 Or 3 Piece
ng Room Suite
You Receive This
Beautiful Hall Tree

·.:::·

~
H ere 's a Colon ial g rouping th at w 1ll w1n you over The stylmg IS diS tJncnve and
1rr es 1st 1ote . Th e g ra cefully -c urving b ac k th e tas teful woo d tnm . and the ta 11 0red
arm p 1ttows set 11oft And the Jabr1 c you select ma kes 11 uniQu ely yours
But there 's more Com tort Lots of 11 Generously- th1ck
..- -\
seat cus i')IO:lS comome w1th a c omtor1 -eng1neered spr 1ng
'

FREE!

sys tem an d re laxtn g high back lor hou rs o1toung1ng
comf on
Choose 1he co m bma ti on tha t' s right for you
sola loveseat. c ha1r
or queen steeper Do 11
today 1

Get Yours Today!

~~~~Zj~

4

••=
E
,.•

~ luront~ ·:J ue s·~ •· ec.J

B

G ., ,. C"b "'PI h ;. rn C a '""l (;,, ,, d"'
"'' (" 'O•A·~ ''"'" '"' O ~ ~ a ~' &lt;ID'l''.
,_.~,.,~1'&lt;1

"n&lt;

I(I~Pfl

~'&gt;o•-;
1 &gt;'•1 ~~

"'''" ~&gt;•a no

~ "'llli'~ "~ ~

'/l;lf:f' llf&gt;h&lt;nl1 I NO "" "'&gt;&lt;'

" to&lt; •l!nm o r cao•n.er llf'a ul·lu
'W d "d 'f'

~·JII ~· '"

'to"' '•

l,oc ~

5 Of1 ll"l!•

... .
HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS OF GIFTS TO BE GIVEN AWAY TO SOME LUCKY CUSTOMERS . JUST A
FEW OF THE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAY ARE: SF:ALY MATTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS, EUREKA
SWEEPER, ZENITH 1V. CRAFTMASTER QUEEN ANN CHAIR AND MANY MORE . BE SURE AND
REGISTER WHILEINOURSTORE , NO PURCHASE NECESSARY, NF.EONOTBE PRESENT TO WIN.
DRAWING WILL BE HELD OCTOBER 3, 1981.

-••
Reg.
$59995
Trade 1120"

•

"
•
••
:
•

~

i

&lt; ·•

•

•

• ••

Model RT14F7

''ONE OF OUR BEST"

TO" DOORORESSER
63"
SHELF MIRROR
CHAIABACK BED
5 DRAWER CHEST

1

:Reg. 1695.
'

00

NIGHT STAND .

s15 9,

91

Expans_ion
SaIe PliCe

dlsplayshowroom .

• HOLDS 8 GlJN S

10 ~! ~1\{)

$179 •95

...,. .......... .....$9995
,
Compare

at Sl35.

*1295 e

;:r.,
-~~ontilt ~"'!o':'
'..UM &amp;f.
A~ rllplcty ond
..ot.iy fi'" '0C .........todinulrl'lf'.

895
Complete

print s l Features inclu d e 3

adjustable glide -out shelves,
2 g l ide -o u t cr ispers and
convert ible·reversible doors.

F.::::::::~----------~:--::~-:----;~----,

•

Early American

··. WOOD GROUP SALE

I p...='
~

mattres ~

Prices
Start At

or order an

$39995

All Wallaway
And Rocker

BERt&lt;UNE®RECLINERS

OFF

Regular
Prices

Gets dirt you can't see.

TABLE COU£CTION

EUREKA ESP UPRIGHT

·Colonial charm, country warmth ... by

Our Regularly Priced 7 Piece Wood Group At
895. Reduc.l!d To Only
'599 9 5

20%

This Eurel&lt;a Upright has the pow. to

make your ciMnlng chores Msl•.

1

For this sal e only. Many other wood groups. Drastically
Reduced

SAVE BIG BUCKS WITH US!

•Dtai·A·Nip® adjusts to
clean • carpet height!!!
from low naps to
high ShagS.

·
bealer
barbwshroll 12"
loosens
deep down din .
•Brllllonl-iiJht ......

NOWs
NLY

na

OFF

695e

..

_._

MODEL 1428AT

. •' "' .

carpet s tram lo w naps to

7 PIECE MAPLE FINISH
WOOD DINETTE SET
'
·~~· Check prices anywhere
$
can't beat this bur ONLY

Dark Knotty Pine
finish
.

'

$2- a
· ·aoo

SOFA, CHAIR AND LOVE SEAT INAiERCULON COVER WITH VINYL STRAP .ARMS. REAL
I

All 3 Pieces Just

29 •
. 1 · ONLY

Save
Save Up To
GIBSON 8,000
.On A
- *20000
B.T.U.
Maytag Pair ON 1982 ZENITH A lr _Conditioner.
Reg. $359,. .
COLOR-T.V. SETS
, Savef
- *2M•s -

high shags .

... in

'DINEnEs SALE • PRICED

•aooo

•Triple filter sy stem for dust
free cleaning
•Vibra-Groomer"'' II beater bar
brush rolf loose:1s deep grit
and ground -in din .
•6 positi on Dial - A- Nap·~ cleans

48"x18"x15"

-. ...

MANY OTHER
ROOM SUITES·
. · As Low as '4Cto•s
GET A NITE STAND FREE!

NICE, INEXPENSIVE 3 PIECE GROUP

50% Extra
Suction Power

out dirt .
•Top ta . . disposabfe
dust beg has large
capacity , resists clogs

mpie A 1995. Suite

.

~

BOX SPRINGS

For fine pariOitii&amp;IIC8 and long life
quallty ... Eureta Is a bast buy.

30%

Our Loss Is Tour Gain~

AVAILABLE IN FULL OR
QUEEN SIZE

MATTRESSES

SEVERAL BEDROOM SUITES
Reduced

NICE FOR T.V. ROOM OR DEN.

Sleep soundly on a extra firm solid foam
optional innerspring mattress .

Gibson 's dependable
Frost·c tear system . Texture
Doors make •1easier to keep
clean and actually hide finger·

Sealy And Imperial

12 STYLES TO
CHOOSE FROM.

~

MAPLE DINING ROOM SUITE
CHINA TABLE AND S I $

.

Sm a ll outside . b1g in side.
w1th the extra co nvenien c e of

Good Selection
Of Lane
Cedar Chests.

• lOCM TOP I
BOTTOM

SIX CHAIRS
.ae
9o
Prtced
At
Regu 1ar 11099 ·

With a Convcrta.Couch you can have full size sofa beauty and
comfort plus an easy open heavy duty mechanism.

· Big Savings On

• 8AASS 11ARDWARE
• H OLASS DOO RS
WITH PIAN O HING ES

OTHER GUN CABINETS AVAILABLE IN
6 AND 10 GUN SIZE BY PULASKI.
PRICED FROM s179. 91 TO 1379. 91

Prices Range From
S99'5 Up To ss99. 91

Comfortable, seatln~ and sleeping for holiday ~ests..Jor apart·
m('nt dwellers .. .for summer &lt;·ottages .. .for anyplace you need
doubi r dul y from your sofa .

..---------------------------------------------------4 :•••
DOOR PRIZES GALORE!!
•"

lh oo bea~'•' c• Gyn

Sale Price

To Choose
From.

SLEEPER SPECIAL

MASSIVE ALL WOOD RK PI E DINI
R
i:NCLUDES LIGHTED CHINA, TABLE, AND SIX CHAIRS.
seethissuiteinournew Regular .11850. Sale Priced $149 5.

• :· (]

Expand e d Desk

''

•

H

'" rr•11 10u· rlr ~ o r O l&lt;~vr m m .. . 111 ,,

Over Our Newl y

Different Styles

SAVE '80 00 ON A PAIR

.

Stop In And Look

LAY-AWAY YOURS NOW FOR CHRISTMAS.

Now For E a1/ y Ame1ic an Classic
hristm aS in KN OTTY PINE linish

sz29"

''

See Us ....

· Line . T e n

14.0 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

Lay·Away

Reg.

--

WASHERS &amp; DRYERS

Gibson$

•

~ ,·· •ho •n••

'I

I1
[
I

toc!ays fabn: s • Electron ic , Auto·Dry
a nd l 1ml! Controls • BtQ load Otum

TO THE FIRST 100 LADIES THAT
VISIT OUR STORE DURING THIS ·
SALE YOU WILL RECEIVE A
BEAUTIFUL GIFT. DON'T MISS OUT.

·,'I
'"', j1-

-

MAYTAG ECONO·MISEA
BIG LOAD DRYERS

: NOW
: . ONLY

..
.•
"

•

-'$9995
'

~ft=._.US!

'

,,,. .Hf?V .· FREE!

A!l
3 Pteces

•Bright headligt.t to see in dark
dark areas.

·'•

*12995

£u1n theu dov• 11 dMsn 't COli o lot to br111Q counr'l' warmth

and flauor to vour home wtrh tht• j1n1 collect10t1 of
tiOtO!JO and ditplay ~~from Cct&lt;ml.
Auolloble In dark knotrv JNrte utnvf finish on all wood product. .
Brau hdrt'.fware. /t4or ond ltCfn Nllltonr
A NoutJ/uf wav to tHcorate vour home .

Now$1.3995

Skip By And See Our Storewide Savings,
Now IS The nme To Save.

ONLY

· Model 2086

:~

,

�\

1911

1981

Ohi~Point

Engagements

Engagements

.

MeadowsBeaver

SAVE$
imi1~uantities 1n al hems in this ad. None 1111111

Wr rtnne lht

Snyder-Payne

BUY ONE
GET ONE

00

OVER

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., SEPT. 26, 1981

During Our ...

''*"

WITH COUPON BELOW AND $10.00 PURCHASE

WITH COUPON BELOW AND $10.00 PURCHASE

Coea·Cola, Sprite

SEAL TEST

enriched Hour

•'

HUNGRY EIGHT

'•

GENERIC

'

BUY ONE 12-oz. Ctn. of

~~

BUY ONE 8 Pack 16-oz. BOTTLES OF:

ttageCh

or Ta&amp;

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH • FAMILY PAK

Fr,ing
Chiellen Parts

Weiners

LARGE OR SMALL CURD A, ,..,
93•-AND GET ONE ...

AT 12.29 PLUS DEPOSIT
AND GET ONE ....

'

7

The

...

1·1b. Pkg.

Snyder, Payne

Meadows

..

CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Richa rd L. Meadows of Crown City
announce the engagement a nd forthcoming marriage of their daughter,
Carol Sue, to Stephen L. Beaver, son
of Mrs. Dorothy Beaver of Mercer·
ville, and the late Houck Bea ver.
A double-ring ceremony will be .
performed by Rev. Terry Noble De·
Iober 10 at Victory Baptist Church.
The open church ceremon y will
begin at 2:30p.m.
The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate
of Hannan Trace High School and is
employed at the Gallipolis Parts
Warehouse. Mr. Beaver is a 1978
graduate of Hannan Trace High .
School and is employed by the Ohio
Depa rtme nt of Transportation .

lb.
us.oA INSP

25¢
83¢
98¢

fAYGO ALL VAR

Diet Beverages .

16 01
. Bo l

NABISCO

Premium Saltines .

'6 01
p~ g

I';LLSBUWI HUNGRY JACK COMPLE IE

Pancake Mix .

2 10 Box

Chicken Legs

Best 0' Fryer . ..

!b

STEAK UMM • fROZE N

Beef Sandwich Steak .

.14 o.·

Beef or Pork Patties .

Whole Fryers

10

. 1 1n Pkg

$ 9
11
-

....2 ~k~~ 89
$ 29

8~~,~~~tr'~tries

WELCH'S • GRAPE

59¢

USD A INSP

PKG$2~

fREEZER O'JEEN • fRO Z CHICKENCRODUEnESor .

:

• BONUS BUY •

Crouch-Warner

89¢

US DA INSP • FRESH WHOLE

ALl CHO~E 'ARTS

¢_

Hood-Powell

2

THOROFARE DELUXE BEEF "U.S.O.A. CHOICE" FAMILY PAK

Jelly or
Jam

BONELESS

Sirloin Tip
Steak .

32·oz. Jar

•

•

I

SMAll(~ ~ti l
'2.34

lb
•

•

I

I

•

•

•

GALUPOLJS - Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Snyde r, Gallipolis, have announced the engagement and approac hing marria ge of their
daughter, Tammy Sue, to David Lee
Payne, son of Mr. and Mrs. William
F . Payne, Gallipolis.
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of Gallia Academ y H1gh School , and
is employed at The Ohio Valley
Bank.
Her fi ance is a 1979 graduate of
Buckeye Hills Car eer Center, and is
employed at Bob Eva"-' Steak
House.
The open chu rc h wedding will take
place at 7:30 p.m. on October 31 a t
Grace Uniled Methodist Church,
Gallipolis , with the Rev. James
Frazi er officiating. A reception will
follow m the dining hall.

I~

•

Boneless Whole Sirloin T1p . Cut Free'

lb. '1 gg

FRENCH S 55 lo 6 01 PKGS

SWA N

Boz

Hydrogen Peroxide ..

. . Sol

JUMBO ROLL

Thoro1are Towels
\ VAPIEl il S5 2 W:

I

Soup Starter

25¢
58¢

$11J

e: C•r

LiGHT BROWN ORCONIICIIJNfRY

Crouch, Warner
POMEROY - Sheila Gay Crouch
of Pomeroy and Michael Clinton
Warner of Minersville are announcing their engagement and ap·
proaching marriage .
The open church wedding will be
an event of Oct. 10 at the Racine Fir·
st Baptist Church with the Rev . Don
Walker performing the ceremony at
7:30 p.m. following a half-hour of
nuptial music .
The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate
of Southern High School and is employed as a secretary at the Meigs
County Board of Education. Her
fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Warner , Minersviller, graduated
from Southern High School in 1978
and attended Rio Grande College
pursuing an associate degree in
business administration . He os em·
played with Dale C. Warner Insurance, Pomeroy .

US. Sugar

. . 2 IO POll BJ'J

Specialty Potatoes .

99¢

BURDE NS

Chocolate Flavored Chips

12 " Pkg

Hefty Lawn Bags . .
Robin Hood Flour .

98¢

Clorox Pre-Wash.

Kelloggs Pop Tarts
16 01 Bo1

MINUTE MAID • FROZEN CONC.

Come And Get It Dog Food .

Orange Juice

THOROFARE • PURE 48 01 CAN

' 6-oz.

Spic &amp;Span .
16 Ji JAR

Marzetti Slaw Dressing .
CASC ADE • AUTOMAT IC

D1sh Detergent
BU ~ BL E

BEE • CHUNK L'Grl l

Tuna "o" w"".
Cl

\ 5 01

J
Pk~ $238
. . l ie~~~ $1 ~
lb 2 01

P~G

Bisquick Baking Mix .
Baking Soda .. .
Oodles of Noodles .

Tomato
Sauce . ...

15·0Z.

• Can

35~

Beef Cube Steaks . . . Fam•ly Pak 1n

76¢
Kraft Marshmallows _
$238
Neste aInstant Light Tea Mix .
-

THOROFARE FROZ. CRINKLE CUT

12 01 JAR

2 '0 CA N

French
Fries ..... .

. _$279

Nestle's Quick ...

Sausage Reg or Hoi

2·1b.

Bag

88

.

.

·¢

01 .

SUPERIOR'S FRESH PORK

Pork Loin Roast

,b

1$2 29
-

C;~;R~(cs~; Loin Pork Chops. $2~
lb

CAN

Select Oysters For. Frying .

.

Frosted Whiting Fillets .. ..

10

$31 9

BUDOIG S • WA FOR oLICEO

Beef, Ham, or Turkey .

-

$1

? 'c:
Pkg

49¢

TRY OUR

BELL RINGER
SERVICE

I!)

IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT:
OUR MEAT SPECIALISTS WILL PROCESS ANY
SPECIAL CUTS OF MEAT YOU PREFER ,JUST
RING THE BUZZ ER FO R PROMPT COURTEOUS
SERVICE

-Bacon ......... lb.

Byler-Pontius

lb$1

0

$129

_'_:~Y~EO•SWD

~
$ 99

Lo1r.
Port:on

Center Cut Rib Pork Chops ..

St~~Adard Oysters For Stewing $2 ~
T2

Spare Ribs . ..

SUPERIORS fRES H PORK

• FRESH ASH AND SEAFOOD •

-

COUNTRY STYLE

Rib Pork Chops for Stuffing . .Jb

Smaller Packages ....... lb. '1 .28

1
$229

SUPERIOR'S FRESH PORK

SUPERIOR S FRESH PORK • CENT ERCUT

Patty Mix ...... .

-

,... ..... ;'JIMMY DEAN

• BONUS BUY •

99¢

2-lb$
or More

Beef

lb S2. 33

• Smalle1 Packages

12 oz Pkg

$169

"GROUND FRESH DAILY"

$ 59

THOROFAREDEL iXEBEEF ' USOA CHOICE

. 32 01 Ja!

l6 n1
. Bag

-

'short Ribs Of Beef . . ... . . '"

THOROFARE

ORIENTAL. CH i C K [ ~ 01 BE EF

1n

TH0R0f ARE DELUXE BEEF "US 0 A CHOICE"

12 01 Pkg

ARM &amp; HA MM ER

Sliced Bologna .

!b 12.33

• Smaller Packages

FROZEN EGG. ONION or PLAIN

Jf T PUffE D

THOROFARE

-Boneles·s Beef Stew . . . 't~~y

:b

PESCHKE • REG . THICK . OR GARLIC

lHOROFOARE DELUXE BEEf · US O.A CHOICE .

6
8
Old El Paso Taco Sauce . . . . .
¢
5
7
¢
Lenders Bagels . . . . . . .
F7os;~~s Whipped Topping . . . . 08¢
Genuine Dills .
78¢

lb

Ring Liver Pudding .

-

lb

HOT 01 MILO 801 . BOT

Can

1

•

SUP£RIOR BRAND

. _THOROFARE DELUXE BEEF "U.S.O.A. CHOICE' ENGLISH CUT OR

$1 ~

Vegetable Shortening .

Large Bologna .

'$1 99
·Round Bone Chuck Roast . . .
$1 99

$6~

fRISKIES 20 lb BAG

ALL \ARIETIE S IQ) Ji 10 II Oi 801

·-chuck
.
· Roast . . . . . . . . . lb.

_ $1~

16 02 BOTILE

SUPERIOR BRAND • REDSKI N

$ 89

.BLADE CUT

7·

Lysol Spray Disinfectant .

Smoked Polish Sausage .

- THOROFARE DELUXE BEEF "U.S.O.A. CHOICE"

$1
6
~ ~.~~
,_

REGULAR OR SCENT II

98¢

I 10 BAG

~~.o~$11J

Lysol Tub &amp; Tile Cleaner

$2~

10 c\ PKG

,$1 ~
$1 ~

SUPERIOR BRAND

Hood
MASON - Carl Hood, Mason, is
announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of his daughter,
Carla Ann, to William Mark Powell,
son of Nancy Powell, South Daytona
Beach, Fla ., and Bill Powell , Hart·
,ford, W. Va . The bride-elect is the
;daughter of the late Shirley Henry
Hood.
: The open church wedding will take
I
place on Saturday, Oct .24, at 1:30
1
'p.m. at the St. Paul Lutheran Churlchin New Haven.
Hood is a 1981 graduate of
:Wahama and is employed at K mart .
IPowell, a 1979 graduate of Wahama
High School , is serving in the U. S.
Air Force, stationed at Kirkland Air
,Force Base in New Mexico.

I

Peters-Stanley

Generies
CALIFORNIA DELICIOUS

PENNYFARE OFFERS YOU fHE ~ L. TER ·
NAT:VE WAY TO SAVE . NO FANCY
PACKAGING , NO FANCY LABELS JJST
HONEST-TO-GOODNESS SAVINGS OVER
TOP QUALITY COMPARISON BRANDS AT
PENNYFARE WE WANT YOU TO SA.VE
MONEY EVERYTIME

Hone,dew
'~r .,./' } Melons
ea.
,

1
I

Byler

BUY ONE I 00 FOOT ROLL OF

GLAD WRAP

JACKSON - Mr. and Mrs. Dan J .
Byler of Route 4, Jackson, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Betty, to Roderick Pontius, son of Mr. Jon Pontius of
Gallipolis and Phyllis Pontius of Rio
Grande.
. Tyler is a 1980 graduate of Jackson
High School, and Is employed at 1\yLine Mfg., of Jackson. Pontius is a
1980 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and is employed at Bob
Evans Inc., in Rio Grande.
No deflnlte date has been set for

I
I
I
I
I
I

\

w?&amp;!90
«wzg

,
i\T P[ ~~VFAR[ WITH

HUS COO~

LiMIT ()N[ WIONf fREE ~ALDSUN
S[PT 10 T~U SAT . SEPT16. 198 I

'I

PAM VEGETABLE SPRAY
1

free

AT 2.29 AND
GET ONE.. '

•

I

1Eifu

ret'. ~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

BUY 8 01 CAN OF:

w

A! f'[ M~HARE WITH HtS COUPOfl
l ~nONlWIONHRH VAIOSlJ\1
)( 1 ?O THRUSA! , SlPT16 1981 ·

'
'

SWEET RELISH

\
'

free

.. ......

~··t

,
-~.....-~.,..,
'...·:·
\ l: .....
'
' .
.
· / 5-lb. BA.G
·~~

:' :IRed'.Potat{)es
'

· • CRISP GREEN . '

~ ~- . Cucumbers .

.st~

.4 $·1
lor

Head
•

''SALAD FAVORITE"

Romaine Lettuce . ....
· Simon Candy Drops . . . . .

$J!f

69¢
.3lor$1
• lb.

VI

,

.,_

,.

·il

,.

'

'
-:-.

•

3-lb.

Bag

79t

FRESH

Green Onions,

. . .

4-lb. BAG

Jolly Time Popcorn .
•

the wedding.
(

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U.S. N0.1 YELLOW

SNOW WHITE • CALfDRNIA

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$1
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.$·1~-

Peters
CUFTON - Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Peters of Clifton, W. Va. are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Lisa, to Charles Stanley,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Stanley, Mason .
Both are graduates of Waharna
High School, and the groom-elect
·also graduated from the HOCking
Technical College. The open church
wedding ceremony will be held at
the Mason Methodist Church
Sept. 28 at 7 p.m .
A reception will be held in the
church social room.

on

�•
Page--B-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sept. 20, 1981

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

1981

Weddings_ _ __ Anniversaries___________
McGhee weds Rinehart Golden year reached

"

.,

'.

,.

all the bells
KATIE ..
ring out this morning.
celebrate aU of the years that we
shared.
times, and bad tbmes, the
jtau1gh1:er .and sorrow,
hard work, the joy and the tears
we've shared.

hard to believe that time goes so
'

''

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Stover Will cel ebrate their
50th wedding anniversary September27.
They were marri ed a t Pt.
Pleasant. W. Va .. September 30,
1931 , by Rev. John Bedrtow
They a re the parents of six
children , .J ames, George, C11arles,
and Ralph, Ga llipoliS. Ba rba ra

,.,.: f''\
I .

.. _

Mr. and Mrs. Rinehart
GALLIPOLIS- Vicki L. McGhee
and Steven E . Rmehart were united
in ma rriage on Ma y 23 at Grace

United Methodist Church, Gallipolis.
The double-ring ceremony was
performed by Rev. James Fraz1er at
~ ::!0 p.m The bride" the daughter
uf Mr. and Mrs. Myron I Bud I
:vlc-G hee of Ga llipolis. The briM·
~room

i s the

~ on

of Mr. and Mrs.

En rt Ri nehart of Ostrander, Ohio.
Ad or ni ng the a lta r

were two

ca ndelabra s
decorated with blue bows. Two large
ba skets were placed on the altar

SL'Vt' n· branch

uf Gallipolis, and Rhonda rWard)
Wmdholtz, Darcy !Lingo) Maniaci,
Jane Gentil, and Cindy Rider , all of
Columbus. The bridesmaids wore
light blue formal gowns with a sheer
floral overlay featuring an offshoulder . effect. They carried
bouquets of white roses, blue car·
nations, and baby's breath with blue
and white ribbon
The groom wore a silver grey
tuxedo with a while ruffled shirt and

fallwr.t hc bnde wore a formal gown
uf orgcmza with a wedding band
neckline . The bodice wa s an F.nglis h

long sheer chiffon sleeves . Her cor-

nt·t yoke with veni se lace trim . The
full bi;:;hop sleeves are sheer and are
appliqued w1th venise lace. The A·
li ne ski rt has a tiered pleated floren ·
ee trirmned in shiffli lace. A chapel
train and matching fmgert1p veil
n nnpl eted the silhouette. The
bnde 's bouquet was an all white
cascade of roses. mini carnation s,
pom pum mllffis, baby' s breath and

sage was blue tipped ruses, carnations and baby's breath.

ikiiJy's breath . The family pews
were marked with ribbon and
fl owers. All the fl owers were
i:l rr'an ged by Jurrie Reynolds.

0 ;1vid Ru binson was soloist and

Li S&lt;J Allen was 1anist. SelectiOns mdudcd " We've Onl y Just
Begun. " " Wedding Song," and the
trad1 ti ona! '· Wedding March."
~1i ss

The

ce re mon y

includ ed

th e

lighting of candles by parents of the
bnd e and groom, followed by Robin;-;nn si n~in g ''Sunrise, Sunset. ''

Gi ven in marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by her

r ibbon .

Hrirtesma!ds were Beth 1McGhee 1
Nul l. Cindy r Roush r Graham , both

Registering

guests

was

groom , Waldorf, Md ., wore a dress
similar to the maid of honor. Both

young ladies wore lavender hair ribbons.
Mike Robinson, cousin of the
groom, was best man and ushers
were Mike Hartsoe, North Carolina,
Randy Fowler and junior usher,
Greg Robinson, the groom's brother.
The bride's mother wore a dark
ash blue floor-length gown with attached wasit-length cape.
The groom's mother

wore a

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Nelson celebrated their 7:lrd wedding anniversary August 27.
Mr. Nelson is 90and Mrs. Nelson is

95 years old.

,
They make their home with their · ,

sun , Rev. Lucian Nelson, uf RL 2, ~

Vinton .

Wedding announcement·
POMEROY - The open church
wedding of Tamara Kay Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Davis, 43960 Yost Road, Minersville,
and Steven Clark Bachner, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bachner, Uncoln
l&gt;t., Middleport, will be an event of
Oct.IO at 6:30p.m. ·
Their wedding will take place a I
the Forest Run United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Stanley
Merrifield officiating at the
ceremony. Music by Jane Wise ,
organist, and Denver Rice , violinist,
will begin at6 p.m.
Tina Davis will serve as maid of
honor for her sister, and the bridesmaids will be Brenda Ash , Miners-

Evans' 28th year

ville; Pam Spencer, Syracuse; ano
Ann Diddle, Pomeroy. The flower
girls will be Milly Stultz, Parkersburg, W. Va., and Teresa Simpson,
Pomeroy.
Dick Owen, Pomeroy, will serve
as best man for t.he groom-eleet, and .
the ushers will be Mark Eaton,
Columbus; Scott Reuter, Middleport; Mick Davenport, Middleport, and Kevin Betzing,
Pomeroy.
Guests will be registered by Usa
Reynolds, Mason, and Tracey Odell,
Pomeroy.
A reception in the social rooms oi
the church will be held immediately
following the ceremony.

Little Kyger has speaker

i

•

.'

Mr. and Mrs. Evans
GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. Denm s, Henry Clagg, Alan Blain,
Billy Gene Evans were recently Jay Massie, Jake Chevalier, Mr. and
honored on their 28th wedding an- Mrs. Bill Kuhn, Mrs. Clara Craft,
niversary with dinner at Bob Evans Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stewart, Mr. and
Steak House and on returning home, Mrs. Clayton Clagg1 Mr. and Mrs.
a surprise reception was hosted by James W. Evans, Mike Evans,
their children, Barbara Ann Lewis Charles Baker , Jason Butler, Mr.
and Kathy Jean Evans. ,
and Mrs. Walt Hawk, Mr. and Mrs.
They were married Aug. I, 1953 at Bill Mathley, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
the First Church of the Nazarene by Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ray, Mr.
Rev . Vernon Shafer.
and·Mrs. Glenn Ward, Mr. and Mrs.
Helping with the afternoon were Urban Baldwin, James Thompson,
Mrs. Basil Evans, Mrs. Kevin Den· Mr. and Mrs. Don Clagg, Mr. and
nis, and Mrs. Urban Baldwin.
Mrs. Basil Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
Those in attendance were Mr. and Buss Cror1'ilish, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Mrs. Kevin Dennis and Amber, Wen· Cromlish, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
dy and Batina, Mr . and Mrs. Wilbur Mitchell and children.

Rev. Daphne Resch, pastor of Lit· vice-chairperson of the Holzer
tie Kyger Congregational Church, Medical Center Volunteer
will be guest speaker at St. Peter's Chaplain's Association. She is
Episcopal Church, &gt;41 Second Ave., presently a member of the National
Gallipolis, when the Episcopal Chur- Association of the Congreational
chwomen (ECW) hold their first fall Christian Church.
meeting, Monday. Her topic will be
All ECW members of St. Peter's
"The Biblical Basis for Women in are urged to attend this meeting, as
Ministry."
final plans for the corning ECW
ECW President Mrs. Charles Bazaar will be made at this time.
I Bobbie) Holzer will ch~ir the noon
potluck luncheon- business meeting. , - - -- - - - -- - - She asks that members bring their
own table service.
Resch was born on the Navy Base
at Yokosuka, Japan, was graduated
from Bay Village Ohio High chool
and in 1975 from Bowling Green
State University with honors and a
4.0 average in studies. At BGSU she
sang with two choral groups, at·
tended and worked with Plain
Congregational Church and, through
an Int e r-Varsity Christian
Fellowship, worked as a swruner
missionary in Costa Rica. Her
YOUR
majors at the university were in
CHOfCE
education uf the hearing bmpaired
and elementary education. She IS a
graduate of Princeton Theological
Seminary and was ordained June
1978 at Plain Congregational Church
in Bowling Green. ·
Her local activities have been
largely pastoral and inrlude vice
424 Second Ave.
president of the Gallia Ministerial
Gallipolis
Association, treasurer and later

similar gown of light blue with attached cape. Both ladies each wore a
red rose corsage.
A reception was held following the
ceremony at the VFW Post 1800 at
Indian Head.
The bride's table featured a
mauve colored floral bouquet centerpiece-- and the decoration used on
the wedding cake was the one used
on her parents' wedding cake.
The bride is a graduate of Lackey,
Indian Head, Md., Charles County
Community, graduates from College
January 1982. General studies AA
and Majoring in Computer &amp;ience.
She is employed by the Department
of Navy, Crystal City, Va. The
groom is a graduate of Thomas
POMEROY--American Legion
Stone and is employed by M &amp; M Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
Welding and Fabrications.
Pomeroy, both junior and senior
Out of town guests attending the members, will meet Tuesday at 7
wedding Included Cindy's grand- p.m. at the American Legion haiL
mother, Mrs. Clara Williams, Clif- The program will be presented by
ton, and Mrs. Virginia Hartsoe, the Meigs High School choral group
grandmother of the groom.
· of Ed Harkless.

e

'

we stand on the brink of
of our yesterdays gone by the

in hand we walk into the

Congratulations.

Murry awarded CDA renewal
.
GAUlPOLIS - Ullie Murray ,
center coordinator for the GalliaMeigs Head Start Program, was
awarded a renewal of her Child
Development Associate Credential
in recognition of work with preschool children in a group setting.
The credential renewal was awarded by the CDA Credentialing Commission, which is working to improve the quality of care for
youngsters in child care centers.
Every candidate for the CDA
Credential is assessed by a team of
lour persons, including three from
the local community. The team
members observe the candidate
working with children and evaluate
the caregiver's competence in six
areas. These range from
establishing and maintaining a safe
and healthy learning environment to
advancing the child's physical and
intellectual growth,

HEALTH~TEX

$298 YD.

SEWING CENTER

formation may be obtained by
calling 273-56!i7 or 372-4744 .

"On The T" Middelport

Feature of the
Week

H

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o~··'" ' ~

~

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·~c

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~·

~-,

~'~" tl'l"l

oo·~ "'•9•

BEEF
T-BONE
STEAK

Juice

$129

00

it's not

Handlome to hotel- - Proudtaseml

PRODUCE

POTATOES
20-LB.
BAG

$ 99

TAVERN
WHOLE HAM
BEEF PORTERHOUSE

STEAK

Riverby
·Calendar

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ROUND BEEF

ge om etn cs.
A circular c lu ste r of da zztmg di amond s 1n the

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'

$} 09

2-LB.

BOX

GOLDEN GRIDDLE
ROYAL CREST

BUnERMILK

9·e

PANCAKE SYRUP
24

oz.

$}39

BOTILE

VALLEY BELL

COTTAGE CHEESE
'

24 oz.
CTN.

•

39

ALL PURPOSE OR SELF RISING

FLOUR

CARNATION

5-LB.

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BAG

200Z.
STER

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LAWN CLEAN UP

GLAD BAGS
BOX
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c

JUMBO
ROLL

are not.to be bll.rled, neither Is he that "believeth" to be saved I

'

For~

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GAUON
Free Bible Correspondence cource Write ...

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of

HILLANDALE

~IW41

Bulaville Road •. P.O. !lOx 308
GAI.Lt~LIS. OHIO 45631

I

S11nd1y eveninl"'
Worship 6:00

Wedntlday
Evenlnt
1:00

---- ...

FRUTH PHARMACY
..

.
Across from the Holzer Medical Center
Gallipolis, Ohio'

•

"dies," you will bury the "seriously ill." We would think such reason·
ing is absurd; yet, many reason the same way In regard to "He that
believeth and is baptized shall b" saved.'' Just as the "seriously ill" .
'

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·1i

Rldlo
' 'M•su'"from
the Blbtt' ' ·
Dlll'f•WJEH
li :SSAM

LB.

COMPLETE
PANCAKE MIX

"seriously ill" and must precede "shall be buried.'' It you drop

The news in crafts Is old: the old·lashioned "countr( look '
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colleclron ol acrylic Coootry Colors in 28 authentic folk-art
shades, now you can create !hat warm and charming tradi·
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pamtmg, canvas, miniatures, much, much more.
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New from Ac~nl is lhe convenient unbrea~able 1-oz . jar,
but wrth old· fasHioned Accent quality: creamy formula for
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Coootry Colors fresher longer.
· Slop In now to star! a "countr( heirloom with Country
Colors. Asuperior product from our IUlnois Bronze Accenlllne.

'129

HUNGRY JACK

mag n1f1 Cent co unt er pO int o t

a coordinating conjunction, connecting words of equal value, making
"baptized" as important as ''believeth;" therefore, If baptism conies
after salvation, so does "believeth'' precedes salvation. To teach
otherwise is not only to pervert the scriptures, but to go against ruleS
of grammer. If I were to say, "he that is seriously ill and
dies shall be buried" , would you understand me to mean that we
· will bury the seriously ill who dies? "Dies" is as important as

49~lB.

FRESH LEAN

the. great square
diamond cluster

dience! The believer will be obedient to the command of baptism!
(2)- "Believing does not include baptism:" The main verb in
Mark 16 : 16 is "shall be saved." "Believeth" end "is baptized" are
aorist tGreek ~erbs indicating past time) participles (verb used as an
adjective I and are antecedents !happening before, preceding) ;
therefore, "believeth" and "Is baptized" are adjective clauses modi ·
tying "he", the sublect of the main clause and describe the actions of
the one (he) that goes before the main verb "shall be saved.''" And" is

·3~~

USDA CHOICE

MIXED
FRYER PARTS

...

pent; in Matthew 10 :32. we are told to confess; and I Peter 3:21 in ·
forms us that baptism now saves us. Am I to understand that because
"believe" Is not mentioned in these passages of scriptures, "believing" is from the Greek word "apeitheo" and means "to refuse to be
persuaded, to ret use to believe, to be disobedient." In the RSV it reads,
"he who does not obey the son shall not see lite." If a person "believes
not," he obeys not. Where there Is disobedieoce, there is unbelief. The
~~unbelief" in Moses led him to take "one step beyond" God' s com ·
mand and it kept him out of the land of promise. "Unbelief" in the
command of God In regard to baptism influences teac~ers to remove
baptism as an essential part of the plan of salvation, and it will keep
many out of heaven. Where there Is "believing," there is also obe-

$}6~9

GOLD KIST

BAPTISM PRECEDES SALVATION

in Stock!

$29~

SUPERIOR BONELESS

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE
ALL PURPOSE

Murry

KNITS

Childbirth Preparation Classes will -------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
begin Monday, September 28. The r
class is for couples whose expected
date of delivery is prior to Novem·
ber22.
Class participants will learn
breathing and relaxation techniques
for first stage labor, effective expulsion technique for second stage
labor, physical and emotional aspecSUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
ts of the birth process and body85
Vine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-9593
conditioning exercises to promote
"We Reserve the
to Urn~ 011J1r1titv''
comfort during pregnancy and post'""''"-dr
C ,.,,., "'P'·''!.,l'1"'
''"'" "m"'~"" """' ·" '• ~- , "':a"~
partum.
.,. ,,.,,. ·'"" • ' ...,, ,J&lt;J' ,, ···'""' '" '" "e",
~·&lt;X'~·· c~' M ,.,,. .1,, "•· '"' ·r~'' ' ~· · ••
The lee for the series is $65. To
.••
-,., ""'
COI"'C' \•1 :&gt;'
prto-register for the classes, contact
o'
•
,,, ..,
Geo•9•ac !&gt;
Pamela Collier, ASPO-Certified
t ••e
·oo•.
Childbirth Educator, 1 Ransom
•"C 'Me
USDA CHOICE
Road, Athens, OH 45701, or call 5935049.

•

,•.t...

RACINE-Southern High School
will have a homecoming parade Oct.
9 at 2 p.m. Those planning to enter
the parade are asked to contact
Tonya Salser, parade marshall, 9¥.12845, or Sherry Beegle, 843-2753,
student council president.

NEW SHIPMENT

ATHENS - A series of Lamaze

?QUare
to be
square

{j.'

Department of Education .
Raymond Adams from Gallipolis
City Schools participated in this
Southeastern Conference.

rtiiiiiiiiiij~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i :

sv. oz.

Exhibit for the month ol Sepltem,ber - Victorian Era Antiques
Ohio Glass. All items on loan
13 area residents; chaired by
IPe1111V Evans. Includes fufniture,
quilts, dishes, flatware,
Uevreb~ and other items, aS well as

Announcements

coopera ti ve office education
teachers in the southeast region was
held at the Hilton Inn , Columbus.
The conference was sponsored by
the business and office education

CANDY'S CLASSIC
COLLECTIONS

COUNTRY COLORST.M

"'
Rev. Rummel

Lamaze classes

senior citizens. Sei:ison ticket in-

s12goo

Acrylic

'j)!~·~

sey Orchestra, Morrow insists the
band retain the authentic sound and
style of the late Dorsey and still ha ve
the elasticity to meet almost every
musical situation. His repertoire
embraces not only the classicals of
the original Dorsey Orchestra but
the spectrum of popular music from
Dixieland, rhythm and blues, intricate ballads to progressive jazz or
current rock tunes. His library also
has a nostalgic representation of
those familiar tunes of the 40s so
irreplaceable to the many who loved
and remember the Big Bands.
Tickets will be on sale at the door ;
$4 for adults, $3 for students and

An 1mpress •ve look. av t~ l l ­
Since its beginning in 1976, hours of the training and to spend at
ab le '"a range o f SIZ es, at
Crisisline has relied on well-trained least 44 hours of volunteer time, af·
lr uly affo rda ble pr1ces .
volunteers to supplement its starr. ter which Crisisline awards a cerThe 2+h9ur a day telephone coun- tificate of completion for the
program.
seling service needs new volunteers,
Call Crisisline in Meigs County at
according to Laraine Newsome,
992-5554, in Gallia County at 446-f&gt;S54
Crisisline's coordinator.
A volunteer training program will and in jackson County at ~ for
MIDDLEPORT
begin on October 5 and be held Mon- more infonnation.
days and Wednesdays for six weeks. . - - - - - - - - - -- _.1.------------j
Crisisline and Community Mental
Health Center professional staff will
A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE..•
conduct the training which will be
held at the Gallia Corrununity Mental Health Center. Residents of
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs Counties
may participate.
By William B. Kughn
"Men and women from aU walks
of life who are interested in par·
we are going to consider two more arguments that are used in supporting the theory of "faith only :"
ticipating in a worthwhile, in( 1)-"One who believes in Christ is saved when he believes:" This
teresting volunteer program are
assumption is based on the statement made in John 3: 36 where bapurged to call," said-Newsome. She
tism is not mentioned, " He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting
life : and he that believeth not the Son shall not s~ life; but the wrath
said that volunteers are asked to
of
God abldeth in him." If we take this stand, what happens to
make a commitment to attend the 36
"believe" when it is not mentioned? In Luke 13 :3, we are told tore·

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

••

AMEASURE OF IMPORTANCE
Sorrre day when you're feeling importsnt,
Someday when your ego's in bloom,
Some day when you're feeling
You're the most bmportant man in
the room;
Take a bucket and fill it with water
Stick your hand in it up to your wrist.
Pull it out and the hole that remains
Is a measure of how much you'll be
missed.
You may splash all you wish when
you enter,
Stir the water around galore,
But you'll find when you finally
leave it,
It's exactly the same as before.
So, as you follow your daily agenda,
Always do the best that you can
Be proud of yourself, but remember
There is no indispensable man.
Author unknown. I believe the
poem has a great lesson for us all.

JACKSON - The Tommy Dorsey
Orchestra will open the 1981-82
season for the Jackson Arts Council
(JAC). The perfonnance will be at 8
p.m. Oct. 5 in the Ripley High School
Auditoriwn.
Buddy Morrow, conductor of the
Tommy Dorsey Orchestra and trombone player, first came to the public
eye when he was featured with
leading orchestras such as Tommy
Dorsey, Paul Whiteman, Artie Shaw
and Jimmy Dorsey, and as staff
musician with many of the major
radio and television shows.
As conductor of the Tommy Dor·

a square-s ha ped se tt ing.

'
J

together with someone

Mr. and Mrs. Olarlie Jon~s who
reside on SR 325, onto-half mile east
of Danville, are inviting the public to
view their new earth sheltered home
on Saturday, Sept. 26, between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
The couple lost their home by fire
December 1979, and have been in the
process of building their earth
sheltered home since then .
They extend their sincere thanks
to each and everyone who helped
and supported them in their time of
trouble.

CRISISLINE volunteers needed

'9950

Now

ey band will perfo"'"'"' ~~~~~;~~~e~~}~o~c~~~~f.~2~~ :~~0~~!

Stnk1ngly di SI1n Ct1ve

LADIES'
CLUSTERS

Rummel
ordained
RODNEY - Rev. Marcia Rwnmel was ordained a deacon of lhe
United Methodist Church at the
churches ' West Ohio Annua l Conference held at Lakeside, Ohio.
Graduated in May with a Master
of Divinity Degree from Asbury
Theological Seminary, Wibmore ,
Kentucky, Miss Rummel is the
pastor of the Rodney United
Methodist Church and the Bethesda
United Methodist Church.
Since coming to Galli a County,
Miss Rwrunel has been active in the
Gallia
County
Ministerial
Association and the Holzer Medical
Center Volunteer Chaplaincy
Program.

years seem but a moment in

p.rn

Lisa

Roush of GallipOlis. Cindy Mason,
Gallipolis, passed out rice bags.
Following the ceremony, a recepti on honoring the couple was held at
the Gallipolis Shrine Club . Hostesses
at the reception were Holly Lmgo,
Gallipolis, and Becky Canter, Oak
Hill.
The couple now reside m Cin·
cinnati .

Williams and Robinson
exchange wedding vows
CUFTON - Miss Cynthia Ann
Williams of Indian Head, Md., and
Charles Randolph Robinson of Brandywine , Md., were united in
marriage on June 20, at the Indian
Head Baptist Church, Indian Head,
Md ., by Commander Arthur
Seeland, Chaplain, U. S. Navy. She
is the daughter of Thomas Williams ,
formerly of Clifton, and Mrs.
Thomas (Helen) Williams of Indian
Head, Md .
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles G. Robinson of
Waldorf, Md.
Vows were exchanged at the Baptist Church at Indian Head. Summer
flowers and two seven·branch
lighted candelabras were the
decorations used. Linda Butler,
organist, provided wedding music
and soloists, Barbara Martin sang
the "Wedding Song" and Jeff
Williams, the bride's brother, sang
".The Lord's Prayer."
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore a white lace gown
With pleated insert and scoop
neckline, fingertip veil. Her bridal
bouquet was a mixture of miniature
daisies, lavender carnations and
Iisby's breath. For something
borrowed, she wore her mother's
gOld cross necklace.
: Barbara Martin of Elk Garden, W.
V.a., maid of honor, was attired in a
~vender dres with spaghetti straps
and sleeveless knee-length vest.
, Terri Robinson, sister of the

La nghorne of Gallipolis and Frances
Medlin uf Winston Salem, N. C.
'•'he children wish to honor their
parents by holding an open house on
September 27 at the home of son
Charles at 1158 Second Avenue.
All fri ends a nd relati ves are invited to ca ll dunng the hours of 1 to 5

boutonniere of white roses . The
groomsmen and fathers wore silver

grey tuxedos with blue ruffled shu1.s
and blue boutonmeres. Groomsmen
were Steve McGhee, Gallipolis, Den·
nis Solon, Shreve, Ohio, and Ken
Turtletaub, Mike Davis, Randy
Palmer and Ted Dyrdek , a ll of
\ olumbus.
Ryan Nul l, nephew of the bride,
was ringbearer. Ryan wore a light
blue tuxedo, white ruffled shirt, and
hlue boutonniere. He camed a white
S&lt;Jtin pillow edged in lace , made by
Mrs Cindy Graham.
For her daughter's wedding Mrs.
McGhee wore a floor-length gown of
light blue chiffon with matching
cape and a wrist corsage of blue tipped roses and carnations . Mrs.
Rinehart wore a floor-length gown of
turquoise blue with pleated sk1rt and

with mum:-; , roses, carnations, and

''

Mr. and Mrs. Nelson

Mr. and Mrs. Stover

away like a swift flying

Time s-Sentine i- Pa

71

Katie 's Korner

Nelsons celebrate 73rd

The Sun

Ohicr-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

GRADE A
EX-LARGE

EGGS
DOZEN
CARTON

PlASTIC

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•
Page-B -10- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY

GALLIPOLIS - The revival
continues at Calvary Pentecostal
Church, Clay Chapel Rd . Call
Pastor David White at 446-7649
for transportation. Jt begins at
7:30 p.m. w1th evangelist Betty
Baker, of Kingsport, Tennessee,
and Joyful Sounds. It will be held
Sunday and Tuesday through
Sunday night.
GALLIPOUS - Relatives and
friends of the late Edward and
Eva Johnson and Perry and Emma Lambert are invited to a
reuniOn September 20 at Clay
Schol on Route 7 from noon to 5
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
Grande
Squares, square dance at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church, S-11
p.m. Dayton Richerson. Huntmgton, caller .
GALLIPOUS - Friends of the
Library will hold a book sale at
the library, located on Second
Ave., Sunday from I to 5 p.m.
GALLIPOUS - An icc cream
social will be held at the French
City Bapt1st Church Sunday, on.,.
fourth mile north on Rt. 160 of
Holzer Medical Center. All are
welcome.
LECTA - Rev . Kenneth Sa nders will preach at Okcy Chapel
in Lccta Sunday at 7 p.m.
CE NTERPO INT
Centerpoint Freewill Ba ptist Church
wi ll hold its annua l homecoming
at 10 a.m . Sunday, Sept. 20. The
Rev. Allie Skaggs will deli ver the
message, and

tllere

will

Remember

be

specia l singing by the Spritual
Air singers. Pastor Danny Boggs
mvites all to attend .
GALLI POLIS - The fou rth annual McCarley reunion will be
held at the Ga lha County Fa irgrounds Sunday . Dinner will be
at !2:30p.m.
Rev . Ted
NORTHUP Wootep,

now

serv ing

h i~

detuta.hpn to Alllit ralla with
Evangehoti c MISsion, Inc, will
be guest spea ker Sunday at Northup Church at 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga ll ia
County Histori ca l Society will
meet Sunday al St. Peter's
Episcopal Ch urch and will hear
Mr. James Sa nds. Sa nds presents
arti cle.s of historica l

in tcr~.s t

in

The Gallipolis Dally Tribune
weekly and h1s progra m
pro mises to be most interes ting.

The ti me of the meeting has bee n
changed to 2:30 p. m., g1ving the
exec utive

committee ,

Pomeroy-Middlep ort- Ga ll i polis, Ohio-Point Pl easant,

which

meets at I p.m., a little more time
to conduct the business of the
society. The public is invited.
RODNEY - Rodney United
Methodist Church will hold
Homecoming Sunday, Sept. 20.
There will be a dedication and
open house.
RIO GRANDE - The Fairview-Spring Valley annual picnic
al Bob Evans Shelter House, 12
noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. Bring two
covered dishes and own table service . Meat, rolls and drinks will
be provided.
POMEROY - The Eighth
District Conference will be held
at Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, Sunday, beginnmg at 10 a.m. Dinner will be served at II: 30 a.m. All members
are invited to attend.
ALFRED - Homecoming Sunday at Alfred United Methodist
Church. Basket dinner at noon
and afternoon program at 2 p.m.
Spec1al sing ing by the
Angelaires. Public invited.
POMEROY - There will be a
wors hi p se r vice at Grace
Episcopal Church, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, at 12:30 p.m. Sunday .
This is the only service to be conducted on Sunday.
RACINE - !50th anniversry
observance of Racine Wesleyan
Ch urch, 10 a. m. Sunday School;
worship I I a.m.; potluck dinner,
12 :30 p.m. ; afternoon program, 2
p.m. with Rev. Wesley Clark
speaking. Observance open to
public.
COOLV ILL E
Annu a l
Homecoming of Vanderhoof Baptist Church, Route 2, Coolville,
Road 65, Sunday . Morning worship , 9:45 a. m. with Sunday
S&lt;'hool following. Basket dinner
at noon. Afternoon service, 1: 30
p.m. with special singmg and
music by Harvest Trio, Reedsvill e. Public invited.

MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE - The Past
Ma trons Club, OES, HarrisonVIlle, will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Bernice Hoffman. Avgnr ll George will serve
as co-hos lt~~s.

PO ME ROY-MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club speci al session, noon
Monday a t Meigs Inn.
FALL MEETING of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association
will be held at 7:30p.m. Monday

at Trinity Church. The program
will be presented by the Mid·
dleport Amateur Gardeners and
the Rutland Garden Club members will serve as hosts.
CHESTER P'I'O Monday at
7:30 p.m. at elementary school.
Grandparents night will be ol&gt;served. Guest speakers will be
Richard Roberts, superintendent
of Eastern Local and Mary Rose,
lunchroom supervisor. Plans for
a fall ca rnival will be made.
Room mothers are needed and
those interested are to call 98:&gt;3981 or 992-3f&gt;55. Child care will be
provided. Public invited.
LETART PTO Monday , 7: 30
p.m. at school. Plans for fa ll
festiva l will be made.
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS
and ProfessiOnal Women 's Club,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Middleport Library.
SYRACUSE CHURCH of the
Nazarene, 7 p.m. mlssionary ser·

vice with Jack Armstrong,
missionary to Uruguay, to be the
speake r. Service wi ll include
message,

slides

and

music.

Public invited by pastor. the Rev.
Kames Kittle.
FOURTH ANNUAL Membership dinner meeting for members of Milk Marketing, Inc.,
District 10, locals, 6, 7 and 8, 7:30
p.m . Mo nday at Sa lisbu ry
Elementary School.
A NEW series of aerobic dance
exere1se classes will get underway with Ma ry Powell as instructor . The sess ions will last for

eight wee ks, d asses twice
weekly, for a tota l of 16 one-hour
classes. There will be evening
classes at 7 at the Orchid Room,
E. Main St .. Pomeroy, on Mondays and Thursdays and afte rnoon classes at 2 p.m. on the
sa me days at the same locati on.
Reg is tratio n for afte rnoon
classes will be Monday, 1:30 tu 2
p.m. and evening classes, 6:30 to
7 p.m. Monday night. Anyone
wishing more informa tion may

call Mrs. Powell at 992-2622.
MEIGS COUNTY Churches of
Christ , Men's Fe llowsh ip ,
Rutla nd Church, Monday, 7:30
p.m. Elec tion of officers.
THE BAND Boosters will meet
at 7:30p.m. at North Gallia High
School.
GALLJ POLIS BUSINESS and
Professional Women's Club will
meet at Osca r 's for dinner at 6:30
p.m.

Se f . 20, 198 1

w. va .

Oh io-Point P

TB clinic protects county
The "behind the scenes" work in
the Meigs County Tuberculosis
Clinic is for the protection of every
fami ly in the county, according to
Mrs. Joan Tewksbary, R.N.,
executive director and a health nurse.
Over the past months, in the newspaper articles ••Facts ahout Tuberculosis," she described what has
been done and will continue to be
done in the county as long as funds
are available.
Over the past five years 11,329 skin
tests have been given , resulting in
518 positive reactions wi th 420 persons
receivi ng
p r eve nt ive
medication.
In assessing the program, she emphasized that the clinic finds tuberculosis early and sees that those
needing treatment or medication
receive it. The clinic has provided
46,562 services since the last
renewaL
In discussing the need for the
program, Mrs. Tewksbary stressed
that tuberculosis is a "s ilent"
disease in that persons may have the
germ in their body and be una ware
that they might be infecting others
unless it is detected through testing.
A total of 30 persons in the county
were found to be active cases and
these people must have at least two
yea rs of treatment , she said. Since
December, 1979, Roy L. Donnerberg, M.D., Chest Clinician, has
held 33 chest clinics with 316 pa tients
being seen. There have been 1,408
chest x-rays taken and evaluated.
Mrs. Tewksba ry pointed out that a
tuberculin skin lest can tell if the

GOOD
NEWS!
tl ec au se of so m a ny r eq ues ts, w e ar e e xt e nding
ser ving h our s for our c om pl e&gt;l c m e nu unlll 9 P.M.
da ily a nd 10 P. M . on t he
wee ke nd .
Th ese h our s w ill il lso le i
Ch ef B urton be ll e r ac-

germs have entered the body and xrays discover if damage has been
done and if so, it is imperative that
cases be determined early when it
can be cured most quickly. The
Tuberculosis Clinic bas 34 patients
on tuberculosis medications at this
time .
The county tuberculosis nurse has
made 1,150 home visits and has held
168 community clinics. These
evening clinics have been conducted
at various communities within the
county for the convenience of those
persons who may not be able to
come to the tuberculosis of!ices
located at the Multi Purpose
Building on Mulberry Heights.
The three school districts have .
had yearly skin testing clinics f or all
school personnel. Children, with a
parent's consent, receive this ser-

Astrograph

vice and the general public receive~
skin testing upon request.

Geo rg e Ha ll c ontinu es hi s
mu sicil l milglc n1 g htly 1n
th e loun ge .

French Quarter

Times-Sentinel-

;.
II!

~

Open Daily 1H
Sundays 1·6

The Meigs County TuberculosiS
Association has been happy to sup.
port a levy for these services sin'*
1952. The association clinic ha~
operated under the .40 mills pet'
thousand (40 cents per $1 , 000~
property valuation for the past five
years. Even in these times &lt;l
spiraling costs, the TuberculosiB
Board of Trustees, assures the
public that they will continue to keep
the cost of operating the clinic to ~
minimwn . The levy mua be
renewed every five years.
,
Mrs. Tewksbary explained that
with present medical knowledge
tuberculosis ca nnot be era dicated,
only kept under controL

l,..;:.

tOda y, and a catalyst for your
friends. Don't rui n lh lngs for the •
group by stepping back and let· .
l ing a bungler lake charge.
PISCE S (Feb. 2o-March 20) If the changes you i nlllate In the
home today ag r ee with !he
ma jority, ignore !he diss iden ts In
the family and proceed as plan·

ned.

~C~~~j~~I(OCI.

24-Nov. 22)
·vour personal affairs should be
conducted tOday In a confldenll al
atmosphere; with only the persons Involved presenl. Oulsiders

r-;=========================1

w ill

I

complicate matters.

SAG!"iTARt.uS (Nov. 23· Dec.
21) DOn't try to m lx friends who
have differing points Of view
. !Oday. You·could wlnll up playing
ref_,ree•to a couple of holheads.
C;t,P~tCDRN (Dec. 22-Jan.
Sc.h~ule your day. so you can
give all !he time necessary to
:your most Important priorities.
.Otherwise, you could become
distracted and waste valuable
time.
- AQUIIRIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb. 191
You' re an excellent organizer

m

--___,........,

G.,.·,,,,..,

~·tno 'l'

"•&gt;f'O "18'"" ''

ll •l 'l·..ecl •It-

· ~• • a. a itl·~ •r·

I'

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D:.

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*' ~ - • '"~·~ c ~e: •

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l ' ' l'll~\r

lOt l"f '"'f'( "I '&gt;O•W 0~~ Of &lt;'"' ? ' Pi\Q~
~0'&lt;' 1 ~ "''' 1 Cl~l"l''l • '0 ~ ~" ~~~ 1 l~f

·

your resources. However, an en·

vious person may trv to dem ean
your accomplishments.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) In
fu rthering your self-Interests,
bear In mind you can figure ways
to get arOIJnd mosl any Obstacle If
you use your head and y our
creativ itY.
.
CANCER (June 21·July 12) You
have excellent i maginative
abilities toqay_, yet for s.ome
reason you may have a dlffl cull
time believing your Ideas' are any
good ,

•

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Have fun
and enjoy yourself tOday, but
don't put such a strain on your
watlellhal you end up broke. Pay
close attention to what you are
spending.

77

$Pr
our Reg. Q6C-11 7

TailOred Nylon lriels
Misses· and l ull figure bnefs
with cotton sh1eld

VENETIAN BLINDS

'

~Annual

SAVE 35% TO 45%

picnic planned

. The Bob Evans Shelter Houae In

i Rio Grande will be the site of the an-

picnic for all families In the
! community of the Fairview-spring
; Valley Homemakers Club. The pic; nic will be held on September 'll
; from 12 noon WIUI 4 p.m. Each
1fimlly is asked to bring two covered
£ nuaJ

• AMERICAN MADE
eWHITE ONLY
e CUSTOM LOOK AT
WELL BELOW CUSTOM

dishes and their own table service.
The club will furnish the meat, rolls,
drinks and cups. AU members and
families in the Fairview-spring
Valley C011U11Wiity are welcome to
attend. For further lnfonnation call
446-4261.

Focat'Uodacolor II' ·
DEVELOP and PRINT

We've got you covered w1th fantastic sav1ngs on al l ou r 1'1-sTock blankeTs Save on
regular and thermal weaves. Electnc and sheet blankets. too• Many colors. s1zes

SPECIAL!
First Set of Prints
AI Regular Price

··-·g)

( 801)

(lnehtcllng ftfm

fMOnVl

~-~~ . ' I ·
.:
c::!:c:::Ill::::l

lt;ondStt

'

Only 4'Each

REG.

SALE ·:

•36.99
'39.99

' 19.99 i•
'24.99 !

'44.99

'26.99 :

SIZE

23"x27"x64"
28"x31"x64"
32"x36"x64"

i

Slip into updated traditlonals .. .a neatly tailored
cla&amp;slc, designed ta take town or country in
~tride - and in style. Crafted in rich burnished
lealhers with the incredible comfort features,
excellent fit and superb quality that have made
Old Maine Trotters famous for more than
flfty·years.

(802)

••

'C- 41PROCESSFILMSONLV

DOES NOI APPi Vro REPRINTS

'

Our Re g. 58C

Bo• Of

.I

50

Our Reg . 97c

Sale Price

3For$1
Heavy Rug Yarn

2

8.97

Assorted Elastic

8 Digit Calculator

Doc roc'
oz. 70

Non rol l, polyester .
va ri etyof si zes.

Thin " credit ca rd"
Srle. SAVE .

For$}

~~~

1197

Shoe Cafe

1.27

.22longl1lfle Amm"'·

H:go ve'oc::v t O 8ra o
IU0 " C8t e o oOv e

...,

( 80 8)

t,.~~

Flashbar II

For Pa lo rord'
rnslant c ameras Now sav ing s pr iced

.

~tC;,~C;,

·~.

\I

I

Lim II

'

2

,~'

10·flash

t._v,,~t"\~

·-~
I

Larayette Ma

.

I
·~~
Prtnte)Qri .

Our ReQ .64C
2Prs88e
Comlort·lop Knee HI's
Nylon/ spandex Wiae
band at top Basrc shades.

tlmlll

·

eB ox (806)
Our Reg . 11e
Glad' Sandwich Bags

83

,:. ~ eotea-oo : : o r""'.

CO;J S

of c ~ ea•

1

co'vet~v ene

$4

(807)
Our Reg 6 97

NAP Alarm Clocks
Hand wrnd or c1cc

1.27

Our Reo I 88

32 oz. Dove
L1QU1d d ishwashing

tr 1c. Save Now .

'\"

. SAVE .

( 81 2)

Sole Price

limit 2
4·11. Or.

6.88

PLENTY
OF FREE
PARKING

Kodak"
Calor Film

PLENTY
OF FREE

OPEN
FRIDAY
TIL 8 PM

5a1e

OPEN
MONDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

10 97
2 00

For Kodak'
ins t a nt
cam e r a s .

•

Kmorl '
Sal e Pri ce
•
Less Fa ctory
Rebate
• •
Your Nel
1811 )
Cost Aft er
Factory
Rebate
•
Curling Iron/ Brush

8 97

)\t lfl\e )\ lc oue

Tasty Fiddle Faddlt'
Por&gt;cr&gt;rco peanuts rn a
dAl inh l f~ll glaze . 7 oz .·

Hoovl'R

Tanole .free

t:Jr .sr.e

desr gn 2 heat settrngs

38e

Each

Palmolive Gold Soap
For rich deodorant
lather .

Oil Of Olay Lotion
~uxur&lt;J 1€

1n

a

I Q'"'i

non-greasv 'or'T:ui O

SWEEPERs

10%

2 1nstr .• 1K rnan tHO"J
Ollf111£&gt;r

DOWN HOLDS

J

Cna~s•s lvbr.cah.:Jf1 ,.,,

t•nose l1raJ
:lOO

IN LAYAWAY

CEDAR
CHESTS

BEAN
BAGS

LIVING
ROOM
SUITS
SLEEP
SOFAS

";

~~~ · · , ~e

4~PLY

BEDROOM
SUITES

\'If' , ••

'0'

( ~ He ~ ~ • · ~ ~ ~

o~ ~~

'· • ·~ •• P'\. , • . o•

''

\IOC t 0' ) .

:lfHJ Second ,\ ve .

BEDS

1

'

1 INCH MINI-SLAT

NOW IS YOUR CHANCE
TO SAVE -ON EVERY
.
ITEM IN OUR STORE, AND LAYAWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS DELIVERY.

BUNK

--

A0~;;;;~--::

K marl'
MERCHANDISE POLICY

ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19 )
This Is a good day lo discuss Important matters, but recall that
not everyone has your vision.
Take care whom you select as
your sounding board .
TAURUS !Aprlt 20.May 20)
You need evidence of growth, and
tOday you' ll find ways to add to

commod a t e h is m r1 n y out-

of-town fri end s.

TheS

W.Va.

WHITEWALLS
Ou r Reg. 37.76 - A78xl3

.THE EVER POPULAR

RECLINERS
DINI,NG
'

ROOM

SUITES
.'
'

'

li\IIO!Ied
Ba)t.e rv tor
mqnv u.s.~ors.
light' trucks.

2197

Plus F.E.T. 1.58 Each

~'78" series tread des1gn a nd 7 muliiSrpe:l
tread ri bs Mounting incl uded Sa~e' ·
All Tires Plus F.E.T. Ea. • No Trade·ln Requlrtd

.&gt;'J N ~

,.,., :··: .- , . ~

8.88

011, lube And
Filler Special

.

For ma11y car s : mo
trucks Save
I
ReSistor Plugs. Ea.,

~?rr1 t
- ~

69ceci.
Autollle' Plugs
Stondard plugs tor"
many. U.S. ccirs

�•,.

.' .
~

Pomero

Sentinel

lis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

·•
'

340 YEARS - These lour olsten represeat 340 years of UvfDI.
Daughten of the late Geor&amp;e aDd Flora ADD HeDman oldie Bllllker · '
Hill area of Meigs Couaty, the lour mel Wectnesday for tbelr -.1111
~
BDDual reaaloa. Tbey visit eacb other lrequea&amp;ly hal all of the four
;
slstenget together ollly oaee a year for a reunion. They are seated, I
•
tor, Jessie Carr, 89, Pomeroy, five cblldreD, five gnmdchlldrea ud
•
four great-gnmdcblldrea; Myrtle Carman, 87, Collllllblu, four
cblldreD, three gnmdcbOdrea llllltflve great-gnmdcblldrea.; •ct. I to
r, Neva KJug, 83, Klupbury, who boeted the retiDfoa, two cblldrea,
seven grandchlldren and two greal-graodCblldren, and Nora Cum- , '
mlas, 81, Reynoldsburg, two cblldren and sbt graadcblldren. The
slsten bad two brothers, Erneot, wbo Uved to be IN) and Rayumond
•
wbo died as a small cblld.

Astrograph
·•
Se pte mber 21, Hl81
More opportunit •es cou ld com e
your war t hrough fri end s th• s
com .ng year . Don't t aKe them for
granted If you fail to m a k e th r
m ost of them . you ' ll regre t 11
tater
VIRGO (Aug
21 - Se..11)

Before

lar•ng

ou t any

haro

ear ned cash today, check every
th ing out carefu l ly to see if th e
situation or it em 1S worth 11, f'vcn
if
i t 's ott er e d
b'Y
a
w el l
inten tioned per son
LIBRA (S ept 23 -0ct . 23) Con
tinu e to work ..·lligently towarct a
goal , but clon ' t become pushy or
bossy over your pr o tect You
could upse t me applecart

SCORPIO

(Oc t . 24 -Nov . 12)

Your worthwh•le , creative .deds
ma y nt'ver g e t otl th e grou nd
tod ay . You m ay opt to beh e ve
th at .nner vci ce th at is bellow.ng
out all types of appr enens•ons
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 -Dec .
21) I t 's not st ingy to turn down a
loan t o a frH:''ld th at you rcilll ·,.
c an·t afford rn the fir st pla ce
Follow your co m mon se nse, not
your emot rons
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan 19)
You might not be able to ple ase
everyone today , so if you run m to
a few peop le who dan·t rhmk
you ' re too hot. c h a lk rt up to !h err
lack o f vis ron
AQUARIUS (Ja n. 20 -Feb. 19 )
Door s will b P opened fo r 'fOU
tod ay . b1.il on ce you walk thr·ouqh

•

rhem you nao better be ab l e to
produ ce This is not a ti me to
cove r up inexperi ence.
P ISCES !Feb. 20-Marc h 201
You mingle well even in un ·
~amilia r ci r cles t oday, but your
tudgment co nce rning s trangers
may not be too k een. Take ca r e
with whom you get invo l ved .
AR IE S (March 21 -April 19 )
Some opportun i ty you deem
specia l .:'lnd exci ting m ay be of ·
fer ed you t oday . However; your
spouse may not view th is in the
same lig h t . A choice may have to
be made .
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20 )
You mi g ht no t be realis ti c today
abou t somefh •ng you wa n t_ Y ou
rnay expec t to t1a ve it han ded to
you wi t hout nny eff or t on your
par t
G E M I Nl (Ma y 21·Jun e 20) It's
Quite po ss rble th at yo ur ge nerou s
nature will be taken advantage of
today
You may even know
you ' r e bei ng had , but you ' ll sti ll
ante u p .
CA NCER (June 21 -Julv 22)
Se veral f r i end s .nay seek out
your company for tun an d games
today, but i t's doubtf ul yo u'll be
nb le
to part i ci pate .
F amil y
r cs ponsrbili t ies w ill in te rf er e
LEO (Ju l y 23 - Aug . 22) Those
who won't g ive you th e ti me of
cl.w are th e ones you' r e t ryi ng t o
&lt;M er to today , wh rle you'l l ignore
rn cfrviclua ls w~1u offer friendship .

'

A t:our::;e in s ign language, the
in P omeroy beginning October 8.
The Thursday ev t~ n ing class fo r
beginners will meet for nine Wt'ek.s

at the Commumty Mental Hea lth
Center on Mulberry Heights.
An audoologost with the r·ummunity Mental Health Center. Lisa
Koch, will teach the class ... Most
deaf people in this country use sign
ta nguage to communicate with each

other and with those hearing peopl e
who understand the language," sa id
Koch . Koch attended Galla wlef
College in Washington, D. C.
"Gallaudet has been a leadmg
school for the deaf for over 100

Coming
Event

.

Eighth-~ Ohio State survived

Mi~gan State's second-baH rally that i.Jiduded a Big Ten Cooferent-e
~rd &amp;:1-yard field goal by )'lorton Ande~n to defeat the Spartans

· The course will be of interest to
people who are deaf or hearing impaired a nd to their family and fri ends... sa od Koch . She also recommended tile course for people who
might be interested in ca reers
working with the deaf. "or for people
wilo simply would like tu learn a
beautif ul and
po ctures qu e

Tole

painting

cla ss

St.lrfs Sept. 24 . Register

now .

Class

space

lrmited to 10.
HOURS : Mon .· Fri . 10· 6
Saturday 10-4

r -~fo~r~t~he~e~v~e~nt~·n~g;·;;~~;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
GOSPEL MEETING

Tuition will be $25 for students
registered before September 30, plus
$6.50 for the tex tbook. For more informa ti on call the Cormnunity Menta l Health Center, or write to Lisa
Koch at the Meigs Currununity Mental Hea lt h Ce nte r , Mu lberr y
Heights, Pomeroy, OH 45769.

BiK DD taate ... BiK em value!
• A full half·pound of ground beef patty topped
with golden onion rings.
• Served with French lries (or baked potato
5- tOpm).
• Toasted Grecian bread .

AT

CHURCH OF CHRIST
200 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

language.··

Before he was hurt, Schlichter teamed up on a 46-yard pass play
with split end Gary Williams to open Ohio State's scoring. Tailback
Tim Spencer ran 1 yard an&lt;! Atha booted a 27-yard field goal to give the
Buckeyes a 1Hl lead at halftime,
However, MichiganState outscored the Buckeyes 13-3 in the first 22
minutes of the second half. Leister connected with tight end Terry
Tanker on a 38-yard touchdown pass play and Andersen followed with
his field l!O&amp;ls.
.
Team trainers helped Schlichter, who is ranked second on the Big
Ten's all-time total yarda~e list, from the field after the game.

446-2134

• SHONEY'S ALL· YOU-CAN-EAT SOUP &amp;
SALAD BAR 1

DATE: SEPT. 20 thru 25

Thank you lor coming to .. .

EACH EVENING AT 7:30

Sunday Services: Morning 10:00, Evening 6:00
Evangelist: Maurice Barnett
Phoenix, Arizona

328 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

..

EVERYONE WELCOME

·-·~
• No Mall·lns
• NORibates
• No Waiting

clearance
new
cooking
ease

in a space-saving
microwave oven.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
MICROWAVE
COOKING SCHOOL
MONDAY, SEPT. 28, 1981
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the second Smith-t&lt;&gt;-Carter pass and
a 1-yard·scoring plunge by Lawrence Ricks.
Smith added a 6-yard touchdown
run early 'in the final period, while a
swarming Michigan defense kept
the Irish bottled up inside their 32yard line for all but one possession in
the first three quarters. Notre Dame
averted a shutout on an 8-yard pass
from Tim Koegel to Dean Masztak
with 7: 42 remaining.
Clemson 13, Georgia 3
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - Clemson's ball control strategy worked to
perfection and a fired-up defense intercepted Georgia's Buck Belue five
times as the Tigers upset the fourthranked Bulldogs 13-3 in college football Saturday.
The loss ended Georgia 's lf&gt;-game
winning streak, the longest in the
nation .
Tar Heels 4!, Mlaml7
CHAPEL IDLL, N.C. (AP) - North Carolina tailback Kelvin Bryant
ran for 136 yards and scored five
touchdowns, leading the loth-ranked
Tar Heels to a 49-7 rout of Miami of
Ohio Saturday in a non-conference
college football game.

Bryant scored on rw1s of eight,
two, one and four yards, and caught
a lf&gt;-yard touchdown pass from
quarterback Rod Elkins.
Pin 38, Cincinnati 7
PIITSBURG}l (AP) - Da11
Marino fired five touchdown passes,
four to split end Julius Dawkins, and
Pittsburgh's punishing defense
yielded 50 net yards as the seventhranked Panthers beat Cincinnati 337 Saturday in college football.
llllnoisl7, Syracuse 14
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) - Mike
Bass booted a 23-yard tie-breaking
field goal into a 17-mph wind after
Mike Murphy had plunged one yard
for a touchdown Saturday to give
Illinois an uphill 17-14 victory over
Syracuse in an intersectional football game.
USC Zl, Indiana 0
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (APl
Tailback Marcus Allen rushed for
274 yards and two touchdowns Saturday as second-ranked Southern
California, wearing down Indiana's
defense in the second half, rolled to a
2)-() college football victory.

CUba%, Espoll
MONTREAL (AP)- Bill Buckner
slugged a twQ-run triple in the fourth
innilll and Mike Krukow and Randy
.Martz combined on a six-hitter,
· leading the Chicago CUbs to a 2-1 vic. tory over the Montreal Expos Saturday.
'Krukow, 7-9, struck out four and
walked none ·before getting help in
the ninth from Martz, who recorded
his fourth save,

Plilllles 8, Pirates Z
PffiLADELPHIA (AP) - Gary
Matthews blasted a home run and
two singles and knocked in a pair of
runs, leading the Philadelphia
Phillies to an 8-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates Saturday.

snapped a 3-3 tie with a two-run
double in the fifth inning and John
Mayberry and Ted Cox clubbed
home runs as the Toronto Blue Jays
heat California 6-4 and handed the
Angels their fifth straight loss Saturday.
A's Z, Wblte Selt 1
OOCAGO ( AP) - Rickey Henderson lined a sacrifice Oy to center
to score Dave McKay from third
base ill the ninth inning and lift Rick
Langford and the Oakland A's to a 21 victory over the Chicago White Sox
Saturday.

Red Sex 8, Yallkees :;
BOSTON (AP l - Rick Miller capped a seven-run eighth inning off
relievers Ron Davis and Dave
LaRoche with a three-run homer

Saturday as the Boston Red Sox
staged a dramatoc two-out rally for
an 11-5 victory over lhe New York
Yankees.

Red Sox 8, Yankees :;
BOSTON (AP )- Rock Miller capped a seven-run eighth inning off
relievers Ron Davis and Dave
LaRoche with a three-run homer
Saturday as the Boston Red Sox
staged a dramatic two-out rally for
an 11-5 victory over the New York
Yankees .

--

Meta I, Cards%
NEW YORK (AP) - Hubie
Brooks' tw~run homer In the firlit
inning and Dave Kingrilan's roth
homer of the season in the si%th
powered Pete Falcone to his first
victory since Aug. 16, as· the New
York Melli stopped the St. Louis Car·
dlnals 6-2 Saturday.

SAVE

,___

Blae Jayi I, Aulela 4
TORONTO (AP) - Emte Whitt

$100

OUwhips
Falcons,

;

23to21
,.,.

LITTON

$150

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Home.
Economist, will show
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we requesl your res~rvalions f" ·' ' ·
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See Th~ Grate Boys
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ModellS20

ANN ARBOR, Mich. ( AP) - AllAmerican wide receiver Anthony
Carter caught toucMown passes of
71 and 15 yards from Steve Smith
and Michigan, knocked from its No.I
ranking by Wisconsin a week ago,
rebounded Saturday to smash toprated Notre Dame 25-7.
The acrobatic Carter, a f&gt;-foot·ll,
161-pound junior from Riviera
Beach, Fla., boosted his touchdown
totBl to 25 in of!)y 26 varsity games,
while stretching his Michigan career
record to 24 scoring receptions. The
71-yard play on third-and-19 early in
the second period was the fourth
longest pass play in Michigan
history.
·The setback was the first for Notre
Dame in two games under Coach
Gerry Faust and only a late touchdown kept it from being the worst
licking for the Irish since a iir.-24 rout
by Southern California in the 1974
regular-season finale. Faust had
won his last 33 games at· Moeller
High School in Cincinnati before getting the Notre Dame job.
The lith-ranked Wolverines, 1-1,
broke open the contest Letween two
of college football's winningest
schools in the third quarter, raising
tl1eir halftime lead from HI to 19-0 on

Tigers nip Indians, end losing spell
Swnmers and stan Papi homered
and Dan Petry hurled eight strong
inninp to sperk the Detroit Tigers to
a 4-3 victory over the Cleveland Indians Saturday.
The triumph snapped a five-game
Tiger losin&amp; streak and was
Cleveland's si.Ith defeat in seven

1

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SAVE

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Oven

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CAMYING A LOAD - Mltblgan Slate fiaaker pme ill Colamhwl Saturday. Graul wasable to lake In
Graat loetl up lor a JIUI wttb Oblo Slate. ulety · tbe ,... lrem Spartaas quarterback Jolul Leister for
:Garda Laae luiJII!q • Ills ._ell Ia the flnt llalf of a u 11-~pliL ( AP Laserplloto).

ClEVELAND (AP} -

7:30P.M.

•

AP ~Writer

~LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

However, team physicians indicated that Schlichter should be ready to
play at Stanford next Saturday. They said he could have played in the
fourth quarter agalnat the Spartans, if necessary .
Scblichter compll'ted 12 of 23 passes for 155 yards and the one touchdown. He ran for 14 additional yards and had a total offensive performance of 159 yards before the 79th straight Ohio Stadiwn selloiut of
8'1 ,1114 fans.
Michigan State, in losing to Ohio State for the fifth straight time,
relied on illl passing game to keep. the action close. Leister, who
replaced starting quarterback Bryan Clark midway through the first
quarter, completed 14 of 37 passes for 213 yards, but threw three interceptions. Clark, the son of Detroit Lions Coach Monte Clark, hit one
of three passes for 5 yards.
1be Buckeyes had a 214-9!1 yardBge advantBge against the Spartans,
wtih tailback Tim Spencer gaining 93 yards. However, the Spartans
owned a 2111-177 advantage in the air_

Michigan State, 1)-2, bad an opportunity to score a possible tying
touchdown later in the quarter, but quarterback John Leister threw
three straight incompletlons. Alba wrapped up the viclory for Ohio
State by bursting 22 yards for a touchdown with one minute remaining.

Spring Valley Plaza

end-of-the-month

M EAL IN O N E· l ets you cook a
number of comp let e n'eals at
once Or s t art other m ea ls w .th
on e drsh or rw o, and ndd a thrrd
t ood as you coo k
• 2 st .rrer b lades ( not tu"&gt;l one1
evenly dr s. Trib u te m! c r owavPs lor
dell c rous r esults every t 1m e .
•Va n Cook · varrab le power ove n
cont r ol cnoks. srmme r s, warms or
d e frost s
• Varr Temp · rJu toma11 c tem per
atur e control wr1h t ooct sensor rn
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•Aut omittr c
de t rostrnq
Autom at •c H ol d Warm
•CookbOo r. rncludf'd

•

ByGEORGE8TRODE

Michigan rebounds,
trips Irish, 25-7

LITTON

With

•

r

-1

.

-

DI 'S CRAFT SUPPLY

THE GALUPOLIS Welcome
Wagon will meet in the Community Room of the Jackson Pike
bra nch of the Ohio Valley Bank at
1:30 p.m. Pat Houck from the
Ga llia -Jackson-M eigs Mental
Health Center will be the speaker

years, '' Koch said.

Model1020

-~·

27·13 iii college football Saturday,
'
·
.however, the Buckeyes,~. played the entire fourth quarter without
stl6' quarterback Art Schlichter, 1be senior suffered a rnodel'lte ankle
sp'tain with 21 seconds left in the third quuarter.
'J.'l!e Buckeyes were leading 'JJ).7 when Bob Alba took over for
Schlichter and set the stage for Andersen's kicking performance.. .
the left.fOOted s~ialist from Denniark kicked field goals of 44 and
~yards to bring the l!l·point underdogs to· within 'JJ).13 midway
thiloughthe fourth quarter. Andersen's &amp;:1-yard effort wiped out the
coilference field goal reCord of 59 yards set by Ohio State's Tom
SJPadany set against Illinois in 1975.

Sign language offered
language of the deaf, is being offered

c
edge
MSU,
27-13
on,
Bucks
hold
..
Sept. 20, 19i1
The Sunclily Times·Sentinel - Page- -

I

1

•

\

•

NEAll Mllll - Nen IliuM'• .r.a Krtllia
·&amp;rlreea u i.e 'niiAes • taclde • Vlliwerllty t1

w, 1 +'• ..a w..-... «241
.._a
........, ...........,,

......

llrrfiH'

~.

�Sept. 20, 1981

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

"

~pt. 20, 1981

Rain mars hard -fought

:::
....
....
....
....
....,...,
....

-

GOOD BALANCE - Pt. Pleasant quarterback
Mike Porter 151 brdces himself with left hand while

picking up yardage against the GaUipolls Blue Devils
Friday night. Porter rushed for 37 yards in 13 trips.

:P t. Pleasant slips past
!Gallipolis by 20-13 tally
'

PT. PLEASANT - II was another
·one of those '' knock down and drag
: out" battles on Sanders Memorial
Field before 3,500 fans here Friday
· night as Coach Steve Safford's Pt .
Pleasant Big Blacks edged visiting
:Gallipolis, 2().13.
Despite a ch1lling rain, Pt.
Pleasant built up a 13-{) lead in the
first half, gave up a last-minute
score 111 the second period, then
broke a 13-13 deadlock with 7:18left
to play to chalk up its third victory in
four starts this fall .
Coach Tom Korab's vastly improved Blue Devils dropped to ().J.
Controlled Ball
F'or the f1rst time this year, GAHS
controlled the ball and had some
edges 111 the statistical battle.
GallipOlis ran 54 plays from scrimmage, collected 12 fi rst downs and
picked up 245 yards rush1ng and
passing.
The West Virginians ra n 53 plays,
had nme first downs and gained 248
total yards .
Return yards favored the Ohioans,
4!l-15. GAHS was penalized three
ti mes for 38 yards ran in the !mal
perio&lt;i 1and Pt. Pleasant three limes
for 25 yards.
Gallia's Tim Lanier punted five
tunes lor 161 yards 132.2 1. Mike Porter punted six times for 185 yards
130.8).

Scott Korab paced GAHS runners
with 40 yards in 12 trips . Phil Kmg
ca ught three passes for 112 yards
and King also had a pass interception and scored both Blue
Devil touchdowns and one extra
point.
Kip Atkinson led the Big Blacks'
offensive attack with 113 yards in 12
trips. He scored two touchdowns.
Craig Hesson had 42 yards in 13 trips
and one touchdown .
Kev Smith k1cked two extra points
for the winners.
Porter Alert
Mike Porter, Scott Rutherford and
John Daugherty were credited with
recovering three GAHS fumbles.
Porter also had two pass interceptions .

Scoring Summary
After recove ring a GAHS fwnble
on the PPHS 10 midway in the first
period, Atkinson galloped 84 yards
down the Gallipolis sidelines to give
PPHS a 6-0 lead with 4:45 showing on
the scoreboard clock. Smith kicked
the extra point.
Midway in the second period, Pt.
Pleasant drove 53 yards in six plays.
Hesson streaked up the middle the
final 19 at the 4:50 mark. Smith's
kick from placement was blocked.
Gallipolis marched 68 yards in
four plays to get on the board. Scott

hurt Friday's turnout of the 52nd
renewal of the Gallipolis-Pt.
Pleasant football series at Sanders
Memorial Field.
PPHS Principal Ralph Sayre said
with the new stadium bleachers, Pt.
Pleasant now bas a seating capacity
for 5,400 spectators. He estimated
3,500 in attendance despite bad
weather.
" It was a hard-fought game,"
commented Big Black Coach Steve
Safford.
"We got a 13-point lead, they came
back and scored just before the half.
I knew that fired Galtipolis up. They
came back to tie it in the third quarter_I knew then we were in for a real
dogfight," Safford continued.
"After Gallipolis tied it up, it was
just a matter of time who was going
to get a break. We ended up getting
the break," (a pass interference call
on Gallpolis on third down which
gave PPHS possession on the GAHS
22).
Darst Tough
From there, Pt. Pleasant scored in
four plays with wingback Kip Atkin-

son going over from the two. The Big
·Blacks' defense, behind the outstanding play of middle guard Dave
Darst, whom Safford calls a " real
blue chipper," dug in and choked off
three Blue Devil attempts to knot the
score.
"Our kids played their hearts out
tonight," remarked GAHS Coach
Tom Korab . "I was proud of all of

-

....
""

·C

them. If we can get some peGJ!le
our backs, we'll be 100 percent
ter,"Korabadded.
. ~
The GAHS mentor praised the Sii
Blacks. " Pl. Pleasant has a glllii!
team. We made some key mistaki!S
out there tonight. A break or two uilJ
way would have made a big cUt
rerence," Korab concluded.

bflt

:t

...

,_

..

'_ .-.

.

·--

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

TEAM

ALL GAMES
W l
T P

Ironton

OP

3 0 0 84 36
31 0 5846
2 1 0 48 24
2 1 0 68 47

Pt. Pleasant
Rock Hill
Coal Grove

2 10 5632

Jackson
Wellston

2
1
1
0
0

Me igs
Waverly

Gallipoli s

Athens
Logan

. 1010356
2 0 45 43
2 0 lJ 52
3 0 25 58
3 0 21 100

0 3 0

Friday's results :

Pt . Pl ea sa nt 20 Gallipolis 13
Circlev i lie 35 Athens 0

-

Ironton 28 Portsmouth 8

0 107

Jackson 29 Miller 6

Nelsonville-York 40 Logan 0

·.

Meigs 26 Wahama 7
Waverly 13 Piketon6
Wellston 53 Vinton County 6
Coal Grove 22 Trimble 18
Wheetersburg12 Rock Hill 0

Sept. 25 Games:

F i rst downs

Meigs at Athens

Wellston at Jackson
South Point at Rock Hill
Wheelersburg at Coat Grove

-

Pt . Pleasant - open.

"

"'

Net rushing

Pass attempts

20

Com pl etions
Intercepted by
Yard s pass rng
Tota l yard s
Plays
Return yards
Fumbles
Lost fumbles

7
1
141

245
54

Penalties
Punts

Score by quarrers:
Gallipolis
Pt. Pleasa nt

J
3
3·38
5161

~

13 victory over visiting GaUipolis Friday nlgbt. The
trophy was originated by the two clubs wben the river·
series was renewed in 1977 "for the purpose of'
promoting good sportsmanship between the two

;: MERCERVILLE - Hannan
1race stopped Huntington of Ross
~ounty cold, 1W, in a Friday night
j:ame.
·
• The Wildcats posted their second
otraight win. Huntington was
defeated by North Gallia, 43-14, in a
non-league game Sept. 12.
The Wildcats bad 10 first downs
a,hd the visitors 4, and totalled 2'19
yards to the Huntsmen's 28.
· Huntington broke through the
Hannan Trace defense during the
,-f!rst quarter after nine plays on a 63~ard run by McCluskey. An attempt
~t the extra point failed.
• HT came back in the second quar3er when Greg Webb ran 4 ynrds and
~cored. He passed to Mike Waugh
~or the conversion, placing the half-

-..
•"'
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•

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1980 MERCURY MONARCH 4 DR..................'5295
6 cyl., auto_trans., PS, PB, Air cond., AM/FM
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$5·995

Air, PS, radio, Low Mileage.

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II
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1979 MUSTANG
3 DR. HATCHBACK ...............' 5l9$,.
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1980 FORD FAIRMONT 4 DR•••••••• : ••••••••••••••••'509S

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C.I.S. FUEL INJECTED
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BORDERS GARAGE DOORS

Parkersburgksignited
dis 1 for
1 ad' second
3q n
half f.
trewor
Pay, ea mg ....,
in the third period, then rambling on
for the 48-0 victory.
UnofficiallYgained
Novaknear
andor
Knillka
of
Parkersburg
over 100
yards on the ground and shared top
scoring honors. Overall, the winners
had 320 total yards, while limiting
Southerntojust32.
Southern's QB John Porter,
playing with a broken hand, completed 1 of 4 passes for 12 yards. PCC
was one of six for 18 yards.
Dave Talbott gained 20 yards on 14
carries for SHS, Rex Thornton four
yards, and the other Southerners
were limited to negative yardage.
Allen Pape and Ty Brinegar each
had 12 tackles for Southern.
Southern hosts Wahama Friday.

s

25

32

5·61 10· 100
quarters :

0 14

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time score at 8-IL
Webb again ran for 21 yards for a
touchdown in the third canto, and
failed on his run for the additional
point. Both sides concentrated on
keeping each other from gaining ex·
tra ground in a scoreless fourth
quarter.
Webb was top rusher for the Wildcats with 1'!1, while Waugh had 94
yards to his credit. Keith Campbell
and Mike Beaver were lead tacklers
on the Hannan Trace defense.
The Wildcats have an open date
Friday, and host Ironton St. Joe Oct.
2.
Department
HT
H
Fi t s1 downs
10
•
Yards passing
9
123
Total yardage
279
28
Interceptions
2
1
Fumbles
Penalties

Score

by

Hannan Trace

Huntington

;: CINCINNATI (AP) - Cleotha
~ontgomery,
a kick return
c;pecialist for the Cincinnati
!;Bengals, worked as a teacher in
::English literature during the off.
:!season at Brownwood, Texas, High
#School.
:: 'For the most part we conEcentrated
on Shakespeare's
,..tragedies,'' Montgomery said. "Nol'
::many !lectured for about tO minutes
:to a ~lass of 25 !lludents."
..; Montgomery says his favorite
::authors are Shakespeare, James
:: Joy,:e, William Wordaworth and
E: Joseph conrad.

1979 FORD FAIRMONT WAGON •••••••••••••••••••'4995

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NOW THROUGH OCTOBER 31, 1981 ONLY

By

6·12

~econd
win in row
..•.

schools."

WINTER TUNE-UP SPECIALS

!Comp·Affl

Inter ce ptions
Fumbles· fu m bles lost
Punts
Punting average
Penalties

•

0 7 6 D- 13
7 6 0 7- 20

V.W. • AMC ·JEEP· RENAULT
Wants To Help You Save Money With Their

Passes

Hannan Trace posts

0
3·25
6·185

RIVERSIDE

7
.0
. 30-44
68
112

• Alltobs back e d by w.1rro1n1y

Parkersburg
Gatholic Crusaders bombed the local
~uthern Tornadoes 48-0 here
llpday evening in a non-league foot!lilll contest The loss left Southern
~th an·()-3 record. PCC is now2·1.
•~The cool fall weather produced a
~rfect setting for a close and coml!;titive first period, but once the
~ders got rolling they started to
olarm up the Southern turf, burning
!lie Tornadoes in the fmal half.
;Southern trailed by just seven at
e first quarter mark,7-{), then
opped to 10..0 early in the second
ter Parkersburg hit on a '!/ yard
ld goal attempt. Moments later
I'Oilowing a Southern fumble, Novak
of Parkersburg trotted into the endzone for another score.
Going into the third period 16-0,

0

to pace Ga!Upolls' offensive attack againlt Pt.
Pleasant Friday night Pl. Pleasant woo, Z&amp;-13. Brenda Wilson photos.

Firstdowns
8
Pli!VS from scrimmage
45
Yardsrush i ng
33-103
Yards passing
126
Total yardage
229

• Prompt, accurate •n5tallatum

•
"• RACINE·The

BACK TO PT. PLEASANT - Allen White, left,
president of the Gallipolis Rotary Club, presents the
Rolary TravelUng Trophy to Pt. Pleasant Rolary Club
President Jim Musgrave following the Big Blacks' 20-

KORAB PACES GARS AITACK- Junior Quarterback Scott Korab (211 rushed for 40 yarda in 12 trips
and completed seven of 20 pass attempts for U1 ynrds

ds, and Hiebel two for iO yards.
Glenn Singer picked up :16yant&amp;·o1f 2
receptions, while Kevin WIIIiams of
Federal had 41 on 5catchel.
Defensively the 'GI'fltll . Wave'
defense sacked quarte1 biici Clad
Rlcharda for negative 40 yards.
Bissell led the 'wave' witb t t;ackles
and Cole had eight. Riffe had tw&amp;~
terceptions, Bissell and Haulli!ltlllle,
and Roger Bissell one. Richard's lind
Fisher led Federal Hocking wltlll2
tackles each.
DEPARTMENT
E
FH

Lancer punt. One play later,
however, Mike Hauber hauled down
an interception and put Eastern in
the drivers seat for good.
The big 'Green Machine' again
went to the air and the resul!.'l were
just 88 impressive. Riffe pulled
down another 23 yard TD pass from
BiBseU with only two seconds left in
the game. Ironically both defender
Glenn Singer and Riffe came down
with the ball, but Riffe was credited
with the reception. The dramatic
finale iced the cake for the 22-{)
Eagle win.
Eastern gained 103 yards on the
ground led by Riebel , who had 63
yards on 11 carries. Troy Guthrie
gained 13 yards on lour carries,
while Bissell, Greg Cole, and John
Beaver each had nine_ Bri~n Fisher
led Federal Hocking with 60 yards
on 16 carries.
Riffe had 45 yards on two receptions, Rob- Smith
had one for 12 yar. -

CALL NOW

PCHS romps Southern

15

49

- ~B-C -3

WANT THE BEST FOR LESS?

~

9'
247
I4
233
6
1
2
15
248
53

12
113
9
104

passing game. MeanwiUie, me Lancers couldn't penetrate the tough
Eastern defense that has been a key
to Eagle success all season long.
After several changes of
possession the hosts again hit
paydirt with 30 seconds remaining in
the half.Eastern's last second offense again buckled down for last
second scores 88 it had in its earlier
contests. Mike Bissell fired a pass to
P.G. Riffe for the second score
which covered 22 yards.
After a scoreless third period,
Eastern picked up two points on a
safety at the 7: '!/ mark in the final
round. With the ball resting on the I
yard line a Federal Hocking player
was cited for unsportsmanlike conduct. The penalty was an automatic
safety since the rule is enforced as a
mandatory stepoff.
With Eastern enjoying a 16-0 lead,
Federal Hocking was still alive and
trying to make a comeback. The
much improved Lancers recovered
an Eastern fumble which followed a

STilL GOING .- D!!IIIIU Calcutt, quarterback for the Parkel'
sburg Cathollc.Cratiaders, appean to keep going despite touchlDg the
grouud In Friday's 4H triumph over southern. A host of Toruado
tacklers were left beblnd.

Ga llipolis at Ironton
L ogan at Waverly

Korab's 46-yard bomb to Phil King
made it 13-6 with :'!/left in the half.
King kicked the point after.
GAHS marched 61 yards in eight
plays in the third period. King's
eight-yard scamper around right
end tied the score at 13-all with 4:04
left. A 45-yard pass from Korab to
King kept the drive alive. The point
after attempt was blocked.
After an exchange of turnovers
late in the third period, PPHS
traveled 44 yards in six plays for the
winning score. Atkinson slammed
over from the two. Smith kicked the
point alter.
Gallipolis will begin Southeastern
Ohio League play at Ironton Fridsy.
Pt. Pleasant has an open date.
Statistics:
pp
DEPARTMENT
G
Y a rd s rushing
Lost ru shing

EAST MEIGS-Eastern's Eagles
relied· on a sparking aerial attack
and strong defensive play to soundly
:lefeat the Federal Hocking Lancers
:rw, Friday evening, thus remailling
undefeated at 3-0. Federal Hocking
drops to 1-2 on the season.
Eastern followed the script used in
Its first two victories by battling
Federal Hocking to a scoreless first
period, then came alive going down
the stretch In y!e second quarter.
A strong/ and consistent perfonnane&amp;· by quarterback Mike
Bissell .rtaYed an important role in
the ll;astetn slrives.
At the 8:$0 mark in the second canto, Bissell hurled a 17 yard spiral to
John Riebel for Eastern's first
score. Mike Hauber added the PAT
with a ki~k through the uprights,
capping an 8 play, 89 yard drive that
started with a 38 yard completion to
Riebel.
As in the opening period, Eastern
couldn't get its grilund game on the
move and had to rely _on ib. ~tent

•..,;

Grid standings

The sunday Times-Sentinel-

Eagles record 22-0 win over Lancers

-..

Blue Devil-Big Black tilt
PT. PLEASANT - Rain, no doubt,

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

'
SE:E: ,GARLAND PARS9tiS
461 S.3rdAve.

Ph .••.,.,IJCII.

·

, · ·

...

0

3-35

quarters :

0 8 6 D-14
6 0 0 o- 6

Vegas auto race
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - The
Caesars Palace Grand Prix, the first
Formula One auto race in the
history of Las Vegas, will be held
Oct. 17.
·Actor Paul Newman, a racing e~P
thusiast, will serve as chainnan of
the event, which will be held on a
track on 7!i acres of land, including
the parking lot of the hotel.
The race will have 16 turns and
will be run cin a 2J!-mile oval. There
will be 45,000 grandstand reserved
seats for the spectators.

.·-------------------------------~-----------------l
POMEROY EAGlES INITIATION OF
N.EW- MEMBERS
• 11 .
·.'AN.D,REGUIJR MEETING', '
a

.

.

..

~

·

2
9-65

,

.

. .

C&amp;S Bank clears the air on the new "All Savers" certificate.
Thanks to the passage of the new Tax Bill, C &amp; S Bank
and other qualified financial institutions will soon be
able to i&gt;ffer tax-free interest on a new, one-year savings certificate.
It's called an" All Savers" certificate. And it starts
October J.st.
But, the fact is, an " All Savers" certificate is not
for all savers. Because how much you benefit depends
on how much you earn, what your lax bracket is, and
how much you have to invest And, to further complicate things, there has been some uncertainly surrounding the very high interest rates you've been offered to reserve your tax-free certificate right away .
It's all very confusing.
So before you jump in with both feet, make sure
you know exactly what you're getting into .
At C&amp; S Bank we know how important a little learning can be. Espe~ially when it comes to something as
confusing as tax-free savings. And we'd hke to be first
to give you what you need most to make the right
decision.
The facts .

Fact: Tax-free savings

is a tax-free certificate.
Actually, it's a one-year savings certificate. And, effective October 1st, it's available at all C &amp; S Bank offices with a minimum deposit of just $500.

Fact: U.S. Treasury Bills determine
the yield you receive.
The yield on your savings certificate is set at 70% of the
average Investment yield for the most recent auct10n
of one-year U. S. Treasury Bills. For example, the current one-year Treasury Bill investment yield is 18.01".
And, 70% of 18.01% is )2.61%, which is the annual yield
you would earn. The rate changes monthly, but you're
guara~teed the issue rate for the full tenn of your cer·
tificate.

Fact: After December 31, 1982,
the tax-free honeymoon Is over.

)

By law, qualified financial institutions can issue taxfree savings certificates from October I, 1981 to
December 31, 1982. And you can purchase your certlfieales at an...r time during that period.

Faet: There's a ceiUng on bow mueb
of your interest is tax-free.

1be Interest you earn On your savings certificate may
be excluded from your taxable income. But there's a
Unilt. Up to a total of $1,000 for individual returns. And
up to$2,000 for joint returns, even if only one of you actually owns the certlfk:ate. If the net interest paid you
is more than the llmlt, the 'amount of interest over the
Uniltmuat be ~1llded as taxable income.

.

Fact: ·Tu:·free uvblgs bappeDS
· ODly on~ in a Jifetim!l.

Your interest earniJigs exemption Is a once-in-a• liflltime exclusloo 11nd'applies to the total of all interest
r•l&lt;! on your·tax-free savings certificates.
•'

Fact: Early redemption,
no tax break.
If yuu deci de to redeem your lax-free savings certificate before 1t matures , none of the interest earned
from it in the year of early redemption is tax-free. It
must be included on your lax return as taxable income.
And you'll also have to include as income for that year
any interest from the certificate that you had excluded
the previous year. In addition, the standard . early
withdrawal penally for one-year cerhflcates
1furi eitu re of three months' interest) applies.

Fact: How much you benefit
depends on your tax bracket.
To fully benefit from your tax-free savings certificate,
you 'll probably need to be in a tax bracket above 30% .
Which is one reason why an "All Savers" cerllflcate
really isn't for all savers.

Fact: U you owo a 6-month Money Market
certificate, you're not locked ln.

New rules allow you to "roll-over" your six-month
Money Market certificate before maturity into an "AU
Savers" certificate on or after October I, 1981 w!lh no
early withdrawal penally.

Fact: C &amp; S Bank's Interim investment plan
does not jeopardize the tax·ftee status
of your tax-free certificate.
If you qualify and already have a certificate maturing

before October 1st, or would like to reserve your "All
Savers" certificate now, you have the opportunity to
choose our interim investment plan paying today's
high interest rates. Then on October 1st, with your
authorization, we can automattcally transfer your
funds to the new tax-free savings certificate, though
you're under no obligation to do so.

Fact: All things being equal,
C &amp; S Bank offers more.
All financial instutions will be offering pretty much the
same tax-free savings certificates.
So it's important to look for a financial institution
with the kind of professional people who know and
understand the subject. People who demonstrate sound
financial thinking and a willingness to share that thinking with you.
Stop by the C &amp; S Bank office nearest you and ask
about a one-year, tax-free savings certificate. W~'ll
give you all the facts. Along with a chart we v.e
developed to help you decide if it's right for you. And 1f
''All Savers" isn't for you, be sure to ask about our
other high-yield savings and investment plans.

.

:
:;
.:

C 8r S BankB.ank. ~.._. ·~..j,;

The Commercial lr Savings
"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

"\)

Membii
. · .;..t~., ' ·)~,

Sprlng.Valley
'.\

�Page-C -4- The Sunday Times-Sentine l

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va .

Sept: 20, 1911

·Sept. 20, 1981

Marauders post first win, 26-7 over unbeaten Wahama .
-

By LANCE OLIVER
POMEROY-It took a couple
games for Meigs to find that initial
victory, but tha t only made it taste
sweeter.
The Mara uders, shifting into gear
for the 1981 season, rolled over the
previously unbeaten Wahama White
Falcons 26-7 at Mara uder Stadium
Frida y.
Three aerial touchdown strikes by
quarterback Bob Ashley sparked the
Ma rauder victory, despite injuri es
to several key Meigs players.
Seniors Greg Bush and Mark Boyd
both watched the game from the
sidelines due to injuri es. Bush, a
fullba ck on offense and lineba cker
on defense, is still a question ma rk
for next week, and Boyd , a mainsta y
of the MHS offeru;ive and defensive
Jines, will retum to the lineup
Friday.
But the bi ggest blot on Meigs'
initia l win was the injury of running
back and defensive end Mike
J ackson . The jumor suffered a
d1slocated right shoulder in the
process of bringing down a Wa hama
runne r for a loss. Doctors say
J ackson will rruss at least three
wee ks of play , proba bly more, and
the loss will certainl y be fe lt by the
Ma ra uders.
Pr-i or to his injury, J ackson 's effo rts Friday mcluded 26 yards from
.sc rirrunage on just four ca rr ies, and
une 4&gt;-ya rd ki ckoff ret urn.

It was the Me1gs offenSJve Ime tha t
enabled the win , blessing Ashley
with time on his hands when he
chost! to pa ~ , and opening holes in

the Wahama defense that sent Roger
Kovalchik on his way to a 100 yard
plus effort .
Mike Edwards, Randy Murray,
Gary Nakamoto, Greg Taylor and
Dennis Thornton, filling in for Boyd,
played their best in the second half
when Meigs left Wahame behind in
the soggy turf .
" I thought we were a little
sluggish in the first half," said
Meigs Head Coach Char les Chancey_
" But we played crisper in the second
half. We showed more enthusiam
and intensity . The offensive line
played especia lly welL "
" We've been working on pass
blocking all week," said guard Randy Murray after the game . " We
fina lly did it."
Ashley took advantage of the
protection to throw for 191 yards and
three touchdowns and one PAT. The
senior quarterback was seven for 16
passing with two interceptJons, a nd
a lso punted for a n outstanding 54 .5
yard a verage.
On the ground , Hoger Kovalchik
exploded for 109 yards, 90 of those in
the second ha lf as Bush a nd Jackson
we r e forced to watch from the
sidelines.
Kova lchik accounted fo1· lengthy
mileage, playing fulltime on defense
as we ll as carrying the ball 27 times
from scrinuna ge.
" Yeah," said Kovalchik tn the
bo1ste rous Mei gs lockerroom, " I had
to stop and chan ge the oil in the mJddle of the third quarter."
Meigs struck first w1th 7: 31
remaining in the first quarter .
Ashley found Rick Chancey all alone

downfield, no WHS defenders within
15 yards . The quarterback dropped
the ball softly into Chancey's handa,
and the end scrambled the
remaining distance to complete the
7~yard touchdown strike. The kick
attempt was wide.
Wahama's only lead in the game
came with 2:18 left in the quarter
when they retaliated with a drive
that ended with a 21-yard touchdown
run by junior fullback Kevin DiVincenzo. Don VanMeter's kick gave
Wahama a 7--6lead.
Meigs took the lead for good with
5:57 left in the half. Facing fourth
down and eight on the Wahama 13
yard line, Ashley found Scott
Pickens with another perfect pass
and Pickens scampered in for the
score.
Meigs added two more points
through the air with an Ashley to
Greg Thomas completion that left
the halftime score 14 to 7, Meigs.
The second half was a Marauder'•
dream.
_
•
Meigs scored on thei~d
possession of the half on"·· . y, 53yard drive thet was bo&lt;)ate by a 42yard pass c01 npletiilif to Rick Ed·
wards. Chris Burdette grinded int~
the end zone from the one yard line,
and Meigs Jed 20 to 7 as the kick
failed _
The most exciting score of the
game had to be the final Meigs
strike . Earlier in the game, an attempt at the flea-flicker play had
failed because of a fumble. The
Wahama contest was the first time
Meigs had tried the old play that had

brought limited success last season.
But this time it paid off.
Mter 13 consecutive runs, 12 of
them by Kovalchik, Wahama was
expecting another ground attempt,
but Meigs gave them exactly what
they did not expect. Two handoffs
and a pitch back to Ashley set up the
33-yard completion to Rick Chancey
who danced across the goal line.
Good blocking by the offensive line

again gave the intricate play time to
unfold.
Rain drizzled throughout the
second half, causing a total of 13
fumbles and killing several drives,
mostly Wahama's. Meigs bested the
Falcons in ev ery statistical
category.
Next week the Marauders begin
SEOAL play as they travel to Athens
to meet the Bulldogs.

Statistics

w

Southwestern holds on for 16-14 victory over Vikings

Total yardage

193
l4
4

M
' 13
-149
t1
'3&lt;1()
- 17
'7

1nterceptions

2

0

Department
First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passing

Passes attpt.
Passes com pt.

6
146
47

9
5

Fumbles
Fumbles lost

Penalties

By quarters:
Wahama

MelliS

3 20
I 0 0
6 8 6

:•3

'
·- ~0

o---· I

6'----~6

TWO BIG LOSSES- Mike Jackson (20), jUDior offensive and defensive back for the Meigs Marauders,
puts a stopper on quar1erback Kevin James during

victory at Marauder Stadium. JaC:bo;n,
however, came out of this battle with a dislocated right..
shoulder. He will be lost to the team for at least threl!
weeks.
'

A

Johnson serves . Tammy Proctor of
Kyger made the score 4-2, before
Laren Wolfe increased the score to
14-2, forcing Kyger to call a time out.
Kyger added another point, 14-3,
before Debbie Michael added the
final touches on her serve for the
15th point.
Mel Weese had some very important set-ups for Southern, while
Laren Wolfe produced some good
spikes.
Laren Wolfe led Southem with 15
serving points, ten of which were in
the second game. Cindy Evans and
Michelle Johnson each added five
important poinl,.
Southern, now 4-0 in the SV AC, will
face a rematch with Kyge r Creek
and Southwestern Tuesday at
Southem High School.

NEIGHBOR

OF YOURS

Cooper had been contacted by officials of both the Clippers and the
Richmond Braves, Atlanta 's farm
team, after Thursday night's fourth
game was postponed by a torrential
rain .
The officials s uggested tha t the
playoffs, in which there had been iO
rainouts smce the start of the
semifinals , be ended so the parent

was no champion.

Bengals must worry about
Sipe in final two minutes
CINCINNATI !API - Cleveland
Browns quarterback Brian Sipe
makes his living on the tw(}-minute
drill , winning ball games at the last
minute. And that's what Cincinnati
Bengals ha ve to worry about this afternoon in Riverfron t Stadium.
In the last three games, countmg
the final preseason contest, Bengals
opponents have scored twice and
come close the other time in the
waning moments.
That's when the Bengals use their
prevent defense , sometimes called
the nickel defense because there are
five defensive backs instead of four
to prevent passes.
"We've been giving up too many
big plays,'' said defensive back
coach Dick LeBeau as the Be11gals
prepared Thursday for the Browns.
"They (opponents) have hit a
couple of plays in the most critical
time of the games. This can be
corrected. It's not that our guys
don't know what to do . They're just
not quite getting It done," said
LeBeau.
"The nickel works well all during
the ball game, but it hasn't been

•

But Cooper declared Columbus the
champion because of the Clippers' 21 lead in the best-of-seven series.
Columbus thus became the first
team in IL history to win three
straight pennants and playoff titles.
From his office in Grove City,
Ohio, Cooper said " I didn't want to

what you'd like in the final
minules," said cornerback Louis
Breeden.
In the final exhibition game, the
Denver Broncos' quarterback Mark
Herrmann moved the ball 61 yards
for the winning touchdown with no
time-outs.
Two weeks a go, Seattle's Jim Zorn
marched his team 60 yards before
the defense finally shut him down.

~

Bowling's two yard run capped the
drive. Walsh then added the conversion cutting the score to IS-8.
On the ensuing kickoff, the
Vikings' onside kick wsa recovered
by Southwestern which was unable
to move.
The Highlanders threatened twice
iluring the period but could not
score. Late in the fourth stanza, Don
Carr blocked a Viking punt,
however, the Viking defense stopped

Southwestern .
On the next series, Carr picked off
a Viking pass but returned the ball
when he fwnbled while being
tackled.
With two minutes left, Syinmes
Valley blocked a Highlander punt.
Following a pass interference call,
quarterback AI Burcham connected
on a 45 yard TD play to Mark Wade.
A run for the tying points was stopped by Rick Silvers and Lewis.
On the kickoff, Synunes Valley
again tried an onside kick and this
time was successfuL After completiilg a 20 yard screen pass, Sym·

big defensive stops. Lewis a nd Bo
Bevans were also commended for
their steady performances. Southwestern 1-2 hosts Buffa lo of Putnam
County Friday .

mes Va lley lined up for what a ppeared to be a 47 yard fi eld goal a ttempt. However , Burcham went to
the air and his pass was intercepted
by Southwestern's Jerome Potte r.
Offensive stars for the Highla nders were Hammond with 140 yards
rushing while running the triple option and Lewis with 134 yards.
Coach James comme nded Rand y
Layton and Elton Savage for their
work in opening huge holes in the
Viking defense.
Don Ca rr had an exceptional
d efensiv e game with an in terception , blocked punt and several

Stat is ti cs
SV

De partm ent
F 1rst d ow ns
Ya r ds ru shi ng
Ya r ds pass 1ng
Tot al y a rd age
Passes a tt pt .
Passescom p t .
ln ter ce p t iosn
Fumb les
Fum b les los t
By qu art ers :

SW

8

11

171

300

107

0

218
12

300
2

7

0

0
2
I

2
2
I

0096--- 14

5V

sw

8

B 0 Q-- 16

one

they won an abbreviated series.
"No matter what decision I made,
there would be disagreement. But
that's my job. I thought the integrity
of the game was at stake. I gut the
feeling that the players themselves
didn't want to play any longer."

football telecasts until after a
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - A
special
Dec. _6 meeting of the NCAA.
federal judge has put the OklahomaDistrict
Judge Charles Mathews
Georgia suit against the NCAA on
an
order in Austin Friday
signed
hold, urging the College Football
that continues the temporary
Association and the NCAA to reach a
restraining order against the NCAA
compromise at a special convention
until Jan. 4, after UT agreed to limit
in December.
its civil suit only to UT·Austin conU .S. District Judge Luther
cerning a television contract with
Eubanks issued a temporary
NBC.
restraining order on Friday, preven·
Statistics
Ward said the order will be refined
ling the National Collegiate Athletic
Department
KC
further by attorneys for presenFirst down s
13
7
Association
from
starting
Yards rushing
235
45
tation
to
the
judge
on
Monday
and
disciplinary proceedings against the
Yards passing
0
BO
may contain additional provisions.
universities of Oklahoma and
Total yardage
235
125
A lawyer's conference also is
Passes Attpt.
12
20
Georgia.
Compt .
Passes
0
8
Oct.
I
scheduled
before
Eubanks
on
· NCAA spokesman David Cawood
In tercep ti on s
0
1
to
assist
the
lawyers
in
preparing
for
:a t NCAA headquarters in Mission,
Fumb les
2
4
the December hearing. The order
Fumb les lost
lean., said, "Although the exact conI
1
Penalties
4· 40
3· 25
vindicates the schools' decision to
tent of the modified restraining orBy quarters ;
challenge the claim on their proper~er is not yet clear, our legal counsel
Ale)(ander
0 0 0 6---6
ty r-ights and freedom to contract.
Kyg er Creek
:was pleased with the manner in
0 0 0 o--o
.which the hearing was conducted
·and the expression of the court that
'it would be preferrble for the parties
.to resolve the matter out of court.
The special convention affords us an
opportunity to do so.''
: Oklahoma faculty representative
Dan Gibbens and the school's chief
legal counsel Stanley Ward announced Eubanks' decision Friday
-night.
Ward said the order also restrains
the NCAA from implementing any
v
football television contr~ct purGallipolis Business College is offering the Ac·
porting to bind the two universities.
credited Program. Work you are required to
The order is to continue until a
complete for the real estate finance and ap·
final hearing on the merits of a class
action suit filed by the University of
praisal. Complete in only 12 weeks- Call Now
Oklahoma and the University of
-Classes will begin September 28th. For more
Georgia Athletic Association regarinformation:
ding the 61-member CF A schools'
property rights to televised football
games.
That hearing is scheduled the
CONSULT LEE TYLER
week after the NCAA gpecial convention on Dec. 3--4, asswning the
key issues are not resolved by then .
Meanwhile the Universitx of
Reg . No . 75-02·0472-B
- Texas has agreed to hold off on its
Ph. 446-4367
: civil suit against the NCAA over

ATTENTION

to see
lor all
rour loml/y
lnsu11nce
needs.

Kyger Creek grabbed the initial
lead before Southern went ahead 3-1
CAROLL SNO•WilE'
on the next serve.
417 Second Ave .
Southern maintained its lead
Ga ll•po lis, Oh .
Phone 446·429()
throughout the game, although
n•n , .. ,.
lif• I
Kyger Creek stayed close the entire
.A..
good ••ilhb!N;
game . The hosts pulled within one at
.Stoll flrJI
H , then a series of long and hard'
nnuuNc~
if tltlll.
fought volleys followed with
Stale Farm Insuranc e CompaniM
Southern eventually taking the win
Home Ot1 1ces : Blooming!on , Illinois
in the well-played affair.
Both Coaches agreed both clubs
e 730 u
played well and exhibited a very ex- ,--------------L._________:_..:,::::..:::,::_
citing display of volleybball. Good
play and good set·ups were witnessed on the front row for both
teams.
In the second game, both teams
got off to a slow start, but Southern
took a 4-0 lead on a series of Michelle

make the decision, but I had to."
He said Aaron called Columbus
General Manager George Sisler
" and told him they wanted to cancel
the playoffs. George agreed with
him. I called Richard Andersen, and
he told me the field was unplayable
for (Friday night).
Aaron told him "he felt the teams
should be c~hampions. He told me
George Sisler agreed with that,"
Cooper said .
But he said he called Sisler "and
he didn't make that statement to me.
So, 1 decided Columbus would be the
champion on the basis of thefr 2-1
lead in the series . Tl1ere will be an
asterisk in the record book to say

final canto.
Playing ball control most of the
time, Alexander rolled up 235 yards
on the ground which was led by
Green's 87 yards. Denny Facemire
had 67 yards and Dave Malloy , 63.
Kyger Creek, minus fullback Tim
Barr, was able to garner just 45 yards on the ground and 80 in the air.
Passes were completed to J . D.
Bradbury and Craig Richards for
most of the air yardage.
The win gave the Spartans a 1-1
season record while Kyger Creek
dropped to 1·2.
The Bobcats travel to Minford
Friday .

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1

Authorized Dealer
for

The New York Jets' Richard Todd
moved the Jets for a touchdown to
pull within one point of a tie.
Sipe won nine ball games last
season in the final two minutes, and
the Browns are third in passing this
season despite their ().2 record.
The Bengals, undefeated in two
regular season games, are ranked
21st in the National Football League
in pass defense and loth in the
American Conference.
" The nickel defense is kind of like
the guy who holds on kicks," LeBeau
said. "They're always on the field in
a relatively critical situation. When
it's played well, It's forgotten. When
it isn't, you remember it, just like
the guy who holds the baiL"

by Synunes Valley which marched
65 yards for its first score.

,--------------------------1

Tho

Aaron feels Cooper got 'cold feet'
clubs could call up needed players.
The Clippers are a fann team of the
New York Yankees.
Richmond General Manager
R1chard Andersen said there were
three main reasons for ending the
playoffs- The parent clubs wanted to call
some players up.
- The bad weather could continue.
- It was getting too expensive for
the or~ anizations with low gates not
matching expenses.
Richmond officials were under the
impression Cooper would declare
the teams c~hampions or say there

Alexander a IHJ victory over Kyger
Creek .
The run followed a second and
eight play at the 6:55 p.m . in the

Suit 'put on hold"

1.

guys. It's a bad way to handle it,"
Aa ron sa id F'riday night after
Cooper halted the playoffs.

ru-st

~ CHESHIRE - Fullback Jerry
Green broke up a scoreless fourth
quarter dual with an electrifying 52
yard romp here Friday night to give

CHESHIRE.Southern claimed the
battle of the unbeaten Thursday
evening with two consecutive wins
over SV AC foe Kyger Creek, IS--6 and
JS-3, in local high school volleyball
action,
The win boosts Coach Suzanne
Wolfe's Tornadoettes to a perfect IHJ
mark , whi le Kyger Creek drops to 5-

RICHMOND, Va . 1AP 1 - Hank
Aaron, fa rm director of the Atlanta
Braves, says he feels that Int e rnational Le a gu e P r eside nt
Harold Cooper ' ·got cold feet" when
he declared the regula r-season
champion Colwnbus Clippers the
winners of the r ain-canceled final
playoffs.
" At first , he said we'd 1Richmond
Br aves I be co-champs . Then he sa id
Columbus would be champs because
they were up 2-1. That' s not what we
had 1n mind. It's not fair to these

all important conversion for an IHJ
lead.
'
Midway throngh tbe second
period, Southwestern reached
paydirt again on an unusual play.
Quarterback Randy Hammond, running an option, raced 40 yards only
to fwnble. The ball bounced into the
hands of offensive center Greg
Terry who went 20 yards for the
touchdown.
Hammond added the extra points
for a 16--0 advantage at the half.
The second half kickoff was taken

'

defeats Kyger Creek twice

later suffered a dislocated right shoulder, had a 45 yard
kickoff return and 26 yards rushing. Closing In is the
White Falcons' Shawn Paugh (531.

PATRIOT- In a gBme dominated
by both teams In each half, Southwestern scored early then held on
for an exciting IS-14 win over Symmes Valley here Friday night.
Coach Jack James' Highlanders
dominated the first half, but nad to
rely on some fine defense to halt the
Vikings' second half comeback.
Southwestern took the lead in the
stanza when junior b!lck Ron
Carr rambled in from two yards out.
Scott Lewis, who was switched to the
fullback position this week, got the

(J-reen 's long run gives
•
~partans 6-0 grid wrn

Southern's volleyball team

COME BACK HERE! Wahama's Alan Machir (84)
lunges for Meigs' Mike Jackson (2U) during Friday's
game at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy. Jackson, who

The Sunday Tim e s -Se nt inel- P age- C-5

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3 Milos llonh of Rt. 60
GALLIPOLIS FERRY f
Phone: 722-338&amp; Lumber 722-21t I Homo Cont11
~D~:;D(~)t 7 &amp;. 4 il4 WIE.DAYHOO U1 - 1:00 P.M. SAlUROAYUCIIIA.II.- 5;00 P.M. SUODAYS 9:00A.M. - UHI P.M.
PHOIE: IH·7DM

,,

'I

�Sept. 20, 1'81
Page-C-It-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Sept. 20, 1981 · ·

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Pirat~s
Ironton

IRONTON - Fullback Dennis
BacoA ran for three touchdowns and
l!ll yards Friday night in leading the
undefeated Ironton Tigers to • 28-8
smashing of visiting Portsmouth.
'Ole Trojans entered the contest
undefeated, but were throttled by
the tough Tiger defense until the
fourth period. when Coach Bob Lutz
irwerled his subs.
Wltll his Tigers holding a 21Hllead
the veteran Ironton mentor sulr
stltuted freely, permitting the
Tl'f&gt;jans to gain 85 of their 209
nJilhing yards, and their only score.
In addition to Bacon's three
sooring runs, the other Ironton
touehdown came on a beautifully
executed 68 yard score pass from
Mark Snyder to Mike Smith with no
ttmeleft in the third period.
The Tigers rolled up 210 yards
rushing and completed two of five
passes for 76 more while the Trojan:;
netted 209 rushing, and completed
one of 11 passes for 19 yards, with
three intercepted.
Scoring Summary
Portsmouth
0 o o

8-

8

7

0 14

7-

Malt Bonzo, kick blocked.
J - Safety, Mike Hartley tackled

28

I - Dennis Bacon 3 run, Jimmy
Morri s ki c k .
1 - Dennis Bacon 61 run , Morris

in end zone.
J - Malt Bonzo 10 run, kick failed.

kick
1 ~ Mik e Smilh 68 pass fro m Mark

Snyder, Morri s k 1ck .
1 - Denni s Bacon 41 run. Morris
ki c k
P Rob Jackson 44 run, Tim
Fu ll er pas s from Joe Gri f fith .

J - Matt Bonzo 59 run, John Hale
pass from Bonzo.
J - Todd Davis 16 pass from Bonzo, Mark Fenick kick.
M- Kevin Stiles 2 run , run failed .

Bonzo paces lronmen
Penalties mar tilt

JACKSON - Quarterback Matt
Bonzo ran for a pair of touchdowns
and passed for two more Friday
night as the Jackson Ironmen whipped the Miller Falcons 29-6
Despite losing four fumbles the
Jronmen rallied behind Bonzo to notch t heir second victory of the season,
as the senior qua rterback also led
Jackson in rushing with 84 vards on
lO ca rries.
The Jackson offense rolled up 207
ya rds rushing and 88 passing as Bonzo hit on five of six, including touchdown passes of 30 and 16 yards
Score by quarters:
Miller
0 0 06- 6
Jackson
6 16 0 7- 29
J - Allen Collins 30 pa&gt;S from

WAVERLY - The Waverly Tigers
not only scored their first points of
the season Friday night, but also
came away with a 13-ii victory over
visiting Piketon.
In the contest marred with 293 yards in penalties defense was the name
of the game.
The Tigers outrushed Piketon 11251 and connected on five of eight
passes for 66 yards.
Waverly drew 15 penalties for 180
ya rds while Piketon was whistled 13
limes for 113 yards.
Don Welch topped the Tigers with
76 yards in 16 tries while Todd
Mowery led Piketon with 33 ya rds on

16 carries.
Scoring
Summary
Piketon
o o o 6-- 6
Waverly
7 6 0 o---13
W - Rusty Conl ey 13 pass from
Tom Thompson. Don Welch ki c k .
W - Marvin Harris .SO punt return,
ki c k failed .
P - Eddie Turpero 2 run, run
failed .

End losing streak
NELSONVIlLE - The Nelsonville-York Buckeyes ended a :IS-year
losing streak Friday night as they
bounced visiting Logan 40-0 ,
marking the third straight contest
this year that Logan has failed to
score.
The last time any Nelsonville
team earned a football victory over
a Logan team was 1956, but Friday
night there was no doubt about the

outcome.
The Buckeyes took a !9-(llead after three quarters and then jammed
21 points on the board during a five
minute span in the fourth period.
While Nelsonville rolled up 93 yartls rushing, 13 first downs, and hit 11

'Not in must-win situation yet,., --Mac
LOS ANGElES (API - Cincinnati Manager John McNamara
doesn't feel the Reds must push the
panic button just yet.
"No way we're in a must-win
situation yet," McNamara said.
But Johnny Bench, who delivered
the crushing blow in the Reds' 5-4
comeback victory over the I.os
Angeles Dodgers on Friday night,
disagrees.
"There's no room for error'at this
point," said Bench, who socked a
two-run homer in the top of the nin·
til. " We dug ourselves into a hole by

Francisco's victory over Houston,
moved them to within half a game of
second-place Los Angeles, which
still trails the Houston Astros by two
games in the National League West.
Rookie reliever Dave Stewart, 4-3,
who hadn't allowed the Reds to score
in nine previous appearances, pitched out of a jam in the eighth but
served up Bench's clout in the ninth.
" Stewart has heen tough on us,"
noted Bench. " He just tried to make
too fine a pitch, and he got it up ...
Cmcmnati took a Hl lead against
starter !lob Welch when George
Foster led off the second w1th his

not getting off to a good start the
second half."
Bench is doing his best to gel Cincinnati on the right lrar,k. Since
returning to the active roster after
breaking a bone in his ankle during
the first half of the season, Bench ts
ba lling 412 114 for 341 with five
home runs nnd 13 RBis .
" I've just tried to make the most
of my opportunities," said Bench ,
who appeared Friday ni ght as a pinch-hi tter . " Fortunately , I'm seeing
some good pitches."
The Reds' win , coupled with San

The state dtstncl court jury
deliberated for more than three
hours over two days before decidlng
Friday that Johnny Merla was not
entitled to any damages for the pain
and humiliation he claimed he suffered 111 the scufne. The confrontation took place on Jan . 5, 1980

after a game at the HemisFair
Arena .
Jurors said there was no merit to
Merta's $825,000 laws uit , which
charged that Cowens and Bird spat
on him and that Bird knocked him
down with a duffie bag.
The jury found that Cowens did not
sptt on Merta, a memher of the San

For the record. ..
I ~agUt'
PH ILAO F.I.PH \A
F\.YF.H S - S1~ned
l11ck St l'nm. gualw. to &lt;~ rnu lll· yt'&lt;H
ru nlra ct

MajM ~ague Baseb.aU
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W L
2:J
2:J

Milwauk:t&gt;t'
!JrlMIII

Bo&lt;ton
x-New Yurt
R.altimore
l'orootu
C1eveland

Pet. GB
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14 ~
12 "
dJVISIUil wmn&gt;:r
Frid•y "s Games
6, Boston 4
5, Baltimore 1
Ca lifornia I

Seattle
California
x.· First-tU~If

N..... York
Milwaukee
Toronto 5,

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11 5

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19

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Xr Phl.ladelphia

Houston
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CIGciNiati
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Cle&lt;tr. Bos·
lun. R-1. /Wl. :1 Jfi, Tnrrl'Z Boston 8-2
800.
3.&amp;1:
Me(; rt'gor
Balt 1rnorc. · l \·3:
3.42 . (~m dr y, i\t•w Yurk, l l· J, .1116.
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Ojeda. Auston. 6-2 , .750. 2 .ll
STHIKF.OUTS
Barke r . (1cvd&lt;wt.f, 11 2:
Blylr.\"en . Clevela nd. I% ; Burn ~ C h1 c a~o.
92: !.t.•ontml, Ktt nsus Cit y. 91. Gurdrv,
New Vurk , 81 .
·
786,
2.92;

NATIONAL L E AGl:E

BATil NG 1!2.J at bats \

burgh,

.341 :

Concepcion,

F~y ' sGames

~ a dlock

?tit s-

Rose.
Philadelphia.· .327 :
Cincmnati.
.32.1 :
Dawson,

Mvnlr!!a l, .322; Durh.tm. ChicagLJ, .3 16.
RUNS : Sc hmidt. P h!ladelph1a. 6~ : Daw·
.sun, Montrea l, 6.1 ; Raln es, Montreal, :l!l ;

Montreal II, Olicago 0
New Yurlr. 8, St.Louis I
Pittsbur-gh 7, Philadelphw 6
AtlMnta 3, San Diego o
QncinnHti a, Loti Angeles •
Sen Franci.!ICO S, Houston 2
Saday'1Games
"Cl£11!10 at Montreal
,.itbburgh at Philadelphia
St.UJuis at New Yorll
ClndMBtl al Los Angeles
Atlanta til San otego

Rose,
Pluladclphra ,
~EI:
Hernandez,
St.Louis. 59 : Collin:i. Cinc mnat1 . 59
RBI : Fos le r , Ci ncmnat t. 78; Sc hmidt
Pt1Hadlphia, 72;
Buckner . 0Hl'&lt;IKO
63 .'
Cuncepciun, C1 nnnn!1tl. r~1 . C.u1 t' r.' Mnu:
treal. 61.
HITS : Rl)St! , Ptuladelphta, 122: Concepcion, Cincinrl&lt;t ti , 117; Ba ker. Los An·
)(eles. 1\3 ; Uoc knc r. C h lc a~o. 112: Daw·
son, Monl real, lll8 : Carve)', l.os 1\n~rles ,

Houl!ltoo at San Francisco

108.
DOUBI.FB Jones. Sa n Otego. J l : Ruck·
ner. Chicago, Zll ; Concepcion, Cinc mnati .
27; Chambliss. Atlanta, 2J ; Howe, Houston, 2J .
TRIPlES: Reynolds. Houston, 11: Rictr
Hfd::i, San Diego, II: Raines, Montreal. 7;
Wtlson, New Yo_rk, 7; Moreno, P1ttsburf5h.
7: Herr, S t . Lou1 ~ . 7: Templeton, St.Louis,
7: Herndon, San Francisco, 7.
HOME
RUNS : Sctunidt, Phlbtdelphia ,
26; Dawson , Montre al , 1.'1; F'o.~ter, Cincir\·
nsli, 20; Kingman. New York , 19 ; Hendr·
ick, St. Louis, 16; Oark., San Francisco,

MODd.ay's Games
8t.Louis at Olicago, 1
Pbiladelphla at Montreal (n l
Pittaburgtl at New York (n 1
Cincinnati at San Diego t n 1
Oaly gatne!i !M:'hedu.led

Transactions
BASEBALL

16.

No_. ~aPt

S'I'OLEN OASES : Raines, Montreal, 69;

"A~A
BRAVES-Recalled
Terry
~ .Weider; Matt SW.tro, catcher;

Moreno, Pittaburgh, JS ; ScoU, Montreal,
27; Dawson, Montreal, 26; North, San

~. •hort.!ltop, from
~onat League.

Francisco, 2tl.
PITCHING (8 Decisiorul : Seaver, Cincinnati, 12·2, .8$7, 2.58 ; Va lenzuela, Los

, ~

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ol 11&gt;e

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Wallt,

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RIIIGRTS-Hired
Freebilld «10cll. Named Dick

LOI1doll ~ .IIOCUY
malllll"·

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oiliiOIT UD WINGS-AIIi&amp;ned Per·
~~~

of the

American

Angeles, 13-4, .765, 2.3R ; Carlton, Philadelphia, 12-4, .750, 2.47; Camp, Atlanta, 93, .750, 1.98; Reii5S, Los Angeles, t-3, .750,
2.19; Rhoden, Pittsburgh, 6-3, .m, 4.24;

1 Cl~lnnatl, 11-3, .m, 3.09; Ruthven,
Phllaaelph1a, 11-5, .688, UB .
STRIKEOUTS: Valenzuela, Los Ange-

H~

" 1111or IIIII Deonla Potonlch, forwlltd.,
to

WELLSTON - Dale Lambert
scored four touchdowns and ran for
207 yards Friday night in leading
Wellston to a ~ stomping of neighboring Vinton County.
The Rocket offense rolled up 427
yards as they upped their season
mark to 2-1.
Score by quarters :
Vin ton Co
0 0 0 6- 6
Well ston
14 19 6 14- 53
W Dale Lambert 94 run, Bill
Nor r is kick .
W - Dale Lambert 7 run , N orr is
ki c k .
W - Bill Norri s 1 r un, kick failed.

CIRCLEVILLE - Tony Cooper
scored three tO\IChdowns and rushed
for 130 yards Friday night as Circleville lashed the Athens Bulldogs
J!Hl.
Following a scoreless first quarter
the host team put 20 points on the
board in the second period and added 15 more in the third to run their
season mark to 2-1.
Athens, winless in three starts,
managed only five first downs and 35
yards rushing while the defense ~
gave up 271 rushing yards and 119 ·
passing to the Tige•s.
Score by quarters:
Athens
o o 0 o- 0
Circleville
0 20 15 D---35
C ~ Tony Cooper 15 run, Tim Lane

kick .

C-

C -

Tony Cooper J run, Lane kick

Tony Cooper 25 pass from

Fred Pyles, kick failed.
C -- Fred Pyles 5 run, Pyles run .
C - Tommy Tomlinson 23 pass
from Py les, Ke ll y Robinson ki ck .

MEN

STUDY THE CLASSICS

Welch, after his rocky start, was
chased in the seventh when the Reds
tied the score, collecting four
straight hits with two out.
The Dodgers went back on top in
the eighth on pinch-hitter Reggie
Smith's sacrifice fly, hefore Bench's
homer gave reliever Joe Price 6-1
the victory.
'
'
8:00 am Latin class means two things:

Antonio Spurs Baseline Bums
organization, and Bird was acting in
self defense when he swung the tote
bag.
Three policemen, a paramedic , a
bus driver, two San Antonio fan, and
the two players aU testified that
Merta provoked the incident by sp itting in Bird's face while a drunken
group of fans shouted obscenlies at
lloston players boarding a bus .

1) You've got to get to class on time;
2) You've got to stay awake .
To make those first steps easier, try Bass® shoes for
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The
Shoe Cafe

:111t1 Second ,\\'C.
Lafayette :\'I all
Gallipolis. 0.

Imagine shingles that resist
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Hockey

le_s, 1&amp;2;. Carlton:... Philadelphia,

Soto,

147;

Cincinnati, 125; K)'an, Hou:ston, 112 · Der·
enyi, Cincinnati, 91 .

lf.t•sult..s

I.J·: llA ,'\JON. Olllo I A P \ ~ Snow Goer won lhe
fcatUI"l'illllilt&gt; trut Friday , pay in~ $UO, $3.20 Hnd
$:.1211 0:1~ l ..t"U&lt;~nun Ra l-e Course opened its fall
rnel'llllK bdon· 1.686 1ans. who wage red $185.336 .
M 1.~t y Su.san wa s st&lt;.'ond , $6, and J4 10, 11 nd ll"l:

hurse, Rarluw .I ~.X", pcud $4 .80 .
Tlw l · ~rluuhlt · of f·:t"M'· ~ K rn g&lt;~nd Jav Mi le paid
$.\:. l iJ
.

'

SLIPPING AND SLIDING - Baltimore Orioles
right fielder Jim Dwyer slides on tbe ootfleld grass
while lrylqg lo come up 'wttb a blooper ofl tbe bat of
Paul Molitor of the Mnwaukee Brewers In tbe second

Sports
briefs ...

By WILLIAM R. BARNARD
. . . AI.',Sports Writer
· A'lflliicanLeague
~e is never a very
comfortable lead for a team in first
place, but Milwaukee Brewers ·
Manager Buck Rodgers says it is
more precarious than ever because
of the split baseball season.
Rodgers says he is concerned
because the Brewers are scheduled
to. play one more game than Boston
or Detroit in baseball's second
season, and two more than
Baltimore.
"One-half game ahead isn't
eriqugh," Rodgers said after the
B~ers moved jnto first place in
til&amp; American League East with a &gt;I
vidory over Baltimore Friday
night. "If we were even with
Baltimore in losses, for instance,
we!d have to win the two extra
gatnes."
~waukee leads Detroit by onebaH game, Boston and New York by
one, and Baltimore by I 'o2. All five
teams have !&amp;losses.
Rodgers said now that his team is
in .the lead, the important thing is to
sta)there.
In other AL games Friday night,
New York tripped Boston 6-4
Cleveland beat Detroit 11-4, Toront~
defjlated California &gt;1, Oakland
whipped Chicago 111-4i, Minnesota
stopped Texas &amp;-3 and Karisas City
bombed SeaWe 8-3,
Pete Vuckovieh won his 13th game
in 17 decisions and combined with
Jruiue Easterly on a seven-hitter in
!he' victory over the Orioles. The
trilpnph was Milwaukee's fifth in the
lasf six games and was one of the
feW: accomplished without the help
of (eliever Rollle Fi.pgers, who has
three victories and 26 saves.
'
Indians 8, Tigers 4
Jbhn Denny won his sixth straight
decjSion, knocking Detroit out of first P,JQce for the first time since Aug.

Cleveland, which · had fQur tw&lt;rrun
innings to snap a five-game losing
streak. The ~ers have lost five in a

fO'I!;-.

\

Denny, 9-4, 8Jiowed nine hils in
eight innlllgs for the victory.

Boxing
NEW YORK (AP)- Muhammad
Ali , in one of his vintage performances , sa id he would wm the
heavyweight title a record fourth
time, after it was a nnounced that hewould fight Trevor Berbick in a 12round bout in early December at
Nassau, Bahamas.
No exact dale was set for the fight,
which is bemg billed as the "Drama
in Bahama," but the three-time
champion indicated it would be Dec.
2, a Wednesday.
Ali, who has retired and unretired
much more often than he has won
the title, has not fought since Oct. 2,
1980, when WBC champion Larry
Holmes s lopped him embarrassingly after 10 rounds at Las
Vegas , Nev . The fight went mto the
record books as an lith-round
knockout.

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General
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - A
state jury unanimously cleared
Larry Bird of the Boston Celtlcs and
Dave Cowens, a former Celtic of
any wrongdoing or damages in ~on·
?e~tion with a Jan.5, 1980, post-game
mcident outside HemisFalr Arena.
The jurors, who deliberated more
than three hours over two days,
found that Johnny Merla, a member
of the San Antonio Spurs' Baseline
Bruns organization, should reteive
no damages for physical pain and
hwnilitition he claimed he suffered
in a confrontation with the two
players.
The jurors in 37th State District
Court found no merit in Merla's
$825,000 lawsuit which charged that
Cowens and Bird spat on him and
that Bird knocked him to the ground
with a duffle bag.

CASH &amp;

ASPHALT OR FIBERGLASS

SHINGLES .

Only

CA~RY

win home opener,

iDDIDg of tbelr game ill Baltimore Friday night. Dwyer
could nol come ap wltb tbe caleb aUow!Dg Mark
Broubard lo score from second base oa the play_
MUwaukeewOD, 1;-1. (AP Laserpbolo).

VINTON - In ils first home game
Fnday, North Gallia didn't disappoint its fans by defeating
Southeastern of Ross County, 8-0.
For themostpart, the Pirates had
an easy time c1 it, although
Southeastern, considered a fair
threa I to the hosts, apparently blew
manyofilschances to score.
The Panthers came close only onee, in the third quarter when they
pushed all the way to North Gallia's
four-yard line, but tough defensive
play by Charlie Swisher,
who
fimshed with 14 tackles, and Kenny
Neal kept the visitors in check .
Following a scoreless first quarter, the Pirates crashed into the
Panther end zone with 4:03

'

Millersburg Mil~ry Academy . ·

remaining in the second canto on a
tw&lt;&gt;-yard run by Scott Pickens .
Pickens passed to Bruce Shriver for
the conversion.
Top rusher for North Gallla was
Jeff Smith with 68 yards, while
Shriver and Eric Pennick ran28 yards each. The Pirates were penali2ed
5 for 35 yards and Southeastern 2 for
18 yards.
North Gallia travels to Paris, Ky.
Fr~day for a 5 p.m . game against

Department
Fkst
downsi ng
Yardsrush
Yards passing
Total yardage
Passes attempted
Passescompleted
Intercepti ons
Fumbles
Penalties
Score ·
by
North Galli a
Southeastern

UlLE, France (AP) - Blagois
Blagoev of Bulgaria set a world
weighllifting record for tbe 198pound category with a snatch of 4C8
pounds in the World' Weightllfting

Championships.
Blagoey broke the record of Yurt
Zakharevich of the Soviet Union,·
who snatched 403 pounds on June 211'
in Ligano, Italy .
-.

NG

' SE

6'

10

68
54

28
8
97 ·

175

10
3

'r'

0

0
9'
2·18

I '

2
5· 35

0q "8a rote ;.,s.a ·.

o

Blagoev SCtS WClg
• h tliftmg
• mark

o

o

By KEN .RAPPOPORT
AP Sporls Writer

Nalioual League
After third baseman Huble Brooks
made two. errors against the
Philadelphia Phillies Thursday
night, New York Mets Manager Joe
Torre took him aside. for a bit of
fatherly advice.
"I talked to Hubie privately before
tonight's game," said Torre. "You
have to do that with a young player.
He's very aggressive and he knoW!!
there are going to be days when he'll
be. embarrassed. He's a rookie but
he doesn't play like one - he can
bounce back from adversity."
The talk paid dividends Friday
night as Brooks bounced back to
deliver a tWt&gt;-run triple and an RBI
single as the Mels took an 8-1 victory
over the National League East·
leading St. Louis Cardinals.
" Mier yesterday, 'I just wanted to
produce, to drive in some runs. I'm
glad I did," sal~ Brooks, who admitted he was "down" after Thursday night's ~2 Ieiss to the PhiUies.
In other NL games, Montreal.
walloped Chicago 11-0; Ctnctnpatl
edged Los Angeles :H; San F~iln­
cisco beat Houston 1;-2; Atlanta
blanked San Diego 3-0 and Pit·
tsburgh tripped Philadelphia 7~.
Brooks' triple highlighted a lour·
run first inning and his RBI single
came in another four-run outburst in
the eighth, Doug Flynn also knOcked
in three f!II1S for tHI! Mets, two with a
single in the eighth.
Ed Lynch, 4-3, gained his first victory in four starts against the Cardinals with relief help from Jesse
Orosco, who posted his first save of
the season. St.Louis starter Bob
Shirley, 1&gt;-4, lasted just one-third of
an inning.
Giaal&amp; 5, Astros 2
Joe Morgan and Enos Cabell, two
fanner Houston players, combined
to beat their old team as San Francisco whipped the Astros,
Morgan, who clllfle to the Giants
this year as a free agent after
helpiilg the Astmdo tbelr first NL
West title · a year ago, po1mded out
three hils and scored two runs,
Cabell, who came to the Gianls in exchange for pitcher Bob Knepper,
knocked in two tiiJlS with a single
and a double.

TIEMPO

IAL
It may be all the tire you'll ever need
all year round! Has smooth- riding
polyester cord body , double steel
cord belts. Specially compounded
tread rubber for sure grip In any
weather ... wet, dry, hot or cold .

FREE MOUNTING

Whitewall
Size
P185/180R 13
P195/75R14
P205/7SR14
P215/75R14
P225/75R14
P205/75R15
P215/75R15
P225/75R15
P235/75R15

Fits
BR78· 13
CR78-14
E R78·14
FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-1 4
FR78-15
GR78-l5
HR78-15
LR78-15

85.50
92 .15
96,00
98.00
102.35
97.00
101.00
104.40
111.75

Sale
57,00
62 .00
64.00
66,00
68.00
74 .00
68.00
70.00
74.00
77.00

Btackwall
P155/80R13
P165/75R 13
P195/75R14
P165/80R15

Metric
Metric
ER78-14
Metric

61.95
68 .25
87.75
74. 10

Sale
44,00
49.00
59.00
51.00

P185/7~R14

Reg.

80.00

Plus F . E.T. 1.40 to 2.95 per tire

'

RADIAL
WHITEWALL

Everything you need in one great
tire! A steel belted radial with big ·
ger footprint , more grip in mud and
snow. Great traction In rain,
hydroplaning resistance. tread wear
and durability. Plus responsive
handling and quiet ride. Natural
contour helps prolong tire life.

FREE MOUNTING

Whitewall
Fits
Size
Metric
P155/80R13
P165/75R13
Metric
P185/80R13
Metric
P185/75R14
BR78·14
ER78·14
P195/75R14
P205/75R14
FR78·14
GR78· i4
P215/75R14
FR78· 15
P205/75R15
P215/7SR15
GR78-15
HR78-15
P225/7SR1S
P235/75R15 · LR78·15
PtusF.E.T.l.St to2.91-ttre

Reg.
69.75

74.95
91 .35
95 . 15
105.35
109.65
111.90
110 .75
115.40
119.30
127.80

Sale
45.00
49.00
70.00
72.00
74.00
76.00
78.00
78.00
79.00
83.00
87,00

CUSTOM POLYSTEEL

RADIAL

It's any Radial buyer's dream! The lire that keeps iis feet
even in the rain. Features two strong belts of steel plus the
smooth ride and durability of polyester cord body .

$4SAVE5o~R78Xl3

Note!
Rib count and
.sidewall styling vary with
size. Not a II tires look ex-

Whitewall
Size
Fits
Reg.
P185/80R13
85.95
, P195/75R14
99 .05
.I;:R78· 14
FR78- 14
103, 14
P205/75R14
F R78·15
P205/75R1S
104.22
GR78-15
P215/75R15
108 .63
HR78·15 . 112,19
P225/75R15
LR78-15
P235/75RlS
120.15
Plus F.E. T. 1.19 to lM per lire

Sale
48.00
61.00
63.00
65.00
73.00
75,00
79.00

. Everyday Low Prices
. · On Power Streak
Drive ., , With
Co.nffdence I

'21!~aon,
·

PIUs su;o FET

Ql Did life.

.

SPECIAL

$2 3 89 Square

CAROLINA
LUMBE.
R
- .
AND ·
..
SUPPLY COMPANY~

312 Sixth Street .
6 7 5-ll6Q
Point Plm.:~t
St~·~ Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p,m., Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

.

·s-o·

Brewers on top,
Houston beaten

29. •
8il Diaz hit a ttwo-run homer and
AJai1 Banniste,r scored three runs for

WmiiL.'Id .

Ht•ndt• rsu n, Oak la nd
STOLEN BASE ~
47, Crw: , &amp;;J \th·. 42:
I ~..·Flu n·. Chtt'&lt;tgu:
32; Wtlsun. Kt11\.iiJ:i C1h . 2.'i .
D1l.mt•

Pd.

J6

11

.

bR .

Breu . Kansa ~ CH_1·. l: "'1\ ~u n , Kansa s
f"1ly. !i : Hentlnsun. Oii k laml . ~J
HOME HUNS
Anna s. Uaklom d. 21.
Thomas. Mil~·;wket·. 20 : (;rwh. Ca ltfur·
111&lt;1.
lB. Murr·a) . Bal(rrrrun•, ]~ . Ev ans,
Ruston. 17; l.u :ll n ~ kl. Chu: a~o . II

nI

15

21
19
17
16

Cahform;1.

phr} , Nt•w Y11rk , :i,

1n I

t

Lambert runs wild

Bulldogs shut out

s lltl ~

HNltlers un. Octk land . 122. Ul i\"L'T
117.
l;w ~ft•rd . BtJs\o n. l Ui. Bur :

TH IPI . F. ~

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

5t Louis
M-.ol

Bur11bn.
.

Oak land.

Mmm·~wUI . 7: Lermm.

Seattle at Te:ws 1n 1

w

t\nnus .

f. vi:ln!"t

f\2 : Hotr :
I);Litun&lt;&gt;rp

Cl)"llt'r. M1lwaukt·1·. 29. 011 ·
H·r. Tclot.'i . 21i . P·dnurck. ~·iiltl &gt; · . 2:"1:
Brett . Kansa.~ l"l h ". ~4 . W111frdd. New
Yurk. 2:1 .

Oakland 111 Chicalo(O
Kan!Las City at Seattle 1111
Minnesota al Texas 1 n f
Meoday 'sGamn;
Mihrauk~ at Boston t nt
[)(ltroit a t BcJIUmore 1 n 1
Oetland :11 Toronto 1 n .1
Oeveland Ht New York 1 n 1
Ce~ lifomia

Oak lond. 110 .
M1lwauku•,

DOUBLES

Det.ruit at Cleveland

ill Kansas City

Hcndt· r ~tm.

Nt•w York. 6.1: ~ll\' 1 1' , ,\-\tiW.tU ket'. 62.
Murra) . Ralt un&gt;l rt·, Iii
l';w1un·k. St•;t ll k ,
f.~: Bd l. Tt·X&lt;&gt;S. 5(1

S.Dday ' 11 Ga me~
CAlifornia al Toronto
New York at Boston
Milwauilet ill Baltimore

HI

11U NS·

Muston, 69 : Ctl•1per .
rail . Clt'Vl•l;urtl . J7.
IU:) l

Karllllll'l City 8. Seattle :1

(llic&lt;tj.(O

Ld~n(Jn

1\Mf.R il"AI'I. LEAGUE
1\A TTl}."C
1:125
n1
hat sl
PiH' Illr&gt;'k .
Se attle . .332: Z1sk . St.·a Hle . J:l2 . Lan ~ ford
Bustun,
.130; Henderson . Oak l&lt;t llil .
329.·
H arf.(ru v ~ . Cler~l cuul
329

M

Oaldand 10, Chicago 5
Mirmesola 6, Tt&gt;x&lt;~s 3

Minneso~

o

0 0 o-- 0
Nels· York
7 6 6 21 - 40
N Mark M etca lf 15 fumble
r eturn , Brad Woodson ki c k .
N - Mike Bishop 8 run , kick
blocked.
N - Brad Woodson 25 run , kick
fail.
N - Ross Flowers 8 pass from
Bishop, Woodson kick .
N - Eric Manney 21 pass trom
Bishop, Woodson kick
N -:- Bob M c Donald 1 run , Wood·
son k1c k .

Logan

l' ·o

8. Od.rmt 4

a~·~l.and

Beulah Results
COLUMBUS, Oh1o (APf ~ Piece of Class, ridde n IJy Pnry Ouzts, won the fe.atured eighth race
at Beu la h Friday a nd paid $27, $9 and $6.60 .
In :-;ccond was Two Buck:; for $5.40 and $3.90.
Tlmd was Gypsy Ma 1dur $'/ .W.
The ninth ran• lrifecta of 11 -~ paid Sl .007 .10.
Thl' d111ly double, Hi, paid 122f).60.
1\ crowd of 4.300 bt•t $451,0&lt;17 .

'-:-

WEST

RariSll.sCity
li-Oakland
MinOt-sola

Racing

Score by quarters :

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-7 ,

kn~c~ off Panthers,

W Lambert 68 punt return,
Norris kick .
w - Todd Montgomeroy 1 run,
k ick failed .
w - Lt~mbert 66 run , kick fail.
w - Bub Norris 1 run. run fa i led .
W France Coleman 7 run, ·
Charlie Shotts run .
vc - Roger Mace 32 pa ss from
Curt Prater, kick failed .

20th home run. In the third, Rick 'liiii!'i~~~----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~l
Monday hit a two-run homer, his nin- 1
th of the year and sixth against the
Reds . The Dodgers then added an
1
unearnedrunafteranerrorbyDave
Concepcion to take a 3-1 lead.

Bird., Cowens cleared of any wrongdoing
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) Jnrors cleared Boston Celtics Larry
Bird and Dave Cowens of any
wrongdoing and refused to award
a•y damages to a San Antonio Spurs
fan who claimed the athletes
knocked him down and spit on him
during a scuffle after a game.

of 19 passes for 139 yards, the defense limited the Chieftains to no first
downs, a minuse 30 yards rushing,
and one of nine passes for just three
yards.

w. Va.

SALE
10 EARllt TIRE VALUES NCM ·

30th

MEIGS
TIRE CEM.TER
.
'

.

'

o-o ,

�•
Pa

The

1911

entinel

Judge won't 'bend on OHSAA ruli.Dg

Friday's Ohio
football scores
Ohlo HjC!J &amp;:ltMI F..aMU
B)' Tttt Aa•fllled Prell

I..UU iSVI Iie Aquinas 21, United 7
Loudonville ~. FredericklU'Wfl 0
l.u11eland 21, Milll.ll'd 1
LudlllW, Ky . 4!, lA'klllnd 1~
Mans. Madison 28, Mt Vernon 0
M~m.!i. M11labar Z7, Mans . Senior Jt
MO!ple Hb. ~. Cleve. L.incu!J~W . 14
Ma r ion 1&amp;, UJn&lt;~ C..th . H
Marion Harding 13, Dela ware 6
Manon Loca l 16, Lima r.ath. H
Mason 14 , Middletown Ml:idisun II
Massillon PelT)' . Z6, Mw.rlin!P-oo IJ
Mathews 111, F'a1rpon H11rdin.: 6
~Y!iville 14, Philo 0
McDonald 14, A:!hl&amp;bulH 0
Meadt.lwbrook 8, ~lprt' 1
MedilUI 13, Norton 12
Medina Highland 22, Medina Ruckt&gt;yE' I
Meigs 26, Wallllma , W. Vu . 7
M~ ntor i7, Cleve. W. Tech 0
Miami E. 26, Bt'thd 0
Miami Trace 20 , Cin . Hughfs 8
Mi111mi.sbur!l 17, Sidtiey 7
Millersport 14. Liberty Unioo 6
Milton-Un ion 26. Day. Northridjo!e 0
Mineral RldJo!e l3, Southington 0
Minford 19, McDennott NW ti
Minster 1&lt;1 , Waynesfi t-l d 12
Munrueville 20, Ashland C~1v iew 0
Morgau 21, Rivl'r Vit&gt;W 6
MI. G ile~td 9, Crt',;lline 0
ML Healthy ?!l , C:in . Turpin 15
Napoleon fifl. Bowling Green 0
Nelsonville--Yo rk 40, Lo!!!an 0
Nt&gt;w London :?!, Wellington 0

l'rldly'oK.....,
Acb 33, Cridersville Perry 6
Akru11 Filbtone 31, Alliant.'\! I
Akroo Hot.n 10, Rittnum 0
Akroo KenrllOrr ll . Cu)l•hoglll F'a lb 0
Akrtll'l
Malk'helllrr
3:1 ,
Grl"f'!nsbll.rg

Grt-&gt;en 15
Akroo N. 30, Ta!Imadgl! 6
Akron St . V...St. M 10, Akron Cen- How 7
Akron Sprtnl\. 14, Akron Ellet 6

Allen E . 14, Upper Sciuto V11l 6
Alnande r 6. Kyger C~k 0
A~lll St~le 9, Firehtnds G
Ar li n~on

Ash!MbulM

32,

Ltberty-Benton 0

Harbor lll. Warre n Champton

7

Au.stintown-Fitch

7,

Niles McK ink-y G
Avon Lake 21. Mid~rk J

Ayenwille Jti, Edoo 14
&amp;rbertun 13, Wadsworth 8
Riilh 1JJ G lamlorf 0
R.ll.y 12, L..l:lkewuod 0
B€ ll brook It Grt.-cnvi!le 12
Belldont.a i ne ZO , Ben jamm Lo~an 0
8€rlshire 7, Gr11.nd Val. 3
Bt&gt;rlin W. Rt!servt' 2£1, St-bri/161 McKinley

J&lt;
Bt-rne

Union

ZO,

Ananda-Cleercr!!'t'k

6

Ri~

Walnut 19. Col. Bri gg!l 1.
Hlttck RJVer 22, S. Amherst 12
i:Uoorn---CMrrull 7, Canal Winchester 0
Blllfftoo a. Paul din~ 1
Brooke lS , SteubeJwilll:! Cw.th . 0
Brookfield 7, Giran.J 6
Brunswick 2. l.orJ:!In Ki n~ 0
Buckeye N Hi, Mingn fl
Auckeye W. 12. Stanton l.oc01l 0
U.dlz 1t Da y_ Jeffcr'!ion 0
Cald well IJ, Fort f' rye 7
Cambridge 32, Col. Centrul 0
C.mal Fult on NW 12, DlrTolltUfl ()
Can(ieid 49. YuWl g. Ubert y 21
r anhm

Ml·K1nley

17.

New

Canton T1mken 7. Canloo S 0
Cardmal 20 . Gllrrctlsvllle 11
Cartll n~n 14. Danvilk 6
Carey 6, E lgm 0
Carlisle 12, D1xie 12, lie
Cl'nterv ille 37. Sprint - Nurtll 14
Ch;~grin Falls -tS. P&lt;tJnt'sv ille Riverside
'
Cm

Aiken :Mi. Cin . T&lt;tfl 0
Colcnun 'ill. Norwood li
Ctn E lder H. Luna H
Cin F' inneyt uwn :1:1. Grt't'nhills 0
rio McN 1dwlas '!6 , R e~ i n11 ti
Cw Northwest 1&lt;1, Fort:st Park 0
Cin Oak Hills 23, .'!.nde rson 13
rin St. Xavier 17. Middletown 6
r·m Swnrnit Z2. Cilllt()I'I-Milssle 1 ~
C111 Sycamore 15, Indwn Hill H
l'ln W yum m ~ 211 , N. Bend T01 ylur 14
r·ltt'lt•villt&gt; 35, Athens 0
C)e\'1!. Be nedict ine 17. Clevl' . M.11 r shall 0
l'll'VI:!. Cl:'n lntl Cetth. IJ. Bra·ilsv ille
(1cvl:!_ Un 1ver.s1 ly 11. Clt've. Or111rl lit' 6
r ual r.ruve 2:2. Trim ble I~
l 'ol ~Sa Irs 51. Brookhi!Vt'n 0
l'ol. La.slmuor 211. Wcstcr.·1lle S. 0
Col Harmltun Twp. 2S, fa1rf1 cld Umun
Cln

it

D&lt;ly.

P!tlt t'rsun 36 , Ott}·

Selmunt

0

fill y. Wayne 2~. Da}·. Steb hi n~ fl
r)t'cr Piolrk 'lO. M11riemunt 12
Defiance 21, Kenton 12
Ot'lphu.s Jefft'rSUil SJ. ConvO) Cr e~1\'lt' w
tl '
~ lla
~n· r

15, Aryan 0
21. Cl ;~yrnunt 0

D•blin 21. Cui

Centenllllll 0

~atun 20. Twm Va llry N. 0

C l ev~&gt; l a nd Slul:w ZJ, Warren sv ille 6
Pulesti nt• 38, Suuthern l.»t'.!li ti
!:agertun 12. Antwe'l' ti
Elnl;,r 21, Ce lina 0
Elm\lliOoJd 14, Ntlrthwuud I ~
F.iyria 7, Tol M11cnmber 0
Elymt Cath . 7. Weatlake 7 he
t:r1 e 1P&amp; . I StrurlJ.( Vmcenl 6. Cun~au1 u
F:verl:(rt&gt;en 7, L.itll&gt;ny Centt•r 6
F' ;mbanlu; 7, lll'h1 rysvillt' I
F"curburn B11k er 8, Nortlunoot i
F'i:Urficld 21, W Chester LakoU!. H
F';mlc.s.s 14, Dorlestown 13
F'il tnnoot W. J. Sprm g. South 0
hurv1ew Park JJ , S tronl{~"\' lll e 20
t"1dd 3:1. Ak nm C ov~ntry 0
Frankli n furnace Cnaen IJ. Portsmouth

E:

t.;

L.orain 34, Cleve. Adarru,: 0
Lorain Clearv1ew 3, Lor:.~in Cath . 0
l.urain Su utlr view l2, lJJrain Brook ~ 1d c

n
IAJui.sville 12. Massillon

J.iick.~un

0

Schooi~-

Stalger, who is deaf, was hom on
Aug. 31, lift2, ' 13 JIOiirs and 13
minutes before the sept ! .cutoff that
would have made him ellglble to
play d\lring his senior year.

and Lee Tr'evlno sitting out the afternoon matches, the European
team won 210 of a possible four poiilts and took a surprise one-point lead
over the heavily favored United
States in the Ryder Cup matches.
In the final match of the day,
Americans Hale Irwin and Ray
Floyd were aU even through 15 holes
with Bernard Gallagher and
Eamonn Darcy.

ABILENE , Texas (AP)- Tommy
Valentine shot a SI!C&lt;llld-round 70 for
a 136 total to take a on~shot lead after 36 holes at the $350,000 LaJet
Cla,.,ic.
The group at 137 included Dr.Gil
Morgan, Fuzzy . Zoeller and Craig
Stadler.
surj,nse Leaders
WALTON IlEATil, England (AP)
- With Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson

Floyd eventually salvaged a 2 and
I American edge with birdie puts e1
about 1$-20 feet on the lith and 17th
hole~~. It was the United States' only
victory of the afternoon, kept the
AmeriCBilll from ~ two full
points off the pace and left them
within striking distance going into
the Wit two days of play.
Ulldlspated Leader
HIGH POINT, N.C. (AP)

GMllU.

Olrnsterl 17, N. Ridgeville 7

1on ol! the second-round lead
pi"
in the Henredon Classic LPGA tour-

I

Sp n n~ .

Shclwncc

PINK FIBERGLAS

INSULATION

3&amp;80

REAGAN APPLAUDED - Secretary of Interior
James Watt (right) and Betty Rendel, president of the
National Federation of Republican Women, applaud as
President Reagan completes his speech to the
Republican Womeu in Deaver on Friday. An uulden-

• Do -tt·Yourse!f.

• Prrhuflg

• Save onFue.l Bills
• Qua lif•es fur
Ta.oc Cred rt.
• f'\raft Faced Rolls . .:l :

I I

• Temp~r ed Gla ss.

• Ha,-dw!re
INiuded .

24%~
14 1~~*
r-----------~r/F~T---=~~
~~~
50

$12"

su99

at

~n

R- 19

l ..;~ k e

40, Ctll:lho&lt;..1un 0

Un1oto :12. Hll lsbtlro 12
lJ ppt: r Arlington 33, Ci n. Prtncetoo li
Upper Sctn d u~ k y 6, Ont;o~.riu 6, lit'
Urbana a-1 , r in Weslt&gt;rn Hill.s 6
Ullca 12. Ht·bnm l..akewoud 0
Vf'r.;culle:; 13. Coldw.11ter !i
Walsh Jesuit :ro. Akron Buchtel 9
W ap;;~ k mwta n, Deiphu:; St. John 7
Warnn H u..,. l :o~n d IS, CortLand l.illr:"if'W

OP"

• 30 ltJ. Bag.

· ,

6-lp.m.-Coi'-Recreatlon

; sept. 211· 10 p.m. -Colleve Recreation

• S&lt;!pt. 22 I · 10 p.m .·Colloo&lt;o Recreation
: sept. 231· 10 p.m.-Colloo&lt;o Recreation

j s.pt. 247 p.m.· Vollevball vs. Denison
, s.Pi. 25 H p.m.-Open Recreation

• Si!pf.M CIONd· IHiltlball C""ches
: :t&lt;
Clinic:

, . ~I. 27 Hf·m.-O!Ien Recreation
•
6· p.m.-College Recreation

"

WALESA MEETS WITH MINERS- Polish
leader Lech Waleaa, right foregrouud, walks from a
coal mine In Kllowlce, Poland, Friday after a m~etlng
with miners and a government delegation on Poland's

efforts to increase productivity in the mines. Walesa's
union came under fire last week from the Soviet Union,
which told Poland to take "determined aud radical"
action against Solidarity. lAP Laserphoto).

" We did not sweat and bleed to get the economic
package passed only to abandon it when the going gets
a little tough," he declared. ,
Enroute ba ck to Washington, Speakes said Reagan,
who he described as "tired" after a busy week, wtll
review budget options this weekend , without any aides
or senior advisers present, and "make some decisions

about what he would like to put in his plan."
A senior administration official who spoke on the
condJlion he not be identified indicated that foreign aid,
for whi ch $6 .5 billion is sought in !982, would not be cut.
He called it "the whipping boy for budget cutters" for
years.

Reagan ended his Denver speech by reading a letter
from a woman in a small Iowa town who wrote of the

em pty bedroom of a son who dropped out of college to
join the military and gave away his penny and baseball
ca rd collection before moving a way.

" Will you be especially ca reful with the country
nowc" the woman, later identified bv the White House
as Mrs. Dorothy Nuese of La urel. "Iowa, pleaded in
closing .

" I will be careful,"the president promised in the last
line of his speech.
The scene brought tea rs to the eyes of some of the
women, who put down their small American flags and
dabbed at their eyes as the band played "God Bless
America. '' Among those with tears in her eyes was the
president 's wife , Nancy .

Union leaders consider
response to Kremlin

• Nd1IS f-urniShed
• lnsta ll1n Mwtw tes

• Polystyrene
• Tdt
•

•

Tnpl~

• losu lat•r&gt;Q p,epa~ls

Tra c k

Oual1 f1es for
En~rgy Ta ,

• q Md Clear
• Mo1sture 8iJrrter

w·,zs·

• ~.. ·!3 5e';48

Cred 1t

fYirl! :=1n1 s.h.

• Standard S1ztts
Up to '18 U.l
·~

• &lt;! ~CO 'NO!Xl,:.rd .r . I ,n,sr-.

O'i :::lepboard

• Ice~;

I,: r 'iCN"&gt;~" O• W~&lt;l¢€

PRf·HUNG

EMTERIOA DOORS
• Ouatd1e5 for Energy
Cred1t
• Full~ Insulated

'v·''

R·IO , I'

Westfilll 2, Madison PI!Urui 0
Whet·~er.s burg 12. Rock Hill 0
White l"r.Oill 411. Cu 1 lndept&gt;nde!ll't' 0
W!ek!Jffc 12. Mentor Lake ~ l h . 9

13, Cleve.

steady course over the long run. 11

ltc.h .

• ti'*s ar-e Prc -Puncf'led

IA)('al 2ll , St M&lt;~r y, W. li01 . 6
Warren l..xetl :11i, St Mary 's , W. Vii . '
W;c; hJOicton C. H 26, Oiillicuthe 20
Watkin ~ Mernonal 10, Lickm,.; V•l. 12
Wi!\'erl} 13. Pikt•ton £
Waynl&gt;deth• 14, Triway IJ
Wd)'lli::SV dlt' 28, Nt! W ~iaml a
W dlm~lon 28, Nt!w London 0
W Corrul ltun 20 , Fcmburn P01rt Hil ls 1
W (i~·a u ~il 6. Cll've . Brush ()
W Hulmes 27 . t'l e ~o~ r F'urk 0
W Jdft•rsun lJ , Col. M~:~rwn-Fnmkl i n 0
W Mu sk m~urn 20, New l.e1 ingtoo 1&lt;1
W S&lt;t lem NW 12, Avu n 7
Wt&gt;.slervillt&gt; N. 9, Cui. ~ hc roft 1

~-

WASHINGTON (AP) -Even as his critics take to
the streets in protest, President Reagan has embarked
on a campaign to convince the nation his economic
plan is " as good as money in the bank."
Reagan delivered one of his toughest attacks yet on
critics of his economic policies Friday in Denver, then
retreated to Camp David in the Maryland mountains far from the din of tens of thousands of people con·
verging on the capital to vent their displeasure with his
approach.
Directing his remarks at "our friends in the financial
markets," Reagan said: "I hope the people on Wall
Street will pay attention to the folks on Main Street. If
they do, they'll see that there is a nsing tide of con·
fidence in the future of America."
He berated "those Chicken Uttles who proclaun the
sky is falling and those others who recklessly play on
high interest rates for their own narrow political purposes."
The president's speech was interrupted more than 20
times by applause from the National Federtion of
·Republican Women audience.
Deputy White House Press Secretary Larry Speakes
said the tough rhetoric reflected an effort to convince a
jittery Wall Street - where stock prices have skidded
to a 16-month low - that the administration is on a
steady course and that Reagan will " keep preaching
the gospel" of reduced increases in government spending and a balanced budget by fiscal1984.
The president promised he would hold "to a finn,

• U.L. Listrd .
• Won't Sc:ratcn

' Warrt'n

Willough by

'

tlfled woman In the background wipes tears from her
eyes. Tbe President read a letter at the conclusion of
his address from an Iowa mother whose son joined the
military recently. The letter brought tears to the eyes
of many. (AP Laserphoto).

'as good as gold'

Val~

Str~lsht1 ru

Uniont own

-I

• Covers 30 Sq J="t

Creenfit'ld 0
Steubenvill e lO, .-.kron E. 0
Stow S, Revere 0
Strasbuq( 21, E . Ca nton 0

31. Aurnn1 6
Strich 28, Sylvania Southview J
Struthe rs 20. Yn un~ . Wilson 12
Swa moo 2 ~. WuuSt'on 0
Sy lv01nia Nllrthview 18, L1m&lt;t Shwwnee 7
Tn·wnseh 18, Plqlkl 6
Ttpp City 28, Brookville 6
Tul Ati• sher 2t Ttl! Rogers 14
l ui. DeV ilbiSS lfl. Per ry .~bu r11 14
Tol . St. rr~:t nt'i!i 2t ToL W01itt&gt; fi
Tol St. Juhn 16 Mawnee 0
To!. Start 7, Mlhony W.!!Vrle 0
Tul. Wlutm er J. Newark 0
Tunmtu 18, Martins f&gt;"erTy a
Tn etd 1&lt;1. Cedarville 6
Trotwood Macliw n 'J:i. V~o~ ndi.i ! Ut
Troy 16. i"11 1n nont E . 0
TUS('t~riiWl!li Y11L 10, Srmlhvttlt&gt; II
Tuslaw fl. Dalt oo 9

· co,.,ar,IIIIT rON

• Whitt: 3Z80 and

~-

WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Solidarity leaders meet
today to respond to a dire Kremlin letter warning
Poland's Communist leaders to crack down on the independent union.
A Solidarity spokesman said the union leaders are to
"assess the general situation, not just the Soviet letter."
There was speculation among some Solidarity sources in Warsaw that the Soviet warning might indicate a
crackdown on "extremists" is imminent, or that it
might be intended to Ioree a postponement of the
union's second congress meeting scheduled to start
next Friday_
The Kremlin letter, published Friday by the official
Polish news agency PAP, said the first session of the
SoUdarity congress last week had " become in effect a
penilanent tribune from which slanders and insults
{are) sounded against our state ."
The statement called for an immrdiate crackdown
and criticized the leaders of Poland's government for
not acting sooner, It said the Soviets could not understand "why the Polish authorities have not taken
any resolute steps so far to cut short the hostile campaign against the U.S.S.R."
In Moscow , some Western diplomats speculated that
the warning might signal ·Soviet military intervention
in Poland. Fears of (Dilitary intervention to halt the
social and political unrest in the Soviets' Warsaw Pact
neighbor have been raised repeatedly throughout the

year of labor turmoil in Poland.
In Washington , the State Department said the Soviet
statement represented "interference in Poland's internal affairs" and was intended to "intimidate the
Polish people!'
Solidarity did not have any immediate reaction to the
Soviet sta tement, which was given prominent attention
in the Polish and Soviet media.
Union printers, however, churned out sharp rebukes
of a statement by the Polish Politburo, which warned
Solidarity on Wednesday that it was heading toward
bloody confrontation and a " national tragedy!'
Solidarity workers in western Pomerania were
quoted as say ing, "The nation knows the truth
and ... will not succumb to intimidation and even threats
emanating !rom the (Politburo l statement."
The Polish Cabinet issued a statement Thursday
echoing the Politburo's warning to the union . The actions by the Communist Party and government appeared to have been prompted by the delivery of'the
Kremlin letter, apparently late in the week, by Soviet
Ambassador Boris Aristov.
The Soviet message was the strongest to Poland's
leaders since Solidarity was formed after last summer's crippling strikes. The tone was stronger than a
June 5 letter that openly criticized Polish Communist
leader Stanislaw Kania and Premier Wojciech
Jaruzelski.

IHWI..IITION IMLUI'

Kenne.:h· 0

Woodsfield 21 , F'runtier (J
Woustt'r Zi, Cloverleaf 6
WurthinKlon 9, Lancaster !i

•

Wynfo rd 13, Pleuant 0
Xl'nilll 21. lkavercrt"t"k 19
Youn ~
Chetnt:'y 1!1, Bu~o~nirnotn 0
Yuunl{ . E&lt;ts1 26 . Ashllilllui.H Edfsewt.aod 0
Yuu n~ South 22. F'mdl&lt;t)' j
Yount&lt;:
Ur~u li llt'
J2, C~un p~ll- Mt•mu r i al

$389995

15

Protestors converge

Z... Jre.s\' llie 7. Wintt&gt;rsv ille 0

6-2, to give the Soviet Union an unbeatable :HI lead over the Nttherlands in their Davis Cup European Zone
B match, Tass said,
HIIJIIIIry Takes Lead
AVILES, Spain (AP) - Hungary
led Spain 1..0 in their Davis Cup
European Zone A competition afltr
Balasz Taroczy defeated Fernando
Luna 6-1, 6-3, 6-3.
Advauces to Semis
PALERMO, Italy lAP) - Corrado
Barazzutti of Italy beat Wojltk
Fibak of Poland 7-:i, 6-1 in the quarter finals of the Grand Prix championship.

w- o1 s.,t. 21, 1n1

• s~t 101·• P-"'-'~ Recreation

lS

Floyd, whoBe bnlther is PGA
player Ray Floyd, bas a tw!Hiay
total ofl37, 7 under par, on the 6,24~
yard, par-72 Willow creek Golf Course.

STOAM &amp; SCREEN

TREATED 'LUMBER

• Stops cos.t ly
Inks .
• Ywbn,'t hurt

4"X4"x8'

patnt. \IVOOd

or met.11l

• Or it!S c/eitor.

PHIS aff
easrly.

c;IOS&lt;td

1-9 p.m.-Open

Swim

CICIHG

H p.m.·Open Swim
6-1 p.m.·College Swim.

2•,, Miles East pf.
Ashland bridge on
Old U.S . Rt. 52 ·
Shtridan, Ohio
ON ~r

AIEAlOC-.U lON

WONT BELIEVE
!t'OO ClD IT '(OURSELF I"

WASHINGTON (AP) - Employing the tacti~ and
the march paths of protesters of yesteryear, org~nized
labor and its !lilies are using sheer nwnbers to e~press
their dissatisfaction with President Regan's economic
and social policies.
Tens of thousands of union members, civil rights activists, women and environmentalists converged on the
·' nation's capl~ for the SoUdarity Day protest, a,march
that seemed likely to attract 200,000 people arid rival
any,demonStration seen here in recent years. . ,
• At the AFVCIO headquarters, where leade~f the
labor federation made final arrangements
y for
''IOday's demonstration, officials refused to s . any
emotion over a ~bor Department statement which
said the 111888.mardl was ill-advised and unwarranted.
The labor federation organiZed the ma~h, and
rec:rui~ ,ita aUl\111 111 the civiJ lights mov~ent to v~t
!IJ18er over Ptelidel\t'Reagan's deep cuts In
'
0!1 ~social Jll'lltll'8l!lS·
•
'&lt;' Reqan ~ded tospeni!the weekendaway,lrom the
While~; ll'lvellnl!.late Frida)' from ,a~
engagonient Jn;Qenver to the presidential, :treat at
camp David, l'ofd, The president has made o public
'statements abolit the protest march, the fi major
show ol ~ to ~an's program in lhe eight
monthlllnc:IO,hls Inauguration.
I
' But in a statement issued In Labor $ecretary
Rayiilond'Doniwan's behalf, special assists* Earl G,
:
•
Coxsaid:
• "This ildinlnlstration wants to work Iwith all

spending
.

I'OOL

Hp,m,.OpenSwlm
6-8 p.m.·Collett SWim
8·10 p.m.·College Swim
8·10 p.m.·Colleve Swim
8·10 p.m.·College Swl,m

••
''i
I
'

on Washington

LYNI CINTIR SCHIDULI

: DA'TI- GT!IIINASIUM

•

nament.

Ross SE 0

OOQRS

D

Reagan insists his plan

Marlene P'loyc! fired a brilliant
rwnd ot f.Under.par G6 to take s!lle

Win quarterfinal matches
TOKYO (AP ) - Mirna JaliSOvec
of Yugoslavia, ' Bettina Bunge of
West Germany and Americans
Kathy Horvath and Ann Kiyomura
won quarterfinal matches in the
$17~,000 Toray Sillook women's tournament.
JaUBOvec eliminated American
Sharon WaIsh 6-2, 6-4; Bunge beat
Cindy Reynolds 7-:i, IHl; Horvath
defeated England's Anne Hobbs 6-4,
, IH, and Kiyomura ousted LesUe
Allen 6-1, 6-2.
Uubeatable Lead
MOSCOW (AP) - Vadim Borisov
· and Konstantln Pugayev defeated
: Tom Okker and Mart Albert 6-4, 6-4,

Sept. 20, 1981
The Sunday Times -Sentinel-Page-

Valentine has lead in La]et Classic with 136

0

F 0

GalumNI 34 , Cu i. Walnut ftidt~: e ti
Garfield Hls S. Metyfit'ld 6
G.. neYiill Ul, Eud1tl 7
GenOil 28, Mi llbury l..illr:e 0
Grovt' C it ~· 11. Cui. Franklin Hls. 0
Groveport !.!, CUI. Nurthland 11
Holrnsun 12, N. College Hill '
Hubbltrd 10, Bellnower, Ca lif.. 0
Hudson 13. Twinsburg 6
Hicksvil lt• 211 . Wa ynt' 1'nit'l:! 8
Hilltop &lt;12, Tinora 21
Hulll:llld Sprm~ 12. Arehbold £
Iotlepende n e~ 6, Wmdham 6, lie
Ind ian Vallt&gt;y S. 20, J ewett-Sew ll
Iront on 21. P~&gt;rurnuuth 8
Jad:surr 29, M1ller 6
J aekson·Mdtun 36, Newlun f' i! lb; II!
.l o·f[er!Wn Unam 21. Rll('kere S_ 10
.Julm Glenn 14. Cruok..w1 lle 7
.Joh n.stown 19. Hei:ilh 0
Juh nstuwn North n d~e 21. Gnmvillt' 14
J,n&lt;!Lhll n Alder 19, Buekr)'t' \'i:il. IJ
Kenstoo 42, Brookly n lti
Kent Rou~t've lt 22. Cleve, H a~· 0
K elte r i n ~ Al lt&gt;r 30 , F'ranklm 0
l.t'b&lt;.nun 1!i. Wilm in !'l ton 0
IA'donia 15. Colum bian.11 0
IA'ip1iic !16. Hil rdin N. 6
IA':unt:ton Z6, Galion 0
l.undnn 20, Olent.anl(y 0

a.

~-

N

Nurwayne 40, Columbia 7
Oak Hill 12. Ironton St. J useph 0
Oa.kwood 29, Valley View ti
Oberlin 2Ji, Keyston e :tl:
Olmsted Falls 1&lt;1, N. Roy11 ltoo 6
Orrv ille H, Cuple;o; 6
Otlaw&lt;1 Hills 1~ . Indian Utk e 0
Ot.se~o :Jl, N. Baltimore 6
P11i nt'~v ill e Hal'\ley 6. Chardon 6, tit'
Pandora-GilbOa 21. Arcadia 0
Purkersburt: W. V&lt;1. 2:;, Maricttlol 6
P01rkway H , W. l.iberty-&amp;km 0
Panna Paduil 16, Parma N11nn.andy 15
P01trick Henry 21, Muntpelier 0
PelT)' IS, Kirtland 0
Point Ple.as11nt. W_Va 20, G&amp;l li pnli.s 1:!
Portsrrwulh W. 2(), Boyd Co_, K}' 6
r•rcble Shawnee :Ia, Mct.:lain 0
Rdvenna 6, Sa lem 0
R.a\'l'lllla SE 2(), Mu~ 11o d0re 0
R ee&lt;t.~ ~· ill e E. 22, F eder al H ockin~ 6
Reynoldsburg 24, Pickerington 22
R1chmood Ht.s . 14, Cuyaho~ et Hls . 0
Rid ~...:l.a le i. Cutond Cn11..1'un:l 0
Rid~e1nont 16. N. Union fi
Rootstown H . Waterloo 7
Rossford 26, E:a~twood U
St. Henry 25, Sidney Lehrn.il.n 0
St. M&lt;tr)'s :!7, V.11n Wt&gt;rt 0
St. Wrmdeli n 'll, KlllllSloiS !.&lt;lkut.&lt;t 0
S&lt;t nd v V&lt;~L 2fi, Minen.a fl
Shd by .17, Asht&lt;1 ncl 6
Shenan dooh Jt Wa terfoN 0
Sht•nd l! n 16. Tri·Va lll:!y 1&lt;1
Sherwood Fetirvit•w 1!1 , H oii~•L•• 6
&amp;!lun 33, Bedfon:l 6
S. Chl:lrlest on ~ t~ 7. Mech.anicsbur;: 6
S. Centn1l H , Senec.11 E . 6
S. Ran).!e 35, Col wnbulll&lt;ol Crestv1cw 5
Spt!nt't&gt;rv ille 2b Colwnbus Grove ti
Sp ringboro 31, Lemon--Monroe 29
Spring. Greenun 12, Spr ing. C111holk' 0
SprinJ.: . Nnrt.he~stern 2:1, Gr~~ohlllrn 0
Spring . Nm1.hwrstem 5.1. Yt:'llu11. S()ri"f(S

Pll ilwddplua

Ctll. H01 rtley 12, Bedey 6
Cui. JJnden-McKinlcy 26, Te;,~ ~· s Vi!l 6
Cui . Mifn1n :!6, Cui St Llletr l t~ 9
Cui . R~t~dy ~. Cui. West 1.1
Col South zo. Col. Ew.sl 0
Col. Wattl-rsun 15, Col. Wh ctstune 0
Cui. Wehrle 14 . Gr01ndview 0
CQI. Westllind 12, H11l 11:trd 0
Curdi11o wson H. Mt·Comb 12
t:reStwuod 27, WuudridJ: e 21
Cov m~tun 17, Bradford 14
D.!ly Carr11ll H , Ci11. 1-&lt;t&amp;llr 9
Iliiy. Meadowd~l"' l4 , t.llly. Wriltht 0

cl~ssified

Stiller ha~ RetlliOMd· tiM Uiell there .a n lolliC to be a lnnHon
aSIIOI:lati911 and tliell ~~for ali . ."\*' i!jlliuu," {Ieee! Mid. "I feel t!lat
except!... to ~ ap ~e. IJ'IUii1C It Ia .. to the auodation. U they
that littln« out his .,m'f year.._.. hilt to make an exception, theillt is
hurt his· chancel of ltWDC 1111 ' up to tlan-..
athletlcscholaJ'IIhipfcrcollep. . .
Slid Slqer, "Ht _...just 'going
"U the court Ia cfllnl to mate an by the tulel. ~. wun't flvinl! me .
exception and ld a 1t-)'Ul'&lt;lld play, py ~. He's ru1nec1 my career."

in prohibiting Gene. Staiger from
playing on the Wal.Vl Jesuit Hlllh

Newcomerstown 14, Ri141ewuod 0
N. Canton Hoovl:!r 6, C..ntun GlenO&amp;k 0

0

'

AKRON, Ohio (API- A Summit
County Common Pleas judge has
refuaed to bend an Ohio High School
Athletic Association ace rule and
allow • 111-yeal'&lt;lld student to play
high scllool soccer.
Judge Evan J . Reed ruled Friday
that the OHSAA was within its rights

'.
377·4327

Americans to improve the economy . And we want to
work closely with the leaders of organized labor. But
we can't do that when they put on their partisan
political hat and set out to oppose o•Jr programs indiscriminately."
An AFL-CIO spokesman refused to discuss the '&lt;
statement, saying those participatin~ in the protest '
(
will send a message of their own to the American •
people.
The labor federation has said all along it thought approximately 100,000 people would take part, but George'
Berklacy, chief spokesman for the U.S. Park Service
said he felt the turnout would be twiee that high,
Participants in the march traveled to Washington by
car, van and bus. But in a show of sympathy for some
12,000 air traffic controllers fired by Reagan for
striking against the government, they refuaed to fly .
On the eve~ the SoUdarity Day march, Rep. John J .
LaFalce, O.N.Y., called on Reagan to reinstate the..
controllers.
·
..
In a letter to Reagan, the congressman
acknowledged the president has prevailed over !hit
strilfers, but urged him to "become a magnanim01a·

'

victor."

'"

" I suggest that you simply declare viclory, whic;~'.
everyone would accept, but also say that in order to be ·
magnanim~us. you will permit the striking contronen·
tocomebacktowork."
'
The AF~O didn't offer a lJiatforin for political
figures at the .Washington rally,
-

�The

Is,

Ti

Ohi~Point

Pomeroy-Middleport-~allipoli~,

W.Va.

the Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D·J

Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

·
It
d
Expect
increase
in
oilseed
producti_
·
.
.
Agncu urean
.

GALUPOUS- Our Annual Beef
Forage Twilight Tour will be held
Thursday evening, October I , 6 p.m.
to 8:30p.m. at Hidden Valley Ranch,
Route 2, BidwelL
Any beef cattle farm family in
Gallia and neighboring counties is
welcome to attend this annual event.
It is sponsor;;d by the Gallia County
Extension Beef Committee and the
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.
Fred Vollborn, manager of the
farm, will conduct us on a tour of
part of the 2,700 acre operation . Area
Extension Ag ents , Jim Clay and
John Underwood, along with me and
Alden Wedemeyer will assist Fred
during the tour. Mrs. Bettie Clark,
County Extension Agent, Home
Economics, will have a special
program for the ladies called
" Wheat Weaving," Bill Thomas will

WASJiU'IGTON (AP) - Aided by
a bumper U.S. soybean crop, world
oilseed production is eliJ)ected be up
sharply in 1981-82, says the
Agriculture Department.
The U.S. soybean harvest is
estimated at 2.09 billion bushels, up
15 percent from last year but stlU
be the teacher for Mrs. Clark's below the record 19'19 harvest of 2.27
billion bushels.
session.
According to a new analysis issued
During the tour you'll hear a
discussion on the future of the beef Friday by the department's Foreign
cattle industry ; we'll look at 50 Agricultural Service, world soybean
yearling bulls that Fred has just production is expected to be 90.9
placed on feed and we'll talk about million metric tons, compared to
adjusting feeding programs to the 82.2 million in I!IID-81 .
A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds
quality of forage where calves are
and
is equal to 36.7 bushels of
held over one or more winters.
soybeans.
You'll see a demonstration of No-Till
On that basis, the estimated U.S.
Grass Seeders not common to our
harvest
is about 56.9 million metric
county and hear Fred explain the
tons
or
63
percent of the world total.
forage management program that
he and Bob Evans have followed
over the years. Then we'll take a
look at a 75 cow fall calving herd and
then wind up the evening with roast
beef sandwiches and all the trimmings.
Don't forget now the date is ThursGALUPOUS - Secreta~ of
day evening, October I, 6 p.m. to Agriculture John R. Block today an·
8:30p.m.
nounced his intentions to implement
a 15 percent " reduced acreage"
program for the 1982 wheal crop to
offset the effects of record supplie~
and depressed wheat prices.

Science Review is this coming wee k,

Sept. 22, 23, and 24 . Tickets cost $1.50
and will be available until Monda y
afternoon, Sept. 22. If you have
never been to the Farm Science
KevJew. Try It ... You'll Like It.
Dales for local feeder calf sales
this fall are as follows: Gallipolis,
Sept. 23 a lB p.m.; Athens, Oct. 13 at
8 p.m.; Gallipolis, Oct. 7 at 8 p.m. ;
Gallipolis, Oct. 21 at 8 p.m.; Athens,
Oct.27al8p.m. ; Athens,Nov. l7.
I recently attended a stale feeder
calf association meeting . Wally
Barr, an ag econnrnist, presented an
outlook on beef for 1981-82. According to Wally, those who fed out
ca ttle had a •wy bad year financially. Even though we have the
second largest corn crop ever, this is
offset by high interest rates and exports will be up. Wally predicts
feeder calf prices will follow fed cal·
tie prices rather close. He IS predicting 6&lt;Hl8 cents per pound for fed cattle and 63~ cents for medium frame
steers weighing 5()(H;OO pounds.
Heifers will be about 10 cents less
per pound.
Buckeye Feedlot ConditiOning
Program 1BFC J ... there is going to
be considerable emphasis on preconditioning feeder calves in the future .
Preconditioning consists of several

shots given to feeder calves by a
veterinarian, at least three weeks
prior to being sold. It is also recom-

Dr. Vir~inia Vivian, Chainnan of

the Human Nutrition and Food
Management Department, School of
Home Economics, The Ohio State
University, will be the keynote
speaker. She will lead the discussion
on current hot spots in nutrition fiber, sugar, vitamins and mineral
supplements , cholesterol, weight
control, and others.
Dr. Vivian will be followed by
Christine Goodall, a nutritionist for
the Ohio Department of Health, who
will continue the Discussion of basic
in nutrition - why we eat when we

mended calves be weaned prior to
being sold. Anyone interested in this
program , please contact our office.
September is an excellent month
to establish lawns by seeding or sodding. To establish a new lawn from
seed, rough grade the area to be
seeded. Allow settling to occur and
re-grade when necessary.
Apply lime and fertilizer based on
a soil test. Thoroughly prepare the
seedbed by tilling or plowing and
disking up to six inches deep.
Remove rocks and other debris.
Allow freshly worked soil to settle,
then apply a starter fertilizer into
the soil. Seed with high quality lawn
seed, following directions on the
label for planting. Different grass
varieties are necessary if you have a
heavily shaded lawn area .
Once planned, rake or lightly
cover the seed. Apply a sprinkling ol
clean, weed free straw and water.
Keep damp but not soggy .
Landscape and Garden Tips Remove spent flowers from perennials to help keep plants vigorous.
Also, sow fall garden spinach now.
Grape harvest is here. Taste a few
to be sure they are ripe . And from
the garden, freeze excess
cauliflower when finn and compact,
tender and white.
Allow gourds to remain on vines as
long as possible so they will mature
and keep welL
Overgrown or weak peony plants
may need dividing . Now is a good
time to do that job. Plant spring
flowering bulbs now through October.

do and what we need to know about

However, the analysis held out

some prospect that some of Brazil's
competitive edge may have been
dulled by its beavy exports of
soybean meal and oil earlier this
year instead of.spreadlng them out
over a longer period as previously.
"The pressure on U.S. soybean
and product exports is expected to
lessen in coming months, although
U.S. exports may still be held down
due to the strong dollar relative to
major European currencies," the
report said.
In a look at the Soviet Urtion's
oilseed situation, the analysis said,
"It is becoming increasingly evident
that the Soviet Union is Jagging in Its

requirements."

... ~ .

Imports of foreign
" continue to make ilp
share of total Sovie!;
product supplies," ltsald.
"The oilseed
ject to the same
problems that
Soviet agriculture,"
" Consequently, given the' f~:t *!~t!
the Soviets are detennlned to mallf!.lj
lain and even expand liv~
bers, relatively large QWillltl!~ [.erj
oi!seeds and meals

~~!,;the~~:~~
perfonnance of the hi
sunf!owerseed crop wiD alio
slate into more oil and fat

requirements."

"Wheat supp[W in the United
States are 14 ...percent above last
year," Block said. "The carryover

:~

~··~

next June is expected to exceed one
billion bushels, the highest level since lm-78. The reduced acreage
program will strengthen prices by
reducing the 1982-83 marketing year
supplies."
Block said the increase in supplies
and decrease in prices is the result
of two successive record U. S. wheal
crops and a record-selling 1981
world harvest.

The program will be volunta~ .:~.'.
producers can decide for theili!l
selves, based on market conditio~
whether they want to participate~
Program benefits, however, will~
tied to participation.
· :~
"Soil conservation wiD be ,strii0!4
stressed in this program,"'
said. "The reduced acreage
have to be devoted to corJSeJVal~~

A. Bread Baslletl
B. Wall Decor
c. AIMrtld Baskets
D. Tntp
E. Bamboo Bread Buketl
F. Allortld Fans

uses."

(Items on this page not
exactly as pictured.)

G. Mini Bamboo Fruit Baskett

H. 8-12-16 Oz. Pn-VIew Refrlpnttor Contain. .
I. Tca 8q

Auuit· Anybody

lly RETTit: CLARK
F:xtrnsion Agt&gt;nl,
Hnmt' Ernntlmi&lt;·s

GALUPOUS - (Nation-wide
studies show that breakfast is the
most neglected meal, yet nutrition
and medical research shows that
skipping breakfast has some bad
consequences. This is the second of
two articles on breakfasts.)
Getting kids off to school - and
dad and mom off to work, too makes for a pretty hectic morning.
Or maybe you live by yourself and
it's a real effort to get up in time to
eat before racing out the door. In
any case, eating breakfast with
others has become the exception
rather than the rule. So it's important to have foods on hand that
each person can easily fix him or
herself.
It's hard to beat a bowl of ready·
to-eat cereal, milk and fruit for convenience - and good nutrition.
Some little "extras" can make this
easy breakfast a hit with kids. For
example, try egg not over ready-toeat cerea I topped with sliced
bananas or blueberries. Cereal sundaes turn the most regular breakfast
into a party. All it takes is a dip of ice
cream and a few peaches on top of
that bowl of cereal.
These days hot cereals are almost
just as easy as ready-to-eat cereals
since most are now available in instant form. The first person up in the
morning can put on the hot water
and the rest of the family can mix up
their own as they're ready to eat.
Also, hot water is all it takes to make
a cup of cocoa if you make up the
mix ahead of time.
Or, if eve~one. in the family en-

~ 11

tAl EACH

HOUSEW~Rii DEPT.

joys a hot cereal brooklast, make
old-fashioned oatmeal or cooked rice
in the crock pot, plugging it in right
before bed the night before.
If you don't have cereal eaters in
your home, try fixing meat or
peanut butter sandwiches the night
before and storing them in the
refrigerator overnight. Cold san- ,
dwiches are food for breakfast - but
some people like to heat theirs in a
toaster oven. And it doesn't take
more than five minutes to make a
toasted cheese sandwich this way.
In fact, any foods that provide onefourth of the day's needs for calories
and protein give your body the fuel it
needs to have a productive morning.
A "no-dishes" breakfast includes
cheese, melba toast and a piece of
fruit that's in season. Of course, canned fruit and applesauce are
reasonably priced year round and
are good for breakfasts, too. Fruit,
cottage cheese and toast is another
not-so-ordinary but easy breakfast.
Even if breakfast at your house is
serve-yourself style, you don't have
to cross off the possibility of a
traditional pancake breakfast. When

It has·the
one thing a pro looks
for in a saw. Everything. ·
KEEPS YOU CUTTING FOR AS LONG AS YOU
WANT TO WORK
• Six-point vibration isolation system effectively reduces
vibration levels for more comfortable operation and less
fatigue.
• Thflleillece, centrifugal lined clutch transfers more power to
the bar and chain for optimum cutting action.
• Automatic oiler with manual override lets you customize the
oil flow to match cutting demands.
• Capacitor discharge ignition for dependable all-weather
starts.
• Dual chamber Soflone·· muffler with front-mounted, bottom
discharge for quiet operation.
,
• SAFE·T-TIP" anti-kickback device protects you and your saw.
• 4.1 cu. in. displacement makes the 410 strong enough for
heavy felling, lightweight and versatile enough for lirnbing.

you have some "extra" time, make
up a whole batch of pancakes. Then
put a layer of foil between each pan·
cake and stack them in a baH-gallon
plastic ice cream container and
freeze. You can take the pancakes
out one at a time and immediately
heat them covered in a toaster oven.
By the time you have heated water
for instant cocoa or coffee and g&lt;t
out a piece of fruit, the pancake is
piping hot.

G.

2FOR
a. 30 CL Pulh Pins

C. Doily Memo Holders

D. 7" Str1w Trivltt
E. Set of 3 L8ver Bottle Capa
F. French fry Cutter
G. Toothpick Dltpenaer

.I

H. 2 Pintle T• a11 Holderl
I. t...undry Heokl
J. Stain .... Steel Tu Ball
K. Set of 3 Scl'8pen
L Dlcer CluYw
M. 3 1'1:. Wooden Spooll Set
N. Paper Towel Holder

llq 10 ltc EACH
HOUSEWAAE DEPT.

SEETHEHOMaiTE"410CHAINSAWATYOUALOCALDEALER.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

'

CHESTER, ·OHIO

Distribute

nutrients .

To choose a nursing home, what do
we look for? What should we consider? John Rollins, Area Agency on
Aging, Rio Grande College, will lead
the afternoon discussion.
The program will conclude with a
discussion of the results of a computer " Dietcheck" for each in-·
dividual attending the conference.
Registration fee is $2. Reservations should be made by Sept. 23 to .
Pat Glass, P. 0. Box 32, Jackson,
Ohio 4564Q. Dietcheck forms can be
obtained from any County Extension
Office in the area . Call 286-2177 or
your County Extension Office for
more infonnation.
The program is open to anyone interested in learning more about the
announced topics.

WASHINGTON (AP) The Ininimwn quantity speclfled in the
Agriculture Department says the agreement. It calls for Russia to buy
Soviet Union has bought an ad- a minimum of 6 million metric tons
ditional600,000 metric tons of grain . of grain annuall:y. An additional 2

delive~

Program operating procedilres
will be issued after ~-g !ann
legislation is enacted in(olaw.

Homemakers'
Circle

directory
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County ·
now has a guide to the community
which includes:
A business directory, diagrams of
all Gallia County townships, map of
Gallia County, index of landowners;
city maps of Gallipolis and maps of
the four surrouding counties.
Gallia County's first plat directory
is an 81&gt; x 11" booklet.
The directo~ is presently being
distributed by Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District for $5.
The District office is located in the
Spring V~lley Plaza, 529 Jackson
Pike, Room 308-C, Gallpiolis.

Soviet Union buys additional grain
for
in 1981-82,
theagreement
sixth year
of a long-tenn
supply
with the United States.

•

ability to produce enough oil&amp;eedl
meet dotnestic oil and

ft•alurln~

Announce topics
for conference
JACKSON - Food and nursing
homes are included as topics for the
1981 District Health Conference,
"We Make Our Own Choices," to be
held at the Jackson Area Extension
Center on Wednesday , Sept. 30, from
10 a. m. to 3 p.m.

example, department
economists predict soybean prices
at the !ann over the entire 198t-a2
marketing year will average in a
range of $5.50 to $7 per bushel, compared to $7.55last year.
The new world report said that
"much of the slippage can be at·
tributed to stiff competition from
~· or

Brazil and Argentina;' as well as
relatively slack demand, especially
from European markets.

Reduced program acreage announcedfor '82 wheat

Meigs County
agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE
£&gt;&lt;tension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY - Farm Science
Review Tickets .. get your tickets
now and save $1 .50 at the gale. Farm

BI'!IZil is the No. 2 producer of
soybeans with an estimated 1981-12
output of nearly 15.8 million tons,
followed by China, 8.1 million;
Arg~Una, 4.1 million; Paraguay,
850,000; and other countries not Identified, 5.3 million.
The rise in so;rbean production
worldWide - along with more cot·
tonseed, peanuts and some other im·
portant oilseeds - has helped dampen prices for American fanners.
·

million can be bought without further consultation, but if more than 8
million tons are wanted 1n a year the
UnitedStatesmustbeconsulted.

URGENTLY NEEDEDI
or

To fulfill future d f llling programs write
call and be
sure to include jitopertv location and acreage that is
available for le~se. Also those that have oil and gas
leases that are due,to expire within one year.

'1

P.O. Box 74

'
'

..was$309.~.

16 Hardnose

'Ph. 614-532·0101

. -{ s~o
..,
~

CO.

I roriton,.Ohlo

45638

•29215

,Was$317.95

Was '·

Upper·River Rd.

'

C. on.ntiJ.:Ityle H1t

'*' r...,.

D.Squ-TI'IIf

. XL12 16 DL

,,

~ETROLEUM

. $154.95

11 Left

. .r$289.95 .

a. ~.~cq~JINd ....,boo w... a......

A. 36" Kllll Konc ,.,

Was

wasS139.95

.

OIL ~ND
GAS .LEASES
.

UN IVERS,

XL 10"
Was$99.95
•.

~

A n)etrl~ too Is about 2,206 pounds
and is equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat
·or 39.4 bushels of com.
•
The new purchases pUshed the
~.; total for 1861-82 to 8.2 mUIIon metric
: tons - 2.8 million wheat and 3.4
·: mUJJon com ..
Further, the 8.2 IDilJion tons now
scheduled by the S!Mets exceeds ~

.2 Left

.XL12

r;;;;;;;====-·--------------..

Officials said Friday the latest
purchases, which were reported to
the department by private export
- companies, Included 300,000 tons of
· wheat and 300,000 of com.

HOM ELITE®

SXI.AO 16 PT. · . $ .'l"*··..
w_asS339.95
--. 13 r
SXLAO 16 HARDNOSE' t
Was$3~1.95,

.

VI. -

141nch

•

'3271' '

E. " 1'1
n
....

Q.laund , . . .,.,.,.

H.......... IIIIIII
I. Dehdl Haft tlllf Fruit a.bll

J. ltac•A.sntlc

�Page-D 6- The Sunday Ttmes Senttnel

Pomeroy

Coal gasification plant lit
Gallipolis from 1870 to 1911
By JAMES SANDS
GALUPOUS
The makmg of
gas from coal and shale has recetved
such attenhon tn recent months tha t
one would thmk
that tt was a new
dea But over 100

years

ago

Galltpol s had tts
own

coaJ

gastft at on plant
T he ope ra! on
kn own

as

Ga ll pol s Coal
:&gt;ANUS
and Gas Company was orgamzed on
Sept 3 1869 w th Roman Menager
W lltam Nash Wtlham Shobe and
P A Sanns as agents
The plant when fm shed n Aug t
of 1870 conststed of four bu d ngs at
Second and V ne Streets an off ce
pur fymg house r etort house and a
condens ng house Coal was hauled
to the plant where tl was healed n
a n e nclosed space by s tea n hea t
The coal gave off a gas wh ch was
pumped thr gh unde g uu d p pes
to hones a d slrett a 1 p fo
1ghtmg
The dea fo sla It ~a gasp an n
Ga ll po ll s began w h Sa ue l
Soloman of Pars Kj wl o p esen
ted to the C tv Cou I he
poss b I t
of gas ght Tl e Cou I
then put
propos t on b fore he
vo ters n Ap
o 1868 I
ele
turate
ed 4 J u 20
favor oft e
plan I he coo I th n gav pe r
russ on fo
h above n c t u d
nen to for n a u pan and tu en ;t
subscr ber

THE FIRST

o purate mee t ng
washed on 0 t 9 1869 whe twas
announced that the &lt;o pany had
captta l of $40 000 or 800 s hares at $50
a share \'w a Nash v.as t: e ted
prestd e t w th Ed A esh rc as
s cretHry an I P
A
S&lt;-l ns
~

easure r
It ""
Januarv of t R70 that th
con!)tru t o
nt act was I t o R
T Cove da l and ha t he C ty Coun
gave pe
ss on to 8) p p u t1
the stre ts By \ugu t of 1870 when
the pla t t bega n opera! ns 3 m s
of p pe I ad be
la d Son peopl
c a tm tha t po t on f th p J&gt;t' a
I n the gro d
WHEN ARTIFICIAL I ght ca me
l al pol s ther we re 90 pub c Ia n
p a n 100 p va le na ns and f x
tures
It was Aug 8 1870 It a t Ga ll pol s
was I up or U c ftrsl t me us ng a
Ifc a
ga
A urd g
t
Ga po J our a
h

Mtddleport

By THOMAS RIZZO
Assoclaled Press Wriler
COLUMBUS Ohio ( AP) - The
man once diagnosed as havmg 10
personahltes and who was found m
nocent by reason of nsan ty m the
1978 rape of three women nearly
OhioStateUmverstty ITlllyhavehad
as many as 24 different tdent ltes
A process on of tow sfo k headed
A book to be pubhshed by Ran
bv the Ftre Br gade paraded from dam House traces the life story of
the Gas Works to the Court House Wtlham S M lhgan the ftrst per
"h re the} heard some speeches on son m history to be found not gwlty
t1 be ef ts of artiftc algas Several by reason of nsamty for major
peakers made note thai w th the crunes because of mulltple per
gas co npany a ll Gal po s needed to sonallltes
sa d author Dame!
push her nto p ospenty was the Keyes m a telephone conversat on
ra road
Saturday from his home m Athe ns
AFTER THE proceed ngs R T
Ke}es
assoc ated wtlh the
Coverda
the cont a to
e
Eng! sh Department of Ohio Un ver
le r a ed offtc als of the co npany a t sty n Athens satd The Mmds of
party he ld at tl e Val } House, B II} M 11 gan w 11 be published m
H tel where the Gall a H te l ow November
ts Sa d the J uurna
The M ga
ase att acted
nat 0 n a 1
a tt en t 0 n
when
ps) c h atr sts test f ed that M !han
suffered f o n a rare disorde n
which he per odica ly assumes up to
I he gas plant
e s\\ I h d o 10 d fferent persona hiles
bu ng coke nstead of oa and
Only o of the persona hiles were
h n&lt;e the na 1 e was c ha ng I o the k own
the public
Keyes
0
Gall pol s Gas and Coke pia t C'ok
sa t Th others were hidden
g s o nued to be Ga pol s on y
because the) were constdered un
our e of art f ca l I ght unt I 1891
des rab e and) "ere revealed here
when
tr ca n c to town " th th
n Athens The book w II ma ke them
bu d ng of the ele t
a I wa y The
pub! cfo thcf rst t me
g nc at
f r th ra Wa) al o up
Althougl Keves decl ned o p n
a e I
cs
pont
he xact number of per
IN 1902 THE C' y Coun I de de I
ona t e ps) ch atnsts fo und ad
to~ e a ll of th c t} s str et ght ng
d pub! bu ld g I gl t ng to one
ompa v T h ee b ds " e ece v d
Ga ll po s Gas and Coke
Ga I po s Electr c a n outg o" th of
the street ra1 lwa} co npany and th
J H Maxo Co pan) of Coshucto
Oh o
Maxu wu th btd and soo had
wallo"
p the
he wo o
pa ~ In 191 the Gas and C k
p a l &gt;~e I ba k upl beca use of the
COl UMBUS Ohi o APJ
There
pe t on of electr
and of
was
pol
t
cal
ron)
m
the
outpour
ng
atu a ga I lu t ne th clectr
of
hock
and
sadness
over
the
death
pa
f the M x
enterp tse also
n I tal o Wednesday of fo r er
nt ba k upt and both pants we
De
no a t c Gov
M c hae l V
I ug hl b) J B Ha r ng on n 1914
HARRINGTON ~BANDON ED the DSa e
1 e nporar ly at least t ran GOP
1 f a gas pl a nt n 915 a t d suo
Gov Ja nes A Rhodes and his $1 3
af
I ctt t was to
do v
Ha ngt n ld he e c tr plant at b on tax h ke proposal off the front
Th rd and Syca no e to the Oh o pages of most OhiO newspapers
A d t rem nded pohttc ans a nd
UtI t es Compan y wh ch n 1929
be a c Colwn bus a nd Soothe n p I t cal observers of what can ha p0 1 u Eled c a d 1926 was tl e asl pen to the pol t cal careers of gover
no who endo se a nd p es de over
)
tha t the l.al po
electr
tax ncreasrs It \\as Rhodes back
p a ge nerated c ectr Cll)
1962 who hu ng the name TaK
Ja nes Sands address s Box 92
II
ke
M ke
n D Salle and defeated
Cl rksbu g Oh o ~3115
him n hts b d for a second four year
ter n DtSa lle had raiSed taxc o
a coho! c beverages Cigarettes and
horserac ng to add a bout $300

The Me gs County

Conun ss oners recentl}' passed a
reso uhon of apprec1at on for out
stand ng a d e r tun ous sen·
of
Ralph We ke to Me gs l ount)
The esolut on read as fo o •
Whereas the members of the
Me tgs County Boa rd of l n
mtss one s have ea ed of he death
of Ralph Welker and Where as the
mernbe s of the Metgs County Boa d
of Corrun ss oners have perso a
knowledg
of the
Tlll )
n
tr but ons made bj Ra pi Welker to
Me gs Count) and Wherca
th
pass g away uf Ra lph \\ lk r

•

c t en therefo e
Be t resolv ed tha t th m nu es o
the Me gs County Boa rd of Corn
n ss oners meet ng s hou d ene
th loss Me tgs County has cndur ct
and hat on Tuesday Sept 15 a
on nt of Sile nce wa he d n I onor
of Ra lpl Welker a trul} outs a d g
M gs Count) C t ze n

as a close encounter \\; th a en
be ngs n the Wh te Mou ta s of
New Ha npsh re
On Sept 19 1961 the post nan and
ht wtfe sa d they arned h n efro n
a drtv e throug h he m ounta ns puz
zled by sta ns and r ps on her dt ess
scuffs on h s shoes and mark on
the r ca r The wa tches ad stopped
Ne ther ould rem ember what had
happened dur ng two hours of the
tr p That bla nk "ould not be filled n
unt I fou yea rs la ter whe the two
subm t cd to hypnos ts a nd the
story made head! nes
The H s to d of betng captured by
creatures resembl ng short ba d
humans w th b g eyes no ears and
htgh fo reheads They sa d they were
taken nto a spacecraft exammed
w th strange In strumen ts and
released
Htll dted n 1969 a nd Mrs Htll now
62 who rettred as a soc1a l worke r m
1975 often lectures on UFOs a nd he r
capture
She marked the a n
ruversary Saturday wtlh a talk at

Pease Air Force Base
In an mtervtew las t week she
descnbed her expenence as sheer

terror
I must have had a ery stro g
hea rt s he sa d I s rv ved
For four years the coupl e a d
they cou ld rerne mbe be g chased
by some k nd of a rcraft a nd gett ng
ho ne a te bu nuth g else Then
H II s health began to f
and whe
he d d not respo d to m ed ca t on a
doctor suggested hyp no
Under hypnosts H II me toned
be ng captured by st a ge bemgs
Hts "tfe began hypno
treat n e nts
and the story unfolded
Near Campton sou h of P a con a
Notc h a fter be ng foll owed by the
UFO about 30 m les thetr car
stalled
The car was standmg n th e road
and they started com ng toward us
Mrs Htll sa d Barne) kept try ng
to sta rt the car and t would t start
a nd when they separated and came
up n wo groups on e tl e r stde of the
car that was tl
I was go ng to tr) to outrun them
but I ha d JUSt gotten the door open
and was ready to get out and the re
were f ~e of them st a nd ng nght
there
On board tl e craft she sa d
They put a need le- ke nstrunt ent
n m y navel whtch was unheard of
here then but now doctors do tt
every da y

Two injured in shootout
RAVENNA Ohio (AP) - Two
members of the Portage County
Sheriff s Department were slightly
mjured m an altercation wtth a
shotgun-wtelding Ravenna Town
$lupman
Offlclalll said four offtcers were
)'esponding to a report of an at-

tempted sw ctde Frtday mght when
they found CurtiS Cottrtll 20 m a
fteld behind his home
As they approached him a
shotgun blast was ftred slightly
woWJding sheriff s Lt Mike Tmltn
offtctalll satd Capt John Watson
suffered contwnons and abrasiOJL&lt;J
during the mctdent

n

446
6

on to the state s revenu es

cents on the-do ar sales tax w ch
vould h t hardest on the poor a nd
u dd e class as they buy al n st
eve } fan y or househ d te ex
cepl food andn ed cme
0 Sa e 73 when he suffered hiS
fa a l heart attack wh le vacatiOn ng
n the land of h s a tcestors dtdn t
ru n for off ce aga m after h s defeat
by Rl odes by 540 000 votes among
3I m o
ast He m oved to
\\ash n&amp;&gt;ton and established a h gh y
ccessfu Ia " p act ce dtd some
lobby ng and kept h
hand n
Democrat c po t cs both there and
back home n Oh o
D Sa lle a liberal Democrat and
one of the f rst governofs to endo rse
lohn F Kennedy for pres dent n
1960 returned to Colwn bus fa trly of
len to endorse a nd work for
De no rats
II e short :;.root 5 fanner Toledo
13yor had mellowed from the days
follow ng h s defea t fo r re-electiOn
saymg he no longer harbo red a
esentr e of Rhodes He s one of
the best po t c ans m the bus ness
It s a ll n the game he satd
When Rhodes who turned 72 on
Sept 13 heard of D Salle s death he
dtcated he also has put the 1962
campa gn wh ch was b tter o both
stdes far beh nd htm The governor
ordered Statehouse flags flown at
ha lf sta ff He called DiSalle a noble
pol t cal opponent and a good
representat ve of the people o1
Ohto But Rhodes wants to run for
the US Sena te next year and says
I e s not worned about the pOsSible
unpact of h s tax h ke on that race
perhaps wmd ng up "1th the
n ckna me Tax Hike Jtm He sa d
I don t care what they call me I ve
been called everything There s
pro bab y been more wntten about
me than any other Ohtoan
Fonner Gov John J Gilligan a
Democrat also ousted from offtce by
Rhodes after one tenn after he gave
Ohw tts ltrst mcom e tax had at least
an mdirect comphment for Rhodes
last week After expressmg his sad
ness and sense of loss ove r DiSalle s
death Gtlligan now a professor at
Notre Dame sa1d Mike and I
belonged to an extremely small but
exclustve club as former
Democraltc governors of Ohto
Asked why DiSalle was defeated
by Rhodes and dented a second
tenn Gtlligan satd you re asking
the wrong man

G

Cod e

M

'

Jijij

•

For er House Speake r A G Lan
one Be atre Democrat sa d last
week that D1Sallc s tax h ke \\as
peanuts compared to the pa kage
Rhodes cu e ntl) 1 push ng Hhodes
vants tu add 1 75 cents to the four

ea

Co A

'"]4J

45
6
04]

l41
949

42
Mason Co

6 4
M dd epo '
Pom eroy
Ch es t e
Portl&lt;~nd

W Va

OV

Bu fl a lo

0 PLACE AN AD CA LL
Coun y

Me g Cou nty

446 2342

992 2156
675 1333

AND

MISCELLANEOUS

Vac

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., SEPT. 26, 1981

ap

prec a ed eve y h ng

10 00 AM

0 ve Un oe

D scant nu ng farm ng so Wll se ll the lollow.ng
terns Located on St Rt 124 tust E of Rae ne

Oh o

TRACTORS
65 M F D ese P W and P S w th 0 t lock
ve
P T 0 aux va ve 1 00 hrs Farm a Super A
Fa mall Cub 3750 watt po tab e Generator

MACHINERY

GEl

one
M and M s And y Wa d
and Zac ha y
Announcements

- --

-

SWE EPER
and sew ng
mac h ne epa
parts and
supp es
P ck up and
de ve y Dav s Vacuum
C eane one ha m e up
Ca 1
Geo Qes C eek Rd
446 0294

WR NK ES bol he yo u
F ee f ac a
$ 2 va u e
Ca

G veaway

4

B ue T ck hound ma e 4
y s o d Loves to hun Ca ll

367 7727
3 pupp es Mother r sh Set
er Fa he m ld mannered
man
6 4 843

6 4 446 7895
bl a k k tten 6 weeks o d

Make br ead n 90 m nutes
fo 20 cen s per oa Mag c
M
G nde
and Bosc h
M xer B ende
61 4 446

7895

ca 6 4 992 5208
AKC
eg s e red
mal e
Pome an an 10 years old
To f am y w h no ch l dren

6 4 843 2933
Fo
bu d d e ve y o
and
gaso ne heat ng a
d ese f ue ca L andmark
99'2 181 Pome oy Oh
Cake de o a ng c asses
soo n
Ca
st a
ng
Ca ouse
Conf ec ona y
6499'16342
on
o rn a on

6.__~
Lost

FOUND

and Found

2 sets of keys

Ca n be c a med at Da ly
Sent ne Off ce 992 2156
Lost

Basset hound lost n

the M dd teport area Last
seen beh nd Sunoco

PERMANENT HAIR Call614 992 6349
RE MOVAL
Pr of ess ona
E ec t olys s
Cen c A M A approved
Doc o
e e al s by ap
on y 304 675
po ntm en
6234 Tu esday Thursday
F day &amp; Sa urday

sft~

on

L os
one wrlker female
coon hound on Bunker H

Ba I Run Rd Cal 6H 992
3377 or 614 985 4184
LOST

Redd sh

brown

MO UN T A N St a e Rack ng fema e walker fox hound
&amp; Pac ng Assoc at on nc St pped her col lar n E
as t hor se Letart area Found or seen
s hav ng th e
show of th e season Sunday 949 2320 or 949 2744
Septembe 20 a
p m a
Samoeyed
ackson Cou nty Jun or LOST mal e
Fa g ounds
Th s show wh t e n Pt Pl easan area
reward 614 388 9009
w II be BO% pa'(back
4

G1veawav,____

LOSTdog
Krode

Park

n

vcnty

black

w th

ANY P E RSO N who has tan paws part E k hound

anv th ng to g ve away and part German Shepherd
does no offer or attempt to reward 304 675 6281 or 675
offer any other th ng for 2071
sal e may p ace an ad n h s
column T her e w II be no
charge o the advert ser

Puppy to g ve away Ca ll
446 9257 after 5 00
One full blooded Samoyed
d og
female
spayed
housetra ned
exc
with
ch ldren T o a good home

ca tl446 9476
6 cats 4 black &amp;
call coats Call446 9542

Bu ck Pont ac GA I po s
Oh o Cal 446 2282
WE

BUY

FURNITURE

YARD sale II Wake! e d

Ve se I turn ture Sagraves
Furn ture 446 4775

HUGE yard sate Fr day
Saturday &amp; Sunday 10 ?
above lock 11 on Rt 35

for anyth ng sta mped 10K
14K 18 K 'Ond denial gold

Road Septem ber 18 19 9 ,

lruc~

Sept 21 22 Clothes

bed liner dishes m sc
Beh nd Ashland stat on n
Mercerv lie 9 5

8

Pubtrc Sale

s

on has moved

on Rl 2 Gall po s Ferry
w va Every Sat 7PM
Buy and SetJ Lonn

Class r ng wedd ng r ngs
watches Clarks Jewel y

e Nea

367 7101

WANTED

One

Wr te M D M I er Rt 4
Pomeroy Oh 0 992 77/IJ

NEEDED Ababys tterfor

CHIP WOOD Poles max

church nursery 9 to 10 am
on SLnday morn ngs Ca I

d ame ter

5 ft Ford 3 p Brush Hog 3 pt 2XJ2 and Jx14 p ows
2 f a bed wagons s de d esser tor Cub and Super A
3 pt Ford Flex 0 H ch P c kup d sk John Bean
Sp aver w h 7 H P gaso ne eng ne 3 pt Subso er 3
p He d Seeder Cult vato for Cub and Super A 8ft
Du nham T ansport 0 sk Sea rs 8 HP R d ng Lawn
Mowe and 22 Pu sh Mowe
HOT HOUSE &amp; EQUIPMENT
3 Hat H ou ses 20x90 4 Ho House Heaters 50 000
BTU Bo e Gas approx 500 pepper and cucumber
boxes A pprox 2000 3 b Tom a a Baskets approx
4000 0 ob Basts,ets 14 000 Cabbage Crates large
a moun s of t ay's nserts Buckets Pots Hang ng
Baskets and app ox 20 000 treated Toma o Stakes

Ca 446 4612 ex 76

No tern to large or smal
nouseho d New used and

ant que Cal 992 6370
Four 15 nch mag whee s
for Chevrolet 895 3568

Scra p m e a ls ba tte es
r ad ators g Aseng yellow
root
and mere h a nd se
b oker ng Yarper Halste
ad Sa lvage Company 300

Eleventh Stree

-__:__:_____:::::==;===;;;:,_,~.;========~
8

Publ c Sale

Pome oy 992 2689

o

pi
ca nts
for a Heavy
Equ
ment
Operat
ng Eng
neep
Apprent cesh p Tra n ng

'R.~

AU CT ON &amp;
REAL ESTATE CO

AUCT ONEER
M L Bud McGhee
Ptlone 614) 446 0552
L cen sed &amp; Bonded
Oh o &amp; We st V rg n a

428 Second Ave

po s OH 4S631

979 Ford extra long van

4 ft
A lum num Boat Sho
Guns F reezer
Refr gera tor Tread le Sew ng Mach ne Meat
Sea es Cash Reg st er Tool Boxes W e End
Tabes Juke Bo
P nba
Mach ne and other
m see I a neous

OWNER GEORGE WOLFE
lUNCH
POSITIVE 10

Dan~th

J1m Carnahan

949 2033

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1981
AT 10 00 AM
Gall polls Oh oat the cor-ner of Th~rd Avenue and
0 ve Street one block off of State Route 1
L st ng n part Cherry wash stand Ch ld s w cker
cha r pr m t ve 2 pane cupboard odk knock down
wardrobe Ch ppenda e blank et chest oak Napane£
k tchen cab net four oak ch ars wo oak s deboar
ds two oak sere ar es oak k tchen cab net w th
tw n ben s and sp ce rack coppe b rd case WICker
f ower stand oak serpent ne wash s and w th towel
ba s two p e safes several square oak tabl es oak
f at wall cupboard Martha Wash ngton wash stand
arge f ower chest three came back trunks two

h gh headboad beds two h ghboy chests walnut

w th tw n boxes

How Does a Gross
Income of $1,400° 0
Weekly Part-Time
Sound To You?

e ght

toot oak show case

ma rble tdp V ctor an dresser s x oa~ stat bark

cha rs two oak f 'lie leg tables several oak dressers
w th n ce m.rrors s )( pressed spindle back chairs

two watc hma~ers desk~ brass kettle w th stand
h ghback pressed sp ndle rocker several n ce
roc~ers drop front desk p e cupboard twO oak ser

pentine h ghboys With m.rrors walnut marble tap

dresser w cker rocKer Aladd n amp R,ayo tamp
arge parlor cha r w th double 1 on heads two oak
wash stands w th towel bars two krlchen cup
boards oak f le cab net secretary chest lark ns

desk six drawer spool cab net B rd s Eye highboy
and lowboy and wash stand lour draw'r SpOOl
cab net severa Iron and brass beds Vlct~ota cur
ver door oak secretary we ght tcock m~nlel clock
old kitchen cab net with cotored glass doors 15
story book dolls about filly years olll We hav~ two
lots of nice glassware and pollery McGully
Readers Ray s Artt,nmetrc old books large plctu•e
frames oak ce box

This Is only a partial listing 11 y.\u INveli't been to
our antique au~llons don 1 miss tills one
SWAtH 5 AUCTION BARN
AUclionHrS
f
swan
RlckPHrHII
Ohto
Maien W Va

Own a
small business
of your own
VENDING
Be Your Own Boss
and wo k you owro hou :!i You can bu ld a
successful bus ness and fu u e based on a
fu I I ne of nat ona known p oduc s preso d
th ough n~ ona adve t s ng and p a rn ot on
Be•t Inflation by bu d ng a success fu pa t
t me dep ess on proof bus ness fa you self

You II add hundreds o do Ia s o you xed
ncome Pus vend ng mach nes a e s lent
sa esmen they demand no wages
T•x Benefits As an owne of you own bus
ness you II be e g ble to se f.-amp oyment

tax benet t• In facl du ng the f st three
years you I have an exce lent ax sheller due
to acce e ated equ pmen dep ec at on

MAKE EXCELLENT FIRST YEAR EARNINGS
WORKING PART TIM£ W$ ar~ see~1ng nd vr
duals wiling to stock co11ect end keep ell
money from Vend ng Mach nes placed n n
dustr a and commercial bus nesses

Coah Out Dolly Automat c merc hend s ng s
st ct y a high p of 1 cash bus ness You have

no f J~:ed over h ead and you can operate
from you own home

Loc•tlon We secure al local ons They a e
placed n lndustr at and commerc a bus
nesses n your area A I you have to do Is
stock and coiA!ct the money You ver fy all
tocat ons before acceptance

_.

MINIM~

CAIH INvitTIIINT

NO OBLIGATION

Phone T-oll Fre~
1 8110-554·11710
Phonn Steffecl 7 D•r• A WHk
Sun•y Cella Accepted

ca pet 1970 PMC

17•60

two bedroom new carpet
B &amp; S Sa es nc 2nd and
V and Street P P easant
wv Phone 675 4424

7HEN- THE LOCAL PAPERBOv'S MOH
R t7£S Sl:JNHY UP 7Ht: WIVE ANO OVER

THE BIG CITY PWBL 'CATIONS

1967 12x60 2 bed oom
baths Fo mo e n o

98S 42 0

de t a Is
Equa
Em
ployment Oppo tun ty Em

e e m en a y
M dd epor
eac her needs ba by s e
tor 6 weeks o d baby 304
882 3250 ask a s uz anne
Weave
wou d ke an ol de lady a
g r
to
ve
n
L ght
housewo k 992 3704

Pome OY OH 45769

Per son needed fo Fu e
Brush n M ason Coun y
area Wr te to Rt
Box
243 Ravenswood WV

2

- --

S tuat on s Wanted

A
om
n own

Som eo ne to c ar e for me n

my hOme 992 2686

Ca 446 3437

E m Resthome

Ca e fo

hafd capped aged o bed
patent
Temporary o
m ted ca e Or con nuous
hom e w th us Equ pped fo
whee cha r 742 2266

H ave vacancy n boa d ng
home fo e der y pe sons

P cessta tat$175 614992
6022
Would I ke to babys I lor
sma

ch dren n my home

n Syracuse

614 992 3242

Jl

Insurance

FOR SALE BY OWNER 3
bd r hom e toea ed at 123
Gart e d Ave 2 ac r es runs
from SR 7 to Oh o R ver
Fu ll basemen t
f n shed
r ec room 2 f ep aces 1
1 2 baths n ground con
c e e poo al new ca rpet
new pa nt ns de and out
W co ns der you home or
mob l e home n t a de
Owrier w II cons der f nan
c ng a 10% APR after
r easonable down pay m ent
f n er ested ca 446 546
fo an appo ntmen

FARM

fo

SA L E

ce ed'
los t
operator s L cen se

N

ca n
you
Phone

Havseeds Restauran

Ex

per enced only reed apply
304 6.75 3853 ask for

~a ll

Mr Lukacs

mon

h or nomebuye sat F en
ch C ty Mob e Homes 266
Upp er
R ve
Rd

Gat po s

446 9340

Buy

dur ng Sep em ber and ge
cent a a o washe a nd
d yer f ee Reg s e o ex
pense pa d week end fa 2 n
La s Vegas

By owne 3 bd
ch n c ty c ose o sto es &amp;
schoo s A
m odern
ven en es P ed to

446 9863
L IY Ke
p oper y R o
G r ande 9 ms new s d ng
ca pe t fu n an e &amp; hot
wate heate
Appr o)(
acre of g ound Ca
446

3485

56xl4 1980modc o a e cc
c
c amp e e y turn
de ve ed and se up on
your a $8 995
ohnson s
M ob e Hom e Inc 446 35 47

Too busy o hol d a ya r d
sale' Let us do t for you

Ca 1446 8581

- - -- - - - -

TV serv ce c all s Ca ll 992
2034 A so used co or TV for

new wood bu ner exce en
cond t on a r cond t one

2x65 30 4 6 5
304

house
n
se ll on l and

cant ac t 6J4 42 2 73

House

exce ent bank ba n ad
acent Pom er oy Bu ld ng
to s ava l ab e
Poss ble
la nd con ra e Make off er

6 4 385 6740
M dd epor Oh o 4 rooms &amp;
bath new ca pe t Can p a k
a 14x70 a e 992 7244
7 rooms and bath 4 lots
Needs some repa r F nan
c ng ava !able $25000 Ca

s9,295
Calllmmedtalely

Farms or Sale

FARM

HOUSE a nd a p

p ox mate y
0 ac es
mas y t abe E&gt;cc wa fe
Good ou bu d ngs
est! y
pa n ed
new gu e s &amp;
oot ng
4 bed ooms
mode n
k che n
&amp;
ba h oom P e y se ng
on p vate Jane nea Me gs
m nes $3Y 000 Qhone 742

2795
lS

NOTICE

14x70
2
oom ur
a
un
ngs
a

Lot s &amp; Ac_!_a gc

LO S Rea n ce ca mqs e
on Raccoon c eek
a
$300
u t es ava abe
down owne w
f na nce
ca att e 3 p 11 256 6413
2 ac es on F oyd C a k Rd
c ose t o Rt 160 S 000
Phone 446 0390
ac e o cho e oca t on
nea hasp ta on Kempe
Ho ow
$3 000
Pass bl e
and contrac Cha es Su t
on
337 Ew n g Ha

Athens Oh 45701

D&amp;W Estates, Inc
I J m E I ott
Rt 9l North
Ja ck s.on Oh o

286 3752

BY owner 3 apar t menf
house on app ox
ac e
L ve n one r ent o he s o
make your paymen can
be conve ted s ng e home
C y wat e
w
cons de

and cont ac t 675 883 9 5
pm

after 5 ~ 14 992 7284

sa e
for

South

Kommun tv

Ac
ton Counc I Inc Ch ld &amp;
Famllv Development Inc

- - - - -- -

Housekeep ng Two s ste s
would ke to clean house
Reasonable
rates
Ga I polls and Pt P easant

center n Pt Pleasant For
application please apply at areas 675 4109
Senior C I zens Cent~r 8 2
V and 51 PI Pleasant WV
f IHaHelal
No tate r than s p m
Tuesday September 22
1981 An Equal Opportunity 22
Money to Loan
Employer

FHA VA Convent al Home

APPLICATIONS are now
be ng taken by the Mason
County Act on Group tnc
lor a Nutrtllon Cook Must
be abte to cook and prepare
baked
tems
lor the
Nulr ton Program Apply
no taler than September 23
1981 Sen or Community
Center 812 V and Street
lor applltallon
Local l trm needs qualll ed
front end
a,llgnment
mechanic Full lime work
with paid vacation and
other benefits Guaranteed
salary ptus com miss on
High volume bay with com
pUierlz~ alignment equip
men! Schooling available
Must have own tools
Referencn needed Send
application tel P o Box 534
Pomeroy Ohio 45769

M dd eport

we I bu

3

bed oom d n ng Ia ge k t
chen den ha dwood floor s
basement att c garage
new s d ng etc N ce ne gh
borhood Se er f nance or

ease opt on 992 2517
new k tchen
nsulated

Hobstetter
Realty Phone 7 42 2003

Loans Cdtumbus First
Mortgage Co 463 Second HOUSE Meadowbroo~ Ad
Ave Galt polls Oh 446 d ton 3 bedroom lam ty
7172
room w ith f replace cen
tra a r basement 304 675
23
Prolesstonal
1542
Services

Plano tuning and repa r
Lo•e your neighbor tune
your Plano Bill Ward
Wards Keyboard 446 4372
Galllpol s
PIANO TUNING &amp; Repa r
Lane Daniels 742 2951 or
992 2082 Have you hugged
your plano today?

Milton Rood Camp Conley
2 year old 3 bedroom home
fully carpeted w lh I lull
bath and 2 half baths yard
landscaped w tn large
utrl ty building Assume 8
12 percent loan 675 6275
House lor sa te on Jerr cho
Road S rooms and bath
cellar 2 outbu ld ngs on 1
acre of ground 675 5078
OWNER

3 bedroom
ocatoon

sgggs
Call At
Let sure
Frnancrng
Avatlable
S year
Protectron Plan
Large Inventory

304 675

lAND
up to SOO

acres must be under
UOO per acre STROUT

REALTY - 446 0008

Rentals
2 bd house on St Rt 7
Phone 256 6520 or 446 4292

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOMES
INC.
210 Eastern Ave
Phone 446 3547

wood bu ne
men
and
ga age Tha
prope y a

$39 900 00
NEW LISTING

F IVE

POINTS
A e you
oak ng lo as x yea o d
home on one a e o
g ound ha has a wood
bu ne and a
and
on ng We
hs s
Thee bed ooms ba h
wa c so t cne and u
basem ent
has Pe ma
Payne w ndows a pc
and e e
ba eboa d

he a

NEW
LISTING
SY RA CUSE
Ex
a c s wha th s
bed oom home
s p saow n
assumab e oa n
Wha a e
c co m
Ran e and
b a on
el g
n uded "' onq
w h sfo m w ndows
pa o and ca po
u
y oom n e k hen
no mo e unn ng up and
down basemen steps o
do aund y $3 500 00

NEW

LISTING

CH ESTER
Do you
nd you se w sh ng fa
mo e
ose s r~n d a
wo k shop fo you hus
band s oo s
L e us
show you h s home
hn ha some new p ush
a pc The e a e mn y
ex a ea u es n th s
one oo p a G vc us a

a

S 350000

COA L MIN NG COU N
TRY
Ran h
ype
home on 2 S a es of
ovab e g ound
has
s orage bu d ng
ga den
house
f ant and s de
and
ut
ees
A o th ~ p us a th ee
w th
bed oom home
hookup fo wood bu ne

$32 000 00
Real Estate

General

44 ACRES

2'

bath brick corner lot con

•en en!
9164

VACANT
WANTED
1981 14 Wtde

RACINE 4 bed oom home
2 bath s
cab nets
$32 500 00

M D

Eye ca

a er5 OOp m 304675 3987

33

1973 MART ON 12x6S a
e ect c wa
nsu lated

2079
bed oom

OLEPORT -

977 V c o an
bed oom t am y
n shed
en a
de penn ng awn

3 bedroom house 2 acr es 2
baths am y oom Fu
basement
ga age
949

Rut la nd W

POMEROY 0
992 2259

oft 7 s 256 6836

72 Sch ullz
2907

t quuty Oh o Cat 614 949
2010 o 6 4 247 2424 lo
m o e nfo mat on

388 8564

3967

NEW LI ST NG

304 675 3030 0 615 343 1

5 oom house w th
ve
fran age on SR338 at An

1 2 to 44 n Cha nsaws
blades of all k nds and
e ectr c dr II b fs Phone

Mob e home oca fed n
Camp Coney E)( f a
e
and c ean Phone 304 895

5 rm w fh ba th 2 ac es o
bottom and
oca ed on
Hannan T ace Rd 1 m e

New 1981 14 Wtde

H LL TOP
SHAJl P NG
SERV ICE C rc ular saws 6

1972 nvade
4 x 70 3
bed ooms J972 Nnshau 14
x 60 2 bed ooms 8
S
Sa es nc 2nd and V and
Ss
Pt
P ea an
WV
Phone 675 4424

2 X 50 PMC hOU3€
a e
on en ed o 304 6 5 5658

55 ACRE FARM

NEEDED exper e nced gr
11 cook for breakfasts

SEPTEMBERS do

M d $40 s Ca 446 2 58

4

n

on

CLEAN USED MOB LE
HOMES
KESSEL S
QUAL TY
MOB L E
Dar an 2 x 65
HOMto SALES 4 M
bed oom s
19 2 C own
WEST GALL POLS RT
Haven 4 x 65 w h 8 x 0
35 PHONE 446 3868 o 446 expando 3 bed ooms 1973
1274
utop a 2 x 65 2 bed oom s

2

a
&amp; hea t ng a ge ga
den F nanc ng ava ab

AUTOMOB L E
SU RANCE
been

co

9

576

h 40

'urance Co has offered
serv ces fo f r e nsur ance
cove age n Ga ll a County
fo
a lmost a cen tu y
Farm hom e and persona
prope ty coverages a e
ava abe to mee
n
Con ac
d v dua
needs
Ray Wedem eve
agen

G aup Med ca Cove age
for sma bus ness as we
an
nd v du a s
M a or
m ed cal bas c hosp ta &amp;
group fe nsu a nee com
b ned tog ve you one of the
best p ograms ava abe
Very competat ve rates
Fo
mo e
nforma on
s teve M cG hee 446 OB1B or
446 0552

USED Mob e Home

771

by

531 4lh Ave 2 bd

Phone 388 8249

M

om

OWNER 2 m
North o
W ksv I e
00 ac es eo
t li abl e fa m house ou t
b u ld ngs f ow ng st ea m
surrounded by good r oads
good and $50 000 cash a
la nd cant ac t 10 per cen
down ba ance at JO per cen
606 266 4654
n erest Ca
a fer 4PM and anyt me
Sa turday

SANDY AND BEAVER In

6000 Ext 6403

Wr te box 304 Ga 1 pot s
Da ty Tr bune 825 3 d
Ave Ga ll pol s Oh 4563)

n nb

A ]

Fo sa le on l and can t act
House and 2 mob e hom es
oca ed at Bu av e W
se l sepa ate y o toge the

Phone 446 37S8

Per
Part
T em e
at
HomWeek
e
W e b st
Amer ca s fa emost d c
t onary company needs
home workers to update
local rna I ng I sts All
ages
ex per enc e un
necesssary Call I 716 842

W dow ady early s xt es)
to share my home prefe
l ady who can d ve
Reference s
exchange

oy 3 A m
y wa e and

~

G aduate studen
wou d
Like to shar e de to 0 u
t asses 9 4 Man ~r

Wanted to Do

TEACHER

Ph 594 3S43

5835

Ga lt pol s Da ly T bone
825 3rd Ave Ga po s Oh 992 2143
45631

western

906A East Sta teS
A hen s Oh

Wanted fema e
apa tment w th sa me
ch d acceptable Cal 245

- - --

G ow ng
Com pa ny
s
seek ng sha P nd v dua to
serv ce new and ex s ng
accounts
n Ga l a &amp;
sur oung ng count es
se l ected app c ant w I
have guaranteed draw
Pus comm ss on
group
med ca l coverage
pa d
vacat ons and P entv o
room for advancement
Sa es e)(pe ence s hel pful
but des r e to be successful
s mperat ve For personal
nterv ew
send
br ef
o
Bo)( 303
esume

Gene a

J1mOwen&amp;Co Inc
REALTOR

School Cte k Th s post on
eq u es a pe son w th a
m n mum of 5 yea s ex
perience Th s exper ence
shoul d nc ude pubt c con
tact
typ ng and some
bookkeep ng Please send
r esume to 346 East M a n

4 992 3090

U_I___

Th e Me gs Coun v Board of
Mental Retardat on s now
accept ng appl ca ons fo
the past on of Secretary

- --

house
4
ba h
com
a peted n ce and

and

Omtul);
fl2l

H elp wanted Apply n per
S t ea mbo a t
Res aur an
Rae ne Oh o
4pm 7pm

S

shed

Rea Esta e

-;:=======~========:::;~-~ $180

949 2701

J m Brown Apprent ce
Not espons1ble for Ace dents or Loss of Property

chest

S x hou cook fa nut t on
program at New Haven
Un ed Method st Church
New Haven WV App y
Sou hweste n Com mun y
Act on Counc I 540 F h
Ave nue Hun ng on WV
25701
o
N ew Haven
Method st Church n ca e
of Nutr tl on Program be
ween 10 am and 2 pm Mon
day hru Fr day E 0 E

0

MISCELLANEOUS

CASH
AUCT ONEERS

21

s Thto s bet aCETA
n ng
funded by the

State of Oh o App cants
m u st b e econom ca y
d sadv1ntaged and have
been unemployed for at
eas t 7 days o meet CET A
n
T t e V t el g b y
terested per son shou d con
ta c t th e r
toea
Oh o
Bureau o Emp oyment Ac
on Ag ency fo r fu the

so n

M~GHEE

97J C own Haven
4X65
hree bedroom new ca
4)(64
pe 1971 Came on
two bedroom new carpet
1972 Champ on 2x60 two
bedroom new ca pe
976
Came on
2x60
two
bed oorns ba h &amp; 1 2 new

Unfurn shed
house
6
rooms Ne ghbo hood Rd
P va e arge yard S225
Ca 446 44 6 afte 7PM

Un u n
aoms
pe e y
c ean 6

Grande Co lege s
ur ent Y seek n g ap
R

1966 Buck Sky ark v 8 310 w de a t e ng ne 2 doo

~wf

7380

EOE

ploye

Auct oneers note most 1tems '" th s sa e have been
n the fam y for many years Collectors and ant que
buyers should cons1der attend ng th s sale Please
be on t me we w111 start promptly at 1 30 P M We
r:outd have add1hona11tems the day of sate
Terms of sale Cash or approved check day of sale
Buyer s respons1ble for all terns purchased

1973

new
oom
ve y

Mob1le Homes
tor Sale
2)(65 two bed ooms
carpet
arge I v ng
w h woodburne
good cond Ca 446

RN sa nd LPN s needed f or
new upcom ng C CCU n
full o partt m e pos ons
Even ng a nd n ght sh f s
Also Ass stant Head Nu se
needed n OR RR Mu s be
RN w th prev ous OR ex
per ence
Con ac
Per
Sonne
Dept
0 B eness
M e mor al
H asp ta
Hasp a l Dr Athens Oh

fects of the late Ralph C Whitmore as requested by
h s Widow Ruth S Wh tmor e and her Com
m1ss oner Frances m Tucker
Pol a o d came as book stand A v n ste eo 2 RCA
B&amp;W TVs E lec tro u x sweeper Bu oughs add ng
mach ne sold map e BR su te pas er BR su te
wr t ng desk older wr t ng desk w h ft op and
drawe B sse l sweeper ceda cl es
ocke n ght
stand
bed Chr stmas decor at ons d op leaf
tab e RCA color TV wood stand amps and lamp
tabes 2 pc Ear y A mer can LR su e ash trays
a nd sta nds Mangus e ec t c organ sw ve c h a s
elect clock elec t c an ots o pots and pans an~
and other k chen utens s w ndow a r cond t one
Ph leo electr c range Ke v nator efr g ste am
ron crock pot handmade g ass wa e p tcher k t
chen table electr c heate sever a s ep ad ders
dehum d f er fru t ars ca rd able wash tub 2
meat saws m sc f sh ng eQu pmen seve ral pant
brushes a
n excellent cond on 1 se p tc h ng
shoes and pegs powe sanders ston e ug severa
sma ll hand too s set p o butcher kn ves w steels
power sa w Sk I
m tre boxes kraut cutter Sk
power d II e ec c ext co ds ool boxes cane bot
tom roc ker water ng cans p ctu e frames lawn
turn ture 18 power mower 22 se lf propell ed
mower wood porch sw ng hand saws bench g n
der Benz 0 Mat c to ch new Sab e 1 g sa w bench
v ce fram ng squares bow saw Craftsman belt
sander several garden and ou s de too s ex tens on
adders Ph l eo upr gh rad a cab net cedar chest
arge v nyl covered cha 6 d n ng oom cha r s end
tables o oman glass top tru t ars

32

Help waryted

~========&amp;=A:u:c:'•:o:n========:::;i Tproge amV

2

They II Do It Every T1me

675 5187

675 5868

A lso F ea Market open
da y
Open
Monda y
Fr day 1 5 pm

TRUCKS &amp; CAR
J979
Ton Ford Van
and 97 4 F eb d

on largest

De verd to Oh o Pallet Co
Rock
Spr ngs
Rd

WANT E D Four Old meta
frame park benches to be

w 1 buy 1 p eceo camp ete

Ga

4

e nd $ 2 SO per ton Bundled
s tab
SIO SO pe r ton

f atbed

donated f o
use at he
H stor c Towers m n pa k

11
HetpWanted
GET VALUABLE Iran ng
as a young bus ness person

The sunday T1mes Senttnet- Page--0 7

and earn good mone';~lus
BEDS IRON BRASS o d some great g fts as a'lll!en
nel route carr er Phone
furn ture
go d
s lve
dollars wood ce boxes us r ght away and get on
the et g b ty I st at 992
stone ars ant ques etc
Complete
househo ld s 2156 0 992 2157

Store Ga ll pot s 446 269
Pome oy 992 2561

Wanted to Buy

9

Ca II 446 409 4

wagon for group hayr des
a R ~ccoon Creek County
Pa k Ca I 446 46 2 Ex 76

&amp; Auction
Nea ls Auct

Buy ng Gold Pay ng cash

4 Crosscut

deane
ank typel
eel ner cha
2 kerosene
heater s e lec tr c hot p ate Wh t e rotary sew ng
e ec tr c fa ns awn mower garden
mach ne
sp aye
2 hou se acks at w ndows and doors
M ay tag wr nge washer ndustr al wheelbarrow 24
tt ex tens on adde
cow yokes garden pow 2
~cy hes forks hoes etc new axe
r o er cane m
p e s w enches e c Mu h m scellaneous

Thank s o eve yo ne who
e m em be ed me on my

3

sm th

cars

Location from Galli POl s Oh o 8 m les south of
State Route 7 on nght s1de of h ghway Look tor our
blue S1gns
Th1s sa e s for the purpose of se ll ng the personal ef

Card at Thanks

hJnKs to a who he ped
ness a nd
us du ng th e
dea o ou daugh e a nd
mo he
She l y
You
p aye s owers ood a nd
dona ons w e e g ea y ap
p e a ed Spe a han k~
o Rev Wa ke
Ew ng
Fune a Home
Doc o s
and Nu ses Bess eac h

used

Saturday Sept 26 Beg nn ng at 12 30 PM
Two m tes off S R 248 on L ck Sk llet Road Leave
s R 248 s m les E of Chester or 3 m11es w of long
Bottom Follows gns

AARBQHEEMfRIS

B th day

model

THURS, OCTOBER 1 1981 - 1 30 PM

Not espon s ble for acc1dents or loss of property
Owner Dav d R Yates 432 6463
Auct oneer I 0 Mac McCoy- 985 3944

n Mason Cou n

82nd

CASH PAID lor clean ate

AUCTION

HOUSEHOLD

N ew H avet1
e ta 1

nG

Big garage sale Sept
19 20 From 9 5 Route 681
E halfway between Tuppers Plains and Reedsv I e
B g pond on r ght Ardward
McM II on

9
Wanted to Buy
74 or 75 Chevrolet Laguna

P ogram

saws old Ph co rad o Hand c othes wr nger
ch d s rock er k dd e cha r bow and p tcher
cusp do
at d shes o d ante n books desk and
c h~ r hand auger p cture frames hand crank
phonog aph o ha ness and horse drawn tools
p ows cu t vators s ngle e~s etc hand powered
odde cutte b ass a !road lock
on kettl e flat
opt unk p atform sca les m lk can stone ars oak
d n ng t ab e and s x (6 cha rs buffet k tchen
cab net cher y dr esser rock ng cha r stands

1 Fat s

Rae ne
Ru t nd

c Code 304
P P easa n
H Leon
A pp C
Mao

jentintl

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES

A

'

WANT TO BUY Old fur
655 Buhl Morton Rd Turn n lure and Antiques of a I
to eft at FOOdtand Sept k nds cal Kenneth Swa n
21 22 &amp; 23
256 1967 n he evenings

PUBLIC AUCTION

gsCo A eaC od e

Let

~tmts-

iunba!J

wanted to BuL__

9

parts s304 895 3568

( '""jlltll'lft!,l s 11111rth•
ju/1 Ill 111ft!. It It plrm11 &lt; ~~ h""W s
G

Yard Sale

1972 to 74 model Nova to

Classifieds

Ironic

g eat oss to h s fa n ly and man)
fr e nds n Me gs Count)
a nd
Wh reas th e sa d Ra lph Welk r ha
unself s hly served h s county as an
ab e b ts ness na n s her ff s a t
r p e enta ve and out stand ng

Ms we denbomer was beaten to
death last month by a mentally
dtsturbed and retarded patent at
the Dayton hospttal
A state highway patrol spokesman
sa d a compla nt had been rece ved
from Milhgan and that h s charges
were be ng nvesltgated
Before bemg transferred to
Dayton Mtlligan had rece ved trea t
ment at Athens Mental Health Cen

Pomeroy-Mtddleport-Gallrpolrs Oh1o-Pomt Pleasant W Va

At Meadowbrook Manor

ter and at Lima State Hospital
No doctors were there (Lima or
Dayton) who Wlderstood multiple
personltties
Keyes satd
The
transfer IS from one maximum
security mstitutlon to another It s
sttll like a pnmm but there are
psychiatnsts (m Columbus) who
spectahze 10 multiple personalties
Keyes who met Milligan nearly
three years ago satd he Interviewed
62 people whose paths crossed the
s&lt;&gt;-ealled
campus rapiSt
m
eluding two of his three VIctims
I think tt s umportant for people
to know about multtple per
sonalihes he srud There so much
mtsunderstanding Multiple per
sona lttte s
are
usually
m sdiagnosed
Alan Vogel director of the Dayton
Forenstc Hospttal satd the transfer
to Colwnbus was requested by Dr
Judy Bachs who was one of the
or gmai spectahsts who worked wtth
Milhgan
She ts an expert m the type of
behavioral problems Milltgan seems
to have Vogel satd last week Slle
requested the traJL&lt;Jfer and we feel tl
IS m itne wtth seemg that the man
gets the best treatment posstble

and conditions at the state factlity
where he has spent 10 months Cen
ter offtctals however satd Milligan
IS bemg transferred to provide him
with better psychiatric treatment
and not because of his complamts
Milligan m a telephone mtervtew
wtth the Dayton Datly News on
Thursday from his ward at the
Dayton factltly charged that four
secunty guards worked me over
He told the newspaper that guards
!ted him down m a seclusiOn room
and that they Jwnped on me With
their knees
Milligan alleged the beatmg
followed my cnltctsm of how the
mvestlgatian mto the beatmg death
of Nancy (Wetdenborner an at
tendant) was handled

The story of M lhgan ts unportant
because he ts also the ftrst multtple
personahty to be ohserved around
the c ock by psychtalrtsls Keyes
sa d
Mulltple personabttes are
usually treated on a n outpatient
basts The conditiOn IS generally
class !ted as a neurosts a nd they get
therapy severaltunes a week
M hgan spent seven months un
der observatton at Harding Hospttal
n Colwnbus and was also the ftrst
person whose mull phc ty of per
so aht es was attested to by seven
phys e ans
M lltgan w II be transferred
Tuesday from the Dayton Forenstc
Center to the Columbus Forenstc
Center Mtihgan has frequently
compla ned about poor treatment

DiSaile
death

Notes UFO anniversary
PORTSMOUTH N H AP
was 20 years ago that tome t od st
for Barney a d Betty H II two hour
of terror ecalled through I ypnosJS

vance tnforrnation from random
House stated that Milltgan had 24
different ones
Keyes IS best known for his scten
ce ftctton novel Flowers for Alger
non the story of a mentally retar
ded man named Charles Gordon who
was the subJect of a n experunent
that transfonned him mto a gem us
The
exper me t
however
ultliTllltely faded

Sept 20 1981
7

Milligan reveals 24 personalities in hook

Resolution honors Welker
POMEROY

Sept 20 19.H

Galltpolts Ohto-Po nt Pleasant W va

Good r et rement home
n qu et area near
Ew ngton some woods
sma II pond S acres
tillable vmvl stded 4
bedroom house A good

buy aiS49500 Call Gary
or M ar lyn Rams er at

(216) 4lS 6351 agents
lor DALE WIRTH
REALTY Creston (216)
4l5 6365

MIDDLEPORT -

Co e

ttl e home ha needs a
few repa s B ck 1
s ory ho m e ha can be
us a sma
you s fo

pr ce S20 000 00

REALTOR
H n y E C eland

992 6 91
REA LTOR
ASSOC ATES
rr ussell949 2660

c r urner 991 S69 2

o
q

r rner 992 5692

�The

Times-Sentinel
Houses for Rent

41

Houses for Rent

41

• bd r., 1 112 bath, living
room with woodburner,
din1ng room &amp; kitchen .
Washi ngton School di strict .
De p r eq . Ca ll 446-4167 a fte r
6PM .

3 bdr . house 1n nice sub·
d tv i s1on , family r oom ,
large lot , S300. ca ll446-7942.
1 bedroom house fur n ished
ove r look1 ng O h io Ri v er
Br owns Tra i le r P a r k . 614·

991 ·3324 .
La rge nouse t or r ent in
Le tar t Fa l ls, Ohi o. Must
ha Ye
re fe r en ces
and
depos1t. Contact F red W.
Cr ow Il l, Po m ero y , Ohi o,
day, te lephon e 992 -6059
n•ght , telepho ne992·751l.
1 bed r oom house, 1 1r1 mi les
fro m down town Gall ipoli s.
$275 month . Deposit an d
r efer ences. 675 3655 .

STARKEY
REALTY

or992·2'1 17.
Mobile Homes
for Rent

Loretta McDade

T r ail e r
tor
r en t
in
Sy rac u se . Call61 4 992 -1906

12x60 tr a il er w i th ex pan do

living

room . Loca ted on

large corne r lot in a ni ce
ne1gborhood 1n Midd leport
Adult s only , no p e t s
Avail a bl e 1m m ediate ly

Call991 ·1101 or 991·23 19
FU R N IS HE D, 2 bedr oom
mob il e ho me in N ew
Haven . Ad ults onl y , no
pe ts, 304·675·1457 or 675

1981
Ap~rtmemt

44

sf

for Rent

deposit requ i red . 992-2606

J be dr o o m
t r ai l er ,
Cheshire, $175, $75 deposi t,
you pay ut i lities . Ca ll 614·
36].7811.

by Larry Wrtght

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

Furnished house in Middl eport . Ref er ences &amp;

42

1981

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

592-2419
MINI FARM Just 3 m i l es fr om Raci ne on
bl ac kTo p r o ad . L ove l y pr. va te se ttrn g consisting of
711'). ac r es w ith 14)(70 m obil e hom e co mplete ly
enc losed w ith roof and full leng th porc h and ca r ·
port . T he two r oom s added on 1n the rea r , one wi th
fir eplace and one w 1th wood burn er , m ake it tr u l y a
tam11y size home. Ther e is a b ar n and two other out
buil dings . Pr iced in the low $&lt;10 s, and ow ner w 1ll
hel p with fin anc mg .

2 bdr . apartment unk.lrn .,
in Crown City , Ohio. Call

51

156·6520.
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy . Par-

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa , cha i r, rocker, ol·
toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa ,
chair and loveseat, $275 .

tially turnished . $170 you

Sofas

pay utilities. C all 99 2·2288
after 6 p.m .
'

992-7787 .

from $285 . to $795 . Tables.
138 and up to S109 Hide· a ·
beds, IJ~ .. queen s ize, $380 .
Recliners, $175. to $295 .,
Lamps from SUI. to 565 . S
pc . difettes from $79 ., t o
$385. 7 p c .• S189. and up .

1 BEDROOM. oJhlurnished

$219 up to $495 . Desk $110 .
Hutches, $300. and $375 .,

Available . 1 bedroom apt.
for rent . Contact V i llage
Manor Apts .• Middleport .

ReaiES'tate - Gerl m l- -

--~

----

675-5571 .

•

Apartment, Mason , wv.
bedroom furnished . No

pets . Deposit. 30H82 ·3356.
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes ,
houses.
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.

---

614 446-8121 or 614·145·9484 .

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

Apartments 675-5548 .

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408
r

2 bdr MH in Cheshire. Call

- - - · - -- 2 bdr . traile r for r ent Call
446 1052 after 5PM.
For Rcnt·3 bedroom m obile
hom e on
R . 218, 3 m i les
South of Gallipolis Pr ivate
tot, adul ts, r ef . and dep
r equ ired Phone 446·7326 .
Even1ngs and weekends

s.

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY IN
GALLI POLIS

HOME - 2 ACRES
IN THE COUNTRY

Br 1c k and tr am e 4 a par
tm en t house on low er
?nd A e One ap artm ent S
bat h ,
2
r ooms,
bedroom s - Th r ee (3)
on e bedroo m apart
ments . L 1ve 1n one. tel
the other three pa y fo r
this home Ca II now
II
4

8

6

room home with 3 or
possibl e 4 bedrooms.
k1tc hen
with built 10
ca b1ne ts, storm w•n
dews and doors . L arge
Ch ic ken house. stor a g e
bul d1ng, 2 wel ls pl u s
r ur al w a ter, on a State
H ig hway . A ll fh •s tor
on ly $36,500 .00 Call fo r
appoi ntment now 11 364

1
hom e
Sit uated
on
Garft eld
Av e
within walking
di stance from down·
town Gallipoli S Large
garden are a, on e· ca r
garage
Co mf ort a ble
l1v1ng r oo m , d1nin g
roo m and l&lt;rtchen Id ea l
tor one or two per sons

CONVENIENTLY LOC·
ATED - 3.3 m iles north
ol Hot zer H asp II a I ad
1-'Kent to Slat e Rt 160. 3
b e dr oo m,
modern
hom e,
w / h ardw o od
floor s
a nd
p a rt
basem ent . .70 acre lot
mc ludes 12' xl2' st or ag e
bu1l d ing. Pr ice $56 ,100.

Pnce $25,000 00

2 bd r . mobil e home ref
r equ 1red . Ca ll 256· 1922 .
2 bedroom trail er . Adults
only
Brown' s Trailer
Park . 992·3324 .
o:t4
Apartmemt
_ _ _...:l.or Rent

3 rm apt. utiliti es pa 1d .
Call 675 · 5104 o r 675·5386.
Unfurn . 4 rm . apartment.
$250 mo., $100 dep ., utilit1 es
pd .. no ch ildren , no pet -&gt;.
Ca ll446·3437.

0 AC RE S, 7 ROOM HOME - BARN

45
Furnished Rooms
SLEEPING ROOMS and

304 77 3-1882.
Deluxe furnished apart·
ment •central air and heat,
excellent 1ocat1on, adults
on l y, lease , d ep., upper
bracket, reference . 446-

0338.
Mobile home in c ity central
air and heat, adults only,

dep . 446·0338 .

s0 s

AM ERIC A N D R E AM
tr 's ea sy t o ma ke a dr eam a rea l ty by own rng th1 s
rmmrl CUi i!lf' Carefree home Wl lll thr ee bed roo m s '}
b rl i~IS . '1 pa 110S. eat 1n k 1tchc n w rt h b url I 1n oa k
Crlb rn cts. IM QC ltvr ng roor~.;._a n d st orage bu il d 1n g
LOUII Cd 1n ( IIY School DI S tr;]\:1 Thrs one \I'OU m us t
"' ' t ' In t&gt;t•l r•'""' As lun q '!.ll ll.'i&gt;{)(j.: •
11 45]
COUN T RY A TMOS P HERE
Look,ng tor tha t perfe c t ~l ome? Loo k no m or e F our
t)cd room s, 3 1 1 baths. 23')( 18 ' 11v1ng room, 20':.:2 4'
t,lmily room , ex tr a nr ce co untr y lo:rtchen W1l h all th e
ta t c&gt;S T co nve n 1en ces Gracious lr v 1ng w 1t h Approx
J4 50 sq tt l rv 1n g spac e plu c, a ben u1dul pool on 3.2
&lt;1cr C'S of w uodL•d land Mu ch m or e, en II tor vo u r ap
po 1nl me n1
;, 504
C 0 U N T R · 'T'
Remodt' led .l 5 bt' c1 r oorn ho m e w 1Th 1,1-ep lace
IOCrl l r d on SJ d C fi:.'S ot l rllrlbl e an d pas tu rt' land,
pond bnrn . lury~e me tol l.J uil dl ny, l obac co base Al l
Th rs tor lhf' luw . low pnu~ ol ';4 2, 900 Ca ll tor m or e
.,.., , ,l rl &lt;;

NEW

Natura l wood s1di ng
de corat es
tht S
3·
be droom r anc h styl e
home situ ated in a
woo d ed
a re a
overlookin g the vall ey
adjacent to Ker r Beth el
Rd Spac 10US l1v1ng rm
area County wat er ,
e tectn c he at , 10%, 30
year , r~ ss umn b l e mar
tgage

129,900 .00

-

If 4 7~

USED

AP ·

PLIANCES
washers ,
dryers ,
refr i gerator s,
ranges .
Ska g gs
Ap ·
pllanc e s. 1918 Eastern

Ave .. 446· 7398
Park. , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

Ave . Call 446·1215

SOFA -2 cushions new
upholstery , black leather,

$250. Call 446 ·2991.

3148.

For sale coffee table, oc tagon &amp; hexagon end

I

CENTRAL REALTY
NEW LISTING - Country hom e, 2 stoty , 4 BR,
basemenT, outbu il ding, vinyl siding, fruit trees. Bemg offered at $25,000.
NEW HOME - B1 level in Gallia Co . on Rt . 554 . 3
BR , 1112 bath, beautifUllY carp eted throughout Sets
on large lot , garage and d eck . Asking $62,000.
COMFORTABLE- 3 BR ranch , 1 mile off Rt. 7 .
S1tuated on 3 rolling acres. There is a separate
garage and other outbuildings . Priced in the $50s.

39 ACRES- All mineral rights, 4 BR home needs
some work , fru it trees, garden space . All th iS for

S3S,900 .

MOBILE HOME- We l l kept in Ra c ine. Completely
furn1shed Asking $11,000. Located on quiet street .

All

3 FLAT ACRES -

Located 10 Rac i ne . Land contract financing possible .

OPEN HOUSE

the comforts tor moder n
IIVIOg but With th e
solitude of the country .
3-bedrooms, living rm,
dining room, util1ty rm ,
modern k1tc hen w l oak
ca binets, 2 baths, l4'x IB'
m uster bedroom . A p
prox 1mately
50 fr u 1t
tr ees and 6acres of land
nea r Rac coon Cr eek A ll

SUNDAY, 1-S P.M.

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL

'1 story br1 c k, 9~ Four1h Ave. fully equrpped kitchen,

N.ancy

!orm,ll dmrn9, 2 or 3 bedrooms, carpeting
Throughout . ~ form wmdows, gas furnac e, and cen Tr .l t ,11r . Ass um.lble loan at 9 1 2%, $40,000 or best of l N . 446 -7148.

J.asper~ -

Virg1n1r1 Hayman -

Assoc1ate

Real Es1ale -

:J II!-

DROOM ~- ]

A CRt..~ M . OR L

1lf' hom r· 1.1 xJO 1976 Fr eed om , l' , ba th s U n
lo t s ot built rn c a b1n et s.
r n n ge,
1 rp,nn,no
t l· rclrr rl tor din t.' l \r 'Sf' l A rr cond 1tr oner an d OHle r fur
1
Rur,J I wutr r n1c r ln nd tor qood ga r den A ll of
r·:, tor only'f&gt;n ~()()
~
KYG E R CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT
Moder n 3 BR ra nc h home appro x . 4' 1 yr s. old . T he r
mopane wrn dows, stor m doors. FA furna ce. w ith
cen tra l air . kitc hen has buill 1n ca b1n ets. stainl ess
StP.cl dbl s1nk and dtning are a. F ull basem ent with
pat io door s. R ura l wate r sy stem, ga r age Call now

079
APPLE PIE CONDITION
And spark l1n ' c lean best desc r1 bes th1 s tr 1 leve l,
thr ee n1 ce s1ze be dr oom s, 2 bath home. Family
roo m w 1th f1r epla ce, d1n10g roo m , m odern k itc hen
w1th built tn s, nat g a s heat a nd a.r . Two c ar
gara ge Located tn Sprin g V all ey on a beautifully
lan dsca ped large tot. M1ss th1s one and you ' ve
mi ssed a good one
f/450
DRI V E A LITT E, SAV E A LOT
3 RR . l u ll ba 5c me nt . •N hlle al ummum stdmg , t ue l o 11
FA t urnacP . 30':&lt; 40' barn s. sh1n_g led r oot . lo ts of
vou nQ pc ,l ch n nd npp lf&gt; trees All th1 s reduced to on·
l y$1 ·t.'i0 0
.rt4 S2
91 1 °o LOAN ASSUMPTION
Nofh 1nQ lan ey
noth ,n g b•g but a ren l r: ute ana
cozv tw(l bedroom stnrfer hom e or a n 1cP s1ze hom e
tor r ef tr ees I f has a fuel oil fur nace, f irepl ace &amp;
can a tso be h eated by w ood only A ll thi s on a .57 ac
lof appr ox 7' ~ m1 1es tr am Gall1 pol is Prrccd a t only
$t8 .900 Wha t a buy 1 Call toda y
11 478
v, H Jl f IJ. IH: AU fiFUl ~RI C k H O M ~
LQ( ,l l0d rn f i i Y ot G.l i i iPOtr s. c lose to superma r Ke ts
anct bU S1ness scc t1 on •o r oom s. 3 or 4 bedroo m s,
mN!f'rn k llC. h{'n .N 1Th ro ts ot ca bme ts, d1 shw as her ,
(l ,'l rt) ,r (H' d rspo sa l . t' lec rn c t abl e top ran ge Form a l
! '1nrn c1 room. t&lt;l mliy rec r cat1on roo m Just lot s ot
1011 m Cen t r a l r11r, niltur at gas FA f u rn ac e, central
P f\ &lt;, vstc m , l 1r epr acc, pl rmter in home Y ounq a p
p lf' rlnel pe nc h tr ees, flowe r s and Shrub s ,lnd a IOI
mor f' i\~U ST SEE THI S CITY HOM E
1i]9l

•

39ACRESMOREORL E SS
Till abl e pas tur elan d . so me limber , pl ent y of sprr nl,;i
wate r . 1• mile f rontage on Prospec t Church Roa d
Phone fo r f ul l dPtad s
11 497

1 ACRE S- 4 ROOM HOME
12' x65 ' MOBILE HOME
L ive in on e. r ent th e oth er . Rent now comi ng 1s
115.00 a month 2 acr es of wood, ow n w a ter syste m .
A . gas furna ce N1 ce modern kitchen. All of m 1s
only $73,000 .00.
w 494
FANTASTIC BUY 1

REDUCED FROM $35,900 TO $28,900
OWNER SAYS "SELL NOW"
Modern 8 room ranch in th e country . Large living
room 16' x18 ', family room 17')(12' with woodburning
fireplac e. Rural water, ce ntral air. Appro)( . 112 ac re
of clean land. Large concrete patio, carport . See
this home now!
~ 323

NEWADDA1LY

564,000
Fram e
dwe111ng, large lot w1th
small barn Centenary
Owner m oved out of
star e. anx 1ous to sell 3
b dr m , '.2 t 1re places, new
ca rp e trn g,
full
b asc m rn f.
c arpo rt
Gr een Sc hoo l D1stn c t .
IF YOU HAVE BEEN
LOOKING for a com ·
hom e an d
b i nat 1on
bu sine ss opportu n 1ty,
we have 1t! Locateo 1n
downtown
Gat liPOII 5
and zoned commer c ia l,
but w1th re s idential use ,
too . N1 ce, neat 1,424 sq.
ft . home with bu s ines s
budding in rear . Owner
w il l help finance, or
fina nce entirety with ,
25o/o down payment.
Thi s 1s a quality piece of
r eal estate. L et us show
it to you tod ay!
1 ACRE LOT loc ated
along Kemper Holl ow
Rt .
Rural
water
available. $4,000 .

MOBILE

HOME

IN

VINTON , has entrance
lot, 2 bedrooms, 2 ba th s
with
ca r port
a nd
covered porch . All for

'$25.000 .
FOR

PERFEC r LOCATION
tor sm al l bu s1ness or
r emode l and move 1nto.
Loc at ed on th e m a1n
co rn er rn Ew.ngton, tal
Sl ze appro x
56x 170'
Bu y th 1s p r oper ty now
tor $20,000

RENT

2

[B

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
REALlOR., Susan Gilliam, Assoc. 245-5208

A ir Co m~r esso r s . n ew
Ingersoll Ran d 5 hp , s.ng le
an d 3 phase. tr uck loa d
sa le. From $l.2 45.00. Call
col lec t 304 766·6244 .

11'5 GOOP·I5Y
TO A 61 FC:L I toJ
PARIP. .
Now arrange Ina circ:led leners 10
tonn lha !IUfJ)riae llf'IBW8r, as eug·

I I K

gested b'j the abo'&lt;le'CIII100n .

Prlntanswerh818:

"(X I I I)"

per m o. b uys 4' x 8' el ec tri c
flashing arr ow c han geable
letter s ign . Call Fr ee 1-BOO·
55 1·3070 . Cutliff Sig ns

(....._.-.oay)
'festerday's

S4

Misc. Merchandice

For sale Sears 18,000 BTU
air conditioner &amp; small
humidifier. Call 4-16·3933.

For sale Sears fireplace,

used 1 winter . Call379·2584.

tember . Register for an expense paid weekend for 2 in
Las Vegas, Special prices
and free washer and dryer
or central air with purchase . Stop in today. Fren-

SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE · SEASON SALE :
$999.00 INSTALLED! I!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at $999.00. Price In·
eludes pobl, deck, fence,
filter,
liner,
and in-

CALL:

ch City Mobile Homes. 266
Upper River Rd. 4-16-9340.

POMEROY
lANDMARK

For sale 2, 3,000 gal. fuel
tanks and l, 4,000 gal. fuel
tanks, good cond. Call 446·
7'100 .

614-992-2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating 011.

reconditioned by RAOCO.
Call 304·523-1378 . Hgtn.,
WVA.

PRICED RIGHT.
CALL TODAY!

ENGULF PRIMED
down" - Dul recovers-

w orld
Special
sav ings
Te r m s

304-882 ·1485.

304·882·1485.
--- -~c---

Real Estate - General
---

l~~~~Rs~. "'"o
budg e t

$175 0,

TP .

NEW LISTING - Fam1
l oy room 12 :.: 19 , flu e tor
woodburn er
I berty 2
bedroom trader , a1 r
cond iti on er , por ch and
l ev el tot Only $9,600

WILL TAKE TRADE Trad er on small house
Have a 3 bedroo m f' OUn
try home w1th furna ce.
modern kttch en. full
ba se ment and larg e lot.
Only s:;o,ooo .

5-U-P-E · R L-0 -C-A·T-1-0-N · WI LLDW DRIVE
Cozy 3 BR r a nch with
full basement and large fenced lot, low Utilities.

GOOD CITY LOCATION -

s29.soo

Only

CENTENARY - Go od 2 BR star ter ho me W1th full
bas ement on Route 141 . Pr iced to sel l now

Ju st list ed an exceptionally nice home. Prates
s1onally land sca ped Featuring a large rustic f am•
ly roo m w ith mass1ve stone fireplace , book sheiYeS,
bay w ind ow an d beam ed ce ilings. Large spac rou s
for ma l entry Modern kitc hen with pa ntry , forma l
din ing ro om an d 11vtng room . Everything for your
comfort . Selt1n g on th e edge ol town on a sem1
wood ed lo t Shown b y A ppomtment!

$36 ,000
CLOSE TO KYGER N1 ce ranc h w1 t h full
base ment, 3 bedroom s, carefr ee vi ny l s1d1 n g, lar ge
lot of 1 14 acres Call toda y
# 0142
INVESTMENT PROPERTY -- 2 ni ce lots w ith .t
rent a l mobile hom e p ads. all ar e r ented, each pad
has concr ete runner s and patro, loc nt ed 1n Rodn f' y
1 1155
IN TOWN - Lovely f rame ho m e, gara ge, f en ced 1n
lot. •nctudes furn 11U r e, good r enta l p ropert y
Located at 2129 Ches tnut St
$28,000

refrigerator, 1
maching, girls

VACANT LOTS - Large tr ac t co nsi sting of 3 fu ll
lots and 5 part1al lot s, 1n ci ty on Ches1nut St . # S20,000

Combination record player
&amp; ra'dio, $15 .00 . Electric
organ with ben c h $75 .00 .

21 1 ACRES Good b uildi ng site or mobil e home
stte, Blaz er Road, A d d 1son Tw p.
S6,000

992· 3079 .

t50 ACRE FARM - Has good b arn , tobacco ba se,
t1mber , and large pond, good locat 1on.
t1 0021

Log splitter . 882·3242 .
lawn

7 h.p. Wheelhorse garden
tractor. 36" mower, snow
blade. Very good cond 992-

6375.

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

YOUR

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
Se ftrng p re tt y on 5 8 ac r es n 1cely land sc aped Lo ts
of sp ace an d char m adorns thi s 4 bedr oom home.
Fo rm al I1V 1ng r oom and dtn i ng, large m odern kit·
chen . full bas eme nt, f1repla ce in family room , 2 ca r
gar age attac hed Wo r k shop and a barn . Th 1s home
re fl ec t s tender, lov.ng c ar e and true valu e Shown
bY &lt;Jppo1nt mcnt . La nd contra ct 9% lnt Rate

RT . 124 HOUSE AND .

COLONIAL BI · LEVEL
4 bed r oom s, form al 11ving room, w .b f1r eplace,
modern k1t chen , and dtning area. 21h b ath s, rust1c

family roo m . w b fir epl ac e. ut il1ty room and 2 car
ga rag e. Gas ne al, ce ntr al air . Shown by appt. only!
Loan assum pt1 on .
TIRED OF YOUR JOB? - Be your own Boss! Now
y ou ha ve th e oppo r tun i ty to ow n your own bus,ness!
A well es fabtt shed bus rness with compl ete inven
tor y and a 1973 G.M .C. service van. National Ser·
v 1ce Cent er w arr ant1es. Se ve r al commecontract s 1n
f or ce. Owne r s w ill help fin ance 50% an d on th e job
tra1n1 ng if needed ! Ca ll fo r more detail s. $30,000 .
6 a cr es of woo dland only 1 mile south of R 10 Grande

on 51. Rt. 315.

CHANCE

G oo d
wo odburn 1n g '
fir eplace, full base
m en!. gas f u rnac e. J · ·
bedr ooms. 11/ 2 balh s, :
pati o and 3 car g ara ges.
2 lots . Only $27.500.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Darvin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

4 cyl., standard .

·

B ook -Chlld c ratt .
ba ck t o schoo l
on all bindings
av ail abl e . Ph one

$37 ,500

'

36 in. cut nding
mower. 882·3242

World
Spec ral
sav. ngs
Term s

HIGHWAY LOCATION

clothing 10· 11 . 992·5090.

1978 Ford Mus...••• $3595

thsold . Ca ll 256· 1581 .

- 7 r oom s, 4 bedro oms ,
l 1h sto nes, n at gas fur
nace, full basement and
p1 pes.
Only
c opp er

buolding, etc.; 4'x8', $5 .50;
4' x12', $7.60 each . Tuppers
Plains. Ohio 614·667·3085 or
614 667 3074 .

Auto., AM-FM cas.

Sea rs 14,000 BTU a ir con · ·
dl tion e r ,
exte nd ed
warr anity . Approx. 3 man·

w ater , 2 car g ar age. All
v ery nice. $46,000

Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave ., 675· U73.

G.E .
sewing

Jog Indoor s on th e Sun·
da nce r M 1nt · T r a mpo l ine .
Free d em o. Reg . $199 -sale
$ 159 . Ca ll614-446·7895.

NEW LISTING - Lik e .
new ran ch, 4 bedrooms, ·
11h baths, central hf&gt;at ,

EASY credit available now
to pL•rchase furniture,
televisions. or appliances .

.'

Call 446 4818.

216 E . Second Street

1·800-624-8511.

Twenty gauge 4'x8', 4'x12'
metal sheets won't rust,
many uses, home, out- '

Thunderbird, nice.

PIN G Pong tabl e, $25. 304·

675·5995 .

stallation under normal
ground condition . Free
shOP at home service . Call

Suburban wOOd &amp; coal
stove. With blower &amp; tr iple
wall chimney 2 years old,
exc. conct. 992-5348.

Cutlass Supreme, sharp.

575.00. Caii30H7 5·2065.

OFFICE 446-7013

peaches. Now thru Sept. 20.
Any quantity available.
Retail &amp; wholesale. Bob's
Market. Mason. Phone 7735721. Open dally 11119 p.m .

1978 Olds ••.•••••..•• s4995
1978 Ford••••••••••••.54395
1978 Chevette ••.•••• s3595

100 AMP shut ·oft box, $50 .
Leblanc trumpet, good
Sl50 .
Eur e k a
shape,
cam st er sw eep er , l1 ke new ,

Ta ppan electr ic range,
whirlpool r efr ig ., set of 4
chrom e wh eels &amp; rims
( 15'), lighted d1sp la y cases .

Phone
1- ( 614 )-992-3325

Yellow Freestone canning

THE SAVINGS
PLACE

Book · Chi ld cra ft
b ac k to school
on a ll b indi ngs.
Ph one
a vail able

6809 .

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

poling. Cal! 251&gt;·6233 .

special sale during Sep-

SANDY

1975 Ch evy Impala and gas
r ange 675 37 63

Real Estate - General

4 dozen fox traps in good
cond. 112 prjce. Bweecher

WE ARE celebrating our
12th Anniversary with a

I

Jumbles· GLORY
A

Answer

2593.

CHAIN saw , Remington,
good con di tion , sao. 304 - 6 7 5 ~

WHY PAY R E NT? 559.50

\DRUGEDj

LOT - B room home. 3·
or
d
bedroom s ,·
carpeting , crty water .. ·
cen tral a1r and heaT. ·
equ1pped kitch en, ba se ' .
ment an d .66 at an acre : ·
ONLY S35 ,000 .00 -

N 1ce·.

6 room 2 story , fr am e'
w ith 3 bed r ooms . el ec · ·
ba sebo ar d h ear. 1n · .
sulated, li\rge porch.'
patio, and n rce lot . V1eW· ·
of nver Only $35,000. ·'

IN

THE

WOODS

-&gt;

Qu1 et , r enew ed , on eb edroom , ced ar 1 1ne ~
cl osets, mod ern kitchen ,.
nat. g as furnace, c ity·
water and nice shady ~

lot. Jus I $21,SOO .
As soc1ates : Gordon B. ,·
Helen L and sue Mur-:

phy .

Real Estale- General

-- · - ~------

- · - --, - - ---- -

- SJO,ODO -- Within walking distance
c t R1o Grande College . Good investment for college
stuor nt , buy inster~d of paying rent Nice 2 BR , 1'h
b ath ~
formal di ning William son for ced air fur
nacc Gn rng e Garden spa ce .

RIVERSIDE
TRADE CENTER
Ph. 446-9740
1220 Eastern Ave.
GaUipolis, Oh.

This new all brick home some 4 miles
from Gallipolis in Green Twp. 6 rooms,
3 BR, 2 baths, all new appliances, 2 car
garage, thermopane windows, insula ·
tion 12'" in ceiling, 6" under house, 6"

CENTEN'2lRY - S43,S0.0 - Three bedrooms, 11J~
bath ra.nch .. Cozy fan:'ily room with fireplace . You'll
lovP thts fnendly neighborhood just a few minutes
from Gallipolis. Nearly one -half acre level lawn.

over garage . Well buill . S60's.

$1 5.000
COMMERCIAL BUILDING 1n downtown
G allipolis, 3,795 sq . ft . of
floor sp ace , rear en·
tr ance from servi ce
alley, also S1de door en ·
tr ance. Rented apart·
mcnt on 2nd floor r Jrd
story storage. Call for
more information .

LOOK 1 NG FOR A
SMALL
BUSINESS
building with an apart ·
men t overhead? We
have just listed this
bu ilding on Olive St . and
sellin g it for $17,000.00.
Better look at this one
tod a y!!!

20

acre farm in Harrison
Twp . Older farm house
with fireplace and all
the comforts of home.
and owner wi II help
finance . Call for more
information .

HOUSE FOR RENT - 3

IN CITY
TWP. - 4 bedroom ranch with family
room and modern ki t. tias F.A . nat . gas·'furnace
pl us woodbu rner , full basement With garage large
lot on ly 2 mil es from ci ty . $51, 500 .
·
COUNTRY LIVING just a few mtles from the city
Ap pro x. 3 acres surrounding 3 BR frame home. For
ma l d 1n1ng, lg utility room , sewing or hobby room
2 car g ara ge and heated greenhouse. Covered patio .
H1 ghes 1 ga s b ill last winter was $29 00 . JUST
L I ST E D 1 $53 ,500

DOWN BY THE OHIO ~ Exceptiohal home, 1,148
sq. ft . b eautifully decorated living area plus full
basem ent Only 4 years old. J bedrooms, formal
drnmg, kitchen has ranae, refriaeretor, snack bar,
butcher block counter top. Fully carpeted except
k1t chen . Wood deck. Over an acre with river fran"

~

ZONED COMMERCIAL- 142,900 -

Larg~ 2 story frame . Presently used as rental , 4
• apartments. Could be nice family home or beauty
shop, etc. Only 2 blocks from city park JUST

LISTED!

.

IN CITY - Sl9,900 - One story frame home, 3
rooms and bath. Nearly new roof . Large 42'xJOO' lot .
RIVER VIEW - 538,000 - Beaut 1fu l VIeW of the
Ohto and only a few miles from city . Immaculate
brick ranch, fully carpeted, large eat-in k1tchen
with dduble. oven range, nice front porch and patio,
blacktop dnve, storage buildtng . City schools.

IN CITY

~

$26,000 --. Home plus income. 3 BR

tage. l39,900 .
ADDISON - $3S,OOO - 3 BR frame hOme plus 2
trail er spaces plus 24' x40' Alum. bldg . suitable for
body shop or other business plus bldg. and space
presently leased for U.S. Post Office. Fenced with
chain link fence . Corner lot. Great i ncome property
JUST LISTED!

.

CHESHIRE- SS3,SOO - Nice 4 sR ranch llh baths
frame redwood siding, H .W . floors , f .a. f~rnace
full basement . Located on large lot on SR 7 JUST

and

LISTED .

.

CHILLICOTHE ROAD- $13,000 ~' Three rooms
• .nd bath co"age in excellent condition. Has alum .
S!dm~

and large storage building. Convenient
locat1on .
.

bedrooms, 2 baths,
located 127 Garfield

56 PLUS

Ave. $265.00 month .

knotty pine paneled IMng rm. with fireplace. Kit-

ACRES-$94,000~

chen has snack bar, counter top range, natural gas '

furnace heot. City water. Most 01 land Is fenced
pasture and meadow land, some timber, pond. GOod
\

~

$23,900

~

Immediate possession

s

room home, bath, large attic, part. ba'Sement with
t .a .•turnace . AISQ has small mobile home presently
RT. 588-510,500 - Large lot near c ity with started
h~use foundation, 30x52.

BULAVILLE ROAD - SlOO,OoO- Prime building
sites . . 149 acres . . Frontage on Bu,.vllle. Morton
Woods and Yale College ROads. 60 acres tillable, 15
pasture, rest timber. Nice 3 BR ranch home, eat· in
kitchen, storm doors and windows. Also 4 room cot-

tage with trailer pad for tenant or rental . 2 barns.
chicken house and Other . outbldg . Kyger Creek
Schools; 6 mlles1from city.

·

'
157

ACRES
$79,500. Approx . 90 acres fenced
pasture. Good barn; other outbldg . 6 miles from
Gallipolis. City School Qlst . 600' ljoad tront&amp;ge on
'blackloP~"!'d ·

..

1.27 Gal. (

List P{ice $219.95
SALE'

I)

· 13.5 Hrs at Full
output

•194'

5

PltE SEA SON SPECIAL

WOOD-ICOAL HEATER
SALE '350•

List $503.00

2-SUPPLEMENTAI... FURNACES
.
•

f'

•'\

List S73~.CJ!I·

MINERSVILLE - large impressive
older 4 bedroom home. Recently
remodeled . Family room , 2 fireplaces .
full basement , 110 a c res . Garage Bar n
Corncrib . Tobacco base Pond, tillabl f'
acreage . Road frontage M eigs County
• 719
CATTLE FARM - 190 acres, tots Of 1t
has been improved, good fence, pond ,
stream runs through farm . so acres
le'llet, 6 acres woods. tobacco base.
Barn, rural water available. We' re ex ·
cited about this $110,000
f/803

VINTON COUNTY -

to No. 3 mine.

N 709

SALE '425CIC!
.....,
'

~

Just Listed

home, full
f1r e pl ace .

OWNER

AV AILA BLE

AVAILABLE

LOTS

FOR

SALE

NfW LISTING - BUILD TO SUIT
yourse tt on th 1S 10.8 ac r es. W_ill s~ ll in 'l
t ra c t ~ . Crty or rur a l wa ter ··a vailab le
Natur"l ga s a n d sewe r avai lab le
Wi t h 1n 5 m1n utes at l aw n
li 805

LOOt&lt; lNG FOR A NI CE LE VEl LOT?
We hav e almost an acr e located 6 miles
from town a long St at e H 1ghway Rur al
warer avail able and no r esrn ct 1on s.
Call us rod a y.
# 736

LOTS ·- Owne r r'5 w 111 1ng to se t I these 7.
lots c lose to Bl ue La ke on a land co n
t r ac t . 100x 107 and I00 x99.9 $5,000 ea ch
Doc king pr1vll eges
11 7~11

~

land . Possible land contract.

$3,500.

.

f870

PRICE REDUCED ~ · LAND CON TRACT - Buy house &amp; 54.3 acres or
h;OUse &amp; amount of acreage you want .
Approx. 15 ac . tillable, presently used
for pasture. lf ou want to buy, t.h is
owner·wtlltry &amp; work with you. Priced
.• , $37,000.
084

ACREAGE
ANOTHER GOOD ·BUY J $250 Poi' a d e .
,73 actes WoOds and pasture land . Water
ava11able for calli~. Almost all fenced .
Ei&lt;cellont ~untlng area , S18,250. · nsy

1 ACRE LOT -

Located on sta te h ig h·
N876

5.4 ACRES or S ACRES ~ Ar e you
looking for a tract of land for the home

of your dreams? 5.4 acres partially
cleared and partiallY wOoded or 5 acres
of mostly woods. Make your own

choice.

N87H 878

NO RESTR 1CTIONS on mese two
50x159 lots. Rural water and electric
available. $2,500 . Owner will sel on land
conlraclloqualified buyer.
N788

1873

· ·~~t•1=1 I!:W:t•MI:hil
PRI CF R~: OU CE D - Compl etely fur ·
n1 st1ed w 1th beautiful 1u r n1ture Mobile
hom e ha s '1 bed room s, 2 tull ba ths, tor
m al clln1n o nnd love ly exp ando family
roo m . Pa t io. wa l ks, con cr ete dr1vew a y
nnd 1 ac r e of la wn .
N 833

RESIDENTIAL

way, has drilled welt , and i s r eady for
the home of your choice. Priced at

.

2 story fr arne
brtsem ent. woodburning
O WNE R FINANCING

610 FIRST AVENUE -

Owher will work with vou to buy this
farm . 2 mobile homes, tobacco base,
miner.al rights. Will sell part .or all of
farm, 1 or 2 mobile homes 'w ith less

.

IN STOCK

&amp;08 Fl
bedrooms,
venienc es.

Situated ctose lo

Vinton County line. 48 acres . 2 bedroom
home with stone fireplace and new fur
nace. 14x65 mobile home completely
furnished. 3 wells. Mineral rights . Close

25 ACRE FARM

2-~BUR8AN

renting for $135 per mo. JUST LISTED!

Justa few miles from

c ity at Centenary . Nice redwood tyPe home, 3 BR,

barn . City schools .

CHESHIRE

,uoo

PRI~

frame home plus 3 rooms and bath, garage ~t.
Great way to get started with rental property.

N800

FARMS

1

bedroom home, situa ted
.a long Rt . 160, FA fur
nace. 50' x 249' lot, 1deat
be ginner
hom e, or
re tirement home for

32 LOCUST ST ., GALLIPOLIS

ITEAREA
K) I I

HP go-cart. Call256· 1333 .

PROUDLY WE OFFER

$45,000.

~

[J

I (J

8 pc livmg room suite, etec·
tr ic sto ve , f r ost fr ee
r efrige r ator with l7 c. u .ft .
fr ee zer , aul omatic washer
and electr ic dryer, 2 pc
bedroom suite with twin
bed, 2 pc maple bedroom
suite w ith f u ll bed, Singer
zig zag -&gt;ew ing mach ine in
Cherr y wood cabinet , 3 odd
tab les, 1 kitc hen ta b le 6
ch air s, ex tra l eaf and por t ab le pr at e .t or . 304 882·

Mtsc . Merch~tndice

Standard.

ol d
modern
horn e,
situated along Upper
River' R'd .. Kyger Cr eek.
School
Distr1ct.
ov e rtookrng
the
beautiful Oh •o River
and priced tor only

WOODR~ALTY,INC .

Robyn SX401 CB. ~ chan·
nel. $~ . Call614-949-2559.

1 ye ar

VINTON

BIRAB

heavy duty rear end .
clarinet. Call after
or before 11 AM, 367 ·

CB,TV,Radlo
Equipment

BI G discou nts l or cash and
ca r ry a t V Ill age Fu rn i tu re
2605 J ackson Avenue, 675·
1773

~4

Misc . Merchandice

25 LOCUST ST., GALLI

All for only $33.000.00

bedroom apartment ad·
jacent to golf course .
Refrig . and range furniShed, adults only. No

pets.

535,000.00.

NEW LISTING

camper, self con·

1116.

S4

Auto., 112 ton.

bed room, Jl l? baths, 10
years old, electric heat
(b aseboard), modern1n
every w a y . $5,000 .00
down and owner will
help f1 nance bal ance
Buy
it
toda y
for

IN

I

lai'!\1!&lt;1, hitch included. 1980
Chevrolet pickup, 4
52

tr ailer and camp si te on
Raccon Cr eek . Close to
Oh10 R1 ver. $500 down .
Ow ner wi ll f 1nan ce. 61 4·256·

I MYDUP
I................
KJ. -....._,_ ...
_._

Sl50 . 73 Sunway 5th

Misc. Merchandice

16' . TROUTWOOD trave l

ooe lettii!H' to each square, to form
tour ortllnary wor&lt;1$ .

For sale Youth bed &amp; chest
drawers, SSO. 2 end

Auto., low mileage.

GALLIPOLIS,

3 BEDI!,OOM -

9264 ask for Jam ie.

1974 Chev. Nova•••• 1495
1973 Chev. Nova •••••.s795
1974 Ford FlOO ..... st295

General

CANADAY
REALTY
1 · Y E AR
OLD,
3
b0d roo m . m odern horn e
c,lf Urt !Pd on I r~c r e IQI
o" " r iOO kln q
th e
bi ' ,1U 111 U I
Ot11 o R rver
Lo cated along Oh1 0
Riv er. $45 ,000 .
46 VINE STREET $59,000 - 4 bdrm , lull
b a ~e m e nt,
lg
f ront
r oom . Com b rnation dt n.
room and ki tc hen w ith
p lenty of &lt;..a bin ets, l'h
b ath s. gar a ge with e l ec
d oor ope ne r . Owner
r eq u1res $8 ,000 do w n
p ay m ent , will fin ance
b alance a t 12% u n til
loan 1S pa1d down to 80°,0
of pu re ha5e pri ce

unscramble theN lour Jumbles,

I t•,hll;;. &amp; coffee tabl e in ex c .

5

- ----~

lor $78.500 .00 .

IN

WOOds, seasoned. Ca 11 245·

Monarch, air cond.

PH. 985-4197

62 A C R E~ M OR L VA CAN T LAND

1B A CRE S VA CANT LAND
Hu nt er 's PMad rse L ot s of bu lid 1n g S1tes alon g old
Stal l' Rt 7 l ac rng th e Oh1 0 R1 v er Lo ts of 11mber .
Lo ts a t vA lue tor a low prr ce
11446

F.irewOOd for sale Oak,
hlckorv, cherry, or mixed

1.979 Mercury•••••••.s4195

Associate

PH . 843-2075

--

Wood ed and pn&lt;s tur f' ln nd otf old R t 7 on Hor se
Cr eek ,n Ohro Tnw ns h1p Pos s1b le co al ve 1n A I
tor d ablc rn ves fmPn1 p r opf'rf y
Cttl l for more in
lorm&lt;'lt ton
/f 468

Utility trailers . 4x7 112. 14'
tires. $200 . and Sl50. Call
4-16-UlJ.

ter ization kits. Call446·1l2&lt;

factory carton. $450. Call
256·1216.

1 bedroom apts. ava 11 able
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Oppor tu nity Hou sing . Call

--

cos t over $2500.00, like new
1950.00. 304-675·2195.

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.

New woodburning furnace
heats large house. still in

0284.

--

DINNING room set, made
bY Haywood Wakefield, •
cha irs , hutcH, dry i~iiln,k ,

S4

Complete sales, service,
PGOI covers, and win-

tabl es . $65. Cal1388·8108.

For r ent 2 bdr. upstairs
furn.
apt .
Pnvate en·
trance . Call 446·2374 or 446

991-7711

Whirlpool
like
ne w. Call&lt;-16·8181 .
washer,

Restaurant . equipment

LETART FALLS - Just reduced to $12,900 . Must
see to apprecia te. good r ental investment or com·
fort able starter home.

NEW LISTING acre farm 1n Harri son
Twp. Olde r farm house
with firepl ac e and all
the comfo r t s of home .
All for only S33, 000 .00
and _owner will h elp
finanCe . Call fo r m or e
information

446 0322
GOOD

Modern office suite for
rent , downtown, Business
and Profe~sionat Building
Call or see Morris Hllskins.

TR AILE R space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt Pleasant, 675 -

t:• . .:.
"'

Space for Rent

Furnished apt., 3 r . pr1vate
bath, 2nd floor, 845 2nd.

.

20

·-

with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275 . complete . Baby beds ,
$99. Mattresses or box
spring s, full or twin , SSB. ,
f irm , $68 . and $78 Queen
sets, $195 5 dr . c hests, S49 .
4 dr . chests . $42 . Bed
frames, S20 and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet
te chairs S20. and S25 . Gas
or electn c ranges , $295. Or ·
thopedic super firm , S95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35 ,.
bed frames S20, $15. &amp; $30.
used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bu!aville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri. , 9am to5pm, Sat.

:o====;c===o===;===

46

992-7479 .

3
b ed room
hom e,
s
tuat e d
on 43':.:173' lot,
1ust
wa1ting l or you to come
e njoy
the
new kitch en and bath
New f a natural gas fur
na ce and all new ca r pet.
If you're 1nte r ested you
can hav e it all for

•
NEW LISTING -

-

apt.,

2 BEDROOM apartment.
HUD a ccepted. 675·6722.
675·5104.

Re al E stal e- General

NEWLY RENOVATED

LISTING

light housekeeping
Park. Central Hotel .

sale

automatic

Misc. Merctoandlce

Bunk bed complete

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

3 or ·l bt'drooms

tob .=~cco base. elec t n c ra nge, built
'" woodi)Ur ner , fue l oil F A fur nac e, lots of t ru1 t
t rl'l~"&gt;
qrape nrbo r . 5t rawber r y p a tc h. 3 ac r es
ll i i CJ bl c n s~um ablc loan P hone l or m orcd eta d s
II 503
r. r fr.'A f l l '-'' ~ A LL HRt C K H O M t:· ~
t- n ,(r,. "lc bc,w tdul Oh1 n R1vcr !r om lh1 5 spnc rous,
1 lt '('rtu l •o usr· . I hf• rl rnoms 11 brl th s. lnr qc I1V1n g
ruo n1 PA l rn kr l l hf' n } lirf'plncf's t u l l br1 Sf'm c n t, 2
pv r ( ll r·s p lu"&gt; mrlTI\f (• )( l r,lS Phon e IOd Cl \1' l or df' l r11 l ~

priced

54

mapl e or pine finisll
Bedroom suites
Bassett
Oak, S675., Bassett Cherry ,

$795 .

1996.

cha irs

Wood table with 4 chairs ,

apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment, 304-

Call collect- 614-592 -2419 .
Loretta McDade, STARKEY REALTY
Athens, Ohio

and

HouseiiDld Goods

Fo r

Household Goods

The Sunda Times-Senti

.

PRICED TO SELL - in the low.lO's is
thi s 2 be droom home. A k itchen any
w oman would be p roud to own. Garage.
Basem ent. L ar ge law n 4 mil es from

HM C.

N812

BELLOMY LANE U se as a 4
be droom hom e or 2- 2 bedroom apartm ents. Live in one and rent the other .
Ni ce lot . Pat1o . Pri ced intne$40's . NB04
N ~ 11 r AS A P IN ~ Lo ve ly t r ee shad ed
law n, ·2 bed r oom hom e, 1 bath, k itch ~ n ,
&lt;:n try pa\ch , 1 car gar age an d liv1 ng
rootn w ith pr etty t 1r eplace. Priced i n
tne $20's .
,d 815

fERRIFI C START E R HOM E - Th1S3
bedrooin , 1 bath w ith large lot h as '' all .
Tastefull y dec orated , includes fa m i ly
r oom , d inin g roo m ana basement.
Route 35 l oc ati on . Priced in $40's. /1739
G REAT BUY! 3 bedroom home
r emodeled w 1th new sid ing, shutters,
and lots m or e. l bath, liv ing room, kitchen and b ase ment garage. Priced at

$16,000.00.

1828

PRIC E R E DUCE 0 - - Pomeroy, Ph
story , 3 b edrooms, den, wooclburner in
livin g r oom, n iCe large front porch and
garden ar ea . Close to hospital, stores
and c hurc hes . Owners amcious to se l l .
.
N84S

10% tNTF..REST - Ovmer fmancin g on
thi S b eautifully m a 1nlained 3 bedroom
mobil e home. E x pand o pl us ftlmily
room w 1t h w ood b ur nN Pat io Garage.
13;_. acr e.
N869

RESIDENTIAL
LOVELY BRICK RANCH Wlthsomu c h
room 1 acr e of lawn . Home has 3
bedr oom s, 2 bi'lths, tormat dini ng , sun·
ny d en, full b asemen! partly f1n1 shed
w it h fam il y room and
f 1rep1a ce,
w orK shop, util1ty ro om , a nd cellar
room . Possibl e FH A loan a ss umption
~ 815

WHAT A WELCOME PLACE TO BE!
~ Sce n e ry is tops L ar ge ex c rtr ng hom e
c lose to ho sp dal
At tr a c tive 3
bedroo m s, 2 ba th s. de l uxe k1t chen. tor
m al dining room , ly livi n g roo m, lu ll
basem en! , larg e piti iO, f enced yard '1
.Je res
"JSJ
LAND CONTRA C T
Routf' 'l33,
b edUtlfUI loc att on, 8 room ho m e, cellar
house . 3112 acr es Sellr ng at the low pr1 ce
ot 515.000 $4,000 dow n nnd B% 1nter es t
own erne edsto se l l
# 716

FISHERMAN'S DELIGHT- H ave your
own frontage on the Ohio River on thi s
.t .45 acres. Also has a \4)( 24 bldg .
presently used for beauty shop , 2 st ory
home with 3 bedroom s, 36 x 48 b arn ,
toba cco base and MU CH m or e
t 856
NEED SPACE? Plenty of r oom w1th
this 13.90 a cres. A year old 3 bedroom
ranc h. Tobacco base. 20d0 tobacco.
bi4.rn . kyger Creek School s US,OOO

#799
WHAT A BUYill LAND CONTRACTil'
itnmedlate ~5&amp;eSsion nrtakes this IIDI'M· .
a great buy. Ranch stvle. l bedreem, •'
wife approved 1t:ltchen, garage; tutl ~v
basement, f4111iiY rm ., workstta; "

utility r11,1. Close to town &amp; best ef ~ti
priced rlilotal 5-15,000.
nR

�Tomes54

Mtsc. Merchand•ce

GIRLS

clothtng 1 wtnter
coat, excellent con d ttton,
size 12 l Wtnter ca r coat,

fatr condttton , stze 14 1
ratn or shtne coa t, ex
cel lent co n d ttton, size 12

Skt rts dentm, cord. and
gaba rdm e, good
Tops
velour, co tt on, fl annel and

sweaters Pants den tm &amp;
corduroy Dresses excelle
nt dress ~ ps m ~ ntt Some
sc hool dresses

Al l above

stzes 12 14 304 675 3099

KOE HLER wheatilghts,
leat her dog collars leads,
tra m mg sce nts, bre ak1ng
s ce nts, brass name pla t es,
dog feed 304 675 1098
4 NEW f1res tone r.res stz e
H 78)(!4, $40 each World
Book encyc lopedia $65 304
882 2654
SA TOH 650G a nd equ1p
m e nt , e ndl oader for Ford
or Ferguson , Honda XL 100
motorcycle new ftr es &amp;
r 1m s for sma ll p1c kup , 1974
Ford Courter 304 895 34 41
WOODBURN I NG Franklin
Stove. use d very lillie $75
304 881 3?02
55

~ utfd ~ ng~ up pl• es

_

Buil dtng m at e nals, b lock,
br1 c k sewer p1pes w tn
dows. l1ntels, e tc Claude
W1nfers, R10 Grande, 0
Call 245 5121

-i6

Pets

for. ~5,.acc
l e.___

_

DRAGO N WY ND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
bla c k Chow p upp.es, CF A
Htma lay a n , Pe rs1an and
S1amese k 1tte ns Ca ll 446
3844 afte r 4 p m
HI LLC R ES T KE NN EL
Board1 ng all breeds. clea n
tndoor out door t aci11 t1 es
Also A K C Reg Dober
mans Ca ll 446 77 fi5
8RIARPATC H KENNE LS
Board.ng a nd groom1ng
A K C Gordon se tter s
E ng i1Sh Cock e r Span 1els
Call 446 4191
J e c'1n 1e's P e t Shop Rt 141
West of Ga ll•pOIIS 446 7920
SpeCial Fancy and Angora
hamsters , $2 00 each
AKC Dobe r ma ns 3 month
old pups
Ma le 2 yr s
prove n le m n le 2 yrs bred
Ca ll 44&lt;1 1562

ll61

Reg Cocker Spa n• e L 11
wk s old buff Call 446 1262
mo old Da sc hu nd , very
good wtth c hil dre n Ca ll
446 63 10

9

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

Pets for Sale

--.

POODLE GROOMING
Ca ll Judy Taylor at 367
7220
61
F1sh Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave , Pt
Pleasanl
675 2063
Fon
c hes, smgmg cana n es and
sma ll parrot
Da c hshund,
Pomeran1an an Poodl e
pups 304 895 3958
: KC

ALL
AKC
Yorks h.r e
Terr.e r , Cream puff c hoco l
a te Poodle puppy, Toy
Pom era n1 a n ,
Boxer,
Cocker, m ust se ll , 1 304
743 8001
UKC reg 1s tered Amer1can
Ptt Bull Terr1er pups, 304
773 5877
S tud servtce
avatlable AKC reg1stered
Yorksh tre Te rne r

BRIDGE

-

57

MUSICOII

John Deere 3300 comb1ne
Ma ssie Ferguson 300 combine. New ldea-2 row
p1cker, Oliver 2 row picker
New Idea 1 row p~eker
Super M Farmall and 2 row
mounted p1cker
Russ
erothers Farm Machinery .
Sl Rt 139. 6 m les Soulh of
Ja ckson C;tll 2,·2731
One row new Idea corn
Pt cker, 2 yrs old Ca ll 446
1542

....J.

NORTH

8N Ford se t turn plows Set
cul t1v ators Phone 675 6473

9-t!l8t

• i 7

WEST

sl

.

EA.'IT
• Q 10 7 2

.,

• K 914

•ton
• Q84

• KJ6

•au

• K

!0 9 5

SOUTH

•

u

Vulnerable Bolh
Dealer South
Norlll

East

Pass
Pas.'!

1+
P .. ~,.

Pass

Sout•

••••

P &lt;~ ss

leave South one tnck short
East could return a trump

Trumpet &amp; stand, exc
cond, $150 M ay check W1th
band d.rec tor Call 675
U76
For

Sa le

Co n n Alto
Saxa phon£~ , $300, exc cond
Ca ll 446 0022
For sa le Bundy Trumpet ,
good cond . Sl50 Call 367
7182 or after 5 PM 367 7406
Ludw tg Clear v.stal•te oc
taplus, profeSSIOnal drum
se t Mtnt cond1t1on collec
tor's 1tem
Only $1 ,500
appo1n tm en ts (614) 245
5630

MASSEY Ferguson 255
dtesel tra c tor, exce lle nt
cond1t1on, 304 675 4230

Fru1t
&amp; Veg e ta,~b'"l"e's'----

Swee t pota toes, red , wh1t e,
ye llow Robe rt w Lew1s,
Rt 2, Rac .ne Oh10 614 843
1432
For Sate or Tra d e

F 250 PICk up ca mp e r
spec•a l, a1r cond, P S, PB
Will sell or tr ade fo r ca tt le
of eQua l va lue Ca ll 446 1052
a fte r 5PM

Trade
Regulat •on pool
tab le for 1 smaller or bum
per pool tab le Call 446
6564

Real Estate

YET CONIIENIENT Gr ea t famt i Y home wtth 3 BR , 'l baths,
15x27 LR w tth gas ftrep lac e large
m od ern ktt c hen wtth range, se lf
c lea nt ng ove n DW and d tsp lau ndry
rm w tt h washer and dryer . pa rt base
menl large covered pa t to, garage and
ove r f. a c r es of lan d a t the ed ge of town

Bee f. ha y&amp;.
gr.;w1larrn ao acres, m 1 t a ppro x 35/\
qood c ropl.=m d 10 A ..voods bal a nce
pustur e. good fe nces 9 rm / bat h hom e
was bu ilt •n 1872 &amp; has bee n parf1al ly
rernode led SOxSO ca lll e bar n w1th con
crete f I oar la,·gp s il o w tt h auto
unloadcr , several s heds la rg e pond ,
s pr1ngs , s. tand 1ng c rops go to new
owner Ca ll RA N NY BLAC KB URN tor
m ar e• nl o rmat. on 446 0008
WAlNUT TOWN SHIP

CROUSE BECK RO AD - Res t r •c ted
bud dm g lot I 27 acre, ntce woOded se t
t•ng, c d y sc ho ols $5 900
ROOM TO ROAM ~ Thi S lovely br 1ck
ranc h ott ers tots of good lt v mg for your
grow•n g tam1ty 3 BR 's, 2' 1 baths large
lu tc he n &amp;. LR formal d1n1n q rm 2
fir epl ac e s wood burn• ng s tove, ce nt
a 1r , ga r a ge, lull basement w1th family
rm, ba r&amp;. la undry Loca ted on app ro x
2 acres on Sta te Rou te 554 be twee n
Porter &amp; E no Pr1 ce d to sell a t $59,500
l 0 C A T t 0 N - 620 4th Ave, 4 BR ,
211 bath s, la rge LR , for mal d •n• ng r m ,
co m p le te k1t c he n Wtf h d1sp, OW com
pac tor
refr,gerator an d r ang e 6
f•rep la ce s, ga rag e, new al u m1num
s 1d1ng a nd s torm w•ndows Shown by
appotnfm e nt only
ClAY TOWNSHIP ~ Raccoo n Creek
front age, 11 • sto ry, 4 rm s a nd bath
dow n , u psta1 rs unf1n 1s hed, good ba rn ,
ga rag e , s hed, near Blue La ke, c• t y
sc hools Ask .ng $42,500
FARMER 'S FARM
One of Guyan
Townsh•p's f• nes t 106 acre m il , ap
prox
45 A fe rtil e botto m la n d,
ba lance p as ture &amp; woods N1c e mode rn
bnc k ranch home has large k •tche n &amp;
fam•I Y r m l4 x l8 LR , attached ga r age,
ma •n barn •s 56x104, also 1nct ud ed .s
20)(24 s teel ga ra ge, wo rk s hop &amp; seve r a l
s heds Own er •S re t1 r 1ng &amp; w ill help
f1n a nce
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pas tur e fa rm, mostly ro lling &amp; h1l
ly grass la nd w•m a ppr oX 10 A wooded ,
tots of s pn ngs, p;, s tory home has 4
rm s &amp; bath large ba rn , toba cco base,
fronts on 3 roads •n Walnut Townsh1p
OHIO Rl\IER \/lEW - Approx 8 acre.
wooded land, n1 ce bulid •ng s 1te, county
wa ter, located on Route 7 approx 5 m•
south of town S6 500
MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5
yr old split level features 4 or S BR s. 3
baths, 30ft. LR , 2 ta m11y rms, 2 wood
burmng fireplaces, large k1tchen and
dining area, 2 car garage, one of the
county' s nicest pool s {20x50) and a truly
professional landscaped lot Located on
Debby Drive. Owner says sell .. so caH
Ranny blackburn for a personal
' showing. Ypu'll be pleased you did.

-

Reg•stered Quarter Horses
fo r sa le Qu a lttY s how horses, board mg &amp; tr a1n m g
Dan or Karen Beam ,
Ga ll •polls 446 0183

in complete control

WANTED
Volkswagen
Beetle body , 1969 and up, In
gOOd condition. •46·2072.

R eg 1ste red Polled He rford
Bull 15 m onl hs o ld 985
3906

Ohio-Point Plea sa

1971 Buick Eleclra very
low miles Full power, fully
equiped. good cond. onslde
and oul. $1 ,450 00. •46· 4630.
1977 Nova 6 c yl , PS, PB . ,
exc . cond . $2395. Ca ll 388·
8769
1970 Camaro, $200
1979
ATC 70 Honda, $300 Ca ll
446 2.13

1977 Ford Thunderbord,
very good condition . $3300
675· 4•96

1976 V Wagon Dashe r,
Statton wagon, auto matic:,
AM FM, $2750. Call 446•
8050
I

72 MALl BU, 304 675 1506

1981 C HEIIETT E hat
chback, 4 speed with atr,
2000 moles, 304·773 57S8
1970 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill ,
8 c yt , automat1c. ai r con
d1t1oner, call oafter 4 p m
304-675 2492

1978
Mer c ur y
Grand
Marquts Exke lle nt con d•t• on, low mt leage 614
992 33 4tl or see Tom An - 1974 FORD Ponto, ca ll 304
675 2715 afler 5 p m
derson

He

AUIO for Sole

1973 Capri, 1 owner, good
cond1flon, new paint, r uns
good, low mileage. S1000.
Phone 458· 107•

wmd up wilh si:r trumps,
two clubs and the two other

1976 Olds 98 Regency Sa le
or trade All power, ti It and
telescopiC wheel, am -fm •
track ste reo, new tires.
body 10 good shape Runs.
good , uses no all Call 304:
773 5013 a nyt1m e
1973 Gre mlin , 6 c yl , stan ~
dard s h1ft Runs good 985·
4346

aces

~

(NEWSPAPER mT!:RPRISE o\SSN)

Real Estale ~

- ~--

----------------,
WISEMAN 1

-j.IIiiilllliniilil!i _____ R
~e_.,_.at Estale

General

General

II

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
Jim Coc hran

Anoe~ate

446

718 1E11 e

8 J H••rslon, Auoc 4U 4l40 Ev•
Cl'/(!f! w•lkt!r Auoc 20 SH'
Tom Hol!te •, , AUO(: Jtl 9160

PHONE 446·3643

rn
I.&lt; Ao

~ lately Bnck Hom e Loca ted on Rutland St 1n
M• ddl epor t They 1u s1 don ' t build th e m ftk e th1 s
a nymor e Cen tr a l hea t a nd a.r cond•t•on •ng 7
room - 3 bedroom s, 2 b a th ~ . basement. garage,
ltlrqe pr• v at e lof b'iO 000

~ea-1 ESt ale

CONIIENIENT
LOCATION
MULBERRY AVE
Be t w ee n
WaS hi ng ton Grade School a nd GA HS 1
s tory home offers 4 or 5 bedroom s for
your grow1ng fam ily , 2112 ba t hs, 17x2.S
LR, ta m tiY room w1 lh WB s tove, co m
pl e te ty eq utpped k1f che n and a la rge
screened 1n porc h F 1sh .n your own
back yard Own er may he lp f1nance
Shown by a ppo1 ntme nt Ca ll Ranny
Bl ac kburn ~ 446 0008
JOHNS CREEK ROAD
Near
Merce rvill e a nd Crown c ,ty m•nes, 1973
Duke Crown Ro yal tnobtl e hom e
l4'x65' , 2 BR , woodbu rnm g s tove, flat
lot w1th we ll , ba rga tn pr1ced Ca ll about
lh1so ne
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588
- Rem odeled home tncludes 6 rm s ,
a nd ba th , carport. s tove, re fr• g ,
d1shwas he r , almost 6 ac r es. at la nd and
pnced to r Qut c k sale
RIO GRANDE AREA - R•o Cente r
po• nt Rd (Cherry Ridge), approx 75
ac res wood land, fronts on 2 rds. county
wa ter avatlable Owner may he lp
fmance Pr•ced to sell atS400 pe r a c re
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 176
acres m / 1 vacant land, fronts on Ra e
coon Creek &amp; th e Tom G len Rd Approx
31 ttllabl e &amp; the balance wOOd ed Under
SAOO per acre.
BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx. S1!1 a c res located on the
Graham School Rd. , co. water, over 300
to rd frontage, Green Grade School &amp;
Gallo a Academy High School . $10,900.

For all of your wir·
ing needs.
L&amp;t George Mtller
check your present etec·
tr,cal system.
Res1dentiat
&amp; Commerc•at

169 N. 2nd
ModdlePOrt, Dhlo
9· 20· 1 mo

ROORNG

eAium1num

e Ca strng • Trailer Hit·

•
•
•
•

•

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smalle•t
Heater Core to the
LOrlJeSI Radoator.

IN SURANC E
428 Second Ave
Ca ll 446 0551 Anyt1me
r edu ced to $ 11 900 Ow ner w.1 nts 11
!&gt;OI&lt;I now• !U x ~ u •-no b d c home Sil uaJe d on r~ rl'ld ' r
front lot E xt PIILn t buy tor new lyw(' ds or to r rc t• rc d
pe rson s Cnll now
Pn (('

STANDARD
OIL CO.
tSOHIO)

90 •,% ASSUMPTION- RIO GRANDE
- Owners transferred and must sell
fh e 1r 2 yr old 4 bedroom brtck, 2 story
hom e Th1s energy efficienf home has
w b ftrep lace that ca n heat entire
home, ex t r a m s ulat1on. large family
room , lull basemen! , 2 lull &amp; 2 ha lf
b a ths, beau t1ful k1tchen &amp; 2 car garage
E xce llent locat•on 60's

BMR 396 - L sha ped fr a m e a nd bn ck r anch Three
BR s, 14X2 1 family room w1 th br 1c k fire place, built
•n k.1t che n 11 x iA d•n•ng room Th e r e ts mu c h more
to be sa 1d fo r th 1s f• nE&gt; hom e G1v e us a ca ll for a
pnva te s how. ng Gall •Polis Schoo ls

I

LO rln CJ ssu mpr .on W1lh tJ ' 0 o 1nr c rcs r J
1\Mh" JtHI
bedroo m horN ' •nr lu d es frlrn ly roo m w•th l •re pi M C'
Do n 1 P·l SS fh 1S onr

INTON
con
tra c t with S2 3.000 down at 10% 1nterest
3 be droom , 1 floor plan Has fireplace,
full basement , fully 1nsulated &amp; newly
pa1nted

Rcslr •cfc d bud cl•nQ lo t 1n c •ty sr hoo l
ch5tr •ct U 6•1 ot .u1 nc r L' Call now
I'M~

J/1

Ou •e t co untry hom e on 112 a c r e tot •n
e tudes 20x20 narn w tth lott and parl •a l base m ent
Yo u wll I en 1oy th 1s one Reduced to '$25,900
BMR 386 -

I
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II
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( .f\ H S

ll OU &lt;;f' h 1&lt;; rf'Cf' llll y hl'f..' l) r PrTICKJt&gt; ll'tl
•ns•de and ouT , has bas e ment hea t pump fo r yea r
a round comto rt , t 1ve mob •l e hom e pads , lots of fra n
tag e on Rou te 7 plus a n equa l a mount on th e Ohto
R1vcr Th1 s one co ul d be n money m a ker Call now
f \W,

COMPL E fE AUC fiON SERV I CE
WE SELL I r ALL
REAL E S fATE &amp; CHAr fEL S
111\Mi' Jf~
Pr1 CC' qr c&gt;a t ly r pdu ccd on th• s J B ~ bnc k
r.1ncll '"l flu a ted on li!rQc tl a tl ot Ca ll tor detail !:. '

BMR 398 ~
Close to town 3 BR ran ch
on lg flat 101 1nc ludes d eta c hed 26x26 g arage plu s
18x36 1n grou nd pool Owne r tra nsfe rred a nd anx
IOUS to se ll

O.Vnc r t• nnn ctnq to
qu,l lllic d buy e r Mod ul.l r horne w tt h ! BR s , 1 lu ll
b&lt;llhS l.=trQe I1V1nq r oom d•n •ng arf'Cl built •n k. 1t
chen Pr• cedt OSP II Qu• c katon ly$21500

BMR 40 2 - 37 Acres ba re la nd, 1401 lb tobac co
base, 30x30 tobdcco bar n Che-c k on lh•s one •
BMR 403 - New L1stmg ~ 1981 Mob1le hom e on ren
ted lot $10,900 Nearly new
BMR ~oo - Check th• s one For only $8,500 you can
bu y a two BR home w/ rurat wate r a nd bath .
BMR 391 - Owner says sell , and he will do the
fina nCi ng at 12% It 1S an •ncome produc m g duplex
Pnced at$17,500
BMR 38' - Th1s fme 4 bedroom home 1S located in
the c 1ty sc hool syste m You wtll enJOY a Iaroe lot
w1th a total country atmosphere, and the same time
have all of the c ity conventences . Call now, owner
has been transferred and needs to sell soon.
BMR 404 - New LISting - City schools, Oewly carpe ted and pa .nted This three BR home !S priced in
the low SJO's, a great buy on tod ay's market.
BMR 405 - Great location! A very nt ce ranch style·
home w1fh a full basement with family room Main
floor has three BR 's, large llvmg roqm with a cozy
bnck ftre place. All sttuated on 43 of an a c re and
only two miles from Gallipolis.
BM r, 406 1 25 acres m / 1 located clo-.. to
Gallipolis. Fronlage on Route 160 and Bulavllle Rd .
Owner will help ftnance .

L--------r------_JI

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1

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I
HOME &amp; 9 ACRES - 1975
I MOBILE
12x65 3 bedroom
911al to rolling
With $ome woods &amp; c1n Old house
1 acres
lexcellenl workshop) . 2 extra mobile
l homepads $24,000
Shull~

II
I
I
I
I
•

we are now serving all
of Meigs Co. with
Heat1ng Oil, Diesel
Supreme,
Gasoline,
comle1e - t.ine
of
Lubricants tor lhe
farms &amp; Industry .
PH . 992·3460
, If long distance, eall col·
lect:
~arry E. Miller, Dealer
·
8·30·1·mo

143 GARFIELD EXT.- $22,000 - 9%
assurnptio~ possible on this 3 bedroom
home w/rlver frontage Has family
room, full basement, nat. gas, new roof,
new a ir cond. and .8 acre lot.
'
8% MTG. ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE -

Quality cedar ranch In super loca!IOII In
r:lio Grande. Beeutlfully decoratecf" 3
bedroom home with 2°h baths, formal
dining, lull ba-..menl, large family
rOom, fireplace, 2 car garao. plus a
lovelv pine tree studdecll'h acr.-vard.

I

219 ACRES - Less than 1 mile off Rt.
Ul. Has 1300' paved road frontage, 40
acres crop, 60 acres pasture (could be
much more) and balance In' WOOdland 2
large barns, 1411 lb. tobacco baS.,
spring &amp; rural water available." Also
modern 4 bedroom rancl\ wnii full
basement. Coil for details .
•
,

I

Utility Buildings

heatin~.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011
992·7656

8-20·tfc

-

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

e D6lthw.lt..-h

•••nWu ,_ tH_. W•ttrTnks

71

74

Aulo for Sale

77

Thunderbird, 34,000
miles, $3,000 also 69 Copra
slide·ln truck camper, S900.
Call367-7238.
79 OLDS Cutlass Supreme,
loaded, 304-675·.0S7

2,000 miles, excellent condillon . Call 446·064 alter 5
p. m

.'
~

)

GOOD SOIL
DELIVERED

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Clean1ng
•46·4208

CALL BETWEEN
8A .M &amp;5P.M
446·1142

JIM MARCUM Roofung
spouting and siding 30
yel!lrs experience
Free
est tmates . Remodeling
Call 388·98S7

DENNY

CHAIN LINK FENCE
FREE ESTIMATES

Ken Soles

WEATHERALL CON
CRETE · qualoty and ser
voce, call675 1582

ll: ~

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
446· 3915
No Answer 446-2062
Modern steam cleaning
tor carpet &amp; upholstery
( 1nsurance work)
• Scotchguard-JM
• Wall s, floors, w1ndows_
eWater &amp;
smoke dama~ e
lndustnal
Co mmerc1al
Restdenttal
Depe ndabl e, e years expenence. We do care!

NOI1010S

PAINTING
lnteroor and
exterior,
plumbing ,
rOOfing, some remodeling
20 yrs. exp Call 388·9652.

SVRPLUti JEEPS, CARS,
TRUCKS, Car· lnv . value
S2U3 sold for $100. For In·
formation on purchasing
similar bargain,, Call 602·
94HIOU Ext. 7965. Phone
call refundable.
1974 WV Super Beetle, 304·
675·3308,

367-0SAI.

ACROSS
FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
mainfa•nance
and
remodeling
Phone 3889326.

gbod

1919 ,.. Chevy Luv truck
AM· F M stero, topper &amp; tool

be""

leller

66 Decree
67 secret

6 Wideawake
11 Cha1ra
meellng
18 Hnmte'l

2 1 Advance

1971 350 Honda Chopper,
runs good . $200. 304· 773·
5835.

2066.
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
super glide. $2000. 67S·6823.
J981 YAMAHA 550 cc
Maxim, 1800 miles, loke
new, $2150. 304·882·3297

DOBBINS &amp; SONS CON ·
TRACTORS Remodeling
Inside and out·electrlal
work·heating·plumblng·sidln
g -room additions. (ex·
perlenced carpenter· 28
years) Serving Southern
Ohio &amp; Wester n W.VA. Cjlll
David Dobbins Sr , 388·
91156. If no answer call 388
9964.

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
•nythlng for
onybody a! our Auction
I S.m or In your honw. For
Information and pickup
Hrvlco coli 256-19.,.
Silo Evarv Slturday
Nlghlat 7 p.m.
We

1977 HONDA 360 Street,
condition, $425.00.
Caii304·773·55U or 304·882

g&lt;iod

AUCTION SERVICE
KeMtfh Sw•ln, Auct.
d&amp;OII

l!:::~C:or:n:o:r:T~hl:r==:v:t==~

Call 4-16-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

Excavating
83
'!:!---~~=="-­
Back Hoe &amp; Dotc her Ser
vice, waler lines, dllc hes,
septtc systems, footers .
Catl446 9340 or 675·6898

Custom
bu i lt
Pole
Buildings tailored for your
needs.
Buildings
are
available for your viewing.
For free estimate phone
Byerly Cons!. Co. •-16-6639.

Dozer work Mobile home
sites and driveways. Small
lobs a specialty Phone 741·
2753
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
In septic tank . 675 1234.

Wallpaper ,
pai~llng,
general carpenter work. AI
Tromm, 614·H2·2328.

2823. ,
1976 SUZUKI 500, excellent
condition, call 304·895-3467 .
1979 KAWASAKI KXBO
with helmet, $450., ex·
cellent , condition, 304· 773·

boX. Call 446·4944 •

5649.

'
For salt 1977 ·314 T GMC
4X4 1 pl~ku~, 12,500 as Is
must sell Clue to l)ta.lth. ~
3&lt;118.

1981 , Yamaha Midnight
Mexlm 650 CC, black and
sliver,. 1600 miles. S2,2IJO •.
Ca1167s'687i. ,.

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Siden ·
strlcker 67S·5580.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl
882·2079.

114

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quezar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
~r

1111

SWAIN

French City Painting
Resldent•al, commercia l,
interior, exterior:.,_ paper
hanging , and texured
ceilings Ph. 367-7784 or 3lo7·
7160.

1975 F -800 1 ton Ford flat·

body ' rough,

1 Greek

Romeo
19 Slately
home
20 Reno~tale

1978 Kawasako SR 650,
cruise controL sissy bar,
highway pets, klng·queen
-.,at. 992·7582.

Abbr
65 Par1 ol ·to

•46·245 •.

F &amp; K Tree Trlmmln~,
stump renloval. 675· 1331.

E lectrlcal
&amp; Refrigeration

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition servlcer.
commercial, lndu,trla .
Phone 882-2079.

76 Ford 100, 6 cyl," 6 tires,
new , tool · carrier, llood
concl•• 52,000, 12.350. Call 1·
245-9118.

85

O.nerol Hauling

· NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call tor estimates 367-7101

Hie

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Coli 367-7471 or
367·0!91 . ' '
'
Haunno Of limestone &amp;
grtvtl. 992·2772.

'
MOBILE hOmes moved,
ncellltd, · and bonded . 304·
576-2711 or 304-576·~.

'.

t7

• Upholstery

TRISTATE
, UPHOI:.STERY SHOP
· 1163 Sec. Ave,, Gallipolis.
446-7833or 44&lt;h1133.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
.
ANOH.EATING
Fourtlland Pine
or 446· m7

, car.
P1101111M"•
\

_-

... ·--·· -----

1

Showmg

MOV\ ' ·y s
1 8o)t , ,' Pl
675·41S;

~ho

slery Rl.
le •an r, 304·

wrlttngs
69 Pallern
71 Sea eagle
73 Conceal

74 01scord
goddess

76 Most
mature

wreaths
2 4 Frutt dnnk
26 Neal
27 Rupees
Abbr
29 Repulse
10 Care
31 Send forth

32 ActOf
wattach
33 Tiny

34 Spol&lt;en
3!&gt; OiHICull
36 Falls Into

dtsuse

ca ravel
8 1 Par1 ol

HRH
82 " ~4

Mts-

erables ·
BabylOni an

da.ty
85 Simpleto n
87 Amount
owed

90 Bolts
92 S hallOw
vessel

93 Amullary
verb

95

S udden ~

97 Tidy

81 Excavate

miles

64 Steam-

t50 Is borne
15 1 YounQ
salmons
DOWN

105 Sharpen

3 Hebrew

108

Anglo-Saxon money

Madrid
113 SOrrow

60 Check

146 Command
148 M ore an d
149 Hay

saw
2 Rude hul

112 Three, m

compound

Cloth

measure
142 F1sh sauce
143 Bear wit ness lo

104 Frosted

51AKolly

58 Chemical

141

1 Surg1cat

soldoers

103 Stalemale

52 Coojunc-

57 Rights
Abbr

goddess

101 Body Ol

110 Beginners

S5R~ous

"""

spreader s

49 Worshtp

54 Classily

Ever g u~en

136 De n
137 Keen
138 Number
I 39 Sca le note
140 M oon

playoH

pi
99 NH' s
neigh l-or

lion
53 Stnke

133 Greek

144 Backs
down

40 unctes
41 Peet
42 Flying
mammals

fiSh

127 Shaded
129 Hold back
131 Frwt seeds
132 F1ber plant

Iefi er

98 Compas..c;

47 Waste
altowance

124 Moun lam
take
125 Ctpher
126 Hurned

134

38 Jotn

43Bow
45 Ardent
46 Cvt&gt;rlnold

123 lndta n
weight

79 Columbus

23 Hswanan

62 Parts of

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric ShOp,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

1

Jf '

Culloden Nursery
Sprong Sa lei
West Virginia 's
"Greatest Nursery"
·Beauttfut
Canadtan
Hemlocks.
Searle!
Maples, Sugar Maples,
Pin Oaks, Japanese and
·Chinese Crabs, Green
Ash, Purple Plums,
Pink Dogwood, Brad·
ford Pear, Uprighl &amp;
Spreading Evergreens.
All nursery stock ts prtced to sell. 25% off Ra my
Day Purchases.
All stzes of flowertng
trees guaranteed to
bloom this 5 nngt
Designing &amp;
Services,
Free
Estimates , Nursery IS
,located 1 mile out
Charley's Creek Road
on the left between
Wesleyan
camp
Ground. Only 13 mites
from New Htgn . Mall.
:Trailer load deliveries.
Scotts Bluegrass sod
pvallable.
~
743-9996

and

750CC,
water
fully d ressed,
rm . can•46 1210.

'~ t=======::::l238&gt;
Detrlot,
13Speec:t, good.
conel.
Call256-6520.

~·
Suildlv !lolls1'
-·

675-4378

Home
Improvements

19111 Honda XR 500, less
than 200 miles, like new.
Caii•46-06.S after 5 p.m .

1977
DOOGE
Royal
Monaco, 4 door, air, PS,
PB, $1500.00, JOH75·219S.

19751ntetnallonal Tri·Axle.

"'BH•IIIul, j:ust'""
• lUI It O.r•'"'.'
Coli , tar trw ' lidlng
Htlmatft, Mt-MGI or ·

11

BUS I N ESS
CLINE 'S FABRIC
AND VARIETY SHOP
Yard mate rtal , cus t om
m ade wood furntture ,
bedspread mat ena I,
sheet blankets, full or
tw1n, towe ls, m en 's,
women's a nd chtldren 's
c loth1og ,
hous e hold
goods, plu s much mor e
Ke rr Harn s burg Rd
Open 9 a m . ttl 9 p m
Monday 1hru Saturday
Ph 245 5846
Owners loute &amp; Erma I

Motorcycles

1980 Kawasaki KZ 250 L TO,

engine &amp; 8•25x20 .tires,
asking $2,700. Call 446· 2~1.
8·5.

·BISSElL
..:SaDifiG CO.
.'

Pl. Pleasant, w. va., old
state liquor store.

Frank Rose Ca nst Co
Remodeling repatr , new
constructiOn, all types
F.reeestimates. all work
fully
guaranteed
Res1den t1a L commer
eta\, tndustrtal and mm
tng , elec t n c work
MSHA Cert
446 4627

SUNDAY PUZZLER

bed,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
' SIDI.NG..

ROGERS
PAW &amp; COIN SHOP
601 Main St.

"

Top prtces paed for auto
bodaes, scrap •ron and
metals.
m 11e
west
of
1
Fatrgrounds on Old Rt.
33.
Mon -Fn. 8 : 30 to 4:00
Afler Aug. 3
Ph . tt2-6S64
8· 30·1 mo pd

Ph.992-758l
8 27 1 1110

1972' Dodge Dart, $225. Oell

e DI.,.WII

8 ft walk-I n camper top.
S150. Call614-949·2559.

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp;' Metal)

tensove remodelmg.
• E lectrocal work
• R ooling work
14 Years
E xperoence
Greg Roush

1976 .Dodile 112 ton pick-up
truck&gt; good cond. 18 MPG.
Calll&lt;I6,33Jl. ''"
)
' ~..
:

e Dryers

Camping
Equipmenl

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

chorper, show blke.$975
Cal after 6 pm 304-882·

e W.IMrl

78

Rt. 3, BoM 54
Racine, Oh
Ph . 614·843·2591
6 15 lie

1975 Yamaha 650, low rider

...

TWO Crager wheels, two L·
60 t ires &amp; adapter, 1• in.
304·675·3968.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh .

1

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Sezes trom 4x6 to IZX40

V. C. YOUNG Ill

The Sunda Tomes-Senti nel-

Services Offered

I

70 ACI!ES ~ Nearly all In WOOdland 1
Excellent for hunting, hiking, elc . Has
12x6• motol!e home, rural water
av~llable, springs, stream &amp; large
cave. S32,000.
•
'1
60 ACRES - Mostly WOOded hill "land
wl~ ::'~• crop lllnd. lncludft shaft in
pru,
n QIS weltn Localed on Me·
Culley ·Rd. In AdiliSOII Twp. Only
N
$24,000.
g

---~-·~-~----~~~~~--,.. ,,
' •

I
I

Stzes
"From 30xlO"
SMALL

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCJION

custom kttcnens and applaances,
custom
bathrooms, remodelln9,
ptumbtn, electric, and

76

Farm Buildings

1973 CHEVROLET Caprice
"1---~-------&lt; station wagon, 3 seater,
'
rebuilt engine and transmission, 454 engine, S800
304-882·2910.

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

Sec th1 s one no w

BMR 139 - REDUC E D - Two story h ome on
Second Ave, Ga ll .poi•S Alum tnum S1d 1ng 3 or 4
bed room s Reduced t o $21 500 Ca ll tor details

I

I
I
I

BMR 399
Two s to r y h om e p rese nt
ly bemg used as dupl ex, could eas ily be conve rted to
s 1ng le family Chot ce loc ation tn Ga ll •polt s Owner
will he lp f1n a nce
'
IIMR 401

I

19% ASSUMPTION - 18 ACRES - Con·
veruent tocatton at edge of tow n Bnck
&amp; frame 3 bedroom home With full
base ment , 2 f.r eplaces, 2 baths &amp; nat
gas hea t 18 wooded acres plus large OUTSTANDING BRtCK RANCH - 1
b lock from H M C Nestled on a la rge
barn Perf ec t tor hor ses
lot w1th exce llent vtew Thts attra c t1ve
3 or 4 bedroom home mcl udes 2 baths, 2
FAIRFIELD· CENTENARY RD. Spac.ous 8 yr old m a •nte nance fr ee ftreplaces, large famdy room , den, has
hom e .n a n excellent locatton.., 3 had excellent care &amp; mamtenance &amp; '"
bedrooms, 2 baths, famil y room, wood one of the best ne•ghborhoods
burne r , 2 car garge, hea t pump, plus 1
Year Buy e r Prot ec t1 on 1h a c fenced OWNER MAY HELP FINANCE - AI·
tra c ttve &amp; well kept J bedroom 2 story
yard
home m a quality netghborhood tn town .
1 ACRE - 9% ASSUMPTION - AI Has Jl/1 ba th, nat gas heat, large ltv.ng
tract 1ve 3 bedroom home 1n n• ce ne 1gh room , large sc reened porch, famtly
bOrhood Has fire pl ace, la rge equtpped room, ttreplace, full basement &amp;
kttchen, garage, storage b ldg Plus a gara ge Low .SO's
n1 ce p1ne treed 1 ac yard 40's
OWNER TRANSFERRED
8%
ASSUMPTION
Must
sell
this
at·
9111% ASSUMPT I ON ~ JUST LISTED tra c tive 6 yr old Tudor ranch in Rod
1 - A 3 bedroo m ran ch loca ted on SR 218 nev 3 bedrooms (18' master bedroom)
Has hea tllator f1r eplace, d in1ng room , 2 baths, family room , woodburner, cen~
ste p saver k •fchen , e lec hea t, new h w trat atr, 2 ca r ga r a ge plus •11 acre flat
heater, and a 100x300 flat yard W1fh 'yard $53,500
sma ll barn Only $40,900 Low down
pay m ent
, 168 AC. FARM - Owners m o ved to Fla
Anx1ous to sell and have dropped pnce
' '"% ASSUMPTION - $43,500 - Cozy $20,000 Approx 24 ac. c rop land, 60 ac
1 &amp; ex tra sha rp 2 bedroom hom e With pasture and 80 acres of WOOd land &amp;
fire p lace and full base m e nt Situated on wtldllfe Remodeled 2 s tory 3 bedroom
2 flat s hady acres. l6Xl6 storage shed, home. wtth newe r fir e place, new roof, ~·
bn ck ba rbe c ue, 2 car deta c hed garaoe s torm w1ndows, tnsulat1on &amp; garage
(house &amp; ga rage have vmyl S1d1ng&gt;. Nt ce orchard, large wh1te p1ne. &amp; some
Green Grade S'c:hool A lovely locat1on
t1mbe r reported
Pnced in $60' S.
Localed oil Rt. 554
OWNERS MAY FINANCE - Qua lofoed
buye rs could poss tbly f1nance as low as 101 ACRES - Mos tly WOOded land w1th
8% Large 2 story home With lots of lots of w1ldltfe Has 2 barns, and 3 small
character . Has nver frontage, 4 or 5 bUildings 2 story , 3 bedroom home
bedrooms, fa m11y room , woodburner &amp; Located 1 m 11e north of Thurman 40's
oil furnace. downsta ~rs bath &amp; more
$39,500
165 AC · RT. 141 - Bare land 50 ac
c rop, 65 ac. pasture , 40 ac woods
REDUCED TO $30.900 - Assume FHA Springs, creek, well. rural water, 40x60
Loan on thts 3 bedroom home off Rt 554 barn, 16x60,s hed Call for tnfo.
Kyger Creek Sc h D1st 1J2 acre yard,
house has 1200 s q fl &amp; asl um . sidong. 160 ACRES - Rec•ntly used as dai ry . l
Ni ce location .
ApproM. 6,00' of tolat rd. frontage : 50·60
ac. crop, 70 pasture, some wood$ 36lC.SO
HOME &amp; 6 ACRES - 6 moles norlh of barn, silo. tobacc o ba-.., -..veral either
Rio Grande 2 bedroom home situated buddtngs . 2 story home p8 rt .
on 6 acres of shade trees Has full remodeled. 4 bedrooms, nat. gas heal, 2
base ment &amp; 2 barns Priced tn 20's _
f1replaces, etc. Call for details

!IM R J Y'l
Now '" yo ur d lcHlCC lo l•vr tn town lor
lf'S&lt;; th,l n ':. ·.W 000 rhrr e 11f'f1room hOmf' llf' Mr
1\ MR J'lj

II

S43,500 - Comfortable 3 bedroom ranch
s1tuated off Bulavtlle Rd. on 11'2 ac lot
Equ 1ppf!d k1tchen, 1112 bath, nat gas
heat, garage &amp; c ha1n \Inked fence
around yard

__ _

w. Va.

...

ALL STEEL

-Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrtal work
(Free EslomalesJ

9·4·1 mo.

ltF E

I IMR JY 1

Roofing olall tv pes
S1ding
Remodel1ng
Free estimates
:zo Yrs. expertence

Ph. 949-2285

HEWETSON

a raker Aucr1 onecr

eBackhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines
eDumpTruck
eTrencher
Locensed &amp; Bonded

And Home Maintenance

ches • Metal Fabncaflons .
Monday· Fr1da'1
4 p.m. lo 11 p m .
All Day Saturday

Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

RIVE RIIIEW - BARGAIN PRICED You won't f1nd a more reasonable buy
tha n th1s 4 bedroom stonP. ranc h on Rt
7 Over 2,000 sq ft of llvm g s pace, 3
baths, fireplace, famdy room , nat gas,
a.r &amp; d e tac hed 2 car garage Close

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

OHIO VALLEY

WELD SHOP

esteel

Gas Lln•DIIches
Woter Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
H · llfc

Ca II 742· 3195

BARNETI'S

307

- Gcrle-ril -

55" WE ST ERN P leas ure
m are, gentle, 304 675 3699

GUVAN TOWNSHIP - 108 ac res m/ 1,
!or ated s ou th of Mercerv1IIC Approx 20
A !•liable, b alance woods, ta b base
Ow ne r s w ill he lp ftn a nce

urs

BEAUTY
SALON
PH•. H2· 2725

Now Taking Enrollment For Fall
Day or Evening
Clases.

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

106
J ACKSO N COUNTY FARM ~ cres MI L, approx
30 A till a bl e,
ba lnnce pastur e &amp; woods, n ~ee 2 s tor y 7
rm home, new 40 x80 m e ta l barn,
severa l o ther bu ild •ngs, m us t sell soon
Ca ll for other de tails

Longer ttair

CERAMICS

Pomeroy, Oh.o

REESE..,
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water·Sewer·Efectric

w~ve Length For

FRAN'S

BILL CHILDS, Mgr .
Phone 992-6312

20
Hol ste •n
Spr.n ge r
He1f ers
Te Ba y Da1 ry ,
Parkersb urg, WV Phon e
863 3705

GREt' N TOWN)HIP - CENTRALLY
lOCATED ~ 112 ac re fa r m has fron
tage on Sta te Rout e 588 Fa tr f•e ld
Ce nt e n ary Roa d &amp; Vanco Fa trft eld Rd
Exce ll en t tor farm 1ng or deve lopm e nt
Olde r 5 rm &amp; ba th farm home, b arn &amp;
silo •nc luded Owners will co ns 1der sell
.ng sma ll e r tracts of shor t ter m hn a nc
•ng Call fo r more •ntor ma f• on

$20.00
Now $17.50
525.00 . Now $22.50
$30.00 • Now $27.50
535.00 • Now'S29.50

MIUER
SERVICE

SMITH NELSON
MOIDRS INC.

18'/2% AC. VER RD Attract1ve 2 story 4 bedroom home w1th
15 ac 1n woods &amp; 31f? ac . m lawn
Family room, 2 baths, remode led k1f
chen, f1replace, 2 woodburners, 2 car
garage &amp; se ve r al tru1t trees A n•ce
hom e tn c1ty schools for $61,900

R.C.S. REALTY INC.

Pe rce ntag e s mmenta l bull
1400 lbs 4 yrs ol d, $750 614
446 3845

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN ·
CHER plus 78 ACRES of la nd m
Chesh.re Towns h1p off e rs tots of good
l1v1ng for yo ur growmg fam 11y Home 1S
!USt ltk e new w1 t h 1438 sq ft of 11v1ng
a rea plus an atta ched garage 2
spa c tous BR s, 2 ba th s, 8x27 LR , l0x24
k1 tchen w1th refr 1g d1 s p , DW, doubl e
oven &amp; ra nge, washe r &amp; dry e r st ays m
laundry Land 1S m os t ly rol lmg past ure
land w1lh ap prox 25 ftc res wooded Ca ll
tor appotntme nt

SEPT. 21 tllru DCT. 24

Radiltor Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Y rs. E xperoence

I •

LAFF - A- DAY

____ a

'

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. H2-2174
5 7·11c

37 r abb itS, all SIZeS, 14
cages plus feede r All for
$100 Ca ll614 949 2559

General

BJtsiness Servi·ces

1975 TR ·6 c la ssoc con·
vert 1bl e, exc cond , 73,000,
two top s, cover, two snow
t•res, $3.285 245 9118
•

drew trumps, entered dummy with the Jack of clubs to

Ik e WliemiUl, Brok e r 446 37'6 Eve

STROUT REAL TV
COuiHRY.

By Oswald Ja.,..y
ud AluS..Ial

~L,_.o.!.
ve
k _ __
00s~t~o,_c.._

Ju m bo Bobwh1fe Qua il,
wee
k old t o adult s 1zes
MUSI Cal
Ins truments , (614 ) 985 4345
cor one t, trumpet
Good
co n•t• on $60 Phone 614
992 3804
Blac k Angus Herd b ull
1300· 1500 lbs 614 742 2880
NEW Bundy flut e, book &amp;
s ta nd 1195 304 675 6766
Reg 1s t ere d
hor n e d
hereford bu II 5 ye a rs old
BUNDY a lto sax, exce llen t 992 7415
cond•f•on, p hone 304 675
1831
Quarter horse ge ld 1ng 2
years tra1n1ng a t Mend1fh
TRUMPET &amp; s tand 1n ex Manor $750
Reg 1stered
ce ll ent cond •t•on, $ 150 M a y Amenca n Saddl e Bred for
c hec k Wtth b a nd d 1rector, sale or stud se rv1 ce 614
304 675 1776
949 2455
58

down
Now, bow dld South actu
ally play the hand? At trock
two lie led bOJ queen of clubs
Eut took his king and led
bl.ck a trump but South was

Opentng lead •10

South"s b1ddin1 of today's
band, u reported by Freel
Karpm, could stand a lot II
Improvement
6o;3o __ _

1972 Vo lkeswagen, 675 2864
or 882·2947

and South would be one

Instrum ents
1 SILAGE b lower , $100
phone 304 675 3456

MOR R I~ON' S Auto sa les
Henderson. WV Phone 675
1574or675 288 1

71

1978 Mere u ry Zepher Low
mileage, a .c., exc cond
992·3090.

1981 Buock Sky lark , lomoled
edi tion . loaded. 675 1203

1979 Butck R1v1era E x
cond , loaded call 446 7497

•
Or South coldd lead a club
to dummy's jack at trlc~
two
west beld the king o(
clubs, South would make an
overtrick. As the cards he
that low club lead might

.AQ 73

Auto for Sate

1969 Cheve lle Super Sporl ,
396,350 HP , p s ., p b , auto
trans
1mmaculate condtt ton Ca ll 446 0648 after 5
pm

useless spade sull

+A 10 2

West

71

S~le

Auto for

71

Livestock

Poled Hereford bull , 4 yrs
old call 256 6639

acalnst dummy's armost

.AKQJ1 ~

w. Va .

Holstein &amp; he reford cow
wilh 3001bs ca lf . $500 Call
367 7238

The only excuoe lor It wu
that the 1ame was rubber
brldll'!, tlie bour wu lllte
and South wonted to &amp;et tbe
rubber over with 1111&lt;1 score
his 100 bonon
There Is a well-known
priDclple of play that II you
want to be declarer you
sbould be able to play the
dummy well
There are lots of ways to
play the hand South could
probably just play out a lot
of trumps and watch the
defenders squirm to KUard

tA.J6~3

Goose neck trailer frame,
tandam axels 20ft long &amp; 6
fl h ogh. $450 Ca ll 446 0183

$25 eac h 304 882 3236

63

How will South play?

Farm Equipment

2 tractor ftres, s tze 10 x JB,

59

Reg Cocker Spa n1 e l p ups ,
10 wk.s o ld bu ff Call 446

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

4

month
Goll bag
II em

5 - twas
sa)'lng

6 Repeal

......

7 ()epos•tad
8 Abstract
being
9 Ar11hcmt

114 Hebrsw

115 Roman
lyran•
t 17 Pertalnmg
to punish-

language
10 Walk s

ment
118 Chief
119 Fountain

woanly
1 t tmagmes

lreal
t20 Preposition
121 Besrnlr'ct.

t 2 ScaAe note
'3 PrinCOIV

h-

lamily
14-

.-....-r.,.-,;""""T';;;""

sl eps
15

he element
16 And
17 MIT grad
2 1 Ptedge
22 Allar

screen
23 Italian
COin S

25

86 Sa 1hng

Nonmetal-

Under

world god
27 Temporary

rulers
28 Prophel ess
30 Stable

vessel
88

Ct1 mb1ng
pepper
planl

89

Stamese
naltves

90 Otlletl
91 And lat
94 P1geon s
96 Telluuum

symbol
98 let 11
s tand
99 Ogre
100 Her mtl

dweUe r

102 longed for

Jt Mun ches

104 A stan
c ountry
105 ChOns ter s

33 Bet

35 U ale deer
36 Fmal

37 Covered
wtth soot
39 Comed1an s
forte
4 1 Couple
42 Farm
bulldmg

44 Vts1on

cum
106 Narcot1cs
107 Flag
109 Ptace l or
com bat
111 Neghgent
1 t 2 Gu tl-hke
b~rd

4 7 Pronoun
48 L1nge•ed
49 Boung tool
!&gt;0 Utstake
54 Scorched
55 ASSISta nt

113 - ot the
Roses
1 t6 Gram
I 16 Filamenl
119 Apportion
122 Rebate
124 Clothes·

56 Whi rlpools
59 Kind Of
actd

125 Metal
126 Red and

60 Opulent
61 Scale note
63 Clan
66 Iron

symbol
67 Cenum
symbol
68 Outeted
70 Jumpet'
71 Slender

n

fintfi l

Free of
73 Planet
75 Med11er r ane::~n

vessel
71 Nahoor

slleoJ&gt;

maker
Green
128 Ate
130 Htndu
cymbals
IJ 1 Docks
132 Actor
Sellefs
135 Rant
137 Escape
138 M1x
140 Marvin or
MaJOrs
142 Sum up
143 Macaw
144 NFL pos
145 TeutonK:
deity

t47 M/" sneogh

78 Sunburn
bOr
80 Sound a
14B Displaced
horn
person
83 FOOd ttsr.
Abbr
~:,;....,;,:....,.:...,.........,.,....

�Page-D-12-TheS

Tim e;-Se ntinel

Po

Fund drive underwa
The Eden United Brethren Church
at Reedsville has embarked upon a
fund drive in hopes of securing
enough money to build a chain link
fence to enclose the cemetery .
Over the years,

brief visit.
They don't gel back often but er&gt;joy every minute of it when they do.
As I understand tl, Johr is involved

a wooden

Ha s the M1ss Amenca Pageant
sl ipped or is it me, Mattie ' Ron Ely
see ms lost as the emcee role and the
blonde wl10 moved breathlessly
from performing to announcing upcoming corrunercials seemed to indicate that the pageant has a s horlagt· of talent and/or participants .
Per haps , the budget just couldn't
tolera te two people .

fence

necessary.
Relatives
of
Bob
those buried in the cemetery are
asked to give whatever the y can to
Robert Reed, head of the drive , or to
Mrs. Susie Kervin , c hurch
treasurer. Both individual s have a
Reedsville address.

in aerospace projects.

Let me make one thing perfectly
clear ..

The re seems to be some confuston
on just who the golfmg coach at
Meigs High School is. Mick Childs is

It's a lways great to set· fnen rt.s
from "way bac k" when they return

a tea cher in the Meigs District and is
active in sports programs. However ,

to Meigs County .
Chatted with Norma ChapliWI
Morris at the county fair . ~urma is
assistant to a textbook author at
Bowling Green . She has three
chtldren. One of the111, fia chel. ac-

the golfing coach is Mick·s fa ther,
R1ll Chi lds, who will serve as a
para professional m the Me1gs
District as golfing coach. The team
will play al the Jaymar Golf Cou rse

companied her he re fur a n.sJ l "'ith
her mother . Mrs. Anna Wht•eil'r .

Incidental ly, Norm&lt;t wa~ \\'L'a rillg
at-shirt which read . ··Applt• (;rove
Forever .. , Can' t you JUSt ht&gt;ar pC'ople

in Bowling Green osking here :
"What's a n Apple Grove···
Norma was an active vocal 1st with
the Big Bend Minstrels for a number
uf years - a nd, fmiuna tel y, s he ha s
some nice memories uf Lhat venture .

Taking in the Labor Day parade at
Chester was J ohn Handl ey. formerly
of Pomeroy. and his a ttra ctive wife.
Phyllis Blackwood Ha ndley . al so a
former Meigs resident.
Johr and Phyllis - by the wav.

whic h the senio r Childs rrumages.
There will be a \'Oluntce r income
tax ass is tance pro~ram established

'" Meigs County for low income and
hHndieapped persons.
Interna l Revenue Service persnnnt:.' l have vi site d the county a mi
ha ve sec ured locations at the

Pomeroy and Middleport Ltbr aries
where volunteers can work in
aosisting the designa ted individuals
w1lh ftltng their income tax returned
for 1001.
Those servmg as volunteers will
receive specia l training a nd the
work involved will be spread e~ruu n tl

are in

so that no one person will be heav ily
burdened.

Atlanta , Ga., these days where John
is in research at Georgta Tec h. He "s
marked up about14 years there.
Accompanted by one of thc11·
d•ughters, Amanda. Phyllis and

l'iol only should tl be a beautiful
fall. but just think soon you will be

John were guesl'i of their rcspedi vt~
mothers, Mr.s. Virgil Bl&lt;:~ckwoo d and
Mr.s. Helen Hand ley d tu·ing thetr

srnllmg.

they have six c hildre n

d

~

free Llf the televiswn reruns . In
mcw y iustances . the first time
druun d was quite e~dequale . Do keeiJ

Q0allJpoll~

IDwrp

~reps. • •
GA LIJPOLIS - It'll b&lt;' 2:30 tilts
(Sunday) afternoon that.Jarn1·s S:lllds, th'e Times-Sentine l\ Gall1a
County histori cal wr&gt; ler . 11111 s hift
gear s fr om wnt n-:f.! l n spc·;1K 11lf'
he's the s peak c·r f,; r the :· tr-.1 r·~ · ~ •n 11
meeting uf the Ca ll L"l C• 'll' : 1 ~
Hist orical Socu.:- ty smce t he sumn1l'r
hiatus .
Yep! It's 2:30. The Peeps colun m
made a n error on Sept. 13 by li sltng
the time as a half-hour ea rlier. but
say it isn't so 1 It's 2 30 today . J im
Sands, who today tells you about the
Old French City's p10nce nng w1th
coa l gasification in hi.s rC'gular
writeup ; then over at St. Peter" s
Eptscopal Church hell tell the
historical society about " Bus!llcss

and Industry in Galilpoli&gt; in the
years 1790 to 1848," ' by wnrd of
mouth , orally, a udibly .
BUT TRY TO COMMIT a n error,
and you' ll not make it. Or Snm
Peeps copierl th e Cin r m na tt
Enquirer story Sept . 13 about Buddy

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Complying with an Ohlo Supreme Court
order, the state Ballot Board meets
Tuesday to draft new language for
Issue I on the Nov. 3 ballot.
Secretary of State Anthony J.
Celebrezze Jr. called the meeting
Friday, noting the court's finding

thai lang~ge the board drafted
earlier didn't properly describe the
proposed constitutional amendment.
At the same time, Celebrezze's office said the group backing Issue 2,
an election redistricting amendment, will have more than enough
signatures to qualify their plan for
the ballot
Issue 1, if approved, wiU permit
private insurance companies in Ohio
to rompele with the state Bureau of
Workers Compensation in the sale of

POMEROY - Ma e Bryson St.
Clair, 88, Valley Stream, N. Y , a for·
mer Me i ~s County resident, died
Saturday at Franklin Genera l
Hospital, Valley Stream.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, Charles and Lucy Price
Bryson; her husband, John ; a son,
Avery ; a sister and three brothers.
Surviving are three daughters,
Bernice Saxton of Pomeroy. Pauline
Kohl of Valley Stream and Ida Mae
Clark of Pomeroy ; seven grandc hildren
and
11
grea t grandchildren; two sisters. Mrs . Edna Quivey of Athens and Mrs. Virgi e
Meier of Akron ; several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services wi ll be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday in the Ewing Chapel.
Burial will be in Carlton Cemetery.
Friends JTiay call at the chapel after
7 p.m. today.

Herbert K Myers
GAWPOUS FERRY- Herbert
E . (Herb) Myers, 51, Gallipolis
Ferry, died Friday afternoon in St.
Mary's Hospital , Huntington,
following a short illness.
Born June 9,1930, at S9ulhside, he
wu the 111111 of Zenie E. Myers and
11eu1e Wiseman Myers, of Hen-

clerllllll.
. He was a member of the
Be)lemead United Methodist
- ~h, and owned and operated
, ..,.... arid So011 ~cavatton Con'tractors and the Myers and Sons

average for statewide petition
drives.
The FAIR committee is seeking
voter approval of the proposal that
scraps Ohio's present method of
drawing new districts for members
of the Ohio House and the U.S.

Redistricting Committee, 90,472
were disallowed by local election
boards because they weren't those of
registered voters and in some scattered cases judged fraudulent.
Hill said the committee had a
validation rate of 76 .6 percent, near

House.

.

It would be replaced with a
puterlzed system that invites clttJ;!Ml
participation and assertedly
provide districts not · Intended
favor either of tbe two
political parties.

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;!i

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

METAL

.. !

I

..c ·.
......

injury insurance covering workers

on the job.
The Committee for Free Enterpnse Competition, an insurance
industry group sponsoring the amendment, said the ballot board
language, as first submitted, was
designed to attract votes against it.
By a 5-2 vote, the Supreme Court
granted the committee's request for
a writ req uiring the board to recon-

QUALITY HOME STORAGE UNITS.
AU STEEL CONSTRUCTION.
GREAT FOR KITCHENS, BASEMENTS,

vene and try again .

The court agreed with one committee claim, among others, that the
original draft implied thai if Issue I
passes, the existing non-profit job insurance program would be changed
to a for-profit system.
Celebrezzeis chairma n of the fivemember board that otherwise cor&gt;ststs of State Sen. Thomas A. Van
Meter, R-Ashland, Sen. Stephen D.
Ma urer, D-Botkins , William N.
Morgan, Colwnbus, and Richard C.
Pfeiff er Jr., Colwnbus .
Meanwhile, Wayne Hill, an a ide in
Cclebrezze's office, said Issue 2
sponsors were over the top in the
nwnber of signatures required to get
their proposa l officially certified for
the ballot.
He said that as of Friday, the Issue
2 cmrunittee had been credited with
331 ,472 va lid voter signatur es, with
JUSt 284,472 needed.
Hill said signatures hadn' t been
returned from one county, Lucas,
and that the official ballot certificatiOn won't come until they
arrive.
Of 422,248 signa tures submitted by
the sponsoring ~·a ir and Impartial

UTILilY ROOMS, GARAGES ....

A schedule of area

WHEREVER EXTRA STORAGE
IS NEEDED.

programming, activities and

Wardrobes
cabinets
cabinets
cabinets.

events,. September 20 thru 26

base
utility
china

A guide to area entertainment
Includes complete

Mo,)rt'·s l'nac h i n ~ b iography, an
ilelll cl ipped hy Caroll K. Showden.
The Enqutrer writer didn't know

listings

tli) \V I IJ spe J: Meigs f'ount y and didn't
lh!n k !• 1!• wk at &lt;1 ili:ip. tl l·' r·l'ftlfC, he
.~,1;,! ) :. •1· !il'l! ~lt~lf.'S · \Lti~)-~:"J ·· and
th.~ t· ~. ;_i ·,, \':;, \· ul' ! 'l ' f·J · ~· ,.,,p tt&gt;d it:
J·:u.Jd1 i1 "l\;, J .Jub wit~ I J&lt;a ~tc rn Hi !:{h
·· u1 j\ll ~q ~g .. .; Couuty .·· All{J the n Peeps
adde d a sneer - yep ; lhat·s the way
the big-c&gt; ly wnter spelled 11. But our
sharp com posttor wouldn't hold still
f ur s uch d flagrant misspe lli ng, and
it came out in YOUR Times-Seutinel
~~ s Me1 gs.

PAU L

~HAW ,

New Network Season,
page 14
Soap Opera Review,

4045 E lbern Ave,

page 9

Cululllbus 43213 , ha s subscrib~d to
the Tribuue fur ;:mother year, and he
~ ent alun~ this note : " It has been 30
yl: n rs since I left Mercerville as
tL'&lt;I L·hcr a nd coach. Tlu:re ctre sti ll a

Maverick Returns,
page 11

few people I knew while I was hv&gt;ng
in G" ll ia County. I enjoy followin g
my fa vorite former Tribune s purts
wnt l.'r, Jaspcy, &lt;J nd Rio athletics.

Kt•cp up Ihe good work ."

1981 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO
Air, p . windows, AM· FM , Stereo,
Ra lt ye wheels, 4400 mi tes . A r ct ic
whi te.

Mae St. Clair

is, Ohicr-Point Pleasant, W . Va.

Ballot board to draft new language

Bob 's Beat of the Bend

around
th e
cemetery has
deteriorated and
fallen
away
making
a
replacement quite

all

Mid-Valley Pavement, both at
Henderson. He was a member of
the
Operators·Engineers
of
Char lesion .
Funeral serv1ees will be conducted at 1:30 p.m . Monday at the
Beale Chapel United Methodist
Church at Apple Grove with the
Rev. Willillm Banks officiating.
Burial will follow in Beale
Cemetery.
The body will be taken to the
church one hOur a~ead of services.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
after 4 p.m. today.

Ralph Welker
POMEROY - Memorial services
for Ralph Welker, prominent local
businessman, former s t ate
rt;Presenlative and former Meigs
County sheriff, will be held.at 3 p.m.
Tuesday at the Hemlock Grove
Cemetery.
Officiating at services will be Neil
Proudfoot, pastor .of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ, and the Rev.
Father Paul Welton, pastor of the
Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy,
Military rites will be conducted by
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion.
Friends and relatives wishing to
donate in memory of Mr. We lker
may send copp-ibutions for cancer
research to the Meigs County Cancer ~iety, Mtllberry Heights,
Pomeroy.

1980 CHEV. MALIBU
STA. WAGON
Air , V6 engine, driven onl y 9,867

mi les. Immaculate conditon .

$f;995
1979 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO
Air, p . w i ndows, tilt wheel,

controL 60 -40 sea t. Only
m ites . Ext r a Nice.

1981 CADILlAC CPE.
DeVILlE
So ld new in May , dr.i ven only
5,942 mi les. Traded back in on a
new Sevil le. Balance fac tor y war ·

ranty .

1980 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO
Air , cruise, tilt wheel. Rallye
whee l s, only 17 ,4 42 mi les. NicE: .

a quality ca r . Factory air,
·Cassette . Only .26.809
iles. 100% War ra nty .

. 19.81 CHEVEUE

Air , crui se, vinyl top, AM ·FM,
1_2.2 40 miles. Showroom condt ·

1980 CHEV.
CITATION
5 dr . Hatchback, 4 cyl., air cond.,
17,62 4 miles. Was$6495.

1980 CHEV.
MONZA
4 speed, Chestnut brown . Driven
only 5,760 miles. Like New .

1978 OLDS CUTlAss.
SUPREME
Air, cruise control, 60· 40 sea1
bl~ ck with burgundy interior ~
Mmt condition .

.' ~INTO
"
'

HI.., TaiBa
.
.

~

Au1omatic, 4 cvl., poWer steer· ·
ino. new Prem . tires. Warranty . ·

1980 FORD
FAIRMONT FUlURA
Air cond ., cruise control.
I owner. Sharp .

·"J(eigs
' :\{-.:1

$4995
1976 MUSTANG II

TV Mailbag,
page 15

Automati c. AM ·FM, Rear
, 5,141 mile~ . Ex pect the

t•on.

$f;488

$f;195
1978 OLDS
OMEGA 4 DR. ·

1981 OLDS
SUPREME

Red. auto.~ t~al owner, N·~w
Prom tires . Sharp. A Q~lltv _car.
·,

..

''·

a~d
1

Mason Counties
'

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