<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14792" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14792?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T15:41:17+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47011">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/a31f656d954ae7ded9f38c50bae21bd0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>207920a7b1b85d64dafd273b26131676</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47061">
                  <text>Friday, November 13, 1911

rr=======================~Collegesco~s========================~

Waterloo man hurt in auto wreck
A Waterloo man waalnjured in a and his vehicle was severely . - - - - - - - - - - - wreck . in Gallla County damaged, the patrol aalcl.
Thursday night, according to the
ClareDce J. Wllllama, 27, Sllade,
Gallia·Metga Post of the slate high- escaped InJury in 11'lwl lU vehicle
went off the left side of the road and
way patrol.
The patrol said MarVIn J. Rutt, 3'1, hit an embankment while -tilwas northbound on Rt. 775 at !he In- bound on Old U.S. 331n Melga County
tersection with Walnut Twp. Rd. 3at at 8:25 p.m. Thursday. There waa
8:40p.m. when his vehicle went off slight damage to his vehicle.
............ DI hllllfiiiCI.t.-tifvtttl~- fht
The patrol t'eported Karen A. lltniOIIICI,
the right side of the road, came back
~- $ofl:;i::ls:411 ol ........llltA t!IM ~ o1 0110. htr...
Kidd, 18, Langsville, waa cited for ~-UIICICOOf-·- . . ~
onto the road·and then went left.
.,.,, lln~.OIIIt*'tlltt. S..IIICJkabltll~~
The vehicle then struck an em- 1188ured clear distance after she Nar
adlariNd . . . IIICIIIIIII,_tlll~·
. .- · llll . . . . lllfiiiMclll..._ls
bankment and overturned , collided with a northbound vehicle ...............
llr•uiiNII......,.tt•••loiM•0..1M31, I
demolishing the car. RI1tt was not driven by Orin D. Wheeler, 23,
':,:m&amp;.';W.,"'t::
Sit·~"'1\l'lfill~::O'!
5111111
imrne&lt;iiately treated for his Injury, GaUipolis, on Rt. 7 in Galli&amp; County llltts,
IN WlfttE llf:.:IJ. IIIIft ..,_.., d!Kfc..d ,.., • • IN!
the patrol said.
tMICI lft'I'HIIION'I.MitCM!M. OIIIO.IIHidlr Mil dill. "*tf•
at 3:05p.m. Thursday.
l Rlktl,.cl.k.. $upl, rJ _._. ol Olw.
151115151
Wheeler had slowed to make a
The patrol said Paul E. McCarty,
Slatt Dl Ofll:l. ~oi!MrMCe, C'.lflhtllll oiCMrfliMet - rt1e
45, Rl. 2, Pedro, was southbound on turn into a driveway when the wreck ufll!eluped, SI!PeniCinllelll -' lnwMCt vi lilt Sl•t 01 ""· flnrllo
llllt •
Lincoln Pike at 4:45 p.m. when his occurred, which caused moderate umt.s
IT....., , _ N CD tt Hlrltlnl Sl.. ~ l#mechc•t. ~"
c~ild Willi 1t1e InS GllftiS SUCt I...,.. II 11 111!1 !S Mlltlnl'ld
vehicle went off tlie left side of the damage to both cars.
~LI""'' lhtatfrtn! ... kl I"IIAtt II! lhn ... lll..,..raattbulii'IHS II
111$11r~. lts flll..C~I coodltCII'IrS ~lit' b .,......Nitmtnllo
road and hit a tree.
Troopers said Gary L. Smith, 38, hllwe
11m M killoln _Gn Dec:aNitf 31. 1a .tdJIIIIId IUib
.00; l:l,llll•n. $212.t3U03 .to: Surplus: ,
The vehicle was slightly damaged Racine, was eastbound on Meigs UIU•5.356
91.159.025 .00: Inc."~- 1222,901.0SS 00 : hf111dt!Wit"
1
142.195.12$00: Neii:S5ds. SIOO. al9.02$ ~ C1!W1, t .1$0.01)00
and McCarty was cited for DWI.
County 1\d. 35 at 8 a.m. Thursday
IN WITNESS I'IIREtf. l MJt llrf..!IIO tioCic:l'lblcllll, lll!llt filii ,
my uti'~"' di1•M•t CoMniM. Ollrl.lllis Gly anc! llallcbert ,
The patrol investigated a two-car when his vehicle struck and killed a ci!MG
L RHc:h!ofcl Jr ,, Supt. cf ln~llf llll:t ol 011.6.
1$111 6161,
accident In Syracuse Thursday mor- deer on the road, causing slight ,$lite DfOIIIO. DeDitflllelllOIIMIQIICf, CetthCIIitltiCifr.JiiiiiCt - The
UrldriSIIAed, .ifllendfnt tllnsiiii..U l)f lht ,.,~ Obiu, lllrlby'
ning.
damage to his vehicle.
urlihU !tilt
'
,
fUM nltt&amp;CMCOol Bloolfttn...... Sl•ll llillaa. til$
. The report said a vehicle driven by
Carl D. Bowman, 21, Rt. 4, Proc- ITATI
complied wtth tilt llws olthrl Stile . . . . . tl • Mit iiiUitllllltcl
Ralph F. Neigler, 59, Rt. 2, Racine
torville, was northboWid on Rt. 7 in dur1"8 ttl. Cllllffll .,_,Ill' !ll!Md ~ lht!!l•fltJ~••pulie busirla1 ~ :
Mtt~~tt . rt~ flldclll ~~lOIIlS ~ lllf 111 11111111 ttiiiNnt to
backed from a driveway on Second Gallia CouniY at 9:05a.m. Thursday hue
lftn tt illws .. Oetembrr 31, Ill): 1llilliiiiCI ..ts.
.017 .00: b•ll•hl iu. S2.1S0.31UtUO; Sa•piYi,
Street at 7:15 a.m. and c&lt;illided with when a deer collided with his vehicle Sl.OID.Il1
S918.062,0UOO, !~COlle. 12.l1l.IH,J54 00: (lpllld•IIHes,l
Sl .18l.J36.0l .OO: Mel mets . St3o.562.G48 00. C1pit11.1
a westbound vehicle driven by and ·continued (In, The accidert $2.!100.00000
)
IN WITJI(SS WHERE«. I h.a~~e t.1w'*t "'llolcritled "f 111111t Ifill
Delbert 'fl. Teaford Jr., 38, Rt. 2, ca~ slight damage to Bowman's CliMe!
111~ 1UII.&gt;bull11 eclll CclllllllbuS. Ofllll, !filS dly 1114 ~llltl. llobm
l Rlttnlord Jr . s..~ aiiMIII'IIIU or Ohio
(Sell 61(1&gt;
Racine.
vehicle.
Sill!~~ OhtO. ~pillm!nl ot IMUIIIIte. CtniiiCflt Df~- lilt
The accident caused slight
Arthur A. Tobin, 19, Pomeroy, was undtrSIRIItd. Suptmtlendenl or Ins Ill' IIIlA olllll Still ol Oh111.1wlelly•
certtl~ lhll
damage to both 'autos and Neigler westbound on Rt. 143in Meigs Coun- STITt
FAIItM GINEUL 1. . CO al81oon11..~ . Stilt ot ~ ~
~~~ ctmPiit4111'~~ the l&amp;wsof ""' Sl.,etHiitllllt to hlllfiSIUII'!II'iltd
·was cited for failure to yield.
ty at 6:55 a.m. Thursday when his duri~
the Cllflt~l Vfll Ill IIIIISICIIII itllldllltils...,prlm tJwnen oil
N1 fon~ndal to~~dihon 15 lifloolon by ih -llliltllll'llltlll to
Troopers reported Bruce A. Hall, car struck and killed a deer, causing &lt;ni~IIA[f
h~we tftn
lol~ nn Oea!mlllf Jl. IIJIIO: Alllllllllill .st~b. •
23, Spencer, W.Va., Was westbound no damage.
SJ0.2l!UII2.60. llaW-~. $23,604.2&amp;4.00; Sl.ltlll~ ....!65.r.aGO.
lfttome \3J74.10U'(I: . EJpeod•ht•el. $801,638.00; Net ISMis.
. on Rt. 338 in Meigs County at 3:45
The (iatrol said Ethel DeWitt, 60, $661SJ)8
.w cCIIJliiii.$1,150.QOOOO
.·
,
IN WHNESS WH£REOf. I hive htttui'IIO 5ubscnbed 111 Rlllt 1rld1•
p.m. Thursday when his . auto lost Rt. 2, Bidwell, was southbound on cauSO!il
m, sell t~be•lli•ed•t Ccfljmbus, Oho, t-11 dlw 111d d1te. RObel'lt
~16211 ,
control on a curve, went off the left Rt. 160 at 6:15 a.m. today when her l lh1tht01d .lr. Su~l.cllnsuiii'ICt ol Ohio
'
S!l!u f 0!110. Otp1rtment cllnsur1nte. (eftrl~tate ol Com~~wt - Th
side of the road into a field and over- vehicle struck and killed a deer "nde'~llned, Supeunl1!!11k!nll)l'ln!.UJIII'Ice ol the stile ul Oil!l, llereby
urt olot s.f~ll
.
turned.
crossing the road. Her car suffered STAll
FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOitU INI COt4 Bborr11nlll(l.
Statec iiHIIIOil,IIM cam~lellw!lt! the l1wsol lhil SllteiJI)Iable ''''
\
Hall was injured, but not treated, · moderate damage.
lnd ll aJthoum:t dUIIRI the 'U11ent Yfll' It ltlfiUd II fhrl; 51ill ill
approplllfl! business ofiiWIUIICt Oil lilt fllll1111l ...... Is fllllfl(lolil
concti!IIIA IS shhn by lb 1nnu~ slltetntfd to •
-.n •lt~N1 011

=

RIBBON curriNG CEREMONI&amp;'l were held
'l'hui-sdly mol'lllDC to olflclaUy opeD the aew Dollar
General Store located In the former Ben Franklin
bulJdlng on E. Main St., Pomeroy. Cu111ng the ribbon Is
Carmel Sisson, mall8ger uf the Pomeroy Store. On the
lefl Is Bill Parks, operations mariagor of , Dollar

General Stores uf Scotiaville, Ky., and on the rlglll Ia
SaUy Icard, Cbes~, district DI8D8ger. The
ceremonies were attended by Pomeroy Mayor Claren·ce Andrews, Interested Pomeroy boslnes1 people and
Chris CaUicoal who represented the DoUar General
··
Store In Qaillpolls.

Orientation to be

Columbia running·
smoothly today
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)Colwnbia's astronauts, working
aloft "on a day-t&lt;Hiay bosis," flexed
the shuttle's ~emarkable space ann
today for the first time - successfully corripleting a test essential
to future shuttle missions and the
success of this one.
The ship's return to Earth could .
come as soon as Saturday, as late as
Tuesday. A fuel cell failure
thre'atened to shorten the mission
but the ship and its crew were
soaring smoothly and ~afely !57
miles above Earth.
wliatever the length of their
mission, Joe Engle and Richard
Truly were intent on completing a
busy flight plan jammed with ex·
periments.
"The ann is out and working
great," said Richard Truly after
exercising the 5().foot, canadianbuilt mechanical crane. "The
movement is much smoother than it
was in the sims (simulations) .
There's no jerkY movement whatsoever.''
The ann, unable to lift its own
weight on Earth, is designed to
deploy 60,000-pound satellites in

held Nov. 28

'

Members of Drew Webster . Post
39, Am~rican Legion, wbo would like

space. Television pictures showed it
practically waving down at a blue
Earth - an image as fascinating as
the moment of launch.
A camera was perched at the
elbow hinge on Columbia's Remot
Manipulator System - the arm.
This provided a visual tour of the
.cargo bay, showing Mission Control
the scientific sensors taking
readings of Earth.
Another viedo shot showed Engle
- weightless, grinning broadly trying to steady himself in Columbia's middeck while taking pictures.
Engle was asked to photograph
thunderstorms over Australia as
part of a second experiment.

to attenil the field service orientation at Post II, Lancaster, on Nov.
28, at 1 p.m. are to call 992-2913.

Southern yearbooks
may be picked up
Southern High School 1981 year·
books are now available and may be
picked up at the high school from
8:30a.m. to3:15 p.m.

Area d~ath~[

Nora Cross

rites will be conducted at the grave
by The Plains Veterans of Foreign
W

may call at the
I ars. I Friends
h
unera
ome, 168 Morr1s Ave.,
.
I
anytime a ter 2 p.m. Saturday,

Women's Organization, the Eastern r-;::::::;;;;;;=====~~==11

Featured on channel three Satur·
A meeting of the Winding Trail
day night at 7:30 p.m. will be a Garden Club will be held at 7:30p.m.
segment on Meredith Manor School Monday at the home of Alice Thornof Horsemanship. Waverly,W. Va.
. pson with Peggy Crane as cohostess.
The school is operated by Ronald
Meredith 'son of Richard and Mary
Meredith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. It is
reported to be the only accredited Answer five alarms
school in the U. S.
·
Five calls were answered by local
License issued
emergency units on Thursday.
At I: 17 a.m. the Middleport
A marriage license was issued to Emergency
Unlt took Edward
Larry Eugene Spencer, 34, RaCine, Owens from S. Third to Veterans
and Beatrtice Kay Avis , 36, Memorial Hospital and at 4:58 that
Coolville.
unit took Blanche Gilkey from

Club to meet

To meet Sunday

Star and the Garden Club in Racine.
Surviving are her husband, Andrew ; two sons, Edwin of
Chillicothe, and Paul of CQllins,
Ohio; a brother, Clarence Yeager of
Letart j 8 grands00 1 a nd Rita JO Hill
• e, wbom she reared in the
of. Racm
home •
' . WI"II be held 8 t
F UJ1ef8 I ServiCes
1:30 p.m. SWlday at the
. Letart Falls

i"'

U ll

~

-:- ~

.........

r....

L IQich!llrcllr . S...plollmulf!UOIOiwl

!SHI62JI;

·

Slttul 0!110 .i)epKIJwtrttolln~ urlntl!, CerllliUit ofCorn!Hillft - Thtl
=If~::· S.,peu~teodtnt ol lnWllllCt oil~ Sllle o] 011111. '-rei~?

Siockman ...

fll.•
'

hl~e been as !olns on Deeem~~r~ 31. 1930: Allmlltett mets!
SU6,n92.1!82 oa: L••billtiu. I ISU8S ,91• oo: s~r~ln .'
m.903.4112 oa : tnum ~. 1''0 ,26~ . 716 oo: hpuditme!,'
StlU21.XJO.ooHelrtssets.S4 .706.:168.0ilCt~~rt~tst . I();I_S86. oo
IN WITNESS WH(Rf:Of, I hm heltllnto l uhwllbfd my &gt;~~me lllld
CI~&gt;Wdmrmltobellllledlt(;()~mhus. Oh.:~. tflrsd.lrtnddlle_ f!.l&gt;l!!l.
L. Ratcntt~d Jr. s..pt ottnslllllllce or 01wo
!Stat 6411

camot!tdwdhtll!!llor.i~lht!SIIIIIpp!ICI!IIf,t(l.lfllrtao"y.,.t

illfll'!ilftecurrtfii~UIICIIIIISIC!ini!IM;5111!11l . .Qp'llltbwllt1!111
~~~·-e
II~ flflinCI~I cO!Id!IIOn 15....,.., lis .. IIIII[ 5111emenl to
1\lo~ ~A IS ftlow~ IJl OeCfmbei lJ. [91&amp; o\d1111~fd 11wb,
19l': lt4.82600.llillolllln. $64 HJ6.09Uik Surpllts. $2S.D11.1l21JJ;
13079 697
· oo:

~fi.m·
C:C::'s?.~~~·
~ "~·
IN WllNESS WHtRHW'. I llu~ l'ef-~ su!IK11bed rnr Alll'lt in~

l$ci166U

Sll7, JD6J!71 00: l1111k1t1~ 1!11,977 .!11

S.tllilll, Sl6,m,665 00:
»7.s::,.4. 397Dl t•JIIl:nllll:ur6.
.19U05 00: Nt\ 1$Hi ~.
Sl8.1&lt;?9.09 JOO:~III, SJ13l426.00
IN '1\'IINESS 'IWIERf:OF. I hiVII htrtuflllllllbscnbeG Ill\' NM 1M
caultd"''M~ttobutfii.Oatcokl"'bu~. o.,.,. thisN,•n~d•te ROO.rt
L. II1Lthl01~ Jr . Su,t. ol tmunntl: ot 011.,
(SNI66JI
f~t:on'Ml .

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
Take advantage of our special sal.e this
weekend on clothing for you and your fa11JJ.Iy _furnishings f~r ~our home. Visit everv:dt'Pa'rt·
ment - you II hke the selections arid sp.e cial
values.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SPAGHEnl DINNER

I
f

l&amp;

)~

~t:.,~ / ...
~........

.f
~.

\

1

.·. .r '

. . . . "&lt;;$\.. .

..,t_ .

b

..J'.-t.''

~

SHUTTLING HOME - After the space · sbat1le
Columbia touched down safely at Edwards Air Force
Ba•e In California Saturday alternoon, a . helleopter

hovered over the ship. See story and addltloaal pictures on D-ZtoCiay. (APLaserphato).

City's $5.5 million water
plant nearing completion
By KEVIN KELLY
, ~~-, longer tllan ~. and the city il • trouble.
.
Tlm~tlneiSIIIIf
presently nliO!IaUng with the con- .· · "~owmanytlmesinone'sllfeisa
.GAWPOIJS - GaUipolls~ most tractor on liquified damages.
w~ter treatment plant created?" the
ambitious undertaking in recent
The plant structure is 99 percent superlntendomt' 1111111:d. "lt'a almoel
history, the $5.5 miltion James A. finished, although Northup said like the Columbia '- the overrun on
Northup Water Treatment Plant, is what's needed now Is a smaU that was something like three
slowly but surely reaching com- amo.unt of wiring on equipment, ad- years."
pletion. ' .,
justments on the chemical feeders
When the plant Ill operating and
Jim Northup, · the waterworks And aU-around "fine tuning."
handllng an anticipated four mi!Uon
superintendent for whom the plant is
Plant staff have. beei1 involved in gallons of water per dl!y, Northup
named, said F:riday the Cheslnut . the past two wee~ in experimenling and other ciiY offlctals bope they can
Street faclllty is "subslantiaUy com- with the chemicals . used in treat- expand their service and bring in
plete," meaning the plant could be ment. Some water has been more customers, particuhirly
ready for a dedication in another processed and distributed to proepectlve industry and other
five weeks.
customers.
businessea optioninl! the develop"I feel at this time we will have it
Northup said several complaints ment land off Upper River Road and
going full steam," he said.
were received from customers abOut west on U.S. 35.
·
the taste or chemical content of the
The old plant on Mill Creek Road,
The Qrigiruil completion date of water, but he explained the
opened
In 1896, preSently handles 1.7
April 17 was delayed due to chemical testing stopped last week.
miltion
gallons
of water per day and
manufacturer and contractor
The PH content and alkallnlty of
is
being
used
as
thjo backup while the
problema, and by tnid-swnffier of. the water, caused by the testing, was
flcials were hoping the place would responsible for the taste, Northup new plant is eased into exiatence.
When the plant is fully
be operating by early fall. ·
said.
Groundbreakinti on the plant was · "These are normal ·startup operational, the water department
held Nov. 20,1979.
·
problems," he explained. "It's like a will still have the old bulldlns. bot
Jnstallalion of new 'wells on the new automobile. When you first bUy nothing definite has been decided on
city's east end to handle additional it, it's not perfect, and if yqur ser- Its future use. Northup said several
fiow by Moody's of Oayto, took viceman doesn't check It, you're in options have been considered;

\

·~

\ \\ Pendants }

·~with

Pe~~lity. .

RECEIVES PILOT UCENSE - PhyUIB Haekett,
Middleport, reeeillly received ber pUll'• ufollowlq a 14 -~~~ - · Willi PbyUIB Is her Ia-

pendants of
14Kt. gold overlay.
Perfectly
matched to your
own personality.

•

Phyllis Hackett, Middleport, first Iady
to earn pilot's licens~ at Mason A.irport

•

...

By KATIE CROW ·
Tlmn l!leallllel Writer .
MIDDLEPORT - A Middleport
woman has becclme the lint flmlle
·to receive 1 pilot'• ~ 11aee
MaiiJII A1rJiort wall lnlo .-Ice 13
yean 180. Mrl. Gecqt (l'b)illl)
HtocUtt, Sevelllb Slntt, .... campleledall the nee z •'l'~
II to obtain her pllat'alll:eaee IIIII II
blcclnllnll•illll!lllllld pilOt.
Aa' Phyllia
.. ao aptly pula It:. "It has
.

FAMILY RESTAURANT
.

·PH. 992·5432

•'

:~·

supervllor Joe Woodall (left) and Dean. Newman, a
waterworks supervisor, examine the •ludge press In
the Cbestnnt Street bulJdlng.

Pacific Coast hit by
second storm in .2 days

---~---

f

.

. ,

CROW'$
I

'

UISTAINTII.UJ.Y COMPLETE - 1be words •ed
by elty olflelall to describe tbe $5.5 million James A.
Nortbap Water Treatmenl Plaat, whleh obonld be
ready lor fuU operatioo In about five weeks . .Plant

----USE OUR LAY·AWAY PLANt - - -

Expires
Dec. 1, 1981

SYRACUSE DAiRY BAR .
Phone 992·5049

.

.

'
g~• «i:.c.. Wix .,,..,;;;,

lltfeb~

'""'"
'"" .
twtH cnv Fill INS coot "''""uPQios. St111 ot M111nr10ta, 111s

,

\

""'~'''

Shtf.otOilOII. ll!!J"Irlll!nlottnsu~tll(e.tfrhhuteoiClm~~~~~tf-lht'.

IJI(JtfSOCfted. SuPtl1!1ter1tlenl ot lmllltfttt ot lilt Slllt ~OhiO,

I~IU/101tfc ItS founcttl toOdfi.-JA &lt;S S..... Q t., ~1 •tnUII l(d@men111:1
~m ~ IS loilalu C111 O!tftii!JII ~ J!IIO Adftliled USI~.

~

.

~~

'

•''-•"'.&lt;~&lt;-cl&lt;c,'

.,.,

""'k' '" ''' ""' '" .....,.,, """''

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

8

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Any Regular$7.85 Deluxe 15 in. Pizza

Wlth Joe Engle in command and Riehard Truly
beside him, Columbia hit Earth right on time, right on
target: the oil-black centerline on a wide-open runway
at Edwards Alr Force Base in Callfornia's· Mojave
Desert.
.
"The bird is real solid," Engle said just minutes
before landiJI@. · .
He guided the 1116-ton winged spaceship onto runway
23 on expansive Rogers Dry Lake. It was 1:23 p.m.
PST; 54 hours, 13 minutes and 10 seconds after launch
from cape Canaveral.
Croo:Ws cheered "Go" as. Columbia passed overhead,
en route to final approach. Mission Control gave its OK
for "autoland" and computers brought Columbia to the
hard-sand floor.
"It'• a great day for the Ace MOVing Co.," shuttle
communicator Rick Houck said from Mission Control,
Houston. This was the second II( four test flights for the
· shuttle. When the ve.hlcle goes operational, late next
year, it will regularly deliver satellites and other scientlfle cargo to space.
Columbia, the first craft to make a return trip ' to

coot

~Y '/ 1U:JY or Yt,~:l · S/11

Donald (Don) Hooper, 80 , Hooper
Road, Shade, died Thursday. at
O'Bleness Hospital in : Athens
followinganextendedUiness.
Mr. Hooper was born in Athens, a
son of the late Clifford and Bessie

~~,,.til ~ '~'"'.

phell wd~tlllllwsulll'oiSIIIIIpOhc:ablet0• 111Jldoslltbon.!W~ urlllr'
'"'
,.,.,,Its~""
1n~ur•nce,
ftna~c111 t:lllldllrDn ts : hnn bv ~~ 11'1111111 1111en~~t J.
to

dUIHllllittUfle!liY911t\llnSK1 1nlti15S1IIIIt51PIIflll/lllh!bugnenbt

:.t•nu·· ' nv '' ,.

Donald Hooper

&lt;

nMi IHSUIIANCE. CO at M1t•aukee. Sill! of ~nt hiS com '

uNION MNK£RSINSUUNCE
Dill». Stllteotlton, ~n
OOmt!llt&lt;l Wll~ !he II'II'S of tillS Sllle tllflllclllle II ~ Inc\ r; aoll'larillld

~

follow in Letart Falls
Friends may call from 2-4 arid 7·9
p.m. Saturday al Foglesong Funeral
Home in Mason and one bour prior to
services at the church.

35 Cents

space, came borne iike a giant glider, starting descent
an hour before touchdown with a· ~minute burst of
two engines that broke its orbital speed 157 miles above
the Indian Ocean.
. In minutes, the shuttle slowed from 17,345 miles per.
hour to about 16,000 mph and dipped into the upper
edge d the atmosphere where gravity gripped the
vehicle and protective tiles began to glow with .....,ntry
heat.
.
Young and Truly left their weightless world after 36
orbits.
Diving to Earth, her speed decllrung, Colwnbia
passed north of Australis and headed out over the
Pacific. During the hottest part of reentry, temperatures up to 2,700 degrees seared the underside of
the ship, generating ioni2ed gases· that blocked communications between crew and ground for 16 tense
minutes while the ship was over the North Central
Pacific.
The spacecraft dashed out of the blackoilt and zeroed
in oo the desert runway 500miles away.
"You're tracking it right down the line," said Shuttle
Comtnicator Rick Hauck in Houston.
Columbia crossed the California coast north of San
Luis Obispo at 138,000 feet, Its speed now trimmed from
. ~times the speed of sound to 61&gt; times.
··
The ship passed over the central California towns of
Bakerafield, Tehachapie and Mojave before sailing in
over the Edwards' runway at 53,000 feet and ·at the
Continued on A-4

troub!Hhortened flight .

1

L R11thford II., Supt. Ill IMIII'IIII:e ot OhiO

, Itt' W ,, v A mer Ic.l

~e'::e;u

sections, 78 Pages

A Multimedii tnc. Newspaper

By ROBERT UICKE
Alledated Preu Writer
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. {AP) Spaceahip Columbia crowned a busy, bittersweet
mission Saturday, bursting brilliant through Caljfornla
cloudcover to Ita second graceful landing. Touchdown
provided a dramatic desert finale to the shuttle's

ctusft[ mw \NII~bnlti•W 11 ~lt.i1:1bus. Ott.:~, 1M dily Jllddlle.lloblrt'

Sttlecl Ohlll . Ol!patl1'11'11tiii ii\SII I I nO! . Certlfiutto1Cam(lll~nU -1~
uflde~S~ened. Su~~tnnlff1Hnt ot tn$~ance ol the SlJte ot Oh10. tftftbv
""tohe~ tll1t

•om.,_
(" ...,.

11

Sunday, Nov. 15, 1981

Columbia lands
Without a hitch

11. 1910. Ad111ined •swts, $10.ll9.tl4.001 OO. l!lllilllttS.

~~~~~~~================~~:!

.'100
OFF

Micldleport·Pomeroy-Galllpolls-Polnt Pleasant

$5 .669 001.340 1!6. Surplus, ~ . 620 93 I.K&amp; 00. l~'cme.,
SU01.445.1ti.OO. EliPtrWIIIIIH!S. $5.lU.7S .100 00
IN WtlltESS M4(R£ct. I h1ve httfllnto Sllblctllled IIY Rille 1m!

clllst1lmys9ttobeaf~ud•tCctull'lbus .OIIII. Ihltdfly•I'HIIIIIf Rtbld

Dbintt

.. _.J tll!ualfu4
UIWJ

Headley St. to Veterans Memorial Hooper. He was retired from the U.
and at 7:51 a.m. took Rose McDade, s. Anny having served for 24 years
The Meigs County Genealogical S.
Fourth Ave., to the Holzer
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
Medical
Racine
Unitthe
at · World
taking War
part II
in. both
World
War I and
the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave., 2:57
t,ookCenter.
Jack The
Rankin
from
He was
a member
of
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
, Forest Run Road to Camden-Clark
The Plains Veterans of Foreign
Hospital In Parkersburg. T~e
Wars and The Plains AMVET ChapSyracuseUnitat4 :40p.m. took Billy te~urviving ~ his wile, Ruth
Halley from his residence on Graham Hooper; five sons, Pat,
(cont1·nued from page 1)
Thanks•iving dinner of ''wide- Bridgeman St. to Veterans
Houston, Tex.; Mike of Columbus·,
o
Memorial.
mouth has~. foot-in-the-mouth filet,
Cliff, Greensboro, N. C.; Tom, with
stuffed crow ... humble pie with
the U. S. Anny in Nuremberg, Gerscapegoat cheese (and) sour M
many, and Tim, at home; six
grapes."
eets Monday
daughters, Donna Slavin, MidThe Senate's assistant
dleport; Debbie Nelson, The PlainThe Bend 0' The River Garden
Is; Christie Jacks, Syraco•se; JeanDemocratic leader, Alan Cranston
of California, said Stockman should Club will moeLat 7' 30 p.m. Monday
ne Hollingsworth, Greensboro, N.
at the home of Mrs. Wilson Csr·
have quit becai!SO Reagan will great
te M he will
C.; Belle Ohlinger, Mason, W. Va.,
difficulty getting budget pro•rams pen r. em rs
make corn
and Csndi Hooper, Bamberg, Ger"
husk
wreaths.
approved by Congress "as long as he
. many; a slater, ll««hy Gardner,
had in charge of that operation a r;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l
man who has confessed to... loose
talk."
.
lEV fRY MONDAY NIGHr A r
When the question of his
credibility with Congress was put
directly to him, Stockman replied to
reporters: "I can't judge that, but I
would only say this: that almost
anything other than, maybe, an indiscreet quotation ... in ·that article
basically reflects things that I had
Served with
been saying In . our private
Choice
of Salad. Roll
deliberations as well as in public
and
Beverage
conunents."

I
I
I
I
I

Vol , IS No. 40 .
Copyrighted 1981

.

United Methodist Church with the ~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Rev. James Clark officiating~ 1

DINING ROOM ONLY

.....·--·-·--·--·-

Lancaster I and 15 grandchildren.
. "II be beld t 3
S
Servl·ces WI
a p.m. un·
day at the Hughes Funeral Home In
Athens with the Rev. Fred Shane of..
ficiating. Burial will be in the Athens
County MemOry
.
G8fde Rs. Military
,

Nora c Cross 60 Rt 2 Racine
·
' in ' St.· · Anthony's
'
'
died Thursday
Hospita.'l, Columbus.
Born Sept. Z3, 1921, in Point
Pleasant, she was the daughter of
the late Archie A. and Arizona BlanChe Roush Yeager.
She was a fanner, a mem her of
the Letart FaUs Uru"ted Methodist
Church, the United Methodist

Scott Sprague, 18, Tuppers Plains,
appeared Thursday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court before Judge
John C. Bacon for senlencing for a
prior plea of guilty to a charge of
breaking and entering in connection
with a break-in Aug. 'll, at Shenang
Springs Night Club.
Breaking and entering is a felony
of the fourth degree carrying a
possible penalty of not less than six
months nore more than five years in

Plans are being finalized for the
Meigs Alwnrii football game to he
played at the Marauder Stadium in
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. on Saturday,
Nov. 21.
The opponents for the alumni will
be the Meigs Warriors, an independent football league team in
this area a short time ago and
coached by C. D. Mcintyre.
Coaching lhe alumni group are
George Nesselroad, Bub Stivers and
Larry Lemley.
· The game is sponsored by the
Meigs Athletic Boosters with all
proceeds going to the athletic dePf!r·
tment of the high school.
Tickets are S2 for adults and $1 for
students and are on sale at a number
of locations in Pomeroy and Middleport.

tmts • •

1

1

Dr. Mateo P. Dayo, New Haven,
appeared Tuesday before Judge
''Super,'' he said, and went about the John C. Bacon in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to enter a volwi·
task.
tary plea of guilty to a charge of
falsification.
Hospital news
Dr. Dayo has a medical practice in
Middleport and was indicted by the
Veterans Memorial H"'pllal
grand jury in July of this year.
Admitted-Edward Owens, Mid·
Or. Dayo was lined $750 arid
dleport; James Meadows, Portland; placed. on probation for a period of
Blanche . Gilkey, Middleport ; one year. Dayo was represented by
Virginia King, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Attorney Charles Knight
Discharged-Leona Hubbard, Ed- and Fred W. Crow ill, prosecuting
ward Templeton, Florence Musser, attorney, represented the State of
Nellie Price, Marie Dixon.
Ohio.

On TV Saturday

Alumni game Nov. 21

•

.

~~

Georgia ........ 24
Auburn ......... 14

Michigan ....... 28
Purdue ......... 10

Pittsburgh •.•••• t8
Arm.y ••••.· •••••• 0

•

.

Enters guilty plea

On probation

Sprague was given a suspended
sentence and placed on probation for
a period of five years, it being a condition of his probation that he com·
plete an alcohol-drug rehabilitation
program.
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow Ill, representing the State of
Ohio, had recommended a minimum
incarceration of six months.

Ohio State ...... 70
Northwestern .·••. 6

l!o

Meigs County happenings., ..

prison.

I

Clemson ........ 21
Louisville • , •• , . . . 0

I.

'••

' •'

'

.

been quite a challange," while cin the

ather band her inllructor, Roaald J.
Drowllln&amp;, Pomeroy, aya Phyills
lita been i "very lood and dedicated
stu:tent..''
·
It toa11 Phyllia 14 montlw to camplete tile COIII'Ie. 'l'llll iloeluded 20
hGurl ollnltnlcUon and 20 boura of
BOlo.W\li'IL In the IO!o wmt na a 10
haur
~ flllhl, I ~Jtal of
IIIII mllellhal had to be llewn In 100
mllelep.

en.

On her flnl300 mile flight lhe ran
Into bid -!her between Wheellag,
W. Va. IIIII . Urbana. It waa
•ery for her to make a
decltdGa, wblcb lhe did, tllld luded

'*

Newwk. lbe can11ctec1 the
wlllhlr iidvllor and fOUDd lhlt she
could mUt It biiDe ~Mad of the
sllirm.
Her _ . . lllkllle flillt ....
frllmPolat ~to WIIHllng and
ContiDDed 1111 A-4
'
Itt

By The Auoclaled Preos
Winds reported gusting to 100 mph
blew down a doun redwood trees
and whipped the Pacific Coast in the
second major stonn in two days
Saturday. while parts of the lower
East Coast were battered by gales
and high tides. One person . was
· killed in a storm-related aceident,
officials said.
Flooded roads, powerless bomes
and daJnaCed property were !ell in
the wake ol the storms Friday that
streldled frllm nortbern California
to Oregoo and Inland to ldabo, and
!rum VIrginia to Florida In the East.
. In Wuhlneton, a •year-&lt;~ld man
was killed.after high winds blew a ·
tree a~ the power line leadln8 to
his Maury llland home, pollee oald.
"It caUHd his power to go out,''
. said lilt FCII'I'IIt lnllee. "He went
outside with his wife and 1tlelopted
to move tbe wire with a stick or a
pole tllld came In contact with the
wire tllld -elec:trocufed."
Tile Cout GIIII'CI upended a
illlrdl for tft whole boat
broke apart In lllomly liU olf Silo- Belich, Calif., Tbundly and for
1man IIIII at-In
the oune
clay olf Olk llland, N.C.
Tile J1II)UillalnOUI tldea on the East

a-

v

.

1

\

Coast were pushed inward by gal&amp;force winds and caused major
erilsion at beachheads and at the
historic Cape Hatteras Ught House

off North carolina.
Friday's wind gusts arCund Boise,
Idaho, reported to be up to 100 mph
Continued on A-4

Inside today•..
·Area deaths ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A-G

Bllsinesl

0

I

0

I

I

I

I

I

0

I

0

I

0

I

I

I

0

0

I

0

I

0

0

I

0 0

0

0

0

I

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

1

oj

0

E-1

Clauifled • • . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • . . • • • • . . D-3-7
Farm •......••••..••••.••••..•.•••............... E-2
l.lfestyle
B-1-8
o o o o

(Mal ••••

0

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

•••••••• 0

I

I

0

•••••

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

•••••••••••

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

o o

I

o o o o o o o o

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

A-.5-8

•

Sta.te-NaUoual •••.•••.••••••••.••••••••••••.••••• "n-1-2
Sports •• ' ..•••
I .~
I.
0.
C-1-8
0 • • 0 • • • • • 0 • • -: . I

Take-One

I

I I

li I I I 0 I 0 I I

I

I

I

I ;

I

I

I

I

I •••

0 •••••

I

I

I ' I

I I , I

.. I

I

0

I

I

••••

o o 0 0 I o

Insert

Extended forecast, state weather
Mostly sunny today~ Highs In the low tltlo. Chance of precipiiation
nearzeropercent. Windssoutheaaterly!OII)PI!tonight . .

ExteadedOhloF~t-M~throutlhWedneaclay: Fair
weather Monday and Wednellday. a.nee ollhowua Tuesday. Highs
5WO Monday and In the upper 4111 to the lllld-60e Tuesday and Wedr-say. LOwa In the 301.
...

�.·

.

.

Nov. 15, 1911

r

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipqlis, Oh io- Point Pleasant, w . va.

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Paqe-A·3

Get rid of the generals?===========Bo=b=m==ag==
·m=an

WASHINGTON - There is bound federal deficit for fiscal '&amp;:! could be
to be some naval signal that a flag- held to $45 biUioo; interest rates
ship sends to other vessels In a fleet · would subsi~ to a prime of 14 J!el'Hold to your course. Or, steady a&gt; cent by year's end; the unem·
you go. Or, keep close in line. ployment rate would not exceed 7.8
Whatever, Mr.Jieagan needs to run percent; we could anticipate ,,
budget surplus of $500 million i·
op some flags.
Pressures are growing on the 1984.
Now it appearS that the '82 deficit
· president. They come from sue!"
junior officers as Budget Director may reach $90 billion; interest rates
David Stockman. They come from are still high; unemployment la&gt;l
his Capital Hill exec, MajOrity month reached eight percent; and
Leader Howard Baker. They come · the goal of a balanced budget by 1984
fr&lt;m committee captains in the has been abandoned. Automobile
senate and from ranking lieutenants sales are stagnant; the construction
in the House. The pressures are aU industry lags desperately; Midto· the same effect: Don't just sit western farmers are in deep trouble.
there, Mr. President. Do something! Even the hattie against inflation.
Subject to a few reservations, this which had seemed to be going so
is . the worst possible advice that well, now seems to be slowing.
might be given the president just
Mr. Reagan's task at this critical
now. When · it comes to taxes, jurlcture is to cast himsell in the role
dclicits, budget reductions and of Horatio Hornblower on the bridge.
economic indicators - the whole C. S. Forester's legendary admiral,
g-8thering stonm of bad news- the you will recali, calmed his officern
president has to hold fast. He cannot by insisting on a few hands of whist
vacillate now.
and a good night's sleep before
Heaven knows the ne ws is had. Six engaging the enemy in the morning.
months ago, the president, his Hornblower had a key word in times
· budget director and his Tn•asury of ·crisis. The word was ' 1&amp;hsecretary Were all talkinJ.! l'IIU- hrnrnrn. ''
That is the word we need now, and
fidently of the economicfcii!UI'c. The
"

junbaJJ1t'imts - itntintl
A~

· A Division of
~m~ f""T""1....~-r• r'""T"'E5!c:::lt-==t

.

"qlv
8%5 Third Ave., Gallipoli5, Ohio
(614)446-ZW

Ill CourtSL, Pomeroy, Ohio
(614)992-2156

ROBERTL. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
E&lt;ecutive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

AMEMBER of The A811oelakd Prest~, Inland DaUy PrH!l AliMoelaUoa and the Americu
Nnrspaper Publlllben A•rwcU.Uoa.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION 11re weleoaaed. They should be Itt• tbla300 vrordllloag. A.U
k!Hen1 are Nubj~t lo editing 111d muYI be sig!Wd with n~~rnc, tddre~~s and telephODe
number. No uDIIIgtJed ld&amp;en wiU be'pgbiMted. Letten ~hwld be Ia Rood tule, addrel•iq
ISJ~un, oot penonaUUn.

Sense, cents and nonsense.
By LOWELL WINGETT
President Ronald Reagan and I have had a rough time this last week. I
have had the flu and Reagan has had Haig, Allen and a few other problems.
Perhaps he would have preferred the flu.
· .
General Alexander Haig has never been very popular with the "in"
group at the White House. His appoinlmenl and conlirmatlon as Secretary of ·
State was never e)lthusiastically approved. Whatever support he had among
the president's close advisors was quickly eroded wben he declared himself
as "Vicar of Foreign Polley," whatever that means. When Prestdent
Reagan was shot March 30, Hsig hurried to the Oval Office and on national
television declared he was "in charge." That cooked his goose wtth everyone
except the president.
·
Richard Allen, who was temporarily dropped lrom the president's campaign committee before the election because of some alleged financial
·finagling in the Ford Administration, was brought back into the fold ~~er the
election as National Security Advisor. There has long been compebtlon between the security advisor and the state department but in this case, it has
been more virulent than u.!ual. Allen's office is close to the president and he
has ready access to the presidentlal ear.
.
Ulsl week Washington Columnist Jack Anderson wrote a colwnn
quoting "White House sources" saying Haig would soon be out on his fanny .
Haig had information on the impending publication and called President
Reagan asking him to intercede with Anderson, persumably to preswne the
column. Anderson; on ABC's NighUine, said the president had called him but
gave no details. Perhaps you read the Anderson column on November 4.
When Reagan called Haig and Allen in for a showdown, Allen claimed he was
not the '' White House source" but the couple were sternly warned, "no more
feuding." It was reported in newspaper headlines the next day.
To us here in the United States it is a matter of little importance, not
even a tempest in a teapot. But not so in Europe. More and more, overseas
our image as the ugly American is growing. We are more to be feared than
the Russians since President Reagan spoke to a group of editors of a
"limited nuclear conflict." Our gigantic military buiJd.up, Reagan's
decision to build the neutron bomb, Haig's statement the U. S. ns con·
sidering firing a "demonstration" nuclear missile and Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger's hazy denial aU have compounde,d the mistrust with
which we are viewed by our NATO partners. That makes confUcts between
our top diplomatic and defense leaders vitally important tO the entire world.
That was not the only thing that was bothering the president last week.
The unemployment figures for October wef1! released. Wlth unemployment
figures standing at eight percent and prime interest rates still above 17 per·
cent, credit buying increased sharply during the month. This was a warning
that inflation is still with us and will be reswned at an alarming rate If interest rates are lowered. High interest (light money) will stop inflatlon only
if we persist in it until business collapses and unemployment reaches the
point of no return. it is easier to get into a depression than out of one. I've
been there!
Herbert Hoover led us into the Great Depression because he was relying
on the rugged individu.alisrn of the 1880s to solve problems of the 1920s. He
was wroog and we had the soup Unes to prove il Ronald Reagan believes in
free enterpriae which might have worked in the 20s and 30s but will not work
in the 80s. This is the electronic age and solutioos of 50 years ago or even 20
years ago will faD. But the administration still maintains it will go il8 own
way just as Herbert Hoover did. Private enterprise, no matter bow free, cannot make 118 way without goverrunent help and guidance. We are now a
•lobal economy. It's no accident that GM's greatest competitor is not Ford
butToyoto.
"Taxes" in this administration has beconne a dirty word. Now when they
speak of raising taxes, they ca,U It "revenue enhancement." Robert L. Heil·
bromer, author and ecooomics lnatruetor at the Graduate Faculty of Tbe
New School has this toaay about "revenue euhlncement:"
·
"TUM are not jllll dead weights. They are the means by which a 10eiely
gathers Its ..-urea for public~- They are the way we pay for.our
defenae, ed~tion, roadl and I'OIIdbeds, and rG111ng stock, clean streets,
poBcemen, water IIIIJIP'Iea, public housing, decent prlaon cella and old-age
.assistance and apport. Ia there anyone wbo would like to claim that we spend
enough far Ill
JIUI JIOIIll?"
·
·
"The trouble, accor-dlni Ill the.Reagan people, is that we cannot aRord to
tax and apend a larger ~tqe of our 1"118 natlooa! product. Funny,
Wes!GermaDY can. Canada can. JIUtaboutevery European country can. Of
course publlc spendll1fl can be wasteful. So can private spending. b it
wUteful If the New York ll'llllpOrUiion ~ lddl now 00., but now it
Dilne)'llnd does? bIt a li&amp;D cllllr'tllllth If we add fiiWGod aperatianiiD tbe,
private aector llul IUe any flllllllianlpiiD the public leCtor. Ia It be1ter to
'
tbanllltrateaaldl..-.'"
.
to I'ICOI't1'lnt from the nu and
Reapll will CO t.ctto drlvtrwtbe aldl(l'llyman or !he model T.

fortunately, tbal is what we are
hearing from the .White House. The
president will zig not, neither wiU be
zag. be will not countenance any
change in the tax reductions
promised for the next two fiscal
years. He wiU suffer whatever
deficits these coming months' may
bring. He remains calmly confident
that in time his program will work:
It will stimulate production,
generate greater revenues, diminish
inflatl011 and provide for essential
federal progr!lfllS. Steady as you go!
I am reminded in this regard of a
cooversation some years ago with
the late Justice John Marshall
Harlan. We were talking of some
line of decisions thai he lllBMestly
disliked but n011etheless accepted.
Why not dissent? It is ~ometimes
more important, he told me, that the
law be fixed than that the law be
"right." This is the case with Mr.
Reagan's program of economic
recovery. In retrospect, I might
wish tbat individual income taxes
had been lowered by just enough to
offset increases in Social Security
taxes, and that his !Jix program had
reduced taxes mainly for business.
We'd be $22 billion better off this

'

.

year and $81 blllioo better off nell

trwnpet sound a certain sound. Jim-

year.

my C'arter's problems - oae cl hill
problema - wu that he rarely
presented an imal!e of steadfaat,
decisive leadership. In his energy

But the Important thing right now
is for Mr. Beagan not to waffle. This
is the ~nee of leadership, that the

· WASHINGTON (NEA) - Rep.
Les Alpin has been a critic of the
Pentagon and ita spending pollcleo
lor the decada that be has served in
Congress. The Wisconsin Democrat
a former economcia professor wh•·
did hill military duty as a Pentag011
budget analyot, always Hn~ ready
to sugg~ to our senenis and Hrnirals botv they can save money
without weakening national defense. ·
Now he has a suggestion for
Defense· Seuelary Caspar WeiJt.
berger oo how to save the $2 bllllan
that the adminialratloo is trying to
trim from lhl! fiscal 1982 military
budget. This ~I - like manr
of Allpin'searllerones- ia not likely
to meet with much enthusiuJnla t the
top levels of the Pentagon.
·
His idea is to reduce the number of
militarybrass. .
I
"The name of the game is to find
cuts in the defense budget that do not
hurt our abilitY Ill defend our country," Aspln aays. "Cutting back on
the number of offlcers is a great
example. In fact, if we make these
cuts we Will probably Improve our
overall defense capability."
Aspin cites atatistlca to show that
the officer corps has grown too
large, eapeclally at the top ranks.
For example:
- At the end of World War II, the
Navy operated 15 ships for every admiral. Today there are t.wo ships per

program. for one eumple, he bad a
way cllleering wherevet the wiada
• blew blm. HlllecJPative lleuhMnta
seldom lmew when to make 1111 and
when to run out the guna.

boss."

"Those I!U¥S sbould have never
gone out on strike. They cut off their.
noses to spite their faces."
"I like a President whO hangs
tough. What IInne does your plane
leave for Rochester?"
"Midalght. My flight to Dallas

.

)

staffs."

Canal

for many of ~ drastic cuta · in
federal social programs if cor·
porations and individuals would pay
the government what they owe.
To his credit, President Reagan
has at least recognized the problem
- which was ignored by his
predecesaors. On paper, the administration's response looks
promising. Presidehtial directives
have stressed the importance of
timely debt collection, and..-!)1951.
federal agencies have appointed·
collection officers to concentrste on
the problem.
.
But it is a herculean task. The
House Budget Committee's projections have assumed that only about
$4 billion of the huge bad-debt total
- whatever it is at this point - will
be collected in the current fiscal
year.
In fact, budget experts have told
my associate Tony Capaccio the
collectioo battle may already have
been lost, thanks to decades of
neglect. These sources say that
many of the uncollected debts have
become uncollectable.
The. most important thing now,
they argue, is to adopt businesslike
procedures that will close the door
on deadbeats in the future. Much of
the current debt may have to be
written off, but at least the sltuatlon
would be brought under control If
agencies can be persuaded to be
more aggressive in their collection
efforts.
Unfortunately, a radical change in
bureaucratic habits is a prerequisite
to any successful approach: The
same "it's-not-my-money" attitude
that leads to colossal waste and cost
overruns has also permeated the

WASIUNGTON (API- All's well
at the Panama Canal, where
\....--business is booming.
That is the word from the administration of Ronald Reagan, once
govenunent policy. The jobs are the most · prominent foe of the
going because profits are gooe. It's 'treaties that relinquished U.S. connot President Reagan, "Mr. Non- trol of the Panama Canal ZOne and
sense." It's your chickens coming will yield the waterway itself at the
home to roost.
end of the century.
Anyone with·a dollar left over af·
The issue was settled before
ter working his head off to gel it is Reagan got to the White House, and .
seemingly the embodiment of greed, it has faded now. There was a time
chicanery and political intrigue.
when Reagan audiences used to wait
What I would like to !mow is what for the guaranteed applause tine:
the professional squawkers are Tbe canal is American, b!&gt;ughi and
doing to help the situatlon they paid for, and ought to be kept. It was
proclaim to set: so plainly in their . a show-stopper at Reagan rallies in
crystal ball? I don't think they are 1976, a conservative issue long alter
doing anything. Working? Never. that.
' Tbey are reposing in their makeBut the conservatives lost. The
believe world of socialism.
canal treaties were approved in
Gayle Price 1977, and the zone was delivered to
Portland. Ohio Panamanian sovereignty on Oct. I,

bureaucrats' views on debt collec- thenn. The Department of Education · .
tion. The whole machinery of has $2.2 bUllon in overdue debts; the
government is geared to spending Small Business Adrninlllralton $2
billion; the Health and Hwnan Ser- ·
money, not taking it in.
The big exception to this ir&gt;- vices Department, $1.8 bllllon;.
stltutionalized inertia is at the Ir&gt;- Agl'iculture Department $1.3 billion;
temal Revenue Service. Yet here Howiing and Urban Development; .
the administration's economy $906 million; Veterans Ad·
mea$ures. are • strangely counter- ministralton, $852 mUUon, and the
productive. There is at least $1~ Labor Department, $821 million. ·
billion in unpaid faxes outstanding,
Auditors have told me that more
walling ooly for the IRS bird dogs to aggreosive collectioo efforll could ·
Hush out the cheaters. ·
do wonders in some caaea. The' .•
The answer here, obviously, is a Education Department, they
beefed-up collection staff; ex· estimate, could recover 88 much as
perience has shown that for every 80 percent of its delinquent ICCOUIIta
dollar spent on collection efforts by .... moetly in student 1011118 - if the
IRS, about $20 is recovered for the agency would undertake a deter·
Treasury - an investment return mined crackdown.
that should appeal to a business- • But there are problems: Attempts
oriented Republlcan adminiatratlon. to turn delinquent aeeounts ovar to
but with surprising short· private collection agencies
sightedness, the president's penny· operating on COOIJJlisslon would
pinchers have cut back the collec- require disclosure of the debtor's adtors.
dresses Ill the · private flnns.
Reflecting the longstanding Congress would be reluctant to apbureaucratic boredom with debt prove mch an opt1011 becaule of
collection; the $139 billion deadbeat privacy-invasion Problema involved
deficit, staggering as it is, actually and the poeslblllty for abuse.
minimizes the true situation. An
in a.nothei area, bllllons of dollars
analysis prepared for Rep. Jim
would be lmpoealble to collect for
Jones, D.Okla., states: "Un· political reasons: For esample, the
fortunately, these gloomy stalislica bulk of the $1.8 billion OWDecl to HHS
are materially understated, because COII8ists of overpayments to SupU. ~counting systems of many plemental Security Income,
agencies do not provide accurat.e in- disabillty and old-age trust fund
formation on receivables, expected beneficiaries. No administration '. ·
losses and wrlleoffs."
would put itaelf Ia the pGIIIIIan of._. · ··
In short, the bureaucrats doo'l tractlng money from the nation's
know bow much is owed to their neediest cltlzena to atraighlen out
agencies~ and they don't especially
the goveriunent'aown mlalakas. ·
care.
Clearly, the JIIOII-.Ible solution
Some agencies do ·report oo their to the deadbeat deficit·is pnventtan
delinquent accounts, even if they - loctlng the Treuury door before
don't do very mucll about collecting the money filtera away.

them========Arl=B=uc=hwa=ld ...
'

takes off at six in the morning."
portatlon isn't going to take any flak
"Are you a Commie or
"You're lucky, you have only four from those guys on the pid&lt;et line," I something?" I IBid engr14t. "What ·•
hours to walt. I have-en."
saki. "Your wile work?"
kind of aignaJ do you think !hat
"lt'a a amall price to pay for
"She'1 a stewardea," the bat- would live to the Rusalanl if he
showing the air controllers they tender-pilot said. "She was laid off, showed . he was 80ft on air con·
~
couldn't violate the taw ol the land." too." He thell went over to a man trOners?"
"You can lay that again. I don't sleeping in a chair and woke him , "U they P,.rdooed NixOn they can '
care if I ever get home as loog as the rougbly. "Look, Mac, how many pardon the air cantrql[en," he aalll.
air cantrollenl bave been taught a tlmea have I told you you cu't Bleep
"There's alwaya one bleedlnv
lesson."
,in here. Now jlet out before I kick hear! in a bar," 1 IBid. "rm glad
"Bartender, L'll have another one, your butt."
·there's no one in the Reagan ad11
and don't forget the lemon twist thla
WhoWU that?" ·
ministrallan who il thiDking In tertime.'""
"He's an air controllers~. ms cllllUleSiy."
1
'Sorry,'' the·bartender said, "I'm Every lime he geta a break, he
"You can aay thel again," my "
new at this job. rm really a pUot. I -down here and tries to catch a friend agreed. "I hear we'll have
was laid off bec:IWI8 ol the air con- few ·wfnka before goes op to the eJIOU8h air controllera by , . lo
trollers llrite. Now jull when I'm tower again."
resume nonnal flight operaUoos
getting the hang .cl a.rtendlng, I'm
"That'a nervy thing for a IUY to llllain-"
going to be laid olf here."
do," I IBid. "You would think a IllY
"I can walt," I said.
"How come?• mY friend asked.
rould· work in a tower for 12 hours
"I'D drink to thet," my friend on ·
"Not enciugh people 111 the alrpori. without gettinl!lleepy."
the next stool said. "You let one air
The lllghts have been cut down by 75
"You know what?" a man a few CQitroUer retum, and they'll aD
percent. All the concesslonnalres IIIOola down the bar IBid. "I think air waul to.came beck to work. Befare '
are going broke."
controllers made a miltllke but he you knOw .it, we'd have radllr
"Well, someone has to autfet to fcqlvea them, and if they ·want to screenalil over the country lllllllllld ·"
show that the llepartmept of Trans- come back~ work they can.''
by cr.imlnala."
..

Our esteemed author of "Sense,
Cents and Non-sense" evidently is
waiting for a political Santa Claua
which he seems to believe is wailing
just around the corner. I wish it were

true.
I ·can't see where the money is to
come from to create the utopia you
hint is just over. the horizon. According to your colwnn all that we
need to do is to get rid of the
President and Big on. This cbuntry
is not only broke, it is drowning in
red ink. Print money? Yes. Worthless money. We already have money
and can't afford to buy things.
The business man (both big and
small) has been taxed, regulated,
villified and "big labored' out of
existence or killed off by deliberate

1979.

prophecies haven't come

items are being h8ndled through putting out fires and attempting to He wrote to Reagan and to Secretary
normal diplomatic cllannels.
create stability elsewhere iii Centrsl of State Alexander M. Halg Jr. He
One point tbat irks Panama is that and Latin America."
got replies from Richard Fairbanks,
the canal co(IlJIIission, which will
Cannon had asked tbe While the aSsistant secretary of state who
opj!rate the waterway untU Panama House and the Stale Department for deals with CongresS. Fairbanks
takes it over in the year 2000, is an an appraisal of the canal situation. repurts that everything is fine.
U.S. government agency. Jimmy
Carter proposed creation of an independent corporation, but
Congress decided otherwise.
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' -"-Theoretically, the canal is under r - - - - - - - -- -SlORE HOURS:
. ~1joint control, but the'United States is
the senior partner. The commission
Man.·Thurs. 9 am Iii 9:30 pm
· is run by a boord comprised of five
Fri.-Sal 9 am til 10 pm
American and four Panamanian
members. What's more, it takes all
~;-;;
a.DSED SUNDAYS
live U.S. representatives to form a
~Ci
uantities--------..t.
quorum, no matter how · many
-we · are now taking
Panamanian members are oo hand.
orders for FRESH
Nothing has happened to validate
dressed Turkeys from
the claims of treaty oppooents that
Eddie Lewis Farm.
the Panamanians might cozy up to
Once .YOU'Ve tried a
Fidel Custro or other communist
FRESH turkey YIIU
regimes, and 'that militants could
won't settle for
disrupt ciperatloo of the canal once
a Frozen one.

TAVERN
HAM

69

Ravenswood Plaza
North of Traffic li!jht in the Shoppin!l Center.

SPECIAl TV SANDWICHES
&amp; PLATTERS

FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT

Here is one taxpayer that stands
behind the volW&gt;teers and the sheriff
and deputies 100 percent.
I feel·the commissioners are not
for the people of Gaitia County, by
financing an undependable E.M.S.
service ~d not sopporting a dependable aervlce like the Gallia County
deputy lherilla.
..
Barbara Brown
Rt.4,Gallipolis,Ohio

• Giant 6 Foot Movie Screen
e Video &amp;.Pinball Game Room

CARRYQUJ

Cinema
Family Restaurant
Ravenswood Plaza

ORDERS
PHONE:
~

27;r5151

1 Large Drink

FREE .

With Each Meal
Coupon Expires 11 ·22·81

O.HIO VALLEY BANK

TAX-FREE.

ALL
*......

10.77«%.
tax-free ..

I 2 71 7...1 _.,..tty IW ,.......turt

SUIDAY MA'IIIEEi 2.PM

..'

THE CINEMA FAMILY RESTAURANT

Minimum Deposit: $500

011£ SliM AT I Pll

tru~·

WELCOME TO

Rate Efkaive thru Nov. 28, 1981

FOX·aid .the HOUIID

"We could make the!le savings - '
with no loss · ol military ef·
fectlveneso. In facl we could
probably increase effectiveness."

r----~~~===-=J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;~;~;~~

trsiiSport herI, as
not an
emergency.
as ita was
taxpayer
of
Qallla County, would like to know
since when the E.M.S. rould say this
wasn't an emergency after the doctor infonned us it was!
I feel, as a taxpayer, that we
should not have to depend oo the
Point Pleasant Squad to do a Gallla ·
County E.M.S. job!
. If the GaUia COIIJIIY E.M.S. cannot
do its job the way II should be done, ·
then they should ~~- lts doors, and
let someone else do it for thenn. I
think It is time lor the people &lt;1
GaUia County to wake oip. Why
should we pay taxes fiJI' a aen.ice .
tha~ when we need it we can' l
depend on that service.
I only hope that my family never
needs to call the Gallla County
E.M.S. again.

ClntCl

savings in retirement obligetlons,
the long-range ll8vings would be
even greater. ,

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

On the Gallia E.M.S.
I am writing this letter to let the
people know how our Gallia County
(financed) E.M.S. works and how
wecandependonitsservlces.
On the 5th of November Holzer
Medical Center called the E.M.S. to
have my mother transported to Huntlngton for a cat scan, as they
needed the test read the same day as
it was done. The E.M.S. informed
the' . hospital that they could not

~ when you count in the potential

The worst-case prophecies of cor&gt;- the surrounding zone was
servatives who called the deal a relinquished by the United Stales.
dangerous giveaway have not .come
"The administatlon's position is
to pass. There has been some fric- · that the treatles are working out
lion between the two governments well," said Sen. Howard Cannon, ().
over innplementatlon of the treatleo,
Nev., "and the situation in Panama
but nothing major.
·
is of no alarm or concern to the
The administration saY. those executive department, which is busy

Wlult's so bad... ?
What is so bad about job security? woulllfeel? i hope \hey come to their
I think every · person wants job senses before some one gets killed.
That would be a terrible way to get
security.
.
If Mr. Niday, Mr. Saunders and the law back on the road. There are
)llr: Burger were livlng out where lots worse things than job security.
they don't have any law protection, I
They are not asking for money,
would feel real sorry for them as it is only security. They say Jim Mont·
not funny to get your door kicked in, gomery wasteq a lot of money. He
robbed and knocked around - even had extra expenses like transporting
take your telephone so you can't get prisoners back and forth and he
wasn 'I the only one to blow the
any help.
,
I am sure if it was the corn- money.
He didn't get aU be was supposed
missioners' old folks, lriends and
neighbors that ~ere getting broke in to in the first place so how can you
on they would wani something done spend money that you don't have?
Rosa Miller ·
about it.
Rt. 2, Crown City
Just suppose I was holding the ·
ace, like they are, wonder how they

level it was during World Warn, we
could save $1100 million annually.
Multiply that by the three services,
and it comes to nearly $2 billion.
'

give~away

1

·To our esteemed author

u-

~~~=u-wardl. ruco t.d

management (903) than in infantry
COIM18nd (138) and more Be~t
colonel donlisls ( 21M) than lieutenant
colooelair.&lt;Jefense speriallsls (223).
1OffiCers do not neceasarily work in
tbeir field of apeclallzalion.)
"If you could siiOQI down Russian
aircrafl wllh dental drills, the ArmY
would be in great shape. And if Harvard Bus!Mu School methods won
battles, we would have nothing to
worry about."
Because there · are so few command shots and so many lieutenant
colonels, says Aapin, the Anny has
invented thousands of make-work
posi\ions for these officers to fill.
What's worse, he adds, is that this
excess of officers has hurt the Ar·
my's abUity to wage war.
"Since the army has 13 co!O]lels
(, 'r ever)' conunand position, it has
shuffled corruruinders through bat·
taiioos very rapidly ~ as often as
every seven months," he says. ltBut
combat effectiveness is dependent
upon trust between commanders
and their subordinates. Someone
wbo is tbere only seven months
doesn't have time to build that trust.
"U the Army cut back the percentage of officers in the Ioree from
its present 1 percent to the 7 percent

- Tile Anny had 3;8'16 soldiers per
genenl in IM5. Today . there are
1,843 r'M·... per general.
- At U. end of World War II, an
Army ..,..U etll1lllllllded at least
one clvislon. Today there are nine
generala stationed in Hawaii ' but
ooly ooe divlalon.
. Alpin aays that cutling the number of ,_-ala llld lldmlrals back to
World War U levela "could save at
least . . mllllon a year JUII in com·
petiu...""
.
"llul tlat wwld be just the beginnine," he •ya. "because eve r~
general and admiral has a head·
quarters and a staff. Cut back on the
numbir of· generals and. you could
eliminate these headquarters and

Letters to the editor

We socked .it to
I was sitting in a bar in O'Hare
Airport killing lime, and struck up a
conversatlon with the man on the
next stool.
4
'Yourplane been canceled, too?''
"Yep," he said. "I was going to
Dallas. Now they've routed me
through Rochester, N. Y. Where you
going?"
"Washington, by way of Montgomery, Ala barns. I guess this air
controllers business is catching ·up
with all of us."
"It seems to be. But t think
Reagan did the right thing, not letting the!Jl come back to work."
"You can say that again," I said.
"He sure showed thenn wbo was.

materiel management (1,148) than
in artillery (547), more In peraonnel

Aspin contends that it is not only at
the '·very top that the command
structure is bloated. In 1945, for
ex8mple, the Navy had 3,876 captains for 5,718 ships; today it has
3,778 captains butoulyt64ships. And
the Anny now has more than 11,000
lieutenant colonels but ooly 842 command spots'for them to ill.
"The Pentagoo bureaucracy has
built an army that is loaded with
managers but few fighters," says
Aspin. "We have more lieutenant
colonels specializing in computer~
(481) than in commanding tanks
admiral.
- Tbe 1Jr Force flew 198 aircraft (413), twice as many specializing in

Deadbeats should
get the squeeze========Ja=ck=An~ders=on
WASHINGTON - A harried
President Reagan is turning tbe
federal budget inside out to find the
savings he needs to run the government, without altogether plucking
the taxpayers like Thanksgiving
turkeys. Yet billions upon billions of
dollars are owed to the Treasury; all
·the president has to do is order his
minions to collect it.
But unhappily, !he collection of
delinquent accounts, overdue taxes,
unresolved audit claims and other
bad debts has · always had a low
priority in government agencies.
Bureaucrats are far more en·
thusiaslic about spending the
public's money than they are in putting~ squeeze ondea(!beats.
·' They would rathe"r hihp the faith'ful taxpOyers for more revenue than
bother to collect from the unfaithful.
Result: Americans of easy virtue
are learning that if they owe the
government money and drag their
feet, there's a good chance they'll
never have to pay op.
It has been one of my private
crusades to call upon federal agen·
cies to collect what is already owed
them before coming to us lor more
money. Consider tbese flgures: According to government auditors, the
amount legitimately owed to Uncle
Sucker totaled at least $24 billion as
of Sept. 30, 1979. One year later, the
figure had skyrocketed to an incredible $139 billion. There's no
telling what the total had risen to by
September 30 of this year. But It's a
cinch the figures haven't shrunk.
With the 1982 budget deficit now
being projected at $100 billion, the
government's lackadaisical altitude
toward the "deadbeat deficit" is
scandalous. There would be no need

per ...._..r at the end of the second
world war. Today there .... 30 air·
craft per general.

'

U.·... t1.11i · lw

IM!YidUIII, up 10

~ llllellll ""'"'"·

' Bank--

Red or Golden Delicious

APPLES
3Lb.
!Sa !I

894

u.s. No. 1
20 Lb.
Bag

F
Cooked
Canned

HAM
$789 5canlb.

·with. coupon
;Good only 11 Barr•• Ekp. 11-21-tl

----~~~------.-

I

.JI

�'
Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohict-Point Pleasant,

Plge-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va.

Nov. 15, 1911

.P acific.•• - - -.- - - - - - - - . : . :&lt;CQn=tl'nu::::ed:.:f:.:rom=pa::g::.e:.:Al;.;.)_ _ _ _ ___
by the Idaho Power Co., were a
major news story there, but broad-

cast IIUtleta couldn't ,report ll
Towarlng Shaffer Butte, where most
of the city's radio and television
transml~ are located, was an
easy target. All four commercial
televlalon stations and its one public
broadcut stationed were silenced,
asweremostFMradiostations.
On U.S: 101 between the northern
CaJlfornla towns at Orick and
Klamath, about a dozen redwoods
"five feet thick" were blown over
and blockro traffic, and there were
"a Jot of power lines down, a Jot of
burglar alanns tripped ...sporadic
outages," said U. Lon McLellan of
the Hwnboldt County sheriffrs
deparbnent. .
Resldenls In the southern part of

•

. ""

the Oregon coastal town at Bandon
Tile National Weather Service ,
were evacuated for a short time said residents at southweslem Idaho
when the wind knQclled over oil and could eq&gt;eel gusts up to 45 mph
gasoline tanks, said stale trooper today.
Mike Ramsby. He said poUce had
on the East Coast. the lltlel and
several reports of people trapped . winds were expected to continue
with downed electrical lines draped their onslaught today, but subside at •
acroes their cars, but aU evelltually night, the weather service said. Wlnwere freed.
ds up to eo mph, producing waves up
Boise, Meridian,NampaandCald- to 15 feet, were reported off.North
well accounted for about 3,000 people Carolina.
left without power because of
Winds of ·74 mph are considered
downed transmission lines.
hurricane strength.
.--------------------------------...;;__________

PICTURE FRAMING

Issue final order
on Hughes' estate

I' y''

SHUTTLE RECOVERY - Space Shuttle Colwn-

Edwards AF'B, caw. Saturday as retOVery helicopters
hover over. (APLaserpbolo).

{:()]llllliJl~ ••• ______~------------~(~C~on=ll=·nu~ro~fr~om~pa~g~e~A~l)~--------~
. speed of sound.
: In il.&lt;i final momenl.&lt;i, Engle made a final loop over
· the lakebed to (urther slow the spero for glide to touch: down . .
The astronaul.&lt;i had hoped to land on nearby run'way
15 to gain some experience flying the ship through
, crosswinds. But the winds were too slrong for .the ship
, to lest this early in it,s lest program, and Mmsion Con,;trol directed the ship to 23· - where Colwnbia had Ian. ded il.&lt;i first time out in April.
·
&lt; The skies over Edwards were overcast to the end'and
:the decision to land or nol to land hung on a last-minute

weather watch. John Young, who flew last April's
triwnphant first landing of the rellyable spaceship,
flew over the ROf!ers Dry Lake at Edwards and said
conditions were fine.

Because of strong winds, Young said Engle should
not Jet the computers fly Colwnbia on ils looping final
approach. "He'll-have to fly manually to stay within
the turn circle," he reported. "The automatic system
won't do that."

It wasn't known how the shuttle's abbreviated
second test flight would affect its third.

.

Wamsley murder conviction
reversed by South Carolina court
COLiJMBIA, S.C. (AP) -

The
murderro In a crime spree that left
five people dead and one Injured In
South CaroUna Supreme Court has
February 1979.
reversed the June 1980 conviction of
South · Carolina Solicitor Ran·
a former West VIrginia resident for .
dolph Murdaugh Jr. says he has not
the 19'19 slaying of a Cottageville,
decided whether he will seek a new
S.C., coin collector.
trial for Woomer, who already
Ronald "Rusty" Woomer, '!1,
faces a death sentence for another
formerly of Huntington and Point
murder conviction.
Pleaaant, received the death
penalty for his role In the killing of
One of the five people who died In
John Turner, 67, the first person

Makes the. DIHerence

HOUSTON (AP) - More than live
years of courtroom bickering over
Howard Hughes' inunense fortune
ended when a judge deClared that
the eccentric blll!onalre's only legal
heirs were a dece&amp;sro aunt and 21
lirst-eousins.
The amount of money !hey and
their estates will receive, however,
won't he determined for years,
because taxes will be claimed once
the size of the Hughes estate is
clecided. It is estimated Hughes left
·a $2.2 billion estate when he died five
years·ago.
Probate' Judge Pat Gregory took
Jess than five ininules Friday to sign
the nine-page order that will give the
22 people the Hughes fortune after
subtra~tlng taxes and a gift of 25
percent for charities.

'·
bia comes to a hall aear shuttle recovery vehicles at

The Right Background

Paintings, photographs,
precious documents ...
all can be preserved,
·enhanced with expert
custom framing. Call.

WHITE'S
700 Second Ave.

GAUJPQUS - A Colwnbus
woman waS injured in a one-car • .,.
cident a haH-mile south of Rio Grande Friday afternoon, according to
the GalUa-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol. ·
Grace E. Mossberger, 58, · was
taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Gallia EMS, where she was
treated and releasoo for multiple

''f~damentally unfair.~'

JF'Jl)t//i~ •••·----~----------------~(~C=on~t=m=u~ed~f~ro=m~P~ag~e~A~l~)·----------------

Self-propelled
CCJNCEI?T CINE
Cleaning System
Quadraflex T..,
agitator

SS25

deep cleans with double
the brushing &amp; grooming . ·
action of previous models.

Edge cleaning
plus...

GAUJPOiJs - A hungry lblef · owned by David A. GJ$sburn, HenapparenUy raided two area grade derson, while parked at the Green
sdloollln hia search for food.
Gables on Rt. 7 in Kanauga Friday
Tile GaUia County Sheriff's Depar-. night.
.
trnent 181d It received a report AdTile incident, reported around
davllle Elementary School on ,10:45 p.m., caused damage to
Bulavllle-Addison Road was entered Glassburn's taillight, deck lld and
sometime after' p.m. Thursday.
rear quarter panel.
Tllere were no signa of forced enGallipolis City Police citro two
try, and the only missing item were drivers in separate accidents
three loaves of bread, according to Friday.
the report.
The department said Larry F.
A similar occurren~ was repor- Miller, 41, Rt. 2, Vinton, attempted
ted at Cheshlre'Kyger Elementary to pass a car driven by Curtis A. Lee,
School in Cheshire, where the thief 19, Gallipolis, on Pine Street at U2
0.. thieves sUpped Inside and took a p.m. Lee turned left into a private
box of donuls and an amount of drjveway and struck the right front
cheese. P~int of entry was not of the Mlller car.
known.
Betty Bake~, Kingsport, Tenn., inThe accident causro moderate
fonned deputies Friday a battery damage to both vehicles and Miller
was stolen from a car she owns was cited for improper passing.
parkro on Shoestring Ridge Road
.Officers said Steven D. Goody, 20,
sometime last week. ·
Rt. 2, Thurman, was northbound on
The .rtment was also notified SecQnd Avenue at 7:32p.m. when he
Friday afternoon a Gallipolis mad~ a left turn onto Pine, failed to
Developmental Center client, see a vehicle driven by Rebecca L.
' Rliymond Ophille, 56, was reported Ambrose, 16, Poineroy, andcollidm.
missing !run the Silver Bridge
There was moderate damage to
Plaza around I p.m.
both cars and Goody was cited· for
Ophllle is described as 5-4 in .failure to yield. ·
,
heigh~ weighing 165 pounds and last
Also cited by police overnight
seen wearing a brown leather jacket were DonaldS. Miller, 18, Galtipolis,
and work panl.&lt;i.
failure to display valid registration,
The sheriff's department is also. and Erroll L. Russell Jr. , 19, Rt. I,
looking for a car which struck a car ·Cheshire, DWI. ·

Accident injures driver

The South Caroltns court overturned Woomer's conviction on
grounds that the prosecution's
cross-ellliilinatlon of Woomer was

back ttl Point Pleasant.
filiated with Hackett Roofing; Linda Franko, Pittsburgh, Pa., a financial
The written test, as well as the Goodwin, West Palm Beach, Fla., an analyst with Westinghouse.
flying lessons, was administered by attorney; Dennis, Colwnbus, whn is
Mrs. Hackett is the daughter of
the Federal Aviation Ad.- a factory , representative of Mrs.·Frances Smart, Colwnbus, and
ministraiton.
Dynamit-Nobel Co., ' and Melanie the late Paul Smart.
When Mrs. Hackett first started r-..--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo...
·her lessons she used a rented low
.wing Piper Warrior. She and her
fALL SPfCIAL
husband, George, who is also a pilot,
REG •..___
later purchased a Piper Cherokee.
They presently own a Ce&gt;.•na SkySPECIAL
, hawk.
00
· Phyllis has had many accomplishments in her lifetime but
.for flying she stated, "it Is a thrill
'you don't get any other way."
Mason County Airport is iqlown as
. Amburgey Aviation and is operated
Write or Call for Booklets Showing
: by Roy, Ralph, .and Kenny AmMemorials in Full Color and Price.
. burgey. They have three planes, do
charter work and olier flying lessons
:and ground school.
Mrs. Hackett's instructor at the
Mason facility has flown for 20 years
POMEROY,OH.
VINTON,OH.
and has taught for seven. This year
Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.
James o. Bush
· alone he has had eight students who
Ph. 992-2588
Ph. 388·8603
· received their pilot licenses. One of
them was his oldest son, Kim
Browning.
"
: Phyllis is a graduate of Middleport
;High School, received her B.A. and
·M.A. degrees from Ohio University
; and taught 17 years at Middleport
; and Meigs Local. Her most recent
Road-Rated™
' employment was administrator at
·: Southwest Licking School District
AM/FM Stereo Cassette Player
lor the past three years.
· She and her husband are the
parents of five children. Dr. Rose
. ·Marie Lilly, Berlin, Wis.; 'Bill,
; Pomeroy, an engineer, who 1.1 af·

Thief enters schools

DEAN
AND BARRY PAINT TOWN
;

HOOVER®

the crime llllree .was Woomer's
alleged accomplice, Eugene R.
Skaar, U, alao of Huntington; who
shot himself rather than surrender
to pollee, officials said.

Ohlct-Point Plea sa

RIVER VI·EW

USDA GRADE A
CHOICE!!

786 North 2nd St
Middleport, Ohio
STORE

FRIENDLY
CARRY.ouT
SERVICE AVAILABLE

HOU~S:

8-9 Daily
11~ Sunday

FOOD STAMPS

WElCOME

Quantity Rights ~eserved - Prices Good Thru Weds., Nov. 25, 1981

-.·

18 LBS. &amp; UP

Probes wrecks

UFDHAS
LANDED
AT

KELLOGG'S

Stuffing

7 OL
Pkg.

'69e

WE HAVE AVAILABLE
BUTTERBALL TURKEYS
AND FRESH OYSTERS.

. MILK

THIRD AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS
446;7886

Automatic
carpet
adjustment

PEPSI

·coLA

adapts cleaner to most
carpet. Special plush
&amp; shag settings!

.. . .
Maxwell
House
i
Coffee ••..., ~••

WITH THIS COUPON AT IGA

.

au ....

389

Umtt t C.UJOO Por Follllly
Oflar bplrnllt .. Now . 21 . 1111.

--------

16 qt. bag capacity

·IG®

OUR MEAT IS

bruises.
. The patrol said Mossbarger was
southbound on Rt. 325 at 5:20 p.m.
when her vehlle went off the right
s1de of the road, struck an embankment and overturnro, causing
severe damage. ·
The patrol said Michael L. Saxon,
20, Rt. I, Bidweil, escaped injury
when the brakes on his vehicle failoo
on a curve.on Green Twp. Rd. 44 at
4' 25 p.m.Friday.
Saxon's vehicle, which had been
PQMEROY - 'I;Wo deer were westbound, went off the left side of
·.killed In two acc1dent.s but the the road and hit a tree. There was
' drivers escaped injury, the Meigs moderate damage reported to the
:Sherilf's Department reports.
vehicle.
.
The patrol investigatro a car-deer
. 5!1turday morning on Rt. 124,
"three deer ran into the palh of a · accident in Meigs County early
vehicle driven by Gary D. Evans, . Friday night.
·
Rt. I, Racine.
According to the report, Harry C.
One wa,s struck and kiUro by the Roush, 34, Middleport, was driving
pickup truck. Damage to the truck south on Rt. 7, threeCtenths of a mile
was moderate.
north of County Rd. 5. at 6:4op.m.
Friday, a deer ran into the path of when his vehicle struck and killro a
a truck driven by Rose E. Carr, Rt. deer which · ran into the vehicle's
2, Coolville, on Rt. 681 and was path.
ki)lro. There was mnderate damage
· Moderate damage was reportro to
to the front of the truck.
Roush'a auto.

edge brusher deep cleans
close to the wall.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

w.. va.

more cleaning per bag!
You'll like the Quick &amp;
Clean bag changer.

Twin lamp
headlight
Broad. bright beam of
light helps seek out litter.

·REG. $26995

'
' rr===============~
Jonb•i! 'timrs · Morntinrl '
~

NOW

USPS 5 ~

AMuJUmedia Newspaper
Published e..ch Sunda y,

8%5 Third

Avenue, by the Ohio Valley Publiahintl
Gompllny- Multimedia, Inc. Secondclall!l
potiLaKt! paid al Gallipolis, Ohio, 15631.
Entered a ~ second cla8s malllng nlatter
at Pomeroy , Ohlo, PostOflice.

l

Member : The Associated PteSII, Inland
01111)' Prell! As.soclatlon and lhe
Ameri can News paper Publishers
Auociatlon, National Adverti sing

Reptuent.live, Branham, 17117 West

Nine Mile Road , Su.ite 2tM, Dttroit,
Michlgan, *1S.

SUBSCRlPTION RATES

•

B)' Carrier ar Motor Roullr

One week .. . ... , ............. . . 11.08
one MMth .. .................. . $4.tG
One )\e&amp;r , . •..... . . •........ . .. 152.10
SlNGLECOPY

PRICE

3li Cenll

No aublcripliMS b)' mall peMnlUed in
when! home .carrier aervice ia

iiiWnl

availlb~-

_..._

n. Sundl)' Tlme.-Sentlnel w\U not be
~lbJe

for advance PIIYTMrdl ffilde

tocarrlen.

.

c::r.!AIG.
T690

Present thi s coupon w ith any one

Featuring ...
• R' Road-Rated'" for optimum mobile performance
• Po~erplay" ampl~ier delivers 12 watts per channel
m1n1mum continuous average power inlo 4 ohms,
both channels driven, from 70 to 20,000 hertz with
no more lhtm 5% total harmonic distortion (0.9 total
harmomc dtstortton at 1,000 hertz)
• Five preset pushbuttons permtt you to lnstantiy ·
recall your five favorite FM or AM stations
. • Auto-Reverse tape deck automatically plays both
stdes of the cassette without attention
• Dolby' Noise Reduction circuitry gives improved
·
·
Jape signal·to-noise performance .
• Sendust allo~ head gives wlder frequency range
and longer ltfe

SundiY Only . ......... .... .... . ..110

' Dolby Is a r&lt;19islerod lrademarl&lt; of Dolby laboralonos
l""""""atod

-udW. . VIraWI '
One year . . . ....•.. -····-· · ···· $33 ..,
.....II&gt; "' " . " " " " " ' . " . 117.10
nntmonthl .... ..... .. ... . . . . 110.10
lllo.OIIlllde-

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

.,..n.8VIIIICRIPTION8

......lftll*

One , _ " " " " • " " . " " ... ....110
Sl.lliloolho .. .. .. ...... .. . .. ... . ...

Upper Rt. 7

Tlnoi!IGIIfhl ................. PI.IIO

,,

manufac tur er 's

I

Double Value
Oil AllY MANUFACTURER'S
COUPOII FOR IIOC OR LEIS
liMIT ONE COUPON
PER MANUFACTURER COUPON

·An exciting new
Odyssey game!.
Armed with a laser camon and proteCted by an energ~ed force field.
your Earth Fedsration bettie cruiser prepares for battle. Three mys'teriaua types of enemy ships ontar your sectDr. UFO's will disintegrate~
hit by your laser, or by coming in contact with jOUr force field . You have
unlimited liUI1I1IY of ernr1U11ti0n, but your force field must recharge each
time you fire jOUr laser or come In cont8ct withe UFO. ~xcitlng adventure
in the relative safety of your own h6me.
·

Acrosi from tiM iiilver Brldlle Plata
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

.•

'

c 1981

'·

Con1umer Electronica Corp.

v
I,

"

I

I
I

I I
I I

I I

Value
Otl ANY MAIIUFACTURER'S
. COUPOII FOR 50C OR LESS
LIMIT ONE COUPON
PER MANUFACTURER COUPON

------------ ------------OFFER EXPIRES 11·25·11

.

'I

OI&lt;FER EXPIRES 11· 25·11

Double Value
Oil AllY MAIIUFACTURER"I
COUPOII FG.R50c OR LESS
L.IT DIE CDUPDII

PER IIAIUFACTUIER COUPON
OFPia EXPIII•s 11·25·11

LIMIT OIIE COUPON
PER MANUFACTURER COUPON

I
I
I
'II

--------

~X PIRES 11-25-11

"ce nt s

off·•

coupon and get double ~ av ing s.
Only one Doub le Va lue Coupon
per it em .
I

WITH THIS COUPON AT IGA

If th e tota l va tue exceeds th e pur·
chase d item . money w tl n ot be
r ef unded. Also, it to tal coupon
v alue exceeds SOc. money w i II not
be refund ed.
Thi s offer appli es only to
manufacturer's coupons. It does
not apply to : r eta iler 's coupons,

grocery coupons or free coupons.
Not valid with beer , w i ne or
tobac co prOduc t coupons.

Limit

4

custom er.

dou bl e

couponsper

ANOTHER WAY

. TO SAVE AT
RIVER VIEW!!
••

�·-

.·
Page-A·6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Nov. 15, 1,98J. .
Nov. 15, 1911

Feds probe advisor
AaodaledPreuWrlter

New Haven and Charles, BiU and
Harry Johnson
Paul Reitmire, all of Pomeroy;
lbree sisters, Mrs. Jimmy (Carrie)
GALUPO!J~ .- Harry F. J ohn.soo
Jr. was stiUborn at II :34 p.m. Thur- Deem, Racine, Mrs. Henry (Mary)
Adkins, St. Albans, W.Va., and Mrs,
$4ay in Holzer Medical Center.
'
Charles
(Ann) Staley, Huntington,
·: sUrviying are his parents, Harry
W.Va.,
and
several nieces·· and
llll&lt;l Nancy Louise White Johnson,
Ga1lipolis ; three sisters, Debbie, nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
Karen and Sharon, all of the borne;
maternal grandparents, Mr. and father, Claude Reitmire, Sr.
Funeral services will be bold at I
Mrs. Cecil White of Gallipolis; and
p.m. Monday at tbe Ewing Funeral
Several aunts, uncles and cousins.
:·Funeral services wiU be held at I Home with the Rev, WiUiam Midp:rrl. Monday in the Willis Funeral dieswarth officiating. Burial wiU be
HOI)le, witb the Rev. Darrell John- in Broad Run Cemetery near New ,
so)! officiating. Burial wiU be in Haven. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after I p.m.
~~und Hill Cemetery. Friends may
today.
c~ll at the funeral home anytime af·
lei9 a.m. Monday and until tbe hour
Iii !he service.

Earl M. Roberts

Mamie McCown

·VINTON- Earl Mont Roberts, 76,
of Rt. 2, Bidwell, died at 4:30 p.m.
VINTON - Word was .received . Friday in Holzer Medical Center.
here by Mrs. Ann Lemley oi the
Born Feb. 17, 1900, in Fayetteville,
Thursday deatb of Mamie Allen Mc- W.Va., son of tbe late Frank and
Cown, Newark, formerly of Rio Millie Long Roberts, he was a·
Grande.
retired truck driver and a member
Graveside services will be held at of the Chapel Hill Church of Christ.
2 p.m. Monday at Rome Cemetery,
He married the former Sadie
near Proctorville, and the body is
Pelfrey, who survives, on Dec. 25,
presently at the Criss Funeral 1928, in Yawkey, W.Va.
Home, Newark.
Also surviving are three sons,
Charles
of Rt. I, Northup, Carl of
Lillian McMillin
Bedford Heights and Rex of Rt. 2,
LOGAN - Liltian M. McMiUin, 82, · Bidwell; three daughters, Mrs.
of 597 W.Front St., Logan, died Fri· James (Helen) Bosworth of Tampa,
day morning in Doctors Hospital Fla., Kathryn Roberts of Rt. 2, BidNorth, Columbus, after a brief iU· well and Mrs. Jess (Janie) Merry of
Rt. 2, Bidwell; 31 grandchildren and
ness.
11 great-grandchildren.
Born Sept. 19, 1899, in Rio Grande,
He was also preceded in death by
daughter of the late David C. and
Lena A. Rickabaugh Wood, she was two sons and two sisters ..
Funeral services wiD be held at 2
a Rio Grande College graduate, ·
taught school in the Longstreth area p.m. Tuesday in the McCoy-Moore
in Hocking County and was a mem- Funeral Home, Vinton, with the
ber of the Trinity United Methodist Evangelist WiUiam B. Kughn of.
fidating. Burial will be in Centenary
Church.
Her husband, Hollis, also Cemetery. Friends may call at tho
preceded her in death on Feb. 14, funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Monday.
1981.
..
Surviving are three sons, Earl of
Chillicothe, carroll of Gahanna and
Marvin or the home ; four grandKenneth E. Sanders
children, 10 stepgrandchildren and a
COOLVILLE - Funeral services
great-grandchild; a sister, Ethel
will
be bold at 2 p.m. today in lhe
Axe of Axhville.
White
Funeral Home, CoolviUe, for
Funeral services will be held at I
Kenneth
E. Sanders, 52, Torch, Ohio,
p.m. Monday in the Heinlein-Brown
who
died
Thursday in Rankin
Funeral Home, Logan, with the Rev.
General
Hospital,
Brandon, Miss. · •
R.W. Faulkner and the Rev. Edna
The
Rev.
James
Hodge will ofHughes officiating. Burial will be in
ficiate. Burial will be in Torch BapFairview Memorial Gardens, Rockbridge. Friends may call at the ·tist Cemetery in Alhens County.
Born June 12, 1929, in Coolville,
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
son of Nile·c. and Olive Heiney San·
today.
ders, who surviv~ at~ Rt. 1, Coolville,

Claude 0. Reitmire
POMEROY - Claude 0. Rei!·
mire, 40, of 1540 Nye Ave., Pomeroy,
died Friday night in a farming accident.

Surviving are his wile, Kathern;
two sons, Jeffrey A. and George W.,
and two daughters, Peggy Jean and
Lorette Lynn, all at home; his
mother, Goldie Reitlnire, Pomeroy;
six brothers, George. Moore,
Jacksonville, Fla., Raymond Reit·
mite, Jacksonville, Henry Reitmire,

he was owner and operator or the
Torch general store and post office,
was a Korean War veteran, a farmer, a former employee of Penn
Metal Co., Parkersburg, W.Va., agd
a member and former commander
of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
3478 in Coolville.
Surviving are. his wife, Evelyn
Huffman

Sanders;

two

sons

Stephen of Fort Belmore, Va. and'
Michael of tbe home; and a sister
Mrs. Beryl (Donna) Griffin of Reed:
sville.

LEA VJNG - Tbe Jack Wilker lamDy ls moving to Lucuter lmmedlately where Wilker will belin bla daUes at the Smith Flmeral Home
after bavlng sold the Wilker Flmeral Home in RutlaDd 1o Guy E. Hunter.
Tbe Walkers are pictured wltb their ~ons, J .R., 10, and Ryaa, 8.

Sells funeral home
RUTLAND- Jack Walker has announced the sale of the 'Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland ,to Guy E.
Hunter of Columbiana.
Born in Uniontown, Pa., the son of
tbe late Thomas Bailey and Matilda
C. Hunter, tbe buyer of the funeral
home, once known as the Chase
Funeral Home, was reared in Cwn-

berland, Md.
He graduated fr~m Adrian College

'NEW -Guy E. Hunter, CoiUJno
biana resideat, has purchased lhe
Walker Funeral Home in Rutland
aoo will begin hl8 dull.;. there immediately. ,

in Adrian, Mich., with a bachelor of
science degree in biology and
chemistry.
In 1964, he graduated from the Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science
and servi!d his apprenticeship with
the Monreal Funeral Co. in
Cleveland. He worked as a funeral
director and manager at the
Mulqueeny Brothers Funeral Home
in PainesviUe before going to Columbiana where he worked and was ac·
tivu in civic groups.
He is a past president or· the
Columbiana Ba~eball • ~ague, past
vice president of the Columbiana
Touchdown Club, served tbree years
as Rotary Club treasurer.
He is a Mason in Adrian, Mich.,
and was in Who's Who in Ohio in 1974
and in Who's Who in America in
1975. He has a brother, Thomas
Hailey Hunter, in San Francisco,
Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walker purchased the establishment in November, 19'73, from Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Martin.
Since moving to Rutland, Mr. and
Mrs. Walker have been active in
civic affairs. Monday, Mr. Walker
wiD begin his new work in Lancaster
with the Smith Funeral Home, They
have two sons, one born since tbey
came to Rutland eight years ago.
They areJ, R., 10, and Ryan, 6.
Walker states that be leaves Meigs
County with regret and extends
thanks for public support over the
years.

HoeOieh's Beat of th~ Bend

House olfii!Ws made such a request,

By TEilENCE HUNT
,

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
JusUce Department Ill invesUgaUng
· Presid.ent Reagan's national
securitt adViser, Richard V. ADen,
for accepting $1,1100 from Japenese
joumaliBta .. a token of their appreciation for an excluaive interview
With Nancy Reagan.
Allen openly ackn~ge(l
Friday that he received ~.ih
an envelope following the reporters'
interview wilh Mrs. Reagan oo Jan.
21 - one day after Reagan was
inaugurated.
Actually, the mooey was intended
for Mrs. Reagan, said White House
deputy presa secretary Larry
Speakes.
Allen "intercepted" tho 111011ey
and accepted It to spare lhe first
lady any embarrasament and to
avoid offending the joumaUsts, said
'White House deputy press secretary
· Larry Speakes.
"In Japan it's quite ordinary for
this to happen, for an honorarium to
be given for an interview with a person," Allen said.
Asked if he ever had accepted
such a gift before, ADen replied, "I
don't believe I ever did. I can't recall
ever having done so."
David Gergen, the top White
House spokesman, said, "It is my
understanding that (ADen) did not
ask" for (money) from the journalists. Gergen said he had no
reason to believe that any White

eitber.
ADen said be pot tbe money in a
safe with the intention of turning It in
as a gift to lhe goverrunent, but
forgot about it for eight months until
its discovery·by others.
Two secretaries who were aware
of. the 1119ney also forgot about It, '
ADen said.
Asked ~ow all three could' forget ·
,1,1100, Allen replied: "WeD, I suppose you might think it's hard to do ·
but we did It in this case."
He said the money 'WIB put away
and "it never occurred to us again
except that the intention, of course,
was always to notify tbe ·appropriate
authorities and get an adequate and
prompt dispositjon of this fund." . ·
Reagan, departing the White
House on a weekend trip to Tesas,
said of Allen: "As far as I know
there is no evidence of wrongdOing."
Asked If Allen would stay on the job,
Reagan said "On the basis of what I
know, yes.''
White House disclosure of the
transaction was triggered by .a
Japanese newspaper's report that
Tokyo police had coocluded a top
secret investigatioo of bribery
allegations against an unidentified
senior White House official. U.S. and
Japanese officials in Japan refused
comment on the story.
The interview with Mrs. Reagan
was .conducted by reporters for the
magazine Shufunotomo - which in
English means Housewife's Friend.

·If you're ruJJ.y buay and need
to whip up those Thankaglvlng pies, members of the Comllllllllty Wives aub of Cheater will be
glad to lake the

are

Big money-maker for the center,
however, will be the hake sale conducted in the multi-purpose r'10f!l as
part of tho bazaar. There also will be
a White Elephant table.
Ruth Miller is chainilan of the
bazaar project.

·-

event.

Vocal music students of Ed Hark·
less at the Meigs High School do
keep buay. The Choraliers will be
singing at the annual Thanksgiving
dinner of the Rutland Fire Department which is stheduled for Nov. 19.
The dinner is a public event and
residents throng to get a good meal.
Veterans Day brought back
memories for Pomeroy's Herbert
Reibel. He produced a letter written
on Nov. 10, 1918 by a nurse at a
hospital In France to his parents, tbe
late Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam Reibel,
who resided oo Pleasant Ridge. The
Jetter illformed his parents that Her·
bert had been admitted .to the
hospital seri~y ill witb influenza.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Op- battle wiU continue in the courts.
ponents trying to prevent a new lanRhodes maintained that
dfill from opening in Franklin Coun· metropolitan counties in the state
ty say Gov. James A. Rhodes' veto already have little acreage enof legislation that would have virorunentally suitable for limdfills
required landliUs to comply with and placing adllitional restrictions
local zoning regulations won't stop onsuchlocatlooscouldpreventstate
!bern in their !fight.
·
and county officials from carrying
The governor's veto of House Bill out their duty to provide for the
114 was a defeat for Jackson Township residents who want to keep the health
"I am
in safety
sympathy
with the plight
and
of Ohioans.
new landfill from being opened at In- of townships in this matter," Rhodes
terstate 71 and Ohio 665.
wrote. "But I believe the method
The county's exisiting landfill on proposed in this bill to correct tbe
Ohio 104 is expected to be closed in situation is a bad ooe.
about 16 montbs.
"There should not be a complete
"If township residents are given usurping of state and county
the right to keep facilities from their authority ip the siting of sotld waste
locality, few if any would · be landfiUs; ratber there should be an
developed," Rhodes said in his veto economic remuneration to affected
message. "Therefore, I am vetoing townships that is substantial enough
this legislation to protect tbe health to offset the negative impact of landof the citizens of Ohio,"
,
·fiUs ."
Rhodes said the legislation "would
The governor said he will ask the
create a potential !for monumental Ohio General Assembly to adopt a
health problems as rubbish piles new bill that will allow !for tonnage
up.' '
surcharges to be paid to political
State Rep. Don E. Gillmore, R· jurisdictions in which landfills are
Columbus, who sponspred the vetoed located.
legislation, had said previously the

l

GALLIA COUNTY'S 1981

B~NKRUPTCY/CHAPTER 13
(Wage Earner Plan)

No fee for Information:

1·221-5379
Pamela N. Maggied
Lee C. Mittman
Attorneys-At-Law
~
88 E. Broad st;

~~~~~~~;~C~o~Ju~m~b~u~s,~O~H~-~43~2~1;5~~~~~~~~

Only
''!teX67/ex2:a/•"

• Uae Aa 1 Calculator,
Or Program ltfor
Complex Problema
• Perfect for
"On-Site" U18

The TRs-80 computer
that goes where you
go! More powerful, yet
easier to use than a
programmable calculator. Add one of our·
ule-prlced Interfaces
and an optional
recorder and you can
uu our ~election of
ready·to-run caasette
software. Progremmableln BASIC, too,

CHRISTMAS PARADE

Theme "Christmas, An American Custom"
Sponsored by the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association.

OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
..

COLUMBUS, ' Ohio (AP) - Nine
regional offices of the Ohio ·Depart·
me~t of Taxatioo were kept open
today to provide sales tax vendors
with new rate cards reflecting
Ohio's new five-cent sales tax.
Gov. James A. Rhodes was expected to sign the budget into law
sometime during the weekend,
making the higher sales tax take effecttoday. ·
There' will he no tax 00 purchases
of up to 15 cents. otherwise, the
rates wiD be 16 to 19 cents - ooe penny; 20 to 29 cents- two cents; 40 to
58 cents - three cents; 59 to 78 cents
- four cents; 79 to 98 cents - five
cents and 99 cents to '1.17 six cents.

Entertains Nightly
PLUS
The Original

HALLMARKS
Saturday

French Quarter
AMESSAGE FROM lHE BIBLE. •.. By Wilam B. Kughn
There is ONE
the faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God" ( Rm.
10:17) . Belief in God and the knowledge we have of God , Chirst and the
Holy "Spirlt come to us today by w~y ot the word. When the word is
taught, the testimony of faith is manifested and received in faith. The
WORD is the DEMONSTRATION OF PROOP to the believer, giving
CONFIDENCE to what is promised and CONVICTION to what is
taught.
The word ot ·faith testifies that there are two eternal destinations
of the soul, heaven or hell, "And these shall go away into everlasting
punishment (hell) i but the righteous into life eternal (heaven)" (Mtt .
25 :-46). The Christian hears the testimony, receives it by believing and
conducts his life in harmony to the word in regard to the two
destinations . It is once anc;t for all settled! No doctrine nor philosophy
can go beyond it. Why? Because the Lord said so! The same is true in
respect to the testimQny of the word regarding the plan of salVation.
Why? Because all God's word is truth. His power to save is in the word
(gospel), ''For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ : for it is the
power of God unto salvation to everyone that believ,tth : to the Jew fir·
st, and also to the Greek' fRom. 1: 161. He reveals H1S righteousness by
the gospel, "For therein {the gospel) is the righteousness of ·God
revealed from faith to faith: as it Is written, the just shall live by faith'
( Rm. 1: 17) . Saving faith, coming from the faith revealed and received
in faith {believing.), leads us 1o complete dbedlence to GOd'S word in
the whole of Christianity .
·
The word of laith commAnds repentance: You must repent or
perish, "I tell you, Nay: but. except ve repent, ve sl'tall all likewise
perish" (Lk. 13:3, s&gt;. "Repent" means ro change or turn from . You
repent by having a change of mind (will), r~sulting in your turning
from the evil way of life. You turn from Satan to Chris1 and from sin to
righteousness. If you clo not repent, you do not have saving faith!
The word of faith commands confession: You are to confess
Christ, 'Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men, him Will 1
confess also before my Father which is in heaven" (Mtt . 10:32 ) . You
are to confess Him as the Son of God, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of
the livinQ God" (Mtt. 111:18; Acts 8:38) . If you do not make this con ·
fession, vou clo not have saving faith!
The Word of filth comm•nclsiNptlsm: You are to be baptized for
the remission of sins, 11 Repent and be baptized everyone of you in the
name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins .. .•· I Acts 2:38) . You put
on Christ by baptism, "For a1 many of vou.as have been bapt ized into
Christ have put on Christ" (Gal. 3:27). Baptism saves, putting you 1n
the saved state, "The like figure whereunto even baptism do1h also
now save us ... " ( 1 Pet. 3:21). If you have not been baptized for this pur·
pose. you do not have the uvlnvlalth 1
,
Since there Is ONE FAitH, el&lt;amlne yOur faith 11nd see if It is one
of the ONE FAITH. You cannot test It by feelings, nor 'he doctrines of
men. but by the IICfSpell
For Free Bible corresponclence Course Write .. ..

Bu--

. '{,-ful ~ ~'-''

Deadline for entry is Friday, Nov. 27 ~ mail all entries to
Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, 16 State St.,
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631. . The 1911 parade is scheduled
Saturday, Dec. 5, beginning at l1 A.M.

,,

of

o P.O. Box 308

CW.UPOi.IS. OHIO 4583 t

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

A DIVISION OF TN«JY ~TION

·~-

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
· COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARnCIPAnNG DEALER

. "Melu.. ,,..,..
Oaltr-W.IIIM

An appeal for
asslalance Is being made lor tbe
Woocty)la1l family of Charles Evans
Road, near Centerpoint, whose
mobile home was destroyed by fire
around 3 a.m. Friday.
Friends are asked to donate food,
clothing and household items, and
may call Charles Cox at 3711-2712.

II:JIAM

~)
~·

'

Crown City, $30; Donna M. Koehler,
39, Syracuse, $29; Arthur W. Dem·
psey Jr., 49, Rt.1, Ewington, ,28.
Karen C. Sparks, 34, Rt. 2, Point
Pleasant, $27; Brooke J. Hager, 47,
St. Albans, W.Va., $27; Charles W.
Guy, 25, Rt. 2, Vinton, $27; Mark D.
Overton, 30, Flint, Mich., $25.
Gilbert F. Moore, 45, Rushville,
$25; Romah T. Frazier, 50,
Sciotoville, $25; Bert F. Board,.24,
Rt. I, Letart, $25; Delmer R. Pratt,
49, King, N.C., $24.
Bobby J. Melton, 47, Greensboro,
N.C., $24; Alvin P. Cormack, 41,
Point Pleasant, $29; Sharon A.
Maynard, 32, Hootlngton, W.Va.,
$28; Lucille H. Val.,.tine, 54,
Ga!Upolis, $211; Paul A. Chaisson, 28,
Fairborn, $25.

•

WASHING'ION i:u&gt;1 - A year af·
ter he wu lndlded, former Ohio
~ Olarlel J. Carney Ia
IICbeduled to go on trial Monday on
cbarpl that he ICcepled- of Ill
ollcompanycredltcardinretumfor
poUUeal fav;on.
Camey,88,ofYounptown,wasin- ·
dieted Nov. 12, 11110, of Gratultlea
Act vlolatiOnlllld wu to have • on trial last April. lila lawyers
delayed lhe court action wltb appeals that .,ere carried ta the

vlolaled lliu111lllll ..imll rfcNI,

1•-•--

'l'beliulaoftbnj)
llan cl tbe O•lllil 4Loe lblt ..oteeta
~from lnnltigetlctn cl
lheirlellaJatlvuc:tlvllilloulaldethe
hal1a of Congnlu.
.
Camey .U.Cedlt Uled a mdlt
card given blm . 11)1 oil euc.ilfl..
WIWam G. Lyden durlnl the elgbl
yean he ~ Obio'a 191h
District In c:ongr.., accordiDg to
Juatlce Department lawyer Andrew
Reich.
Lyden, ~f Youngstown, Is
president of Lyden 011 Co. llld a for-

·Supremeeourt.
Tbe clef- lawyen aougiJt WIsucce8lllu11y to qUIIIIb the indictment
agam.l Carney Oil !IIOUUdiB that the

GARLANO
M. DAVIS
512 Sec. Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446-1235

Home311-9491

WOODMEN
OF AMERICA .
Fr~ll~rlffll lJft lnnm•nrr
Hom• Oftir•- lodt 111attd, llllnal•

·z••
bt I)G'tiCOJing

c-o•

217 Upper River Rood

POMEROY - Procedure8 being
lollowed by tbe Meip Local School
District In tbe event of bad weather
have been outlined by Dan Morris,
assistant superintendent,
The first plan will .Uow buses to
run an hour later than IIIU81. Bua
drivers will contact WMPO Radio of
any route changes or of any areas
where they will be unabl~ to pick up
children.
AD announcements will be called
inlo the alaUon by 6:30 a.m., and' all
students irill be delivered borne at

In the third plan, buses will run
tbree lloun later than usual and instructions in the previous two plans
will be followed.
In case of early school dismissal
the district will notify WMPO of an~
changes.

CALL (614)-992-21 04
or (304~75-1244

..

-

... .

.....

Book Review

..._

+

HARD BACK - NON-FICTION

(•

..~. .r.:.

.......

•
......

1

.....••
.....•

Last time available for
ChristJDas delivery!

ISears I
23 color portra-its

95
total

Lut

Week

1111! LDaD GOD IIAD£ 111EII ALL, by Jomeo
Herrtoc. (SI. Martin'l,$l3.115.) The fUrther adVftl·
t\ll'l!eaflhe YGI'UIUre Vflt •t hame and betdnd OW:
lronc.rtlln .

2

•

J

-·

A lJGHt IN 111£ AniC, by Shel Silverstein .
(Harper 6 Row,llo.t&amp;.) Humor hi canoona 'and

I'

NEVI!I-IAY·DII!T MDit, by Richard SimmoN. (Wamer, Sl4.M.) A reatmen for exercite,
dlet. and life alyle deviled by a Hollyw.ood televl-

11011 penonanty .

4

·:·

1111! IBVI!I!LY HILU DII!T, by Jody .....1.
(Macmlllaa. 110.10.) A reatmen de\rited by a Hol-

lywaod - - .....
PA111FINDI!U. by Gall
(Morrow,
115 .•. ) How ordlftllry people cape wilh liM! nor. malc,....oiUfe.

+
.....•
+
.~.

5

••

f

6

You may pay

..-y.

_...,., wr11er....,...

..

•

7 ~...-.:-n.~~~~~~ &lt;~:;;
evolution~ by

•

&lt;•

•

lite NASA modaf·WiMin&amp;

...-.:-~ IIOW10 11A1U! LOVE J0 A lOAN, by Ate&gt;Wldra
,.._.(CWU..N. Pottor,$18.)Haw-ta.

postman delivers your portraits or pay the full

I

10 .... PIOOY'S GVIDI! TO UFI!, by Mlu Plgy

-· ••·&gt;Am--

_,....ST\tDII!S, by p,.. .-tt&amp;. (Ra-.

traits postage paid.

IAdults ond family groups welcome! I

7

It

II

ot N9o!
Yorl&lt; "'"'
- . a wtth
a toUr.creem
"l'ky.
1111! IOUL OF A NEWIIACJIJNE, by Tro&lt;y Kidllor. (Atlanlk:/Liltlo, Brown. 113.11.) T1le onol&lt;-

t

a

.......,

t

...........
...,. .
I

J •

lllefll• mkrocom,.....

UVINGALONI! UIIINCUTI by Lynn Shahoo.
(Sintlonl Pna. 111.11.) How Joenjoy lhe olnate
lth.

"

U4.95 at lime of sitting and receive your por-

. JANE IIDD\"1 NUTaiTION HOK, by lone · I
Bn.t)'. ( - . 117.11.) Advice by The New York .
u tolci!O Henry Beord. (Knoof / I I - ......
IU.JI.) AmuMn&amp; actvtoe aboui everytbtn&amp; from
lhtiUipii'IUrpon:ln~per.unallty.
·
, _ IAUHAUI TO OUR HOUII!, by Tom
Wolfe.' (Farrar, Stn..- A Giroux, 110.15.) A c:rtUcalloot It contemporary arcldtec:ture.

deposit
at sitting

and lhe U4 belance plus postal Ices when lhc

Tlm11..,......1 hMith col~~mnlll.

·

only

95¢

•

1111! CINDERELLA COMPLEX. by Colette
DowUIII- (a-unit Boab, Sl2 .•. ) f:rom her own
.....,......a, •
IMI women have a

Til Chrittma~

II
II

It

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

• Package includes two 8xl0, three 5x7.
15 wallet size, and 3 charm miniature
color portraits
• No limit on. the number of packa~es.
• No age limit .
• 95¢ for each additional subject in same
portrait .
• Offer is limited to full package orders
onlv.
• Use your Sears charge card.
DOUBLE FEATURE ~PORTRAITS
AVAILAIL.E IN

•

AbON. TO PACKAGE

"

•

•:•

+.

&lt;•
.....

Satisfaction guaranteed
or your money btick.

Offer good on portraits !f-k•n
~1.

-aLJCI &amp;PID tiD.

TUESDAY, NOVIMIER 17

Sliver Bridge Plaza
Photographers Hours: Weekdays 9:30a.m.· 5:30. p.m.

GALLIPOLIS
'
'

•

-=·IIEIIIEA - - ObiiOCiaTV
Layaways
Welcome

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

o,... Dallyf:H-1:.00, Sunday 1:00-4:00

;''

·..

Priced and stvled to please in lOK gold. and ge·
nuin~ stones. Rings have become so Very popuiar
and these are some of our most asked for semi ·
precous stone rings . Look us over. You'H find a
ring that's right for you.

iii

lafayette Mal/
Gallipolis, Oh.
· •

••
••

SEMI &amp; PRECIOUS STONE RINGS

..,. SECONO AVIllA

The Alcove

..•

•

the uaual time.
In the second plan, ,buaes Wm run
two lloun later than uaual. For
example, If a student is picked up at
7:15a.m. normally, he or she will be
picked up at 9:15a.m.

11 'IIIUI!Y Z. !g,.WIIIIom G. Oudli. (........,_Woo~--&gt; _,.. ' -.bttolneu

••

.,

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL. ALLERGIST

l4

.'

Act, which prohibits giving or
receiving anything of value for offlclal favors. He was fined $5,1100 and
placedononeyear'sproliatlon.
In building their CjiSe, FBI agents
went through 100 boxes of

•

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

13

..

Lyden pleaded guilty July 15, 19110,

to cllarKes of violating the Gratuities

Sets weather procedures

Amertea by a ~

,.

period.

back in operetlon by ChNimas .The Cardinal wa eUminatecl by
unless the fl0.5 biiUon 19112 Iran- · lhe govenunenwubaldized rail sersportaUon approprlaUona bill _gets vice Oct. I in a series of cutbacks of
sidetracked.
unprofitable service.
That wu the asseanlellt of an
Funds to resume tbe service were
Amtrak spok0111l1811 Friday after inserted In the Senate aprece!ving word that a joint House- propriaUons bill last week, and the

12

'
•••

mer president of tbe National 011 '!Oilgrell8ionel papers that Carney
Jobben Council.
K.ve the University of Youngstown
L)'denhusaldhegaveCarneytbe afterhewasdefeatedforre-electioo
Amoco card in 1111111 when Carney · 1m
wu Democratic !ead..r in the Ohlo .t-m_ _
. -------Senate, and that he paid '10,1100 in
charges on the cal'd over a 10-year

· WASHING'ION (AP) - 'l'be Car- Senate c:onlennce committee had conference committee accepted the
pauenger
traincould
from
caltlng for 1__;;.
change_
Thursday.
dlnal
WasJDi181oo
to Cincinnati
\IC! · accepted
IW!oration language
of the Cardinal.
_...;._ _ _ _ _.~--_ _ _.....;_.;._ _ __

~:·

.Wa0'8.

•

Page-A-7

Cardinal may run by Christmas

-··:•. The New York Times . i
Best Seller list
+
....
•
.
.,

Tour FaOI'Ite b Back!

•'
••

Jlllllee l:leputmla&amp; ilh 'lgellan

I2J •·:· ·~ •)• .·~ •)•)•:•&lt;••:•1 &amp;ZI

..

PRICES MAY YNfY AT NlMOUAI. STOIIII AHO OEAlEriiS

••

I wanted to tip you off to what I
think is tbe bargain Of the week. It's
a Miss Piggy Christmas tree ornament and sells for only $12. How
many did you say you want? Do keep

GAUJPO!JS -

'lf~l

1:11

Phone.•. . ....... ••.. ........................... •. .

Color me happy due to tbe volunnow an.d then to
. help witb tbe Big Bend Minstrel
Association's last production on
Nov. 211. The latest are J;lorothy
Oliver, Ula Mitch and Brenda
Taylor HiD.
By tbe way, cast members will be
welcoming in the holiday season the first to do so, hopefully, -during
the second half of the production.
The entire second half will deal with
the Chrlatmas season with all pop
nwnbers to be used. Rounding oul
the segment will be the entrance of
Santa Claus and . his elves and a
blacklight Nativity scene.

leelJI who pop ·up

Appeal made

RECEIVING FAitH
FAITH, and It comes by hearing the-word, "So then

Address ...... .................................•..

The drive will start oo Nov. 21 and
will continue untillhe area baa been
covered. Firemen will tllentify
themse)ves when asking for
donations.

· GALIJPO!JS- Twenty-six cases
were terminated Friday in
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Palsy A. Hurley, , 45, Rt. I,
· Cheshire, charged with petty theft,
casedlamisaed.
Olarged With escape, Gladys
Gehring, address unknown, fined
$50, sentenced to 30 days in jaU and
placed on'l8 mooths probaUon.
Stanley Payne, 50, Gallipolis,
charled with domesUc violence, .
fined $50, siJ: months jail sentence
suspended and placed on ooe year
probatioo.
Clarged With left of center, Joe E.
Clar1&lt;,50,GaUipolls,flned$50.
Jolll F. Youn&amp; Zl, GallipOlis, . '
chal'Jed with driving • r iiiiiP"Jl·
sion, lined $16, six months jail sentence suspended and placed on siJ:
months probation.
Charged With failure to display
.valid registratioo, Steven M. James,
29, Rt. I, Ewington, forfeited $35
bond.
Charles M. Dnurunond, 18, Rt. I,
Bl~ charged wltb failure to
obey a stop sign, forfeited $30 bond.
Charged With failure to obey a
flashing red Ught, Stanford G. Cox,
24, Rl. I, Northup, fOrfeited $39 bOnd,
Forfeiting bond for speeding
were:
,
Donald D. TabOrn, 48, Hamden,
$35; Lawrence · V. Unroe Jr., 35,

GEORGE HALL .

'

truck.

Judge ends 26 cases

The Great

Name of
· organization ..••.. . ... . ...........•... . ........•..
'
Type of Entry ••..•....................•....•.•••..

The Racine Fire Department will
to door fund
drive in tbe area served by tbe
department to collect donaUons to
be used for payment on the taoller
be conducting a door

smiling.

Adults Over 21 Only

Nixes zoning requirements

taking orders

Members of Rutland American
Legion Poclt 487 are exlendinfl a big
vote of thanks to Robert Snowden
and his=for preparing the
Veterans Dli dinner and to women
who brought '
dessert for the

starts today

Friday~

Shiflet of Richmond, Va., attended
activities held at Yorttown, Va., to
COOIIDemorate America's victory
&lt;;elebration of tbe Revolutionary
War. It was quite an extensive
presentation held Oct. 1&amp;-19.

lor pumpldn pies
at P eaeh and apple for SUO with
thla Frldly to be
tbe deadline for
BOB
'placillg orders. Orders will be taken
at ti1WIJ61, !JI$.432'/ or !185-4108.

sales tax

'

In addition to the tables at which
the seniors will sell crafts for themselves, there will be a table at which ·
the sale will benefit the center itself
- donated crafts wiU bring· the
profit into the coffers of the center.

Betty· and Howard Roush, local,
and their dlughler, Mra. Faye

chore off yOur
banda.
aub members

The sunday Times-Sentinel

Ex-Ohio legislator faces gratuity charges

Recogni%eS veterans events

·Senior bazaar set Dec. 3
GALLIPOLIS - Featuring
display and sale Of one's own crafts
for profit, the GaUia County Senior
Citizens Center will have its bazaar 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 3 at the center,
according to announcement Satur~
day.
The announcement comes early so
that the aged folk will have time fo
reserve a table. One makes a reservation by telephoning 446-7000.
they'll have the bazaar on the first
Thursday of December in the multi·
purpose room.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohii)-Polnt Plaasant, w. va.

'··
"

�,,
Page-A·ll-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy~Middleport-Gallipolis,

Ohi-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Metzerihaum appears
: ready for '82

Nov. 15, 1981

Drops theater plan

: CINCINNAn (AP) - u.s. Sen. candidate on the basis of any one
· Howard Metzenbawn says he's single issue," he said.
prepared for attacks · by conReferring to the ~oral Majority,
servative groups that have targeted Metzenbaum said the group Is "not
him lor defeat in the 1982 election.
very moral: I don't think they're
But Metzenbaum, a liberal' very right. ·And I'm damned sure
: Democrat from Ohio, asked a lun- they don't represent a majority of
: cheon crowd Friday for help in over- Americans in this CO\IIllry."
,
• coming the anticipated assault.
Metzenbawn also took aim at the. '
.' "I'm going to have a ro1111h lime," Reagan administration's economic
· he told a luncheon of the Woman's policies. He said that the comCity Club of Greater Cincinnati.
bination of social spending cuts, tax
Metzenbaum warned that out-of· cuts and lricrea.ses for the .military
state conservative groups woold would not balance the federal
: present Ohio voters with "more lies, budget.
: more hogwash, more negatives"
Metzenbawn, who helped defeat .
· about him than in any past cam- legislation that would have phased
: paign.
out the oil windfall profits tax,
The National . Conservative questioned the push to give oil com,
, Political Action Committee and the · psnies more money through tax
Life Amendment Political• Action breaks. He noted that the Mobil Oil
: Committee have numbered Met- corJ;. is trying to take over the
: zenbaum among the senators they ll'"'athon Oil Co., based in Findlay.
• will work to defeat in the general
: election next year.
·
''You know what oil companies
' . Metzenbaum said conservative use their money for? To go out and
groups "knocked off many of my buy other oil companies," Mel·
. friends" in Congress last year, and zenbawn said. '"!'hat's what Mobilis
: said he was prepared for a cam- "doing at this very moment, buying
: paign assaUlt by those groups.
up Marathon.
· "l'msortofproudofthefact that I
: jim No. I on all of tile 'hit lists.' I'm
· sort of proud of the fact that l know
lhey're coming, and l'in ready for

CINCINNATI (APJ 7 The ClndnnaU Ballet Company bas decided
to abandon Ill 9-moniJI.&lt;Ild llruggle
to own 1111 own home - the Palace
'!'boater - unless palronJ come up
with an add!Uonal•,ooo.
"AI CJl today, the CBC Is throwing
In the towel. We've ezhalllled our!)(:
forta. It's up to someone else," said
Lorrence T. Kellar, president of the

'·

0

balletboard.

Kellar told a Friday news conference the board had received
pledges of up to fMIO,OOO but fell
'shcirt of the'' million needed to take
over the 2,800-seat theater, which
bas recently been refurbished.
. Palace
a group of local

•

'I

.Nov. 15, 1981

lnveston, said the baUet could have

the theater for mlllioo needed to
pay oflllll debta.
.
Efforts to operate the theater with
ongoing live shows for two years
failed.

Patrol celebrates birthday

Kellar said the ballet had pt8MI!(I
to Increase the number of Its performances with the theater and book
other events. He said the ballet, with
26 full-time dancers, now Is limited
in Its productions at Cinclnnnati
Music Hall because the Cincinnati
Opera Company and the Cincinnati
Symphony also use the facWty.
Kellar.said City Hall turned a deaf

By DEB FOX
Tlm!l S Jfret Staff

GUri'AR AND .BASE L~SONS
NOW BEING OFFERED AT
GALLIPOLIS LOCATION.
INSTRUCTOR B. PA nERSON ·
PHONE 446 8074 AFTER 4 P.M.
AND WEEKENDS

METZENBAUM MAKES A POINT - u. s. s-tar BIIWIII'II M""
zelbaum mates a pabd c1ar1ac a Jq""""on adllrno Ia lbe Womea'• City
Club of Greater ~U, Friday at Ualoa Termlulla Clndnull. MetzeubaWD; a liberal Democrat from Olllo, lallllclled u atlllck • emservadve IJ'lllpl tl!al have lai'Jeled blm for defeat In lbe UIIZ eleclloaa.
f AP Laaerpboto),
·

GALUPOLIS-Today Is toe 48th
anniversary of the Ohio State Patrol ·
and tomorrow marks the 40th anniversary of the Gallla County pcl6t.
Much has changed in both the state
and local patrol's strueture and
· responsibilities since their. beclnnings.
.
· · The patrol was organiUd. by the
Ohio General Assembly in 1933 with
· 60 men, 6 cars and 54 motorcycles to
enforce state motor vehicle laws and
when the local ' post opened eight
years later, It bad four offlcen, two
ears and two motorcycles to cover
Gallia Connty and parts of Meigs,
Vinton, Jacksoo and t..wrence
Counties.
One of those four officers was
Pierce . D. McCreedy, m1 Sunset
Dr, Gallipolis.
"It was different then than II lli
now," McCreedy said. "There were
no specified hours of. work and :we .
worked from 10 to20hoursa day. We
stayed at the post the hours we were
not on the road and we stayed there
'overnight except .one night a week .
"It was primitive compared to .
now: We didn't bave the luxuries of
two-way radios until alter the war
(World War II) and we worked by
ourselveS. When you ran Into
something, you just did your best."

ear.

•

r-------------:-----------------------....,---------------,--------:_.:.-

THANKSGIVING
SALE! 16 thru 21

them," Metzenbawn said.

0

·; The senator took the opportunity
: io attack the "New Right," tile
·Moral Majority, and single-issu•
:groups that endorse or oppose a
: political candidate for views on one
. topic.
• Metzenbaum said the United
, ~tales has never been so endangered
by groups that believe only one issue
·matters in an election.
: "I believe that il's unfair, unin·
: telli~ent and on-American to judge a
:

November

FREEl

:Microwave cooktng
by time or temperature-

save ttmel save energy!

were ended in Rio Grande Mayor's

$30.

I

James L. Bahr, 18, Long Bottom,
and Marjorie C. Nelson, 19,
Crooksville, each charged with
failure to obey a stop sign, each
fined$30.
Fined for speeding were:
· Jerry L. Rsy, 20, Clendenin,
W.Va., $25; Nicholas E. Boho, 21,
Jackson, $33; Rebecca L: Dotson, '1:1,
Gallipolis,$.10; Arthur G. Winno$27.
Jill K. Shlun, 20, Point Pleasant,
$25: Timothy J. Arney, 18, Ewington,
$31; Robert V. Shaw, 18, Wheeler·
· sburg, $31; Kristy E. Arthur, 19,
Wellston, $34; Julie A. Roach, 25,
Northup, $26; Kevin D. Knapp, 21,
Patriot, $27; William C. Burns, 54,
Rio Grande, $26.

Takes
applications
.
.
CHESHIRE - Gallia·Meigs Community Action Agency will hegin ac·
cepling emergency assistance applications oo Mooday. The applications will be accepted by the
agency's Home Energy Assistance
Program (HEAP).
Emergency assistance funds can
be used to purchase fuel, prevent
· service disconnections and restore
.service. Applicants must present a
shutoff notice or certify they have no
inore than 10 dsys' fuel supply.
Applicants must also be Within the
federal government's low-income
guidelines.
; Applications are available at the
· CAA offices in the Meigs County
. courthouse in Pomeroy, the Old
Tbaler Ford building_ at 417 Second
Ave., Gajlipolis and North Second
and East Main Street, Cheshire.

• Thl'ee 1W&amp;Sb/rinse tem-

using 36 minute, 2-apeod

perature oombinatJ.ons

• "Mtcrowa.ve Ou1de &amp;ru1

'•

Vete.rans Memorial
Terre Wood, J..ona
Jlollom; Blanche Serag, Rutland;
Fannie Phillip~, Pomeroy; Barbara
Jloulb, Portland; Velma ReynoldB,
Pumetoy.
ot.eharged - Lewla Ellla,
Thomas Justice, Gladya Fife,
Olarlotte Van Meter.

• AatJvated soak eyoJ.e.

ftlter.

trap llr;~

Model DD1!530011-Eleotrtc

Price Per Pair
waaller

~~toub.

'\

• Ten power.levels
• ":Mlerowa.ve OU!de and
cookbook" !nOiuded.
• 1.3 cu. 11. capocjt;y
• Tlme or temperature

.!' ..·

• V&amp;rlable water lsvala

p.-.
• Three wasb/rtnse

Model JET112A

• Three tlmed cycles:

onorllY jlavlnC !JO!d wa.ter
rlnlle.

• Blllall ~1'10 IOf
tenor dlapanaers.
• P'Utei'-J'loO&gt; 8Jamm helpe

• Two temperatl.U'e cont.rolled. oyoles
• Simmer 'n Cook'" control
for a.ll de,y slow cooking

tr&amp;p llnt.

... -

• Durable poroelaln oll&amp;Dlel
1lnlah on top, llt:l. tub t.D4

•

, reference
• Ten power levels

BEBATE-••IG

. '379

• Double Ducy'" ~helf

• Memory tunction for

.

...,.._

Unbel•~

load control

cll8penaers.

• P'Utor-Flo" Byatem ll8lpa
trap llnt.

-

• Durable poroel&amp;ln ena.mel
llnlah on top, llt:l. tu1l and

• Unba.laru&gt;ed load control
. 'll'BtOlD.
• New ext.ra 01ea.rung
eyoles.

• Blx o;yoloa-regul&amp;r, Min!·

Qu\01&lt;. parm&amp;nent press.
knits, alee.nlng:
mlnl (# I&amp;rge.

•ll1n1·Basket"' fea.ture.
• L&amp;rge cap&amp;clljy, threo
waah and spin speedS.

• lllootrollloall,yqu&amp;llljy.

• Va.r1able wat.l1" liVel aettlng pormltB m&amp;tohlng

$t31.oo

BEBAIE-20;00

'417

0

ott.en usec1 recipes

-Timed cooked.

- Timed clefroat
-Timed Cook Code'"
control

~

temperatoroa wtt.h

• Cook Code'" control cha.rt
on panel for qulck

•l'our WBBh/l"lnse temJ]!;l"ature OOlllb1n&amp;tlOnS wtth
elll!rgy iav1D11lold water
8818ot1ons.
• Ble&amp;Oh and fabric
eollell81'

cyclea-recular

faodyOij're oookinj!

··~~

1

• Two
a.nd
poJ.yioler'laUt/perm

cociklng-ohooae the
method. that IUite the

( ·7:1

I

• 'l'llret wuh/spln spoold
otm:lbtnattons.

Model WWA707W

• l!lectronlcaiJ,y tested

QU&amp;).It;y.

lolocle!WWA6600B

• Standard oapaoll;y, 2-ln-1
With Mlnl-

method of m.tcrowavtng
by Time

$449

~B:::::~~

• 16 au. ft. no-trost .

• Three dey1ng aeleotlonsnormal.low, no heat.
• Durable poroel&amp;1n ID&amp;ID8I

w~

• Big 4.61l cu. t\. O.Zer.
• 'I'W"o Ice 'n Easy trt¥S on
suspended ah8lf.

1lnlah alothsa clrum.

• Elootron!O&amp;Jly'tested

• Two oyoles-re«War a.nd.
apeollllnOludlnC perm
pl'888 a.ncl po~ lmlta.

• Energy saver switch 1n

• Removable U!&gt;II'Ont llnt

•

t _.

,.
The GaiUa post now employs 20
persOila Including 14 troopers to ser·
ve Gallla and Meigs Counties. The
stale bas 1128 employees working
from57posts. ·
The patrol's duties bave also
chanled thnlugh the yeara, Ac-'
cording to the post's preaent commander, Lt. Ernest W. WIQI-or·
th, ~ patrol lr responsible for in·
vestigstion of all breakage, damase
. ' and destructioo of state property u
· well as reports of aU motOr vehicle
accidents outside munlcjpal corpontlons, felony investlgaliOill on
state pruperty, regulation and ~
tro1 of aU traffic on publ)t. highways
oatalde munldpal COJl)Orations, lnlpllCtioa and spot ~ons of all
scbool buses, and PUblic Utility
Ccimmillbn of Ohio·reports on alllntr..Uie and Interstate truck

normal position ll8lpa cut

;275 ..

D&amp;lry oompart.menta.

~_;_·In·~-~ .·:_:_~-'_.1'81"-·llt.· 5-4 5

:_;w_:_
·

Eqjoy Genera.! Elect.rlo'a

'42

v

)

•

fl!.moll8 C&amp;lrod''· S\ll'face
unite. lolore turns In ooll
for evan heat dlstr!·
liutlon. One Bklllet-&amp;IZed
s· un1t and three 6"
unlt.a. RaLal-y lnftnlto
lla&amp;t. oont.rofa make
ohooe!nllt.he l'lght
temperature a snap!

·OIU

o

lni:C.Y · - cli7 Option.

• ll-lrlel _ , lOtion.
•11&lt;&gt;111-~

- - - bo bulh.-ln

• Cbon7woad- top.

·liu&amp;l~·~.
·NoaU~~.

..

• '*'-·
fJr:ND4 .,.,, ..,

•

aw.

: Admitted -

Jl

426 Viand Street

Point Plelllnt, W. VI.
0 ..

'·'

"

0

'};

,.

'

,.

0

'

'

'
1.

'

'f

"The patrol is organized as a riot
or dvD dlaorder unl~ If called on by
,tile pvemar. Itllllao responsible
for aCCIItailllnC ·llld apprehending
.auto llliiVI!I, for driver llcenalng in
tbe llate IJid lawa rtlaUng to proper
reautallon aJ1!1 UUIDC ol motel'

'

•llullt.ln -!Dod

·. ·'1'\dr~·

,.

movanen!a.

'289

Moclol080ee0W ·

~·

.,.. , . ;

Tbe GaUfa County post's first offleers were, left to right, Patrolmen Pleree D. McCreedy, Keoneth L. Duling, wnboir C. Gtlodhart and Cpl. Dooald H. Cole,

operatlng oost.

With
Purcflase

. o;yolo.

"~

.

,1&amp;: -

lbe anlt'1 flrlll commander.

·free

IMhldlJlC l'otmllorull"

~~ ·

• Three oab:ln8t shelves.
• Full·wtdth crisper.'

QU&amp;llt;y.

ModolD ~E630 V- -·El·ectrlc. .

·df- #t

refrlger&amp;tol'-fl'ecer,

• Standard oaj,aolt;y.

l'eatare-pao'ked.
Potacrubber® dt•hwuher.

o7-qyalawuhooleaUon

·The first home of the local post
was 538 Second Ave. II remained
there until December 1943 when the
post wa.s closed because manpower
was lost to the armed forces dH&lt;inK
W.W.II. Thepatroldroppedfrom300
to ISO employees, he said.
During that . time, McCreedy
operated the post by himself out of
his home until 1944 when he was
transferred to the Athens subpost ·
and the Gallia post wa,s closed for a
year .
It was reopened in October of 1945
at the previous locatioo, In about
1948, it was moved to 919 Second
Ave. and then to the corner of
Eastern Avenue and . Smithers
Street.
·
In late 1954, it was moved to its
current location at lhe Ohio Depart·
ment of Highways' building at 422
Jackson Pike. It was at that time the
,local post obtained its first permanent dispatcher.
McCreedy retired from the patrol
as a lieutenant in 1971 and works lor
James M. Gavin generating plant as
well as being a city commissioner.
Not until 1955 was a 40-hour work
week imposed by the patrol. In 1968
the first female dispatchers were
employed and the first female driver
examiner was hired in-1968 followed
in 1973 by the first female communications officer. The • first
female trooper was installed in 1977.

• R&amp;mavable up..front ltnt.

• Filter-Flo~ System helps

ayBtom.

• CooJtCocle'•controlprovides a. short-out

This ho- at 919 Second Ave., GalllpolbJ, became the oecood headquarters ol the JIOiit in 1948. The pstrol'• cars at that time were lhese19fll Fords.
.

llnlsh on olot.hao drum.

·preparatiOn

·,

.'

• Durable poroolatn ~I

water aelectiona.

• Temp hold. teaturo SIVUO
addod llexlbUlljy to meal

~~-~c...

.

• Three drying aelectlonB ~
normal, low, no-heat.

lolodel J!:T!06Y

$419
r..,~ -- 1·_

timed

~··

• Unb&amp;lanced load oont.rol

Cookbook'' Included

B~d capaclt;y,

• Four cycloa- regule.r,
damp dry, pel'ffi&amp;llent
,press a.nd dewr1nkle.

With OilOl'ltV S&amp;Vlng OOld

• Durable porcelain ftns.pu!l
llnlsh on top, lld, tull and
basket.

High. Mediwn,
Low/Delrost

. Answers 4 calls
: POMEROY- Four calls were answered Friday by local emergency
units, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports.
· The Middleport Unit at 7:26 a.m.
look John Stivers from hla home to
'Holzer Medical Center. The Tuppers
:Plains unit at8:05 a.m. was called to
the Eagle Ridge Road, the scene of
an auto accident and Terre WOOd
,.a· taken to Veterans Memorisl
H01pllal.
: The Rutland Unit at 10:48 a.m.
look Blanche Scraggs f1 "ttl the New
Liifta Road to VeteraDE Memorial
HOBpltal and at'5:48 p.m. the MidCileport Unit look George McDaniel
from village hall to Veterans
llfemorlal with a head laceratlim
rece.lved In a fall.

•

• Accurate cooking by time

.1'h.i'Se power levels-

$319.

lolodel DDE530011-Eieotr!c

• standard oapoclt;y, alngle
speed washer.

lo&amp;ds.

tlmar
• MicroThermomater'"
temperatw-e probe takes
,. the guesswork out of
m16rowavthg ·

Model JET88Y

• Two cyoJes-regul&amp;r and
per:naru'nt pi'BBB.

water liJV'Eil to most. stze

• 1.:3 cu. :ft.. capa.c.tty

: RIO GRANDE - Fifteen cases

FREEl

• Three wa.ter level &amp;eleo·
tlons lat you match the

Model JET88Y

Mayor's (:ourt
Court last week.
'
John J. Fox, 43, Fayetteville,
W.Va., .charged with DWI, fined $300
and costs.
Charged with failure to yield,
Henry K. Ferrell, 20, Vinton, fined

16 Lb. Turkey With Purchase Of A MaJor Appliance Or Color TV.

whlclel,
""··
· .,
Ill traffic
IIlii
...........
la1ll aDd"Mie'
0

motorllla,"~llid.

•

'

•

. '

.'

�:

•
Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.
Nov. IS, 1911

Hleddm-~_,--------~
. ----------~
Fisher.and Bragg wed ~ee and Moore marry

SINGER
RED TAG SPECIALS

P~eroy-Middleport-Galllpo!ls, 0111-Point Pieasant, W.Va.

•

.Nibert

...••

·Kincaid and Hutchison exchange marriage vows;~

•

A receptlc!n wu held at the clilu•
Ellis. FJowel'l!iri - Marianne car. . c11.
-: •
dwell
.
'l'hcll!e assisting were Jerry Kin. They wwe gowns of apricot ol'pn- caid, Jud)' Cardwell, Peggy Manza l1ned in taffeta, fashioned with a non, Chesstene Miller and Lyndell
ruffled front and bad&lt; neck1lrle with PembertOn.
·
a bow trim and capelet sleeves. The
The couple took a wedding trip to
gown had sel·ln waistband and a HawaU and reside at Wesbnoreland
flared skirt with flounced hem.
Estates, Huntington, W.Va.
'
Attendants carried colonial
Tile bride is a 1979 graduate of
nosegay's of white miniature car- Fairland High School and attends •
nations, apricot sweetheart """"' Marshall University in elementary
and baby's breath. The flowergirl education. She works part lime at
carried a lace basket with apricot Carpet-Land, Gallipolis.
rose petals.
The groom is a t978 graduate of
Taper lights were Todd Kincaid Fairland High School and attends
. 'Marshall .University in business
andLelandWardJr.
Best man was Fred Stone. Ushers management. He is employed by
lm'e John Lapelle, Bruce Levisay
Hutchison Fire Protection and Supo _
and Steve Miller. Jeremy Scott was ply.

Lepelle, Krill! Klncald and Luann

ModellOIO

.If

I

111t Toudt-,_ MomorY·
n ?' 211110 CUll rllbt to tbe
. . , . , _ ...... Off......

.

:u cniillw otlldl .,....... A

'
tJ
.
~

.................. tlltiiiJ bull 1 ... 1bel'llp.t:Sow" .
...... 111o1 .._. for In-tho-

.

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

SAVE$100

••

Model10.16
All the...,... Thil cratlw
Touch F..-" mochiDe orfen you doo't wint to
mlts. Like ~uuon self·
windiaa bobbin. A one-srep
bu ......... 1be f1Jp"ponol, All the ..UU II Ndu&lt;:al
• prlcos.

sAVE
$5()00
..

t

'

.

Mr. and Mrs. Bragg

. Love," and "If 11 accompanied by
Mrs. Lee. Therewasasolo, "Annie's
Song" with guitar accompaniment

__................ .

I

(

£On and Becky Mallorv, Racine.
RACINE- Cynthia Lee, daughter
For a weddmg trip the bride of Mr. and Mrs. Louie D. Lee, and Radcliffe, Nancy Campbell, Racine;
Reception hoatesses were Mrs.
changed into a sheer polyester dress Randall Moore, son of Bob Moore,
with jacket in a wine floral print, Syracuse, were married on Oct.l7 at ces
Unda
Evaris, Racine,
Portland;gre·at..,tunt
and FranMcKenzie,
Of ·I
and wore an orchid corsage. They the Reorganized Church of Jesus the bride.
reside at Master Hills Apartments in Christ of Latter Day Saint!! on the
The couple resides in Syracuse.
Ansted, w. Va.
Portland-Racine Road.
The bride is a graduate of
William Roush, paotor and close r-:;;;jiiiiifiiiiip;;;;;~
Southern High School. The bride- friend of the family, performed the
groom graduated from Rainelle ceremony which took place at 2:30
High School and is employed with p.m. following a program of music
Ontario Pipeline, Inc., as a heavy by Jocelyn Bailey, pianist, and Eula
equipment operator.
Proffitt, who sang "The Lord's
Out-of-town guests included Prayer."
Marion Knightstep, Jackie, Meagan,
Sandra Lee served as matron of
Mindy McLaughlin, Colwnbus; Don honor for · her sister. Bob Lemley,
Dudding, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Syracuse, was best man, and the
Raymond Cundiff, Mason, W. Va.;· ushers were Chris and Andy Baer,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Roush, Garen sons of ' Jocelyn Bailey of Racine.
Roush, Rob Roush, Mildred Ripley, The three flower girls were Rebecca
Hal'iettMorton, Charleston, W. Ya.; Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Maddox, Mark, Terry Moore, Syracuse; Angela
Maddox, Irene Fisher, Cleveland; Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Barbara , Chad and Stephanie William Davis, Syracuse; and
Mayes, Jean Fisher, ·Gallipolis; . Christina Randolph, daughter of Mr.
Debbie and Amy Spangler, Peters- and Mrs. John Randolph, New
town, W. Va.: Mrs. June Harris and Haven, W.Va.
Rachel , Logan; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
A reception honoring the couple
Neal, Keiffer, W. V'L-; Sandy was held in the social room 01 the
Thoma•. Houston, Te&gt;&lt;as; Mr. and church. The three-tiered cake was
Mrs. Howard Robinson, Flatwoods, baked by the groom's sister, Mrs.
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. George William Davis; and the two sheet
Brown, Rainelle, W. Va.; John cakes were baked by the bride's
Brooks, Rupert, W. Va.; Mr. and graridinolher, Mrs. Golda Radcliffe,
Ml'l!. Rick Sargent, Plains City; Mr. Syracuse.
and Mrs. Jim McCune, Hlco, W.Va. r-.:_______..;___-1

A

FDI·octlfll-

-· ~1

I

Mr.

and Mrs. Wright

&lt; GAWPOIJS -

Bell Chapel,
Gallipolis, W8ll the selling fiJr the
bjov.l wedding of Brenda Lee Nibert .
and Don Ray Wright. The bride ill
the dauchler 01 Hattie Nibert and
late Wlllis W. Nibert Sr., of ·
Gallipolis. The groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Wright ol
' Gallipolis.
The ceremony was performed by
Rev. Everettllelaney.
'

RODY-10 ASSEMil£·FURNI1URE
• Solid American Hardwood
Ready to Stain and Finish
e'Sturdy Massive Construction .
• Superior Qul!lltv at Reasonable Prices

e

Tllll'l!·~UI

Don Ray Colman served as. best
roan. Servmg 8s the maid of honor
was Debra Slaver.
Flowerglrl was Kelly Hannon,
niece of the· bride. Rlngbearer was
John E. Wright, brother of the

groom.

'

The groom works for Ohio Valley
Publishing Cbmpany and the bride
worksforBurgerKing,ofGalllJ?Olis.
They will reside on Bob MeConnick Road, Route 4, Gallipolis.

•
• ---A Tlntversane""s_·
~

-

.WE NEED PENNIES!.

I

.

RUDY 10
C~ ltOCk fAILl
IOO ,_. l , • •. - . .. .......

.
Also· •v•llable, unfinished Chests,
'

.

Booke~ses,

Desks, Vlrllty 1nd Corner Cabinets.

'

BAKERMiddleport,
FURNITURE
Oh.
/

,

Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy at 7
p.m. on Saturday, Nov, 21, may be
purchased at Dutton Drug Store and
Locker 219, Middleport, and Swisher
and Lohae and New York Clothing

SPECIAL
STAND
OPTIONAL

··3aa·:

' THIS WEEK'S :
SPECIAl

:

•
RC :
•
DIET •
'

."

........

CIIMHI

Tope

12" B&amp;W ·

.• sgg9s
Diatonal

RITE •

•

e

:8
e

•e
•e
:
e

the Meig.s

HOLIC\t\Y ...

eeeeeeeeeee•••e•

.t•

alWMi football game to be played at

e
e

•

.
16oz.
Bottles

RC u~:e
•

$129
:
Plus tax e
&amp; dep. •
•

•

ICE COLD BEER,
WINE &amp; POP ·

BALL FURNITURE CO.
2ZO THIRD AVE.

GALliPOliS,

•:• r~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::~~
ee

HOURS
I
Monday thru Saturday e
8 A.M. till I P.M.
e

: Gallipolis Ice Co.

e

:

,,

e
DRIVE THRU
e
e
CARRYOUT
e
e
709FirstAve.
:
eeeeeeeeeeee••••

..
·.

'

.

\

WE HAVE 'EM
GRADE A
SELF BASTING
TIMER

I

1-SG,OOOBTU
warmMomint

.I
'

.

2-65,000 BTU
warm Morning

LB.
WllH ADDlTIONAL '10.00

•

''

GAS HEATER·
GAS 'HEATER.

·~War'
40,000
GAS HEATER
In Mornlnp w/Biower, like new.
BTU

..

WOOD HEATERS
6 lAUNDRY SJOV£S ..
6-New

TUES., NOV. 17th
AT 10:00 A.M.

GRANDPASEZ,

'

AtCost

4 Caps"

"Be sure the Turkey you buy
has the Grand A Ml with no
bruises or parte missing."

atiJC:Ol.ATE. .................•.••.•'1.89 IIJ.

3 USED REFRIGERAToRS
I

''

1-40''
Nice

Locuatlftd
Mldcllaport, Oltlo

011 •

•

Tickets
available
POMEROY-Tickets to

12-21

FREE CANDY MAKING
DEMONS1RA110NS

Carousel~
. PHONE: ftt-6142

Glenn

For the occasion, the bride wore a
goivn of organza and cluny lace
fashioned with a ruffled victorian
neckline, v-shaped ruffled yoke, filled waist, and lace sleeves with ruf·
fled coifs and a full accordion
pleated over skirt bordered with a
deep ruffle. Seed pearls trimmed the
bodice and sleeves.
Her chapel veil was trimmed iri
matching cluny lace secured to a
camelot cap in the same lace with
a!ached.blusher veiL
She carried a cascade of white
miniature carnations and apricot
sweetheart roses and baby's breath.
The matron of honor was Rhond;l
Stone. Bridesmaids were Cathe

··ThanksgiVing Turkey

OH I0 VALLEY BANK

"Decorated Cakes'*
. . All OCIUslons."'

'

MiNERSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Westen of Minersville
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 24 by rededicating
their wedding vows.
Rev. David Mann perfonned the
ceremony at the First Baptist Church in Pomeroy. A reception followed
in the church social room.
Mr. and Mrs. Westen were
married in 1931 at Moundsville, W..
Va. They have five children, Mrs.
Harry (Delllah) Wright, Augusta,
Ga. : Mrs. Raymond (Augtista)
Welch, Marion, Ohio; Mrs. James
(Charlotte) Marriner, Crown City;
. Mrs. Robert (Sarah) Roush, Alexandria, Va., and William .Westen of
Woodbridge, Va. They have 14
grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

ANY FURTHER .
FOR YOUR

And we are willing to pay you a 15% profit, on
your pennies. For a limited time the Ohio
Valley Bank will pay yo'-' $1.15 for every $1.00
worth of pennies you bring into any of our four
offices. Hurry in while this offer lasts.

.

PROCTORVILLE- Cheri D. Kincaid and Phillip S. Hutchison were
married Oct. 4 . at Rome
Presbyterian Church; Prnclorville.
The bride is the daughter of Anne
Kin~d. Proctorville, and
Kincaid, Gallipolis, The groom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Hutchison, Proctorville.
Rev. Dallas Reynolds Officiated
the double-ring ceremony in which
the bride was given in marriage by
her father.
. Music included "Oh, Promise
Me," jjSunriSe, SWlSet" and
"Because." Soloist was Dale
Vicker.i and organist was .ro Ellen
Tinsley.

Golden anniversary year observed

.,.,

.........
,... _,_
z..,,,._,
CHAISII

·

DON'T LOOK

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

skirts with deep bottom ruffles.

'

992-2211

CORRECTION TO SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15 CIRCULAR

·~O::..
~h~~~:~.:~.::U~:. I ~~~~~~~~~~~
puffed elbow leugth sleeves, and full f.-

. .-vee! the cake. Othen · · · - .
: the buffet table were Dorotby Jabn

PIClUM T.UB£

Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co. as your
Sinpr approved dealer.

9-5 P.M. Dally-Evenings by appt. 992-3307·

HOUDAY POOLS INC.

317 N. 2nd Ava.,

.

t'fiii·FOCU5

Pomeroy

115 w. 2nd

·UNFINISHED

Mt fMM INSUIWI:£ COWWIIES
11oft Olltm IIOoiii., IIO~ Ill

POOLS

They carried miniature baskets of
dried fall flowers. •
, Larry Fisher, Pomeroy, was best
man, and the ushers were Tom Han, stlne, Gauley Bridge, W. Va.; and
Doug Warden, Racine. Nathan
· Harris, Logan, was the ringbearer.
The groom wore a sand tuxedo with
maroon tipped ivory rosebuda and
his attendants wore rust tuxedo with
cream mum boutomieres. The ring: bearer·WBB in an ivory suit.
: For her dauchler's wedding, Mrs.
• Fisher wore a wine sheer crepe
atreet-~ength dresa and carried a
llniJe yeUow ..- presented to her ·
bythepoom.Mra. Jim McCune, the
groom's lister, waa in a peach knit
: IIIII and carried a lingle yellow rose
. : ...-nted to her by the bride.
• A recepUonwae held at the Racine
, Amel'lcan Legion hall Immediately
fallowinl the cenmony..lbe brlde'a
tlble f.tured a. faur.tlend Ivory
. ca, topped wldl fall fiowers.
: WleUr butel III'I'IIIPIIIel wi.th
: Clllco bowl on . the table covered
: With an antique lace cloth CMipleted
the dec:or. Ann Radfard, Pameroy,
pi I d led It the puneb bowl, llld Ka,
Wll'llen and Bunni Wll'den, Raein&lt;

....

""" ,

SWIMMING

"'ed
as a junior
at- .
tendants
were bridesmaid.
in maroon The
calico

~

•

tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;w

WHOLESALE RETAIL

flowers
with twoandcymbidium
she carriedorchids
a lace and
fan
ivory linen sandals. For something
old she wore her mother's antiqore
cameo necklace; for something
borrowed, her Aunt Clara Mae
Sargent's cameo earrings; for
something new, her wedding attire,
and for something blue, a handmade
garter.
.
Molly Fisher of Racine was her
sister's maid of honor, and her
bridesmaids were Bambi Fisher,
Pomeroy, her sister·in-law; and
Valerie Hanstine, Gauley Bridge, W.
va. Jennifer Johnson, Racine, ser-

-..
_..,.

..

Mr. and Mrs. Moore

· by David Harris, and during the
ceremony he sang ' Come With Me."
For the processional Larry Fisher
sang "You Decorated My Life," and
Harris sang "We've Only Just
Begun."
Hurricane candles inarked the
pews and a full motif was carried out
with auturnri colors on the spiral
candelabra. Candles in the windows
were trimmed with calico bows and
fireside baskets and stone jars were
filled with fall leaves, dried plants,
com and mums. A feature of the
wedding setting was spotlighted por· rr.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;
trait kneeling benches.
· Herbert E. Shields escorted his
•·
·granddaughter to the altar and
presented her in marriag~ on behall
of. her family, She wore an ivory
· rosepoint lace gown of Victorian
style with a high band collar, a deep
v yoke, schiffli lace ruffle fanning
PORTABLE SPAS FITS
the elbow length sleeves, and a
MOST ANY ROOM
triangular chapel·length train of
schiffli lace over the straight rose'
For Your Winter Need
point lace skirt with a bottom ruffle.
Call 304·429·4788
In her hair she wore a circlet of
1

~

THE FABRIC SHOP

....,.,,.......
RACINE - The new Racine
Wesleyan Unii!Jd Methodist Church
w$g the setting lor the candlelight
' wedding of Amy Marie Fisher,
. daughter of Bonnie Marlene Fisher, .
· · Racine, an~ Kenneth B. Bragg, son
· of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bragg of •
Rainelle, W.Va.
. The ceremony took place ai 6:30
p.m. on Oct. 17 and was the first
' wedding In the new church. The Rev.
·James M. Clarke perfonned the
double ring ceremony which included the lighting of the unity candle.
Music was presented by Lee Lee,
organist, who played "Seventeen,"
"Edelweiss," "Endless Love" and
"More," with Larry Fisher, brother
of the bride, singing "There is

Tile sunday Times-Senllnei-Pag-84

Where Frien.dahip
11rul S.a.•inaa Go
.. H'!llll ilf H.-d

$10000
$29P
EACH
S2ggtl
·EACH
SJ5()10
EACH

'65·
Sl(JOI'
S15()10
S25CJII
S'ACH

AND UP

'

Sale ends Dec. 31, 1981. Order NOW to insure
Christmas delivery.
\

On sale, SILADIUM" class rings. Traditional styling.
Crafted from jeweler's fine stainless metaL More
· durable !hnn gold. The finish never loses its luster.
Included in this special low price are many exciting
extras, 'SO you can personalize your own ring with
features such as:
·

,,

• Yoqr f"lrst name

A Thanksgiving.Bouquet·
in a Gravy Boat
A boaudlul a1T8111&lt;f11f'lt. }( lovely pieu of Ear!henware in ·
neurraJ tonK to match f!tlf!!rY decor. That's our Thank.li(livinc
Bouqu" In A Gravy 8oaL A beaudlul, rhotllhrlul, r&gt;HJIOble
aik that will be lll&lt;!d and ,....,mbered aU year Iona.
Fill&lt; ir'o a wondtrful c.nrerpieco. Th'l' it ~roes a handy
oervi"l! piece. f'dled with de6doua,aravies and IOu&lt;&gt;'ll.
So Hnd the aik rhoy'U r~ aU year lORi.
Thanbaivina il Thuroda~ N&lt;Wember 'JJJ. It'• a aiit they're'""'
10 aobble up.

· POMEROY
FUMER
SHOP
WIY

"The

America Sands Love"
1061Uttarnut Ave.
PH....JU9 or 992·5721 ,

• Your initial or school monogram encrusted
in the stone

.

''•

• Your initial, mascot or favorite symbol set

beneath the stone
• Your full name engraved inside the ring

'.
·"

All schools in Gallia County and Point Pleasant available.
•

1
'

Bri~g·io this ad for this

special offer.

..'•"

.
...
.,

..-·-·-Jaw 'Its

~----ta!Oialt

•
••

�~age---:B -6

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

_Engagements
·Klein-Hysell

Pomeroy

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

POMEROY - Reta Roush,
The open church wedding will be.
Pomeroy, is announcing the at The Father's House oo Dec. 19 at
engagement of her-daughter, Donna 2:30p.m. with a receplloo to folloW
Denise, tQ Philip Franklin Oldaker, in the Community !luilding in Hartson of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Oldaker ford, W. Va.
of Hartford, W, Va.
The Rev. Clyde Fields will officate
The bride-elect is a senior at a~ the double-ring ceremony.
Meigs High School, and is employed
at Adolph's Dairy Valley. Her fian~
is a 1981 graduate of Wahama High
I
School, spent time with the U. S. Army at Fort Dix, N. J. , and is presenGALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
t1y with the National Guard at Point Gerald 'l'l!ornton of Point Pleasant
Pleasant, W.Va.
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert' BW1lelt of

Burnett-WattS

.

POMEROY - . Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Kle in are announcing the

,_

•

engagement for a pproaching
ma rriage of their daughter, Mary
Klein, Minersville, to Bruce Hysell,

'

sea ping of Gallipolis.
,
The wedding will take place Jan. 9
at 6:30 p.m. at the Gospel Lighthouse Olurch,
Jlev. Robert Allbright will perform the ceremony and a reception
will inunediately follow at the
Krodel Clubhouse..

e
•

Pomeroy.
, Hysell, who resides with his aunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Jeffers, Pomeroy, is employed at the
BurgerChef inPomeroy. ,
. The private wedding will be held
111 6 p.m. on Nov. 24 at the Syracuse
Church of the Naza rene. The Rev.
James Kittle, pastor, will perform
the ceremony.

•
•
:
•
•
•
•
•
•
:

-·-

••
•••
•••
••
•••••
••
•••
•

•
" •

•

..

.

~)

:,1; ••

•

•

~

•

...
••

•
' •
••
' ·
e
••
•
•••

. S2QO

'

-·

- Time-Saver"' Controls

'I

Retail Price .. . ..... $899.95
Store Discount ..... $150.00
Total._;_ ........ $749.95
+ Factory Rebate ... $ 50.00
Sale Price·
After Rebate .... , .. $699.95

I

•

' r

,•

r~ . ~

SAVE S150

••

MICROWAVE COOKII'JG SCHOOL

.~

RUTLAND FURNITURE
RUTLJ\ND, OHIO
CALL 742-·2211

e

l't~ know more

. - '!..*:'.."f!:~-~
u-• ......wu.

•

•

school

NO 08.LIGATION TO
. BUY...

.••

20 %

ro

lADIES ENGAGEMENT
AND WEDDING BAND
NOW

$}3400

l itton Momt Econamlt t.

R

LADIES 7 DIAMOND
CLUSTER

$36.00

•~• person atte•-

10 . . . .

dl•a w111 mel•• the most. u '

tftOIIIIt lt'e IDftrwted wt • •

set up lsclaools. Call or ....,.

AU
DIAM~ND WATCHES

sgg95

25%

NOW
OFF
THE GIFT OF LOVE

· CARfWELLE
Reg. ... · ·
·
Sale

All CROSS
PENS &amp; PENQLS
NOW 10% OFF
S IN C E

.
.1

.

1646

.

20% OFF

-NOW- .

.
'

20%0FF
.

3M.M.
4M.M.
SM. M.
· 6M.M.

BALLS
BALLS
BALLS
BALLS

•

•

I.

25%

• Opals

•Emeralds .
• Sapphire
• TOHz

20%

e NECKLACES
e BRACELETS

OFF .

•CHARMS .
NGS

$9'-00 .

.

BAKING
POTATOES

~·.,

••

t .

't

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Whaley are announcing the
~ngagement and approaching
inarrtage of their daughter, Carla,
10 Ted Harder, son of Mr. and Mra.
~etus Harder, Rutland.

•••:

F

FLIJTED
AND
PEARLS

--·-....
SANTA'S HELPERS

POMEROY, OHIO
I

PRICES START AT '$7.95
FREIII EllfGRAVING

.

BROUGHTON

COTTAGE atEESE

ALL
'
COLIUI

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK

•

4

1

•
..

. FREESTONE

4_ •

PEACHES

2i

Whoia-meol model
with 3-slafe mem·
. ory,
on.med
'defro.tlllf.

•

..r..

20% OFF

i ·

LIGHT
OR
DARK

k-tht beauty of the
FJH,.. dinner riq. New
,... -

kMIWthe elepiiCO

which aclorMd tovelr IIdia
-mlool .,... Quolicr

.....,...,.,_biM

PRICES ST~RT AT $7.95
SUPER SAVINGS

lu

brilll""' ll)'lt and charm
• 6-.lho plot.

,! ....,.

. ·· ~· USIC. ·
11a1 ?lapart
'

•.

PKG.

.,,.
l.B.

LIBBY

PUMPKIN- ~
29 Ol CAN

16 Ol
DEL MONTE

FRUIT COCKTAIL
17 oz.
CAN

e

SUPREME

PURE CANE
·suGAR
5 LB. BAG

16 Ol CAN

an •110

Only • srand,....her would

··~ '

$ 79

OSAGE

MEN'S AND LADt ES'

NOW

$ 29

EGGNOG
QUART 99~

Krnmorr'" wholr- mral
model. Programmed defrosting. Delay cook

i

oz

ROYAL CREST

CUT '130 3-stage men IIY

N-

••

FRESH LEAN

n cttall

' GREAT
'
STUFFING S'I'UF,ERS '

I

20% OFF . •

WHIPPED TOPPING

24 Ol
CTN • .

REDUCED

.

12

FRANKIES

PLASTIC

MEN'S AND LADIES'

·ttuttl
•

Second Avenue

: . The Old Fashion
·
isthe ·
New look

'20% '

SUPERIOR

SCOT LAD

GAllON

·BRACELEts

342 SECOND AVE.
. · GAI.UPOUS, OHIO

•

Downtown Gallipolis

~-

. DISCONTI
. STYLES
1 YEAR WARRANTY

SUCED BOILED HAM

9C

iN-ene on Nov. II at 8:30 p.m.
),fllfic will begin at I p.m. An open
i"'o!V~· will follow at the River~ Room of \he Dlamood Savinga
and Loan Co.

Sale

~

240l
CTN.

Whaley

•'

$76.00
$84.00
. $100.00
5120.00

TRI-FO~DS

NOW'.

ROUND STEAK

$18!

la employed at Whaley's Used·Cars.
; Tile open church wedding will take
place •t the Rutland Church of the

Reg.

CHANGE PURSES

eCROSSES
e PENDANTS

USDA CHOICE

RED GRAPES

~
Center.
Her fiance
is a 19791-------------=====:--1
~~~
of Meigs
High School
and

BILLFOLDS
CHECKBOOKS
KEY CHAINS
CHILDREN'S BILLFOLDS

'

_·HAM$ 29

EMPEROR

PRINCE• GARDNER"

ALL .
SPEIDEL I.D.

SEMI-BONELESS

WHOLE HAM

all

THE
SIZING
IS
FREE

SUPERIOR '

::Sl79

: The bride-elect is a 1980 graduate
d Me~ High School and is currenlly employed at the Pomeroy Health

$95.00
$105.00
$125.00
$150.00

OFF

.

RKEY

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

:WhaleyHarder

'

113 COURT ST.

'.

571.95
$79.95
$92.00

50%

WATCHES

• Linde
• Birthstones

NOW

.FREE

ENGRAVING &amp; RING SIZING
,

SELECT

ALL 14K GOLD JEWELRY .

'

CLOCKS

$44.95

Sale

$89.95
$99.95
$115.00
5120.00

•

14K~BEADS
-NOW- ,

' 527-95
$31.95
$35.95

Reg.

RINGS .

·All

ALL
BULOVA

$34.95
$39.95

NOW

YOUNG HEN

PUMPKIN PIE

SEIKO .

BULOVA

MEN'S AN., LADIES'

CROME SETS
SOFT TIPS
GOLD FILLED SETS
DESK SETS
FREE ENGRAVING

cRoss·

ALL .POCKET WATCHES

69.95

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

SUPERIOR

BULOV~·-. SEIKO, CARAVELLE

OFF

NOW

INDIAN MAIDEN

•

EVERYTHING IN STOCK
'NOW -20% ·OFF

DIAMOND
EARRINGS

·Mr. and Mrs.. Ge&lt;;&gt;rge

•••
•
••
••••

'

·14 CARAT OlAMON D
. SOLITAIRE

•

WILL BE .ADRAWING EVERY DAY AT 4 P.M.

't e

'.

Reg. 5595.00 Save $200.00

BEGINNING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16th THROUGH
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25th, JOHNSON$ WILl BE
GIVING AWAY ONE 10 LB. TO 12 LB. YOUNG HEN
TURKEY. WHEN YOU VISIT JOHNSONS
JUST ALL OUT AN ENTRY BlANK. THERE

.~

Now Through Nov. 28th Save on Your Christmas Purchases.
Almost Everything is on Sale. Savings in: Every Department. A
small Deposit will Hold any Purchase Till Christmas. Shop Now
and

$39500

'

POMEROY ·;_ Wayne and Annabelle ~ of Kyger were surpriHd fecenlly when their_chUdren ·
gathered at their borne to celebrate
their 40th wedding llllllversary_
Ice cream, ~ ud punch were
enjoyad by Rlehard, Evelyn and Annette Sislon, Georges Creek Road;
Robert and Carolyn Hart,
Pickerington; Iva, John, Robbie and .
Mellsss ,$i8aorl. Rutland; Richard,
Unda, Lori, and Brian Bndbury,
Colwnbus; and Mr. ud Mrs. David

Mr. and Mra. Slslloo
,Woodall.
. .were presented an anniversary _clock by their
chUdren and their families .

FR'EE TURKEYS

WIN

•

..,
......... -., L!~~l!!!!!!!~~L.!~~~~!!!
MlctowaveCooft!nQ.
for

• '"lho•YOulhefto..,

30 % OFF
ONLY

Sissons
·observe
40th .year ·

;~ .

.The Great
.--·-- -Pre-Christmas Sale

LE:!T

•.

·~

OF
GAlliPOLIS
AND .
POMEROY

10% ro 50%
EVERY DIAMOND IN OUR STOCK

25. Their cliUdren are Marie Conger,
Ewington; Edith Smllb, and Bertha
hsle, Vinton.
Friends are weiCM!e to attend or
'call.

..•• ..... ...

····························~·········································

EVERYTHI"G'S
REDUCED

1bey will have dinner at their
home by lllelr ~ December

'
-..

Wereqontyourreseroatlou,
10 we can hiiYe en011ah food,
.and keep
size or tllo

fff

..

&gt;A
•

•

I

••

• Large U cubic foot oven covily

•

..•

.
-'•
.'.
·•
••
i.•
'

•

l

Rusaell.

........,,-.·•
'

-

-

GAWPOlJS .:. Mr. and Mn:
Wellie K. George.~ Fourth Ave.,
GaJUpolil, wW ceelnta their 50th
.veddinlllllllivew~Y December 23.
111ey were marriad In 1931 in
Morpn IDwnship by Rev. K.

em-

• UUon Excko!lve F-.re
- Meol~n-One1 Cooking Perfonnona:

:
:
•
••

50th·anniversary
year
celebrated
'

wood-warner

,.

,

The New
Microwave

'

the
daughter, 11Gnn1e Sile, te Gil')' lee
Warner, son ol. Mrs. Evelyn MorriJ,
andthel81eJohnWamer.
,
Tile bride-elect Is a 1977 gradiat41
II( Eastern High School ud Is
ployed at the Melp Medical CIIPit:-1
Her flante, a 1973 graduate of Mel~
High School, is employed ' at
Veteran9 Memorial Hospital.
:'
. The open church marriage will be
an event of Dec. 5 atZ:311 p.m. at tile
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Bradiord Church of Christ.
'
L. WOOd, Chester, are aMouncing

SAVE S100.
Litton Microwave
.
· Cookillg .School
·November 30th
7:00P.M.
•
-~- . · SAVE

•
•

son of Mr . and Mrs. Norman Hysell,

Roush

. . ,.,
approaching marn.p Ql t1JU

.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
It llts C1Vfl ~range.
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
It
coomt« .,.c:e.
•• It hasuves
Its own vent Ud lghL ·
••
It looks bull-In,
.
but
you do It ,aurielf.
••
••
••

Klein

RoushOldaker

.
Gallipolis wish to announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Debra Lynn BW'Jietl, to Orin
Thomas Watts, aon ol. Mra. Helena
and the late Edward Watts . of
Ga!Upolll.
'
.
· ·The bridHJect is a 1974 graduate
of Gallia Academy High SchOOl and
is employed by the Flower Nook,
Point Pleasant.
The groom is a 1974 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and 1978
graduate of Ohio Stste University.
He is employed by Kotalic Land-

Nov. 15, 1981

Noy. JS, 1911

BROWN SUGAR

..
........-............ ..
ISearsI ........"
.

POUID BOX

ROYAL CROWN
'
DIET RITE

RClOO
16 oz.

8 Bonu
PREMIUM QUALITY

ICE CREAM$

~

HALf GAL1.0N

SM11. Me PNIII C8.

'

'

.,'

59

�w. va.

The

Sunday

•

AMERICAN Legion Lafayette
Post '11 will hold a recuJar
buslneaa meetiDI oo Monday at
7:30p.m. at tbe Poathome ooBob
McCormick road. All members
are qed to attend.

MEIGS GENEALOGICAL
Society, 2 p.m. today at the Meigs
MIIRIIlll in Pcmeroy; public ln• viled.

Coming Events
Rev. '1'henln Durham Invites tbe
public.

BENi&gt; 0' The IUver Garden

TIIERE will be a geno!ral
meeting of the Ga11ipolls
Welcome Wagon Club Monday at
7:30p.m. at the Ohio Valley Bank
on Jackson Pike. The speaker
will be Dr. Don Rake!,
petliatriclan at Holzer Medical
Center. Rakel will be lalklng on
uWben .to call a doctor." All
members and guests are invited
to attend.

'
GALLIA COUNTY Historical
- Society, 2:30 p.m., St. Peter's
Episccpal church banquet haD,
Pi.erce D. McCreedy. Board, I
.. p.m.

Monday
ST. PETER'S Eplscopal Chill"

MIDDLEPORT Business and
Professional Wonten:s ciub, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Middleport
Ubrary. Phyllis Flowers, district
director, to be a guest. Young
Csreerist to be selected.

Iclnoomen {ECW) willmeet Moofor a noon Juncheoo business
meellnc. Guest speaker, Mrs.
Keith {Lol8 Mae) Suiter, wiU talk
on the future of Our House.

OFFICERS will be inllalled at
a ~ of Pcmeroy Chlpter
186, Order of the Eaalem Star,
7:30 Monday night at. the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

BRADFORD - Meigs County
Churches of Christ, · ·Men 's
Fellowohlp wiU meet at Bradford
ChurchMondayat7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - IUghl to Life
will meet tuesday at St. Louil ·
Cl!urch Base!lient at 7:30p.m.

Presbylerlan Dllrdl, wlll meet

--;-

GROUP II, ,First United
at the Holiday Jnn "--ay at
8:30p.m. for tbelrannual 'l'lllnb.
giving

CHESTER PTO OPEN house
Monday at 7::lq p.m. Teachers
will lie available to talk with
parents. Chester Brownie Troop
wiD conduct opening ceremonies.
Results of recent camlval will be
discussed. Program by the school
choir. Refreshments will be ser·
ved by second grade room
motbers and child care will be
provided.

c
•
Bucks rip Wildcats
Nov. 15,1981
,
The Sunday Times-sentinel-Page-

IUO GRANDE PTO will meet
· 7:30p.m. Tuesday. ~nksglving
program.

dlaner. FoUowinl dllller

they will return to tile cburdl for
the reRUiar meeting.. Devollonl
will be by Mrs. Lewia Sauer and
each member will pn!lll!llt a
'I'hankaglvlng reading.

SALISBURY - Book Fair at
Salisbury Elementary Monday
through Friday. The fair Is being
. held in conjunction with
American Education Week and
National Children's Book Week.
The fair will be open from 8 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. and during the PTO
meeting Tuesday night. Books
will be on display ln the gym at
SalisbUry.

HYSELL RUN - Revlval at
the Hysell Run Holiness Church
Monday through Friday. Joseph
QuiM speaker. Services nightiy
at 7:30 p.m. Special singing by
the Gospel Jubilalres. Pastor

' .

AntENS - A series of Lamaze
childbirth prepitration classes apo
~- proved by O'Bleness Memorial
·· Hospital, will take place Dec. 3-.Jan.
21. This cla.&lt;o is for couples whose
expected dale of delivery is prior to
Feb 15. Class participants will learn

breathing and relaxation techniques
'for first stage labor, effective ex·
pulsion techlliques for second stage
Jabot, physical and emotional aspects of the birth process, and body·
conditioning exercises to promote
comfort during pregnancy and post.

The point total repreaented tbe
·hllhest figure for Ohio state In 31
)'8111'8. The Bud:eyes routed Iowa 8321 in 11150 and had not scqred more
thall83polntsinaconlestslncethen.
· SchUchter, starting his 4lilh
straight college game, received a

WJNDING TRAIL ' Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at home
of Allee Thompson with Peggy
Crane as co-hostess.

the look ci 'MXlQ,
the walk of pleasure I

SAIJSBURY PTO, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at school. Mrs. Karen

nowoodc:o.Adtlhey',.~,

' n.dbl. ond CUINclned to""'

Meigs Senior Citizens Calendar
POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located in
the Multipurpose Senior Center on
: Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy is

.•

.

,I•..

I

open 9 a.m .~ : 30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
. Monday, Nov. 16 - Square Dance,
12:45-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 17 - Huntington
Mall Trip, Leave Center 9 a.m.;
Chorus, 1·2 p.m.; Council Meeting,!
p.m.

Wednesday, Nov. 18 - Social
Security Representative, 10 a.m.·l
p.m.; Games,l·2p.m.

'

Exhibit for the month of Noven•·
:. ber, starting Tuesday, November 3,
" 1961 - 'JWO Part Exhibit; I)
Eighteen works of William Missar of
Chicago, m., including pastels,
• watercolors, acrylics, etc., recipient
of many awards during the Annual
: River Recreation Festival Exit. and
· 2) The Common Thread of the
• Lostian Hmong. Flfty·three pieces
; of needleworks · including wall
: ~erings, table matS, belts, purses,
• etc., depicting the heritage of a
~ small colony of Laotian tenile ar·
~ tl5ts, through the Ohio Foundation
;: on the Arts,lnc.
: Gallery HDUr.! - Tuesday and
• n... -s'.lay, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.;
• Sslunlay ann Sunday, 1 p.m. unlil 5
p.m.
November 16, 8:15 p.m. - FAC
Trustees Meeting, IUverby.
" Novemberl7, 9:30a.m.-11:30a.m.
., - Second in the series of Bread
Dough workshops, taught by Janet
:: ·Byers. Bread dough ornaments
·, created the week before wiU be psin·
;. ted and completed during this
• second session; 8 p.m. - FAC In•, terdepartmental Meeting, IUverby.

Thursday, ·Nov. 19 -

hllt-'0 ~ tl'leloc*dwooel..;m
IM /OVId Ccmfcrt1

SOUTHERN LOCAL Board of
Education meeting, Tuesday,
. 6:30p.m. at high school.

.

{

11

TOUCHDOWN BUCKEYES 7 Ohio Slate quarterback Art Sellllchter
belmet u be heads for tbe beocb u die referee alpala a
Buckeyes' toudldOWII Saturday agalllst Northwestern ID Columbus. Tbe
game was Scbllcbter's lut at home after a 10111'-year career wbere be
didn't miss a pme and set neW markS lor. a Bud&lt;eye quarterback in
eve')' categoey. (APLaserpbotol.

UDSIIIIpl blJ

1
, '

POMEROY - Bosworth Council 46, Royal and Select Masters
will meet Tuesday, l'(ov. i7, at
7:30 p.m. The royal master and
select master degree will be con·
!erred.

Blood

Pressure Clinic, 10 a.m.·12 noon; ,__ _ _.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J..._ _- ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - Nutrition Education, I a.m.;

Thanksgiving Program, Rutland
Elementary Fourth Grade, 12:45
p:.; Kitchen Band, 1:30p.m.
Friday;Nov. 31 - Crocheting, 10
a.m.-12 noon; Bowling,l-3 p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m.; Monday through
Friday.

Variety
olelylee

,-------'-----------------------1

SUPPORrAMERICAN
EDUCATION WEEK
November 15-21, 1911

Steplnto

Winter
In Style
t~ Is time to put that classic stvle of Bass~ Shoes into your active
ltfestyle. Bass1111 Shoes have that ·cushiony sole that {Tlakes comfort the
only way to-start fall . So, prepare vourself for action Come In and see
the class collection of Bass® shoes.
·

. Th
@~
e
.~Shoe Ca:fe
~.:.~

Easily maneuvered over car~
peting, grass or rough surfaces . Attractive chrome
plated finish. Padded arm•
rests and heavy duty vinyl
upholstery. Comfortable tilt

designed In seat and
back. Folds co.mpactly

smarl!
Smart rou are and smart rou lui
wlttl Futuro's Men's SUPER SOCKS.
For OMlhing, lht$e are rut eluti~
stock inas - the ~ i nd ~u need tor

wuicose reins or iuil plal11 leJ Ia
liii:UI!. hMion i! l•pertd up the lef
to "aid venous flow. Yet there's no
elntic !iloding appearance. Nylon
covets lh ~ elastic thrndi:, gi~~es the
appearance of drus soch with
sm11t under-knee ltn,eth. Guar•nleed 1 year. Black 1nd colors.

•

1111t n 1111

for trav'el or storage.

Rental
Rates On Request

.

Prlcea As low ~s

Pii'tes from

'5.00

to

Sl4,0Q

CRUTCHES

WALKERS

Underarm
Rental
Rates
Available

Folding Model
Lightweight aluminum for
easy handling plus double
bar strength for exceptional
stability. Folds e'asily for
convenient storage or travel.

is, Ohio

...
'

':1

.·~

featuring

KAJJMIR
'
"TT!ere'
s nothing

quite like-

cashmere eicept.••

..

KAJJMIR

. .,,•

. ...
::·

·,;

. ..

..

,...
"

.....

.:·.

-

·.·

..
"

....

.."

. ·:
. r.
. '..

~·

l ''

'

.II .

.~.

:: '\

,t\
I

uzy
_tar
Jl,INIOR LINGERIE

·:. ·J ..· .·

" I .
.•

louis )¥alter .

Enlill

COAT
SElfCnON

20%

:&lt; ' f

•. •','

.,

.... ..;..
..'
. ..

.·:·
_._..'1j,
'

I

-- w-=
·--

N-F-'I_.,_

..

·~

In the ·Lafayette Mall

1300 5ecood Ave.

l

Gallipo~

In the

3IMt

La;atte

••
tsdru..,

"'I
PU '!1j

~c

w

-

L

I

'

T PFPA Pel.
I Ill 1• .710

, 410 .

.Jill

..117

.tiD ,

71 ' 1 . . 111Jit
I I I ID HI I I 0 . . Ill
110141117
I 7 0 Ill ID

Qiy

·

I I 171 IIJ

.100

IIIIDIIIJIII

lloltDIIIO

lllllllo

J

· ,.._.c s w

.

•

'

.•
..

. . . . 1• •

I I I J I I I M...
_
lltllllll

11

tlltiiiMI

171111 . . .

•

\•

, I

r.n.&gt;o Bay

?we

Ceolnl7 I 'I I ID Ill

=4

&amp;

'·

WEST LAFAVETTE, Ind. {APIQuarterback Sieve Smith passed '11
yards to Craig Dunaway for a first·
quarter touchdown Saturday, then
ran 26 yards for another touchdown
as 11th-ranked Michigan scored
three times in the fourth quarter to
beat Purdue 211-10 in a Big Ten Conference football game.
Purdue's Jeff Feulner, making his
first collegiate start at tailback, had
given the B.oilermakers the lead
with a :i-yard touchdown run mid·
way through the third quarter.
The Wolverines, taking over sole
possession of first place· in the Big
Ten thanks to Wisconsin's 17-7loss to
Iowa, started their go-ahead drive
from their own 24-yard line early in
the final period.
Two ·runs apiece by Smith and
fullback Stan Edwards brought
Michigan to midfield, and a cosily
puss interference penalty against
Purdue gave the Wolverines first ' ·
down at the Boilermakers' 29-yard
line. Two plays later, Smith rambled
in for the score.
Kicker Ali Hajl.Sheikh, who
missed a J9..yard field .goal aUempt
oo Michigan's previous possession,
booted the extra-point kick for a 14IOlead.
The Wolverines, now 6-2 in the conference and 11-2 going into next
week's regular·season windup
against Ohio Stale, then moved 63
y~rds in 13 plays with Butch
Woolfolk scoring from the !-yard
line.

GALLOPING AWNG - Ohio Slate taJibaek Jim
Gayle carries the ball and a bolt of. Nortlawestem

defenders as be goes lor a sbort gain in tbe first hall of
Salorday's Big Teo game ID Columbus. {AP Laserpbotol.

.....

'" .

San Francisco in the "National t:u.~
ference West.
Today's other games are Pil·
tsburgh al Allanta, Houston at KaJI.
sas City, Cleveland at San Fran·
cisco, Dallas al Detroit, Baltimore
at Philadelphia, New Orleans at
Minnesota, Denver at Tampa Bay,
Oakland at Miami, Buffalo at st.
Louis, Wushington at the New York ·
Giants, the New York Jets al New
England and Chicago at Green Bay.
Monday night's game Is San Diego
atSeatUe.
Rsy Malavas~ coach of the Rams,
will be starting Dan Paatorinl. in
place of Pat Haden at q111rterhack
for the second week In a row.
The Bengals' startlnc quarterback
may not be knOWII unW game lime.
Ken Andel'Son, ranked No.2 in
passing ln the league behind Denver's Craig Mortoo, completed 18 of
28 passes for 288 yards and two
touchdownS agalnat the Chargers,
but sprained his left shoulder
making what he admitted was an UJ.
adviaed heacJ.flrst slide during a
scramble late In the pme,

Cftlral~

IIJ'IM~

~

~·

when ·Brian Franco booted a 27-yard
field goal.
·
But the rest of the half belonged to
tbe Crimson Tide.
Paul Carruth scored from the 2,
Trodd kicked a 27-yard field goal .
and Lj!wis "completed a J.yard
scoring to Bendross.
Penn State had the hall for only
seven offensive plays lllid a punt In
the final 10 minutes of the opening
half.

Purdue
dropped
28to 10

.

NFL standings

I

IIOIMIIIJII8
I 0 I Ill Ill .100 ·

.. ...

.

.•
••

By BRUCE WWITT
AP Sporlll Writer
The Cincinnati Bengals always
knew who· they were. ,And they're
fast convincing the rest of . the
National Football League thai they
delerve recognition.
"I think we have finally gotten
over that Identity crisis that many
people had 'about us," said Steve
Kreider, a third-year wide receiver
for the American Conference's Cen·
traJ Dlvialon leaders. "Most people
jusfdidn't think we were for real."
Now, most people probably think
they are. The 40-17 demolition of the
Chargers in San Diego last Sunday ,
· surely convinced a levi people bf
that, one of the Bengals among
them. "We're 7-3 and we are
rolling,'' said Cincinnati defensive ·
lineman Eddie Edwards.
The Bengals hold a two-game lead
over . Pittsburgh and Houston and
can maintain or widen that edge 'by
beating Los Angeles today. The
Rams are 5-5 and struggling, tied
with AUanta three ~ames behind

110117111, I I ID ID .110 1

•;

...

WUilams, a senior split end,
caught four of Schlichter's passes to
become Ohio State's all·time careiT

MADISON, Wis. {AP) - Tailback recovered a fumble by .Wiseonsin:s
Phil Blatcher dived I and 2 yards for Chucky Davis at the Badger 46 tate
touchdowns and Iowa 's Big Ten· in the first quarter. The Hawkeyes
leading defense forced five tur· were set back to their 39 by a l:i-yard
novers as the Hawkeyes defeated penalty, but came hack with a 57·
Wisconsin 17·7 In a college football yard Pass from Bohannon to Dave
showdown Saturday.
Montz whi~h carried to the WisconIowa, 7-3 overall and :i-2 in the Big sin 4. Moritz beat cornerback Clint
Ten, jwnped into prime contention Sims oo the play,
for what could be its first conference
Blstcher scored from a yard out
championship since 19110, when the two plays later as Iowa led 10.0.
· Hawkeyes shared the crown, and its
Iowa nose guard Pat Dean
fmrtRoaeBowl berth since 1959.
• .Wisconsin, held to three first recovered a fumble by Wisconsin's
downs uhtU the last three minutes of Mar.vin 'Neal ·on the Badger 31
moments later. Bohannon paased to
the third quarter, fell from a share
of the Big Ten lead to 5-3 in the con· lvoey Webb for gains of8 and 9yards
to set up Blatcher's second touchference and 6-4 for the season.
·Iowa drove 53 yards in'lo plays on down with 7:28 left ln the find half.
Wisconsin scored its only touch· its second series and took a 3-0 lead
.
down
with 2:29 to play a 53-yard
on a 3ft-yard field goal by freshman
pass
from
Jess Cole to Thad McTom Nichol. Gordy Bohannon comFadden.
The
Badgers tried an on·
pleted 5 of 6 passes for 4{) yards on
side
kick
after
the touchdown, but
the drive.
Iowa
recovered
at
its 34.
·Iowa safely Bohb:• . Stoops

7

•k

,;,.

'.'

I·

·· ' I . ·'t

'

•••• .. ..

.

. •. ...-

· ~

..

'

. t . ::

. ..

"• .,

by

..., '· .
.... ::
.. ..

. .,...

The Wildcats trailed only 7-G afteT
the lint qliarter, Freshman fullback
Vauglul Broadnax' l·yard run
provided the Buckeyes their flnt·
quarter margin. ·
tailback Tim Spencer ran 14 yar·
ds early In the second quarter to give
Ohio State a 14-G cushion before
quarterback Mike Kerrigan directed
Northwestern on its lone scoring
march. Kerrigan took the, Wildcats
00 yards In six plays, with his Illyard pass to flanker Steve · Bogan
climaxing the surge.

Iowa step closer
to Big Ten title

Bengals .hope to
·~ up division lead

•'

presents

Anders set ln ]~.

oo

.Sturdy wood and aluminum underarm crutches.
all adjustable lor a comfortable fit .

Larayelle Mall
Gallipolis, 0 .

-"'..

The victO")' lifted Ohio State into a
tie for second place in the , con- ·
ference with Iowa. J!oth have :i-2
recorda. to ieadlng Michigan's 6-2
· mark. The Buckeyes, 7-3 overall,
close out the season next' week at
Michigan.

calfhes,

Price per pal r

:wo Second :\ve.
Rt. 160 &amp; l5 West

SchUchter completed 16 of 24
passes for 281 yarils. His touchdowns
came on pusses of42 yards to Cedric
Anderson, 36 yards to Victor
Langley and 48 yards to Gaey

reception leader. WUilams has 110
surpassing the previous
schOOl mark of 1111 light end Billy

Northwestern 'made a game of·lt
for the lint ?» minutes, before the
Buckeyes scored three times in 3: II
for a 3!Hi halftime lead.
Schlichter - a &amp;-3, Bpound
seni~r - · now has thrown for 7,'J!J7
yards in his college career. He has
8,587 total yards, easily ranking as
the school's aU-time yardage cJwn..
pion.
• ..
. Northwestern, suffering its 34
straight conference defeat, is IHO
this season, with eight of those
defeats coming in tbe Big Ten.

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. {AP) and breU the record held by the late Uons, wbo.suffered their second loss
Waller Lewia' two touchdown passes Amos Alonzo Stagg since 1946.
against seven wins.
The Alabama defense intercepted
to Jesse Bendross and a tenacious
Alabama {11-t·ll look a. 7-G lead
. defense triggered Alabama to a 31·16 three passes, recovered a fumble,
with
2:16 left in 11\e fwst period on a
triumph over Pann State Saturday · sacked Penn State quarterback
37-yard
Pass from Lewis t&amp; Ben·
and enabled Paul "Bear" )leyant to todd Blackledge four limes and
drosa,
Paul
Trodd, a sophomore
tie . the national collegiate football mad~ two goal line stands.
kicking
for
the
first time because of
. coaching record of 314 victories.
an
injury
to
regular placekicker
Bryant, 88, in his 37th year as a
An record crowd of 85,133 watched
•
Peter
Kin\,
converted.
head ,coach, now must wail two sixth-ranted Alabama ron to a 24-3
Penn Stale reduced the lead to 7·3
weeks until Alabama closes its halftime lead, gaining 334 yards to
rel!lilarseason against Auburn to try but 70 for the fiflh.rated Nittany five minutes into the second period

Lcx:*llb WI:IOd.lut tiWy .... llkt

2525, 594-5'114, 594-5148. '

·

·1

'Bear' records 314th victory

refreshments wiU be served.

psrtwn. The fee for the series Is $50.
To pre-register for this series, or to
request.a schedule of future classes,
contact Jeanne Barton, Route 6, Box
340, Athens 45701, or call 61-w.l+

stralshl Ohio State home aeUoul of
811,912whenbeleftthegamemidway
in the third quarter.

Willlams.

Tuesday

~-----------------------------------------------------------------, Walkerwillheadabook~wand

Lamaze series classes planned

.~landing ovation !run the 83rd

By GEORGE STRODE
AP llparil Writer
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Quarterblck Art Sdlllchter's three toucbdownl helped Ohio state llllother
Northwestern 7D-8 Saturday.
keeping the Bud:eyes In cootenllon
r... the Big Ten football t!Ue and ex·
tending the Wildcats' aU-lime~
lOlling streak to 30 games.

1

'·

MUDSOC - A blood pressure
clinic wiU be held at Drummond
General Store ln Mudsoc Monday
beginning at 6:30 p.m. It is free
and open to the public.

· GALLIPOLIS - Unit 27
American Legion Awr'llley will
meet at tile LoliGD Hall or-lay
at 7:30p.m. RepJar llleellnl.

Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
home of Mn. Wllaon Carpenter;

cornhuak wreaths to be made.

· REV. RALPHWorkmanwWbe
guest speaker at Uberty Chapel
Chun:h Sunday. Services begin at
- 7p.m. Pastor, Paul Martin.

GALLiPOLIS - Lafayette
White Shrine meellnc. MUonlc
temple, 7:30 p.m. Tuelday. Of.
fleers pres rt for rebeanal for
December ceremonial.

I

I
I
I

Detroit
Onto Boy
Oaic:sao

I

I
S 7

lllnl'loncll&lt;o
A111nt1

LaoAIIIIIet

New OrleiM

I

I

I
I

I
I
S 7

I

..
,. \1
COlliNG

0 171 Ill
0 Ill ID
0 Ill Ill
I 18 Ill

0 Ill Ill
D 171 !It
0 WI Ill
G 111 117

.....,.,-..11
-.,No

.IDI

.•
.•
•

.Ill
.1111
.1111

JiiO

.... .~ ..
........,n.ct

ScoU
ea z'II (ce.la'l ....... to 1- tile fae* n • be II
fiiSlM fi,MbHpe'alllllle Bona (It), £Ia Neee&amp;m
(r!pl) . . l'ln!l Glrpeb (tap) ill lbe flnt Will We,!

0 1111 Ill ' .D

..........
t

Spartans
•
surprise
Gophers

LC)()8E -

Punlae

It '1

Olldlhl.1\:J

1.1

llloiJIIId

NY ,_ o&amp; -

-Ill - .......
1iiiir1iii.li•

Pir

.
ac
""..._.
...

QIJ

.

, Boo 11110 II lolllllt

-

•

I\

.t 0

'!!()•

0

In addition, Marino's current total
of28 touehdown puoes adda to the
lldlool record be . . earlier thlll

1

l'tllidlal
• 1M ,_Dllrtll
• NY CHilD

..

boOsted bls season total to 2,099
pasolng yards, surpassing the old
Panther record of 1,1121 ain8aaed by
Lucas in 1188.

-·a-Bay
!:'~i
"? u

;.rc,

Laserplloto).

Top-ranked Pittsburgh crushes Anny,

'lllllmOn ..
II 81....

,.,

Lafayette Safllrday. Micldgao'a Jerry BurJ)e
recoveftd the fumble for tllelr lint posomlon(i AP

1

year. Alld be'• alnady Pill'• all-

vk.UrJ a •Ill PIU, N, tile
No.I nnldnl fGr tllltird 'fttkllla
rOw, \be IIJIIIIlll any tum hu beln
'ftle

•

time- leader in JIUilnl yards
and~.

(~

\\

I
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) Bryan Clark bolted 15 yards for a
touchdown with 56 seconds to play as
Michigan Stale overcame Minnesota
43-36 in a topsy·lurvy Big Ten foot:
hall game Saturday .
Clark, who passed for a 711-yard
touchdown to Daryl Turner on
Michigan Stale's first play from
scrimmage, S&lt;.'Ored ~ winning
touchdown after engineering an SO.
yard, nine-play drive.
· Earlier in the !ourth quarter,
Clark hit split end Ted J ones for a J6.
yard touchdown, then threw to tight
end AI Kimichik for a two-point conversion that tied the game at 36.J6
and negated a spectacular Min·
nesota comeback.
Mike Hohensee passed for a pair
of touchdowns and ran for two more
as Minnesota exploded for 30 points
in the third quarter to overtake the
Spartans.
The Golden Gophers trailed~ at
halftime.
.
Clark completed 21 passes for 318
yards and three touchdowns during
the afternoon as Michigan State .
evened its record at 1&gt;6 and iJn..
proved to 4-4 in the conferen&lt;;e.
Mlnnesotaa slipped to 4-4 in tbe
Big Ten and i-1 overall, losing to
Michigan State for the fifth straight

year.

,,
•

�Nov . IS, 1981

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. 1/a.

Pom

Pomeroy Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohici-Point Pleasant, w. va .

The sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C·3

Youngs~own Mooney .rips Steubenville; .Waynesville out
ByGEORGESTIWDE

For Waynesville, the Cla.u A state

AP Spirts Writer

poll ntinga king, the school's first
appearance .in the playoffs was sn

Youngstown Mooney, a veteran of
. the Ohio high achoollootball playof.
:s, sbowed why It's The Associated

embarrassment. Maria Stein
Marion Local upaet.WaynesvUle 2012; banding the . Warren County
school its first loss in II games this

Press Cla.u AA r.guiar season poll
· champiOn Frlcjay night.

8\lliSOD.

Mooney,\he 1973 €lass AAA champion aPpe&amp;ring in its fourth playoffs,
flexed Its muscles with a t!Hl pounding ol Steubenville in the opening
Division n round or the playoffs
Friday night.

Meanwhile, the Class AAA poll

king the last three years and defending Division I champion, Cincinnati
Moeller, began its liMII playOff trail

last night in a rematch wllh Cincinnati St.Xavier at Kings Island.

Moeller, riding a 43-game winning
streak, walloped St.Xavier 37-3
during the regular aeason.
AU of the Divislon I and Division
IV playoff games were played Saturday night.
In other Division I games Satur'
day, second-ranked Upper Arllngton
entertained Colwnbus Eastmoor,
No. 3 Canton McKinley and Panna
. Normandy met in Canton's Fawcett
Stadlwn and Mentor went against
Cleveland St.Joseph at Euclid.
In Division IV Saturday, Burton

Berkshire laced Rootstown at Yards for another score. Sixth- Rick Cusano's D-yard field goel
Warren, Rosaford took on Tontagony nnlted Marion Local will carry a!(). · and extra point placement.
Otsego at Mawnee, Coal Grove bat().1 record in the semifinals while
Elsewhere in Division ill, Elyria
tied Nelsonville-York at Ironton and
Waynesvill~ suffered its first 1001 in
Catholic nipped Bellevue 7-41,
Washington Court· Hoaae beat
Bellbrook met Wheelersburg In 11 games this fall.
Dayton's Welcome stadiwn.
In other Division !I games Friday Zanesville West Muskingwn 2'1-18
Fullback Mark Karchmer was night, 1980 Division Ill king and Akron St. Vlnceni..St.Mary
IIJooney's hero, scoring three touch- aev~land Benedictine sldellned mauled Chagrin Falls Kenston2H.
downs on runs of 25, 5 and 7 yards for Avon Lake 24-7, CoiumbUB Whitehall
Tiffin Calvert, the defending
the 1~ Cardinals. Steubenville needed overtime to oust Colwnbus Divisi1&gt;11 V champion, convened
suffered its third loos in 11 games
Watterson ''Z/·21 and Trotwood three New Washington Buckeye
this fall.
· · Madisoll outscored Dayton Roth 33- Central errors Into touchdOWIII in a
Matt
Hanly
torpedoed • 13.
3W . romp. Mogadore edged
Hamilton Badin, last year's I'WI- Ashtabula St.John 1().7 and Newark
Waynesville's unbeaten dream,
passing 20 yards to Qreg Garrnann · nerup to Benedictine, outlasted Cin- Catholic sidelined Crooksville 21·1&amp;
. for one ~own and running 2 cinnati Deer Park on placeki~er in the other small school contests.

AMERICA'S LUMBER STORE

INVENTORY
UCTIDN
\-\.,..

'~
REBOUND- 7&amp;ers' Aadrew Toney, right, takes a
rebound away from Kings Joe C. .Meriweather, !ell,

and Mike Woodson, cenler, during the first period of
play Frldny nlgbt in Pblladelphla. (AP Laserpbolo).

RUNNING BLIND - Larry Bird ollhe lklllaa Celllco wu DllllleDtarUy runnlllg bUDd as Ju van Breda KoHl of tile New Jeney Nell putllll
band In Blrd's lace dnrlng the first baU of tile Cellle.Nets Nalloul
Basketball Association gsme In Hartford Friday. (AP Luerpbeto)

...._.roomscost

Gervin nets 47, Spurs dump Sonics, 119-112
.

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporlll Wrller
Ron Brewer did a pretty good
imitation of George Gervin when the
San Antonio superstar missed three
recent games with an injury.
But there's nothing like the real
thing, as Gervin proved upon his
return Friday night.
Coming back to his old job at
guard, Gervin scored a season-high
47 points lo help the Spurs beat the
Seattle SuperSonics 11!1-112 in the
National Basketball Association.
"J think Ice got his job back," said
San Antonio Coach Stan Albeck.
Actually, Gervin never lost it although Brewer did put on a rather
amazing performance · in his aJ&gt;.
sence, scoring 37, 40 and 44 points,
respectively, in the three games.
"There seems to be some magic
about that position on our team,"
Albeck noted.
Gervin produced his 47 points
despite being hurl in the second
quarter of Friday night's game.
"I came down on my knee wrong
and paid £or it,' ' said Gervin, who

had been out of action with a deep
bruise in his right thigh. "It pained
me lor a little while."
In other NBA action, it was Los
Ang eles 11 9, Portland 115;
Milwaukee 95, New York 85; Boston
Ill , New Jersey 97; Philadelphia
100, Kansas City. 85; Golden State
102, Houston 100 ; and Utah 131, Denver 124.
Mark 'Olberding added 23 points
lor the Spurs. Jack Sikma's career·
high 39 points led Seattle and Gus
Williams had 26.
Lakers 119, Blazers 115
Los Angeles' front line, headed by
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar's 29 points,
scored 71 points to lead the Lakers
over Portland. The !..akers trailed
85-82 entering the fourth period
before takiilg a two-point lead, 97-95.
The lead eventuaUy was stretched to
10 points at 105-95 with five minutes
left . .
Following Abdui.Jabbar's 29 points, Jamaal Wilkes scored 22 and Mitch Kupchak had 20 for Los Angeles.
Trail Blazer Calvin Natt topped aU
scorers wit!) 34 points, while Mychal

Thompson added 28.
Bucks 95, Knlcks 85
Quinn Buckner scored 21 points to
help Milwaukee.beat New York. The
Bucks virtuaily locked up the game
when ~unior Bridgeman hit a jump
shot for a live-point Milwaukee lead
with I :08lefl.
·
The Bucks opened a 7:Hi4lead with
2:56left in the third quarter and led
81·72' after two baskets by Alton
Lister in the first minute of the final
period before the Knicks rallied
behind Campy Russell, who scored
21 points overall.
Bridgeman's basket gave the
Bucks a 00-85 lead and helped
Milwaukee survive the Knick
uprising.
Cellics 111, Nels.11
Larry Bird had 22 points and four
others scored in "double figures as
Boston defeated New Jersey. The
victory was sixth straight and the
seventh in eight games lor the defendingNBAchamps.
aird combined with Nate Ar·
chibald for 'Zl first-ball points as
Boston took a 63-52 halftime lead.

'

.

.

aloi11101e
than )'011 thiak~

'

Besides Bird, Archibald had 17 points, Robert Parish and Cedric Maxwell had 14 each, and Kevin McHale
had 13. Rookie Buck Williams scored
a career-high 22 points to pace the
Nets.
·
78ers 105, Kings 85
Lionel Hollins scored a seasonhigh 25 points as Philadelphia beat
Kall.SIIS City for its seventh victory
in eight games, Darryl Dawkins added 13 points lor the 76ers, while
pulling down a career-high 19
rebounds.
Philadelphia ran off 12 straight
points at the start for a Ill&lt;! lead and
fjnished the quarter ahead 31-14 with
Hollins scoring 14 points'. Ttildoselt
the Kings could come after that was
seven points, 5&amp;-49, early in the third
period.
Warriors Ill!, Rockel&amp; 100
Sonny Parker hit a layup as time
expired to give Golden State a tight
vietory over Houston. Parker

SALE!

"9Paa1idasud

rebounded a Lloyd Free abot with
two seconds left on the clock and
made a reverse layup for the winning basket.
.
Houston had led 81·71 in the
opening minute of the final quarter.
But Joe Hassett scored seven points
and Parker added six as the
Warriors caught Houston with 3:15
left and took a 92-91 lead to set the
stage lor a frantic finish.
Jazz 131, Nuggets124
Adrian Dantley scored 38 points,
including 14 in the final quarter, as
Utah downed Denver. Dantley
scored 20 points in the first ball, but
sat out the third quarter after getting into foul trouble. He came back
in the fourth period and. scored six
field goals, most from outside.
Dan Issei led Denver with 32 points. Kiki Vandeweghe added 25 and
Alex English 23 ·for the losers.
Darrell Griffith scored 18 points for
Utah and Carl Nicks had 15.

..IJ
· CAROLL SNOWDEN
417

.,..

~'~ .

hastitai!SIIrgiclll insuRIICI.
UAU rAaM

&amp;
.., ,.,. ...,. _
...._ ..,_,
- - -.•.,.

r-----------------------.1.-===========-

..

Ford lfld yOur p.~Riq)l lrrog Fool Oulertn
ol!tm; !lllltWY ..p 110111 on- 0! tile!• De$1·
-~~ ~9'"t ..,...,..,_ INI and 11192 c...
Maney 10 h&amp;lp lrnar.:e 11111 rww car you noec1 II
mNtlt '1'0\1 un 10wer \'OIIf monthly ~rmen~• DV
~

lhe U¥1"!1110

~~

borrowlroO lftl lo ~·n Willi

0own PloY,_,. "nd

Or 91' e c:l\fek

Oot~fromfonl ll 'l~e"'OCCI

CA'" UP•IIMO!fT. OtNrl mi U )'00 _,..; 1JP to
lou rv-ar•to 'l"' your l&lt;il ..........,.'aoworth &amp;I
Fore! Clll out eM ~ rn vtwtiiOdltl toa!W.

Nol l rtdt.cedanouaiO.rcenl••••· llulcash

up. lrQrll

MAICI! TOIM IH!lT DUL. T l&gt;enq&gt;no~w~ll
hundf'edl a4 dcJIIu1 11\UVII'IQS S!o•B $700 &lt;In
AI'III MCIIl-IIWO-NII!el IICJni·,..,..I III&lt;Ve

_,

Foof1 Up-FroniMorw,.- youo F(JI(I 0.... ano
!lui' trom ltock ar OHitr betwten - lftd

11101111! vnui!NII!WS.,...,_..,.,,-you·,.
ioc*11'9!QI 1 mill·lilll~ ~- FordFIIIffTD'II

F~ E•P

fUII.rl 4-0001 it IC1U ity . . . . . pncfCIIO&lt;iMI'matl
IIIII JIHlr 10o iO(HJI !t'.t, Ford il! ofllm;J .....

pop.ll' IPOII I ear : Ford Mw11111111 Olar•
OOfllnb.J()tl mtly tii.C. COAl~ p&lt;oc. Umol
rr..- per CYIIOIT'Ief,

~alllt padl-att on r~WJr Olhef ~ llllldN.
SO tit lUff IC ctliCk DIJI ail me ~II!Ut , _ JfOI'II
FCIO'd lot 1882.

S..,.uploUOOon lrQOI ·• I&gt;teldu..
FordE~. Md i.w 1000 on Amtfltfl'lmoal

ssoo

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

_ _ F_ _. , ...,., _

· ~ ot -

IJUT Oft ORPt!R HOW. To gel )'OIIr 11\Wt 01

47 [31]**
. . ......,

ESCORT

--f.IJJ_.,

INf.ltWQ

f•ont"""""dr!oe_lcur....,.

Get $20 bacll from
AnnSbCHig wllen IOU buy
.,. of tllelr best ceilings,
ami Instal It w1a1

33~·
::..=......::--~~ (.

.560()

HT"'"

EXP

-mwo

46[21]*

SMC)

U't"IIW'r

.,•
••

Juu tymmer
the foUf'foot

meDI tracks Into
rne celttng tolm ,

~it1on

Then
the t il es ;mc:l snap
into plac e That s

now eas~ It Is to
inc;~

What an offer!

uo a t ile ceil·

with

EIS'W Uti, a 00·

lt ·o;ounelf kit

ttwgiWS'WOU

ttl! confioence

m ~anvtto It

.,

~ourself

Jad~.'s A.wni ni(Sa l es

50 22

Blue.Tartan

411 28

Key Realty

40 32
40 32
40 32

·

Ttm 'sBod)'Shop
Joh~'ll Market

FetJtral Mot:ul
PonJi Kl'.ll
·

$2.69

30"

29.95eA.

1

EA.

PRE-FINISHED PANELING

LARGE SELECTION OF STYLES AND COLORS ALL 4'x8'
DARK OAK
LIGHT OAK
KINGS INN

4.29

1

4.84

1

PC.

'J.84

r.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

6.99

1

PC.

BIRCH

LODGEWDOD PECAN

'7.84

PC.

•

PC.

PEG&amp; PLA8K

10.49

1

PC.

No.

No: 901

OFFER ENDS NOVEMBER 21, 1981

....

PC.

-·

that h•ve chi and gas leases that are due to expire within one vear.
p

o s

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
74

PH . 614-532-0101

ALL
STOCK
SAXONY

1ronlon. Ohio4S638

~~~~·~- ~o·~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~
....,....,.u_r....

&lt;&gt;I -

'IOCA

WHITE$1.59

KITCHEN
CABINETS

EA.

VINYL EASE
NO-WAX FLOORING

3.84

1

45

:~

PLUSH SHAG CARPET

5.99

1

~~

INSULATION

CELLULOSE BLOW IN/POUR IN

$4.75

36 36

CAROLINA LUMBER
, AND

SUPPLY COMPANY
•'

675-1160 .

Fediral MO«Ul - Carolyn BUI'too high game of
110, "Mal")' Bw11:e 1 hich .eria of 443 ; Jack 's
Aw~g Salel - Debby RuDell ~h p.me 18;
Jan !lowell high Rries $32; Team Ro. 10 - Debby Ban..'Wi (sub' hi gh p me and high RriH 171·
459. •
'
5llllb: con~rCcd ; C.lh)' VanWinkle the »IO

artd the 5-3-10; Hazel Marcum the :Jolt; Nellie
JacJton the 5-10.

....

Point Pluslnt

Store Hours: Monday·Friday 8 a.m.·5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m .• 12 noon

•

URGENTLY NEEDED OIL AND GAS LEASES
To fu"ifl future. drilling programs write or call and be sure to Include
PIIPtoiJ tocation and acreage that is available for leas~ . Also those

32
30
28
28

Lon"

•

28.95u.

1

DRYWALL

Rangers 3, Sabres 3
The Rangers used • second-period
goal by Ron Duguay to knot the
Sabres, whOm they beat 7-3 two
nights earlier, · Defensemen Ron
Greschner and Reijo Ruotsalainen
also scored for New York.
Danny Gare, Ric Seiling and
Larry Playfair tallied for Buffalo.
"Basically, we did the same thing
as we did in New York the other
night," said Duguay. "They had a
lot of good scoring oppOrtunities, but
we got some breaks and our goaltender (rookie Steve Weeks) played
well to keep us in it."

311 36

.Ro!Jilns and Myen - Nellie Jacbon lM-418;
Tim~ Body Shop - Hazel Marcwn zua,
"Gotd ao.~. hat!l''; Pony I.e&amp;~~ - .Uiftn
taz.-:: lllue Tart.n - Pat ~tel' 17_...;

..

24"

~A~·

Of BLOW II MACIIIE FOR DIE DAY WlTM A PURCHASE OF 20 BAGS OR MORE.

.•
...'

.'

..

'
'"
Dpn'ttry
it
••

. lfORWALK', Conn. (AP) - GoU·
t~ng pro Bob TOIIkl wrote Ill
"GGif Di&amp;C" 11m ,... ......
co6l play a 11111 1MB illlllld 1
~ better u.n Nancy Lopa.

MJ;",.;. replied three morrthllater
in fie same JIIIPIIne. ''How raany
tiJ1tlll,"lhe Inquired, "did Bob Tlllld
will tournamenls with shots from
be~ a bunker?"

•
..

... MILTON ·

~0':'1: MI-IIDI ,

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-9800

··-.'.

.•
......
..
....

"' ~
' l • CATLETTSBURG

l\(\ eST. ALBANS

'

.

s~

PHDII: , ... _

ELKVIEW

~=g~W110 ·

PHDII=- -

\\1

G GAUIPOUS
FEIIRY /
liT. IIDUTH
PIIQII: IIMtlli-GM·

.,..,.~
..ddii

e f,EUL.,
:8

RIVERSIDE VOLKSWAGEN

..

....
.-..
..
•. ...
•
.
..•.
..'.• .
.
....•..

Introducing the 1982 Volkswagen Diesel Pickup. ·

Nothing else Is a Volkswagen®

•

'

MANY MORE ITEMS NOW ON SALE!

'.

· Th inking of picking out a pickup?
If so, you 'd do well to consider our 1982 Diesel.
.
Its mileage is fair ly impressive, we th ink, e specially si nce it happens
to be the very best there is for a picku.£:
.
In fact , it gets an EPA-estimated ~I mpg, 49 highway estimate.
(Use •estimated mpg" for comparison. Mileage varies with speed, trip
lertth, weather. Actual highway mileage Will probably be less. )

..-• ...•

.• .••-.

FIBERGLASS

182aild hltth~h..'!14&amp;:1 ; J'IFCXldMartandOeliDelphin! StarUn!J high game and ser6eii7H73 ;
Dealls Carr! Out - bebby Nibert 111-442; Key

,,. . ., liN

312 Sixth Street

CAS IlliG

EA.

1/2"x4'x8'

miracles."

Realty - Pam Hannon had high game of 174,
with. Karen Ch.Uln havinK high Jeries ol 482; ·
J•1nln'• Gas Service - Joyn Ruas 117-413 ;

38[2Z]*
ur-.

DOORS
BORED WITHOUT

40
Jordan's Gas Sst.-rvkt'
42
Team No. 10
44
J's Pood Mart ond Dl!ll
44
Ro=and Myers
·
26 46
I vidual high pme and high series;
J
'll Marhtt - Janie St.ale)' high !(Bille

·.

No. 492

STUDS

'W, L.

Deal 1s Carry _f)ul

Because an offer this special may

'

steady."

INTERIOR
PRE-HUNG

$f.19

Local bowlin
Tellll:l

~ ·_..-

PH. 992·219&amp; ·

Detroit Coach Wayne Mallfler contended the bani c;.hecking of the
bigger. Red Wings ~ventually paid
off in the final two periods.
"In the third period, except for
about three or four chances, I
thought we were in control," he said.
Maxner said Detroit goalie
Corrado Micale!, "maybe had a shot
at Washington's second and third
goats, but he didn 't ge~1them . After
that, he settled down ahd was very

Micale! had 23 saves while' Mike
Palmateer, making only his second
start in Washington 's last eight
games, turned aside 26 shots.
"We're so close, but we're not
there yet," said Maruk. "This is our
second start. It's going to take time
to tum things around. It won't be a
sudden bang. You can't expect

2"x4"
PRE-CUT

Bowlblg LNgur

First you get a brand-new top -Quality Armstrong ceiling tore place your old celllno.
,
Then you oet enouoh Armstrong grid-or au-new easv up
Kits-to Install. vour new ceiling 1150 SQ. tt mtnlmumL IEasv up Is
tne newest, Si(1'1Piest wav ever to Install a tile celllng.l
And fOr getting wnat·s oooCI fOr vou. Armstrong will send vou
$20. .
.
It vou·u be needing a new
I
1
"It now.

PAT
HILL
f081),
INC
•.
See: Garland P1110111 or Pit Hii-Gen. MJ.

Butnotforus.''

2.71
16
'5.54
1

PC.

Novi!IDbft" I, ltll
Sla.Unp

-III'I•OI'C·""""'-..
.......

IITHW"I'

Ogrodnick fired his tying slapshot
from the point after McCourt won a
crucial faceo!f.
With 6: 281eft, an apparent goal by
Walter was disallowed alter
Washington's Rick Green had rnade
an illegal two-line pass.
"I heard the whistle, but I thought
I was right outside our bench door
and across the blue line," said
Gr_een. "If it had. been another team,
they probably would have let it go.

'2.42
'3.64
14.85
'6.99

PLYWOOD

IUwllqllel..

or~ Up™ g] [:d rrJ~"\
I&gt;Ut

MUSTANG

ana
Maruk
gave
CapsAfter
a :HI Dale
lead
jusl3:43
into
thethe
game.
McCourt scored on a power play for
Detroit, Ryan Walter boosted
Waihington's lead toJ-1.
Mike BlaisdeU scored lor the Red
Wi'!gs in the second period, and

.quality Armstlong grid
Ills.

LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - The
.Washington Capitals were in the
unusual position of being ahead. It
may .have proved to be their downfaU .
"After we got ahead, it seemed
like we were waiting for something
to happen," said Bryan Murray af·
ter hi• second game as Washington's
newcoach. .
. Wjjatever the n:I!'l'lR• •the Caps
blew a 3-1 first-period lead and
woUnd up with a 3-3 National Hockey
League tie when .John Ogrodnlck
· sco~ed for the Detroit Red Wings at
15:31 of the third period Friday
night.
Irl the only other NHL game, the
New York Rangers skated toa3-3 tie
with the Sabres in Buffalo.
The Caps managed to end their 13gall)e losing streak, but they failed
to post their second victory in 16
games. Washington's only triumph
1 thiS season came over Detroit on
Oct.IO.
"Maybe we were sitting on the
lead, ... said Washington's Dennis
Marui&lt;, who scored orie goal and
assisted on another. "We haven't
been ahead in many games, and
maybe we were thinking, 'Oh, oh,
we '.d better protect this one."'
Power-play goals by Tim Tookey

16'

CONSTRUCTION

Caps blow lead, .tie Wings, 3-3

.. See meforState Fam

'4.16
15.99

'3.46
'4.99

2"x8"
2"x1 0"

LOOSE PUCK - Buffalo Sabres Ai.dre Savard chase afler the puck In Rangers' territory dnrlag tile
(tell) and New York Hangen Rpn Greschner (right) first period ollhe Friday nlgbt NHL game. lAP Laserphoto).

"

A better way_ to beat the high
cost of financing.

~·

-

Ave.

14'

I

111.

••
••

l3 1-14 _ , 731-4121

='~:.~~

WUU&amp;r~ 1•1.•: .

·

1:• P.M.

n2-2111 H- Comr

SATURDAYS Ul AJI. •

i:. P.. .

IUIOAYS I :DIIl.M. · 5;M ' -M.

IIEtNEIW AlfAJI.MU Ar IIEAIOMAIU /lArES

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

.

...
..-.
.....
•

•
'I

�· OhiO"'- Point Pleasant, w. Va .

Nov. 1

Nov. ·15, 1981

The lesson was clear: with a f&gt;.li
and just six games left, the
Rams can't afford to flWlk another
record

one.
"We are trying to come back and
get down to basics, trying to simpl!ly
things,'' Malavasisaid.
The inJurY·hobbled Rams, who

CO.MOST VALUABLE PLAYERS - Gregg Deel,

left, and Bruce Shriver, seolor members of the North

trail the resurgent San Franci.Scl&gt;

49ers by three games in the National
Conference Western Division, will
start Dan Pastorini at quarterback
Sunday against 7.;1 Cincinnati.
Pastorini, lonnerly with Houston
and Oakland, made his first start for
The Bengals frustrated the passhappy San Diego Chargers lasl week
in an easy 4().17 'victory, sacking
quarterback Dan F.outs six limes
and intercepting him twice.
Quarterback Ken Anderson err
joyed another good day passing,
completing 18 or 28 tosses for 288
yards and a pair of touchdowns
the Rams in a 21·13 loss to New
Orleans last week. Pastorini com-

NEW YORK (AP) - With one set

pleted 15 or 33 passes for 233 yards
and a touchdown.
The Bengals have given ground
grudgingly thls swon, ranking fifth
defensively in the American Conference. Malavasi thinks that the
way to beat tbem is through the air,
but he ISn't sure whether his club
will be up to the task.
"I think they are vulnerable to get•
ting beat long, but we haven't been
getting long gainers, the big plays,"
MalavJisi said. "Our trouble has
been inconsistency.''
· before leaving the game wilh a
. sprained left shoulder. Anderson,
the No. 2-raled quarterback iri the
league, was listed as questionable
for the Rams game.

Gallla IUp School Pirates football team, were ~ed
C&lt;rMosl Valuable Players fot"their oolstaodlllg efforts
during lbe 1981 season. -School photo.

Deel, Shriver share
North Gallia MVP award
'

~:

.:

·;·the Southern Valley Athletic Con. • .ference,. was first team all-league
: this fall and scored 28 points for lhe
· Pirates. He had 51 assisted tackles
and 21 individual tackles for a total
: of l2. Deei snapped the ball on punts, .
: and caught six passes for 109 yards
- · and three touchdowns.

'

'

Sl.lle Pa.yoff~
Frida)''l Ret~ulb

, .,

MOST lliiPROVED PLAYERS Bob Adkins, junior guard; Mike
Mays, junior end and Scott Pickens,
sophomore squarterback.
B&amp;'lT DEFENSIVE LINEMENDavid Swisher, senior end, Paul
Hollingshead, junior tackle.
BF.'lT DEFENSE BACKS- J. J.
Justice, linebacker and Kenny Neal,

P~nick,

sophomore tailback.
Swisher, Justice and Smith were

broken leg .
Pirate mentor John Blake pointed
out the 1981 squad collected 2,121
yard• rushing lin 424 attempts) for
an ave1·age of 5.0 yards per carry,
and scored 23 touchdowns.
The Pirates completed ~1 of 103
passes for 727 yards imd nine touch·
downs.
The alert Pirates recovered 13
fwnbles, intercepted 17 passes, and

Benedictine

Hamilton Badin

24,

Avon

Lake 7

Mooney
,

49,

/

Park

·9

AISolqn

A.IAUIIUDIOWII

.. Youn~ .

Deer

Steubenville

Mujj.adore

10,

Ashtabula

St. John

1

AtTlffln

0

AI O.ytoo

TUfin Calvert 39, Bucke)'~ Centro! 6
AtZIDetvtlle

Trotwood

Madison 33, Day. Rolh 13
Divis loa III
AtKeat
: At ron St. Vlnc~'flt.St. Mary Zl, Kenston 0
,.
AtLon~ia
• F.lyria
Cat h.
7.
Bellt!vue

Newark

'

Cath . 21 , Crooksville
'
At Dayl&amp;n
Marion
20 ,
Wayne11 vi lle
Regul.lr Seaaon
Col. Beeehcroft 47, Col. Walnut Ridge
Jeffer:~on Union 11, Bergholz. Spring.

11
12

8
7

.: Reds group sales office open's Monday
:; CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati
:- :Reds' Sales Department will begin
: • )lccepting orders Monday (Nov. 16)
• • ~or groups interested in attending
:: ~ames on the·1982 home schedule.
: • : Groups of 30 or mroe qualify for
: : llfelerred seating and scoreboard
· : 1'i!cognition when vi.siting Riverfront
: : SIBdiwn for Reds' games. More than
: ·.:2,000 seats, both box and reserves,
: : )IIJ' available for Group Sales
· : -customers for each home game.
; •: There are atso two air-conditioned
: )rivate rooms available for group

use. The Press Box, located down
tbe first base line, accorrunodates 78
to 90 people, while the Home Run
Room, located in lett field, is for 38
to 50 people.
Groups which have already selected their 1982 dates may visit the
Group Sales Office at Riverfront
Stadium
or write:
Cirr
cinnati Reds,
P.O.Group
Box Sales,
19'10, Cirr
cinnati, OH 45201. For additional infomiation, call the Reds' office at
(513) 421-4510.

SHORT GAIN- Penn State back Curt Warner (25) is trapped by two
Alabama tacklers .after only a short gain In lbe first period of game at
Unlversily Park, Pa. on Saturday. AI right is Russ Wood (89) of Alabama
and left Is bls teammate Warren Pyles. (AP Laserpboto)

Coach Ted Lehew introduced the ·
managers and reserve players.
Coach Ron T"Yffian introduced the
RIO GRANDE - Kim Clingman,
varsity players and Coach Blake
a
senior
at Rio Grande College and
presented wecial awards.
Corrununity
College, has been
Junior Kemper is president of the
named
the
runner·up
for athlete of
Boosters Club.
the year at the school.
Players , cherleaders and
Clingman has been astarter on the
managers honored were:
volleyball
squad for four years and
Players
served as captain the past two
Jeff Smith, Barry Marcum , David
Swisher, Jay Moore, Juaquine years.
Justice, Mike Null, Bill Halley ,
Robert Caldwell, Mi'ke Null, Bill
Holley, Robert Caldwell. Gregg
Deel. Bruce Shriver, Bob Adkins,
Mike Mays, Kenny Neal. Paul
Hollingshead, Eric Penick, Scott
PiCkens. Matt Kemper, Jay Skid·
more, Tookie Holliday, Joe Moore,
Jack Glassburn, Brian Hawks, Tim
Smith, J. D. Colley, Bill Harden,
Mark Foreman, Scott Roush, Scott
Wtlliamson, Pat Ellis, Jim Denny,
Ji m Coleman and Chuck Easter.
Varsity Cheerleaders
Debbie Boyles, captain, K i mmi
Coleman, co-captain; Nikk i Thax·
ton, Joanne Jones, Diane Shilot,
Lynn Marcum and Dawn Beach .
Statistician
Marty Glassburn .
Managers
Joe Browning and Jamie Calihan .
Coaches
John Blake, Ron Twyman ~ Ted
Lehew and Steve Saunders .
Announcer
Keith Saunders ...o
Press Box - Doyle Saunders 6nd
Phil Saunders.

r---;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;iiiliiiil

,

HONEST PRICES
FAST SERVICE
OPEN FOR RECEIVING NOVEMBER 13
FIRST SALE DAY NOVEMBER 23

•

14 inch steel,
optional coal grate

iron dooiS.

New YorK
WashlngtOII

New Jersey

nament record for most polnts
scored.

San Antonio
Utah

A three year starter, Clingman
was co-c~ptain of the Rcdwomen a

PHONE_698-6121

HUN1JNBTON PRIDE IN TOBACCO MARKET
No 20 nth 51••1

tWI'IIIftolltOI\ .,.., Vllglrlll 25703

KansaaCity
HOUlton ··
Dallao

.:W
.125

.114

.m

~

6

1

.11&amp;7

Z
6
~

.114
·375
.ZII!
250
125
·

u~

7
6
4
3

3

Z
3
4
4

.778
.&amp;25
·000
.UII

4

1

1~4

2

2
2
-

I
3""
fo

t lf.t
5
""

-

.tZ9

tt

1
2
3
~~,&lt;,

ByT11e .U..:IIt.edPrttl
. . . . Cellfemll'e
Pabiek Dh11klll
WLTGFGAP\8
1023"'41113
9515111319

I.

57

711 IS

Montreal
Buffalo
Quebec

10
2

D 0
7 7

34
51

1M 20
&amp;3 11

7S

38 22
75 a

CalftJibeU Colllere•ce

NM'rlll DlvbiOD

10
6

~~g

7

Detroftst. Louis

3 2
:

6 ·7

6

Toronto

4

68

66 . 16

9 2

70

73 H
68
53
11
811
73

9

3
I

7

7

3

81
56

8

9

0

79

SmytbeDIIO•~,"''

Edmonton
Vancouver
Los Anl!l:eles
Calgary
Colorado

~: n~e
4

71

78 n

21
17
11

3 u 4 53
10
3 9 3 42
9
Friday'• Gamet~
New York Ran~~:ers 3, Buffalo 3, lie
Detroit 3, Washington 3, lie

W. L.

54 ..
411 ,.
40 32

Orcle's Redlurant

Gino'al'tl:u

!&gt;PweU a.mlcol
Les Jewt Arca4e
...gic Mirror Deluty Salon
United Security and

.. 32

"34 34
31

WiMman Aaency
Ohio Vo112 Laundry

~dl
'.t GI'Ol'ery
'Ramlle)''aGrocery

"' .
....
32 ..

o.ntnunlcatlona

·

:II ..

.. 42

, ,

Jnlh1duo1 hilh- Mel hill&gt; .......,

.. 411

Cln:le'o-W'IIItl, ()pol Cdlo IOoh ~ 202
ond Liley F - Ill hl&amp;ti 111'1• G1nci I Piwo,

JinnlferlloJTioioubl lafhl&amp;tipmundn! high

m.•ncl

~erie~: McDonak1'1, Pflyllil Bictie 157 high
...... ond . . blah ...... , llqk: Mimi&lt; Beouly
Saloa Blrban 'ltUler Dl
106

lltlh ' ..-; WMIIIer'•

, :rereaa

-.... ,,. hlP ..... ud •
...... ,
_..,~.Jon a-111 blahpmeond

ReoliJ. llov Wonl180
llllh..,..,.nulllch-; LooJ... Amde.

llllqll- ~Mudly

Li11lln-"""

and Schneider said things had
changed from a year ago, when the
Yankees sigried freHgent outfielder Dave Winfield to a )().year,

{

•
"No one wants to get into a biddins

war," the agent said in a

soft

Loulaiana drawl. "We're not goin&amp;
to see any Dave Winfield set..

tlernents."

'

A FREE
FIVE DAY
S I VACATIO

Tire, we want tci
help you enjoy the
winter season . And to
prO.ViO it, we invite.you ·
to register at any Appalachian ·
Tire Store for one of three
5-day Ski Vacation Gift
Certificates worth $7 60c
This fabulous Ski Vacation includes:
•LIFT TICKETS
•LODGING
•AND LESSONS FOR TWO PERSONS
Simply stop by yourlocal Appalachian Tire Store
to register. A winner will be drawn and notified for a fun·
filled week at v\le~3 Virginia's finest ski resort-:-Snowshoe.
And to make your trip to Snowshoe a safe one,
we've reduced prices on our finest lines of
Goodyear snow tires. We can also totally
"winterize" you·r car in our Car Care Service
Center.

'

pitcher

Now! Drawing will be held Dec. 19th. ·

tu a tl~Ne-year cootract.

'
FOOTBAlL
Natlo118l FDOtball r..e.gue ,
WASHINGTO"N
REDSKINS- Piaced

Wilbur Jackaon1 (ullback, on the injured
l'fltrve list. Cl&amp;lmed Nick Giaquinto, run-

ninK back. oo waivers from !he Miami
[lolphinil. Re-signed Bob Raba , Ught end.
Waived Mike Rae, quarterback.

Team
Baird and Fuller Realty
New Rl~r Elec.
BobEvansFarm

Headcn•rten Bar

'11M! Elks

Gavin Elec.
Warehime's FWleral Home
'!1le Halr Cllppm
JimanetU's Pizza

Village Ins.

F32
Radial

I *57!
W.L.
~I

21

46 34
~ 3$

4t at
fo3 37
42 31
40 40

• UrNQue tread rubber compound
has bendability In the
under the tread

2-ply load range 8 ,

e~ll

plus S1 .53 FET.
No trade needed.

31 U ·
38 44

3CI 44

McOorlllld's
.II 48
C.nl"l Supply
21 53
Baird and Fuller Realty won ell:hl polnil from
Gavin Elec. High bowler for Bl1rd and Fuller
, Realty waa: C. Lane with 5111. High bowler for
Gavin Elec. 'ftAAlklre with &amp;H.
Bob Eva,.. F1nn woo eight poiMa · from
JlmaneW's. High bowler for Bob Evans Finn
WIS R. Spence with • · Hiah bowler for

JimaneW'swuD. Petrie lrilbi.M.
The Elks won MVea poinll from Ce(ltral Supply. High bowler lor The Elb..., R. ,..,.....,

w:ith 81Z. Hlah bowler fOr Centrll Supply wu B.
Shaw with lb.
Vi~Je _1111. won til: pointl f111m 'l'he Hair ~

pen. J1i1b bGwier for Vlllue II'll. wu H. KeYifl'
with $11. lfilh bowler for 'ftw: Hair Clippen...,
F.Kno-wllhfll.
H..-rters Blr ..., llx polnlo fT&lt;Im New

River mec. Htllh bowler for Headquarten Bar
wu R. Clonch "lth * · Hll:tl bow'ler for New
River Dee. wu J. O.vil with M7.
Warehime'• won lis polnta from McOolllld'a.
Hlah Mler for W8Nhime'1 wu T. Jone. with
M[ A&amp;ih' bowler for Mdlonald'I 'WU R. ~t
•lth51f.

TIEMPO
$3!)95

• The strenglh of 4 full
plies of polyester
• Hard·pulling deepseated tread cleats
• Effective in slush,
snow. and hard pack
Sin

Sin P1 55/BOR 12 Bleockw,•lll
Pluo$1 .40FET .

• All season tread design for
traction in mud and snow; plus
quiet hi9hway ride

• Gas-sav•ng radial construchon
• Over 10.000 gripping edges

for lnlclion

426 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, W. Va.

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
WHk of November U, 1981

Pool
Oete- Gymnlslum
NOll . 15 2-4 p.m.·Opeh Recre.allon
2-4 p.m.·Open Swim
· 6·8 p.m.·Collogo Recreation
6·8 p.m. ·Open Swim
~"" 168·10p m ·College Aecreallon
8·10 p.m. ·College Swim
NOll: 178·10 p:m:.college Aecrtallon
·.
B·IO p.m. ·College Swim
NQV 111·30p m.· RodmenYI. BtrN
ClOYd
N ·198:1op'm ·CollegeRocreellori
B·10p. m.·CollegeSwlm
""i.!oTE · All (eclllllesln Lyne Cente;wlll be clooed until classes resume
lor Wlnltr 'Q uarter on Monday. Nov. 30. A new scllec!Uie will be published at
that llmt.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-6441 or 992·2668

$23 million contract.

,,

NY Islanders at Philadelphia
EdmOnton Bt New Yor·k Ranf!(ers
Colorado at Chi'caw:o
vancouver at Calgary
Ml'Dday'1 G1ma
No games scheduled

NOv.i,lllll
StiiiMUqa

'""'

SUII, 2Q of the eligible players each

were drafted by three teams or 1~.

·--~;
~ ~

Sudly'1GilPlet1
BostQfl at Buffalo

SXVLINER'S LEAGUE

... . . '""h ......... 4D '""h ...... ,
Uaa.d-yondCorM1unl&lt;au-,RibyWUI
1• bill&gt;- IDd
Ruby Wlll
. ..
bJP ...... Georle~l Grocery, 1JDdl
Jfenry
1•111P pmo .... dllilh •rtoo; Obit Volley
LluDdry - - Ntol ill hllh ...........
1111b Wlei· -.D Ooomiolf.- Gilmore
iiiUiol • hJaji pmo IOd po!l1 Nlbell Ill hlah

DALE HILi.
FORD TRAClOR, INC.
251 w. Main st.

l

Local bowling

c.n.day Reolly

-·

Boston
Hartford
••

9

1 14 I t3 12 3
•1
Au.DIII Dlvt. OD
10 3 3 71 50 23
9 3 .• •
42 22
7 4 6 Sf 56 20

•-

"'

N1Uoul Horkey Leap~:!

THf FOLLOWING .

every year."

• By The o\UI)(IIItd Prell
IASEBAU. '
AmerkaD League
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Named Jim
Beluchamp rr.nager af their Syracue
fann club in the Jntematlonal Leagu~ .
NoU..WLea...
MONTREAL EXPOS-Signed Ray Bur·

s..day'IGUietl

SPICIAL SALf ON

peeled,'' Miller said. "I think this
draft ranks somewhere in the Jnid.
die of the six drafts io far . As far 85
potential free agents signing with
their old clubs, you have that happen

Fridly'a Sport11'nuluctiua.

Cleveland at Mlhr1ukee
Indiana at Los Angeles
San Antonio al ·Portland
Moaday"1 Gimes
No Kame5 .-:hedllled

DALE HILL FORD
TRACTOR INC.

7

Minnesota

·~

S
3

NY Rangers
WIL'Ihinat"n

6

2
4
.333
Friday'• Game.
Boston 111, New Jersey 91
Philadelphia 105, KIMN Clly 85
MUWiuket 51, New York BS
Golden State 102, Houston HIO
Utah 131, Denver 124
Lot Angeles 111, Portland 115
San AnlonJo 119, SeatUe 112

11-11, 1111

3~
4

2
.
i
; ·
Pacific Nvl~ion

Porlland
Phoenix
Uts Antl;eln
Golden State
SeatUe
San Diego

Ford Tractor 3600,40 h.p. Diesel . ...... . Retaii $15,120
SALE .................................. $11,01i
1-~ord Tractor n.oo c~So(DC, am·fm stereo,. rear tires
f1lled, 1\)lld mon1tor ... , .,, ...... : .... Retail $29,976
Sale Price ............. ;............. Only $20.435
1-Ford so3 Rake .. . : . ............. _. ........ $1,045
1-Ford 101 Plow, 2·14 ......................... $780
· 1-Ford llil6 6 Ton Wagon' Gear ..... ·SOLD .... ... $428
1-Ford 201 Flex Disc, 71!• fl .. .. ..... ........ . .. $1,015
1-Ford 131 Chisel Plow, 7ft.......... ......... $1,003
1-Ford 208 Field Cultivator . .. ........... . . .. $1,325
1-Woods 84NC·2 .Pull Type Rotary Cutter . . . ... $1,735
1-New Idea R402 Rake .. . ... , ............... $1,575
1-Rossl Wheel Rake ....... sOLD ............. S535
Wood Splitters . . .. . ....... . .. .. .. ... ........ .. $575

I .

7

.ut

-

Mlchret1 Dlvilll!ll

Denver

· 5 year guarantee
From Pomeroy, North on
Rt. 143 to Carpenter
Turn at RR Tracks

1

.B'l$

Chicago
· "'"
Cleveland
3 4
.m
Indiana WESTEKNCOJFE~NCEug

NOTICfl
FORD CHRISTMAS TOYS GOING FAST.
C.Ome In and Layaway Now. We Are
Unable To. Order More.

., $42000

1
t
4

• · 3
3
~
4
il

Detroit
Atlanla

team's best defensive player last
season and shattered the state tour~

7
3
2

Celltral DlviMJell
5
2

Milwaukee

last season. She was nam~d the

__.:_l

By'lkAuoclaiedPrHI
EASTERN CONFERENCE
' AtlaJrde Dh'illoa
W L
Pet. GB
7 1
,875 _

Phlladelpllla

INVINTORY ITfMS ONLY

HEATER

and screen, cast

·BoslOn

· In basketball she averaged 12.6
points and 9.5 rebounds per game

Last spring she was the May Day
Queen
representing the Alpha Sigma
McEnroe, Connors
Phi fraternity. ·
gain semifinals
Perri Martin, who graduated from
Rio Grande last spring, recently
WEMBLEY, England (AP) received the Newt Oliver Trophy as
Defending champion John McEnroe , the school's outstanding athlete. She
and second-seeded Jimmy Connors earned 12 'varsity letters and was an
both scored straight set victories to
A!AW All-American while at Rio
advante to tbe semifinals of the Grande.
$175,000 Benson and Hedges tennis
tournament.
McEnroe trounced Brian Gottfried &amp;-1, 6,2, while Connors downed
Shlomo Glickstein of JsraeliH, IHJ.
In other matches, No.8 seed S!lndy
Mayer upset third-seeded Roscoe
Tanner 6-4, 5-7, &amp;-! in an allAmerican clash, and No.4 seed Vannick Noah of France defeated un·
seeded Richard Lewis of Britain 6-3,
&amp;-2.

YOUR TOBACCO

.•

N•lloaal'Buketbaii.U..Ct.Uoa

during the strike, said it wu too
to tell whether the compensation formula or the ecmomtc
impact of the 50-day walkout af·
fected the draft.
" It went pretty IJIUCh as I ex·

soon

Guidry was the only one of three
Type A free agents 1Q elicit much inDENNY
JACKSON
GUIDRY
· ANDUJAR
terest. Ed Farmer was selected by
Atlanta, Philadelphia, St. Louis and
RE-ENTRY DRAFT - Aside from the Yallkees ootflelder Reggie
fromieft, was by far lbe most popular pick. Seattle chose St. Louis CarTexas, and his rights were retained
Jacksoo, Jell, wh""" aegotialiag rights were selected by lbe Toroata Blue
dluals' pitcher J011qnln Andujar, tblrd from left JohD Denny, right, a pitby the Chicago White Sox. Dick
Jays, pitchers were lbe m•Jt poPnJar. selecU~ In Friday's aanual freecher for the Cleveland Indians, was chosen by 13 clubs. (AP Laserpboto).
Tidrow was drafted by only the
agenta re-entry dralt. Yallkee left-banded pitcher Ron Guidry, second
Phillies and the White Sox, and so .,.......:__ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _; . . . . - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - becilme eligible to negotiate with all
26 teams including the ! Chicago
Cubs, his old club.
Type A players are thosb ranking
in the top 20 percent of statistics for
their positions over the last two
seasons. The category was created
in the strike settlement, and it
meilns that their old clubs will be
able to select compensation from a
pool of roster talent if they sign with
another team. The compensation
draft will be held in January.
Marvin Miller, director of the
Major League Playru;s Association

··----;:;~~= ;;:t~:'~·::J

Men's
Frye
'loots

year ago.

IN

ASHLEY RADIANT

Jackson's New York Yankee
teammate, Ron Guidry, was the
most popular player of the day,
selected by 17 teams. The Yankees
also retained negotiating rights to
the ace le!t-hander.
''We are not going to be
unreasonable," said John
Schneider, Guidry's agent and
·longtime friend. "We're going to
have a prlcetag for each of 18
ballclubs, what they can reasonably
offertopay;Eighteenpricetags."
Schneider said Guidry would seek

trade contract. He reportedly rejec·

ted a Yankees offer or a three-year
deal worth $2.4million.
·Pitchers led the selection .list.
Guidry was foUowed by John Denny,
with 13, and Joaquin Andujar, with
II. Outfielder Dave Collins was
picked by 10 teams~ but his old club
- CincinnaU - failed to retain his
· negotiating rights:
The Reds and Houston both made
Guidry their first·rllund piCk, tbea
dropped out of the draft. Minnesota,
San Diego and Detroit made no
selections.
Pittsburgh, coining off a disappointing season, picked the most
players - 15 - and pushed tbe draft
to 18 rounda .
The Yankees had announced last
week - after acquiring ouifielder
Ken Griffey in a trade from Cirr
· cinnati and thus removing him from
the free-agent market - that they
would forego this year's draft. But
after passing on the first round, the
Yanks plunged in, drafting five
players and retaining rights to
Jackson, Guidry, pitcher Dave
LaRoche and outfielder Bobby Mur·
cer.
· Yankees owner George Stein·
brenner, one of the draft's biggest
spenders in years past, said last
week's statement had been nothing
more than predrafl strategy.

to atrengthen their teams with free
ag~.
'
Batting averages, home run
totals, won-lost recotds, innings pit'
ched and dozena of other statistics
that pour from the national pasttime
have been dissl:cted and decisions
made on who among the 41 eligible
players would be seleeted or
ignored.
.
Now, attention focuses on the bottom line - that string. of digits,
preceeded by a dollar sign and often
containing six zeroes, which will
determine if a team can lure a freeag~mt star to new environs.
"This weekend,'' Baltimore
Orioles General Manager Hank
Peters said after Friday's sixth annual re-entry draft, "is when we
really start lb work."
Conducted under a new set.of rules
born of the midsummer strike and
with some of the biggest potential
free agents already signed to new,
multimillion-dollar contracts, the
draft contained few surprises.
Reggie Jackson, the first player
chooen when the first re-entry draft
was conducted in 1976, was No.I
again, selected· by the Toronto Blue
Jays. Some see Jackson as past his
prime at age 35, but seven· other
teams also Pi.cked him.
"If we. didn't see Reggie as a
productive, dominating ballplayer,
we wouldn't have drafted him,'' said
Joe Torre, the new manager of the
Atlanta Braves. ''Ted Turner (the .
Braves' temperamenlal owner) ISn't .
looking for an ego trip by draftinK

·Kim Clingman .runnerup

TAKE PRIDE

..

'. ,

for top athlete award

Div.. loaV

AI CU.DU

• Col. , Whitehall 27, C&lt;ll. Watler.Jon 21. OT
•

10, Cin.

.,.

visor, introduced the cheerleaders.

AI t..ae~~•t.er
Washington C.H. Tf; W. Mwkingum 16

AI Parma

' Cleve.

Principal George Hertzke served
as master of ceremonies. Rev. M. H.
Jeffery gave the invocation.
Darla Saunders, cheerleader ad·

He missed six games, due to a

At Middletown

.•\:.\.

, 'h."

Trucking and Porter Texaco Corner.

first team ail-league. Marcwn
received special mention a!~ league.

DivWloa II

.

·

school assembly. Indi&gt;·idual trophies .
were presented during the banquet.
Trophies were sponsored by
George's Groc&gt;ery, McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Archie's 76 Station,
Windy Valley Farms, Cottrell's .
·Grocery, Theiss Market, Gabriel's
Limousine Service, Jim Edwards

BF.'lT OFFENSIVE LINEMEN -Mike Kemper, sophomore tackle
and Barry Marcum, senior guard . .
BEST OFFENSIVE BACKS Jeff Smith, senior fullback and Eric

of numbers reviewed, baseball's
owners and general ll)8llagers tum
Ill another line of figures 85 they try

him."

letters, senior · plaques and certificates and pins during ~ recent

linebac.k er .

s~hool grid results

:.1·High

this fall. Ten different players
scored 218 points for the Pirates, .
who fini.shed the year aiiH·l ..lnside
theSVAC, NorthGal!ia was4·1.0.
C&lt;rCaptains for the 1982 squad
were announced. They are Paul
Hollingsbead and Kenny Neal.
Gridders received their varsity

other honorees were :

peel, runnerup MVP Lineman in

: Shriver, also a defensive safety,
: carried the ball150 times for 859 yar·
· ds (5. 7 average) and scored 13 touch.downs for the Pirates. He completed
· ·five of 13 pass attempts for one
: :toucMbwn, and caught six aerials
· for 86 yards.
· ~ Shriver returned. 17 punts for 163
: yards and had five pass in• terceptions with 88 return yards. He
was· first team all-league, and was
·the SVAC'sMost Valuable Back.
· Shriver led the SVAC in scoring
' with 82 points. He had 47 tackles, 29

reCorded six C(lnsecutive shutouts

assisted and !8 solo.

VINTON - Greg Dee!, 193-pound
.senior end and Bruce Shriver, 14&gt;pound senior tailback were named
· "C&lt;&gt;-Mosi Valuable Players" on the
. · !981 North Gallia High School foot. : ball squad.
· This was revealed du1·ing last
. week's annual posl·season grid
: :banquet at North Gallia High School.

The Sunday Times·Sentinel-Page-C·S

All set for 'bottom line' -after sixth re-entry draf~

Rams ·can't afford to·
flunk Cincinnati test ··
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Los
Angeles Rams have prepared for
their meeting Sunday with the Cincinnati BeDgals like a student cram· ·
mlng for a crucial final eum.
·
Rams Coach Ray Malavasi closed
his club's practices to the public, ,
saying his players needed more concentration on their second game
ever at Riverfront Stadium.

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

675-3930
li

.,

�Page-C-6- The Sunday Times-Senti.nel

.Teacher
becomes
mentor

CINCTNNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals, who w.ere 3-7 ai this
lime a year ago, have reversed·
themselves with the addition of
rookie Cris Collinsworth the
maturiJ1g of young players ..;,d the
el&lt;plll18ionoftheoffel18ivesyatem
"All the guys have a hetter grip.on
the system now. We're at·the point
where we can change things up from
week to week," said Lindy Infante,
as:li:ltant coach who designed the
system.
"Now we can accomplish the
same thing with a little different

" We'regivingguysmorefreedom
in pass route adjustment thla year,
now that they know what they're
doing,"ldfante said. "Last year, we
diiln't give them as much fiezlblllty.
Now some'of the burden iB on themselvestogetopen."
" We have a lot of patterns where
we have the option of whieh way we
want to ·break," Ross said. "Last
year, when you ran a pattern, that
was it. This year you can run a pattern with as much as four different
routes. It meant more learning at
training eannp thla summer, but it's

look," Infante sa id.

secondnaturetousnow.''
" Last year we were very basic to

The Bengais, 7-J, face the Los
Angeles Rams here Sunday. The
Bengals said Friday the game has
now been sold out. But it will not be
televised locally because it had net ·
soldoutbyThursday.
"Last year, if they put in a couple
of new playa, no one knew what to
do," said tight end Don Ross. "This
year, we know where we'resupposd
to be."

11

York Tuesday for a
Madison

bash at

the Manufacturer's Hanover
Women's Classic Dec. l!f-20.

TONJASALSER

'

5254.00
$400.00
$289.00
$480. 00
$210. 00
$395.00
$195.00
$395.00
$180.00
$395.00
$395.00
$195.00
$328.00
$450.00
$320.00
$513.00
$195.00
5395.00
$280.00
$405.00

...

LE

.

~

$391.00
$180.00

(
•

J

$293.00
$138.00

. GOLF. BAGS

6 CY.-V-8 - AUTOMAnCS- STANDARDS

-

LADIES

-

IN STOCK
LIST

SHORT &amp; LONG BEDS
We are declaring war on all our many trucks in ,
stock. Trucks for work, trucks for play, for hauling wood or hauling hay. We have the truck for
your needs.

$165.00
$175.00
$135.00 .
$125.00
$125.00
$67.50
$41.50
$38.00
$38.00

WILSON LUXURY-OXBLOOD-TANW/TOTE BAG
RAM GOLDEN GIRL-TAN-WHITE W/PURSE

$175.00

SALE
$130.00

HOGAN •••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE S34.95

WILSON. ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• SALE $34.95
RAM ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• SALE S:i4.95

~~~as .
HEAD COliER

e..tt.'\~\. $14500
~

..
.·

,.•'
'•·

.
''·

.•

1982 FLEDSIDE
6 Cyl.-3 Spd. Manual.
Stock N168

·

ONLY

$6793°0 .
-

THIS WIIK ONI.r

.

~

BULLSEY~E-T.

Simmons Old.s.-Ca~~·Chevy, l_
nc.
301 E. Main St.

: .'.Jf

25

%Off

. SALI PRICE

s,l sr

CHESTER, OH.

985-3308

Jr .

Sarah Goebel, Eastern

Sr.

Ci ndy Evans. Southern

-....-

Jr.

second Team
Player, School
Loretta Gilmore, Kyger Creek
Hollv Jenkins, southwestern
Barb Edwards, Southwestern
Tonia Satse,r, Southern
Nikki Thalton, North Galtia
Chris Beebe, Kyger Creek

'

-rr.

•

Sr.

1n case •••

Sr.
Sr .
Jr .

Sr .
Jr.

•

•

l•'
}

•

~

.-

...

•&gt;

.,
I
••

·-

IIIC!N thlln • mlnerol block.

ctstaley

The Patented SWEETLIX formula helps make
auio canto oottho right amount fNOry day of the
Important caJ&lt;:tum. phoophorus, sail. lroce
minerlll.,d 'litltntno they need lor production
of milk and moat ... ptua mOIIIIfl tor benor
utilization.

••

••

J

1t
•'
'

r

',.

,:

3 in 1 Block ·
~··

".E.P. Block

.,..

................... 1-1•1

ii:

..

•••

~·
•••

.

Yo~r financial needs are
about to change!

H. E. P.T.M.

3-ln•1 T.M.

•'

••'•

.
-..
..-' .•.. ,_
.• ·•.
. '

~ ·

Pomeroy, OH.

•
..
......

....'
-.

t:

Pomeroy, OH.

JA YMAR GOLF c·LUB
'· ,.
;___

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

'•

'
••

C/.ll i

992-4312

Jr.

Sr .
Sop h.

Kellv Nibert, Kyger Creek
Laren Wolfe, Southern
Tana George, North Gallia

.

.

•

j

UST PRICE '225.110

1 mile north Of "-'•~~tun R t. 7

Yr.

•

-. ..

•'

PH. M2-6614

.,

Player, School
~e i VVeese , Southern

HbMELITE '' SUPER E-Z
o16" Power Tip Guide bar and chain
oAutomatic and manual cha in oil er
• Rubber cushioned handl e bar
• Compression release
o Rugged 2.5 cu. in. engine (40.9cc )
o Chromed chain

•

-•

LINE-T.P.M. ·

.Q lJa. BAGS, HEAD COVERS

TEAM

First Team

career

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) Danny Ongais, badly injured in a
crash during ll)e Indianapolis 500
last May, may reswne his racing
career later this month at Daytona
International Speedway.
Ongala this week informed Speedway officialS that he will test the Interacope team's Turbo Porsche 93:i
on Wednesday, Nov. 25, in
preparation' for the Camel GT 250
sporta car race the follOWing Sunday
and, if aU goes well, will then drive
In the season-finale of the International Motor Sports
Association GT series.

All-SVAC Volleyball team
A~L - SVAC VO~~EYBA~L

resunne

HOMELITE

••

3

MEN'S ST·A mR sn
;

~ay

NAME

•

.

__...__

Southwestern, Kyger Creek, and
Southern were represented at the
meeting. Each girl will officially be
honored this spring during the
league's all-sports banquet. At that
time each honoree wiD receive a
plaque for her outstanding efforta on
the court.
Southern easily claimed . the
league title this season with a perfect !:HI nnark in loop play and a 22-1
mark overall, its on(y loss being to
Trimble in the sectional tournament. Early in the season, runnerup ~yger Creek and champion
Southern engaged in a tight battle
for the top position. Kyger'~ only
losses came and the hands of
Southern as the Jiobeats ended the
league season at 12-3. Southwestern
ended its league play at 6-9, while
Eastern, North Gallia, and Hannan
Trace ended playwith identical 4-11
records.

A GOOD·

l • ·

P.G. A. Shirts, PG.A. Sweater Duckster Jackets, Difini sweaters,
Derby Hats, Amy Alcott Socks, Jaymar Towels, Foot Joy Gloves,
Wilson Gloves, Titleist Head Covers, Wilson Head Covers .

See Your Dealer on the River .. .

Gerry
Cooney- suffered a back injury that
very likely has knocked him out of a
Dec. $flghl in Las Vegas against Joe
Bugner, but word l'as the topranked heavyweight contender's
mid-March title bid against Larry
Holmes - a nnatch than would give
eaeh fighter $10 million - was not in
jeopardy.
Cooney pulled a muscle in his back
during !' Tuesday sparring session
and co-nnanager Mike Jones said
that the injury will keep him from
training for at least two weeka.
Cooney WBll ordered by Dr. Jeff
Minkoff to refrain from sponing or
any other exercise except walking
lor two weeks, according to Jones.

I
-~

PRO-LINE GOLF BALLS .nnEisr, PRO STAFF, .TOP FLITE, MAX Fll,
.
RAM, ADVANTAGE, GOlDEN GIRL, PINNACLE.

r
NEW ' YORK (AP) -

•'

•

For Example:

Cooney injured

'

JUNIOR .

SUNDAY BAG DELUXE

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Fourthseeded Mark Edmondson of
Australia beat eighth-seeded Tim
Gulllkson 6-3, ~. 6--4 in the quarterlinals of the $7$,000 Taipei Invitational tennis championships.
In other matches, No.3 Paul McNamee of Australia beat Mike Estep
~. 6-3; Pat Drupre beat Ivan
Dupasquler of Switzerlarld 7-6, 6-3;
and Robert Van•t Hof beat Rod
Frawley of Australia 6-4, ~. 7-:i.

NEW YORK (AP) - One of the
reasons for the increasing
popularity of marathons is that they
are frequently run tllfough city
stmts with the tape in the heart of
t~. New York and Boston are two
of that kind.
That wasn't the case in the
original 28-mile, 385-yard run - the
messenger going' from Marathon to
Athens to proclaim a victory over
the Persians in 490 B.C .

.

$215.00
5225 .00
$175 .00
$165 .00
S16S .OO .
$90 .00
$55.00
$50.00
$50.00

Lebanon results

Edmondson advances

Marathon Charisma

MEN· - IN

.
WILSON STAFF-RED-WHITE W/HC
HAGAN STAFF- BLACK W/HC
P .G.A. LUXURY-MAROON W/HC
CONFIDENCE STAFF-BLUE-WHITE W/HC
WILSON CORDOVA-BLUE W/HC
' P .G.A. EMBLEM-BLUE W/HC
\ TIT LEIST AIRLINER STAFF-RED-WHITE
TITLE 1ST-BLACK-WHITE
RAM-BLUE-GREY
RAM-BROWN-TAN

.

team, won the MVP award by
receiving the most voles on the first
team ballot. Southern dominated the
league's dream team by placing
Tonja ~lser, Cindy Evans, and .
Laren Wolfe on the team.
Ail SVAC schools including North
Gallia, Hannan Trace, East~rn,

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Rubin
McKain, a 15-1 longshot, won the
$1,000 featured pace mile at Lebanon
on a photo finish Friday night, and
leading driver Herb Coven Jr. had a
driving triple.
The winner paid $34.80, $11.80 and
$8. Buckraker, who finished a close
second, returned f8.80 and $UO, and
Swift Sandy' third, paid $8.
The 2-3 double of Darby Don and
Holiday Joy returned $UI and the
crowd of 1,1911 bet$173,323.

PRO-LINE GOLF.CLUBS-LADIES-IN STOCK
P .G.A.-BUTTERFLY WOODS 1-3-5-7
P .G.A.-BUTTERFLY IRONS 3-PW
RAM-LADY TRIBUTE WOODS 1·3-5
RAM-LADY TRIBUTE IRONS4-PW

POMEROY - During a recent
meeting of all six SVAC volleyball
Cllllches, Southern's Mel Weese was
chosen ali the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference's Most Valuable
Player, and 11 other loop netters
were named to the first and second
teams Ali-SVAC.
'
Weese, an integral part of
Southern's league championship

Dream
Team ...

CHRIS BEEBE

NIKKI TIIAXTON

Southern's Wees·e heads
All-SVAC Volleyball team

$190,00
$290.00
$219.00
$360.00
$160.00
$295.00
$146.00
$295.00
$135.00
$295.00
$296.00
$150.00
$246.00
$340.00
$240.00
$390.00
$148.00
$295.00
$210.00
$300.00

. ·-

GOLF BAGS

\1\\

.
'

TITLEIST-TOUR MODEL WOODS 1-3-45
TITLEist-TOUR MODEL IRONS 3-PW
HOGAN~RADIAL WOODS 1-3-5
HOGAN-DIRECTOR IRONS 3-PW
MAXFLI - AUSTRALIAN PERS. WOODS 1· 3"5 .
MAXFLI-AUSTRALIAN IRONS 3-PW 1
THE HAIG- CONTROL FLEX WOODS 1· 3-5
THE HAIG-CONTROL FLEX IRONS 3-PW
RAM-ACCU BAR PLUS WOODS 1-3-4
RAM-ACCUBAR PLUS IRONS3· PW
WILSON-AGGRESSOR IRONS3-PW
WILSON-STAFF WOODS 1·3· 4
P.G.A.-ARMOUR WOODS 1·3·4·5
P.G.A.-ARMOUR IRONS 2-PW
P.G.A.-EMBLEM WOODS 1-3-4-5
P.G.A,-EMBLEM IRONS 3-PW
DUNLOP-POWER FLANGE WOODS 1·3·5
DUNLOP-POWER FLANGE IRONS 3-PW
CONFIDENCE-TOUR PLUS WOODS 1-3-4-5
CONFIDENCE-TOUR PlUS IRONS 3-PW

- Sonja Hogg, coach of Louisiana Tech's women's basketball team,
poses with &amp;-foot-8-lnch Anne Donovan of Old Domlulou University at
New York's Madison Square Garden. A high school teacher who says she
didn't know much about the game, Sonja led her Lady Techsters to a perfect record last season aDd captured the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women champl0118hlp. (AL Laserpboto) .

'

.,
'

All
SVAC

LIST SALE

.
WOMAN IDGH SCHOOL TEACHER TURNS BASKETBALL COACH

%TON TRUCKS
1h TON TRUCKS
S-10 (series) TRUCKS
LUV TRUCKS
4x4 TRUCKS
Dl ESEL TRUCKS

''
"

1981

PRO-LINE GOLF CLUBS-MEN-IN STOCK

WE NOW HAVE IN STOCK:

''

tedtomoveforus,nGreggsaid.
And this year, the offense began

LORETl'A GILMORE

CINDY EVANS

TANAGEORGE

"""

'

TRUCKS

..
'

begin with," said Coaeh Fori-est
Gregg. He also credits the exceptlonal play of quarterback Ken
Anderson and 42 receptions by
Collinsworth as major lmprovements.
" As they (the team) got accustomed 'to the system, things stor-

LARENWOLFE

uEnd of Season''

C-SERI ES-S-lO's-LUV

'

STAlE UNIV., Ark. (AP)- Walkon players are fairly common on
college football fields but a walk-on
who refuses a scholarship is
something else again.
Jerry Mack, a senior tight end and
team captain of Arksnsas State, is
one. He led the team in scoring last
season, is rated a fine blOcker, and
still refused an athletic scholarship.
"It's not that I'm wealthy or
anything," he said. "It's just \hat as
long as I'm making it on my own,
·rm proving to myself that I can beat
the odds. It's something I'll be able
to look back on the rest of my life."

BIG DISCOUNTS

AVERY GOOD SELECTiON OF 1981 &amp; 1982
'

Does it his way

UPRO SHOP SUPER SALE"

1

hurt you.' It was quite an experyence. Then later we both won
natiOnal championships. It was like
a gOod-luck chann.
"I hope to see him again Wednesday in Chicago at a CBS press
conference to promote the NCAA
seaSon on TV. I wi)l be the only
woman there, too, but I don't think
he'ii remember me."
·
Hogg, ma rried to a campus sweetheart now an attorney, has become
one of the leading ambassadors for
women's basketball. She was in New

theseuonwhereitleft off last year.
"I think Undy's offense has beo:n
accepted by the players and ~;
panded as the sea.son has gone on,
said receiver-punter Pat Mclnally.
"It's alwaya diffieult to adjust to a
new system and his is ~lex. I
think we've all matured together,"
Mclnally said.

"JAYMAR GOLF CLUB

friends urged, GO ahead, he won't

' '

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~Point Pleasant, W, II a .

Rookie Co~sworth .o ne big
ret;\SOD Bengals in first place ·.

By WilL GRIMSLEY
Special Correspoudent
NEW YORK (AP I - When
Louisiana Teeh decided to field a
women's basketball team seven
years ago, a petite Ruston, La., high
school teacher who had never been
on a court was picked to launch the
program and serve as coach.
"Wonderlul," said Sonja Hogg,
"but I'm afraid I don't know
· anything about those 'X's' and 'O's.'
Basketball's not my bag. Maybe you
should get someone else."
"Don't worry a bout it," counseled
the university president, Dr. F. J . .
Taylor. You'llleam_. "
Learn Sonja did, and last season
her Lady Techsters, cllmazing a ·
phenomenal climb,. rolled to a perfect 34-&lt;l record and captured _the
Associa tion of Intercollegiate
Athletics for Women championship.
This projected her to the feminine,
if not the physical and emotional,
equivalent of Bobby Knight, coach of
Indiana Unive rsity's reigning NCAA
champions.
" rt's a bit ironic," says Sonja . "I
· met Bobby. at a clinic in New
Orleans. Many of the top male
college coaches were there. I was
the only woma n.
"I was naturally awed. Bobby
went through a demonstration, with
his· usual sprinkling of profanity.
Then he noticed me sitting on the
end oft he front row and said, 'Young
lady, 1need a volunteer for this.'
"L was hesitant at first. But my

. .,

Nov. 15, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-P,oint Pleasant, W. 1/a .

n r

It's time to think about financial survival for your
new arrival! Like one of our many high interest
savings accounts that's geared to grow with your
growing family! We've day of deposit accounts,
long-term certificates, saving clubs and more .. .
each earning high interest. Select yours .. .
And see about the other services we offer.

cars

Bank

25 Court Street.

Silver BridC)II Plaza

...

-' .
.. .'
-' .• ..' ''..
' .
.''

..

.. .' •'

The Commercial • SaYings Bank
"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

....:''
·· ..

Member FDIC

Spring Valley

.- •... ..
...

�•
Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Nov. 15, 1981

Collins anxious to talk with all t~ams

Ohio
Sportlight
•

By George Strode
By The Associated Press
(grays) were poor sellers last winOne of the largest fur buyers in ter," said Mallow.
Ohio believes the market will he acTop g~ade raccoon pelts wiD bring
tive thi.s winter with pell prices star- around $35 ·with the average ones
ling high and leveling off later In the selling for $20 to $22, about the sanle
1981-82 season.
as the 1980-81 season.
Mallow · says the demand for
Marvin Mallow of Clarksburg
warns that the high value of the muskrat, the most plentiful fur pelt
dollar in Europe, coupled with high available In Ohio, wiD be dqwn. "We
interests, could cause jitters in the just got 'em too high last year, and
there are stiU thousands of them on
foreign fur buying market.
Mallow predicts there wiD be a the market- unsold," he said.
good demand for long-haired fur, hot
The fur buyer says he paid up to $9
little interest, at least early In the
per miiSkrat pelt last winter, hot
season, In short-haired fur.
Therefore, that means there wlU believes that figure will he around $4
be a strong market for raccoon and 1thi.s Ume
MaUoW expects a price of $18 to
fox and the muskrat and mink
demand will be weaker, althotigh $20 for each male mink pelt and $9 to
mink is always popular.
$10 for the smaller female pelts.
'MaUow believes he will be paying
Oppossum will bring $1 at the
trappers $50 for choice red fox pelts most: "They just can't sell them,"
and $25 for a lesser.grade of red fox. Mallow said. "AI the last Hudson's
He says that price should remain Bay fur action in Toronto, they
stable, saying, "They just don't have didn't get an offer on oppossum."
any nwnbers of red lox and it's a
Fox hunting and trapping season
runs
through Saturday, Jan. 16, racpopular fur."
However, the market lor gray lox coon hunting and trapping, muskrat
pelts will he down, probably with $30 a,nd mink trapping seasons through
a pelt being the top .figure. "They Saturday, Jan. 30.

·I

w. va. ·

~ to · aallry arbitraUon twice
before he wa.s eligible to become a

CINCINNATI (AP) - Outfielder
Dave Collins says he hasn't ruled out
any of the 10 major leaiue teams
that drafted him Friday In
basebaU's free agent re-entry draft.
"I'm excited and anxious to talk to
. aU 10 leama," said Collins, the most ·
popular non-pitcher In the draft.
One of the clubs he won't be
talking to is his former employer,
the Cincinnati Reds. The Reds didn't '
exercise their option to continue
negotiations with the swllcb-hiller.
Collins and the Reds weren't able
to agree on a contract, which Is not
an unusual situation. CoUins took the

free agent.
Collins said he thought the club let
him go In the draft solely for financial reasons,
He noted that the Reds gave ohor\Stop Dave Concepcion a club record
$4.5 million, guaranteed contract
over live years rather than !Ole him
as a free agent. Outfielder Ken Grif·
fey - eligible for the draft thi.s year
- was traded to the New York
Yankees.
'
"It was disappointing, I guess,"
Collins said of the Reds' decision

, firat baae or left field for his next
team. He said he had no other
preferences.
11
l've got an open mind.· I'm
willing te listen to all10,teams," he

Friday to let him go, "I've t.n with
them for four years. It woold have
been nice to 'irOrk somethln&amp;.out.
"I think they just made a bullneaa
declsioo to let Ken (Griffey) lnd I go
and sign Davey.! dldn'tezpect them
to draft me.
"I think It wa.s just the fact that for
the lirat Ume ever they gave out a
guaranteed contract to Davey (for
fU nilllon) and · tlley made a
business ·decision. I don't think Jt
goes any further than that."
Collins, 29, who hit .272 last season
after batting .318 and .303 the two
llf'!vious years, ~i~ he wants to play

those requiring compensaUon In the
form of anothen player, Cleveland
made New York Yankees lefthander
Ron Guidry Its first pick Friday.
Seven other teams did also.
Guidry was selected by 17 of 23
clubs In the one-hour draft Friday.
He was foUowed In popularity by the

Kansas City, Toronto, the Chicago
Cubs, Milwaukee, Oakland, both
New York teams, Los Angeles, St.
Louia and Teras drafted Collins.
Collins, who batted

W, L.

56 24

.

Conunen:: iahuH.ISa vm~ Bank

52
48
H
H

Citizens National Bank
Peopl~s Bank
Preseripti on Shoppe

Babyland Dropouts
Founl.ain of Youth

40
36 44
;16 44
34 46
~0

J11ymar's

M~cHearts
Te~un

28
32
36
36

lnclilins' John Denny, who received
top conslderaUon from three teams
and was drafted by 10 others ..
"I didn't think he would be
available," Indians President Gabe
Paul said of Guidry. "I had a honci)
he would be signed !&gt;Y New York
(which retained negoUatlng rights).
I know oDe thing. U we don't draft

No. 9

34 46

Rawson'!! lnsuntnct"
32 4B
CredJI Bureau of
Pl. Pleasant
24 !i6
Individual : City Icc and Fuel. 21 ~ C. Junes. 536

him.''
Cleveland also drafted pitchers ·
Larry Christensen of Philadelphia,
Joqualn Andujar of St. LOuis, Glenn
Abbott of Seattle, Pave J.aRoche of
the Yankees and Bill Campbell or·
B~on.

~-. ·~

0 . Casto;

Commer c ial,~

Mar)' Ward , 58S Me.v

Wart!: Ci tizen~. 190 1.. Rcynuld!o , 492 C. Ruush:
Peoph:s, 201 D. Rawson , 007 J .

r.reathQu~ :

Pn&gt;:&gt;crietion, l14-'13!l J&lt; . Chattin ; Babylaml, 173-

m C.

anWinkle ; Fountain Of Youth. 1!:.9 P.
Ml&lt;:rcw 4~ V. Grovt!r ; Je~y1nar' s, 2J4.r.76 W.
So.:t~l"berr'y (sut.ll Moos~. 180-479 D. Nibcrl ; .T~arn
9, 139-397 T. DH\' i~; Hav.-snn's. 193--502,_ R.

Double Eagle V crew
plan trip around .world

NOV. 9 THRU 21

Standings

47
42
41

S7

Windshield · Comfort Glow
Washer·Fiuid HEATER

Forest Run 'BJork

34
19
Hi!!!h individual game - Kim Batey 201; Belty

~. 3

Whitlatch 189; Carolyn &amp; chner 188.
Hig~ series - ~at Carsan 468; Betty Whitlatch
-48I ; KunBatey454 .
r
Teamhil!h game - Mei~s Inn 540.
Team high~ries - Jim sGuJI 1440.

Cleans road grime,
gives you safe, clear
view of road, good to
20 below. (26-5350)
SUPER PRICE-

GAL79C

Clean, odorless heat
for ~nnies an hour.
Very economical,
almost 100%efficient
in cOnverting
kerosene to heat,
runs 16 hours on one
filling, (28-0863)

514690.
HEAT LAMP

Insulated
BOOTS

Men's 3-eyelet, ·steel
Shank support, cushion
insole, warm and
comfortable. (22-5606)
SUPERPRlCE
PERFORMANCE 78
While-wall-4 ply polyester

'A250-watt
clear,
Jill medium-base
~ 1j
infra red bulb.
- £\)21-2125)

&lt;IYs1•
Bulb
only.

600-12 P15S/80DIJ
A78·13 B78-13

CO-OP PORTABLE
HEATER

.

'

&gt;

'

""

,

"To go around the world would
probably cost $2 miUion," he said,
Aoki, 43, and Abruzzo, 51, Larry
Newman, 34 and Ron Clark, 41, all of
Albuquerque, N.M., celebrated the
first-ever crossing of the Pacific
with a dinner party at one of Aoki 's
restaurants Friday night.
Abruzzo, Newman and Maxie Anderson made history In 1978 when
"I'm trying. to convince Captain · their Double Eagle n became the
Abruzzo to go around the world In 20 first balloon to cross the Atlantic.
days," thrill-seeking restaurateur
"We could do it," Abruzzo said of
RDcky Aoki said hours after he, Ben an .around-the-world flight that
Abruzzo and two others crash landed Wlluld take one-quarter the time
their huge craft during a rainstorm needed by ,Jules Verne's fictitious
In the rugged mowitains of Northern balloon. ,
' Califonua.
'
·
"All we need ts dough. We need
"'lbla flight took one year. and six two or three million ,bucks to bifld a
months·to arrange, and C)JSt us $1.25 flying machine. II would be a 20-day
million," said . Aoki&gt; a Miami flight and would require a very
resident who helped sponsor the sophisticated system."
f011t-day journey !tom Nagashlma, ,
"I'll fly it if somebody wiD finance
Japan to the U.S. coast. .
it."
,
By DAVID EINSTEIN
AB8oclated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The
crewmen of the Double Eagle V
barely had caught their breath
follOWing a record-setting transPacific baUoon filglit, and already
there was talk of an even grander
challenge.

.

'

SAVE$35.00

FREE

I.

LANDMARKe

Toboggan

Cap

FREE
MOUNTING .

Big 2-liter plastic bottle,
DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL

C78·14
E78·14
F78·14 G78·14
H78·14

BLACKWALLS

2.00 LESS

5

G78·15
H78-15
l78-15

All Tires Plus

F.E.T. '1.58 to 12.84 each

rI

r PERMANENT

!

Whitewall-4 ply polyester
Same guarantee as new MIS.
p 1ss/80D-13
600/700-13
A78-13
B78-13
C78-13
560/600·15 (VW)

,

VAlUABlE COUPON I

~

Plus F.E.T. and
Recappable Casing

I

l

ANTI·FREEZE
f419

·I
I

~er Gal.

I WITH COUPON '3"

'

PROTECT MOVING PARTS

,LUBE &amp; OIL ' FILTER ilkr

.

..L-~!!'!..e~!:!!!.~!!~.:.!~!.!.·.!.~_j
..
VAlUABlE COUPON

CHANGE
$999

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

HOMELITE OIL
6-% PT. cans
•411
WITH COUPON

I-• VAlUABlE COUPON I
I
I
I

·! WILD BIRD SEED

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

Bulk or Bag

1·

I

25•Lb: '611

I

Bag

I

I

!

OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 22,1981

WITH COUPON

•525 II

. . .---

---------1

~

12TON
Reg. $975.00

,

WITH COUPON . ., ,•

br•nd lOW.W ol .

I
I

• Chauia lubrication
and oil change
• lnc!udet! llaht trucks
• P I - catrror IIPPOI-nt

OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 22.l911

POMEROY LANDMARK

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ A
Accountant Miller said he had no
private accounting firm reported ' plans to go to the prosecutor "but we
expect him to come to us."
Friday It believes that $78,000 of $1.3
million In unaccounted for funds in
Gov. James A. Rhodes retained
the state treasurer's office was em- · the nationally known firm to look into the situaUon after a state audit of
bezzled.
Frederick Miller, an official of
Treasurer Gertnlde W. Donahey's
cashier's office showed $1.3 mi111on
'Price Waterhouse Co., gave that
wont to tbe state Controlling Board unaccounted for.
in a progress report on its private
Friday was the first time the.word
"embezzlement"
has been used by
audit of the treasurer's office.
any of the accountants or inHe said the $78,000 involved lour
vestigators although the Price
differences between the treasurer's
Waterhouse official tOld the conbalances and those of BancOhio.
trolling board, which is paying for
where the state has its regular
checking account, in the period
the audit, in September that evidencovering Jan. I and March 31, 1978.
~of a cover up had been found.
A fifth discrepancy, still being In- " Part of the problem has been
vestigated, involves another . records missing ~~the office from
whichl former head cashier
f405,000,.MWer said.
Meeting later with news reporters,
Elizabeth Boerger resigned In
Miller said he did not know whether
January 1!81. She suffered a stroke
more than one person was Involved.
shortly thereafter and since that
But he said he thiilks the money was
time h8s suffered from amnesia, her
taken by someone In the ·treasurer's • doctor said.
Officials -have been unable to
CI(fice and not the bank.
.
question her because of her illness,
The accounting finn spokesman
Slld he has met with the , county
However, Miller said Price
Waterhouse has been able to reconJll"llM!CCItor, Michael Miller, several
tJlnes with regard to the la~ter's con- struct many of the ret-ords, in- .
eluding aU that were missing for the
. tlnulng Investigation, but had not
dlscuslled the latest development · year 1978.
.
So far, the probe has cost the state .
wtthhlm.

I

.

I
I

'

'

'

rates, despite recent declines, con-

tinue to hamper demand.

unloaded everything that wasn't
nailed down, Including clothes, food
and expensive camera equipment.
"We baUisted off practicaUy
everything we had left," said Abruzzo. ''We went up, but the ice drove us
back down, and this time there was
no going back up."
The baUoon and its gondola,
together as taU as a ,26-story
building, came down near . the
remote town of Covelo. During the
landing, a tree pierced thl. gondola,
and Abruzzo and Newman were flipped over onto their crewmates. No
one was hurt, however.

. WASHlNGTON ( AP) - Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, skipper of a
navy-within-a-Navy for more than 30 years, is being retired against
his wishes. But the Reagan administration is offering him a job that

1

the Navy insists ''isnot a sop.''

Rickover, though, hasn't said whether he would accept President
. Reag~n·s job offer - as presidential adviser on the clv1Jian uses of
atomic energy.
'
'
'
At81, Rickove~is the oldest active duty member of th~ armed services, but the Perltagon announced Friday that his active-duty statu.s
will not be renewed next year.

,l

'•'

•

"The president feels that this is the proper time to plan and carry
out an order\}' transition of a successor to Adm. Rickover," said Navy
Secretary John Lehman, who recommended that Rickover be
replaced.
Rickover, hot¥ever, ''doesn't have the desire to retire,'' Lehm~n told

reporters Friday.
Lelunan, 39, said Rickover's age "is not the reason we are starting
the transition in the sense that he has slowed down in any way ... he
has not.'' But, said Lehman, "we need to put in a yo~g man who ~an
he available lor the next decade.''
The secretary denied that Rickover is being fired and said the
presidential offer "is not a sop.'' ·
,
The four-star admiral will be officially retired Jan, 31, lour days after his 82nd birthday and 20 years beyond the normal retirement age.
Lehman has asked that Rickover "be extended on acUve duty for the
Ume required to have an orderly transitiOn to his successor prior to
laking up his new responsibilities.'' He said the transition probably
wiD be over "a period of months.'' J;ilosucce&amp;Sor has been named.
Through administrations of both parties, Rickover's protectors in
Congress have arranged two-year extensions of his service as deputy
commander for nuclear propulsion or the Naval Sea Systems Command.
But age and time have removed most of Rickover's old allies from
Congress, and what years ago would have provoked an outcry now has
spawned only "five to 10" letters of protest from members of
(;ongress, Lehman said. In a last-ditch to protect Rickover's job, Sen.
Henry Jackson, [).Wash., and a lew other senators met Thursday with
Lehman.
Rickover took part in the initial steps to develop nuclear submarines
shortly alt~r World War II and was appointed to his present job in 1949.

.'

•

•'
•
••I '

'•''
••

...,
•'

•'

•j.

.·

RJCKOVER TO RETIRE Adm. Hyman Rickover, shown
during a recent appearance ' on
Capitol HOI, irill be transferred to
the White House as a presidential
adviser and retire as head ol the
Navy nuclear submarine
program. (AP Laserphoto).

.

'.

.:·•'
..

_.;;.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____. '•
•
L'.

..-.
•

...''''
I '

.:

.

'

'l •'

'

'
••

- ..
-

.,.
.'.

'

..

·~

•

unless

-•lhe

s--s.nate _..._

""*'

.

moment,'' said William · Helman,

chief economist of the New York Investment firm Smith Barney, Hat:rl~ ·
Upham&amp;Co.
The Big Three automakers said
Friday new car sales fell 13.9 per' '
cent in lhe first 10 days of November
compared with the ~ period last
year. Ford Motor Co. posted the worst decline, 21.3 percent, while ·
General Motors Corp.'s sales fell
13.6 percent. Chrysler Corp., •
however, said its sales rose a slerr
der 3.2 percent.
It was GM's fifth straight 1lklay
period in which sales fell and Ford's
fourth straight. Chrysler's lm- ·
provement snaJ1ped three . consecutive Jl)&lt;lay sales declines.
Besides autos, the biggest production losses in October came in
building materials and consumer
items nonnally bought on credit an indication that high interest

to step down

driving rainstorm, the crewmen

$409,000 lor 6,100 man hours' of work.
But the controlling board released
another $138,000 Friday to continue
it through Nov, 30 when Price
Waterhouse wiD submit a lonna!
report on ill! work to that point.
Miller said he would give the board
another oral briefing on Nov. 23.
He said the investigatiOn is .being
conducted in steps, the first being
for the year 1978 which ~11 be completed Nov, 30.
The next steps, he said, ij the
board wants the firm to proceed,
would cover the fourth quarter &lt;1
1977 ·and the year 1979, the first six
months of 1980, and finally the
period from July I, 1980 through
Aug. 31,1981.
Miller said if the state wants Price
Waterhouse to investigate the entire
period in question, from Oct. I, 1977
·through Aug. 31, 1981, the total cost
would be $849,000.
Mrs. Donahey said earlier she
welcomed the investigation by her
office and promised to cooperate
fully, which Miller said she has
done.
She said in September she would
have no further poblic comment
whUe the investigation was still In
progress.,

Led by an 11 percent slide in auto
output stemming from poor sales,
the decline in industrial production
was the worst monthly drop since it
fell 1.7 percent in June 1980, the Fed
said Fridny. Production fell1.2 percent in September alter a 0.2 percent
decline In August.

eroding rather

Adm. Rickover

, WASHINGTON (AP) . ~ · it ts fair to .embaqo Ill of them," give more fuel to House members
, Congressional negoUators Fri~y
saya Sen. qharleo Percy, R-IU., • looking for reasons to oppose the en.,.-eed to require b111l,ons of dollars chairman fll the Senate Foreign tire farm blU compromise package.
til federal compen1111Uon to farmers Relations Committee and sponsor of
The plan would effectively require
1f agricultural aports are ever
that measure.
the government to pay fanners,
siJigled out for an embargo ali Jll!rl of . Althout!h opposed by the ad- over- the market price for their
the naUon'J foreign policy.
rnlnlatntion because 11 ties a crops, an amount equal to or
Sen. Roger Jep.en, R·lowa, a
prestdem's handi In coftductlng possibly greater than that. market
n1ajor propolll!llt of ' the embargo foreign poUcy, the compensaUon price.
1
pro4ect1on plan, acknowledged that provillon ww!d not affect diclsla...
Those comproml.se negotiations
IIJ prtmary piii'POie Ia not to com- bfl'nsldeat Reagan
he IB 're- are pert of the efforts to resolve difpeDUte farmen far ICOIIOIIllc IOSBell eleCted in liM. No QOIIII'e8llonal ap- ~ bet~ the '$16.6 bll)lon
dill to a aeltdlve embaro but to ef.. · proval wauld be retjulred for an R'OiMi' venton of the new fann blU
hctlvat, prahlbll auch ernbarps in
a •rd trade ban. .
111111 the '10.8 biWon Senate version
llle flltul'a,
,
Ooilp 71 rNI ca:em over larm endorsed by Reagan. " · ..
&amp;I• dlciiiM ""'tile
WI
_ _ _ _ . . . pi
t lal'-llle 1&amp;- ·-- • -...
"
..
'
- - ('QIIIIDIIIee, -'1118 on a
1111111111 II* e 1 p apiDf the
Adminlstratlotl ofliclala have not
..... ......., £arm bW, ca1111 a daJ Savitt Ullllln, 1n.,aaec1 by former vigorously &lt;lPP'*!d the embargo
fall Senate voted . . tD Prllideftl Clrte' 1n 1880 and lifted pl'Otecliotl plana, dellplte the poleDCIIIIIP' t lmal approm fll br Rnpt
Ual coetuf up lo $311 bllUon, because
_, l!ll'lcuJiunl aport emiJu&amp;o 'nll&amp;~~~~~rp JINIIdlon plan waa Jthey aay fteaCan hu pledged never
1n1p lhfWrltl4.
endtillld 111 tile ClMeiwnce com- ' to Impale an embargo that affects
"~ ltlllllr~~t.~o one group, . - llllltll - ~ -~ It WGuld only agriculture.
q,

.,. u.

tl

Originally headed for southern
California, the Double Eagle V
veered north in bad weather and
high winds and passed over the coast
100. miles north of San Francisco
Thursday night.
As they began 1o lose altitude in a

dustrial sector.''

to be
rapidly at the

" The economy seems

•

LOG SPUTTER

r
1
·----·--------------J

Includes up to five
qUarts
ma/or

The reduction was seen as en-

couraging, ~: bec,ause many .
economists thirik a recovery in the
battered housing sector ·is crucial to
restoring economic growth.
Other · interest rates, such as
b;lnks' prim~ lending rates, also
, have tumbled recently In part
because of the economic slowdown.
Economists say the reductions
reflect falling corporate loan
demand as .businesses - facing
slower sales and bulging inventories
- pare their operations.
Meanwhile, Commerce Secretary
Malcolm Baldrige called a report on
Industrial production by the Federal
Reserve Board "another sign that
economic weakness in autos and
housing has spread across the in-

Negotiators l'each .a greement

OFFER E-XPiriES NOV. 22,1981

r--"111!111

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

1

I

'3"

There were many signs of a
deepening recession Fridny as auto
sales reports showed Detroit still on
the skids and figures in other Industries showed a sharp dropofl in
demand.
But anatys~ said rec"""ion leaves
rooin for the money supply to grow,
lessening the competition for
borrowed money and lowering rates
charged to get it.
Tbe goverrunent announced it was
lowering its ceilings on federally Insured home 'loan rates for the second
time In two months. The top rate will
drop Monday to 15.5 percent from
16.5 percent lor fixed-rate and
graduated-payment, long-term
single-family mortgage loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration.
'

Miller th·i nks $78,000
of
.
missing funds ~mbezzled

7-UP, DIET 7-UP OR
BARRELHEAD
ROOTBEER

MUD &amp; SNOW RECAPS

"'

BAUOONISTS RE'll!RN- Ben Abi'IIZ2o, 51, eap- :111gged jerralo lo Northe111 Ca!Uornla. Tbe baUoon
· taiD of the crew of the O..Uble Eagle V,ls ldssed'by an crash landed on a motinlalo ridge after completing a
ualdentllled woman· after their resrue Friday from , piolleerlog tnms-Paclflc balloon voyage.

BIG SAVINGS ON WINTER COMFORT ITEMS

No. 1
J im'sGulf
No . S

By The AIISOCiaied Press ,
People trying to buy or get rid of a
house may find some solace In the
nation's declining economy, which is
bringing down Interest rates.

him, we have no chance .of· signing

10:. D. Hern, P. F'~ r ~ lls On , P. Cielldt!nm ~10 : [..
Sw1sht!r 4-5 .

Pt.s.

lower interest rates

•

V.
Split ~ l'Onverlt&gt;d : C. Roush 5-8-10; F. Call !i-610; R. Curim&lt;~ n , H. Canaday 2-7: M11r.y Ward 5-

Team
Meigs Inn

-1

•

for
Cincillllatfand stole 79 bases In 11180,
thinks his speed, swilciHliiUng, age
and aggressive style of play rna~
him a popular pick.

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tue!Kiay Triplic!!te League
November3, 1981

D

Bad economy causes

'lead-off

Th"~Y Mocoi' '~~?,,~~~OOlb~~~!'!a~,, l6Hl1 P'""'""

Tellm
City kund Fuel

Nov. 1s, 19&amp;1

said.

Indians ·seek siX pitchers in re-entry draft
CLE\'Il:LAND (AP) - With the
possibility of losing two starting pitchers and a reliever to free agency,
it wasn't much of a surprise when
the Cleveland Indians .dnifted six
pitchers In the free agent re-entry
draft.
·
Despite an earlier claim that they
would not draft any Type A players,

classified

lall.....

'~1

CHAMPAGNE SPLAIIII- Marela Meyen ~
d, 'wile ol DepldJ flec&amp;elar)' of Ddt~~~~t ll'raDII C.
Carlllm, ..... llle tndlu-1 bottle ol pwmpopo
-tile Trltleat A'-'lne tl8fl ftorlda Ill CbrloleiiiDg
ee&amp;emonles In Grololl s.turday. JAoldwl oa are: A4;
.
&lt;l.

'*"' ..

.-~' .-

mlral n-aB. Ba,wanl,
N...t O,..lltlllo,
- - . ud Daftd s. Lewll, c.alrma&amp;l .. die ....... ol •
GeMtal .,....., 'l1le f1artda ... die llllnt TrNellt •
Clua~tobelniltbed. (API.alerpboto).

,,

,' •

'

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

Page-0·2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Nov. 15, 1981

•

•

a·z

N

,

Reagan: world's . 'eye~
and heart' on shuttle

•

'·

two key aides, planned to go turkey ·.and We bouild llld gagged David
hunting today at a ranch In Sabinal, Stockman.''
Auoclalecll'ftu Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - President Tex., leaaed by his White House
Baker said thai ReacaD "haa little
chief
of
staff,
James
A.
Baker
m.
Reagan, proud of the Columbia shutpatience with yes men. When he
"You've already wiped out a bun- says no, we aay no." AI that, Reagan
tle mission despite Its shortened
ch of turkeys In Wublngton. Good pounded the table and threw his
scl'l!dule, says the world "lias got Ita
luck tomorrow in Texas," said a head back in laughter.
eyes and its heart" on the two
message
· to Reagan from Vice
astronauts guiding the spaceerafl
Before Reagan left Washington on
President George Bush. The Friday, II Willi dlacloeed thai hill
"I wanted to make a request,"
Reagan told the ·astronauts. "I just · rneaaage Willi read at the fl!nd- national secw:ily adviser, Richard
wondered if when you go over ralslng dinner, which honored Baker V. Allen, had received fi,OOO froffi a
Washington before your landing at and other Texans in the ReagiUI ad- Japanese .journalist sedting to inEdwards Air Force Base, could you minlllration.
terview First Lady Nancy Reagan.
pick me up and take me oul I
Reagan said thai aa estimates of
haven't been to California since 1aat revenue di opped and thole of the
Apparently referring to that as
•
deficit grew, ..~ puhed the well aa to the Stockman develllt&gt;August."
Reagan's words were beamed to pomic button llld aid we lhould call rnents, Baker aaked: "Did any of
astronauts Joe Henry Engle and off the tax cuts (paused earlier this you have one of those days when you
Richard H. Truly during a brief year) or we should pass new In- went into your office and were afraid
presidential trip to the Lyndon B. creases in taxes."
to ask •What's new?'"
"There's one thing we don't need
Johnson Space Center.
The formal dinner was expected to
The president's visit to the control an&lt;~.ooe thing I'm against: We're not earn $850,000 for the Texas
room represented his greatest. in- going to have a tax increase," the Republican party's state · and
.
BLOWIN' IN TilE WIND- Old Glory waves In the hindlng ill the Space Shuttle Columbia at Edwards Air
volvement to date in the space president said,
congressional races.
He also pointed out thai while the
brisk momlng wind Saturday at the public viewing site Force,Base. (AP Laserphoto) .
program. Although it haa escaped .
'
When }!eagan spoke with ·the
where thousands of spectators gathered to watch the
his budget ax, he has remained non- percentage of people unable to find astronauts, they .were flying j)Ver :he
committal abOut future spending for work has increased since he look of- North Pacific in their 25th orbit. The
the National Aeronautics and Space fice, there are :ieo,ooo more em- mission was being ended Saturday
ployed Amerl~ans than there were - 2\2 days early - because of a
Administration.
in
January.
After speaking with the
dead fuel cell.
·
Baker
was
not
at
all
reluctant
to
astronauts,
Reagan
told
a
"Joe
and
Dick,"
Reagan said to
By ROBERT LOCKE
National Aeronautics and Space with runways where many of the · Republican fund-raising dinner that refer to the problems caused this
the
-astronauts.
"This
is Ronald
AP Science Writer
Administration officials seemed world's most advanced aircraft
he would not bOw to presSure to raise week by publication of budset di...,.,_ Reagan.''
confident the shuttle would land as have been landing lor four decades,
taxes and said that those who think lor David A. Stockman's admiaaions · Speaking into a telephone, Reagan
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, planned at 1:22 p.m. PST (4:22p.m. " is hard and dry and ready to go,"
he should have "pushed the panic of problems with the economic plan. said his visit to the spaCe center and
calif. (AP) - A,barreq, sunbaked locally) at Rogers Dry Lake, scene said Les Reinertson of NASA's
He said that before leaving the conversation beamed to the shut·
,
button."
lakebed awaited Columbia's return of its triumphant first landing last Dryden Flight Research Center
Washington,
"We turned ' off the tie was "a rare experience for an old ·
Reagan,
winding
up
a
week
in
to Earth • Saturday, as · NASA April. But a backup landing strip in here.
lights,
turned
down the thermostat. horse cavalry officer."
which
questions
were
raised
about
checked the weather by airplane and New Mexico was ready and waiting,
This region of scraggly desert
·balloon to make certain the shuttle jll$t in case.
scrub brush and twisted joshua trees
wouid land safely.
hasn't felt rain in more than a rnorr
The normally blue skies over the
The Columbia's malfunctioning th. The dry ·lake, its thin crust
Mojave Desert were a blanket of fuel cell which forced curtaili)Jent of cracked into spiderweb patterns,
clouds aU day Friday, and Air Force the five-day mission after two days could easily absorb a light shower,"
weathermen predicted today's par- was not expected to create any officials said.
tly cloudy conditions would be problems in landing.
Taking no chances on landing day,
marginal for the spacecraft's
The lakelled, a kidney-shaped mission leaders planned to probe the
return.
stretch of tan clay, criss-crossed weather intensely.
By JAMES GERSTENZANG

Cl11.~sifietl Pages

cover the
fo/loU"inl( telephone exchanges ...
Ga11ia Co. Are-a Code
' 614
446-Gallipolis
361-C heshire
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oist.
643- Ar.lbia Dist.

Meigs Co. Area Code
614
Y9:t ·· Middleport
Pomeroy
Y!:IS-Chester
Hl- Portland ·
247-Letart Falls
949----Racine
142-Rutland

Mason Co., w. Va.
Area Code 304
o7S-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
516- Apple Grove
1/J- Mason
ti82- New Haven
1195-Letart
937-Buffalo

I TO PLACE AN A,D CALL
In Meigs County

In Gil Ilia County

446-2342
'

111) 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,, 15,61C

,. . .....................
... ... . ... ". .

_,.,,,

Card of Thanks
the voters of Orange
Township, thank you for
your support. Faye Wat·
son.

~ To

2

MONITOii MISSION - Astrouauls and mlulon
,· spedaUsls James F. BuchU, left, and SaUy K. iude
work in Houston's Jolmson Space Center Friday morolng moollorlng and working with the crew of the

Space Shuttle Columbia. Ms. Ride, wortmg u Ca~ule
Commlllllcator, worked with the crew Ia orbit bandUng
the exercise of lhe Remote Maoipulator System oa
board Columbia. (AP Laserphoto).

I

'Wish it were a little longer'
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) ..:_
Columbia headed hpme Saturday,
. its disappointed astronauts wishing
: for "a little longer" in space, but
: comforted to know they accornpllshed "90 percent" of their
flight objectives despite a fuel cell
problem that cut the mission short.
MiBaion Control decided Friday
that .1!lthough the spacecraft was
performing splendidly, prudence
called for ordering Joe Engle and
Rlchard Truly to end their journey
after a '-'minimum ·mission" of 54
hoprl. They landed at 1:22 p.m. PST
011 ~ ·~d runway in CUlifor•
nla'~'Mojave Desert.
.
'111111 Columbia's second mission,
scheduled to tall:e It through 83 orblta
of the~ over five days, ended up
the ume length u Ita 31-orblt
malden lllgbt In April.
"Wiah It was a Httle longer, but
we'D IM!I! you all in 11-'on," Engle
told Mlaslon Control u the
lltrmaula retired far their oecmd
llld fiMl nlglllln orbit Friday.

Astronauts and space'officials hoped
for a repeat of the ship's perfect
touchdown last spring, although
clouds and gusty winds in the area
were causing soll!e concern.

proud everyone down here Is."
The space travelers thanked him
for "laking the trouble to show all
the people working on the space
shuttle how much you really care."
Columbia was "humming right
"We'd like better weather, to be along" on the two good fuel cells
honest with you," flight director when NASA offlctals made the
'l:homaa HoUoway told a briefing in decision at midmorning Friday to
Houston early Saturday. However, cut the mission short.
he upresaed confidence the shuttle
Misaiqn rules dictate the shor·
would be able to ljlnd In California tened flight if one ol the three fuel
and not have to uae a backup landing cells falla early. Flight controllers
site in New Mexico. He uid NASA had said Thuraday they would bend
would try to mali:e 8 final decision "a . thai rule and mali:e gG-D"'ttO
couple of houn" before touchdown.
decisions on a day-t01Jay ba.sls,
The utronauta flreri their deorblt
rocketa high above the Indian
The decision 10 slice three da)'l
Ocean, slowing their 1.-f by 100 from the flight plan came ai Tntl)'
mph and started their dac:ent on a . Willi achieving one ol the hlch
path that look them over the Pacific priority goal.s - lelllf1l a ·ICWoat
north ol Hawaii, aCI'OII the Callfor- meclulal arm, flllllftUftl'ln II up
nJa coaal and Into Edwards Air For- and doWn, bldl IIIII forth, and
ce Baae.
pronoundng Ita "IWIIII'IIable fllght
President Reagan vlalled ~
~ machine." ~ Control Oftlclal1
If, weredeliJhled,becaulewlthoullhil
Coatrolln Houlton Friday r
sat at the fllcht directOr's
sole cranHike robot, fabn llhuttles
Qlee . . . . Columllll .....oopec~..­
llld told tngje llld Truly: "'fhl.l would not be able to pe.tfaun their
Ita
and primary millie~~: deploying and
down from IIJice &amp;owatd an airliner- whole nation...haa
like landing at Rotlen Dry Lake. · heart on you. I'm ~you !mow hOw retrieving uteW~.
~~,

sot

I

..

eyea

for aboul2 minutes, 29 seconds over
the Indian Ocean to slow the ship so
it begins itsdescentfrom Ita 157-mlle
high orbit.
12:50 p.m. -Columbia enters the
atrnoophere on its 37th orbit at
400,000 feel, north of HllwaU aJid Ia
protected from the heat of friction

byiiiiWes:
12:52 p.m. - Ionization builds up
. and the ship goes into a 17-minute
radio blackout.
1:22 p.m. - Columbia toucbes
down and rolls to a stop two minuteo
later. GroWld crews "safe" the
vehicle, making sure nol(lous gases
are gone.

In Memoriam

In memory of Max Manuel
Jr. who left us five years
ago today Nov. 14,
1916. T~ousond
of
thoughts of one so dear, often bring a tiny tear.
Thoughts gO back to scenes
long passed, time rolls on
... but memories last. Sadly
· missed by' Wife, · chi ldren,
..... and grandchildren.
Announcements

J

SWEEPER . and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
·Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·02'14 ..

s..ee

...,-lnllrumttnla

,.ccnam

.,.'t

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun . starting
at 1 p.m . Factory choke
gunsonly
- ··- ~.--~~- ·--TRAPS and TRAPPING
supplies ." Gene Hines,
Amesville, Ohio. 614-448·
6747. Daily after 1 p.m .

Delight the children with
their very own letter from
Santa. To order send
names, ages, and addresses, no later than Dec.
20, along with one dollar for
each letter to, Suprlse Let·
ters, 90 Park St.., Mid·
dleport, Ohio 45760.

No Hunting or Trespa ssil')g
Kenneth Watson farm .

1:~~~~~:~1.

written (Butch)
per ·
Kenneth

Stolen Property . Antique
kitchen safe.
Antique
dining room cabinet. Two
rocking cHairs . Other
items. Anyone knowing or
seeing this furniture being
hauled in the vicinity of
Flatrock, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
oltered . 675· 1302.
POSITIVILV no hunting on
the old,H . C. Brown Farm
opposile Racine l ocks
Letart. WV . Signed Bill Me·
Daniel .
Children's Gymnastics and
Ladle's Exercise, Wed·
nesday evening in Pt .
Pleasant .
Instructor :
Helen Zinn . 4:30 to 7:30.
Call446·8074 or ~46 · 70~~ -

OIL &amp; GAS
LEASES

NO
hunting
&amp;
no
trespassing w i thout written
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove .

. WANTED

Apples, Honey and Sweet
Cldert ' Grimes, Romes,
GaL, and Red Delicious.
Staymen Winesap . . $5.25
per bushel and up. Cheaper
in volume . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, SR689. Phone 614·
669·3785.

Call or Write Todav

DIXIE ENERGY CO.
P.O. Box 683
Wooster, Oh. 44691
216-264-5612
Racine Fire Deipt. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6:30p.m .• Bashan. Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun.
TRAPPER We have a com·
plete line of trapping sup·
pi ies. Traps, dye, wax, and
lures .
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

The lzaak Walton Club will
have the i r deer slug
shooting match · at the
lzaak Walton Farm 3 •h
miles sOuth of Chester and
Shade River Rd.
The
match will start at 1 p.m .
' Sunday Nov. 8 and will be
continued each Sunday at
the same time until deer
season.
It will be bench
ond off hand shooting.
Prizes will be turkey, ham,

and bacon.

Starting Tues .• Nov . 17 J .L.
Hatfield will be taking over
Sheffield Trash Pickup.
New customers can call
379·2322. Rate: $6.00 per
month.
bulk delivery of
iiJi~Soline, heating oil and
diesel f uel, call Lanclmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.

FLEA MARI&lt;ET
Will have inside booths
available by the 1st of
November. Reservations must be made in
October.

SLUG SHOOT

ARTEX. AND TRI -CHEM
tres -merged . Book a class
and get "Christmas items
painted . Alice Nease, 985·
3942.
.
-~-

-- ....... - ---8

- --

on Fred ' Johnson · Dale
Casto Farm -Leased by
Leroy Roush .
ATTENTION
Kaiser
AlUm inum employees laid
off or faci ng laY·off. Hear
what our Company has to
offer .
No
re -location
required ." Come to Mason
County Publ ic Library , Pt.
Pleasant, Monclay Evening
November 16th. at 7:00
p.m . for free presen tation .No obligation. Ask
for E .A .C. Inc. meeting .
TRI ·Chem get together .
Public Welcome. Register
for classes now. November
30 at the Ohio Valley Bank
meeting room on Rt . 35.
10 :00
a .m .- 7 : 00
p. m .
November 16th. Chrl s·t ian
Union Fellowship Hall ,
Main St . Pt. Pleasant. 10 :00
a.m .-8:00p.m . ,

4_

No hunting or trespassing
on the property of Earle
and Marybelle Schult~ off
SR681 in Reedsv i ll~. Ohio.

-

~----.-- · --- ·

NO hunting oi- trespassi ng

I

c:aa.u.

llnally wu shut down. Rulli call ...

I m"*'*Wil It-hour IDilllon,. Jn
11

llldlu lftllt.
'l'lllllldtle can Oy with two f1iei
celll,
but offlr Is 'WGft1lrcl
!bat IIIIOibar fllllure
' put tbiPI

even-.

,.

Formoll M tractor ·(good condition); three hoy
wagona with 1'' beds; 32' hey and grain elevator:
set of cultivators tor· Farmolt H or Nt; Jo~n Deere
10' drag disc: (good); ,10' culllpackor; . 10' drag
• harrow; Old JOiln Deere baler with QQOd ~ cylinder
engine: ~ CIHner; ·blockamllll biower; coHio
-nero; hOII feeder; Fairbanks ' 31 ploHorm
. scaln; Gravolv_rldlng tractor wllh mower, 12 H.P.
wlllt now motor IIIOOd sllopeJ; 12 hold of pigs 1
- k l old ol solo lime; approximately 1,1100 I&gt;Ushtla
of oor eorn, 'will Hte per bushel with option to toke
ell. Smoll amount of household goods. Alto othtr
mlsc:. ltems.
1

teNtJ:

RllllertiiiU"' W. Ve.
AUCTIONIER t IDWIN WINT!ER

Mlllo!Ood. w. Ve.-171-1441

lbeulrclnntllt•..-lt~.

1\

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bu ick- Pontiac. GAll ipol is,
Ohio. Call446·2282 .

BUYING GOLO &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamped IOK, 14K , ~BK and
dental gold. Class rings,
wedding rings. silver coins
or anything
stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or.
992·2()54 in Pomeroy1
Junk cars witt) or without
motors, and batteries. Call
388·9303.
Terrier house dog, perferably Carin or Yorkshire.
Good with children, will
consider a poodle . Call 614446-43:r . ..;}
BuYing
Gold,
Silver,
Platinum. old coins. scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sa l e.
Spring
Valley
TradingJ Spring Valley
Plaza, 446-8025 or 446-8026 .
Pool table with sl ate top.
Call 446·6220.

BEDS· IRON. BRASS. old
furniture. gold, silver
dollars, wOOd ice boxes,
stone i ars, antiques, etc .,
comp l ete
households .
Write: M .D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Oh. Or992-776().
---~

--

FOUR, 8 week old puppies,
small. part terrier &amp; part
cock·a·poo. 30 ..·675-6838 after 5 p.m .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

11

Gold, silver, ' sterling,
jewe lry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3416 .
NEED MONEY? I need
furn iture . New, used or•.stl=tique . Also buying glass,
china, gold, silver, coins,
watches, c hains, elc . Martin's General Store, MiddlepOrt. Ohio. 992·6370.
Raw furs, hides, scrap
metals,
batteries ,
radiators, gln~ng, yellow
root , .:irid merchandiSe
brokerin.g. Harper·Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 615·5868 .
A lso Flea Market open
daily.
Open
Monday Friday 1-5 pm .
LOCUST posts, 8 ft. long .
4" sma ll tip -chip poles. 304675-6325 after 6 p.m.
HOUSE , on land contract,
nea r Pt . Pleasant, 304-6755123 .

11

Help Wanted

The Gallipolis Recreation
Department Is currently
taking applications for
basketball . referees and
scorekeepers for the Rinky
Dink Basketball Program .
Apply bu Nov . 25 at the City
Building. 518 Second Ave ..
Gallipolis.

HELP
WANTED
Cytotechnologist ASCP or
equivalent needed for a
large multispecialty group
practice in southeastern
Ohio with two pathOlogists
in a CAP acci-ed;ted labortory . CompetitiVe salary,
excellent benefits, Send
resume
to
Personnel
Department, Holzer Clinic:
Ltd .,
P.O.
Box
34.4 ,
Gallipolis, Ohio45631.
Part·t i me (one or two
hours a day) Licensed
Practical Nurse (LPN) to
dispense medication to
re siden ts of an i n ·
termediate care facility for
the mentally retared in
Biclwell . S5.75/hour. Cont ac t Cathy Neal, P.O. Box
906, Gallipolis, Oh 45631 , or
Call 446 ·1642 ext. 332 .
Buckeye Community Services is an equa l op-·
portunity employer.
1 ~
, c

•

••

· -

-

•••

3600 sq. lt. of beautifullY decorated office space.
Concrete parking lot. Convenient location, excellent
visability, hi~h traffic area. Call The Wiseman Real
'Eslate Agencv- 446-3643.

FuH ·t ime employment in
your own home as a Home
S~rvic:es . Worker
with
Buckeye Community Ser·
vic:es. Provide a home.
fri ehdship, and guidance
for a person with mental
retardation and earn a
salary, plus benefits and
room and board rate. No
degree required . We will
tra in you to help another
person grow and develop.
For further information
ca ll 388·9772 or 446-9595, or
write to Marie Hobbs,
Patriot Star R t., Gallipolis,
Oh
45631. Equal Op·
portunity Employer.

-

·-

-

· -

-

-

• •

••

-

CONSERVATION aid for
McClintoc k
W i ldlif e
Station . 20 hours per week.
must be 55 years of age or
older, meet department of
Labor guidel ines, drive &amp;
be a wv res ident. Pt .
Pleasant Job Service, 30-4. 675-2770.

REAL ESTATE
SALESPERSON
WANnD

You would be alflliated
with a national organization. Full time
only need to apply. Ex·
cellent oportunity for
the professionals who
want to succeed. All
replies will be kept in
strict confidence. Write
Box SOO, in ·care ot The
Daily
Tribune,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

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

NEW LISTING
2-story, renovated 4
beclroom home located
along Upper River Rd.
New carpeting, new fur ·
nace, rural water ... A
comfortabl e home for
your growing fpmily .
Extra lot next to ex ·
isting home .... all for
$55,000.00 Call to look at
this one today!!!

NATURAL
WOOD
siding decorates this 3
bedroom ranch style
home situated in a
wooded area over lOOking the valley adjacent to Kerr· Bethel Rd .
Spac ious living rm .
area. County water.
electric heat, 10%. 30
year, assumable . mort·

"1-'Y EAR
OlD ,
3bcdroom, modern home
s• runt cCI on 1 acre lot
O\C&gt; rlook i ng
the
bt .luTi l ul Ohio River .
Located along Ohio
River . 545,000.

NEW LISTING - Quiet street in Racine. Nice 2
B.R . trailer, lar ge living room, eat-in kitchen In·
eludes "ppllances. Offered at Sll ,SOO.

NEW LISTING 2
acres of land with this
beautifully
finished
brick home. 2·3· or ..
bedrooms. 2 full baths
with
showers,
full
basement, nat . gas
f ired, hot water heat,
asbestos-slate root , copper flashing, 2-car at·
tached garage with
openers ... This is a
QUALITY BUILT home
and vou will be proucj to
own it! Priced in the
$80's.

-~~ .
'

I .

ALL THE COMFORTS
for modern living but
with the solitude of the
coUntry . 3 bedrooms,
living rm ,, dining room
utility rm ., modern kit~
chen w/oak cabinets, 2
baths, 1A'xl 8' master
bedroom . Approximately SO fru it trees and 6
acres of land near Rac coon Creek . All for
$78,500.00.

NEW LISTING:
2·
bedroom home situated
just outside city· Jim its .
22'x20' garage, nice gar
den area, F .A. nat. gas
heat,
city
water .
$.49,500 .00.

.

PORTLAND AREA - 7 miles from bridge. 3 to 4
acres, could be 4 B.R.'s, vinyl sided, large orchard .
Asking S25,oo0.

BEAUTIFUL BRICK - Home has 3 B.R.' s, 11/2
baths, laundrv off kitchen, fireplace, storm win·
dows, well constructed, assume small equity &amp; take
over 10% mortgage. Asking $35,900.

TO

CLOSE
NEW BIRDGE - Has to sellal$12,900.
Could be 3 B.R. home. Stove and refrigerator stays.
Good starter home or investment propertv .

20 ACRES 10%down.

,

Owner will carry on land contract . -.t

NEW BRIDGE AREA - A-frame. This 3 story
newer horne on 6 plus lU~res features 3 BR's, 2'h
bath&amp;, flrllf]lacli!, built-in barbecue, 2 decks, 2 patios
At. many extras. Separate garage and outbuildings.
Priced In the mid S70's. Owner mav finance part.

· LeeJohnsonAUCTIONEER

DEER HUNTER SPECIAL - 1 acre 2 B.R . fur·
nlshed trailer with city water in Long BoHom.

Not Rnponalble tor Accldentsw Lou ot P"!'Of'Y

Wtiy settle tor less. Sel l the
best. Sell Avon. For more
information ca l l 446·3358 or
742-2354.

CENTRAL REALTY

BUILDING SITE - Near Por·tland. l'h acre,
suitable for underground or: solar ho"me. OWner may
help fln!nce with down·payment.

. crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
FOR LEASE

NOV. 21, 1981

1971 Ford 3000gas tractor (2730 hrs.), Ford 1012·14
piOWS1 Ford 501 6' mower, 3 pt. hitGh, lmco 6' '
·scraper blade, 3 pt. 2 row cultivators, 3 pt. Ford dirt
scoop, spike tooth harrow, boom pole. farm trailer,
2 farm wagons cone Gehll. tailgate lime spreader,
8" camper·topper, HD scoop, plows. cultivator,
disc, hoy rake. Burr mllliPTO on wheels!. platform
scales, chain saws, grease, oil crank corn sheller,
old wood stove, anvil, forage, fence charger. PTO
pump &amp; hose, wheal cradle, tog chains, many hand
10011! Sears fuel ott stove, Perfection fuel oil stove,
both '" good cOII!llllon; L.R. suite, 5 IrOn beds,
treadle sewing machine~ wooden chairs, milk cans,
llvtatock water tank, 2 electric cre11m separators,
portable vacuum pump, rototlller, stone Iars &amp;
ct'lurnaand other mlsc.eUeneous Items.
·
TERMS: CASH
MRS. EVERETT CPEARL) SISSON, OWNER

-

'----'--~

CHIP WOOD. ·Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12.50 per ton . Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton .
Oeliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd .,
Pomeroy . 992-2689.

Wanted to Buy

=-==- -GiviaW~i_=-=-=

Locatloq: From Henderson, W.va., take .Route JS
south 15 miles abOve Henderson, turn right on Big
Sext·t en Mile Creek Jnd go 4 miles, then turn left
and go 1 mlle. the folloWing will ~e sold:
.

Termo: Cosharc-wlthposltlvei.D.
Lunclllervttl
·
OWNIR: WALUCI LANIER

II*."~"
11111
beneilla.·"'llllla~
af a
d l m - lMit Wlll'UI tile ria
llul lied. . -~~~~~~~ J'rltll, . .

WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
nlture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256-1967 in the evenings .

Em·
- - ~¥
LPN or RN for private duty
nursing for male patient at ·
Pinecrest care Center . Call
304·675·594 1.
-

9

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column. There will be no
charge to the adverti ser.

-

SATURDA~

Ph. 992-6370

The follawlnt penon.ll property will be offered to
the hlgllest biclcler, as owner Is retirin1 from fir·
m1n1:

Wanted to Buy

9

PUBLIC AUCTION

GENERAL SJORE

located on Route 62 between Buffalo and Rob&amp;r·
Sbu1"11 W, V•.

GARAGE
sale -second
garage on Mt. Vernon Ave.
Misc . items .

high standards of patient
care? Your salary will
commensurate with your
experience and our benefit
package is liberal . Scenic
Hills Nursing Center, Box
262. Bidwell, Ohio ~5614 . At·.
tn:
Kim
Ny e, Ad ·
ministrator . .we are an

~~=~~~~;~~~~~~~~::~~==~ Equal
ployer .. Opportunity

taken
from
Wiseman
property ·no
questions
asked . 304-675-1408.

GALLI A COUNTY
GUN CLUB
SUNDAY, NOV.l51h
NOV. 22 &amp; NOV. 2'1
I P.M. til?

MARTIN

SAT., NOV. 21, 1981 10:00 A.M. ·

.

II anived at the pad at t:llli p.m. In
a red-lllhta fi"hing COIIVO)', wulnst.ned by 10:30 Ud declared
operllive at mldnlghl LalUICh W...
rlelayed 2t hours and then IIIGther 10
·nlnulea for a finll check.
And yet, 18Ven hours into the
mlalliin, a fuel call ~ 111e of ~
electric generaton aboanl
bla - gave laalty relldlnca Ud

R'VfHIIjHSiCH(XX..,
~.N.v.

PL-e~SE r-;t~;~ ·;r~e-sfa~d I;;:::::~ill[g~~~~~~;;~;~;~~~~~~
(engraved Bill Crawford) I;

For

PUBLIC AUCTION

replacement wu cannlhtllzed from
Columbia's half-built 11ater ship In
California and rusl\ed to the lalUICh
pad In a race worthy of a cinematic

lhrlller.

on Bright Mcc;ausland
Farm operated by Wool han
Farms.

10:00 A.M.

Next mission slated for March.
, CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. CAP)- 90paceutofwt.ttheyweQ!uplor:
Space shuttle Colwnblllla alated to
The main tut, ol coune, na to
ny apln early In March on a 18Ven- prove the Clllumbla'a abWiy to fly
day journey. Nat June,~ agalnlnlflllllllllldopanUmltl•opIa to delivered to the N8tlanai portullillel far wail in lbe Nit ol tbe
Aeronautlca and Spac:e Ad- decade. 'l'llllllluUie Ia clee!IMd far
minlatrallon llld America'•
1110 raundlrlpa, Ita IPIICIOUI c.n~o
~-lion System _
1rill haft a biJ able to haul utelllteo up and
.-.
I
down ar to put 1 teha•ln ~pace,
Allrenauta Joe Encle llld Richard or
to earth or the
Tndy Wl!f8 to hive flown JJf boun, CCIIIIIIIII.
.
but three days wmt ICI'apped
'1'111 bk1h ,_,. that da1ayed lui
becaUE ola blcl full CIIL Tbe crew Alti:U'• lint fllllt bJ tine yean,
had barely IIIUJ.d IIIIo lbe fourth or- flliD rac:bd 8'1'84, tbe .-c1 te1t
btl . after l..ach · frvlli c.pe flllbl Ia NASA's Space TraitC..-.1 111 ThuaidiQJ wta. the IPIItafiiCIII) I "
cell, wllleh llllpl .......... tllellllp'1
The ,_... -.cb lit fctr
llectrlclty and AI PIc Wltll', 'ftllt . . . . . p II; .. tD Oct. t, ,_.
h.cll'l'Fae wu no ...... to lbe poned ...,. til Ffw. t IIIII .,_
ub\Nall, Ia NASA WIIIUd to be .W ,..S met IIPt dQa lilallllll
111 the llfuldL
ola Iw*u7lc,. 'he IFIIIWifltcid
117 _..... lbelr datil, wltllllm lltllpto'c411-Etcle and Tra17 atll5 piut'wuwd
Onlheewuf'Du•'•,.,..,.,p
bwt-.cl ;ada aftllalr ,......., diiii JI'ICl 1111 .,.._ wlMit • ..,
tub~ II7Iatl7e
11 ,,.. and 1 put l5own , 1n fl'llm
Glynn S. Lunney llld the7 had daiii · Flolltlln.' It
wart and 1

LOST·Male, blac:k &amp; white

yard sale. Sa1. Nov. 14. ·9 to
? Bad weather cancels.
Jean Stout resid'ence; 7fh
St ., Syracuse.

NO hunti ng &amp; trespassing

.

Kenneth C. Welsh
Guardian of
Adrienne French

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
C8lif. (AP)- Here Is a timetable fO. ·
the landing of the space shuttle
Columbia Saturday on Rogers Dry
Lake. (All tiriles PST).
!2:10p.m. -ShuWeturnsiOa tallfirst position.
.
12:25 p.m. - Tile two orbiting
maneuvering system engines fire

Horses, ponies. horse
trailer, riding lessons. Hoof
Hollow 614·698·32'10.

and experience, and who

-~ tc;
I!QII """-:TIM,

vardSale

Experienced man to d~
bOdy work and painling
Apply in person at Hysel
Useo Cars, Rutland, Ohio.
Only serious workers rieea
apply.

shares our committment to

LOST - Beagle
dog,
Gallipolis Ferry. Reward,
phone 30-4·675-5072 .

1

Help W.1ntltd

RN . L.x'al 100 beet ICF is
currently seeking a c::Urec ·
tor of nursihg . Are yoo the
dedicated professional who
is qualified by education

Found: 1n front of Swisher
aod Loshe, Pomeroy, small
black kitten with white spot
under neck . 742-2306.

Announcements

3

In Mason county

NOTICE OF
SALE
Offers will be received at
. the office of Bernard Vd
, : Fultz\ 11 1 1~ West Secon
1
\ , stree , Pomeroy, Ohio, un• 111 the 17th day of Novem·
• ber '1981, ol 10:00 o'clock
( A.M . .tor ·lhe sol~ of part of
, the Adrienne Fre"ch real
• estate situated In Scipio
Township1 Meigs County,
Ohio. The portion of real
estate being offered for
sale consists of
ap·
• proximately 171 acres.
• (There are no buildings on
· the land being off.ered for
sale.) Interested parties
mav submit competitive
bids at 10:00 o'clock A.M.
on the date of sale. The
guardian reserves the right
to reject any or all bids.

Here's Columbia's timetable

Announcements

3

992-2156

.,.

SbattloColumbla. CAPLuerploote).

LOST Black male Cocker
Spaniel, limps1 Virginia
tags. Lost if) down town
Gallipolis, Reward. Call
446·8292.

cat,
Ferry. vicinity
Answers Gallipolis
to name·
Abraham. Reward. · Phone
304·675·6264.
~

11

Wanted RN part time day
sh ift only.IV nursing team
exp_ preferred but not
·necessary, Call veterans
Memor ial Pharmacv . 614·
992'6297 E ,O.E .

Lost and Found-

6

Yard sale. Fri. and Sat.
Long St.. Rutland. 614·742·
2257.
.

NASA checked weather

lew mlnteo ·later Reagu 01p0ke to u~lll Joe
·Eagle ami Rlcllard Tndy orbiting Earth In the Space

2 female puppies. Make
nice pets. 1 cr~am color, 1
darker brown with black
nose. 61 ..·949·2402.

Times-Sentinel Classifieds

· ·~~~!fpiNIIKNIInl
.
.
IJIIJIIU!Hril.llll

TheSunda

They'll Do It Every Time

Available for adoption.
Assorted colors, mixed
breed puppies, male and
female.\ Also adult mixed
breed
dogs .
Humane
Society 992·6505.

That's right! When you use a column inch
or .more in newspaper advertising be it
display or classified you · reach thousands
of potential buyers that are eager
to receive your money-saving
message in ...

...

., , Ull WIIIIIIIIIM

VI8ITS CONTROL - l'nlldollt a-Id Reagan
llstps u Jolmsoa Space Center Dlreclor Cbriltopber
Kraft, Jr., right, ezplalua feature of Mlllloll Coalrol
durlag a visit to tile H-"lll facWty Friday Dlgbt. A

Ohio-Point 'Pieasant, W. Va.

ClasSifieds
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
IS A CINCH
-IF YOU USE THE INCH!

za II!

&lt;

Pom

$8,000.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
N.1ncy Jaspers......:. Associate
PH.143·207S
Virginia
-Associate

1S1 ACRE
FARM
situated near Vinton, 50
acres bottom land,
woods, has 3 bedroom
house, new heat pump.
Needs some work.
Blacktop road to front
door . Also. has lg. barn
and 100'x20' storage sh·
ed.Ownerwillsellsome ,
farm equipment. Call
for more informatidn.

- Stur·
dv., brick. structure
located along Rt. 160 in
Vinton. Formerly used
as financial business .
building . 1,118 sq . ft., 2 ·
rest rooms, 6;620 SQ. ft . ·
parKmg area; onve-1n .
window. use as is or conPfiiCE REDUCED On'- · vert to home with large
this combination home ,._ security vault. Priced trf
and
business
op·
sell $53,000.00.
portunity. Located iii ..
downtown Gatlipblis
and zoned commercial,
RENTALS
but with residential 'use,
AVAILABLE:
too. Nice neat 1.42 .. sq. 1
6·r.oom house, 2 baths .w
ft . home with business
$250 00 mo,
building in rear. owner
6 room house, 1 bath
will help finance, or
S150.00 mo.
finance entirely with
3·room apartmeM
25% down payment.
5125.00 mo.
This is a quality piece of
4-room apartment
real estate. let us show
S200.80 mo .•
·It to you tOday!

,_

WOODREALTY,INC.
32 LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS

•

•

'

.

�11

Help wanted

RET AI~ S A~ES Hatfie ld S.
McCcy is open1n9 the1r Bth
locaticn in Gallipolis and
would hke tc tnferv1ew
sales people interested 1n
jo1n1ng
a
growtng
progressive
company
Some sell~ng experience
preferred CommiSSIOn pay
.system, ma jor medical and
other benefits. Apply in
person at the GallipoliS
Holiday Inn begtnning
Monday, 9AM to 6PM
GET VAL UABLE tramlng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great g ifts as a Sen·
ttnel route carrier F&gt;hone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156 or 992 2157
~

Fuller Brush Represen
tphve in your area Call
:iel4 273 4559 or write Rt 1.
Box 243, Rav enswood ,
W Va . 26164
S1luahons Wanted

12

wanted to Do

18

Bookkeeper or secretary
position full or part time, 12
yrs. experience, good local
referen ces Call 446 0183 or
446 0871, Karen.
Eltm l?esthome Care for
handicapped, aged, or bed
patient
Temporary or
ltmited care Or conttnuous
home wtth us . Equipped tor
wheel chair. 742 -2266
Carpentry ,
panel in g.
ceiling tile and floor tile.
992 2759

Baby s itting , near
Foodland, any age, meals.
snacks, toys, safe home.
references. Call 446·7146,
S35week1Y..:__ __ _ _
Bookkeeper or secretary
position full or part t1 me. 12
yrs experience, good local
references . Call 446·0183 or
446·0871, Karen.
Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing
Call 446 2851, Gall1polis,
Oh
Family man wa,nts steady
work on farm with house
1ncluded, good worker with
references Call388 8879.

21

Business
Opportun 1ty

Trailer Park, 15 spaces
plus 3 bdr , bri ck home on
approx . 3 acres, will divide.
S150,000 w1th 50,000 down,
owner will carry . Also park
ownetl trailers available in
Jackson. Good cash flow
Call286-7019
S180 F&gt;er Week Part Time
at
Home
Webster.
Amenca's foremost die·
t tonary company needs
home workers to update
local matlrng lt ~ts All
ages , exper~ence
un necessary Call 1 312 743
6000 Ext 6423
22 --'M
=
o,.ne"y,__t,_,o,_,~.,o.,.a,_.n,__

Wtll do babYSJtttng in my
home Garft4!'fd area Call
4464813
TV serv1ce calls Call 992
2034 Also used color TV for
sal e .

WILL do HOliday bakrng,
candy
mak tng',
ca k e
decora t tng. Sarah Pe&lt;:~rson,
cp ll
304 675· 5527 ior
est1rnate
'·

--

Homes for S..lt

31

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLVlE"'

3 mobile homes on. one lot.
oiO Custer St., Middleport.
614-992-3318 or 614-992-2685
after 3 p .m .

SANDHl~L

Road, Pl .
Pleasant, 3 bedrOOm$, Ph
baths , double garage .
Owner will · finance. lm
mediate occupancy. 304675-5817 .

1 bedroom furnished and
set up. Immediate oc·
cupancy. $5,250 . In Country
Mobile Home F&gt;ark . 992·
7479.

THE Roush home at 2515
Mt Vernon Is for sale call
the son at 614·927·5413.

3S

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, alt
utilities available, S300
down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p m , 256·6413

P1ano tunmg and repair.
Love your ne1ghbor tune
your Piano
Bill ward.
Wards Keyboard. 446·4372,
Gall •po1 1s
-------~---- -

-------~ ~

WILL do odd tobs, general
house mamtenance Have
expenence wtth carpentry.
plumbtng, electncal , some
appltance repair . Call 304·
675 5981 or 675 3770 . 6753770. Ask for Steve
WILL do cleaning of offices , churches, custness .
Honest and dependab le
Phone 304 675 2885-;

1 acre lot Kemper Hollow,

solar easement, financing
available 614-592 .5639.
HARPER Adult Care Cen
t er -providtng the personal
care your elderly need m a
home l1ke atmosphere
Vacancies now avall tble
call 304-675-1293

HOUSE -Meadowbrook Addition 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen
tral air, basement 304·675·
1542

3 bdr, 2 bath, LR with
fireplace, family room with
wood burner, k1tchen &amp;
dining room, city schools,
446·2003 before 1 :00.

C~EAN

HOMES

USED MOBILE
KESSEL'S

QUA~ITY
MOBI~E
HOME SA~ES, 4 Ml

WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446-3868.
12x6S mobile home, 2 lots in
Plantz Subdivision. Call
446· 1294.
1971 Kirk wood 12x65 two
bedroom, a ir cond.,
awning, on rented tot. F&gt;h
675-5739 alter 5 . 00.

Will do baby Sttttng tn my
home anyt1me
In Mid
dleport area 992-63A9

---------- I

I

Have room and board m
boardtng home for elderly
614 992 6022

32

USED MDBI~E
576-2711 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

---

HOME .

1.5 acres on Jackson Ptke
near S,ock Mkt
All
utllttles. trailer pad $4,000
Call304-757-9479.
1 acre lot $3,500, r~ral
water, Crabcreek Rd.,
GalltpOIIS Ferry, WV Ph.
446-2240.

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx , 1 acre.
L1ve tn one, rent others to
make your payment. Can
be converted s~ngle home.
C1ty 'water, w111 consider
land contract. 675-1863 9-5
p.m

I_J _____ l_!!_s_u_r_
a~,_
e __
5ANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv1ces for fire insurance
coverage in Gallta County
for almost a century
Farm. home and personal
property coverages are
avatlable to meet rn·
dtvidual needs • Contact
Neil Ins Agency, agent .
Phone 446-1694

-rn

PHONE 446-3643

oI

~I

NOTICE

rq o

'.

anslr~tton '-------- --

PIANO &amp; music readmg
classes 7 years teaching
experience 304 675·2440
--~

1 D&amp;W Estates, Inc.
(Jim Elliott)
I
Rt. 93 North

I
I

Jackson, Oh1o
286-3752

S YR. OLD SPLIT-LEVEL- features 4
or 5 BRs, 3 baths, 30 ft. LR, 2 family
rms., 2 woodburnlng fireplaces, large
kitchen and dining area, 2 c;ar garge,
one of the county's nicest pools (20xSOJ
and a truly professionally landscaped
lot. Located on Debby Drive. Owner
says $ell .. . so cal( RANNY BLACK BURN for a personal showing You'll be
pleased you did.

General

.1

OWNERS WI~~ HELP F-INANCE
Over 2.000 sq. ft. of l iving space in the
bnck &amp; frame home. Has family room
2 fireplaces, equipped kitchen, fuli
b~se_ment. central air, garage &amp; 2 31
atfes. City schools

Since 1959
ON- OWners

198114' Wide

are gone and anxious to setJ this
older but well kept 2 story brick on
Rt 588. 3 bedroom, J!/2 bath , family
room, woodburning
full
basement and 1'12 acre

Call Velma Nicinsky
Phone: 742-3092

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW ~!STING - IN
TOWN 4 bedroom
home, hardwood floors,
gas forced air heat, on
50x70iot $29,900
NEW LISTING IN
TOWN 2 bedroom
home tn good condition
with gas forced air heat.
New central atr Full
. basement, garage, wood
burntng f1replace. All
for only $19,900.
RIGHT SIZE - RIGHT 1
PRICE 10 minutes
from Pomeroy Over an
acre of land with 2
bedroom, 1 floor plan
home. All electric heat
Utility room, screened
porch, garage. $16,200.
Ml DDLE PDRT
Newly constructed split
entry
home
3
bedrooms. 2Va baths,
family room, large
dining room. garage &amp;
workshop. On approx . 1
.acre. S.9.900.
OUTSTANDING DES1 GNI Five bedroom split
level In a great sub
division.
Spacious
rooms. Full basement,
rec. room, farge sun
deck. Eastern District.
. 163.000FIVE POINTS AREA EKcelfent location, ex·
celleftt home, exct!llent
price. 3 bedroom•, full
basement. Large lol.

SU,9110.

I
Call
I
Leisure
I
I
Financing
Available
I
5 year
I Protection
Plan
I Large Inventory
I
I
JQHNSON'S
I
I MOBILE HOMES
I'
INC.
I
At

HOBSTETTER REALTY

608
E. Main

HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a huntmg lodge, vacation home, etc Rustic
log home is built from hand hewn
beams and has a sleeping loft, modern
bath, large stone fireplace and approx .
27 acre of wOOds in the Wayne National
Forest. Extra land available Easy Terms.

attractive
home is located in a top qua i
neighborhood and must be sold as
soon ~ possible 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, family room w / woodburner,
large equ1pped kitchen and 2 car
garage. Flat 1h acre yard $54,900

PRIC!'D TO SE~~
ASSUMPTION
A
n ic e
redecorated 4 bedroom home at the
edge of town in a good neighborhood
Has full basement, tam1ly room, dlni ng room, nat gas heat and wooded
yard S39,900

12:

NEIL This tmmaculately
remOdeled 2 bedroom 1 floor plan in
town in gOOd ne•ghborhood has new
kitchen, bath Wtth shower, cellar,
large garage and n1ce . flat yard.
Vinyl siding Nat. gas heat $30s

NEW HOME AND 2.S ACRES MoOern cedar home with 3
bedrooms, lOft, woodburner and nicEkrtchen. Rural water. Located off
Rt 554. $32,600.

·I

MAkE US AN OFFER - ThiS could
be your chance to buy a n1ce home
with a low equity 9112% mortgage.
Newer 3 bedroom ranch with
fireplace and :v. . acre yard. Better
hurry R t 218. S-40,900.

PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES You will en10Y the care this attractive
:trick home has been given . 1m
Tlaculat~ mside .and out Plush carpet,
lovely fireplace, 3 bedrooms, dmmg
room , equipped kitchen, nat gas, cent
a1r, 2 car garage and corner lot. $59,900.
1.3 AC. WOODED SETTING- Private

location along Rt . 588. The 3 bedroom
dutch bHevel oflers a wrap around
deck, 2 baths, large family room, 2 ex
tra part1ally flnishe(j rooms In
ba,sernent, central a.r &amp; 2 car garage.
60

••

NEW LISTING - Nice tam1ly sized
brick home on Rt. 160. Has 4 be(jrooms,
1112 baths, huge family room, fireplace
large formal din1ng room, equipped kit'
chen &amp; full basement. 2 car garage &amp; 1
acre yard. Low interest rate mortgage
$62,000 Make us an offer.
·

WASHINGTONE ELEM.
Cozy 2
bedroom home' located in city school
dist. Has fireplace in living room, large
kitchen. 'h ac . yard. 91h % assumption
20's.
HOME &amp; 6 ACRES - Located off Rt
325 north of Rio Gral'lde. 1 bedroOM
ho~e In n~ of some m1nor repairs.
Qutet scentc rural setting. has WOOd
burner, full basement and rural water
$28,600.
-

I
I
I
OWNERS DESPERATE- Must renll
or sell thts nearly new 3 bedroom home
now Brick jvinyl siding, family room I
WOOdburnert
school dist. All for
only 6% down.
I
101 ACRES - I f you en10Y YC)Ur privacy I
w/lots &amp; lots ol'woodland then you'll encity
~,900

lOY this farm near Thurman. lncluctes a
large3 bedroom, 2 story home &amp; 2 small
barns . .tO's.
,
RIOGRANDE-3or4bedroomhome
right on campus. Has 11/a bath, family
room, fireplace, full basement, nat. gas
heat, garape plus nearly 3A: a¢re. cOuid
be used as rental.l38,900.

1

1
1

1
I
I
2 I

BRENTWOOD DRIVE Barga 1n
priced family sized home for only
$46.500. Has ~ bedrooms, 3 baths
ftreplaces. full basement, huge fa~lly
room, rec. room, nat gas, cent. air, &amp; 2
car. garaoe &amp; fenced yard. Hard to
bel •eve? Come &amp; see for yourself.

' - The owners are
PRICE REDUCED
anxiOIIS to sell lhls cozy 3 bedroom
malnt. free home on Rt. 141. Has new
vinyl siding, new nat. gas furnace, new
h.w. tank.# new !=•rpet, new tinoleum,
etc. owner may help finance. ~.ooo

..

OWNE,R MUST SELL - A gOOd 0 _
portun.ty tQ buy a home w/low ~n
payment. -4 bedrooms, fireplace, full
basement. Located In city school dist

$34,900

RENT OR SA~E lmmedlale
possession. owners desperate and
must sell this 2 year otd ~ bedroom
l&gt;rlc~ In Rio Grande. This "dolt
hOUse" has 2112 batlll, large family
room, fireplace (will ea'!IIY heal entire home), very nice ~lichen, full
basement and 2 car garage. 9'12%
assumption
·

.

2" ACRES - Prl~ed at $300 per acre,
Excellent location, large paved rc!lld
frontage, tobacco baM &amp; hYtrll acrn
of crop &amp; pasture &amp; woods. Thl&amp; 11 a
dandy.

1-

160 ACRES - Former dairy operellon
near Rio Gra-. 50-60 IC. crop, 70 ec.
pasture, balancoln - - Borns, 11101.
tobacco base, ga1
plus an oldtr ,
remodeled 4 bedroom home. Frontage
on 3 roads including At. 325.
165 AC. VACANT LAND- Approx. 50
IC. crop, 65oc. paature, 1800 lb. lobiCcoJ
ball, gas laue, rural water, 2 bams,
Rt. 1411'011d frOillage.

~-·-~-----·------------

FARMER'S FARM - One Of Guyan
Township's finest. 106 acre m/1, approM . 4.5 A. fertile bottom land, balance
pasture &amp; woods. Nice modern kitchen
&amp; fam. rm. 14x18 LR, attached garage
$yaij)larn 56x104, also included IS 20x24
ee ' garage, workshop &amp; several
sheds owner 1S retinng &amp; will help
finance.
BUILDING DR MOBI~E HOME SITE
- Approx. 5112 acres located on the
(;.raham School Rd., co water, over 300
ft . rd frontage, Green Grade School &amp;
Gallla Academy High School. S1Q,900.
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef, hay S.
grain farm. 80 acres, m/1, approx. 35 A.
good cropland, 10 A. WOOd$, balance
pasture, good fences, 9 rm.lbath, home
was built In tan &amp; has been porllelly
r remodeled, SOXSO cattle barn with concrete floor, large silo with 81110.
unloader, several sheds, Iafoe pond,
c.l"trings, standing crops go to rtew
'ner

210 Eastern Ave.
Phone 446·3547
1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, underpinned. 675·-«»64.

1912 12x6S Schultz, 3
bedroom, partially furnished, gas heat, rented lot,
priced on inspection, 30ot·
675-2907.
1971 Dorian 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
Haven, u x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 1~ x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. 8 IJ...
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sis. Pl.' Pleasant, wv
Phone 67!-.U24.

s

MOBILE home located In
camp Conley, extra nice
and clean, phone 304-8933967

HUNTINGTOWN TOWNSHIP
176
acres mil vacant land, fronts on Raccoon Creek an~ the Tom Glen Rd. Approx. 31 tillable and the balance wOOd·
ed. Under S..OO per acre.

'

.

.

COUNTRY, YET CONVENIENT
Great family home with 3 BR, 2 baths.
15x27 LR with gas fireplace, large
mOdern k1tchen with range, self·
cleaning oven. ow and dlsp , laundry
rm. with washer and dryer, part base·
ment, large covered patio, garaOe and
over 6 a&lt;: res of land at the edge of town.
OHIO RIVER VIEW- Approx. 8 acres
wooded land, nice building site, county
water, located1 on Route 7 approx 5 mi .
south C)f town. S6,500.
BEST BUY IN TOWN - Slyllsh 2 story
home was built In 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate. Large open loy.,- and
steirway. LR, dining rm., parlor, com pletely equipped modern kllchen,4
BRs, 21h baths. new sldlhg, garage,
near schools, shopping. etc.

MOBI~E HOME ADD·A·

Houses fo!._Rent _

41

44

house unfurn. in
Eureka. Oep. required. no
pets. Call256·1413 .

For rent 7 bdr., mobile
home in city, adults only.
Call416-l79t

Available , 1 bedroom apt
for rent Con1act Village
Manor Apts., Middleport
992-7787.
.

s room house

2 bedroom trailer. Adults
only, Browns Trailer F&gt;ark.
614-992-3324.

2 bedroom furnished ap't.
992 543ol, m -5914 or 30•·8822566

2 and 3 bedroom furn1shed
mobile homes at New
Haven. 304 ~2-2966.

V:~ double house. 2 bedrqom
furnished.
Deposit
requried. Adults preferred .
No pets Call614 992 2749.

2995

we w111 be having several
hOmes for rent, lease or
lease with option to buy
within the next few weeks.
All over S200 per mo. &amp;
required references &amp;
deposits. For more in·
formation call Strout
Really oi-16·0008.

'

•

very nice modern two
bedroom home
Completely redecorated with
full basement, garage, city
water and gas. Nice yard,
10 minutes from Gallipolis.
Nice neighborhood, close to
school.
Deposit and
references required Call
416-0173.

-------~-

Nlce 2bdt\, home In city,
adults, no pels. Call 4160958.

3 bdr.. house, 2 baths, fully
carpeted, $300 plus deposit,
35 ChilliCothe Rd., no pets .
Call446-3748 or 256-1903.

5 rooms &amp; bath plus utility
room. Clean, no pets,
adults only. Ph. oi-16-1519

Unfurnished house for rent,
1 bdr.. $160 mo, dep.
required, no ut1littes pa1d,
no pets. 57 Oltve St. Phone
446-7886.

H1storlc home on nver Fir·
st
Ave .
Completely
redecorated. Cal\446·2570.
2 bedroom home in Mict·
dleport. Deposit requ1red .
Call614-992-5914

3 brd., 2 bath, tri-level, gas
heat, rural water. Call 446·
2957.

2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. References and
deposit required, Available
Nov.15. Call614-949-2849 .

For rent 104 4th Ave. Small
2 'bdr., no more than 2
adults. Call 446- ~957 _

2 bedroom house, furnished . Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersville 992-3324 .
rooms and bath, full
basement, natural gas furnace. Storn windows and
doors Some insulation All
new
paint
Stove &amp;
refrtgerator furn1shed . 9923090.
4

4 room house for rent or
sale over looking Ohio
River F&gt;hone 446-1615 or
446-1144.

2 bedroom house in Letart
Falls, Ohio. 01n1ng room,
fireplace,
range
and
refrigator included $125
plus deposit. 1-216-532-3543.

- -

--

---

3 bedroom, 1'12 baths, full
basement, garage, fully
carpeted, curtams, stove
and refrigator. Low
utilities. Deposit requ.red.
S290 per month. Call 992·
2362 after 4 p.m.

.

JACkSON COUNTY FARM 106
acres MIL, appro•. 30 A. tillable,
balance pasture &amp; woods, nice 2 story 7
rm. home, new 40M80 metal barn.
several other buildings, must sell soon.
Call for other details

TWO bedroom mobile
home in Mason, adults
I no pets, 30..075-1452
ONE bedroom, adults only,
furnished, you pay uttlit1es,
304-675 2535
675

40~.

TWO bedroom, furnished
cottage at 2103 Jefferson
Av.e. Deposit required 304675-4100. day .
THREE bedroom country
home, modern kitchen,
free water, forced air gas
heat, phone 304-675-64-43 .
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 I;Jdr. mobile hOme, total
electric, 2 112 miles past
Holzers on 160, S175. ' Call
446-3533
2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call446·0175

'
2 bdr mobile home on
Roush Lane, Chesh1re, new
lot. Call 304-773-5882.

•.

furnished or unfurnished,
located Camp Conley 6751371 or 675-3 812.
TWO bedroom trailer.
$100.00 a month plus
deposit &amp; utilities, 304-5762328 or 576-2606 .

-

Apartmemt
for Rent _ _ _..._I

Furn1shed apts nice, 1
bdr .. adults, steam heat,
5220 uttllt1es pd. Call 446·
4416 after 7PM
2 bdr apartment unfurn ,
in Crown C1ty, Ohio C~ll
256-6520.
MObtle home 1n c1ty central
air and heat, adults only,
dep 446 0338
2 BEDROOM apartment,
kitchen furnrshed, HUO
program, utlltf1es paid, 1f
qi:Jalif1ed. 304-675·5104 or
304-675-7364
APARTMENT
Call 446-0390.
-- - --

for

Rent.

Furnished upstairs apt 3
rms , and bath, adults only,
no pets, clean. Call 4461519.
- --~-----

Nite large, 3 bdr. apt_ for
rent in R10 Grande. Call
614 682-7056
2· bdr., apt., large liVUlQ
room &amp; kitchen, no pets.
Call446-3937.

Unfurn. downstairs apart.
on Main St. Vinton. Oh.
Clean. 4 rm , bath, large
yard &amp; porches Sec . dep. &amp;
ref . Call245·5818.

----·- ------..a....- -- -

2 bedroom mobile home
down Rt. 7, $125 per mo.,
adults only. Call2561157

DELUXE 2 bedroom apt,
2nd
Ave.,
Gall1polis.
Phone 256-6506 .

3 bdr .• 2 baths, approx. 4
112 miles from Gallipolis.
good neighborhood, large
lot, $175 mo., dep required.
Call446-2676 afler 6PM

Bradbury Apartments.
2nd. floor furntshed ef
f•eocy , rental &amp; dep
required, adults, no pets
7i9 2nd Ave 446-0957

M,GOO. o146-439-4.

3, mobile 110m• 1olx70,
IOx.!O, 121160, Jackaon. Call
286-7019.
1M3 Hillcrest, IOxSO, IXC.
C~ll388·1368.

Yesterday's I

Twin single, large rooms
and yard F&gt;t Pleasant
Oepos1t and references 1-.
614-263-8322 or 1 614-2632669.

)

lonn the surpriM

Vllwel',

a sug·

galled by the above cartoon

A (

....,.

XI I I I I )

(Mswefl Monday)
Jumbles BUXOM GAUDY WINNOW ROBBER
Answ&amp;r What a clumsy masseur might doRUB THE WRONG WAY

46 ~ Space for Rent__ __
MOBILE home spaces
available,
Henderson
Trailer Court 304·675-7946.

IN Mtddleport. 2 bedroom,
furnished
apartment, 1
small child, 1-304·882-2566.
IN Middleport. 2 room efficiency apartment , 1·304882-2566.
bedroom unfurnished
apartment, adults only,
located GallipOlis Ferry.
675-1371 or 675-3812.

- - - -----

apartment,

TWO apartments tn Cllf
ton, 304·675-1044
Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING F!OOMS and
11ght housekeepmg apt ,
Park Central Hotel .
Room and board for senior
Citizens 1n the country. 614·
742-2266.
Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

wanted to Rent

sl =-=~~ous!hOid GOOds

COUCH, gray, fabric good,
best offer, 304 67S-3875 alterS.
ANTIQUE
rectangular
dining room table &amp; 6
chairs . Will trade for
round wooden table &amp;
chairs. 304-675-3035 ,

IRGI~ B. SR .
216 E. second Street

· Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker , ot
taman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275
Sofas and cha1rs priced
from S285 to $795. Tables.
S38 and up to $109 . Hide·a ·
beds,$340 , queen s1ze, $380.
Recltners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from S18 to $65. 5
pc . d 1fetfes from S79., to
$385 7 pc, $189 and up
WOOd table with 4 chatrs,
$219 UP IO $495 . Desk $j10
Hutches, $300. and $375 ,
maple or pine finish
Bedroom suites - Basst tt
Oak, $675, Bassett Cher~y.
$795
Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275 complete Baby beds.
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin , $58 ,
firm , $68 and $78. Queen
sets, $195 dr . chests, $49.
4 dr . chests, S42 Bed
frames, $20 and $25., 10 gun
Gun cabinets. S3SO , dinet·
te chairs S20 and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, S295. Or
thopedic super f.rm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35 ,
bed frames $20, S25, &amp; $30.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon.
thru Fn .• 9am to5pm, sat
446 0322

s

ROdger's Trad1ng Post 92
Olive St ., Gallipolis. Open
MOB'I LE home spaces. Jet. 9-S. 6 days a week . Fur niture, appliances , an 2 62 at old Y _304 675-3248.
tiQues. Sell, bUYr &amp; frade
OFFICE space or small
bus1ness room
Private Magic Chef gas range, copbath . 1508 Jefferson , Phone pertone in color, S75 or best
Offer. Call256· 1932
304 675 1435.

Phone
1- ( 614 )·992·3325
3 YR . OLD RANCH 1559 sq. ft Almost new
on 3 acres of land Has 3
nice bedrooms , 1•12
baths, central atr and
heat Wood cab1nets 1n
equtpped
k1tchen.
Ask rng $57,000 1
2 HOMES AND 6
ACRES A iam1ly
home and 2nd house for
the parents Swimming
pool. Lots of trees and
flowers 9 room older
home wh1Ch has 2 baths.
natural gas furnace, 3
car
garages and
pnvacy ·
HUNTING AND CAM PING ~ 14 acres of
Forked Run
Turkey
and deer park your
trailer and enjoy the
wild Only $12,000.
$21.000.00 - 8 rooms,
new gas furnace. large
basement, copper plum ·
bmg and lot 50x200.
Near stores and schools.
A good buy today .
CLASS - Woodburnmg
fireplace In the fam11y
room tn full basement.
Genie garage door for
your conven1ence, 3 nice
s1ze bedrooms, 2 full
baths, birch equtpped
l&lt;;itchen m this brick.
vacant. you can move
nght ln .
SUE
P . MURPHY,
GORDON
B.
ANO
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATES.

CB,TV,Radio
Equipment

Sears console color TV,
gOOd cond , needs some
work, S60 Ph. 446 9845

Whir \pool
ref r i ge r aJor
frost free $95, Fr igadaire
refrigerator white $50 ,
avocado Side by Side
refrigerator S195, 30' Sears
electric range $125, Hot
point electric range .40'
white $75 , Norge heavy
duty
washer
$95,
WestInghouse
dryer
avocado S95. 446·7398
Skaggs Appliances at out
new location Upper River
Rd. beside Stone Crest
Motei.Wealsohaveaparts

54 - "'
M"-i"'sc,_,.-'-M
"e"'r" c"'h=• :o
•d
=-i,_,c,_,
e_
For Sale · 750 and 1000
gallon PLASTIC septic
tanks . State and County ap·
proved. Total we1ght 300
lbs ., Haul in your pick·up
truck, Ron evans Backhoe
Serv1ce, located 3 mi(es
south ot Jackson on Sl. Rt
93. 286 5930

department

WVA.

Restaurant
equipment
reCOI"'dlt toned by RADCO .
CAll 304-523-1378 Hgtn .•

•

I

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK
'614·992· 2181

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

I

PRICED RIGHT.

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

=::::;========-~--=--:;-:::-:::-:::--;:;-:::=-:-:::-:::-:::-:-::_-:::-:::-:::-_

GOO 0
USED
A PPLIANCES
washers,
dryer'S,
refrigeralors,
ranges
Skaggs
Ap pliances , 1918 Eastern
Ave , 446· 7398.

Would like to rent a 1 or 2
car garage 10 Gallipolis
area. Call 256-1642 ask tor
Ken. 256-1932

51

Household Goods- -

Real Estate- Genenl

l

Justus Energy Loci&lt; System Is Ideal for solar healing. The thermal
mass of the double tongue-and-groove 4-.nch th1ck solid cedar limbers
retains accumulated heat longer than conventional structures.
(According to Business Wee'k, the insulation factor of wood
inch of thickness is five times that of brick.·) Dove-tailed
joints plus double-pane thermal glass windows
and the energy-efficient design of Justus'
roof and floors, all reduce heat loss to a min·
I mum.
So whether you install a solar system of your choice or I he Justus/
Solar King system lhBI uses water for heat stora_ge and has patented
designed copper collectors, you'll find Juslus is the ideal solar home.
Enclosed Is $4. Please send your Justus Home S1lver Anmversary Portfolio.
Name __________________________~----------------Address ____________________________________________
Cily______Stale,_ _ ___._,p _ _ _ _ Phone - - - - _ I own a lot Location --------'----~------­
_1 would like information on the Justus/Solar K1ng Holwaler and Healing

Syste~s .

·

AUDREY CANADAY JUSTUS DEALER
25 Locust St.
Galli olis, Ohio 45631
Phone 446·7004 f

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

Housing
Headquarters
•,

'

'
I

GUY AN TOWNSHIP- 108 acres m/1,
located south of Mercerville. Approx. 20
A. tillable, balance woods, tob. base.
'lwnerswill help finance.
PRICE REDUCED TO $37,9001 N1ce 3
BR low maintenance home 1s less than 3
yrs. old and features large LR, dining
rm , kitchen, bath, part basement.
utility building and almost 2 acres near
Route218. City schools.

RD &amp; FULLER

CROUSE BEC~ ROAO - Restricted
building lot 1.22 acre, n1ce wooded set·
ling, city schools $S,900

OFFICE 446-7013

REALTY

ROOM TO ROAM- This loveiy brick
ranch offers lots of g()()d living for your
g~owtng family 3 BR's, 2'12 baths, large
k_Jtchen &amp; LR, formal 01nlng rm., 2
ft_replaces. woOd burning stove, cent.
atr, garage, full basement with family
rm., bar &amp; laundrv Located on approx
2 acres on State Route 554 betwee ·
Porter &amp; Eno. 'Priced to sen atS59,500. n
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pasture farm, mostly rolling &amp; hil·
ty grassland with approx. 10 A. wooded.
lots of spring&amp;, llf:~ story home has ,.
• rms. &amp; bath, large b!rn, tobacco base.
trontson3 roads lnWalnutTownshlp.
OWNER FINANCING AVAI~AB~E­
Remodeled home lncl~des 5 rms. &amp;
bath, carport, stove, relrlg.. dish·
washer, mobile home pad, almost 6
acr.. on 511 2 mi. from town. $30,000.
NEAR CADMUS - Forty acres, apprOK- '12 !lllaqte and '12 woods, old 2
story farm home in need Of repairs,
barn, shed,s fronts on 141 . Owner flnan·
clno available at 10%.

DO YOU ENJOY: effiCient fireplace?

~OWER

'

Changing seasons? Children ptaylno
disturbing "" one? Consider this 1977
sectional 3 BA home, 1550 sq. fl , 2 lull
bath&amp;, shoWers, ·3 walk·1n closets,
llllnd kitchen, 1.6' acres scen1c oak
fnH, Alflltdablo price.
I 161

-

RIVER ROAD - See this nice
overlooking the Ohio River, 3 large bedrooms,
woodburnlng fireplace, garage in b,sement
separa~e 2 car' garage .
~ 7400

+

' T10N - Cozy 3 B R ranch wllh
GOOD CITY ~DCA
full basement and large fenced lot, low utilities.
Only
, S29,500
P~ANTS

SUBDIVISION
Beautiful new
doublewide, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, woodburnlng
fireplace, fully carpetec;j, air cond., nice lot.
I 1045
RT. 554 - Nice 1972 12x45 mobile home wllh 2
bedroom•. bath with shower, furniture stavs. I 1016
MAKE US AN OFFER - Frame home with nice
kitchen. basement !nd garage. In tow~;~, owner wan·
ts sold before winter, prtce reduced .
· I 0185

VACANT LOTS- ~arve troct . ~onslollng of 3 1~11
lotsend 5 partial loll, In city on Cheatnut St. no,ooo

Price Clreallaolly rtdUCid:
3 bdrm., mGbllollOmo on en
ocre, drilled well,

Now arrange tnt eireled letters 10

1-----------,.....;.---------1

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason, WV . 773-5651

MOBILE home space m,Pt.
Pleasant. large lot, gartfen
spot. free water &amp; sewage.
304-675-1699.

Sofa-Sleepers,
quality
guranateed Full $399.00.
QUeen S499 00 . FREE
DELIVERY Lifestyle Furniture 3rd &amp;
Olive,
Galhpolls. 446·3045.

eOE5 UP' AFT!!~
A F'E/It'IOD' OF

Print answer here:

47

---~---

4 room turn. apt. Court &amp;
7nd. Ave. 1 bachelor furn.
apt 1st Ave., fireplace.
Call 446 1615 or 446 1243

rncib111

'

a=-

() I

2 bedroom twin single in
Pt Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street $200 month plus
deposit 1-614·20-8322 or
614-263-2669.

46

51

52

IHONGIMt

Apartments 675 5548

45

--- ..

IN FLAil ON.

Five room apartment, par·
fly furnished, adults, no
pets. $125 per month plus
ut1lities. F&gt;hone 614·992·
3201

FURNISHED
304-895-4350

Household Goods

For sale GE wa sher 18 lbs.
load, A·l
shape, $110.
Maytag dryer , g'ood
shape,$70. Cal1446·8181.

tBASURDI

--~

Small fuFnlshed house,
adults only. Call446-0338

INVESTMENT PROPEIITY - 2 nice lots with A
rental mobile home peds, all are rented, each pad
has concrete run,ers and patio, located in Rodney.
12151

Pit ICE RIDUCID TO
AISUME " ' LOAN - Over 100 • H.
DillY! no aree PLUS a full
aq In
thll 3 IIR r1nch. OWnor Is IWVIIItll the
state 11111 II anxiOua to 1111. Make
YOUR Offer lint. L~ on llltllalla
Ad.

i, NENLI
KJ I

One bdr. furn. apt. in M id·
dleport. 992-7177.

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes ,
houses ,
Pt

cr

::~clr:::.!.-··

-~ ------ - - -

ROOM. Complete seltc!IOil
of 11- and floor pt1ns
delivered jl.lnstalled. F rench Cltv Mobile Home, Inc .
Call446-9340.
H•ltmark, 3 •bdr.,
furnished, under
1)1~:::: patio, porch In~
Call 388-8469 after

1

Pleasant and Gallipolis
614 446 8221 or614 245 9484.

.2 bedroom mobile home.

44

2 mobile homes, 2 bdr ., one
double wide, one house.
Ca11675-3000 or 446-0682.

~OVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN·
CHER plus 78 ACRE$ of land In
Cheshire Township Offers lots of good
living for yqur growing family. Home Is
lust like new with 1438 sq. ft. of living
area plus an attached garage. 2
spacious BR's, 2 baths, 8x27 ~R. 10x24
kitchen with refrlg., dlsp., DW, double
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays in
laundry Land Is mostly rolling pasture
land with approx 25 acres wooded. Call
for appointm~nt.
~
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRA~~y
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fron ·
tage on State Route 588, Fairfield
Centenary Road &amp; Vance Fairfield Rd.
Excellent for farming or development.
Older 5 rm. &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
silo Included. Owners will consider sell·
lng smaller tracts of short term financ·
ing. Call for more information.

SR7, Pomeroy . $190 plus
utillt1es, lawn care $150
depOSII. 614-9&amp;5-3949

TWO bedroom trailer , 304-

7 rm . house In town .
Inquire at 918 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis. No phone calls.

~ ~0' 7~&gt;....~~
•
....l•.'{~~

2 bedroom furnished, off

The

USED REFRIGERATOR;
electric range, as is; dinette set,~ chairs .. Corbin and
Snyder Furniture, 955
Second , Gallipolis . Call4461171.

l~bdr. m0b1le home, 5 mites 1

from. Holzer Ref. &amp; dep.
requ 1red. 1 small ch1ld accepted, no pets. Call 446·

In Gallipolis .
Call after 5, oi-16-3945.

51

___ _ for R.=cen"'l_ __

Houses for Rent

4 bdr . 2 112 bath bl level
with pool off Rl. 35 Call
Wiseman Real Estate
Agency . oloi6-36A3

W. Va .

-----·Apartmemt

42 - · -MoblitHOmes
lor Ren,_,_l_ _

bedroom apts available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call
992-7721

5 rm.

•
910 W. COLLEGE quality 3
bedroom bnck ranch near R10 Grande
campus Th1s sprawling home offers a
large family room, fireplace, equ1pped
kitchen, formal dining, 2 baths, 2 patios
&amp; 2 car garage. Nearly 1 acre lawn. Call
for appointment. 81h% assumption

Ohio-Point

FOR . ~EASE OR RENTModern 3 bdr. ranch near
town . SJOO per month.
deposit &amp;
references
required. Call STROUT
R EA~ TY oi-16-0008.

vt/11~~-

9,295.

1s --sc~;.s

FOR SALE
N 1ce 3 bedroom home,
bath,
ltv1ng
room,
dtn1ng room, btg k1f·
chen, utility room , patiO
w1th pr 1vacy fence.
storage bulld tng , on
large corner lot w tlh·
redwood split rai l fence.
off New Lima Road
$36,500

Would you like to own a
home of your ~- We
didnft have $10,000 for a
down pavment nor S5,000
noreven$1 ,000 . Do what we
did Call 513-592-9175.

STROUT REALTY, Inc.

New 198114' Wide

5

IN
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
bee n ca n
y o ur
celled?
L os t
operator' s License? Phone
992 2143

Real Estate

41

_ _ _ _.Real Estale- Gene,r_,ae_l_ _ _._ _ __

Calllmmediatelv

_____ __,_

Lots &amp; Acre•p

= : ; - - - - -- - -- -

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

-

lS

Mobile Homes
forS•Ie

Moving Must . Sell 2bdr.
mobile home, $.4,000 Will
consider land contract.
Call oi-16-6325.

Columbus First Mortgage
COrTI!lllnV"'F H A - VA- 'Fi nan-clng Loan Rep Cookie 3 bedroom older home, apKrautter (304)675-3.473
prox. 4 acres, 10 mlies from
town. Phone 675-6597
=--~
23
Professional
Services

---

32

12x45 S~yllne AciiGmey, 3
bdr., exc . conct. Call 4468134.

BY OWNER: 4 bdr., splitlevel, living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·ln
kllchen, tg _ family rm , 2
112 baths, located In Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool pr i vileges, $75,000
firm Kyger Creek School
District Shown by appt.
only call oi-16-9403.

House cleaning 1 day a
week on regular bas1s Call
Sharon at 949 2160

--------

Nov. 15,1981

w. va.

Sundav Tim-es-Sentinel

211&gt; ACRES - Good building site or mObile home
aile, Blazer Road, Add liOn Twp.
,
N,OOO
142 ACRES - Good hOme with 4 bedrooms, bath
with shoWer. fullY carpeted, 2 large barns,~
base, 12 acrooi&gt;Oitom lend.
_
I___!___IIG9

EVIIIinp Cal

P1bicil Slhith, .... 367-0221
Dlnilllillllllr, Rllltar; 4412599
. . . . . . . . . . .327

LET'S TALK QUALITY - Lovely bilevel home. Brand new Split foyer,
living room, formal dmtng , Wife ap·
proved kitchen, 2 baths, 3 BR , could be
4th downsta 1rs easement level un
ftnished . 1 car garage Redwood deck In
N912
back Situated on approx 1 acre

FARMS

RESIDENTIAL

HOMIE SWEET HOME -5 rooms total.
Bern, outbuildings, grape arbor. fruit
trees. ApProx 15 acres tillable, 20 acres
pasture and rest wooded. 77 acres tofat
Priced In low -40's.
'
1844

BARGAIN PRICED - $12,000 - 3
bedrooms, living room, eat-in kitchen,
utility room, 1'h acres Plenty of room
for the children to play &amp; to raise a few
animals. Southwestern School District
,
8 83

25 ACRE FARM - Just ~IS!ed OWner Will WOI'~ With YOU 10 bUy !hiS
farm. 2 mobllehomes, tobacco base,
mineral rights. Will sell part or all of
farm, 1 or 2 mobile homes with less
1170
lond. Possible land contract.
PRICE REDUCED -

lAND CON-

YOU BE THE JUDGE and tell me il
don't think this well maintained
home is not worth the asking price. 2
bedrooms. basement. Large storage
area. Owner wflllng ~ to help with down
oayment. Rulland. $24,900.
' 1190

vou

TRACT - Buy house &amp; 54.3 acres or
&amp; amount of acreage vou want.
15 ac. tillable. oresenllv used
If you want to buy, thl•
try &amp; work wllh YOII. Priced

1714
MINI FARM, CLOSE IN -7 acrtswell
tonctd, 1181 lbl. tobiCco baae, J:!'x-48'
lobiCco bam, 2 acres timber. 3
bedroom houae, well insulat..::t. New
vinyl siding. Storm doors and windows.
Law utilities. OWner says average bill
Sl6sum!"er, SolO winter.
IIS2
WANT FARM? NI!I!D FINANCING?
pe~c:hes and apples.
Barn, po!ld, tobacco base. Timber and
range land . S.P. 147,800. $12,000 down,
10% A.P .R., 10 years. Refinance In 5
yura. $173.11 monlhly paylnont- 1151

95 ocres. 8 acres

FARMS
SMA~~ FARM-3 bedroom homewltll

' main bath. kitchen, dining room, 2 en·
clo&amp;ed porches &amp; part basement. Bern,
shed garageS. 27.41 acres Of beaulliul
land' 18 acres tillable &amp; aboUt 700' of
road' fronlage. Just walling for that
parttlmo farmtr.
'
1896

INVESTMENTS
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Just
Usttd - Gn station, grocery store,~
greenhouse, mobile home end 3 acres.
All inventory. This can be •fl money
maker. Possible land contract. Owners
anxloua. Call lor alllhe dele115.
1916

-.

FISHERMAN'S DE~lGHT your own frontage on the Ohio River on
thls 4.45 acres. Also has a 14x24 bldg
presently used for beauty shop 2 story
home w tth 3 bedrooms, 36x48 barn,
tobacco base and MUCH more.
1856

RESIDENTIAL
WANT A BARGAIN? -$23,900 Will buy
this nice ranch style, three bedroom
home. Living room carpeted, kitchen dining room, utitity room, llh car
garage. All· this sitting on approx an
~ 771
acre.
YOU CAN STIL~ BUY A NICE HOME
UNDER: $30,000 - Country living and
room to breathe In this 2 bedroom home
with bath. Living room, kitchen and en·
closed porch (could be bedroom or
#820
den) . Aisohas2acresof land .
JUST ~ISTEDI Convenient In-town
location . Older two story o4 bedroom
home. Large kitchen with old fell'lion
pantry . Nalural gas. Off street parking.
School bus pickup, $29,900.
I 893
PRICE REDUCED - Pomeroy, 1'12
story, 3 bedrooms, den, woodburner In
llvino room, nice large front porch and
r garden area. Close to hospital, stores
amtechurches. Owners anxious to sel.
$37:000.
, 145
SUMMER PLACE or live year round In
thiS lovely 2 bedroom home. Living
room, 1 bath, kitchen adn .69 acre,
located on Blue ~eke Drive.
U-12

'lOP

COUNTRY P~EA5URE - 2 bedroom
frame home and 37+ acres Home all
electric. large ki1t hen, lots of cabinets
Add· on room. 1 bath and new basement.
!and has approx. 12 acres Ill table, rest
tS wOOds &amp; tobacco base
f 914

LOTS

FOR

)

SALE

LOTS- Owner IS Willing to sell these 2
:ots close to Blue Lake on a land con·
tract. 100xl07 and 100x99.9. $5,000 each
11798
Docking privileges.
1 ACRE LOT - LOcated on state high ·
way, has drilled well, and Is ready for
the home of your cho1 ce. Priced at
$3,500.
M876
5.4 ACRES or 5 ACRES - Are you
looking for-a tract of lane! for the home
of your dreams? 5.4 ac;res partially
cleared ancl part ially wooded or 5 acres
of mostly woods . Make your own
choice.
M877·1 878

NO RESTRICTIONS on these tWo
50xlS9 lots . Rural water and electric
availABLE . 1§,:1:?'1 Owner will sell on
land contract toqualil 1ec:J buyer. 1788

2 ACRES - Ideal lor ' log home. Partially wooqed . 'Waler and electric
available City school distnct
1 ns
COMMERCIA~ ~OTS. - R10 Grande
VIllage. 2 level lots. Close to Rt . JS,
ch_urches, and Rio Grande College. AH
ut11ittes available. Just li~ted . Call
today_
1911

21™

.
'•

'•'

'•

'

�The
54

s

Ohio-,-Poiill Pleasant,

Misc. Merchandice

54

F irewood,split, del ivered
.. and sta cked. · Mixed wood
S65 per cord or $35 per half
i cord. Hardwood $75 per
l cord or S40 per ha lf cor d.
~ Call for quotes on large

.

. New

With folding doors, grate,
brass decorations, and tool

NORTH

' Fruellauf bo)!: trail er $3,500 ,

More than 100 pi eces of
broWn Underpinning for a
mobile home. used ju st one
year. A seven and one ha If
f eet b~ 58 inc h· Wide oval
rug, and ·white uniforms
s ize ~- 10 . Ca ll 446-3065 afte r
4 :30PM .

For sale firewood. Split,
stac ked and delivered . $30
a large pickup load . Cal!

set, S100. Caii367-0M7.

Fi rewood SJO T delivered.

' Ca ll379-26 17,

,.

_, -----~-----

·• For sale new gas cook
~~ st ove, white. Ca ll"245·5188.

'
i Black

'
d rn
' ett e
~
ro d rron
f. chairs with red botJoms &amp;

;,·- tops, plush , good cond., $8 0.
Call446·3937.

~

,, -----------L~

-

.

.._, Cocker Spantel pup reg.,
'! Stero sy~tem ,
Lu x man
:;" rece iver with 50·1
II'· speaker. Ca ll 388-8240 .

••

50&gt;&lt;10 mobi le home good for
workshop or storage $500,
Dresser &amp; mirror $35, kit·
chen tab le S25, 2 sets of box
springs &amp; mattress $75, end
tat;&gt;l es S20 ea. Cal l 388·9091 .·
Apec o copier •. Sco tts m an
ice machine, file cabinets,
drafti ng ta ble, de nti st
c hair, small freezer s, 4 cu.
ft . office ref r iger at or. Call

388·9!98,

EAST
.Q 109
• Q 10 7 2

tKt5

•Ku

Myer's snow plow com·
ple1e, lik'e new, eledric

SOOTH
.AK6

over hyd ra li e, . $800. Call

256-9350.

•Ks

Older bedroom

suite

tAQJ!OI
.J!OI

in

good 'ond ., $100. Call 367·
7822,
For sale square bales of
hay &amp; straw . Bred

Hereford neiters. Lawren·

ce Burdel L Call 245-5181.

1972 Datsun truck, tom atoe·

or tobacco planter, 3 pt. hi t·
c h, 8 ft. camper top,

------

• AQS

150x84, S5o,oo . Call388·9807 ,

Locust P!)sts. 992·6102.

coal S45 for. deli ver.

flaeW,
retUroed to dummy with lbe
otber too club, repeated lbe
diamond floOue ODd wouud

tau

Early -American go l d
cha if, $50 .00 . .Penny's gold
foam ·backed draperies.

Bluetitk fema l e coon
h~und registered. 614-9492545 ·after 5 p.m.
Garden fertilizer, weed and
feed for lawns. 20 lb. bags
S2 each . 992r2574.
2 used F78· 14 studded snow
tires. Ca ll614·992·3683.

Grain fed fi-eezer b'eef,
ngneck. pheasarits, also
eggs. Wilmetta Leifheit,
Rocksprings, Pomeroy .

614-992-3446.

Shotgun. Rem ington model
1 l -48, automatrc, 20 gage, 5
shot, like new, with case,

$200. Ph , 245'5875,

W.B.

Boston.

BROWNIE outfit, jumper,
blouse, compl ete. Size 10,

$15 . Phone 304·675· 1714.
L UMP . coal $45 . · ton
delivered. F i rewood S30 .
ton delivered . 304-675-7199.

- ---.~-----

Stoves, closing ou t our en ·
t ire s1ock of stoves and
f ireplaces Inserts at dealer
cost, or less. Outdoor
Equipment Sa l es, i c1 . Rt .s
7 &amp; 35 1 Gallipolis. Ph. 446·
3670. Closed Tu e,s. &amp; Thur.
unt il Mar. 1. 1982.
·

DEARBORN propane gas
stove,' 55,000 BTU , $50.00,
phone 304·458· 1042 ..

Four 14 inch Cragar wheels
to ·m Chevrotet. ·Two 13 1nch mud and snow tires. Ml

DRAGONWYND
CAT · FOUR dachshunds. 30H58·
TERY · KENNEL; AKC •1620.
black Chow puppies. CFA

tOr with mower for sale.
mJO, Call 446-1570.
'

Himalayan, Penlan and
Siamese kittens. .Call 4463844 after 4 p. m .

Gravely tra,tors. severS:I

Used

up with five dWnoDds pl01
two trlcltllo eaeb blat$ sul~
There wu some ~
. slon about the poal!blllty
that South could lilve made
an overtrick If lbe deleuae
had sllooed.__ but no one ·
noticed llilt l!iUI could blve
beaten tbe bind If be bad
limply played a low club 11

~~··~·~~no~u~tu~re~~n;e~c~u::.;s:u:-r:;;-:~~~~~;;.~~1
--Misc. Merchandice

S4

2 CEDAR gun cabinets. 10
guns, $225.00 each . 304-675 ·

54

Misc. Merchandice

David Brown tractor, 990
diesel, $,1900. Sears gas
wall furnace, 75,000 BTU .

$150 . 675-2283 .

.303 BRITISH Jungle· Carbine, excellent condi t ion,
unaltered. with ·scope
mounts, Sl 2S . Phone 30_..-

882·2583.

tires.

Hanshaw's,

Lu&lt;as Lane Road . 675·7360.

HILLCREST ' KENNEL ·

STEEL BLDGS: SALE

Boarding all bretds, clean
lnd,oor·outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg, Dober ·
·mans. Call -"6·7795 .

Farm and Commercial
30x32x10
14144

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

30w66x10
40K72x12

Boarding and grooming .
AKC . Gordon
setter s,
·English Cocker Spaniels.

$5275
$8125

dan

Buil~ing

Supplies

Sheet metal. Flat 20 to 24
gauge . Porcelian enamel
coated .' Sizes 4'ft by$ ft._.. ft
by 12 ft . Many . building
uses. Prices S5.60 to sa.oo.
TupPers Plains, Ohio 614·
667-3085.

Lowery Genie organ . '1250
music kit with earphones &amp;
bench included. For information cal1·614·446·9-461 1

NEW Idea 1 rJYW
tow. Ne'l'

Ph, 446·3670, Closed tues:
&amp; Thurs. until Mar . 1, 1982.

.
Pl&lt;ktr

&amp; mb:er

#352 ,
eq_vipment.

Want to trade 48 Case tra&lt;ltor for cheap running car..

304-675-4467,
135

MASSEY

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

GROOMING.

Call Judy Taylor at 3677220 .

a tl· estae11

months old, f,e male. Phone

446-9845. $35 ,00.

FerguSOn

F ish ·Tank 8nd Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon .1
Thurs ., I Frf. 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed ., 1 Sat. 11 to 4. Check
our F ish Special.
A~C

Registered ChoW
Chow puppies . Call 446A KC
· Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle
pups, 304:895·3958 .

80 model Gravely tractor-, 2
wh ef!l, 30 !n;. brush hog
mower, electric Start, · 8

HP . Call 245-9420 or 245·
5286 before 2PM.
Gravely parts, used. We
have junked several old
model Gravely tractors
and will sell .serviceable
parts at 112 ·price. Outdoor
Eqvipment Sales. Jet . Rts.
7 &amp; 35, Gatppoli s, Oh. Ph .
446·3670. ~losed Tues. &amp;
Thurs . until M c;~ r , 1, 1982 . .

Real Estale - General ·

..

farm -machinery. 30-4-57'·

,

DEALER wanted for st~l
bvuildlngs for your area , tb
hiindte our commerical &amp;
agricultural pre·englneere·
d .steel building lines on .jt
part time basis. Good

~~-i-'6,.;~~~94 ·3273 ,

MSGHEE
· 'R.~

Livestock

63

Young Tom Turkey's.

446·9807 after 4PM ,
REGISTERED

Ccill

Poll~d

Hereford bull , gentle, 30;4·

675·2347,

SURP LU S rental clothing,
army cotton
c!othing ,
government
specifications
leather
boots, field jackezs, packs,
denim. Sam Somerville.
(call in orders 304-675-3334
Pt. Pleasant) Warehouse 7
miles east Ravenswood's
new bridge old Rt. 56·21.
Open
only
Saturday ·
Sunday afte_rJ'tOons.

load , Cal l675·1828.
NEW

boys

bicycles-10

Real Estale-- Gener:al

WINCHESTER 30·30 deer
rifle. 304-675·3508.

-m

1371'

BMR 139 - REDUCED - Two story home on Se·
cond Ave. Aluminum' si ding, 3 or. 4 bedrooms.
Reduced to $22,500. Call-for details.
BMR 402 - 37 Acres bare land, 1401 lb. 1obacco
base, 30x30 tobacco barn . Check on this one!

GUysville, Ohio'
Authori1ed John Deere.
Nt&gt;w Holl•nd, Bu\h Hog

'•rmDnler
Equl9menr
·

pliances,

'•

4464636

custom

bathrooms, ren'fod,eting,
Plumbin, .electric, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES

TO BUY

SCRAP

(Pomeroy Sc~ap
Iron
&amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk

, Mon,·Frt. 8:30 lo4 :00
After Aug. 3
Ph. 992-6564
10·12-lf&lt;

New Hou·r s;

Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201

•Remodeling
•Free estlm•tes
•20 Yrs. exPerience

.

Appoinlmenlt

not

•lweys

neceuary. Pomnrly KuHI•Kurl
s .. uty Shop .

73 •

BMR 403- New Listlng - 1981 Mobile t'lome on rented lot. $10,900. Nearly new.
BMR 400 - Check this one. For onl'y $8,500 you can
buy a two BR home w / rural water and bath.
BMR 397 - Owner says sell , and l'le will do th.e
financing at 12% . It is an income ,prOducing duplex .

·' BMR .389 ...:_ This fine 4 bedroom home is located in
the city school system . You Will enjoy a large lot
· with a total country atmQS;phere, and the same time
have a I.I of the city conveniences. Call now.
·
SMR 404- New Listing - City schools. newly car·
peted and painted. This three BR home is priced in
the tow S30's, a great buy on today's market.
· BMR 405 ~ Great location! A very nice ranch style
home with a full basement with tamil'f room . Main
floor has three BR's, large living room with a cozy
brick firepla ce. All situ~te~ on .43 of an acre and
, , .only twp miles from Gall1pohs.
. ; 8 ,Y. ... · 406 1.25 acres mil located ·close to ·
• Gaiiipol is: Frontage on Route 160 ahd Bulaville Rd.
owner will help finance .
.
SMA 409 .:.._ Top of the line split foyer . This fine
Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den

~~~~ir:eplace, ~~at feudm~o~~ Yn':.·~~~~c:r:i~

u:.~~-· d~~~rc wl~help quallflod buyer with very
attra&lt;t1ve financing .
Three beCroom hOme ·on NelyhborhOO&lt;t
BMII 3~ d on 1 acre more or less. Includes two
~~~~~ hg~e pads, Red_u&lt;ed- Call lor details I

t

probable. Three

BMR 381 familY room with flrepla&lt;e, Natural
bedroom.targeblll 132,00 month last year, Call lor
.

, 0 mpletedetaltsl .
.
,
_ Just Llsllll - 30 a&lt;res m/1, slhlated t
•
·•;,witt1
IMRfrontage
407F . on
· A--coon Cr ., as well as frontage on
,. ,bla&lt;ktop county highWaY,

For all of your wlr·
tng n"l!s.

AND

power skoering, 21,90(), g. c.,

· Mot~Y&lt;tes

74

30H8H.W2.

Call245·5669,

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph'one.992-2771
or 992·7093

APPLIANCE

SERVICE

1975 Ford L TO 2 dr .. hard·
top, 351 engine, $1,595. Call
245c9375.

DRIVEWAY
UMESIOHE

3 or 4 bedrooms, tobacco base, electric range, builtin woodburner, fuel oil F.A . furnace, lots of fruit
trees, _grape harbor, strawberry patch, 3 acres
tillable, as~umable loan . Phone for more details.

GRAVR
..... Coal,.
'

3 BEDROOMS- 3 ACRES M. DR L
Mobile home 14'x70' 1976 Freedom ~ Ph baths, un·
derpinning, lots of bullt·in cabinets, range,
refrigerator, dinette set. Air conditioner and other
furniture. Rural water, nice land for 1garden . All th_
ls'

Ph. 992-2772
HEY SINGLES!

1425

ATTRACTIVE ALL BRICK HOME!!

COMING HOME SHOULD
BE
HAPPY TIME
,
i
.
.

A

E-njoy the beautiful Ohio River from this spacious,
cheerful house, 3 bedr:ooms, llh baths, large living
room, eat-in kitchen, 2 fireplaces, full basement, 1.
porches, plus many extras . Phone 10day for details.

sit 5
KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT

Modern 3 ~R ranCh home apP,rox . 41f~ yrs. old. Thermopane w1ndows, storm doors, FA furnace, with
central air, kitchen has built-in cabinets, stainless
steel db I. sink and dining area . Full basement with
patio doors. RUral water system, garage . Call now.1
3
7
9

1975 Chevrolet 1mpala , 2

39 ACRES MORE OR LESS

'

1

OWNER t'INANCING - Move lh con- I
dillon, 2 bedrooms, newly carpet.~~
familY roOm wllll flreptoce, EJI-In kit·
chen. Full bllsemont. Garage. staullflll 1
lawn wllll Ditto River front-. S39.GOo'
16,000 down peyment, blllllfiCe on liill'dl
contract .at 129&amp; Interest ...flt, . IIO yr.o
term ..Monlhly paymanll343.36.
·

SIT ON THE DECK and watch the boais on the beliutllul O"to,
have your own boat dock, spa&lt;ious, like new modular, 1,248 sq.
tt living arn. 3 BR, oquiPIIed kitchen, full basement,wood bur·

Nice 4 rOOI'I'l" frame house with a bath. Eat-In kitchen
heating stove. Located on nice city lot r\ear church
arl9 grocerv. Priced o sell! I
1 511

rung stove, over an acre stOplna lawn.l39,900.

'

·
'

.·
I

,

.

'

'

'

,

ENT.RTAIN •AS!LY or htdo out In your second floor beflroom
wllll a good book. l!•ceptlonol foyer has bridal staircase ...
_ , room. Specious living and dining rooms. Kitchen has
laland range, bufll·ln oven ... brnklast nook with view of
bricked courtyard, ~cefut environment. In the heart 01 the
clly. Assvmable mortgage. $54,900,
·.

. ..
'
,,
FAIIM ... M ACRES - Beautiful pasture and m e - fond,
,, some wooded, Foh&lt;ed, GOO&lt;! barn ond other oulblda , Nice 3 ,
bedroom homo, llreplace, knotty pine penoflng In llvf119 room, ·
~llchtn hoa bUill· In own, counter lop range and· dishwasher.
City IChoOia, GrHn Elementary. Approx. 3 miles from
'G&lt;IIflpofla. 194.1100,

I

French City Painting
Residential, commercial,
Interior, exterior, paper
hanging,
and texure d
ceilings. Ph , 367-7784or367-

dr ., l.o w mileage, exc . cond.

Call446-1288 after I PM.

~,;~·-;;-i;;;.;~th'"A~-c~nd.

For Fast .Service

985-3561

PARTSANOSERVICE ·
ALL MAKES

ewashen
•Dryer.

Four Big Beaver tires,
1200·15 mounted on 10'
rims, 5 note lugs, $350. Call

367-0667 ,

like new, new tires, loaded,

96&amp;&lt; after 6PM.

-- i1 --- iu!OR.p;iir__ _
-----~··--

I
~.io~~. -~Oung

: COZY COMFORT ""'lOr
married 01' retired co11Pfe.. 2 bedroom,
I dining room, klllthen atld JMtfar; A ~~~t
.work and tmaalnetlon tan mlkt 'list
home your "casllo". Delli lot ~. I
. !he water's edge. In city , 516.0110. :

'I

IH2·1 mo.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"
:....Adclcmt and

,..mod ling
..:...Roofing anCI guHer

-- - --

tires. 52,000 miles, sharp, · stalled from $200·$230. Auto
$3,800. 1979 DOdge pickup 6 Trim Center, 446-1968.
cvl., standard, $3,500, 1971
vw new paint, runs like 18
Cam,lng

' •: :.-::-==:::::-=-===·==-==-

new. $1,450, 1972 VW runs

.. - - -~qupm.e"'"'
n '-­

great, $901). 1916 Camara
3.50, automatic, AM·FM
cassette, $2,800. 1977 Nova
Concours low' miles, exc .

APACHE fold out camper,
sleeps 8, heater, coohtove,
ice box, phone 304·882·24-42 .

-------- - -

&lt;ond .. $3,500. 1973 Ponllac
Ventura. one owner, 54.000

-k
Concret work

(Free Esllmoles)

mites. $1,250, Eur,llf Auto
Sates, Rt. 554&amp; 160, Porter,
Oh. 388·975ol,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

76 Ford Cobra Mustang PS.

_Piumblt1i and
.tectrial work

ft24215orft2 -731A

&amp;er lEes

----

11

PB. 302. new peint lob.
tires. rims. $2.700, Call 446;
7122 or 446·3100,

.· ~,Ohio

- -~

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
wQrk . 1nsuranC::e work
welcome. sunroofs in-

or 446·7100.

·- - ·- - - - -

I

,j I

ROUTE 325- near Rio Grol!dl. Nelllty
6V211C._., de•trable area lor blllhflnjl.
$22.500. • ' '
"

U-

TWO 'Acu$Site c;olrtd,!'
drive plus 24'x36' I)OUred foundation.
ACIO cOiicrlllt 'lfGCkl- , .:: ,

I

,. . DID
WELDUIG SII)P

Home
1mprovements

STANLEY STEEMER
446·•208

REPAIR WORK
•Gel &amp; E lectrlc

•CI!ttlnt
•Brazing •

•20 Yrs. lxp.

f!l,asonable Rates
. IMIGIIIIIThlrd
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992-5663

'

1975 Gremlin, std.. with
'

'

72 Chevy Impala with air
cQnd .. . 000&lt;1 cond.. $550,
CaiiJ6H822,
1979 Dodge Omnt 02~ auto ..
p.s.. p,b., r~or ~roster.
am·lm cusette. like new,
$3,800, 742•a1 Sol or 992·7467.
1?70 2 (!oar Maverick, New
tires,
battery,
brake
linings, tailpipe, muffler,
wlnterezed. 121 7th Ave.,

JIM MARCUM Rooting
•POUting .and Siding, 30
'years .xperience, Free
estimat... Remodelln_g .

Call 388-9157,
STUCCO .PLASTERING
textured · &lt;elllngs, com·
merclal

and

residential,

fr.e ntlmates, Call 256·
1112,
.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pel Clunl119 featured bv
HaHolt llrolhers Custom
Carpets. Free a&amp;llmato•.
Call~2107.

WEATHI!RALL CON·
~:;;:~~~;;~~lrr==~~~~~~~~M~I~rt.
CRETE • quality and ser·
r
~-~~~~~~A~u~t~o:so~l~ts.
Phone675· VI.,., &lt;811.,5-1512.
157A
PAl NT I - ,
lftd
TV SERVICE 1974 Duster.
con- extlr-. ,l.tnblng,
dillon. AC, sunroof, 75 slant OOfl• -.ne osmadltlng.
NOW
6 tll91no,l900. or
olfor, ·
20,.,..-. c•• • ,•._
30H75-5172.
f~or

good

OPEN

Ultd CDiar Til Stts lor

...

t{.

·~ NEW PitON. NO.

·

9-21-Hc

belt

'

1977 TRANS AM ADO cu. In,
molar, automatic, red with
black Interior, PS, PI!, AC,
till - 1 . •lreCk ,,.eo,
a-egen. smokld gina.
p!pos, 14.000. 30ol·475·
410,

.."

IIIIM't'IOIICMlTii CON·
STRUCTION · S.Ciallzlng
ln1 concrete ..IYtwiYS,
slctewelkl,
patio,
. . . . . .,, ,.... ftlln
and t1C. fiNO -tel. 11
yan -lonca, Calf 167·
!IPl.

SOLUTION.

ford Pear, Upright &amp;
Spreading EvergrHns.
AU nursery stock is pric·
ed to selt. 25% off Rainy
Day Purcha.ses.
All sizes of flowering
trees guarilnleed to
bloom this Sp,r ingl
Designing &amp; Planting'
Services,
Free
Estimates. Nursery is
•ocated 1 mile out
Ch.lrley's Creek Road
on the lett betwHn
Wesleyan
Ca
Graund . Only 13 miles
from New Htgn. Mall.
•T railer toad deliveries.
Scons Bluegras5 sod
II!Vailable.

743-9996

cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and Dec. only . Call
now·and save. 614·992·6309.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential , automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl

882· 2079,
RON'S Telev isi on ·Service .
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576-2398
Or 446·2454 .

F

&amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675 ·1331 .

perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician,
general
repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675 ·4560.
'

~- - ~--~--

..... ·~ -:-~---

water wells . Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales aild Service.
Stark's tree trimming and
removal . Insured . Phone

576·20 10,

ACROSS

112-11
M DylpOIIum
. symbol
65 Teutonic

1 N!'t asweu
dono
&amp;&amp;lares
t I Playhouoe
18 Eutern
rulers
19 Shlke-rlan

deity

88 Brllilh City

67Stumber
69Gaotropod
molulk

7 t \VIII. elll-

ch•acter
20 Venerated
21 oesc.tdant
ofShem
23 Native
, Egypllaft

84CIIemleal
compound
85 Brook
·

27 Blleball
abbr.

87 Rockfilh

29 Time periOd

30 Healthy
31 German IItie

82 ·~---PlUmbing ---_ _ _ &amp; Heating ______

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

PhOne 446·3888 or 446·4477
83 ·

Excavating

ConStruc fion Equ ipment
for sale. Backhoe 530 Case
Construction, King with 24
ln . back bucket, $4,200.
Located in Chester. Oh.
For more information call
c;:ollect 1-216·243 ·0256, ask
for Paul.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
service. Larry Siden·
stricker. 675·5580.·
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Sc lssors . Fabric Shop,

. Pomeroy , 992-2284.
-JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N . air condition service,
c:ommerclal, IndUstrial .

Phone 882·2079 .
IS

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE , Call 367·7m or
367-0SR
NOW HAULING hOUSe&lt;Oal
&amp; limestone for driveways .

Cell for ntlmates367-7101 ,

11

UphOlStery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTEIIY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .• Gallipolis.
~ 7833 or 446·1833.

I ;;,:c;v;~~c;;h.i;;;;;;Ri
'' YS UpholStery Rt,
1 Box ,
67H L

t

Pt. · 'lta&lt;anl, 304·

t27S-d

t3t Walhlng
t32Eicope

t33Scoln

..,,_,

138A*ew
137 Blemteh
1381mltdDn

76 Clothing
78Crawlocl

90 Garlands
92 London

7J Time porlod

abbr.

83~·

17Streetmap

21 Graupol

129 Arrange4 In

74 Tumbktd

lndll

count.,

128 High: Mus. ·

134 Dutch mea-

poga

82 Brunch

t39Compuo
pt

140 Tried
t4t Born
142 WolfhOUnd
143 Proof·

-··
marka

22~

1111"*''

23·25 Seaeogte

27Sco28 Loodl

eo a_,

MEnc • •
81F811Matond

90- ......

_,_

9t Brit

94Act....

30 Cowl

31LMM

33Donotea
35 Bard
311 Fat

37 Fact
38 Ethiopian
tHio

-

18 Prlnttf'l
81Tourtat'l
carryt-

tOO-

t02 Rerr01iriid, tn

41-Atwhat

printing

time? .
42 BlbKCal

t04 Ovior

44 Smoll

llliMoot107 Sal•

47Mut

,111 Guerenuea

. valieyl

105WNp

-....
--'
. _ -·
- -

antelOpe
34 'Tiny insect

brew

93 Attempts
95 Venetian

33 Atrlean
ete housebuilding services
from foundation to roof.
Local builder with best
references will build to any
sta~e or complete job . Also
room
additions
and
remodeling. Call H. S.
Roclevitch . 304·576-2730.

onco

K-

-··
·--·
-98-one

t25Y-

73 Hunting

81 Weight or

24 H•weMan
-lh
2t Allan

32 Cover

1

'

West VIrginia's
"Greatest Nursery"
!Beautiful
canadian
Hemlocks, ·Scarlet
Maples, Sugar Maples,
Pin O~ks, Japanese and
:chinese Crabs, Green
Ash, Purpl e Plums,
Pink DogwOOd, Brad·

CARPET

Carpet Cleaning

over~rlve.

6 &lt;Yt Call 446·
1873 days or 446·7272.

'·

HOMEBU I LDI NG ·Compl -

PICKUP toolbox, 8ft. top·
per. 30H75·3985.

Hazzard, $1,000,00. 446·0390
9-5-tfc

GENES

304-895-3802.

1973 ro 1982 CheYrolet truck
parts. Oliver traCtor &amp;
farm machinery parts. If
vou need parts, new or used
for anyftllng Oliver call388·

1969 Charger-Replica of the
' General Leee' of Dukes of

,

286·5740 .

'

, i972 -F-o rdLTDBr;;u_g_h-am
- .
air, &lt;and .. PB. PS. tilt
wheel. AM ·FM. $625, Call
446·799L
'

Inc. No Job to small or
large. 2 yrs . experience &amp;
training. work guaran·
teed! save up to 30 to 50 per
cent on heating bills : Free
estimates. Call 286-7171 or

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
Ford Factory fiberglass, 8
ft ., truck topper, 3 sliding
windOWs, exc. cond. Asking
SJOO. Call 446·4472.

·---~

Consider. Bv investing in your own
• home, vou' II have .... a hefty tax deduc-·
tlon for mortgage interest and an 1n·
vestment growing In value all the time.
Interested? We can show you h~ to "get !
a lot more for your money than a rent
receipt.
'

Tillable pasture! and, some timber, plenty of spring
water. 11:: l'nlle frontage on Prospect Church Road .
Phoneforfulldetails.
1491

WHAT A BEAUTIFUL IIRICK HOME
Located In city ol Galllpollll, closelo super..,.rkell
and busineas section. 10 rooms."3 or 4 bedrooms,
mOdern kltctten · With loll of tablnels, dllhwallter,
110rb•1!" disposal, electric table top ranae. Formal
dining room, family, recreation room. Just toll of
room. Central air, natural gas F.A. furnace. Central
PA system, fireplace, plantar In home, Young apple and peach trees, flowers' and shrubs and a lot
more . MUST SEE THIS CITY HOME. '
139t

..

, What are you able to show for a ve4i's
, rent? Rent receiPts, that's what: • It
, doesn't ' have to ~e .. HOfT!e mortgage
-1 moner isn't"ForMarrieds0nly ,(' 1

with metal cabinets and double sink. Fuel oil

Spring Sate!

ba"erles. 441&gt;-7717.

Call446·1826,

Call Ken Young

•Dishwashers
•Hot waeerTonkt

Auto P•rts
&amp; Accessories

Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker ser~tlce, buy
automottlles, radiators and

1978 T· Bird, loaded, new

6 ACRES. 7 ROOM HOME-BARN

N•WADDAILY

1978 I&lt;Z -650· SR, new tires,
sprockets &amp; ch~in. pnone

CHARLIE'S SALVAGe ·

"Interior ,.,modeling''

· •Dispo...ts

3·1Hfc

IN CROWN CITY '

Culloden Nursery

excellent • condition ,

304-675-5085,

ALSO

otlonges

No Iunday Colis

.

1977- Gotdwing 1.000,
- tu~ly dressed, . 9,1!00 miles.
.
1970 Cadilac coUpe runs . Cllll ~ '1111' af19r SPM.
gOOd , fully· loaded, body
needs work . Best offer. 446· MOTOfltCYCLfi, perfect
8263,
for Chrtstmas, 73 HOnda

PAI"TERS

10-28· 1 mo.

....u.o.

IOIODGE . Po·wer

675-6758. '

76

C·O-U· N·T· R·Y

1

van, red

1980 Chevy Scotsdale 3 /4
ton. o~--.1 drl..,, c spd,,

1975 Mustang PS,,PB , auto.

BUILDERS

. "INUtliu~ CUllom ,
lulit Olra111"
Call for · trH siding
nlhnaflta, t4f·2111t or

Remodeled 4·5 bedroom home with fire,place
loc ated on 53 acres of tillable· and pasture land,
pond, barn, l ar,ge metal building, tobacco base. All
this for the low, low price Of 142,900. Call for mor~
details.
·
N479

for only $22,500.

Fo,. win~

wagon, bOdy and engine
need work; 4WD drive
works excellent . S1,575.
cash or might take tractor,
gravely or truck in ori trade
in . 61~·992· 7247, · ask for
Fred.
'

1977

1978 Plymouth votaire. 6

SERVICE

BI!SEtLL
~--SIDING CO.

..

room•

Mobile homo a""'lnp
Aluminum utility
buildings
6t1 Miller Drive

1

Vans&amp;4W. D.

W.aoon. 4-wheet -drive, 304-

-:::=::;::==;:=~1:========::;1'8
4 cyl.,
PS,
,.
PB.Mustang
AC. AM·11FM
8 track.
VInyl &amp; Aluminum
KHpthlsAdlor
new tires, sharp, tall 446·
SIDING
FoturORoference
7838after5 :00.

garage/workshop surrounded by beautiful level lane!, Visually exciting · brick
home. Sunken gathering room, family room with glassed shelv~s and fireplace,
elegant formal dining room. Four bedro(/ms or three plus .a study. 2112 baths~ A
kitchen that promises to turn a novice cook into a pro. Nutone work center,
double ovens. dishwasher, range and breakfast booth custom designed by Chan·
- dlers. Custom drapes,. plush carpet. Attached 2 car garage. Expensive? Yes, but
impossible to
for the
·

3 SR, full basement,
·white aluminum siding,
fuel oil F.A . furnace,
30'x40' barns. hingled
roof, lots of young peach
and apple trees. All this
r educed to only $14,900.# .
4
s
2

Howmet scrHn

Ac·
Frtt

Estimates.
691 Mllltr Orlvt
446·2642

1975 3/" ton Chevy new
tires, 350 V· 8 engil"'e ,
rebuilt frans., runs real
IIOQd, 11.000. Call446·l564,

cyt. Call379-2726.

N •tfC

Call742·3195

12 acre estate with a · "Dallas" flavor. Rail fences, ·srable, swimming ptiol ·

Carports,

Homo

cessor·r ea.

--~----

•Siding

WILSON

Lll George Milltr
'hack your PrJSJnlatec·
friQIIYIItm ! '
.
Rnldtnttal · ·
&amp; Caiilmercl•l

DRIVE A LITTE
SAVE A LOT

NU·Prlmt Rti'IICtmtnt
WindoWs, Storm Win·
Covers,

7_! ~ ~ J:!:Usks iorsa~

350,

Like New-Bi·Level
We have that special
dream home with
modern kitchen, with
lots of built ·in cabinets,
dishwasher and .stainless steel sink, 1 full
bath, 2 half baths, liv ing
room, family room,
dinin9 room has patio
doors leading to sun
deck., fireplace, air conditioning, thermopane
w indows and in mini
condition .
11424

wlndaws
'
Storm WindOWS • d-.
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
. 11111119
H.Wmet Pallo Covon

Home Improvements

Mobile

PHONE 992-3021

And Home M,a intenance
•Rooting oil II types

Ph. 9&gt;49·2160 or 949·2412

8 ' 20·tfc

We sell beautiful things

Nu-Prlmt replacement

dows and Doors, Patio

ter6 p:m. 304-615:6277 ,

1976

Mon.ll:IJ0-7:00
Tues. ll:OD-5:00
Weds. 10:110-8:00
Thurs. 11:00-8:00
Fri. 10:110-5:00

TOM HOSKINS

992·7656

DREAM NO MORE

675-4378

1973 FIAT seden, great
lawn car, standard. Call af-

BIU'S

auto bodies. Top pril;es
paid' for •uta bodies.
scrap iron and metals.
1 mile . west of Fair"·
grounds on Old Rt. 33 .. ,,

•Ba&lt;khoe
• Exoavatlng
• Septic Systems
•Water. sewer&amp;
Gas Lints
•DumpTru&lt;k

pH. 992·6011

H03

heat avo.

30H7s.JS92,

Custom kitchens and ap-

INSURANCE
428 Second Ave.
~ aii446 · 0SS2 Anytime

Two story home present BMR 399 lY being used as duplex, Could easily be converted to
single fami ly. Choice locat ion in Gallipolis. Owner
wil l help finance .

ga~

5'7·11&lt;

Pt. Pleasant, W. va., old
state liquor store.

7160 .
========':':·":'~~==::=======~~;;;::::::::~==m:o:·~ S7 .000. Caii304·173·51SO.
Call 446·2801 for termite,
EVERYBODY n~ . Volkswageot Bus. 882· roach
. bird. rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
C. R. MASH
oHIO.VALLEY
Shops the
Bill Thomas.
1981 CJ7 hard top jeep; tall
.- -- -----WANt AD WAY ·--- _,:---.------· A--CONSTRUCJJON
&amp; C Home Insulation,
ROOFING

LIFE

tin~nclng

Ph; tf:l-2174

Plc~er

Broker-Auctioneer

BMR 398 _,
Close to town 3 BR ranch
on lg. fl~~ lot includ es detached 26x26 garag~ plus
18}(36 in -ground pol . Owner transferred.

owner '

74 ·Datsun 8210 automatic,

&amp;

M

!IMR 375
Price gre atJy reduced on this 3 BR brick
ra ncn S•t uared on l arge fl at lor Ca ll f or details!

·

PomerDy,Oh.

.

Bill's

601 Maln.St.

Bui&lt;k limited,
s1.ooo.
r-:::=;:::;;;;;;-rr=:::;;:;;;:=:::;-l1974
catt446-7247
.

COMPLETE AUCTiON SERVICE
WE SELL IT ALL
REAL ESTATE &amp; CHATTELS

'

ROGERS
PAW &amp; (:O!N SHOP

Must
446-.()94,
, sell $1,900.
----------+----'------t----------1 Callwillie.
HAIR REMEDIES
BOGGS
J&amp;F
Slyllsls:
Mark . Mora
SALES &amp; SERVICE
and Cindy Cutftbertson.
CONTRACTING
u.s."'·
1978 Subaru 4WD station

304-675·2717,

-· Now is your ch LJn.:e to live in town to,
less rna n "£ 40,000 . Three bedroom horne n~ar .
GA H S

'

1H2·1 mo.

HOME made quilts, 2 for
$85 . each . 1 for $100. phone

HM ~ 39 ~

,.(

f':l-7656

. SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

MOD·l23 I RctW New ldtr1 c...:n

Ron Canaday, Realtor 446-3636, Audrey Canaday, Realtor, 446·3636

BMR 386 ~ Qu IP t country home on 112 acre lot in·
eludes 20X20 barn w ith loft' and part ial basement.
You wi ll er joy th is Ol')e . Reduced to 525,900.

'

2 Locations
322 N. Sec, Ave.
Middleport
&amp; 10781 u .s: JS
JA(klon, OH .

AI. 3, Box 54
Roctno, Oh.
Ph,614-14N5t1
6· 15-nc

Tnctorwl Cab
MOD·401t Olesel J.D. Tr•uor

11M R 111 Rest r.ic ted building lot in ci t y sc hool
distr1 c1 o 64 of a n ac r e. Ca ll now

..'

&amp; Shoes for
the whole family.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
• Water
• Gas
• Electric • Sewer
Lines Installed.
Ph . 3·7·7560

ResiC:Iential l commerc:lal , industrial and min·
electric work .

est i mat~s.

REALTOR''

MENS black leath er coat,
size 40. 304·675-6917 or 675·

Slztt from ••• 1o t2x40

Radtttor Spoclollst
NATHAN BIGGS
3SYrs. E'rpo~rtoncit

STU,AilT WAYNE
PULLINS
Ca11Aiter4P.M: . ·

·:::~~:~~p~~~~

new - use~

USED wOoden storm door,
metal storm door, wooden
storm windows, nine pane
solid wooden door, -304-6754444,

UtHity BuHdinp

\

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47 H Working Holghl
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
l52ThirdAve.
614·44H716

REESE TRENCHING

Preeestlmotes. all work
fully
guaranteod .

SHOES

SMALL

1- No'. NOD DI~HI Ford

· 161 Excellent buy for newlyweds.

''

AND CUSTOMIZING
R.. lluo al)d R.. Fintsh
Restock, perts, elc.
· Order Guns1119&amp;
Allave W!totasale

,F AA¥ EQUIPMENT

REALTY

speed, 2·20" . Phone 304-675·
1464.

Stzos
"From 30x30"

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From lha Smallest
Hoo.ter Cort 10 the
Llrtllt Rtdlltor ..

.GUNSMITHING

.,'

CANADAY

Oak F irewood $35 truck

BAILY'S

Farm Buildinp

-------~---r----------+-----------1

7632.

V -6 BLACK Ma x 175 HP
outboard motor, w ill take
sma lfer motor and cash.
Ca ll after 6, 304·675-6277 .

Rase Const. co .
Remodeling repair, neW
construction, all tvpes.

50 East

BMR 391 - Price r educed. Owner wants it sold
now! 10x50· mobile home situated on a river front

.,

Clgs: .6k Dk./ cortons
SUI rtfl,l U.OS lonGs,
Wo 1111 tilt lofi11WTII9
i Pk , IIC, Plot RC or RC
100
S1.2t plus dep.
6 pic. RC PfOducts f1.59
1 pk. Papal froducts
· SJ .J? plus dep .
6 pk. Pitpsl proaucts .
f1 .99
I pk.16 oz. Coktt
sut plus dep.
HOUr1: Mon.·Sat.
6 A.M.·t P.M,
Sunday I AM ;-t P.M.
1HHmo,

8:~

Real Estale - General

~ud'

·

OUrS~IIIIIos

$3250 . John Deere 2010 tree;·
tor $3500 . Chevy :V..stan

2328 or 516·2606 .

6!_ _ -~.!.!!!. EquiPment

ALL STEEL

CI!RTIFIID GAS

T he Sunda

Services Offered

' '

weeks old, Call 388-9790 or
pi&lt;kup $1050. post hole
446·6550.
dig{ll!r $250, 75 Ford pi&lt;kup
S2500. dozer TO 600, In·
'
ternational $6;000. Othet_.,
',.,

1 blooded Spaniel, half
Britany, 8

1324,

Pets for Sale

Citation gas stove, needs
new thermostat, $50. Also
Hotpoint electric stove,
needs new element $20. 675-

OUtdoor Equipment Sales,
Jet. Rls. 7 &amp; 35. GalliPQfi~,

-....~..

Caii245-5J2l.

POODLE

.'

1981 models st ill In stock at
greatly redu~ed prl~e ~,

S~rvices

·Business

Farm Equipment
Early model Grovely troc·

Lowery pl ano console con·
ce rt,
like new,
will
· sacrifice,
reasonable.
Busher
400.
alto
saxaphone . Call446·0541 .

English
10 mos.
male, champion

2 PoOdle puppies. 6 wks ,
old, 1 black, 1 Silver . Call
after 4, 446-9219.

Building materials, blor;k ,
brick, sewer pipes, win ·
dows, lintels, etc . .Claude
Wint~rs , Rio Grande, 0 .

56

Musical
Instruments

Have 3 male Cocker
Spaniels to breed. 2,blonde. l •sire&lt;;,
I 245-9135.
1 red, gOOd blood line, AK.C
-registered . "'-46·9372 after
Gordon Setter females,
5:30pM,
. ,
.
AKC champion sired, 12

446-4960 or
256-1560
6-9 PM
ss

5'7

Call388·9790.

Roberts Const.
Co., Inc.

"'"'

Discontinued cabinets, top, ·
stove. hood, si nk . $1200. OAK firewood,' $40 truck
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675· load, split &amp; delivered, 3042318.
882·3415 after 5.
Seasoned Oak Firewood.
Ca ll675·2757 after 4 pm .

61.

diw..,..,.

lnlerest ralel are bllh
today, but DO loltnll Is pa1d
90 tncltl at ~- U East
bad ducked !bat lint club,
South would bave bid lust
Pou
one entrY to dummr to fead
Pau
dlamondi. East would surely
' have made bls kllll of cliO·
monc1s aod South wOillcl bavt
Opening lead: tG
been able to take oaly elpt
trlcb.
Of coune, lbe play mllht
have ~ed very slow1y.
lly Oswald Jacally
Maybe South would ·bave
found a way to lei a Irick
aad Alu Soala&amp;
out of hJI heart iln&amp;. bulla
East won the ·first trick aU probability be wOuld not
witb his kine of .Clubs. He have worked Ulat out.
i"EWSPAPERENTERPIIJDAIIN.)
f
I th I b it

-~~----

used heavy equipments
tires, 26.5-25(2500x25) tubes
&amp; flapS. 1 Detriot diesel ,
67 1. comple te. 614 ·52 2·3092.

~ -~~ ~ !et5_!~!~e~ ~~

Military Rifle 30·06 $100.
Call895·3638 ,

w. va .

Ohio-Point

Nov.

~ --MisC. Merchandice

trick one.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

3489.
Drum stove, Warm -ever
factory made . Brick lined.
Good for home or garage.
S85 , 614-985-3560 , .

and led back the I 0 of ·
spades.
The play .............. fll!ltk·
ly from then oo, South
entered dummy with a club;
took I

.Jill

446·8535 or 446·7993 .

,.
t L ump

ll·lt·f

•~u

cher &amp; hoe $5.500, 40 ft .

j

'

Tricks pay no interest

$24,500. PhOne 379-2611.
Large used Franklin Stove

26 ft . goose-neck flat bed
trailer $2,500. ~on e 614·
156· 1216 ,
.

'

BRIDGE

Patriot Home Builders will
now buiid a 3 bedroom tullY
carpeted and finished
home on vour tot. Only

: q uanit ies. Phone 245·5478.

wood burnin g • f ur ·
, na nce $450, Davis 700 trEm·

'

Misc. Merchandice

w. va.

1

35 Take a vote

36 Traced

38 Weirder

40 Subject to:
sur.

41AII-andl
yard wide

.rulers

97Warb~

98"-Cid"
99Cerlum
symbol

101 "Don't on me' '
103~

t44 Spouae

t48Heron
148 Communion
plate
149 Feels lndlg-

nanl

150 Sows
151 lock or hair

DOWN

1 otstanl
2Pr'-''•

42 Mountain

104 FOI'OI
105 Coneecrate

3-H,Hep

43 Uke

108 Fla.'s neighbor

4 Before
5 Delhi coins:
Abbr.

Carroll's
Hatler

•sAoocued

46 Negative

110 Scattered
112RI~

41-

nance
113-

5tW52 Paid IIOIICe

115 Ancient

47LHn-to

53-or
Tabby

54 Ollvter'a Utta
55F57Jcoin

58Forllttcetton

eoan-

6t Obtain

114 Tlllurlum
oymbol
Persian

117 Kind of bar

116 Chlnae
faction

t19Average
·t20Hoar
12t Each

123 Plrl ot HAH
12• Pump. tor

ves1men1

60enllh
sprite
7LUao

8 Danish land
dlvi-

9Hebrew

IOSerioue

ttV-swlth
three oaf

12 Pronoun

13Bad

14 bglll'l nest

tllllrtora
tl-.tng.lo

48 Annoyed
49 MedlterOinMn

50 Babylonlon
horo
54114Jg ola
' IOrt

totC-

lt2-·

113 Jump
111 Silkworm

111 Pronoun
Protaottv.

t" dHc:ll

t22L-Ior

55 Sand bar

124 FrOik:a

58Bladl·

t25-.g
tHMai,S-

board•
51hhafe
60 F1ytng

8t llll-.m
oymllol .

83P-foro

and Woody

t28Uft

'

130Re••w'•
131Qu.. , ...

t32TOk-at

portrait
88 Eldst

t35Ear1h'o

87 Abbr. on I
lhlp

t37W-

88Grotlfytng
70S- .
71 S&lt;ft, tor
offtcorl .

-

728!&lt;111

73 Right of

75L-.,g

n-ru11

utoltlto

v0hldo

t38 Ooorn
t«&lt;-

'"'line

IC2Ex!at

143Vt44BaM _

_

145NFLIIon

t47 Eamt
t48

,;dru ,
ar1 of a qt .

�..
'

•

"'"

..

"'

. . ...

.. .

...

.

...

..

.

•

~

•

'·••Page-D-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
t

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

~ t ep.s ...·a ~allipolili

l)iar)' - - - - - - - - - - - .

Pierce D. McCreedy orates
todJJy for historical sopiety
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
:.GAWOIJS- Deb Fox scheduled
tbe 40th aMiversary of the Gallipolis
P.l"l of the siate Highway Patrol for
.!\:reminiscent feature story on Page
()le of the Bsection this Sunday.
;·And the Gallia County Historical
Society at 2:30 this afternoon will
l1ear City Cllmmlssioner Pierce D.
McCreedy on the same subject, a
history of the Patrol in Gallia County. McCreedy was one of the original
qfficers bere, starting In 1941 in
Mandy Bean's brick house across
Second Avenue from St. Peter's
Episcopal Church.
;:n•s the banquet hall of this church
there the historical society will hold
if regular meeting. The society
every third Sunday afternoon
al 2:30, and Nov. 15 clearly is the
tlurd Sunday.
: Maj.-Gen. George .E. Bush (U. S.
Army ret.) is the president of the
Sllciely, and he will preside not only
at the 2:30 session but also at the
l)oard meeting all p.m. in a smaller
.Wm in St. Peter's annex.

.,...Is

; ERMEL V. WOODYARD, Patriot
Star Route, has promised some
Photographs of the Gallipolis Public
1!quare. at Hood-tide. She's not sur~
What Hood, but thinks it may be the
1913 inundation. Ennel was Crown
City correspondent of the Gantpolis
newspaper when the late Mrs. C. E.
Sheets wrote Blue Lake News Notes.
. ; Ennel's middle name is Valentine, which was the middle name of
Harry Sanns, Lesage, W. Va., her
father's best friend. Her father, Vin!on Rankin, died in 1932. Ennel's
brother is also Vinton Rankin of
Crown City, and be was the middle
tine of five children - two sisters
Older than be and two younger. Joan
llie&lt;i 15 years af!O. Errnel was the
j!Jdest. The other two sisters are
Mrs. Glenn (Elsie) Soles, who lives
US 35 out by the Shake Shoppe,
and Mrs. Lester (Kathryn) Sponagle

oo

of Crown City.

side the

book with the cov.r picture

reported J;ight under the Bob Evans

GALUPOU -yes, that's spelled
correctly: omit the last "s"- is the shot. Let's ten you more abOut that
name of a peninsula in European later.
Turkey. The map shows that lt runs
ARTHUlt W. Lanham, whose adthe length of the Dardanelles, a
dress
is Konl Pusat, Seneyan, Jakarnarrow body of water connecting the
ta,
Indonesia,
wrote to Executive
Sea of Mannara with the Aegean
Hobe
Wilson
a month ago lor
Editor
Sea, and it also shows a city GallipoD
up near the northeastern neck of the · Hobe to tell Howard Baker Saunders
peninsula. The dictionary says that that he (Lanham) got a hole-in-Me
it's pronounded Gal-UP·pol·lee, on a golf course right back of his
house. It took a month for the letter
heavy accent on the second syllable
to get here, but ye olde ex-coach at
and a lesser accent on the last
Rio Grande College wrote this:
syllable.
AU this was prompted by a ·tw&lt;&gt;... Golf is great here. K..O.N.I. (the national
colwnn adv the hoss !)rought in, sport cornmtttee I work for) ha.n beautlfull&amp;.cOW'Je Joa.t~ jlllt behind my house. Tht
which shows a guy with his lace tur- OOie
real nice thing II Lhat I have free membeOiftip
ned 'to the sky, and under him the there. Tell Howard 8. SaWll';le.-. that I recorded
my ftrst hole-in-one. I....-. playinw very weU now ;
words, "A Peter Weir Film ol
course, 1 get a lot of praciJce here ...
Gallipoli, produced by Robert Stig·
Art also plays softball and had to
wood and Patricia LoveD. Directed
by Peter Weir. A Paramount Pic- finish his letter so that he could gel
ture." It's from an out-of-town news- ready for a game Oct 19, date of his
newly arrived letter. The weather is
paper. It reads, "Starts tornotTow !"
abnost perfect, be wrote.
Don't know when or . where,
He serves as director of the
however.
AI the top"it reads, "From a place American coaches with the United
you never beard of ... a story you'll States Sports Academy. Lanham
has been traveling all over In·
never forget."
donesia
visiting coaches and
II Peeps remembers his World
recruiting
players for the national
War I history correctly, Winston
team,
which was to combasketball
Churchill was a member of .the
pete
in
the
Asian
basketball ch8mcabinet of Dayid Uoyd George in
1915 and 1916, and Winnie came up
pionship. The tournament was to be
with idea of landing troops on the in India in November, and from
there they were to go to Manilo for
Gallipoli peninsula to separate
the
South East Asian games . in
Turkey from its friends, Bulgaria,
·
December.
His letter had one small
Austria-Hungary, and Germany.
note
of
homesickness;
see if you
The troops landed and the Turks pinned them down promptly. The ven- agree when you re!'d this part, inviting everybody to visit him:
ture failed.
YOU'LL FIND one beautiful book
in the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library of Gallia County:
"Ohio a picture book to remember
her by!' Back cover of the dust
jacket shows tbe Public Square witti
the band stand, and there's a picture
of Bob Evans farm at Rio Grande in-

Nov. 15, '"'

Mayors get economy t&amp;Jk
By DAVID CHANDLER
aald 511.4 percent of the city's 112,844
Auoelated Preu Writer
voters turned out.
MIAMI (AP) - Maurice Ferre,
Ferre, . 46, was accompanied
Miami's Puerto Rl~born mayor, around town Tuesday by poUce
won a fifth tenn Tueaday with a bodyguards aasijpled after he repor'DIId victory over Manolo Reboso, ted receiving death threats. Earner, ·
mo . had lirged voters to "vote his C&amp;mpalgn headquartel'l waa rot).
.::Uhan"ln an emotlon-dlarged race. bed and vandall2ed, and tear gaa
. Ferre held a 57 percent to 43 ~ was thrown into the honie of a
cent lead with 73 of rr
Reboso supporter.
.
reporting, taking 25,202 votes to
Reboso had couried Miami's
Rebcso's 18,985. Election offlclala 40,000 Hispanic voters, while Ferre

precinfts

counted an ltrOnC bec:khiiJ lrll1l the
city's 33,000 blacll ¥GWs .00 11
majority of the olhero.

Educator Demetrio"Perez Jr. held

The biiyl- -inthe'Mlfldaehh~
1

•

'
THIRD AVENUE
446-7886

j-------------;----------"'--''-'-----'--::....;___.;,__

Why don't YOU be that company?
Go to Jakarta and visit the Red. men's old coach- he who held that
position long~r than anyone else in
105years: ArthurW. Lanham.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
. 1981 BUICK REGAL
O_nly 5,049 low miles. Loaded with cruise, tilt J.heel,
v.nyl top.
. . ..

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES
.

I

..

.

AM·FM·casset~e. ~-40 seat,

new

'

SAVE 30%

•

"

.
d.
I
M
1 .u time •a announces earnmgs
'

'

'

f

GREENVILLE, S. C. - Wilson C. an effective lower tax rate and adWearns, chairman and · chief ditional capitalized interest in the
executive officer of Multimedia, fourth quarter," Wearn said.
For the nine months ended Sept.
Inc., announced today earnings for
the third. quarter ending Sept. 30 30, earnings were $17,884,000 com·
were f8,851 ,000, a 22 percent in· pared to$15,108,000, an 18 percent in·
crease over the $5,472,000 earned in · crease. Earnings per share '!ere
$1.76 compared to $1.50, a 17 percent
the third quarter of 11180.
Earnings per share were 85 cents increase. Revenues ror the nine
for the quarter compared with 54 months were 20 percent ahead of the
cents, a .20 percent increase. first nine months of last year for a
Revenu.S increased 22 percent to total of $140,953,000 compared with
$4.9,759,000 compared with $117,391,000.
Tlie board of directors declared a ·
$40,830,000.
The recognition of substantial in" divided of 151'.! cents per share
vestment tax credits, due to in- payable Nov. 16 to shareholders of
creased capital ·expenditures and record as of Nov. 2. Dividends for
the capitalization of certain interest 1981 total 62 cents per share comexpense incurred in connection with ·pared to 54 cents for last year, a 15
the c!onstj'uction of cable television percent increase.
The board, at a regularly
systems, contributed significantly to
meeting, elected Richard
scheduled
the difference in a gain of 16 percent ·
T.
Dugan,
62, to serve as a dicector
in peratlng profits to the gain of 22
"
of
the
corporation.
Dugan is
percent in ne.t income.
president
of
Cincinnati
BeD,
Inc:, a
"We anticipate a continuation of
-.1"

.1'~·~ "

.

.

•

position he has held since 1974.
Dugan joined AT&amp;T in 1946 alter
having served in the Air Force
during World War 11. Dugan
received a bachelor's degree from
Montclair Stale College in New Jer·
sey and completed · graduate
programs at WilliBJII!l College and
Columbia.University.
Dugan serves on several boards
including Union Central Life In·
surance Company and The Central
BancorporaUon, Inc. He resides in
Cincinnati.
.
Simultaneously, · W. W.
McEachern, 76, announced his
retirement from the board.
McEachern had been a director sin·
· ce 1970. Multimedia, Inc.- publishes
13 daily and 25 non-daily newspapers, including the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Pomeroy-Middleport
Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant
Register and The Sunday·Times
Sentinel.

I,

:N{jres·,-r~cord·-·:enrollnu~nt rise
.COLUMBUS - . state college and possible to estfmate .
Enrolbnent patterllll varied con·
university . enrollments have
siderably
among ·institutions . 1
reached a record high 386,609, an inTechnical
colleges
again showed the
crease of 4,149 students over fall
greatest
groW\h
of seven percent;
1980.
Chancellor Edward Q. "Moulton · community colleges two percent;
described the one percent incr~ase university branches four percent;
as a slowing of growth when com- while universities remained stable.
pared to ibe four percent and five Of the senior illlltitutions, only
percent increases of the last two Akron, Toledo and Kent showed
measurable growth while Bowling
years.
Green and Ohio State decliped by
He noted this slowing trend was design to stay within statutory
consistent with the regents' own enrolbnent ceilings.,
The regents also approved a threeurging that illlltitutions stabilize
year
tuition reciprocity agreement
enroUments and hold back program
lor
selected graduate . and
expansion in light ~ the limited
professional
programs at 'the
resOurces available m the. mtenm
University
of
Cincinnati
and Nor·
bU!Iget.
·
them
Kentucky
University
effective
Just how many students were tur·
Jan.
I.
The
agreement
will
provide
ned away or discouraged from at·
residents
of
Clermont,
Hamilton
and
tendance by high fees, he said, i• im·

CJ..EVELAND- It's not ju•'l price ·of generic ·products - those "Wl·
that attracts peOple to low-cost branded," stripped down products,
generic products, according to two often in plain wrappers - ~~ts
Cleveland Stale University across income lines. People with
money to spare are just as likely to
professors.
·CSU marketing professors Ronald buy them as those who , mt~~~l watch
every penny.
L. Zallocco and Robert W. Cook have
young people are.more likely to be
found that shoppers also take into
account tbe qusllty of the goods, and attracted to tbe generic goo_ds, they
what they look, smell and·taste like conclude.
Cook and Zallocco are in the midst
. when they buy. How the products
three-part study. They conare packaged is important, too, they -~
ducted
a blind taste test comparing.
learned.
The.professors say that the appeal a generic peanut butter tp various

a

.

.

CHESHIRE - L. R. Ford, Jr.,
plant. manager at OVEC's Kyger
Creek plant, is announcing the
retirement of one of its veteran employees, Olen W. Neal, who left the
company Nov. I.
· Nesl joined Kyger Creek In
November 1954 as a tractor-diesel
operator in the yard department He
later· advanced to crane operator .
and then to assistant yard super·
visor before being promoted•to yard
supt'rvisor. tbe position he held until
now .
Before joining OVEC, Neal
worked for the Central Operating
Co. !Philip Sporn plant) In New
Haven and the Appalachian Power
Co. in Point Pleasant for a total of
5V, years, giving him a total of 321'.!
years in the electric utility induatry.
A native of Henders9n, Neal served with the U. S. Navy from M'y
194t throughDecember 1946. He is a
member of U'le American '· Legion,
and he and his w\fe pauline reside at'
2409 ML ·vernon Ave., Point"
Pleasant.

.

'

"

Warren counties in Ohio to enrt;)ll in
M.Ed., J.D., M.L.S. and M.S.W.
degree programs at North~rn Ken·
lucky at in-state tuition ra\es.
Similarly, ·residents of Boone,
Campbell and Kenton counties in
Kentucky will be able to enroll in
Ph.D., Ed.D., D.Sc., D.M.Ed.,
D.M.A., Pharm. D., M.A., M.S.,
M.M., M.F.A., M.A.T., M.C.P., and
J.D. degree programs at the Univcr·
sity of Cincinnati at in-state rates.

The purposes of the.agreement arc
to continue to improve post·
baccalaureate educational op ..
portunities for residents of northern
Kentucky and the greater Cincinnati ·
area at minimal cost, toavoid costly
duplication of education programs
and to maxirni~e u~ of exu;tmg
facilities .

Details generic popularity

.•

employee
•
ret:tres

Sohio executives said last month
The main office toWer with higb. that Sqhio el)lecla in 11181 to earn rise setbacks will lace Pllblic Square
CLEVELAND (API - Alton W. more than the ,1 .8 billion net ear· . pnd cup the confluence of the two
Whitehouse, Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) nlngs it reported last year. Owned 53 main Cleveland avenues- Superior
percent by the Britiah Petroleum Co. and Euclid - In a "V" shape, on a
board chairman, uld be hopes a
huge corporate headquarters . Ltd·. of Great Britain, Sohlo is the north-south p!ane.
Architect Gyo Obata said the
project ' 1)1rill stir the imaglnatioD&amp; of nation's largest producer of
fellow Clevelanders and gparl&lt; an domestic oil, mainly on the strength building ill designed to keep the inera of' redevelopment and of its 700,1l00-barre~a-day Alaska tegrity of Cleveland's skyline by
· complementing but not detracting
revitalizll.tlon for the downtown . crude oil production.
The project will be a symbol of · from Tennlnal Tower, a 750-foot lar&gt;area." .
'
Sohlo ' unveiled plans Wednesday · Sohio's "long-term commitment to dmark bunt in lh&lt;\19208.
Groundbreaklng at !he site,
for the f&amp;.fioor doWntown cdrporate the city we have called home for 111
acquired through months of
Headquarters · described as the yea,rs," the chairman said.
The complex, cpmposed of a nine- negotiations. wtth present owners
largest sihgle building project in city ·
story, concave-shaped atrium ~nd tenants, would begin next sum-·
1.istory. ·
,
The cost, estimated at $200 million building lor offices and retail shops mer. The building would be com·
or more: is doubl~ the figure Sohio and an adjoining concave 650-foot of. pleted by mid-1985, Whitehouse said.
gave wlien it first announced the lice building, is designed by tbe Sl _ Whitehouse said the structure
Louis architectural firm of would house 2,600 or more Sohio emproject earlier this year.
.
ployees now scattered in eight dil·
Whil.ellou!e said the original Henmuth, Obata x Kassabaum Inc.
Joe
Wagner,
Cleveland's
law
ferent Cleveland office ,buildings.
figure was the "combination of a
The
company several years ago had
director,
described
,
the
project
.as
naive estimate and a bigger project
"the
largest
ever
in
the
history
of
plans
to build a skyscraper behind
than we !lad estiiDated.''
Cleveland."
the Terminal Tower.

'

.

Plant

headquarte~s

By Hi:NBY s·. ACKERMAN
Allodated Prell Writer

~
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO

plan~

·sohio

FREE "VCR MADE EASY" BOOK
helps you determine what VCR
and camera features suit your
video taping .needs. Come in for
your free copy, while supplies lastl ~ ~

WGNAVOX ·

Nov. 15, 1981

,i'ile sunday Times·Sentinet ·

alllm lead.river Xavier Suarez In~
other at.-large election. ·
•
.
'

... This is a beautiful place for a vacation. I
have plenty or room, a maid, cook and driver 80 I
would welcome some company ...

SALE

Page-

Two other COIIIIIlissiGn aeala were
at stake, with Miller llawtlns, a
communtty CoiJelle admlnlltratot,
tatting IIU pes cent of the vole 8pin.
st Lula Morse in early returna ill bls
bid to malnt.ln 18 years of billet
,CGIIIrol of one seat.

..

national brands and store brands.
One national brand was far . and
away t~e favorite --: but the generic
product did as well as any of !he
others, they found.
The second part of their research
involve'&lt;! interviewing 150 grocery
shoppers. Shoppers were asked what
product qualities most influenced
tlieir buying decisions, how often
they bOught the selected products
and how they would rate the dif·
ferent brands as having the qualities
they considered important.

Bob Evans
promotes 2
COLUMBUS - Promoted to
foreman at the Bob Evans Farms
sausage production plant in Bidwell
NEW SOHlO HEADQtJARTERS- Standard Oil Co. ol Ohio iSOHIO).
are David Morgan, 30, Rio Grande, •
Chai1111an of the Board Alton Whitehouse, righl, and architect Gyo Obata,
and Leroy Wonn, 40, Crown City, an,
.left, stand behind a model ol the proposed Sohio corporate headquarteni
nounces B~ Call, vice president of·
during the announcement Wedoesday in Cleveland. Sohio piau. to Spt'nd
production for the saussge division
$200 million to build the 46 •tory structure on the ea•t side of downtown
of Bob Evans Farms Inc.
Cleveland's Public Square. I AP Lascrphotu).
Morgan wi.ll be responsible for the
sausage room at the Bidwell plant,
where he has worked since 1971
when he started with Bob Evans
Farms.
Wonn has been promoted to kill
.
floor foreman, having worked in the
area 18 years prior to his promotion.
He started with the company in 1116:!
' GALUPOUS - Hamlin C. King', · who in American Colleges ' and on night crew at the sausage plant.
~~~y. at law, would ~ to an:
Universities." She graduated from
,liounce that Barbar~ .A- Wallen, at· Rio Gra~de in 1977, Swnma Cum
reports
tol'fl'!yatlaw, is now assOciated with Laude.
his law offices" at 512 Second Ave.,
Wallen attended Ohio Nmthern
McKEESPORT, Pa. - G. C. MurGallipolis.
Law School, Ada, Ohio, and is a phy Co. sales. of $&amp;1,359,000 for the
Wallen greduated from Gallia recent admittee to the Ohio state four-week period ending Oct. 29
Academy High School in the top 10 bar. Wallen has participated in were down $!182,000, or 1.5 percent
percent of her class in 197~. She at· sever·allocal theater productions, in- lower lhan for the corresponding
tended Rio Grande College·and Com· eluding "Gallia Country" and "A period a' year earlier, Murphy
munity College.
Funny Thing Happened on the Way President and Chief Executive of.
While there, sbe served as to the Forwn ." She has worked at fleer Charles H. Lytle announced r
president of Pi Kappa Delta, a Rio Grande College and in Gallipolis today.
national speech fraternity, as vice Municipal Court.
Sales of $557,632,000 for the J9..
president of the Grande Chorale, a
week period ending Oct. 29, were up
She is the daughter of Jacqueline
select singing group, and a president
Wallen of Gallipolis and Dr. Edward $10,320,000, or 1.89 percent higher
of her sorority, Zeta Theta Chi.
than for the same period in 1980.
Sbe was en-editor of the Rio Gran- Wallen of Carlinville, Ill., and
October sales were generated
'de College newspaper and was in- resides at 30 Evans Heights, from 441 stores in 1981, which is 16
cluded in the 1977 edition of "Who's Gallipolis.
fewer than in 1980. Of the total number of stores, 106 were Murphy's
Marts
in 1981, compared with 103 in
.
1980
and
335 were conventional
The loct:tl business school is in ils
GALLlPOUS - Leo Blackburn,
stores,
compared
with 3M last year.
president of Gallipolis Business 18th year and now has branches in
College, said the school's ricxt term ·Jackson and Portsmouth, with a
will start Monday, Jan. 4, with 200 total enrollment of 350 students. The
St•rvi &lt;'t' plt•ase
students expected in both day and school is licensed by The Ohio State
Board of School and Collcg~
evening classe~ .
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - More
Subjects offered will include RL' Registration. accredited by the AL' than 90 percent of all vehicles
counting (all levels), typing (all crcditirig Commission or the probably have at lea&gt;'t one abnonnal
levels), shorthand"(alllevelsl, com- Association of Independent Coll•·~es tirt~·wear problem that requires se~·
mun'ications, business math, com.. and Schools, approved for financial vicing.
puter scien\~e, · word proce!ising, a1d by the U.S. Office of Educalion,
Ar•;lrcr Green, president of Master
business law, psycholop, sociology and approved for the trainin ~ of Autu Service, says "Without ser- ·
and secretarial procedures.
Vietnam veteqms. He sa id many
vicing, the driver risks premature
Blackburn said the computer colleges now accept GBC credits
wear of the tire.' '
science and wo~d , processing toward a baccalaureate degret~.
programs would be conducted by
Data Systems Unlimited, a new'
. eompany formed by William Cantrell and Paul Taylor. Special
microcOmputer sessions are being
planned for office managers a~d of·
fice' employees of the area. These
pra;tgrams will be oHcrCd on weektmds and evenings.

Wallen
begins
.
legal practice

Murphy

GBC tenn hegins Jan. 4
.

(

.

~:::vs

SAVE 30%

IIOV. 28TH

OUR FINE QUAUTY DECORAUA DRAPES BY DECORATOR IND.
e Buy any width, any length, any .
fullness
• Have 4" double heading
1 Hand sewn permanent pleats
• Blend stitched hems
14" Double bottom hems
e Folded lor nsy Installation

• Choose from hundreds of patterns
and colors including_ ll!cquuds,
sheers, florals, solid colors and'
open weave fabrics
• Lined or unlined
• Brln'g In your measurements• .
Select the pattern and celor tNt's
best lor you and save 30'16 now.

A

CUS10M BEDSPREADS
TO MATal AVAILABli-M Off
.
.

I

'.

ELBERFELDS
IN
.
•

EROY

PR&lt;~Ga.UII-G.JP ' lwcb,wMprtlllleMeDonald'• ReltaiUIIIll, GeDIJ llo, ,.., IIJd llellip+ ..
e•ellell
Jim Olbone, leh, aad Jaclde ~ ri..l, • &lt;GIIJiiW ta be .......
cagers "bo slaad oallllllinlwood -*lll.eaell wnk. C•rbei will mate
the decisions 011 who wW fteelve lbe a...nfl.

......_,!

.~ .

•

�Page-E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi&amp;-Point Pleasant.

w. va.

Nov. 15, 1981

Survey• reveals farmers' telephone
~ills have jumped 10 percent in '81

Nov. 1

.Agriculture and
'our community

•

By DON KENDAlL
•AP Farm Writer
: \'iASHINGTON (AP) - Fanners'
telephone bills jwnJ&gt;ed 10 percent
ttlls· year, almost three times as
lliiiCh as lhe gain In 198(1, as compi,red to only a 3.4 percent gain in
• • an annual survey by the
-'!lirfcuJture.Department says.
·Monthly electric bills paid by far~ were up 13 percent, slightly
fteter than last year's 12 percent
lflln, the report showed.
• Jbe annual sampling, which · is
lflede during the sununer, Includes a
~th c:heck of a family's most
reeent telephone and electric bills.
'l'lte slate and national averages are
. !bon published by the department's
Grop Reporting Board.
· On the average, this year's
telephone blll was $29.90 a month,
compared wlth $27.10 last year, the
report said. That Includes charges
for long distance and extension
pllones. The local portion was $11.50
for the month, up only 6.5 percent
from 19110.

The 111110 Increase was ~ .4 percent
from the year before.
Some of the highest phone bills
were In the Weot, where longdistance calling often ls common.
The monthly bill in Wyoming, for
example, 'averaged $47.90 - . which
included a $14 local charge. But
Rhode Jsbind, where open spaces
are at a premiwn, was close at an
average of $4G.20 for a mon\h, including a $14.60 local charge.
Other states where farmers and
ranchers paid more than $40 a·month this year for telephone service, included Arizona, $44.60; Colorado,
$40.60; New Mexico, $42.20,; and
Texas, $41.!10.
According to the 48-state survey Alaska and Hawati were not listed ('Jhio farm families had the smallest
telephone biD, an average of $20.50 a
month, which included $11.80 local
charges.
Others on the lower end included
Misaouri, ·$23.90; North Carolina,
$23.50; Pennsylvania, $23.40; Tennessee, $21.30, and West Virginia,

$22.10.

Looking at electric bills, farmers
actually used less electricity this
ye&lt;~r, averaging 1,307 kilowatt hoqn
a month against 1,313 Iii 1980.
But the cost per kwh of electricity
rose to a national average of 5.34
cents, compared with 4.72last year.
The report said the national
average electric bill, was $69.80 a
month, up from $61.90 In 1980.
Fanners in Arizona · paid the
biggest electric bills, averaging $~90
.a month for 2,500 kwh. The average
cost was 7.7 cents per kwh.
California producers, who used
more electricity - 2,800 kwh - paid
$151a month and 5.4 cents per kwh.
But farmers in Wasllington state
topped them all , using an: average of
2,890 kwh during the survey month.
Their bills, however, averaged only
$66.50 or only 2.3 cents per kwh.
Other states where farmers had
big monthly electric bills included
Connecticut, $104 for 1,650 kwh or 6.3
cents per kwh; Delaware, $108 for
1,500 kwh or 7.2 cents per kwh;

Fall corn harvest trails
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - This fall's
corn harvest is trailing the usual
pace for this time of year, but gover·
nment crop watchers say good

percent finished, trailing the
average of 82 percent for this time,
the weekly report said.
No production estimates are in-

Florida, $123 for 1,600 kwh or 7.7 cents per kwh; New ~. $120
for 1,1KJfl ll:wh or 7 cenlll per kwh;
New Jersey, 106.20 for 1,2110 kwh or
8.5 cents per kwh; Vermont, $120 for
2,480 kwh or 5.1 cellls per kwh; 8lld
Wisconsin, $101 for 1,900 kwh or 5.3
cents per kwh.

Big cheese
LOS ANGELES (AP) - No other
state in the union conswnes more
cheese than California.
Residents of tbe Golden State each
year conswne, on a per capita basis,
29 pounds 'of cheese or II pounds
more than the national average according to the Californls Milk' Advlsocy Board. Thls conswnption is
about the.same as found in Europe,
the board adds.
Even milk consumption in California exceeds the national per capita
average by 15 qua~. says the

report.

usu~l

pace

~

·
bushels, up 22 percent from last .soybean harvest at 2.11 billion
year's drought-reduced harvest· of bushels, up 20 percent from 1_79
6.65 bUlion bushels. ·
billlon harvested In 1980.
The October report also put the

Ry RRYSON R.l RUIJi CARTER

Gallia Cnunty Extensinn Agt•nt
GAWPOIJS - Remember when
received your soil teat report
thls Spring? Did you have any dif·
ficulty in figurlnf! out which fer·
Wlzer analysla to use and how much
to apply?
The first session of our Gallla
County Fertilizer &amp;hool (Nov. 17)
will be devoted to determining how
much and what kind of fertilizer to
apply in many situations. We'll also
cover other points oo your soil test
report. John Underwood and I wlll
be doing the teaching. The school ·
will be held at the Senior Ci!izens
Center next to the County Garage
)'911

starting at 8 p.m.
The second session (Nov. 24) wiD
feature a thorough discussion of
Nitrogen - what it does - where it
goes and characteristics of Nitrogen
Fertilizers. Dr. Jay Johnson, OSU
Extension Agronomist (Soil Fertility)willbetheteacber.
Fertilizer is a High Return ·input!
It can amount to as much as 20 percent of total production ccots. But,
some authorities.say it results in 30
to 50 percent of your crop produclion.
'
Plan to attend. Bring your soil test
report if you wish,

Government accepts poultry petition
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Broiler Council says tbe
govenunent has offlclally accepted
a petition challenging pOultry export
subaidies paid ·by ll)e European
. Conunon Market.

According to the council, the U.S.
Trade Representative's office has
notified the grilup that the petition
has been accepted and that "consultations have been requested"
with Common Market officials as a

ministration to put pressure on the
. Common Market to stop the subsidles.
The poultry people said ·tbe subsidles allow tbe Common Market to

. fi:::::watt. council president.
cautioned that "thls is just a first in
a series of hurdles that must be
cleared before tbe U.S. poultry Industry can compete on a fair and
equitable basis in the world

di:~~~J~;It:~

~~~~~~-in
cl~~the-~~~.~tber~~~~~~========~=====~===~~~e~=~t!u~.s~.p~rt~-~·~----~~~r~~~···-------~
spme
areas to make rapid progress.
Agriculture
Department was
The government's Joint
Agricultural Weather Facility said
'larvestlng in the major com states
as of Nov. 8 was about 70 percent
cOmplete. Normally, it said, about 80
percent has been harvested by then.
Soybean harvesting was about 76

scheduled to issue Its monthly update of 1981 crop production - ineluding corn and soybeans - late
today.
A month ago, the department's
Crop Reporting Board estimated the
com crop at a record 8.08 billion

Fann Bureau to celebrate
during 63rd annual .rp.eet
OOLUMBUS - Farm Bureau
lnemben throughout Ohio will
gather In Columbus Nov. 30-Dec. 2to ·
celebrate their "Pride In Produclion" at the 63rd 81U)ual meeting of
the Ohio Fann Bureau Federatioo
(OFBF) at the Ohio Center.
Deputy Secretary, U. s. Department of Agriculture, Richard Lyng
and Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes
will address the more than 1,500
Farm Bureau members at the three
day meeting
·
The f...:Otion wilk&gt;present Its
Distinguished Service to Agriculture
awardtoDr.RoyM. Kottman,dean
of !be College of Agriculture, Home
Economics and Natural.~ources
at Olllo State'UniversitY. The award
is given to a leader in agriculture
who has made long standing con·
tributloris to the profession.
In addition high school vocational
agriculture ~chers James Faust of
Peebies !Ugh &amp;boo! and Robert MeBride of Hardin-Northern !Ugh
School will receive the Cooperative
Educator award for their develop-

ment ol a teaching curriculum on
cooperatives.
Also, the 1981 Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation Outstanding Young
Farm Couple will be named during
the meeting.
The meellnl! begins at 11 :30 a.m.
Monday, Nov. 30, and the allef!lOO
features four special sessions
geared for the livestock farmers,
grain producers, young farm
couples and farm Bureau women.
Monday evening a Harvest
Banquet will be held with entertalmnent and a selection of songs
by the Ohio _Farm Bureau -Youth
Cholf.
Tuesday, Dec. 1, electio~ of Farm
B~u district trustees wtll be ~ld
and m the ~moon !be 450 off1cial
voting delegates will begin lo decide
state and national policy for the
organization for tbe corning year.
Mao. on Monday, a special on~
day Farm Bureau youth sess1on wtll
be beld and a special on&lt;Hiay conference will be held for Farm
Bureau young farm couples.

Medication for skin disorder
may ,not be available untill981
NUTLEY N.J. (AP) - A
prescription' acne medication for
two serious, scarring forms of the
skin 'disorder ~y not be available
until mid-11182 at the earliest, the
drug's mimufacturer says.
Hoffman-LaRoche Inc. has appliedtotltefedera!FoodandDrug
.
tlon to sell tbe treaiment
Administra
'

Accutane. It was developed to fight
cystic acne and keratinization disorders,
Hoffman-LaRoche
spokeswoman Carolyn Glynn satd
Wednesday.
•
"There is excitement about the
drug because there Is no previous
acne, she satd.

Ry RETIIE CI.ARK
Extension Agt.•nt.

F.rnnumi('S

some re-arranging to create a more
spacious feeling. A desk with just
one end against the wall placed so
the child can look out into the room
may be a better arrangement than
pushing the desk against the wall
with the child facing the closed-in
space.
After the study "place" ' is
arranged, talk with your child about
what supplies will be needed. Then
plan and arrange enough storage for
the supplies as well as adequate
lighting.
Also keep in mind that some
children like to read lying down or in
other ways besides sitting in a
straight chair at a desk. A comfortable chair near a window or even
a bean bag chair in the study area
may actually encourage your child
to read more. However, a flat hard
surface is still the best for writing
activities.
And don't forget the personal
touches. They make a child's area
more his or her own. For instance, a
favorite poster on the wall over the
desk, a bulletin board full of per·
sonal momentos or a sports pennant
can make a child feel cozy and "at
home" in the work space. Or
perhaps simply arranging the area
so the child can look out a favorite
window may do the trick.

lllld •

• ~11101" ol pllyliology at !he Ulllvenlty of CaUforala Medk

...,.

~i.e tine tl Ita 111111 were sold Ill Ja1 to • pl.a merelllat

(AP Laser-

.

Agriculture.
·
To become certified, youth must
participate in a special20-hour course. 'lbe
covers the principles
of safe operation and maintenance
of farm tractors and machinery.
Youth who complete the course and
pass a written test and skill test wiD
receive a certificate.
Tractor certification courses are

oourse

£~

~.ere

d youth :·.,:

.
•
'
conducted in many cowlties by the ment and !ben direct youth froin ·
vocational agriculture (Future Far- their county to the other counties PI
mers of America) and 4-H take the course," Pugh relates.
:
programs. The courses usually
Pugh points out that the ce'r ·
begin in early January and run for tification courses are not limited .10
several weeks. There is ofteo a sti, farm youth. Young people plllnnlnA
enrollment procedure and a dead- to work with landscape equipment
line.
and other industrial tractors shotild
"Some counties may not offer the also be certified. The training ean
course, but !bey still seek enroll- hell' reduce accidents, says Pugh. !

''

•'
''

By SALLY.JACOBSEN
capacity, including the lack of deep- lakes to get channelS dredged and severe national emergency.
Associated Press Writer
water po~ on the East Coast to ac- port facilities enlarged."
'
wASHINGTON (AP) , _ The commodate larger and more comMorris said the adminlstratiftl
United States, the world's largest petitive coal carriers.
In an effort to reassure foreign also is working to design a "fastcoal exporter, is not considered a
"We have to solve the delays in buyers, the admlnlstration an- track" system for reducing by abotlt
completely reliable source by getting coal transported," Morris nounced this summer a coal-export half the time it takes the governforeign buyers because of labor and said "We have to solve (the policy committing the United States ment to approve dredging projee~
transportation problems, 8 top Corll- problem of) the le~ of time it to honor coal contracts except in a for harbors and channels.
,.,
merceDepartmentofficialsays.
.-----------------------------------.,t,,;;...
But, adds William H. Morris Jr., •
~
assistant secretary for trade
'
~
development, that- Image is '!It&gt; proving and, despite a 72-&lt;lay strike
by miners, U.S. cOld exports ~re ex·
pectec1 to set a record in 1981 of more
than 90 million tons.
Morris said In a recent interview
that the biggest problem iii trying to
sell long-term U.S. coal contracts
abroad ls "Ilia! the customer does
not perceive us to be the molt
reliable (supplier)."
Foreign buyers have expressed
concern about future strikes, transportation coilts and ship-handling

.

..

PUZZLE MAN~ PaDie maker Steve Rlcbardson ol Norwich, Vt.,
holdl 1 151-plece creation with biB signature' pl-, a clown with hls
lnlllala on the baek. Rlebardlon, 42, a matbemaliclan, sells hls puzzleo to
an excllllllve clientele - the prices range up to $%,588. What makes them
different, ho ..ya, Is not only tbe use of band-painted mahogany; but

trlcb that are guaranteed to coufound even veteran jigsaw solven. (AP

Luerplleto).

.

Join

our1982

ChristJDBS aub~·
now• and we'll
.gtveyou a
present!

Behind the grime and the grin he's
got a mind. He's curious about
everything-far away places, what
he'll be when he grows up, what
famous people do and say. Introduce
him to the newspaper reading habit
and you'll help him find out, and give
him an extra edge in school and in
life. It's no coincidence that people
with more education, better jobs
and higher incomes are better ·
newspaper readers.
Sctu Dl, !del put iD • ....,. fGIIfeftDCe 'l'aeldly 1D WlllldJicleD to
111 ce 1111 flldblll ol • rare bini ellled lite ",ellow4tuated pl'l'
be a a ........ Tile ..,• .., bini foad .. Nnr a.m., 1111 110t beeo -

.Boat Division, General Dynamics Corp. in Grotoa Wednesday. The 554-:::-;
foot-long submarine holds 24 Trident missiles with a eapabWty of hitting
/ about 576 separate targets. (AP Laserph~to J.
·

U.S. isn't viewed overseas as reliable source of coal · ·

~nnie

• JI'IND8RARE BIRD- Dr. JaredDlamoad,a Callfonda omllbologfsl

...

.

.
COLUMBUS - Fourteen and 11'&gt;year-illds who will be working off the
home farm next year must be certified, says AI Pugh, Elllension
leader of safety at The Ohio State
University. Thls requirement is according to the Hazardous Qc.
cupatioo Regulations 1n Agriculture,
supervised by the labor division of
the United States Department of

ft·aturing

GALLIPOUS - Now that the
school year is well under way, the
kids may be loaded with homework.
'{hey may be more agreeable about
getting their work done if they have
a special area at hom ~ geared to
their needs.
And that may or may not mean a
desk placed in the corner of the
child's bedroom. Some children enjoy studying and doing other quiet
activities in a rather seclud'1d en·
virorunent. A desk pushed up again·
st tbe wall with good lighting tends
to cut down distractions. On the
other hand, some children require
more space to feel comforiable and
able to concentrate on their work. So
perhaps the dining room table wi.th more space to work and the
ojlen surrounding area - is more .
Conducive for doing school work for
some children.
For some children, an exact
f!lplica of the school work space may
~e the "fun" out of doing school
)YOrk at home. So before you arrange
a·.· study space, discuss the
. poosibilities with your child. For additional clues, note where your child
usually works on quiet activities and
hobbies.
If your child prefers an open environment, but a comer of a
bedroom is all that's available, do

USS OHIO COMMISSIONED- The uation's first operati-1 Trident
submarine, the USS Ohio, "as commissioned in ceremonies at Electric

T ractor certi•£•ICation
• program 0
trea~ntforthesesevereformsof
.

Homemakers'
Circle
Anybndy
Ht~mt.•

~·

....

You can give Santa
a big helping hand next
Christmas by joining the
Ohio Valley Bank Christmas
Club now.
'
·,;,= •~

Picture of a man about
to make a mistake. • •

a

Yol(ll be surprised at how fast the small amount you de'poslt each
week adds up. Then next Christmas that means a nicer surprise for
every.one on your shopping list.
.
. We'll even throw in a little surprise of our own: join the Christmas Club and we'll make the last payment tor yOu, Now that's the
spirit! Last payment free!

·He's shopping around for real "Bargain", but shopping
tor "price" alone isn't the wise way to find one. The retail
merchants ·in Gallipolis offer you price, quality and friendly
service. You see, the answer is in the store where the owner .
is there to serve you better ... Stop In soo~ and see what
Gallipolis has ....
IT'S ALL HERE ..• ,
....

Deposit each
Weelt-For
49Weeks

Every CHristmas Club Account is fully inspred.
By the wiy, we just mailed out 1981 Christmas
$ 1.00
Club checks. The total: $471,530.50.
s 2.00
'Now that's a lot of nice present' for a lot of nice
people. Make sure you're on the list tor Christmas, $ 3.00
s 5.00
1982. Just stop in any Ohio Valley Bank Office.
$10.00
$20.00
Four Great Locations to Serve You I

iunbar. 'limes- ientitll''

We help you cop\J.

...·"..

•••

'

••

Receive Next
··¥-rFor
Chrlstmu

s 50.00
s 100.00
$ 150.0Jt
s 250,119

$ 500.00
$1000.00
.,

..
t

r·

•

••

•

�I

·8- Th

Nov . 1

Woolen mill.first factory;
dye house still standing

•

..

'

Open Oaily 1H
Sundays 1-6

·

ou r
Reg

~

74

(300)

89C

little Debbie Snack CakeS .
DYE HOUSE from the Uniou Wooleu Mill, Gallipolis' first factory,
wblcb was built in 1848. Here's bow the dye h0118e looks today hack of 76
VineStreet.
'
.
was changed to the Star Woolen
By ~AMES SANDS
GAWPO!JS - Behind the Mills.
Competition with larger faciories
Gallipolis Tobacco and Candy Company at 76 Vine, there Is an in tile big cities finally forced the
interesting Jookin- ~~'ll}{~~-~~: ~~ Star Mills to close in 1880.
By 1890 the woolen mill had been
g old brick ·~
· · .i\,~
converted
to a shoe factory that embllilding. In aU ·
· · &gt;c;
ployed
over
liO people.
likelihood . this
, ·,
• .
The
following
year a fire
structure IS all
-:- ... ~ ; - ·
destroyed much of the main factory
that remains of
' building but the building in back of
Gallipolis ' first
Gallipolis Tobacco Copany again
factory - the
survived and went on to other uses.
Union Woolen
IN THE 1920S this small structure
Mill. The building
SANDS
was
used as storage for the Com
in question probably served as the
Bottling
Company which made soft
dye bouse.
drinks
in
the old woolen mill (what
It was in 1848 that Charles
was
Jell
of
it). In 1930 the remainder
Cre112et, Roman Menager, Augustin
l£Cierq, and Reuben Aleshire con- . of the woolen mill (except this little
structed on Vine Street between building) was tom down to make
Third and Fourth three buildings to way for · Mootz Bakery's new ·
house a steam powered woolen mill. building, which of course still stands
The main factory building was 60 and is used by Gallipolis Tobacco
feet by 35 feet and three stories high. and Candy.
In 1869 a second woolen mill was
The dye house was some 40 by Ia feet
built
on the comer of Second and
and the boarding house was 60 by 18
Spruce
and was knoW!) as Waddell,
feet.
Of the four owners Menager and Blazer and Company. The Halliday
LcClerq were sons of men who were family alBo had considerable in. a part of the French 500; Cruezet terest in this venture. Uke Union,
came to Gallipolis from ~·ranee (by the Waddell, Blazer firm manufacway of New York) in 1817 and tured Iinsey · .and stocking yarn, .
jeans, . flannels, Jlnd cleaned and
Aleshire was a Yankee.
dyed
wool, silk and cotton.
ONE OF mE first jobs o( these
lN
THE EARLY 1870s the two
inen was to bring in Stewart and
Dickey from Urbana, Ohio, to have Gallipolis Woolen factories became
charge of spinning and dyeing. the first mills west of the
Coming with Stewart and Dickey i\lleghenles to lnitaU the oew spinwere four inunigrants from England ning jil&lt;!b or so lbey claimed. Union
at Its height employed over 50 people
and two from Germany.
William Fisher, an inunigrant and WaddeD Blazer a few fewer. In
from Germany and 24, was a both cases 75 pereeut of the emcolorer. His brother Henry was 22 ployees were women. Waddel~
and a spinner. John Preston from Blazer and Com(IBDy also won
England was hired as the weaver, numerous awards for their work,
and Simeon Bradbury, Peter Warm- which continued 1111111 !881, when
by, and James Schofield of England they closed, again because of the
were spinners. Nicholas Souverant Inability to compete with massand Linzy Williams were hired as produced eastern garments.
laborers in generaL
The faetory complex at Seeond
THE WOOLEN MILL did all kinds and Spruce, which bas been tom
of work-coloring, dyeing, sp\Jming, down, weat lato the poaseaalon In the
carding, and even manufactured the late 1180s of a empaay that miule u
rloth that sold in Gallipolis' dry bandies. Tlsese handle&amp; were exgoods stores. Their jeans cloth was ported mostly to the European coonparticularly noteworthy as it won for tries.
them several prizes including the
A FIRE DISCOURAGED this
Woolen Manufacturers award in company in 1891 and the woolen mill
1868; the Cincinnati El&lt;jlOSition stood idle untillll95 whim the newly
award in 1870, '72, '75 and '76; and organized company known as the
the coveted Vienna, Austria, Ex: Thompsoo-Francis Foundry and
Stove Company did e~tensive
position's medal of merit in 1873.
In 1870 a fire destroyed the mill repairs and "began a lengthy
factory (then operated by F. A. and association with Gallipolis that
J. L. l,eC!erq ) with damages lasted un'tilt937. Later the Ga!Upolis
estimated at $50,000. The office, dye Stove and Foundry operated here.
We are not sure, hliwever, when this
bouse and storage were saved.
IN 1871 UNION Mill rebuilt but by factory building was finally tom
18'13 they ere forced to incorporate in · down.
· , · t
. (II you want to write to Jameo
order to bring in more capital. In
1
18'16 the miJ1 on Vine Street was sold Sands, his address Is llol92, Clarks·
to the Kenriedy family and the name burg, Ohio 43115.)

. L· iti e o ebb le
Delici ou s
~atrnea l, and
SW iSS roi\S,
vani lia cakeS.

•
(30 ~· \

3.55 ~~~-

1 77

4.96

Misses' Turtlenec;k Tops
The perlect topping for pa nts or

For good-tasting foods from your
kitchen ' Quality Cnsco • cook ing·
fryi ng oi l at savings Save row.

skirls. Of soff spun polyester in ex·
citing new pnnts. Sa ve now.

' f l OZ

a.
9.97

e.

T204B

9.97
13-19

(308)

8.93

63.88

Sale (306)

Price
1 .
Salle! 38-oz: Crisco • 011

Our Reg .
78 .87
1

Spring Fresh Humidified 'Air
West Bend humidifier with
easy roll casters, automat ic
on-off sw itch, convenient top
fil ling.

A _guide to 11;rea entertainment

b.
9.97

a.2·sllce Toaster. Colo r ·
, c ant101. sna p-open tray.
b. Steam/Dry Iron. Light.
we ight. Uses tap water.
c. 3·speed Hand Mixer.
2 c hrome beaters and
p ush- button eiecf
d. Electric Can Opener.
Flip-top magnet holds lid.

lil!tings

Faine, ·
page 14
•

A.gesS
And UP

22.88 (312)

Bumbling aoxlng '

lhelullon •· Camara

Watcntne light!
Wind-up boxer.

Fully-autamaHc . InStant
Polaroid' c amera.

Cards
Made from your
favorite negative

25
50
75
100

Olfr Reg .

1.97

abox

Remington Slugs

Add 2.50 for print
or slide, or for
name imprin·
tin g.

page6

TV Mailbag, ·
147.88 lliJ)
nme·Zaro .. Car:1era
Polaroi d ···Model 2.. w1th

2 pack Focal AashBars

au to ma t1c focusing.

For Dishes

!Grease cut.
tng . no-onorPhorus formu.
Ia. Save :

IOJM•••

ca- .-vere mdGrmadGallnmlce

'

t

688
I

.

.
•

MicanaWood~ ,.

. ood creeper; sturQuahiY w ~~eadrest, swivel

dv.

WYPC joins _BSO's lOOth
Seroing Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties ·

Shop Hours:
Daily 9-6
Thurs. 9-7
Closed Sundays

our Reg .
\1.89 I 1

page 15

(314)

causes damage to unborn child
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP ) !.... not commonly seen in fetal alcohol
Univenlty of North Carolina scien- syndrome.
tists say they have new evidence
"Most scienllsts · who study
.that one or two episodes of heavy alcohol-induced blr\h defects have
drlnk1ng by a woman early in been concerned witb chronic expregnancy can seriously damage posure to alcohol,:' Ms. Sulik said.
her unborn child.
"But with that approacb, it has been
The evidence indicates the con- imposaible to pinpoint the alages in
ditloo known as lela! alcohol syn- pregnancy when injury OCCIIfl.
dnlme may begin as early as the
"MOlt of them lliiYe believed that
third week after conception - · well if you damage the embryo very
before mOlt women suspect they are early in development, then it cannot
JftSIIIIIl
survive,'' sJ:Iesaid
The evidence was Wl':overed in e•Ms. Sulik and Johnllon aald they
pertments done on laboratory mice have altown for the lint time tblt
by Dr. Kathleen Sullk of the Scbool mouse. embry01 cin survive early
of Medicine and Dr. Malcolm John- alcohol injw'y to be bom irttb IUblle
stoo of the Dental Research Center. .defecla in appearance lhal ·are
1belr findlJJp are to publishec! In the remarkably aiJpllar to thoee in
Nov. :Ill laue of the journal Science, human fetal alcoboiiYI'drGme.
1belr J'eiiU)ts confirmed and .,.
Defects In children Include
plllded m lludlea by Dr. William smaller eyelid openJnp. Qllt -.1
We!JII«, a ICientilt at the Unlver- bridges, shorter ·and bJser
lity ol Sydney, Allllralla, Ma. Sulik 1IIJper lips. 1'he 111011 eeriQua,.....
said. Weblter aald ·1111 r- lhal are mental retardation and
even .lirtlf ......, to aJcehol can tlvity . .

Soap Opera Review,
page9
Area Happenings,

6.96
For 12.66
For 18.96
For 24.96
For

Remington Express
gauge fitted slugs.

32;oz: AJax ,

;

..

Includes oomplete

1·1302

New evidence reveals heavy drinking

November 15 thru 24

(301)

4.22

4•94

activities and event$,

..

Play Construction Set ··
Fo ur 6-oz .• cans Pia
Doh •. truck . 20xw· m Yt·
more.
a. ·

(30l)

A schedule of area'programmilig,

Fhalas ieltid Whitawalls
1--· ··-

kMllOIHrlb
Our REg . 42.97·A78xl3

28.97

Premium Retreads ·
A78xl3

20.88

Plu·s F.E.T. 84c each

.....

Solel'nc.

8&amp;.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="205">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2795">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47063">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47062">
              <text>November 15, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1444">
      <name>mccown</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1125">
      <name>mcmillin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="840">
      <name>reitmire</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="775">
      <name>roberts</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="527">
      <name>sanders</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="576">
      <name>wood</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
