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Page--12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday,

Man:h 23,

f- ...

..,.., , ...... '

•

~•

• f

_ .. ,r.

1914

O'Brien ends 35 court cases
Thirty-one defendants were fined kip, $50 and costs, three days Va., DWl, $250andcosts, three days
and four others forfeited bonds in confinement, driving under suspen- confinement; Ucense suspended 60
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
sion, $100 and costs, three days days; J.D. Drilling Co., Racine, two
Fined by Judge Pa!Jick O'Brien confinement, left of center, $25 and chargesofpoillutionandcontamlnawere Robert Parker, Middleport, costs, registration, and license tlon of surface water and land ,$1,000
disobeyed traffic signal, $10 and plates suspended for 90 days no and costs with $500 suspended Is no
costs; Robert Hirtle, Sarnla, Onta- Insurance.
further similar charges Imposed.
rio, Canada, spero, $22 and costs;
Andrew Bauer, Middleport, DWl,
David Flemeyer, Chester, crimiJeffrey Whltlatch, Athens. spero, $250 and costs, three days confine- nal damaging, five days confinem and costs; Hazel Freeman, ment , license suspended 60 days, ment , restitution and costs; T. C.
Cheshire, stop sign, $10 and costs; defective exhaust, $5 and costs, Porter, Middleport, passing bad
Ellis Booth, Ravenswood, spero,$23 assault, three days confinement, checks, restitution and costs; Mark
and costs; Pamela Johnson, Pome- restitution, costs, six months proba- Haning, Pomeroy, possess a deer or
roy, spero, $22 and costs; Robert tion; Michael Dalley, Long Bottom, parts taken with a gun during the
Jeffers, Syracuse, spero, $24 and DWl. $250 and costs, three days closed season, $100 and costs, all
costs; Steven Meyer, Parkersburg, confinement, Ucense suspended 60 hunting privileges suspended for
spero, $a! and costs; Donald days, left of center, $a! and costs;
one year and deer hunting privileges
McCain, Manetta, spero, $25 and Cathryn Schuetzman, Shade, no suspended three years; L. Edward
costs.
drivers Ucense, $100 and costs, three Templeton, Pomeroy, possess maLinda Peterson, Rutland, stop days confinement, If obtain opera- rijuana, $25 and costs; Terry
sign, $10and costs; Michael Mellow, tors license In 60 days $75 of fine will Watson, Pomeroy; DWl, $250 and
Huntington, spero, $a! and costs; be suspended as well as jail costs, :.1 days confinement , operaTommy Reed, Reedsville, expired sentence.
tors Ucense suspended for one year,
tags, $10 and costs; Cecil T.
Ray Barrlnger, Reedsville, anim- no drivers license, $50 and costs and
Brlnager, Racine, speed, $21 and als running at large, costs only;
10 days confinement, left of center,
costs; Terrance Matthews, Pome- Sanomla Queen, Manetta, spero, costs only.
roy, spero, $22 and costs; Walter $21 and costs; Walter Smith,
Forfeiting bonds were All Galji ,
Ellis, Rutland, spero, $22 and costs, Prichard, W. Va., spero, $23 and Galllpolls, spero, $50; Russell
driving under suspension, $100 and costs; Krystal Winebrenner, Syra- !VIorrls, Syracuse, spero, $70; Lewis
costs, three days confinement; cuse, DWl, $100 and costs, attend Harper, Jr., Pomeroy, failed to
Kenneth Madden, Middleport, im- residential driving school, license yield, $:.1; Clair Reed, Pomeroy.
proper tum signal, $15 and costs; suspended 60 days, failure to control
stop sign, $45.
Kenneth Mitchell, Langsville, hits- m and costs; Holly King, Clay, W.

Changes...

Area deaths
Kenneth Bay
Kenneth Bay, 71, Reedsville, died
Thursday evening at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg,
following and extended illness.
Mr.BaywasbomatWamer, Ohio
the son of the late Lewis and Eunice
Corbin Bay. Hewasalsoprecededln
death by a brother who was killed in
World War II.
He had been employed by
Broughton Dairy, Parkersburg for
several years. He was a veteran of
World War II.
He Is survived by his wife,
Florence Swain Bay; one brother,
Bernard Bay, Marietta; two sisters,
Lara Campbell, and Ethel Peters
both of Ravenna, Oh., and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral - services will be held
Monday at 11 a.m. at the White .
Funeral Home In Coolville. Burlal
will be In Sunset Memorial Gardens,
Parkersburg. Friends may call at
the funeral home Saturday from 7 to
9 and Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Charles T. Russell

3,

Charles T. Russell, Sr., 88, Rt.
Pomeroy, died Thursday afternoon
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Russell was bomJune23, 1895
In Pomeroy the son of the late
Charles and Vlsle Russell. In
addition to his parents, he was
preceded in death by two sisters and
one brother.
· He was a retired telegraph
operator for Western Union and
C&amp;ORailroad.Hewasamemberof
Free and Accepted Masons Lodge
164, Pomeroy, and was the oldest
living member of Lodge 164.
He Is survived by one son, Charles
T. Russell, Jr., Pomeroy; one
daughter, Maxine Russell Ray,
Meterle, Louisiana, and three
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 1: :.1 p.m. at Ewinp
Funeral Home with the Rev. Steve
Nelson oftlclatlng. Burial will be In
Beech Grove cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home this
evening from 7 to 9 and Saturday

(Continued from page 1)
He explained that people still
leasing their phones from the
telephone company will be
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. Maxonlc provided the same services as In
services will be held at 7: :.1 p.m. thepast. Forthosewhopurchase
Saturday.
their telephones, either from
General Telephone or a competiElsie E. Shuler
tor, there Is no service obligation
on the part of GTE . Most
Efsle E . Shuler, 72, Rt. 2, Racine, telephone problems can be
died Thursday at Scenic Hills solved, by brlnglng a leased
Nursing Home, Gallipolis.
telephone Into the Phone Mart for
Mrs. Shuler was born December repair at no charge.
2, 1911 at Fairview, Ohio the
He explained that If a consudaughter of ihe late Thomas and mer, who owns his telephone
Came Burton Warner. She was also asks the company to check out a
preceded In death by her husband, problem, and no company equipCoulter Shuler, one sisler, one ment Is · at fault, then that
brother and one daughter-In-law.
consumer will be billed for the
She was a homemaker and a regular $25 service call charge.
member of Letart Falls United While there Is no charge for work
Methodist Church.
on telephones leased from the
She Is survived by three sons, company and already Installed,
Ernest Shuler, Rt. 2, Racine; there Is a charge for changing
Clarence Shuler, Rt. 1, Urbana, lines and new lnstailatlons even
Illinois; Lynn Shuler, Racine; one though the phones are to be
sister, Flossie Badgley, Racine;
leased fro.m the company.
nine grandchildren and eight great
Also at the meeting and
grandchildren and several nieces assisting in answering some of
and nephews.
the questions from the senior
Funeral services will be held citizens was Gary Bates, who has
Saturday at 1 p.m. atEwingFuneral charge of local service and the
Home with the Rev. Jim Clark local Phone Mart. He advised
offlctating. Burial will be In Letart that the Phone Mart in Pomeroy
Falls Cemetery. There will be no will be open fewer hours, but
calling hours.
emphasized that the main role of
the office Is a place to take
Ellie M. Scarbrough
telephones for repair.
He urged that consumers use
Ellle M. Scarbrough, 73, Rt. 1, the envelopes provided to pay
Long Bottom, died Thursday at her
their bills, . also noting that
residence.
payroent will be accepted at
Shewas born December 21, 1911at Fruth Pharmacy In Middleport,
Clendenin, W. Va.. She was a
and the Rutland Department
housewife.
Store In Rutland. Arrangements
Survivors Include her husband, are also being made to have a
John Winford (Jack) Scarbrough;
payment place In Pomeroy.
one daughter, Carolyn Larraml,
Bates suggested that the FCC
access charge to the long
Washington; two step-daughters,
distance tines would appear "at
Phyills McMillin, Racine; Ora
Reynolds, Texas; four step-sons, this point to probably fall
between $1 and $2 a month. "
Lawrence Scarbrough and Larry
Both Bates and Runge emScarbrough, Napoleon; Leslie Scarbrough, TUppers Plains; Leonard
phasized that while local rates
Scarbrough, Darwin;
several
will Increase since there will be
grandchildren and great
no sharing of Income from
grandchildren.
AT&amp;T, the cost of long distance
Funeral services will be an- calls wUI decrease due to the
nounced by Ewing Funeral Home. competition.
Burial will bein Gosham Valley
Cemetery, Jackson, W.Va.

Emergency squads kept busy
Six calls for assistance were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Thursday and early Frlday
morning.
On Thursday at 2: 52 p.m. the
Racine unit was called to the
StlversUle residence of Ella Scarbrough who was dead on arrival; at
6:39 p.m. the Racine unit went to
Portland for Florence Ritchie who
was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 7: 24 p.m. the
Racine unit took Mary Evans from
her Carpenter Road residence to
Veterans Memorla1Hospltal,at8: 11
p.m. the Middleport squed went to
the Stonewoods Apartment for
Mary Gilkey who was treated on the
scene, artd at 10:27 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit went to the Rock
Springs Road residence of Reva
SimmS who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Friday morning at 8: 11 a.m. the
Mkldleport unit was again called to
Stonewoods for Mrs. Gilkey who

Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Florence Barbfr,
·Reedsville; Russell Nltz, Middleport; Anthony Shamblin, Racine;
Lawrence Ritchie, Jr., Portland. .
Discharged: Robert Johnson,
Sandra Luckeydoo, Molly Webb,
Gladys.Zeigler, Grandville W8!J15·'
Jey, Aleva Cottertll, Bessie TurleY.
wnma J\pdei'!Jon, Arthur Duck·
worth, and Delores E . Rife.

,

was then transported to Veterans
Memorial. ThePomeroyunltat8:25
a.m . this morning was on the scene
or an accident on West Main Street
transporting Grace Chaney and
Mary Hysell to Veterans Memorial
H It 1 f
Jbl
1j
osp a
or pass e n ury
treatment.
Lat Th rsd
fte
th
e
u ay a moon
e
Chester Fire Department responded to a chimney fire at. a
residence
of Don Roush on East
Shade
Road.

To end maJTiage
James F. Powell, Racine, and
Rebecca E. Powell, Racine, filed for
dissolution of marriage in Meigs
·County Common Pleas Court.

artatFAC

James J, Kilpatrick says Meese is no 'wheelerdealer'-Page A-2

NEW OWNER - Racine VWage Cutrate has been
purchased by Joan McLain from Dave DUes. Pictured
are Diles as he presented the keys to Mrs. McLain. On

Fann ............................... D-2

Sports ....... ....... .............. C-1-8

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. tAP)As 5,000 people marched bitterly
with glowing candles to protest the
barroom rape ·convictions of tour
Portuguese Immigrants, a community leader said the trial brought
out "long-standing slurs and outright prejudices against our
people."
·
"Just lea Cruclficada." or" justice
crucified," read badges worn by
young and old Thursday night as the
s il e nt procession, mo st ly
Portuguese-Americans, wound
from the steps of City Hall to the city
jaU and back.
"Don't make the Portuguese pay
tor all the rapes," said placards
carried by a &amp;year-old girl and her
father, Frank Buxo. "Not life
sentences," the signs also pleaded.
Organizers had urged a dignified
march, "to show we are a civilized
·people," and the hourlong demonstration was peaceful, pollee said.
A second rally was planned this
afternoon 12 miles away In Fall
River. The demonstrations followed

the rlglllls Beverly Moore, daughter of Mrs. McLain
who wW assist In the operallon of Ihe slore.

the conviction Thursday of two men
In the aggravated rape of a woman
at Big Dan's tavern In New Bedford
on March 6, 1983. Two others were
round innocent.
A separate jury convicted two
other Portuguese defendants of
aggravated rape In the-same case
Saturday.
The trials have driven a deep
wedge In New Bedford'sPortuguese
community, which makes up 60
percent of the city's 98,(0) population. All six defendants were
Portuguese Immigrants. The vic-

State Senator Oakley Collins

Colllns explained the Republlcan
measure would provide a lump sum
Ucan lawmakers to sponsor legis Ia · payment of the extra lottery funds In
lion requiring excess lottery profits July, 1984and 1985withthemoneyto
to go for school funding.
be dls!Jibuted on a per pupil basis
Collins explained the lottery Is and would be earmarked for
generating mWJons of dollars more textbooks, library books, computer
than anticipated and that without equipment and audio-visual
legislative action, the additional suwlles.
furids will not go to education.
"These additional funds would
Collins said that the lottery now represent a 'windfall profit ' for
hasmade$42mll11onmorethan was schools," Collins said.
"That's why the funds would he
expected and that If action on the
measure Is not taken now then earmarked to pay for what has
monies will go directly Into the . become wish Ust supplies needed to
general fund and will not be spent on bring our schools up to par with the
schools..
latest In technology. Thefundscould
"The lottery was originally sold as not be used to pay for pre-budgeted
a funding source for schools", operating costs."
to earmark
the funds
In the
final
Collins
said. "The
legislation
moved
years' or the Rhodes administration. However, we didn't move far
enough a create a mechanism to
handle excess funds ."

was

family records. Those attending are
Invited to take along a small
document for encapsulation.
Those attending will also be
viewing the recently t'OI'IIpleted
woodworking workshop exhibit, a
pennanent display, built and arranged by Fred and Becky Baloy,
Pomeroy.

Clearing tonight. LoW 25-30.
Winds light and variable. Saturday,
sunny and pleasant. High 57-62.
Chance or precipitation near zero
percent tonight and Saturday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday lhrough Tueaday:
MOSIIy fair, but with a chalice of
ralndeveloplnglale'l'ue8day.Hlghs
in the upper 4IM and llOs SWJdAv and
ov
in the llOs Monday and Tuesday.
LowsmostlylntheOOs.

Importance of the action In Insure
that all lottery profits be earmarked
for education. "The way the lottery
has been running, the surplus I;'()Uld
buUd up to the hundreds ot millions
of dollars. It Is only fair that these
monies be earmarked tor
education."

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS
~

bt~u,if11llr "''11tnN
funrr~l ~rr~n~mrn1 ,

11m nil ur ttitil

r-;In~co~nc~l~u~sio~n~,~C~olll~ns~s~tressed~~th~e~;::~~==~~~~~:

BIG DEALS ON CIIDS 'N FEED

25 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks .+ 5o# Purina
Chick Starter Meet .
'$20.00-Save $9.50
50 S.R. Heavy Bre8d Checks + 50# Purina
Chick Starter Mecl.
. · $32.00-Save $14.50
100 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + 50# Purina
- Chick Stl!1er led.
$50.00-Save $10.00
We wiR fl~l only orders placed with .. prior1D ~ 10. All clilcka
will be Helvy Billed( Stnllght Run.

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main
• ·

BAHR .CLOTHIERS

While the CUITent action Is dtlzen-inltlated, city
offldals are known to favor annexation since the
communitY needs to Increase population to maintain
Its status as a city.
According to the censlll! bureau, the ctty's
population declined by sllghtly more than 25 percent
between 1970 and 1981. Census figures show the

Road.
Half the area's landowners must sign the petition

Defense asks Gallia
judge to step down
in Plummer trial
By KEVIN KElLY
'llmeiS •w !lUll
GAUJPOLIS -

The Ohio Su-

preme Court may decide If GaUla
County Cmunon Pleas Judge

Rlcbar!l

c.

Roderick will preside

over 11Je crlmlnal charges tJ1al for
Maxine Plununer, former execuUYe dlredl!r of tJie Gallla.JackBooMelp . . Meatal Health 8olrd
· - 'lllellllb&lt;owt'adedlbl-wh!Ch
. ·· ~ be l'fiQIIIred If Roderick does

not step down - could delay
Plummer's !Jial, tentatively set for

Aprll9.

Mrs. Plwnlnllr, a .Wellston resi-

was secretly Indicted by a
Gallla 8l'and Jury last Dec. 19 for
theft In o1ftct! and us1iJi her ctftce to
dent,

ln11ueilce a public contract.

Mrs. Plummer filed an atftdavit
prejudice against Roderick In
GalllaCounty. DependlngooRoderlck's declalon, the case could go
directly to the supreme court and
would be decided by Chief Justice
Frank Celebrezze, who would
detenn1ne If It's "in the best interest
ot jUBtlce" for Roderick to hear the
case.
Mrs. Plununer hits on seven
reasons to support her claim that
Roderick should be dlsqualltled.
'Thole reasons are:
-RoderiCk removed himself
from hearing Plununer' s clvU suit
after Mrs. Plununer fl1ed another
affidavit of .prejudice against him.
"For that reason, It would be very
dllrlcult for Judge Roderick not to
allow feelings ot bias or prejudice
found in that case .. .from interfering
with his ruJ1ngs in this case In a fair
and lmpartlal manner.''

The Store With
llrp

Middleport

·

Ph. 992·21 84
"All Kinlls of Stull" -

.

Pomeroy

'

For Pets, Stlbles,

llwns 1nd G1rdtnl

Ohi~

-If Mrs. Plununer wins her $12
mllUon suit in U.S. Dlstrtct Court
against county and state offlctals,
RoderiCk's court budget would be
atfected. Also, a guUty finding In the
crlmlnaJ cue would aid therounty's
position in the.federal court case.
-Roderick was interviewed by
tile sta)e-appolnted review group
that ~ Mrs. Plummer's conduct ln. otllce In late 19112. Hla comments were Ulll!d and he
"became a witness to the procl!edJngs'' to remove her from o1ftce.
-Roderick would be under
''great , and unfair political pressure" In deciding the cue.
-The Judie served as amember
of the forensic mental health center
board while Mrs. Plummer was In
office. Contact between the two in
thelriespectlveposltlonswouldnow
" make ltdlfflcult" torafalrrutlngto
be reached.
-Roderick was once in partnership with Gallla County Prosecutor
Jo5ephL. Cain, "and as such maybe
reluctant to makeruJlngsadverseto
his tanner law partner."
-RoderiCk has reserved a ruUng
on a change of venue motion for the
crlmlnaJ !Jial, but Mrs. Plummer
claims that he made a statement
that "clearly demonstrated his
prejudice against the defendant
before ruling on the defendant's
motlon."

Roderick has 10 days to respond to
the affidavit, and It could be another
aJ or :.1 days before Celebrezze
renders a decision on Roderick's
position.
Mrs. Plummer, who was fired as
(Continued on page A3)

Glenn said he believed he partlctWASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
John Glenn says returning to the pated enough In national campaigns
Senate full-time after ending a bid to have a good Idea of what he was
for the Democratic presidential getting into.
"But It's a little different when
nomination Is a bit like the "good
you're out there day after day after
news-bad news" stories.
·"It's good tobeawayfromsomeof day after day as the focal point and
the pressures out there, and In !!Ollie being taken on on every possible
ways -It's good to be back ~ the subject there Is and eve~ •nuance of
Senate," Glenn said. "But when we everysubject,"GlennsaU. "And we
run upsomeofthe debts that we did, had to do that very early on."
"Solwasunderayearofscrutlny,
that has to ·requlre sm~e attention
and there wasn't a whole lot people
too. So that's 1101 90 good."
During an interview with The didn't lcJ!ow about me," he said.
Auoclated Press in hJs Senate "(But) maybe we didn't till In the
office, the Ohio Democrat aald that blanks good enough on the Senate
he wanted hJs bid tor the record here and on my background
nornln$tlon to succeed in the "wont and experiel)ce that I talked quite away,'' • ~ now Is comrtlltled to · bit about - the last couple of
winning .re-election In the Senate months, at least. of the campaign·."
After his withdrawal aniiOIIJICeand erasing a $2.7 mllljon caJ'ilp8jgn
debt L,
'
'
·'
ment laat week, Glenn turned from
"I. dldnti do It :juat for the the rugaed 8Chedule of a preslilen- ·
e:xpet'le!IC'e " Glenn said ot the · t1a1 campalp to hJs Senate job
'
-~
ettort. "I did it.because I without ~ a breather. Besides
bellew!d Ill aome th1iJP 'about this leglllattve chores on priorities such
as the budget defldt and job~ veJY, very (lpnly and wu
retrallllni
lnltlat1Ye5, Glenn plan! to
willllll to put forth the effort to try .
qulckly
tackle
hJs massive camIJid correct lome~...
palgil
debt.
·~It II a dlaappoJntment to come
'"lbat hu to be ot prime concern
back IIIII bave to' Ill)', 'W!!ll, my
Vlewa.....
I belleYe are blittei' J'liht now, on what · kind of.
· than !be ,eopie,'that are ltlll out, organiZatlonwee~Jabllshtoworkon
t11ereare not aOina' to prevaD.'" , that debt," Glenn said.
,
r
.

atthoulh

'

._t

.

Galllpolls population at 5,601 in 1981, compared to
7,490 In 1970.
Should Gallipolis' population fall below 5,000., Jt
would legally become a village, making It more
difficult to obtain certain federal funds.
Gallipolis City Manager Chris Morris was quoted
last week as saying the proposed area of annexation
would be helpful to the city even though the property
under consideration Is not heavily populated.
During an Interview in January, Morris said he
doubted the success of any effort to annex major
population areas Into the city.
"I don't see anything big breaking," he said.

proposal.

Glenn: while looking
ahead~ glances back

fis~hare;;;$;·69~3,;f!7;3·;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~l

SHOP BAHR CLOTHIERS
FOR FINE
w·EARING
APPAREL
FOR ·
·MEt\ &amp;
WOMEN

a petition to annex about :m acres of township land
into the city.
Oty CmunJuJoner Richard Moore saki Saturday
l1llll'nllla the propoeed area of annexation, which
adjoins the dty llm1ts, Is primarily undeveloped land.
According to Moore, the property line begins near
Spruce Street Extension and runs toward Texas

ot

·ORDER NOW!

before It can be presen~ to the county commlsslon
for·approval.
Atte- publlc hearings, the county commJssloners
would then forward the measure to the ctty
commJssloners, who would either accept or reject the

'11me18 4«!18Wf
GAU..IPOUl- City omctals have con1lnned that
IKml! Gallipolis Township landowners are clrculating

tim and a p~tor were
Portuguese-AmeriCans, and five of
the 12 Jul'&lt;\rs in the second tJ1al h8ve
Portuguese surnames.
On Thursday, the throng, march·
lng 15 abreast, was joined by Joee
Medeiros, oneofthetwodefendants
acquitted earUer In the day. He
hoisted atop the shoulders of !Us
friends to shouts of "Joe's back."
The marchers stopped In front of
the jail where three of 'the four
convicted men are being held, and
the , crowd cheered and shouted
encouragement. Shouts and cheers
were heard Inside.

Tu \C!tw.l

--Page A-3--

9 Sections. 58 Pages 36 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis Point Pleasant Sunday, Marth 25, 1984

By lARRY EWING

Collins co-sponsors school funding legislation
(R·Ironton) has joined other Repub-

Rain forecast
for Sunday

300-acre annexation move under way

Records specialist will speak Sunday
George Baln, local records specialist, Ohto Hlstorlcal Society, will
present a program on "Polyester
Encapsulation: A Demonstration"
at the Sunday, 2 p.m. meeting of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society at the museum.
The program will show a'basic but
low cost procedure tor preserving

c.,.....-1,..

Ohio weather:

tnfintl

Vol. 19 No.7

5,000 angry people protest
barroom rape convictions

Spaghetti dinner set
Tickets for the spaghetti dinner to
be held at the Rutland Elementary
School gymnasium Saturday even- ·
ing will- be available at the door.
Serving will befrom4 to8p.m.ln the
Rutland Elementary School gymnasium. The dinner is spon!OI'I!d by
the Meigs Vocal Music Boosters.

Along the River ............... B-1-8
Oullf!eds ...................... 0-3-7
Deaths ........ ..................... A-'
Edllorlals ......................... A-2

tnttS

.J:

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 318.
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the winning number was 4457.
The lottery reported a loss of
$478,344.50 from wagering on its
daily game. The Joss resulted from
sales of $1,214,728.50, while holders
of winning tickets were entitled to

•

Inside

•

Weather forecast

1

Charlene Hoeflich presents a 'very spec~al
letter'-Page 8-8

-PageB-1

Ohio lottery winners

Saturday sign-up

Middleport Yough League will
holdslgnupdaySaturday,March24,
from 9: :.1 a.m. untU 12::.1 p.m. at
Middleport Village Hall. Reglstralion Is $7. For additional Information
can992-3326.

South American

ictim's father says he'll pay
the bill to see Johnston 'fry'
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) -Shortly
after a three-Judge panel sentenced Dale Johnston to death for
the mutilation murders of his
stepdaughter, Annette, 18, and
her fiance, Todd Schultz, 19,
Schultz' father said, "I'll pay the
electric bill when they burn him,
when they try him."
Don Schultz, a Logan firefighter, al.lo promlaed to take a tire
extlngulsber to the Soulbem
01110 "Oinecilbnal Flltlllty at
Lucasville where the !Jf!lltence Is
scheduled to be carrled out Oct.
4- In case anti-death penalty
actlvtsts stage the traditional

'

candlellglrt vigil.
"If people are going to stand
around at Lucasville with candles and say, 'Oh, no, we're
taking a life,' I'm going to take
my water tire extinguisher and

put 'em all out," Schultz said.
Schultz and Todd's mother,
Sandy, who are divorced, talked
to reporters in Mrs. Schultz'
Logan home Frlday after the
sentencing.
Mrs. Schultz said she found It
"very appropriate" that the
sentence was to be carried out
Oct. 4 - exactly two years from
the day she last saw her son
alive.
Schultz said, "As far as I'm
concerned, that 's the day to do

anger and jealousy between
Annette and her stepfather, who
authorltles said had admitted
some sexual"contact" With her.
Johnston has maintained his
Innocence throughout the

it."

The two tee!lagers disappeared Oct. 4, 1982, after leaving
Sa}ldy Schultz' house for a walk
along the Hocking River. Ten
days later, their dismembered
torsa; were In the liver.
Two days after that, Investigators found their heads, arms and
legs In shallow graves In a
nearby cornfleld. Investigators
said they had been shot before
being dismembered.
.Johnston, 50, was arrested
after a year-long Investigation
and convicted Jan. 28. Prosecutors In the three-week !Jial said
the slaYJngs were the result of

proceedings.
The three-judge panel that

convicted Johnston in a non-jury
!Jial also handed down the death
sentence. They could have have
sentenced Johnston to Ufe
lmprlsonrnent.
They heard testimony from
three witnesses Frlday before
unanimously approving the
death penalty.
Joanne,Hamilton, who Identified Johnston as "my baby
brother," testlfled that she had
never known him to display

violence or a temper.
The Rev. Harold Kidwell or
Grove City Baptist Church,
where Johnston and his wife,
Sarah, attended services, said
Johnston was "a loving, caring
person. There's no way I can
Imagine he could do something
llke this."
Prosecutor Christopher Veldt
said he asked for the death
penalty because Johnston did
not express remorse, the killings
were so grotesque and . the
victims were so young.
The judges - James Stillwell
of Hocking County, Joseph
Cirigliano of Lorain County and
Michael Corrigan of Cuyahoga
County - deliberated for less
than an hour.

AmeUe Cooper Johru;ton
Todd Shultz

Attorney General nominee strikes back
WASHINGTON (AP) - Edwin
Meese Ill says he never antlclpated
the "viciousness or the ferocity" of
the attacks again$! his nomination
tor attorney _general, but says he
expects to be conflrmed "so long as
all the facts are considered by the
committee."
In an Interview In Saturday's
editions of The Washington Post,
Meese accused his critics of
"systematic character assassina·
tlon" and said "sneak atlacks
outside the (coilftrmation) process
wlilch have distorted the facts,
raised false Issues and mlsrepres' ented a great deal.
"I knew that there would obvtous\y be !he teniptatlon at least for
some to eng8ge ill polltlcal m\ld·
sllJ!ilng. But I don't think I
anticipated either the viciousness or
the ferocity of these attacks," aald
Meese, who now· Is President
Reqan's COUI1IIelor.
Meanwhile, Attorney Wllllam

"I knew that thete would obviously be lhe temptation at least lor to
engage in political mudslinging. But I don't thinlc I anticipated either the
vic~ or the ferocity of these attacks," ..id AG nomi.- Edwin Meese,
wha , _ is l'relide!it Reagan'a caun111ior.
French Smith, who thought Meese's
conflnnatlon , as his replacement
would be routine Is eager to to leave
the post to help Reagan run for
re-election, but Is under pressure to
stay on during what could be months
of wrangllng over Meese's nomina·
tlon, his associates say.
Smltll has played a backstage role
in every Ronald Reagan election
campaign since ~. JiiStlce Department officials, speaking under
agreement that theY would not be
quoted by name, saki Smith's
associates have told him that for
him · to leave now would make
matters more dlfflcult tor Reagan.
Mee!ie has asked that Smith
appoint a special prosecutor to
investigate accusations against

\

l

Instead, the ctty manager said, he envisioned the
city growing gradually through the annex; tlon of
small parcels by individuals interested In u• .ng the
city's tax deferment program as an Impetus for
deYelopment.
" By deYeloping that land, hopefully with residential
units," Monis said, ~·the city may avold ... barely
avold ... loslng Its city status."
Early this year, the clty commission asked Its
solicitor to study the means of legally annexing all of
GaUJpolls Township. While that study was made and
submitted to the commlsslon, nb action In that
direction has been taken.

i

him. Smith was silent Friday on the
request, but was expected to act

soon.
The Senate Judiciary Committee
has suspended hearings on the
coritlnnation pending the outcome
of any investigation.
One charge leveled against Meese
by his chief crltlc on the panel, Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, relates to federal jobs obtained by
Individuals who helped the presidential coimselor flnanclally.
"In none ot these cases was there
any relation between any financial
transaction and anybody getting a
job, .. Meese said.
"But If you put It the other way
around, the fact th11t these were
people I knew or had some financial

transaction with . .. . would that have
been a reason for me io object to
their appointment • When someone
else Initiated it ?"
Neglect of his personal finances
may have caused some of his
problems. Meese said.
"I was very busy, engaged In a
new job that by itself demands all
th(•time, so I couldn't spend a lot of
time working on personal financial
matters. going out and finding the
loans for cash flow and that sort of
thing," he said.
He said If he could go back and
handle anything differently, ''I'll tell
you one thing. If I had remembered
the $15,000 Joan, I certainly would
have put it on my financial
disclosure form ."
The forms which federal ofllctals
must file with the Office of
Government Ethics are complex,
Meese said, adding that he prepared
them himself because he could not
afford an accountant.

�,, '

•

March 25, 1984

Commentary and perspectiVe
•

• •

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A Division of

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LETI'ERS OF OPINION are well:omed. they should be lafl than 300 wOf'd_fl: kMI • . AU
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sues, not penonalltles.

~

foreign policy
of containment
. President Reagan is entering the election campaign with a foreign policy
that alms at containing the Soviet Union and deterring terrorism sometimes with the force of U.S. arms.
' The will is clearly there - to promote an Arab-Israeli settlement, for
inStance. The Vietnam syndrome of the 1970s, discouraging U.S. actions
abroad, has not taken hold at the White House.
: But it still lingers across the land, generating pressure for the
withdrawal of the Marines from Beirut after more than 250 of them fell
victim to terrorist bombings and sniper attacks and making any sustained
U.S. effort anywhere around the globe questionable.
The admlnistra lion has been wUllng to extend American power In
~ntral America, the Middle East, or In the Persian Gulf, if oil supplies are
threatened by the war between Iran and Iraq.
. New U.S. missiles were deployed In Western Europe, targeted on the
Soviets. Marines and Rangers took Grenada to uproot a leftist regime. The
fleet patrols the Caribbean and Medlterannean to demonstrate U.S.
resolve. Americans are training Salvadorans and Hondurans, and
$nti-Sandlnista rebels In Nicaragua are getting U.S. ald.
The administration bas also made a special point of condemning
i tate-supported terrorism. It linked Syria and Iran to the attack last
October on U.S. Marine headquarters near Beirut. Ubya also provokes
(jccasional wrath. A few days ago, U.S. reconaissance planes were sent to
~gyp! to deter Libya from attacking the Sudan.
, Clearly, the Reagan administration is projecting American might with a
Ylgor unseen since the end of the Vietnam War a decade ago.
~ But restraint is mixed in with the rhetor;tc. Despite repeated threats to
retaliate for the bombing of Marine headquarters, the United States held
ks fire. Reagan imposed minor sanctions when the Soviets shot' down a
South Korean commercial airliner with 61 Americans among the 269
~ctlms.

' The realities of a nuclear age probably have a lot to do with llmitlng the
lase of force. So does a historical Instinct for isolationism, which was
feinforced by more than 55,!XXJ American deaths In Vietnam.
Consequently, the administration has banked largely on traditional
diplomacy to extend U.S. influence and to promote stability.
It negotiated with the Soviet Union to reduce nuclear weapons, but the
talks stalemated.
It trled to line up Israel, Jordan and, Indirectly, the Palestine Uberation
Organization to negotiate a settlement ·In !he Middle East, but all three
parties rejected President Reagan's proposals.
. 'I'IIere Is virtually no Interest .In trying to arrange a sununit meeting
between Reagan and the new Soviet leader, Konstantln Chernenko.
: But even without a dramatic U.S.-Soviet sununit meeting, Reagan can
wways stump the country on his record In reducing Inflation and
stimulating economic recovery.

because perception counts so heavily, my unhappy thought Is that
Meese ought to withdraw his name.
He has become the fourth embarrassment to the Reagan White
House, and lour is too many.
The piece of hanl luck Involved
Meese's heavily mortgaged home
in California. He put the house on
the market after the 19M election,
when It was apparent that he would
be moving to Washington, and the
house didn't sell. Meese Is not a
wealthy man, The move strained
ali his resources. He had to acquire
a second hom e in the capital. He ran
15 months behind in payments on
one house and four months behind
on the other. This would have
drawn little attention but for one
thing: Two officials of the mortgage
company got government jobs.
Edwin Gray became chairman of
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, and Gordon Luce served as
an alternative dele~ate to the

1ht Sunilay n ....Sentlllll·
Page A-2
March 25, 1984

United Nations.
The oversight Involved Meese's
!allure to report an interest-free
loan of Sl5,!XXJ to his wife in 1!*ll. The
loan came from Edwin Thomas,
who later was named regional
director of the General Services
Administration In San Francisco.
There were two other matters.
Neese borrowed $00,(0) from a
California trust headed by John
McKean. The loan was unsecured,
he paid no Interest on it for nearly
two years. In July 1~1 McKean was
named to the board of governors of
the Postal Service. Sale of Meese's
house In California Involved an old
friend, Thomas Barrack, who
ostensibly lost money on the deal.
Barrack wound up with a job in the
Interior Department .
This cynica l city perce(ves a
pattern. No one has stopped to
inquire if these several appointees
~.ere qualified for their positions.
NO one has bothered to recall that in

- The White House wants to
impose lifetime censorship on ail
government workers with access to
classified information. The censorship wouldn't apply, of course, to
the president and vice president,
who WOU\tl be free to write their ,
memoirs. But no one else would be
a ble to set the record straight; facts
that contradict the olliclai line
could be censored.
- The Reagan administration
has also Issued an executive order
a llowing far wider usc of the
secrecy stamp. Invariably, the
government uses Its classification
powers to censor the news. The
people in power regularly stamp
"secret" what properly should be
labeled "censored."
-The administration has pulled
down the bllnds at the CIA. A

Rain~

:concedes

:Today in history
Today Is Sunday, March 25, the 85th day of 1984. There are 281 days lett In
;the year.
: Today's Hlghllght In History:
· Oil March 25,19Qi, the Rev. Martin Luther Klhg Jr. led 25,001 marchers
:to the steps of the state Capitol In Montgomery, Ala., to protest thedenjal ot ·
wtfng rights to blacks.

Snow f': \1

Fl

,·ery political situallon, friends of
t.1ends naturally are preferred for'
ratronage. This Is the way the
system works. There Is nothlna'
crooked about it.
I am not at all disturbed by the
loans and jobs. As for the undlsciused loan to Mrs. Meese, I find It
hanl to understand why Meese:
failed to report It, but 18 years In
Washington have taught me something of the almost unbearable
strains of life at the highest levels of
the White House. It was a mistake,
but it was not a mistakeofsuf!icient:
magnitude to justify rejection of his.
nomination.
Nevertheless, games must be
played by the rules, and politics Is a ·
body-contact sport. Reagan's ad-:
ministration already has suffered·
from a CIA director~~&lt; ith a fondness·
for playing the market, 4 nations[
security director with a faultY,
memory of 10 $100 bills, and an
attorney general with an eyepopping bonus from old frtends In
California. The realities may well.
be that Bill Casey Is a shrewd
investor, that Dick Allen really did
forget the " thank-you money" from
his Japanese friends, and that
William French Smith had earned
the generous payment. It is too
perceptiOn that counts.
.
Reagan has enough hravy bag•
gage to carry into the corning
campaign. He surely does not ueed
the burden of a long and distasteful
battle lor confirmation of Ed Meese
~s attorney general. It may be
unfair - It surely will be painful but no wise man ever said that life Is
fair . Step aside, Ed, and let the
president name a clean-as-ahound's-tooth nominee, Ruch as
William Webster of the FBI,In your
place.

N.lhOfl,tl WPdltlf•r ~ ,. , v•u ·
u S Dl'nl o l C&lt;.HHm• ·r·

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service
forecast for Sunday predlct.s 8IIOW over the northern Rocldell with
rain predicted from northern F1olida to central Vll'lfnla Into the Ohio
liver valley and the northern Mlssl'llllppi liver vaDey repoll8. (AP
LuerphoW ).

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Fair Monday and Tuesday. A chance of rain Wednesday. Highs
from the mid 40s to the mid 5Qo; Monday and Tuesday and In the 40s
Wednesday. Lows from the mid 2(1; to the mid lls Monday,ln !hells
Tuesday and from the mid 30s to the mid 40s Wednesday.

I had a letter from Mrs. Dolly
Kleinschmidt, Logan, this week In
which she said one of my little tales
about Pension Ridge and Letart
Township started her on a "remembering jag." Her letter started me
on a "remembering fag" of my own
and I hope she won't mind if I share
some of It with you.
I have been friends with Dolly
more years than either of us care to
remember. She was a school mate
at Letart Falls High School back
when Letart was a beautiful little
farming town and the ganlen spot
of Meigs County. Her name then
was Dolly Higgenbotham and she
lived on a !ann her parents
operated about a mile back of
Letart on the East Letart Road. My
aunt, Edna Whetstone, taughi the
primary room at the Letart school
and we traveled to school by buggy
from Grandma's place on the
Ridge. The Higgenbotham home
was on our way and occasionally
Dolly would ride with us, especially
If the weather was bad. The three of
us would ride wedged In the buggy
seat with an oU cloth lap robe
covering our ,legs. It was a very.
pleasant experience for me but In
those days I didn't have the
slightest idea why. Remember,
Dolly? '
Those were the pre-consolidation,
pre:school-bus days when it was the
responslbillty of kids to get to school
the best way they could. Some of
them walked as tar as three miles to
get to !be one room grade school
and often more than that to get to
high school. No matter how far I dig
back In my mjnd, I can't remember
one single case of chronic truancy.
It you got a whipping at school, It
was an accepted tact that you got
another one at home. That was the
way most parents backed up the
teacher's authority. ·Then the Letart High School was llmited to
three years . and graduates were
forced to go to another school to
finish their senior year. I attended

my first two years of high there but
transferred to Shade In Athens
County when my grandmother
died. I could no longer live on the
Ridge without her. During those
two years the entire enrollment of
the high school never · exceeded
much more than a dozen. Diuing
my two years. I was a member of a
three-boy class with Homer Ashley
and Solon Butcher. Roland Will was
principal during my freshman year
and Hallie Holter t,he second. The
rest of the faculty was Miss Bonnie
Brown.
Dolly wrote me that all three are
now dead, Miss Brown the last to go
a few months ago. I thought all
three were excellent teachers but It
is Miss Brown I remember best. As
a teacher she was outstanding a11&lt;!
the two years of Latin I studied
more .good
under her has done
than anything else I learned fu high
school. With Miss Brown, Homer,
Solon and I crossed the Rubicon Into
Gaul with Julius Caesar and scaled
the Alps with Hannibal and his
eieph'!nts. We learned the fascination of life during Caesar's reign
and before we finished could even
read a little Latin with an Ohio
River accent. Caesan would havebeen horrified! Miss Bonnie Brown
was a born teacher. Anyone who
could make Latin Interesting to
three teenage boys h&lt;1d to be good. I
don't know where she received her
training or how old she was or how
much experience she had ~ore
coming 'to Letart but she certainly
knew hOW to make ~~ stUdy ot
Latin fun. I a"l not sure but I lhi!lk
she taug~t in other Meigs schools
over the"Years.
Hlgh ·school classes were held on
the top floor of what Is now ~
Community Building In Lt!iart. The
entire high school conSisted ot tWo
rooms and a cloak room. The two lower rooll)S of the building housed
the primary room and a grammar
school. My aunt taught the primary
class ·and Ray Hayman .w as •

~

.

By The Assoclaled l're88
The National Weather Service says rain will probably move Into
southwest sections of Ohio Saturday night and over the southern
two-thirds of the state Sunday. This wet weather will also threaten
northeast Ohio, but It looks as though the extreme northwestern part
of the state may escape with dry conditions through the weekend.
By Sunday l'Vening, the low pressure will be crossing the
Appalachians Into North Carolina and the rain should quickly taper
ott and die. Weak high pressure will build south out of Canada
Sunday night and Monday, and It should be dry for the first part otthe
new workweek.
Although skies were mostly clear across Ohio Friday evening,
high, thin clouds were moving through the state during the predawn
hours of this morning. No precipitation was reported over the state
through the night. Temperatures at 5 a.m. ranged from 22 at Toledo
to 3.1 in the Chesapeake-Ironton area .

re porter can now be sent to prison !ration has set out to remove 1:. This
for reporting news that might gtve a
Is the Freedom of Infonnatlon Act,
clue to the identify of a CIA agent.
a landmark law that permits
In the past, the CIA has instigated
Individuals to learn what the
rebellions, undermined frtendly
government has in its flies, within
governments, arra nged assassina- the limits of personal privacy and
tions, . conspired with organiZed
national security.
crime ·and engaged in other dark
The administration has already
doings that violated U.S. laws.
pu s hed a bill through the
No wonder the CIA wants to
Republican-controlled Senate to
operate In the dark.
amend the act. My associates
- The administration has also
Donald Goldberg and John Dillon
obstructed press coverage or' mli- have carefully studied the Senate
ltary activities. Reporters were
bill. One problem with It is that the
barred from observing the Grenada
language is vague and opens the act
Invasion. The Pentagon's sell- to varying Interpretations by agenserving version of this major event.
cies and the courts. Of the more
therefore, was all that was avalia- · than 40 changes the administration
ble to the American people.
wants In the Freedom of InformaThere is another a nnoying obsta- tion Act , here are the ones that are
cle to "secret government," and
most worrisome:
sure enough, the Reagan adminls-

Gary Hart "chronically unsteady"
on anns control, the Colorado
senator Is tlglttlng back with new TV
ads accusing !he former vice
president ollgnortng the "lesson" of
Vietnam.
The two Democratic presidential
candidates escalated verbal attacks
on each other Friday as the
campaign heatedupfortheConnecUcut primary on Tuesctay and New
York's on AprU 3.
" I am a COIIBistent, solid, unwavering supporter of arms control,"
Mondale told about 200 supporters
during a campaign stop Friday In
Connecticut
"His record on the most important issue-armscontrol-canonly
be described as one of confUsion, of
being chronically unsteady. He has
offered not consistency, but contusion," Mondale said.
Hart, meanwhile, developi.lg his
campaign theme that Mondale was
slow to learn the "lesson" of
Vietnam, is preparing a series of ads
that attack the former vice pres!·
dent's foreign policy record.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-3

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Friday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 585.
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the winning number was~.
The lottery reported earnings of
$618,245.50 from wagering on its
dally game, "The Number."
Earnings came on sales of
$1,383,!e1, while holders of winning
tlckets are entitled to share
$765,645.50.
In the parlmutuel"Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $192,148.50. Holders of

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Friday that his 1978 visit to
Jerusalem helped lay the groundwork for the Camp David peace
accords between Israel and Egypt, :
Hart, boplng to complete a sweeJi
of the New England primaries whef\
Connecticut Democrats vote on
Tuesday, campaigned in Ha rtford
on Friday. The Colorado senato(
chided Mondale for scheduling only
·
one 90-mlnute stop in the state.

ELECT

Paid for by Ray Pope,

r...-1

held Saturday and Monday.
Hart has spent more time in
Montana than Mondaie, but campaign aides for the fanner vice
president say they're hoping for
labor's support In the heavily
unionized state. Neither Hart nor
Mondaie has campaigned in
Kansas.
In his bid to woo New York· s large
Jewish vote, Mondale claimed

You Saw a Sheriff's
Cruiser on "YOUR" Road
- Think About It &amp;Then
Ask Yourself Why??

Box

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

,,

(Continued from page Al)
the 648 board's executive director
last Sept. 19, was died by the grand
jury for signing pay vouchers for her
son, Jeffrey, for work "not perfoiTiled." The vouchers totaled
$9,373.21 over a period between
January 1978 and February 198l.
The jury also Indicted her for an
"illegal Interest" In two contracts
that employed Jeffrey Plummer for
janitorial services.
A motion by Mrs. Plummer's
attorney, Daniel M. Hunt of Columbus, to dismiss the theft in office
charge was denied by Roderick
March14.

r;:========:::=::;)
When Was the Last Time

winning tickets are entitled to share
45 percent, or $86,437. A winning $1 I
straight ticket earns $9,516. A
winning$1 boxed ticket eams$793.
The Number: tive-etght-ttve
. P1ck 4 : etght-nine-etght-stx

s

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teacher of the lour higher grades.
I know you will think this is a
My last year a Mr. Pullins taught
maudlin and humorless piece of
the grammar school. I don't
writing but I think it would do us all
remember much about Mr. Pullins
good to go back In memory to our
except he liked to sing and conduct
high school days once In a while.
songfests. When Mr. Pullins was in
That is where you are first thrust
a singing mood, the whole school
out In the world to sink or swim by
would gather in one room whlle he
your own efforts. To me, having
conducted a music class. I can't · spent eight years In a one room
remember whether we had a piano
school, all that space was bewilderor not but at least it was a welcome
ing. There are a lot of firsts In high
diversion. It is queer how some
school worth remembering,' new
memories will be as sharp today as
subjests, new books, new teachers'
they were over 50 years ago whlle
and new friends. Then of course·
other things Which you should
there were those bewildering crea·
remember are lost in the mist. That
lures - new girls.
:
is why Doily's letter brought back
How I'd love to do It all over
vivid memories I thought I had again!
forgotten.

me

·.

Trial...

UBI: THIS COUPON AT OUR 8'1'0111: 10 RI:CI:IVI:

A Retail Value
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depending on
optloM selected.

One ad tells vieWers to "remember Vietnam" and says U.S.
troops now "serve as bodyguards to
Central America dictators and area
slow· burning fuse to war."
'file conunerclal says Mondale
agrees with President Reagan "and
said he, too, would ieavesomeofthe
troops there as· bargaining chips
with Nicaragua.
"Our sons as bargaining chips,
will we never learn,'' the announcer
says. The ads are designed to appeal
to voters In theirllsand40s,manyol
whom view Vietnam as symbolic of
foreign policy failures.
Both Mondale and Hart are
virtually ignoring this weekend· s
caucuses in Virginia, Kansas, and
Montana and campaigning only
brtefly In Connecticut for Its 52
convention delegates. Their major
efforts are being concentrated on
New York where voters pick 252
delegates in the state's primary.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson plans to
campaign In Virginia this weekend,
where his supporters say he Is
gaining ground . Mondale is considered the front-runner in the
VIrginia caucuses, which are bPing

By .IAMD ROWLEY
Aeeool•te.t p,_ Wrtter
While Walter Mondale Is callJng

Winning lottery
numbers: 585, 8986

Rain in Sunday forecast

lmage advertising:
:a soft-sell message Remem·b ering jag_________.,;___L_owe_t_tw_i_:ng:...._eu
Image advertising, a soft -sell message that seeks only to leave a good
impression ra !her than send you hurrying to the store, has now become one
of Madison Avenue's hottest products.
' Jmage ads are everywhere. By most industry estimates they now
a~t for at least $1 billion of billings, or a sum five times the size of the
nailonal budget deficit.
' What do they bring? Friendship, understanding, familiarity.
"Once I know you I am five times more likely to think well of you," says
Alden Sulger Jr. of Oigivy &amp; Mather, who Insists tha t followup studies
demonstrate this observation to be fact.
· While many people might be Inclined to say "that's nice," they might
also continue to wonder how good feelings impact the bottom line. But
Sulger, O&amp;M executive vice president, maintains it is so.
" You can't put calipers on II, but the impact is there," he says, recaillng
that Smllh Barney, the brokerage house, picked up hundreds of accounts
'sllice !hey began their ads with actor John Houseman.
Besides, In these troubled times everyone needs friends, if only because
,you're never sure what's likely to happen next.
"With friends, you get the benefit of a doubt," says Sulger. "U you make
as many friends as you can there's a better chance that peoplewillllsten to
you rather than trying you and hanging you."
It· pays to tn;~ke friends before the troubles begin. Troubles such as
environmental, political and regulatory, for example.
: Some companies use image ads to create Interest In themselves ·as
·po5slble takeover candidates, and others to scare off would-be acqu~rs.
.And companies use it to enhance their investor appeal.
Some use them to speak to their employees. That might seem to be a
.frivolous use of money, but the results suggest otherwise.
Ad people say that IBM's !mage as a great place to work reinforces the
:notion that it is indeed a great place to work. Other companies, such as
:Nationwide, use image ads to communicate to representatives- agents,
.In thiS Instance - !hi! public image expected of them.
· So versatile Is the image ad, it is said on Madison Avenue, that you can
~ even use It to con-ect a bad situation, as Shell oll, has sought to do since 1974,
:when oU prices shot up like a geyser.
· "It decided," he said, "that a company that seeks to help is going to be
:more highly regarded than a company that argues all the time." It became
:the theme of a helpful series of booklets called "Come to Shell For
:Answers."
· ls image advertising manipulation? Hardly, says Sulger, though he
that some people onMadlsonAvenuedisllke thetenn, feeling it is
; tainted with suggestions of exploitation.
: Self-a!lltered? Yes, perhaps, says Sulger. But inherent In the message,
· he says, Is the understan4fug that a company's self-Interest llEs In serving
: Its customers.

.

Mondale, Hart step up verbal attacks

FOJ gutting~_________J_ac_k_And_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan has tried to draw a curtain
of secrecy between the government
and the people. What he wants the
people to know, he would like to
communicate to them directly or
through government -coot roll ed
mechanisms.
Claiming a need to stop leakS of
classified lntonnation, Reagan has
done all in his power to keep a tight
nozzle on the news. Here's how he
has sought to control the now of
lnfonnatlon to the public:
- He's like to shut up government employees by subjecting
them to lie-detector tests. The tests
would not, of course, stop the
biggest leaks of all: the disclosure
of . cias!ifled Information by the
authorities themselves whenever It
sUits their purposes.

'·

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

The matter of·Meese _______:_:.Ja;..._,;m..;_es..;;..J._K_....ilpa~tric___,k:
WASIDNGTON- It has become
a truism in our town that perception
isn't everything. To paraphrase a
famous football coach, It's become
the only thing. There are times
when reality hanlly matters, and
that's where we are right now in the
tribulations of presidential counselor Ed Meese. A perception has
grown that Meese, the president's
nominee for attorney general. Is a
wheeler-dealer.
.
That perception, in my judgment,
Is wrong. The reality, unless I a m
sorely mistaken, Is that Meese is an
able and decent human being,
devoted to his president, who has
suffered unduly from 11) a piece of
hard luck and 121 an oversight In
filling out a certain form .
If reality governed our public
affairs, Meese ought to be speedily
confirmed. Absent the most compelling reasons, a president - any
president- Is e ntitled to confirmation of his Cabinet nomlne&lt;&gt;s. But

.

Vllld
tlfllil ·•
417/14

·~·•••~•••••••••••~••.-w•••~•••••

AMIFM Megna'o'Ox
Telephone Cloct&lt; Radio

Television

MinoUa X· 700 Camera

Open a 311.!, 5 or 7 year certificate
account at Gallipolis Savings
and receive a BONUS gift.
Your account earns high
interest and is guaranteed.

Seldom do you have a better
opportunity to accomplish your
investment objective and receive an
extra .. .a BONUS yilt.

~

GALLIPOLIS

SAVDN&lt;GS

441 2nd Avenue

Gal"polls, Ohio 45631

(614) 446-3832

�--- .

.....

Ohio-Point Plea~ant, W.Va.

Inflation 'pinned to the mat'
WASHINGfON tAP) - Food
costs rose slower In February to hold
the Increase In overall consumer
prices to 0.4 percent, the government said Friday. The White House
said the news Is a sign Inflation is
"pinned to the mat," and private
economists generally agreed .
Most economists held to their
projections that the Inflation rate
would rise a moderate 5 percent or
so this year. It rose 3.8 percent in
1983, the least since the priceron! rolled years of 1971-72.
Yet a few economists worried that
the economy's strong peformance
in January and February, combined with the declining value of the
dollar, would lead to a bigger pickup
in prices later this year.
The big news In the Labor
Department's report on the Consumer Price Index was that food
prices, which soared 1.6 percent in
January, rose 0.6 percent as the
effects of last year's harsh weather
faded. Still, prices of beef, fresh
vegetables, poultry and eggs were

much higher.
Also rishing shaJllly were home
heating oU prices- up their most in
three years- and telephone bUis, a
result of the regulatory changes
accompanying the breakup of the
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
Co.

Last month's overall Increase
was less than the seasonally
adjusted gain of 0.6 percent in
January. which was the sharpest
rise In nine months. Prices were up
only 0.2 percent in December.
Meanwhile, the department als(l
said the average weekly earnings of
U.S. workers, adjusted for inllatlon,
fell 0.3 percent in February,
compared to a 0.8 percent increase
in January. Eamingsfell0.5percent
In November and rose0.6percent in
December.

Costs for medical care rose 0.8
percent, the most in a year.
Offsetting those increases were
declines in the prices of clothing,
gasoline and public transportation.

11rr;;;;;;~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;~;;;;;;;;jj~

FURNITURE SHOWCASE
Published each Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, by the Ohio Valley PublishIng Co mpany- Multimedia, Inc. Se·
"cond c la ss postage paid at Ga iUpoll s,
Dhlo 45631. Entered as st&gt;rond c lass

SAVE 20% ro 50% STOREWIDE

ma iling mall er at Pomeroy, Ohio,
P,osl Office.
Me mber: The Associa tPd Press ln Jand Dally Press Assoclalion and the
American Newspaper Publishers Assoclallon, Nationa l Adv(&gt;rflslng RE'-Pr'fS(&gt;ntallve, Branham . 1717 West
Nine Mile Road. Su i!£&gt; 204. Detroit,
Mic higa n. 48075.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .. .. ............................ $1.00
One Month .. . ........................... $4.40
One Yea r ....... ...... .............. .... S52 .RO
SINGLECOPV
PRICE
35 CPnts

ThE' Su nday Tlmrs -Senlln('l will not
be responsible for ad va nce payment s
made by carriers.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only
One year ...... .......... ........ ...... $20 .80
Six months ............ .............. ... 10.40

13

52

26
13

_

•4 DAY/3 NIGHT VACATION TO ONE OF 12 RESORTS, INCLUDING HONOLULU, HAWAII;
ACAPULCO, MEXICO; NIAGARA FALLS; LAS
VEGAS, NEVADA: PLUS 8 OTHER RESORTS.

•5 PIECE SET OF SAMSONITE FOLDING CHAIRS
AND TABLE
•LANE CEDAR CHEST
•BRASS TABLE LAMP
ST

ava ll ab l r~

52
·26

REGISTER FOR

TRANSPORTATION NOT INCLUDED.

No suscripllons by mall pefmiltf'd In
town s where homf' carrif'r serv ice Is

Lifestyle
FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

$}59
.

TAVERN
HAM

.

12

$} §H~E

LB ..

LB.

HALF
HAM

HAM

POMEROY - State school foundation payments for March to
Meigs County's three school districts have been released by the state
auditor's office.
Total payments were:
Eastern- $121,745, basic and transportation allowances; $3,748,
school employees retirement; $11,374, state teachers retirement,
with the net payment to the district being $106,623.84.
Meigs - $lll2.216.68, basic and transportation allowances; $9,262,
employee retlremen.t; $34,850, teachers retirement. Net payment
was $248,104.!i7.
Southern - $123,835.72, basic and transportation allowances;
$3,673, employee retirement; $13,658, teachers retirement; net
payment, $106,504.72.
The county board of education allotment for March was $23,716.54.

GROUND
CHUCK

$1 49

POUND
PORK

SHOULDER
ROAST

$J19

RACINE - Kindergarten registration for Southern Local School
District will be held Thursday, AprU5, from8-lla.m. and from 1-2::.!
p.m. in the kindergarten room next to Southern Junior High, Jean
Atklre announced.
Parents are to bring a record of Immunization and child's birth
certlllcate.
A child must be five by Sept. 30 to enroll. A child entering
kindergarten this year must have DPf series and booster, polio
series and booster, MMR vaccine, and recent skin test as requied by
law.
There will be no kindergarten classes on the day of registration.
Alkire said children must be registered at this time to enable bus
drivers to pian routes more efficiently.

CUBE
STEAK

$239

POUND

Tuition increases

LIVER
HOLLYWOOD

.SPARE RIBS

SPECIAL ORDERS
WELCOME
PHONE 446-1543

•FREE DELIVERY
OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.l.
•FREE PARKING
liON. &amp; FRI. TO I P.ll .
"WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN "

DEFIANCE, Ohio (APl - Tul·
tton w!lllncrease6percentandroom
and board 4.75 percent for the next
academic year at Defiance College,
officials said.
Tuition will be $4,700 and room
and board $2,200 for the 1984-85
academic year.
"We believe that these Increases
are well below those planned at
other Independent colleges, and that
our total cost remains among the
lowest for Ohio

POUND

CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE • GALLIPOLIS • 446-3046

RC
RC 100

•

8-16
BTLS.

oz.

Plus Deposit

Dl ET RITE

$}4 9

COTIONELLE 6 ROL~l

!!!!!!

SCOTT TOWELS

·~~~

~

RENUZIT . 45 oz.

Ill ~~R0 ~J:~~~~i $}19

Ill
Ill

NUMAID

'1984

111111
1111

59¢

1111

1111
Ill

1111

___

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

$}49

59¢

LIQUID 12 oz.
DETERGENT
_V;;. ; AL;.;.; LE:.:.:.YB:.:EL:.:.:.L.:....._-=.....:::__

$}69

2%

ORANGE JUICE

'$.13 9

CARNATION

~rJEE

16 '01.

IN-GROUND POOLS

45¢

PILLSBURY
BIG COUNTRY
BISCUITS 10 cr.

HEINZ

RECT.

•

KETCHUP
.

'

.•

.
.•
,•

'

Price ealhown Base prlcealtlrt

.•

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24 oz.

BOTTLE

$9559 * $8669 *
You've got to drive it to believe it!
Plymouth Voyager works like magic lor you and
your family. Carry two and a big load. Or 11118 with
room to spare. Or choose optional seating lor seven.
Front-wheel-dri\18 \~:&gt;yager is easy to drive ...easy
to park. And surpris·
'J/'7 esr.
EPA
ingly fuel efficient.
'II Hwv.
~~ ..

1241

FRESH PRODUCE

Plymouth \~:&gt;yager. America's most 118r&amp;alile wagon.
•..

5 year/50,000 mile Protection Plan.
Voyager's quality Is baCked by limited warranties on
the power train and outer.body rusHhroOgh lor live
years or 50,000 miles, whichever comes first.
Deductible applies. Excludes leases. Ask lor details.

FRESH CRISP

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE Inc.

:. 300 THIRD AVE. AT COURT

PHONE 446-0842

49¢

GlLLIPOLIS, OH.
~

=·

• Slicker price excludes title. taxes, destination charges and optional 7-passenger seating. • • Use EPA estimates for com·
•. ··on. 'lbur mileage may vary depending on speed, weather and trip length. Actual highway mileage proballly leSS.
:.
· .,.rcentage of recaHs for '82 and '83 models designee! and buih in North America. Source: National Highway TraffiC

•

(

·.,istration. '

·'

.}

..

•

'

MAIN:E

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lETTUCE'

Plymouth. Be8t built! Belt t.c:ked. ·

:.

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CALIFORNIA
'

'

P-OTATOES ·ORANGES·
10 LB. $}69 .·
6~0R $}00
BAG ·,
I

,,

ALL POOLS COME WITH CHOICE OF D. E. OR SAND
. FILTER, INSTALLED POOL COMES WITH LADDER,
6' DIVING BOARD, CLEANING KIT, AUTO. CHLORINATOR, 4FT: CONCRETE ON SIDES, 6FT.ON SHALLOW END, 8 FT. ON DEEP END, AND START UP
CHEMICALS. -

•

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•

•
•
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,.

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1-614-992-7191

299
•

• Fresh IQSSed salad with your choice of three dress'"gs
• Piping hoi boked polalo (served t I AM - 8 PM)
Salad. beans. or boked potato (when ovolloble) may be substituted lor
~ench ~ies or cole ~ow with any order.

_ .._

(T-.1 ICIIad ond boked potato 20'

2ND &amp; SYCAMORE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
PH. 446-0303

extro~

A. Caatain D's~

~® a greaTUttle seafood plaee~

WALL TO WALL

_,

SPECIAL
LIVING ROOM
DINING ROOM
-HALL
REMNANTS
GALORE
ALL SIZES
ALL COLORS

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Reg. $598°0
Value

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Other Sizes Priced Accordingly.

INSTALLED
(Super Value Satisfaction Guaranteed)

LAYAWAYS WELCOME
NOT READY?
A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL
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Includes Complete Wall To Walllnstallation .With Thick Sponge Pad And
Your Choice Of Heavyweight 1st Quality Cut &amp; Loop Anso IV or Antron Ill
Nylorl In Over 20 Different Color Combinations.

IN STOCK

CARPET LAND

,

Jim-Roach
JUST PAST
,KRODEL Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
PARK
675-1712

The Captain has a great catch lor you ... o big$
lhree-piece Fish Dinner. Three golden brown
fish fillets. natural-cut french fries. creamy
cole slow. southern slyle hush puppies.

.
,.,..

OLD LOCATION - CRADDOCK COUNTRY GARDEN

Rob Ro~ie
, Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE 446 -1718

CARPET SALE

FULL LINE OF E®Z CLORS,
CHEMICAlS AND TABEY
CHEMICALS AND ACCESSORIES.

16x32 ........ ss200.00
18x36 ........ S8900.00
POOL KITS
20x40 ........ '9800.00 16x32 ........ '2500.00
OVAL
18x36 ........ S2700.00
16x32 ....... '7500.00 20x40 .....:.. S2950.00
18x36 ........ S8300.00 ABOVE GROUND POOLS,
OO FLOATS, POOL GAMES AND
2X40 ....... ;. ,9500
,
• . ACCESSORIES .

2 MOVIES FOR '8.00 FOR 3 DAYS

3-PIECE
·FISH DINNER

. Choice for a Change

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-3795
ONLY

·675-1388

$1s 9

MONDAY SPECIAL

People who know
their business go to

POOLS
PLUS
CHARLESTON RD.

MILK
GAL
-V-AL-LE-YB-EL-L_....::.,_

Gallipolis

NOW OPEN

Captain D's®

• Counlly while beans

OPENING APRIL 2

~~ll~~E 24 oz. $}3 9

SHUR FRESH

64 oz.
CTN.

RUBBISH
CAN LINERS .

~ \I

I
J

1111 -S~UN~LI""""GH...,.T----.:~-

MARGARINE
LB.
PKG.

446-0699

405 Second Ave.

prepares my tax return. My preparcr goes to
school every year to get special training. And
she does taxes hundreds of times. Training
and experience - that's
what makes you good at
your job. l'll care for the
' animals and let Block take
.care of my taxes."

Office Hours by Appointment Only

111~---111 RAINBOW 10 .CT.

FREE

"l know l'm in good hands when Block

Service

360Second
GALLIPOLIS
Avenue

•

In a 4:55p.m. accident, Mink and DWl were Robert L. Patterson, 'll.
another driver, Deborah L. Fisher, 919 Second Ave., Lawrence Grady
26, Gallipolis, were heading west on Jr., 29, 123 Fourth Ave., also for
Ohio 141. Fisher stopped to make a Improper lane usage, and Terry J .
left tum onto County Road 25. Blars, 25, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, also for
Mink'scarstruckFisher'svehicleto failure to maintain control of
vehlcle.
the rear.
Cited during the weekend for
The vehicles had slight damage.
The patrol said Grogg had pulled failure to yield wasRonaldJ. Lively,
onto0hio7from U.S.35ina2: 45p.m . 'll, Rt. 2, Gallipolis and for speeding,
accident and droveintothepathofa David K. Wilson, 30, Rock Cave,
car driven by Debra K. Zuspan, 28, W.Va.; Tw!la G. Taylor, :!!,
New Haven, W.Va.Zuspan'svehlcle Waterloo.
then struck Grogg's to the left side. . - - - - - - - - - Both cars had slight damage.
ia County
Engine ftre extinguished
An electrical short In the !!ngine of
Volunteer
a 1975 Mercury caused a minor fire
Emergency Squad
Friday afternoon.
NOW OFFERING
Eight firemen from the Gallipolis
Fire Department responded to the
3: 50 p.m. incident on State Street
next to Gallla Academy High
Ambulance Service
School.
8 A.M. til 12 Midnighl
Firemen applied 150 gallons of
24 Hour Service
water. Owner of the car is Brenda
Saturday
&amp; Sunday
Denny, 833Second Ave.
DWI charges made
446-8322
Cited by city police Saturday for

''I take the same care with
·animals that Block takes
with taxes.''

ANOTHER VALUABLE
BENEFIT OF
MEDERSHIP
JOIN ~ ' TODAY FOR
YOUR SUMMER TRAVEL PLANS

VETERANS MEMORIAL'HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

49

The two attacks occurred about 12
h:lurs apart Monday and Tuesday.
Pollee said they are searching for a
black man in connection with the
rapes, willie Powell is white.

•Travel Guides
•Road llaps
•Trip Routine

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

---n
!!!!!! !II
f~~~OOM
!!!!!!!!

•

Other drivers cited
Three drivers were cited for
assured clear distance and another
for faUure to yield from a stop sign In
separate two-vehicle accidents In
Gall Ia County Friday.
Charged for assured clear distance were Mary L. Fellure, 50,
Gallipolis; Janet M. Neal, 46,
GaWpolis; and Myrtle Mink, 00,
Northup. Cited for failure to yield
was Myrtle L. Grogg. 26, Shade.
In a 7:00p.m. accident on Ohio7,
Fellure struck a pickup truck to the
rear driven by William J . Campbell
Jr., 41, Gallipolis. Fellure's vehicle
had moderate damage and Campbell's, slight damage.
On Ohio 160, Neal , who was
traveling south, was unable to stop
foracarandstruckltintherear.The
struck vehicle in the 8: W p.m.
accident, was driven by Carolyn S.
Stapleton, 23, Ewington. The vehlcles had slight damage.

PAUL'S HOME VIDEO

twice.

POUND

Gallla-Melgs Post or the Ohio
Highway Patrol following an ace!dent on safford School Road at 12: 25
a.m. Saturday.
He was driving northbound in the
center of the road and reportedly
struck a car driven by Samuel J.
Juniper, 22, P0!n. Pleasant. Juniper
was uninjured ~ .d his vehicle
sustained heavy damage. Saunders
had moderate damage.

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Detectives
who originally thought the same
persop may have brutally attacked
twowomensaytheyarenowcertain
different people committed the
attacks.
Charles Eugene Powell, W,
pleaded innocent Friday to charges
IJ~iiiiilil~iiiii--~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;ii;;;;;;;
of aggravated murder and aggravated burglary in the slaying of his
elderly neighbor, Elva Mae Burris,
82.
Pollce, meanwhile, continued
searching for an assailant who ~---------l
stabbed another woman in the eyes
after abducting her and raping her

Southern kindergarten registration

LEAN &amp; JUICY

$}19

Man enters
innocent plea

School subsidy payments released

LB.

FRESH LEAN

SUPERIOR
PRE-SLICED
BACON LB.

BEEF
BEEF

HELP US CELEBRATE OUR THIRD ANNIVERSARY
AND SAVE ON QUALITY HOME FURNISHINGS.

Dally and Sunday
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PORK SHOULDER

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Sherlft'a Department was
notUted Saturdliy morning of the
theft of tlve calves taken from a lot
near a barn off Ohio 141.
The animals were believed stolen
sometime between 9 p.m. Friday
and eart,y Saturday morning on
property located 13 miles outside of
Gallipolis. Owner of the calves is
John GWs, Cedarvllle. Approximate value of the animals is $375.
Incarcerated Saturday in Gallla
County JaU tor OWl were Larry L.
Fisher, 44, Rt. 1, Point Pleasant, and
James 0. Saunders, 22, Galllpotls.
Saunders was charged by the

POMEROY - Cash management, marketing and personal
computers wW be the topics of seminars that will be offered In
Pometoy by Frank D. Ray, district director of the U.S. Small
Business AdminiStration.
The cash management seminar, slated for 7-10 p.m. Apr113 at the
Meigs Inn, wW rover ·principles ranging from startup capital to
bonus payments and dividends.
The marketing seminar, dealing with techniques of keeping
present customers and finding new ones, Is set for April 26, and the
seminar on personal computers Is slated tor May 17.
The seminars are co-sponsored by Marietta College Business
Resource Center, Middleport Chamber of Commerce and Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce. Further Information may be obtained by
contacting the Marietta college resource center at 374-4624.

Wt R... rve The Right to Umh Quentltl .. '

69¢

lB.

SUPERIOR

GALLIPOLIS - Floyd Wright, 9:!! Fourth Ave., has been
appointed Gallla County campaign for coordinator for Sen. Gary
Hart, candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Wright's responslbUitles include Identifying Gallla rountlans
interested in the Hart campaign and managing the candidate's
volunteer program locally, said Bob Goffee, Tenth Congressional
District chairman for the Hart campaign.

Snurll business seminars slated

Prlcea good thru M•rch 31. 1984

WHOLE
FRYERS

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolit, Ohio-Point Pleatant, W.Va.

--Local Briefs:---. Sheriffs deputies probing cattle theft

STORE HOURS! .
Mon.-Thur.. 9 am· tillO pm
Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

99¢
FRANKIES oz.

Hart coordinator named

March 25, 1984

March 25, 1984'

'

.

446•1641

161 3RD AVE. ON THE CORNER.
Same Location For ,Over 13 Years.

Gallipolis, OH.

�-----·· .
Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Area deaths
William L. Blessing
POINT PLEASANT - Word has
been received by the Times-Sentinel
ot the March 19 death of WllUam
Lester Blessing, 83, Denver, Colo.,
formerly of Point Pleasant.
·Born March 24,1900, sono!the late
WUilam Alonzo and Hannah Fran·
ces Fry Blessing, he was a minister
for more than 60 years and founded
the House of Prayer lor All People,
Denver,ln 1941.
Surviving are his wife, Bernidine
Blessing; two sons, WUUam Lester
Jr., and John David, bothofDenver;
two daughters, Virginia Nell Zlm·
merman ot Yakima, Wash., and
Lois Ann Hoth of Lafayette, Colo.; a
sister, Garnet 0. Chapman of
Letart, W.Va.; six grandchildren,
several great-grandchildren and
SE!Veral nieces and nephews.
,
·Hewasalsopreceded In death by a
brother, Howard Earnest, and by a
grandson.
Funeral services were held In
Denver last week.

Preceded In death by one daughter,
Mildred Mankin.

Ella M. Scarbrough
POMEROY - Funeral services
for Ella M. Scarbrough, 73, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, who died Thursday,
will be held at 10 a.m. Monday In
Ewing Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp
officiating.
A short service will be held at
Gosham Valley Cemetery, Kenna,
W.Va., at 1 p.m . Monday.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 3-9 p.m. today.
She was the daughter of the late
Steven B. and Minnie Hays.
The name of her daughter that
survives Is Carolyn Larrlbee, not
Carolyn Larrami as was reported.

By The Associated Press

Graham Statton, Mason County.
Industry officials are asking the
Reagan administration to impose a
break-point pricing system on
ferroalloys subsidized by foreign
governments. Under the system,

U.S. Commerce Secretary Mal·
coim Baldrige says he expects the
White House to make a decision
within a month on complaints that
imports are hurting the domestic
Repre5f&gt;ntatives
terroalloys
industry.of three West
Virginia terroalloy plants met with
Baldridge on Friday.
"We had a very Informative
exchange ot views," said Bob Pyle,
a consultant toElkem Metals, which
has a plant In the Fayette County
community or Allov.
Ferroalloys, ingredients used In
the production of s!eel, aluminum
and other metals, are Increasingly
being produced overseas and domestic manufacturers have had to
lay off thousands of workers.
Thhe meeting, held In U.S. Sen.
Robert C. Byrd's office, also was
attended by officials from Chemetals Inc. in Kingwood, Preston
County, and Foote Mineral Co. In

PoiNT PLEASANT - Sarah
Allee Wheeler Cain Boggs, 55, 1243
Evergreen Drive, Columbus, died
Friday In Grant Hospital, Coium·
bus, following a lengthy Illness.
BornJune16,1928,inLeon, W.Va.,
s~ attended Point Pleasant High
School and was a former employee
or Western Electric In Columbus.
·Surviving are two sisters, Dicie
McKinney and Mary Rayburn, both
ot Point Pleasant; two brothers,
Delmar and Frank Wheeler, both ot
Leon; and several nieces and
nephews.
·Funeral arrangements will be
under the direction of R.O. Wood·
yilnJ Funeral Home,l346S.HighSt.,
Columbus.

In the U.S. at a lower price that the
cost ot etticiently producing the
metal dom'estically, Pyle said.
Baldrige said the Commerce
Department has forwarded recommendations on the Industry's plight

Charles T. Russell
..
• POMEROY - Additional survtwrsofCharlesT. Russell Sr., 88,Rt.
~. Pomeroy, who died Thursday, are
$CVen grandchildren and 13 great
~dchildren.
·
,. In addition to hls parents, two
$lsters ani! a brother, he was also

,.

' POMEROY - The L. Edward
I
fempleton, Pomeroy, who was
lined in the Meigs County Court on a
~barge of possession of marijuana,
Js not the Edward Templeton who Is
!I deputy for the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department.

20°/o ro 50°/o

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ON ALL SPRING SUITS
The Newest Suits in Spring's
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AND MANY OTHER QUALITY AND VALUE MINDED STORES.

300

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OH.

In the Lafayette Mall

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126 Main St.

•

The Only Portable Computer
With 5 Built-In Programs!
TRS.SO Model

100 by Radio Shack

The

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Pomeroy

992-6674

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ssgg
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They're still the original
Levi's" blue jeans that won
the west over 130 years ago.
Five pocket. button-fly,
copper-riveted, shrink·to·lit
denim jeans. But since that's
amouthful to ask for. we
thought you might like to call
them by their name 501's" jeans.

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

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Reg. 999.00

12" Monitor • Typewriter-Style Keyboard • 12-Key Datapad
The ideal starter computer for your family! Set up a budget, manage invest·
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program it in BASIC or use our ready-to-run cassette software. Expand any·
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• Address/Telephone Directory • Appointment Scheduler
• Auto-Dial Telecommunications • BASIC Programming Language
Built-in phone modem lets you communicate with other cpmputers or acceSs
national information services. Full-size typewriter·s!yle keyboard and 8-line by
40-character LCD. #26-3801 BattOIIOS extra

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• Up to 500-Ft. Range From Base
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is·proud to
-announce
our appointment
as an Authorized
Sales Agent for
Xerox
, in Gallia, Meigs
&amp; Jackson Counfles

•
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For the Newest In Styles
It is......

Call 'for a free demonstr!ltlon and see just how much a ·
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Your Galli~olis Levi Dealer
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The Liberty Prea
440 E. Main S)reet
·~ Jackson. Ohio 45640
, (614) 2~ or 286-6100

t , ,

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.•'•

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709 Flrst Ave.

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I

..

Sunday lit'nM-Sentinel

grand jury.'·!
Mrs. McMartin and one teacher
were Indicted Frtday; the rest were
indicted Thursday. Superior Court
Judge Ronald George refused
Friday to decrease the ball, which
ranges up to $1 million for Mrs.
McMartin's grandson, 25-year-old
Raymond Buckey. Arraignments
were set for April 6.

Deputy C.E. Stout were then called
In to assist. A deputy guarded the
deputy at gun point Friday morning rear entrance of the mobile as two
in a Mercervtlle mobile home, a Rt.
approached the front entrance.
1, Scottown man was ·arrested and
Mullins reportedly kicked the
eharged with aggravated burglary front storm door open, finding a
by the Gallla County Sheriff's security chain fastened and a chair
Department.
braced against theinsldeotthedoor.
· Thedeputy, whowasalsoaidedby The two then proceeded to a
two other deputies during lnvestlga· bedroom, where Mullins again
lion ot a break-in at the home of kicked open a door.
Dorothy Beaver, Main Street,
Both were reportedly confronted
arrested Ted Allen Thacker, ~by Thacker, who allegedly pointed a
Thacker was incarcerated In .22-caUber rifle at them. Investlga·
Gallla County" Jail Friday and Is tors said the rUle was tater
sc;heduled to appear In Gallipolis discovered loaded and cocked for
Municipal Court Tuesday for a firing.
preliminary hearing.
After ordered three times by
The department said that at 7: 50
MuiUns to drop the rifle, Thacker
a.m., Deputy Howard Mullins was
compiled, dropping the rifle on a
dilpatched to the home and round bed. After Thacker was handcuHed,
three windows In the front broken,
a 3'h·to 4-inch lock blade knife was
while the front door secured. After
conflsca ted from Thacker.
questioning nearby relatives, he
The department said Thacker
wu tllld a man was seen walking In 1 may have broken into the ho!lle ·
tront ol the mobile home earlier that overnight and remained while-the
mcrning,
owner was away. Depij1fe5 found
Investigator James Marriner and
drawers ransacked.

Sprin Suit Sale
SAVE

39~
16 oz.
BTLS.

Deput1es arrest man•

and three other women who worked
at the now-closed school with
committing felony child abuse
against 18 youngsters over a 1Q.year
span.
However, District Attorney flD.
bertPhillboslanhassaldhebelleves
up to 100 children may have been
molested, and that with plans tor
many more interviews with former
pupils, "We expect a lot more

GALLIPOLIS-AftersuJTender·

Cut 43°/o
RC COLA

The

\Jig to the commands of a sherttt' s

64K Dual Disk Drive Model 4

Not
the same
,

you're guilty unW you prove you're
innocent, and God help you then,"
said Mrs, McMartin,lndlctedonone
countofsexuaUymolestingachUd.
Ifconvicted,shecouldbesentenced
toelghtyearsinprtson.
The 1.15-count Indictments accuse
Mrs. McMartin, her 57-year-old

~

Cassene recorder eJCtra

,

young 81 2 were raped, fondled and
sodomized as "aU a bunchotlles.''
"But the news media believes

were sexuaUy "brutallzed."
But Virgtnta McMartin,. 76-year·
old founder or the preschool that
bears her name in suburban
Manhattan Beach, on Friday Ia·

after aIIeaed break•m

By Radio Shack

He was also a retired employee of
~ West Virginia Department of
Highways and a member of the
Gallipolis Eagles Lodge and the
Point Pleasant K of P Lodge.
• Surviving are a daughter, Mary
Jones ot Oak Hill; four sisters, Mrs.
Allee Thompson of Rt. 2, Point
Pleasant, Mrs. Mlrinie Peters Riffie
of Gallipolis, Okalla Berkley of
Johnstown, and Eleanor Hail of
Clxtord, Pa.; a brother, Hubert of
Columbus; and four grandchildren
and 10 great-grandcblldren.
He was also preceded in death by
two children.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday In "crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with
the Rev. George Hoschar officlat·
lng. Burtal will be in Lone Oak
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m. today.

elderly, Wheelchair-bound founder
otaday-carecenterwhereprosecu·
tors aay cklzens of children were
molested waa trusted as a "pillar ot
tl)e community," acCording to a
8

~~imipo~rted~~~~erroa~~llo~y~s~can~no~t~be~so~ld~~to~the~Whi~~te~House~~·bu~t~he~dec~l~in~ed~~O.~W~.V~a~.:i~~~~;

~ey.

~t.

Pomeroy-:-Middleport-Gallipolis, 9hio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page

A-7

~~!!l,..~~!em~~~te!... !o!!'!e!l~f!~S,..~!,ll~S!!!~~I!,~~~~~~..-·--

to say whether the suggestions
involved break-point pricing, ac·
cording to Pyle.
Also attending the meeting were
Byrd arid Reps. Alan Mollohan, Bob"
Wise and Harley Staggers Jr., all

Cebert W. Rainey
. POINT PLEASANT- Cebert W.
75, 2211Mount VernonAve.,
POint Pleasant, died at 2: 50 p.m.
F);day In Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born May 7, 1!0!, in Mason
COunty, son of the late Columbus
and Ettie Gaskins Rainey, he was a
retired employee of West Virginia
MBlleable Iron Co. and a president
of. the AFL-ClO union local at that"

•

March 25, 1984

Ferroalloys producers protest foreign imports :

NOW AVAILABLE

S~rahBoggs

March 25, 1984

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

. ._ XERO~· II 1 Uademtril ol XE,,X CORPORATION

,.

I

The TAB ill1d the WO&lt;d 'le~·s•"' are reolste~ed trademarks ol Levi Strauss &amp;CO.•
San FIJilCisco. CA C Levi Strauss &amp;Co.. 1982

·'

who faces 75 counts; his mother,
Peggy McMartin Buckey, who
managed the school; and former
teachers Betty Ra!dor, 64, and Mary ·
Ann Jackson. 57- remained in jail
today.

Theotherthree-Mrs. McMa~·

tin; her granddaughter, Peggy Ann
Buckey, 28; and former teacher
Babette Spitler, 36- posted bail late
Friday and were released.

�-

......

·····•
•

Ohio-Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

river

Cave-in
•
msurance
optional

.

1rim.es- i.entitJtl

Sect1on LeJ~
sunday

r

POMEROY - Beselged with
questions about a plan to create
lxxne Insurance for cave-Ins caused
by mining, Sen. Oakley Collins,
R-lronton, said the Insurance would
be optional and homeowners not
Interested In the coverage could
Indicate to his or her Insurance
agent.
"Apparently some misinterpretation on the mechanics of this
proposal has contused a lot of
people, '' said Collins.
"As the bills stands, no wlitten
waivers are required If the home
owner decides against purchasing
the Insurance coverage," he said.
Collins explained the bill Is
pending In the Senate. Tliemeasure
would set up a mine subsidence
Insurance tund to allow property
owners to Insure their homes and
other structures against damage
resulting from cave-Ins.

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street dance celebrations. It Ill

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March 25,

SOUTH AMERICAN
CltAF'm - The traditional
crafta of South America are
chanllln&amp; with modemlzatlon,
but t.hoee on display at the
French Art Colony are from
rural, non-touriflt areas, and
ll!lllffeded by technoloiY· At left
Is an lkat llhawl from GuaBceo,
Ecuador; Ship-a beekets from
Rlobamba, Ecuador and a lllallk
frum Mexico. Shawls can take
up to 8 monthll to procluce on
looms. At right Ill a Jaguar Ma8k
from Guerrero, Mexico, Ulled In

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teedJ and bmtles.

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••••••••••••••••••

Reds scout
meets Rotary
MIDDLEPORT - Jim Vennali,
Cincinnati 'Reds scout, was guest
speaker at the Friday night dinner
meeting of Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotacy Club held at Heath United
· Methodist Church, Middleport
Vennarl told of the Red's org~­
zatlon, thevarlousdepartmentsand
the prospects for this year.
Roger Luckeydoo, president,
named Hank Cleland chalmlan of'
the annual Easter Egg hunt, and BID

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will serve .·0'! the.

~

Guest was Dr. Gordon Ainsba!y,
Gallia County Rotarian.
.
Dinner was served by the ladles of
the church.

A

South American works at FAC:
technology changes native crafts

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Bus drivers
graduate course
POMEROY - Nine people recently completed the Ohio PreService School Bils Drivers' Train- ·
lng Course held at Buckeye Hills

.

Career Center In GaiDa County.
.
In the group are Dewey Mullins,
Bqnnle J. Mullins, Mark B. Searles,
Daniel Steve Salisbury, Kenneth E .
Ours, Linda Morlis, Ivan Mayo,
· Franklin Brumfield, and Esther
Black.
The 20-hour course Is required of
all school bus drivers In thestate. lt
Is deslgned to assist drivers to
assure all pubUc school children
have a safe school bus ride.
Topics covered In the course are
pupU management, pre-tlip Inspection, first aid, defensive driving,
laws and regulations.

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Arilfilda ~ Jl.e colectloa ol
~ Cl'awford Ullldl ol
Atbepl, 1J1e1111i1w "eyes ol the
coador," Is on ~ 4ll lbe

F'reacb Art Colcli\Y lhroulh
March Sl. At rllbt Is a let ol
Peacock pins fllllloned from

metal Wid! . . . lJtones from
Ecuador. Below Is the dllplay In
the main pllery. which Includes
the IarKe 'water veseel or
Tene,tapa, frum Cblapll8, Mex·
leo; celebra plW'd from Huaucayo, Pena, which hu Intricate
geo111etrlc de&amp;'l!w; carved !Ish
or Feaca. frum Guerrero, Mex·
leo; aD on a p!IIIIIMric cle8lpled
nil
frum Mexico.

Emergency runs
POMEROY -Three emergency
runs were answered by Jocal units .
Frtday the Meigs. County Emer- '
gency Medical Service reported.
At 8: 11 a.m., Middleport was
called to Stone Wood Apartments
for Mary Gilkey who was taken to
Veterans Memolial Hospital; at
8; 25 a.m., Pomeroy was called to an
auto accident on East Main Street In
Pomeroy. Taken to Veterans were
Grace Chaney and Mary Hysell.
At 10: 47 p.m., MiddlePort was
summoned to 217 N. Third St. for
Carol Wines who was taken to
Veterans.

...

.···•
.'. ·'' .
~, '

'

weavmc

·· ~· ·

By LEE ANN WELCH
'11mes-8entlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Interested In
South America and Southern
Mexico? The French Art Colony
has just the exhibit for you.
~ Ojos del Condor will be on
exhibit there through March 31,
and there will be a public
reception and slide presentation
today at 2 p.m., according to
Connie Campbell-Eaton of FA C.
The owner of the exhibit,
Thomas Crawford Lllllck, will
be at the French Art Colony
~Y to answer any questions
concemlng the collection, which
features musical Instruments,
photOgraphs, artwork, handicrafts and clothing.
Lllllck has been living off and
on In the areas of rural Mexico,
Bcuador and Peru for a number
of years, and has a master of fine
arts degree from Ohio
University.
Items on display represent
types of work being created In
that region In recent years.
Lilllck notes they depict everyday situations In the area and
·reflect the Individual farnllles.
Matelials used are Imported
from the United States and
Japan, Ms. Campbell-Eaton
said, as opposed to those native
to South America .
Lllllck said that due to the
Intense work needed to produce
many of these crafts, the
traditions of fine craft Is fading
away. For Instance, a common
wrap, or shlgra, will take up to
slx months to prnduce on a crude
loom.
The government of the area

discourages fine crafts traditionally prnduced, Ms. CampbellEaton said, and will encourage
modernization and use of Imported Items and sold within the
community to boost the cash
now and stabilize the local
economy.
"Traditional crafts are drastically changing In quality and
quantity," she added. "The
government encourages these
lower quality Items prnduced for
sale at toulism points In the
countries.''
The crafts at the French Art
Colony were obtained from

rural, non-towist areas, she
noted, and reflect the traditional
fine crafts ·of South America.

Technology has also changed
the patterns on pottery and in

weaving. Geometlic designs are
no longer used, replaced with
people oliented scenes. The time
Involved with geometlic patterns was great, and the scenes
are reflective of the lack of time.
The exhibit will be on display
through March 31. GaUery hours
are Tuesday and Thursday, 10
a.m. to3 p.m. , and Saturday and
Sunday 1 to 5 p.m .

I

Party canceiled
,.

RACINE- The American Legion
birthday party planned by Racine
American Legion Auxiliary Unit 002
for Saturday, March 31, has been

•..•• .•

...::

cancelled due to the Southern High
Basketball banquet.

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In hospital
RACINE - Victor Wolfe, Racine
Is a patient at University Hospital,
Room 80&lt;1, Rhodes Hall, Columbus,
OH 43:m. Cards may be sent to him
bt care of the hospital.

....

SeJMtne! WID be mc.-d frum ·

• ceae. to 10 ceat&amp;

'lbll. WID be the lin&amp; locreue
lplbe T-8 price minore IliaD four
. ,_.., ..W Paul Barker, Ohio
Valq PnNW•w Co. dJalla.

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TRADmONAL CRAFl'S- Above, this piece Is on the mantle In the
main galleey, and Is a ceramic doll of the market shopper from Peru .
Below Is a decorated pot, or Satumlno Bias, from Cuzro, Peru.

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• Ma,dt 25, l984

Pome10y-Middleport-Gallipolit,

.,

.•

=~··Ef!tgagements = =

ELL

•• •

STORE HOURS
Mon. -Sat. 8 AM-10 PM

SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
'

MAR. 25-26-27

Paula.Jellll SlmdeD
Charlel F. Chlacey

BUCKET

Coupons

• POMEROY -

49

-

··w·1eners ••.•....• 89¢

•

P~~·.

• The open-church wedding wUI
• take place Friday, March 30at 7:30
p.m. at the First United Pentecostal

0A

RADE A

·
LB79¢
. urkeys ••••••••••••
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•Any manufacturer's coupon greeter than 61 C will be
redeemed at face value
· ~nly.
•Only one ... .Jnufacturer'a '
coupon per item.

.'

'•.

BANQUET

Pot P.ies ·.~ ....s·~;
GOLD .MEDAL

: $HURFINE .GRANULATED

FLOUR

. · SUGAR

5 LB. BAG

69¢'

GAL

limit One Per Customer ·
•.. G~d · Only :At Powell's
Olttl
lllrch 31. 1984

I

5·9$

SLB.~ $}.49

Limit One Per Customer
Only At Powell's .

•

Ont Per Customer
Only At Powell's
r_ up~~~
· ~ 31. 1984

••

TIDE DETERGEN'T

1710t$5 99'

•The total value of the double m11nufecturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchue
· price · of the item. Money '
will not be refunded.
•Thlt offer doet not epply to
Powell's Super Velu Coupont, fr~~t~ couponi, or any ·
competitor' a c!'upont. ' ,

THIS COUPON

WORTH $1 00 ON ANY
lnground Pool Kit - Invoiced Before April 1. 1984
Coupon Plus $100 Holds Your Swimn ng Pool
For 1984 At These Discount Pric s!

•

Call, and let me explain State Farm ·s
unbeatable combination of service,
protection. and economy.

Examples:

CAROLL SNOWDEN

16x32 .................................................. $2,250
18x36 .................................................. $2,550
20x40 .................................................. 12,775

4t7 Second Ave.
G•llipotis, Oh.
Phone446-4290
Home44H511

PHONE 448-2873:
OPERATORS

Karen Johnson, ltrv Edwards, llerri
~J ~ Ollar, Jeff lttnry, (llonday Ron SoWards), (Thursdly Marty
Rsynoids).
MERLE II ORMAN COSMETICS

2.

313 THIRD AVE .. GAUIPO.LIS

Our

Reg.

4.68~

rg;;l
~

3.48

Sheer Energy® Panty Hose

Nylon: with coHon panel. Savings.

6·pr. Pkg. Men's Crew Socks

lOO·fl. Extension Cord

Acrylic/nylon. Fit 10-13. Shop now.
Our4.97, 6 Pr.loyt' 9·11 •...•. .. .... 3.97

Heavy duty: lor In/outdoor use.

A M••Nfl• From 1Ae BWle...
TONGUES AND UNBELIEVERS

William B. Kug/an
It iJ affirmed that when the ''unleiJmed or unbeliever," who are not
membert of the ehureh, attend an usembiy where "tongue1 "
spoken, that it hu eonvicting power. But, thuis not in keeping
Paul's aeeount, for he deseribes an identieal situation saying,
t/urefore t/u w.\ole cbrc/a be come togetlaer imo one p/4ce, AJnd
lfl"k wit/a t011gt14t1, IJIId t/ure come in tllo1e tllot are unlearned, or
IIMIIieVerl, will tMy not~ tllot ,C tJn1 mtJd7" (1 Cor. 14:23). "Mad"
u ueed here hu reference to the mentally ill, insane, or lunatle;
therefore, Paul teill Ul that the uneonverted would think of sueh aa
behaving like the iunatlea. Sueh actions would be a hindrance rather
than a help to the non-member.
.
T~ · Proplteey • Unbellever
. Paul eontliluea bia illuatration with a similar situation (that is, the
UHmbly of the ehureh). The one thing different on this oeeulon is the
~of propheer is betnc exereieed, "BIIt if all prop/U!IJI, IJIId tilere come
m OM tllot be/Nt~ttla not, or OM 1111leamed, /ae il conllinced of all, /u il
judglll ofall: And.tb1,... tile ••cret• of /ail/wart tiiGIM ~ell: IJIId
10 falinq dollm 011/MI"'" ,.. will tuorllaip God, and reporl tllot God il
ini/OII .Ofalnltla"(1 Cor.14:24,25).
'froplucw" excelled ·the "lfiiG/tfrtg of
Why? When
P.rophea1sd, he apoke or taught under inspiration, instructing
'ullbe/Nver or t~lllearnlll" the doctrine that would enlia'hten
undertttnding with the knowledp of God. He would be able, 'by way
·the word, to eonvince the non-believer. By the word, he would open the
unbelieving heart (Acta 18~14) and produce the faith therein (Rm.
10:17).
TIM Etl~ Of Pra,lleer Oa TIM Uabellevw:
l·It.. ~~ie_!.!d the unbeliever of ain, righteouaneaa, and juc!Jrment
ehalleDjed the Judgment of the unlearned 10 he eould
eharacter; 3-It opened the heart of the outsider,
the aeerets o! hll innerllioat being; 4-It motivated him to
himself before God, directing his love toward the Almlgbty in
wonhip; 5-It brought !&amp;bout a truthful report to hll loved ones and
aequatntanees ''tW God ilill !fOil. "
TIM Ethctl OfT..... Oa TIM Uabellever:
l·lt waa void of underatanding, being nothing more than myateriea
and without prolit (l Cor. 14:12); l-It wu u e. trumpet that gave an
uncertain sound, haviD&amp;' no knowiedp, and wu u one ape•kfng in the
air (i €or.14:8,8);'1-It inadt the unbeliever u • "barbarian" (foreigner
or,a non,Greek iD akiU and ianguap) to tbe IPUker, and the a~er in
"tongue•" u a barbll'ian I!Dto the unbeBever (1 Cor. 4:11); 4-It
prevented the unlearned from underatanclinJr the "giving of tbanb" 10
u to aay ''Amen" (1 Cor; 14:18); 5-It wu a clillclllb act to ape~ tongues
that eould not be 'UIIcleratood (1 Cor. '14:20); and 6-1t hilp..-cl tbe
unbeliever u being an useq~bly of the mentally ill, or "madmen" (1
Cor. 14:23),
'
.
..
.
The warda.GI Paul allow Ul tllat the Mapealrfng or toncuee" bu the
_. m.iefklet 011 the ar.llcolievtr tod&amp;JI

ggc$

1.27

Glade- ipln-hlh"' .

Hot Cocoa MIXft
In milk chocolate,
marshmallow or 'Hte:

Air freshener Ills tissue holder. Savel

"Netwt.

Sole
Price

190sl .

49-oz: Fab® Detergent
Lemon-freshened Borax•
all-temperature detergent.

9 69.

Stereo Radio/cassette
AM-FM, FM stereo, 4 speaker
system.

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Jlatla.a.

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"Snappy 20" 35mm
Bull-In nash, locus-free
lens, auto-exposure.

K mort., Sale Price
less factory Rebate

Your Net Cost
Alter Rebate

2 •2 7

·1.00
1. 2 7

Rebate limited IO mff.'SttiJ:dotiOn

Flathllghfs/latterles
Jwo
with boHerles.

Developed
And Printed

Chap1l Hill Church of Christ

•Offer it only gdod for p,roduct em l)el)d. No Rain.
chtckt. ·
··· ·
·
~ere it ~

Slondald Ugh! With 2 "~~~=~I
And 1Compact light 2 "C"

rR'l!' ,.._.Bill'-~ Colin• Write... )

•;Thlt ,offer excludet clgerettu, b~ any other itema
· .prohibited 'by lew.
'

•

FCl

tonvue•· "

•The total value of the double'coupon may not exceed

-.

If you want to get
the most for your
homeowners Insurance
dollar, check with
state Farm.
•

Municipal Parkin&amp; Lot

... :. ~~~ . . .IG),.&gt;·...c'i*Qo•to(i&gt;IIQo• •

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·--·-·-·-···---·-·-·-·--------·-·-·-·-···-·-·-·
co
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Next to the Gallipolis

by JitiNITA

:•

•

Middleport, OH.
:
We do cakes, pies, cooltin, fof :
any occasion, birthdays, alllliwf-- ·
sary, holidays. "Wsddlnc a, :
Our Specialy." WeddinJ Cl tops '
and novelty cake items 011 dis- :
play.
PH. 992-6646
HOURS 8 to 6
. -

Church, Middleport, with the Rev.
Clark Baker officlatlng.
Music will be provided by Mrs.
BoMle Baker and Rose Ann Jenkins
with special stngtngby Mlsscamtlle
Swindell and John Lisle.
An open reception will be held at
the Senior Citizens Center In the
multi-purpose butldlngon Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.

~j Head/Ouarter

2

lettuce .......... 2HDs.$}

VAUGHAN'S BAKERY

f'~;;;~;~;~~

Ul = ,.
,.
~

Need A Special Cake7
Call
,

i•.!!~~.!~.~~~~----·------'!!~~!!.~;. !~Y!:.

_Syracuse.

&lt;
&gt;
r-

¢

,.

United Methodist Church with the
Rev. Carl Hicks officiating. Music
will begin at 7 p.m.·
I
304-429-4788
Miss WUson a Meigs High School
graduate.
Roush Is emp~ed at M~mL-----------------------------------------2---------------------------~--~======~-=
Chemicals, Pomeroy.
,-

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. E.
Ned Swindell o! Shade announce the
: engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Paula Jean,
• to Charles Frederick Chancey, son
• of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Chancey,

+

120Z.

Falls (Effie's Restaurant), 3: ffi3:50p.m.; Racine (bank), 4:35,6:00
p.m.; Syracuse (pool), 6: 2().7: 50
p.m.
Wednesday, March 28- Chester
(rtre station), 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Keno
1north side of Keno Bridge) , 3-3: 30
p.m.; Success Road (near 39060),
3 : 4~ : 15 p.m.; Long Bottom (post
office). 4:25-5:10 p.m.; Reedsville
tReed's Store) , 5:20-6:20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's). 7: 2().
7:50p.m.; Baum Addition, 8:10-8: 40
p.m.

Swindell - Chancey ·

'

Round Steak
·.SUPERIOR FRANKIES

..

. . HOLIDAY POOLS, INC ...

Mr. and Mrs.

· announcing the approaching mar: rlageofthelrdaughter,KeUy Ann, to
: Jacob Roush, Paneroy.
: The open church wedding will be
• held on March .tl at the Enterprise

0A

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

FLAVORITE •

19 at 1:30 p.m. at St. Sylvester
Cathollc Church In Zaleski.
Miss Hayes Is a graduate or the
Holzer School or Nursing and Is
employed by Holzer Medical
Center.
MIUer Is employed by Pte-Pte or
Gallipolis and attends Rio Grande
College.

! Geoffrey A. Wilson, Pomeroy, are

.U I

Cube Steak .....~-.. 2

F1sh Port1ons ...~79

GALLIPOLIS- The or. Samuel Eureka, 6: 1~: 45 p.m.
L. Bouard Memorial Library will
Thursday - No route, library
be at the following places the week
closed, professional ll'll!etlng.
;· of March 26 to 30:
Friday - Kerr's, 3-3:40 p.m.;
Monday - Ewlngton, 1:15-1:45 Buckrldge, 4-5:00 p.m.; Jay Dr. I,
p.m.; Geiger's 2-2:30 p.m .; Adney II, 5:15-5:45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
Rd., 2:45-3: ~ p.m.; VInton P.O., Rd., 6-6:15 p.m.
3:J0.4:30 p.m.; Bidwell, 5-6 p.m.;
Han1sburg, 6:1~: 30 p.m.; Hoi·
A&lt;1 p.m.
POMEROY -BookmobUeservt·
Iey•s, 6:..,.
-"·
E
2
""3
ces
In Meigs County Is brought to.
no, :""' p.m.;
TunwoY n - 3 ""3 20:
1
3
20
you
by the Meigs County Publlc
""""• :""' : , Kyger
, : 50-4:
A
p.m.; Kyger II , 4:""
..,..,;
45 p.m. ; Library under contract with the
Rouse Lane 1, 11, 4:45-5:15 p.m.; Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Mon·
Cheshlre I, II , 6-6: 30 p.m.; Cheshlre
""7
·
day,
March 26 - Carpenter
Ill ' 6:""' p.m.
Wednesday- Bane's, 2: 15-2:30 (Laura's Store). 3:10-3:40 p.m.;
p.m.; Smith, 2:45-3:15; Myers, Dexter !Church) , 4:104:40 p.m.;
3:2().3:35 p.m. Saunders, 3:40-3:50 Danville !Church), 5:2().5:50 p.m.;
A 30
p.m.; Rutland tCivtc Ce.. ter), 6: 3().8 p.m .
p.m.; Mercerv ill e, 4-.:
Swain's General Store, 4:40-5 P·:.:.·m:::·.:..;__Tu_esd_a_y_
, _M_a_rc_h_'l:I_-_P_o_rtJ_an_,d

\..T-\U..IAI!!L

Wilson - Roush

$

.

KeiJyWUaon

• GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Francis J . Hayes, Zaleski, Ohio,
announce the engagement and
approaching maiTlage or their
daughter, JoaMa Lee, to Michael
Dean MIUer, son or Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Watson, GaUlpolls, and the
late Frederick Dean MUler.
The wedding w111 take place May

20

Steak/Roast ....L~.

-~

Hayes - Miller

Limit

$}lg

CHEll THE

I 3

r---------=-""-::=----------·

and

,BA.TTER DIPPED.

Bookmobile
schedules---Gattia County
Mei,RS County

Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

FRESH PORK BUTT

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

PleaiCIIlt, W. Va.

crown cuy P.o., 5:1~ p.m.; (post office), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letari

l

We Re881'1/e The Right To

Umit Quantities.

Oh~Polnt

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•

Streetdance
set Monday

Haymans note 25th anniversary
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Hayman were surprised
with a party recently in observance
of their 25th wedding anniversary.
The observance was held at the
homeofMr.andMrs.RobertHartin
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman were
married on Nov. 22, 1958 at the
Bethany Baptist Church, Great
Be!ld, by the Rev. Arthur McCauley.
They now Hve in Laurel, Md., where
they have made their home for the
past 18 years.
They are the parents of three
children, Mark of Glen Burnle,Md.;
Shari at Maryland State University,
and Brian at home.
HaymanlsthesonofMr.andMrs.
Gerald Hayman of Racine, and his
wife Is the former Donna Jean
Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Racine.
Attending the celebration were
Robert and L1111e Hart, Beth Hart,
Greg O'Brien, Keith Hayman,

EAALV

FRESH-LEAN
FRESH-LEAN
SUPERIOR

VALLEY BELL
VALLEY BELL
VALLEY BELL

·------------The Medical

STOVE TOP

JO BO

IDAHO
•

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II()

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BUTTONS

Y2 PRICE

-f

C)
REGULAR or DIET

DR. PEPPER

89(

Limit 1
Plus Deposit

1 FREE Kite Pet Carton

With This Coupon
Expires Ait 1. 1984
C. K. SU ERIARKET

c

-&lt;

VALLEY BELL 2% M~LK

~
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$1.49 '

~

Limit 1

Clllf--

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989

c
QT.

..•

89c

.nell

...

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...
...

VIT .. D MILK ....•..•IQ~~IA\ ••••••• 99¢
ICE MILK ••.•.........IQ~~UUt. •••• $1.39
2°/o MILK ..•... ~ ••...wwt ...... $1.59
COTTAGE CHEES&amp; Q1. ••••••• $1 .29
PAPER TOWELS ...WL ••
49¢
LIGHT BULBS ..•...•u•~~ ......... 99¢
STUFFING MIX "UU'41W~$.ctl.IOI •• 99¢
DOG FOO~ •......•.... ~J:~•$ j$1.00

RESISTOR

MOST IUCIIOIIIC 110M 4"

AFnR

_....,..

EGGS ............... .DOUM. 99¢

'liQUID 01; t . .

31.~.
wr- ·

&lt;:@&gt;.

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cou,.K
-· ·

!~~!o~!NT •~~
.a.~
OIL

IN ft(BATl

79c

•

OOlBOlAKOOWN

129

59~
X
Fi
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OIL

(GUNK)

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MOTOR
FLUSH

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14 g

- --

Oil

SPOUT

~ WRENCH

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(

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\ 2 QT .

CHOICE I

PAN

gc
9

EACH

PERFORMANCE/ ACCESSORIES

REPLACEMENT PARTS

$15 9

I
1
1

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1
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r----------------·-·----·t
COUPON

BUY 2 PACKS KAHN'S MEAT
AT REG. PRICE
GET 50' OFF ONE BOX OF
POWDERED DETERGENT
Limit 4 Sales

,---------------------~
I
COUPON
I
I
I

I
I

PEPSI
8 PACK

16 OZ.

89¢

Plus Deposit

1. With Purchase of 1 Lb. Eckrich Bologna

1

.... I.H

GAL
With Purchase of 2 Baas Franklin Candy at
Rea. price.
Limit 4 Sales

179

89¢

1---------------------II

VALLEY BELL 2% MILK

WITH THIS COUPON
EXPIRES APRIL I, 1984
C.K. SUPERMARKET

I

WITH THIS COUPON

Exn~EM~~~~A11iiE9r

~

Double thi v~lue· of l!llnU· .
facturers' cents off coupons
.JP to 49' in face value.
, SAVE DOUBLE $$
'
AT C.K. SUPERMARKET

-------------~------·-·

---------------------,f
COUPON

OOUBLI PUMPERS
0-477650CFM .
0-4779750CFM

r..

8 PAK

1

16 OZ.

1
1
I

'99¢

.-.

CRUISE CONTROLS

. SAYE'IO OIIIITHU

.•

.

anii!KEGOD

.

IUIIII

SPWII
GUAIDS

&lt;P
7901

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- ••4911
fUIIIJIS
111

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SUPIAIOA
II SIDEll!
Dl-I'IAn DIStGII

~:3988

. . IADIAIOIS
II S'IICI·A&amp;L S1-

CII'IC:..

,•

PICI·UP liiiCI

PASSTHIU

319
299

289
988

Silver·Bridge Plaza - Phone 446-9335

Sl., . , _ .,.,., .

'+

..

.Bill Kelley
Manager

4PIIa

wm
FlOOIIUT

sn

•111.&amp;0
''"

'""
'""

g;g!'"" 7999

Limit 2

•RI!iHm your manuftcturers mciney-nvlni coupons at C.K.'s end rt· ;
celve double tht' Vllut whtn you purchiH till specified Item. One cou· •
pan per 1tt111. No uplrtd coupons tccepttd. Double rtdt111ption offer '
does not 1pply to "F~ ll~hlncliH", coupons ~-coupons over 49' in
flee Vllue. No.~lh refunds wlltn Double Coupont Vlhlt'1!1Ct,cl~ PfiCI
of item . .Clprttttl tnd ctrllln othtrltems 111 txcludtd by law. To insur• productto 111 our cullollltll, wurt llmltinajlur "Double Coupon" ,
o!fer ~o o~ jlr of Instant Cofftlllld dne Cll(of Grou.~(C\offH pir '
shoppina. Double Coupon offer aood Sundty, larch 25 &amp; April 1. 1914. 1

~Rubber Queen

~~-·6999

Plus Dep.

WITH THIS COUPON
EXPIRES APRIL 1,1984
C.K. SUPERMARKET

.'I

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REG. ,OR DIET DR. PEPPER

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WITH THIS COUPON
EXPIRES APRIL I, 1914
C.K. SUPERMARKET

~---------------------~ ~-------------------u=-Diiiiii=-DOiiii:i-:iiiiii EFFECTIVE SUN., MARCH
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AFTER MAIL-INREBATE

I GUHCE

MAIL-IN
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N. 2nd Ave.

lOW-40

NON-RESISTOR

Expires A!Jril 1, 1984
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SHOP

ALL CLIMATE

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- W'rth This Coupon

THE FABRIC

VALVOLI

EXTENDED TIP

~ 299

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ALL WEEK

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FOR
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AND WEDDINGS

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$159
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115 W. 2nd
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WITH PURCHASE OF 2 FROZEN FOODS

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8 to 8
Blo 6
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MON thru FRI
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rate while exercislnc!! 25% OFF. ·

PEPSI-COLA

&lt;C

BONELESS ROAST

' . .

VALLEY BELL

a.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program 1r;~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~
will serve the following menus:
Monday - Roast turkey with
dressing, sweet potatoes, green
beans, lee cream, cake, rolls,
butter, milk.
Tuesday - Fish, llma beans,
glazed carrots, pineapple slices,
bread, butter.
Wednesday - Meat loaf, broccoll, corn, fruit salad, bread, butter,

01::

..

Sl.39

U.S.D.A. CHOICI

·rr~E

~

S1.29 Ll.

ENGLISH ROAST

ACROSS

-

...

I

U.S.D.A. CHOICI

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
ShoP.pe, Inc.
the week of March 26-30 at the potatoes, tossed salad, tapioca
565 Jackson P1ke, Hillcrest Plaza
Senior Citizens Center located at220 pudding, bread, butter, milk.
Gollipollo, Ohio
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Choice of beverage served with
446-2206
Monday, March 26 - Birthday each meal.
party, noon; Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
,.------------IL---------~
Tuesday, March '1:7 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
Wednesday, March 28 - Vinton
9AMto9PM
Bible Study, I p.m.; Card Games,
Saturday 9 AM to S.PM
1·3 p.m.
Thursday, March 29 - Bible
WAt.lt 1,.. OR tAll H)R
Study, 11 a.m.-noon; Vinton Blood
AN AP'()IH I M(NT
Pressure Check; VInton Crafts, 1-2
p.m.
.
Friday, March 30 - VITA-Tax
\J ' \ - Aide, 9 a.m.-noon; Art Class, 1-3
1 ,
A IV~W DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN "
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.;
Group Plano Lessons, 10: 30-11: 30

z

l

S1 •19 La.

,.

Gallia seniors' activities

•We Have The
Widest Selection
Of Fabrics In
Southeastern Ohio
•Craft Patterns
&amp;Supplies
In Stock
•We Sharpen
Scissors and
SerVice all
Makes of
Sewing Machines
Our Entire
Stock of

CHUCK ROAST
ARM ROAST

00

Thursday - Barbecue beef
sandwich, mixed vegetables, coleslaw, lemon jello, topping, bun,
butter, mllk.

,

R.C. COLA Sl.49 - DR.PEPPER SI.09
A&amp;W ROOT BEEF S1.29-CREAM SODA S1.29
~~~~~~LUSDEP. PEPSI $1.49- COKE $}.59

ATLANTA (AP) - Not many
things cost $25,ml a minute, but
that's nearly how much arthritis
costs the United States, according to
the Arthritis Foundation.

mUk.

U.S.D.A CHOICE CENTER CUT
U.S.D.A. CHOICI

GET YOUR FEET IN
SHAPE FOR SPRING!

High cost

t-·r~

ut to earn your business!''
CHUCK
ROAST

,-----------l

Leslie Roberts, Gerald and Focie
Hayman, Robert and Isabel Lewis,
and Carrie Nease, all of Racine.
Phyllis Young, Mindy, Corey and
Justin Seymore, Middleport; Gloria, Ashley and Jordon Whitlatch,
The Plains; Sid, Carol and Ryan
Hayman, Pomeroy; Alan, Beverly,
Olivia and Zachary Cunningham,
Cottageville, W.Va .; Ted and Eddie
Hayman, Bruce, Lorna and Jonathan Hart, Columbus; Linda, Barbara, and Bob Jewell, Letart,
W.Va.; and Brian Hayman, Laurel,
Md.
Cake, punch, mints and nuts were
served and gifts and cards were
presented to the honored couple.

WI IIB8ft !II IIIII TO WilT OUAIIIIYIIS

IN THE
WEEK

GALLIPOLIS - The second
annual community streetdancewUI
be held on Monday at 6:30p.m. on
Court Street, next to the city park ln
Galllpolls by the Berea Country
Dancers.
Live music for the community
event wlll be performed by a group
of four musicians, also from Berea,
Ky. An Appalachian and European
dance workshop wiD be conducted
by the dancers at the Senior
Citizens Center on Jackson Pike ln
GaUl polls, between 2: 30 and 4 p.m.
on Monday.
Both the streetdance and workshop are free and open to the publlc
and sponsored by the Galllpolls
Parks and Recreations Department and the French Art Colony.
A potluck dinner Is organized for
the group between 5 and 6 p.m. at
the French Art Colony at 530 First
Ave. and Is open to the contributing
publlc to meet the dancers.
Rain location for the streetdance
Is Washington Elementary School

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Haynum ·

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-5 •

· MON.-FRI. 8-8;
SAT. 8-6; SUN. 9-5

PICI-UP TIUCl

RUNNING
BOARDS

6999

�•

-

-.·

..

'lOQ.,.'""=at.

•;.t .... _..

• ••

'

...

...

.. ••_

,!

'
Page-8-6-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 25, 1914 .

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

' ' The Sunday Times-Sentlnei- Page- B-7
•.

Knitting class planned in Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - The Beginning
Knitting class sponsored by the
Gallipolis Parks and Recreation
Department has been postponed.
The class Is now scheduled to
begin Monday, AprU 2, from 6: 30 to
9:30p.m. at DJ's Craft Shop In the

Spring Valley Plaza.
Registration Is stW open ant he fee
Is $10 plus materials, which may be
purchased at the first calss. For
details, . contact the parks and
recreation department, ~18 Second
Ave., 446-17lll, extension 24.

GALLI

Contoured and
cushioned for
walking cOmfort

I

PO
OY
STORES!

~~~~~([@~

I

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Suite•

joyce Brown weds Edwin Suiter
in Aberdeen ceremony March 10
GALLIPOLIS -An exchange of
vows for Joyce Brown and Edwin
Suiter of Gallipolis was performed
March 10 at Aberdeen, Ohio at the
home of the brtde's brother,
Michael Massie.
Theceremonywasperformedby
the Rev. Clean Webb, pastor of
Aberdeen Baptist Church.
Attending the groom were Mark
Brown, son of the bride, and
Michael Massie, brother of the
bride.
The bride wore a street-length
pale blue dress and carried a
bouquet of white roses, surrounded
by blue baby's breath.
The groom wore navy blue suit

with a boutonniere of white
rosebuds.
The wedding party had corsages
and boutpnnieres of white roses
surrounded by blue babY's breath.
A reception followed the
ceremony.
The couple reside at 35 West,
Gallipolis.

$

s4200

.

s ·

pring Valley Plaza

~~

-~

-

10-lP/4

oz.

PRICES GOOD MONDAY
MARCH 26TH THRU
SUNDAY, APRIL 1ST
WHILE_QUANTITIES LAST

SHOP EARLY FOR EXCELLENT SELECTION OF.,;::~

EASTER CANDY!!

992-5356

JEUy BIRD EGGS

Ph. 446-2134

~
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FRESH
U.S.D.A. LnLJlL"'
"BONELESS"

GROUND
BEEF

CHUCK ROAST

snue SION!

l_:__ _ _ _ _ __j__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:....__.::__ _ _~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~~~~~~

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"BONELESS"

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..

ENGLISH ROAST

LB.

BREAKFAST
WHEAT IEs OF"THECHAMPIONS"

2

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$1

69!

BOLOGNA

,

LB.

STEW BEEF

BEEF
FRANKS

$t79
LB.

FALTER'S

SAUSAGE ~~~l

69J.
~

DART

BACON lLB. ,,~ CHUNK
LB. TUNA 6Y2 OZ.
HUNT'S

DOWNY

SNACK-PACI&lt;

PUDDINGS

40' OFF LABEL

CHARMIN
TOILET TISSUE

:Activities

99+

4ROLL
PKG.

~planned

64

BI!L}1°

"SMURF BERRY"
CRUNCH ~==
CEREAL

DETERGENT
49 OZ. GIANT

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elta

0

GREEN

ORANGE

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· sTRAWBERRIES

. $129
QUART

FRESH
GREEN

.S

$119

Kooler Bars

49

BEANS

12

OR CHOC.

PEPPERS~

CALIFORNIA

An Individual RetirementAccountisthetax
shelter just about everyone can take advantage
of. While you save for retirement any runds
deposited in your IRA can be subtracted from
income before you figure your taxes.
And now, BANK ONE makes it easier than"ever
for every wage earner to have an IRA. Because
you can open or add to an IRA mini with just
$25. You get the very same advantages ... plus
money market interest rates ... without having to
invest more cash than you want to in your IRA

oz.

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Jor Meigs
Seniors

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$ 29 RAISIN

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BUY 3 GET 1 FREE

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280Z.
25' OFF LABEL

MR. CLEAN

99 ~L~A~S~r

$j79

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2 88 ~

1 RAN 1
49
69
PiiTAT'oEs ·$1 ON'iON'"sns 59" SPIC&amp;"SPAJ1

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CAULIFLOWER

HEAD

10 LBS

There IN aclcled lclv1nt. . .1 to
the IRA mini.
The IRA mini has a one.-month maturity. That
means your inte(est rate keeps up with a ··
changing market You can make additional $25
,deposits to your IRA mini any ti.me during the
month. Or, we can make regular automatic
transfers to youriRA riini from your BANK ONE
checking account TlieiRA mini. All tbe advantages
of an IRA. Wrth just a $25 minimum deposit

zooz_$

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14 OZ.

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2·PLY

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Th8fe is a tubltantiallntereat penalty for ~rly withdrawal.

$1 ·.49

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Leu Mfr•. s
Refund
•

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Member FDIC •

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your
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TENDER LEAN

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$16

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
"BONELESS"

- LB. CHUCK STEAK

"1
UBE STEAK..

GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
Citizen Job Bank, 2al Jackson Pike.
has continued to serve employers tnt
he area. Employers find the older
worker to be motivated, they have a
reliable attendance record, and they
bring with them a vast value of
experience.
The Job Bank has many qualified
applicants, 5().years old and older.
seeking employment to help people
In the community with their
~plrlngtlme horne malntance.
: If you need help with your yard
work, landscaping, painting or
general repairs, call 446-7!XXJ and
place your job order. The Job Bank
~ open Monday through Friday 8
a.m. to4 p.m.

-I

ssa

14 OZ.

SOUD CHOCOLATE BUNNY 4 oz. 99'
FRUIT &amp; NUT EGa
8 oz. S1.29

Job Bank
offers workers

: POMEROY -TheMelgsCounty
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
kelghts, Pomeroy, Invites all eiOerly to participate In the following
activities scheduled for the week of
March 26 to 30:
: Monday - Physical Fitness,
p.: 40 a .m.; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
- Tueylay - Physical Fitness,
11: 40(a.m.; Chorus, 1-2 p.m.
: Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
11:40 a.m.; Bingo, 1-2 p.m.;
Bowling, 1: 30 p.m.
: Thursday - Physical Fitness,
11:40 a .m.; Ceramics, 10a.m.-2
p.m., please pick up Food Coop
ilellveries between 2: 30 and 3: 15
p.m.
- Friday - Quarterly Birthday
Party - seniors with birthdays In
January. February and March will
be honored. The Athens Kitchen
Swingers will entertain beginning
at 11 a.m. Please make a reserva!lon for your meal by Wednesday so
we can have enough food prepared.
: Upcoming In April -Lois Pauley
lv!llinstruct a beginners paint class
on Wednesdays, Aprllll and April
125 from 2 to 4 p.m. Cost for the class
!Nill be $3 per session and Includes
the materials needed to work with;
{here will be tole painting and
beginning sketching Included. Call
the Center at 992-2161 It you are
interested In this clljSS, so she can
bring enoogh supplies for all
)ttendtng.
• The menu for the Senior Nubitlon
•-Program for the week Is:
Monday - Beef stew, tossed
plad, cornbread, fried apples.
• Tuesday - Broasted chicken,
inashed potatoes, three bean salad,
lJeaches.
t . Wednesday - Escalloped pota'toes with ham and cheese, broccoll
lind carrots, role slaw, mtxed fruit.
· =_Thursday - Johnny -Marzettl,
.green beans, waldorf salad, chocolate pte.
' Friday - Melltloaf, parslled
potatoes, creamed peas, roll, blrth'day cake and Ice cream.
; Choice of milk, coffee, or tea
11vallable with meals. Make a
reservation for
meal before
the day you PieD to eat.

r-no11ror

• Contoured lor proper
..C.
weight dlstribu11on
!J"
• Suppons the natural shape
~
ol your feet
«~
• Flexible bottoma to
~(\
absorb walking shock
• So~ leather uppers d~
• Wide range of
dt-'~''
sizes and widths v
0"-

O:arl's

Gallipolis

-

•700 W. MAIN, POMEROY

•137 PINE ST.. GALLIPOLIS
PHONE 446-9399

c:Y")..,;..:)~ ~~ ~ f1?'A •
-~

KETCHUP

·

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• FT SUPPLY

&amp;

CDUITIT STORES

LADY

MARCH 27TH

DJ

DINNERS
10 VARIETIES

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS WELCOME!!

t

EASTER CANDY
DEMONSTRATION

Q

TOMATO

HUNT'$

STORE HOURS:
9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. DAILY. SUN. NOON TO 5 P.M.

.FREE

.rtl
'\Ji

MORTON
FROZEN

.1/

'·

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-'

.

'·

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r

I

1

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OFFU EXPIRES

70Z

RAVE

AEROSOL

HAIR SPRAY

•REGULAR •EX. HOlD
1
--""'._.., •UNSCENTED •MAX.HOLD .

$1'58
.

·

•

I(:~~Jt:t\1

30. 1914

I

•

�· Paga

B-8-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea~e~nt, W. Va.

Calendar
SuNDAY

CROWN CITY - The Rev.
KennethSanderswWbefeatured
at VIctory Baptist Church, Sunday, 7p.m.

PAGEVILLE - The fllm, "In
Remembrance," a story about
the Last Supper will be pres·
ented at the Pageville FreewiU
Baptist Church Sunday at 7: lJ
p.m. Pastor Ralph Butcher
Invites the public.

MONDAY
OAKHILL-TheR.ev.Johnny
Jeffrey wW speak Monday at the
Centerpoint Free WW Baptist
Church, 7: lJ p.m.
The Heirs of Christ will sing
Monday, Tuesday and Wednes·
day and the Kings Messengers,
Thursday, Friday and saturday.

SYRACUSE - The Rev. Joe
Murugan of Guyanna will be
speaking Sunday at both the
10: 00 a.m. and the 6 p.m.
services Sunday at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church.

CHESHffiE - Revival servi·
ces will begin Monday and
continue through March 31 with
evangelist the Rev. Jim Lusher.
Services begin at 7: lJ p.m.
nightly and there wiU be special
singing.

PAGEVIU.E- Thefllm, " In
Remembrance," a story of the
Last Supper will be shown at the
Pagevllle Freewill Baptist
Church at 7: lJ p.m. Sunday. The
pastor, Ralph Butcher, invites
the public.
CROWN CITY - King's
Chapel Church will have famtly
night Sunday, i p.m. The Rev.
John Jeffery, pastor, Invites the
pubUc to attend.

POMEORY Pomeroy
Lodge 164 will bold practice for
its annual ·lnspection Monday at
7 p.m. at Masonic Temple. All
officers and members are urged
to attend.

-

GALLIPOLIS - A revival at
· Prospect Baptist Church wiU
start Sunday unt\1 March 31 at
7:00p.m.
Evangelist will be Danny
Boggs. Special singing wiU be
held each nlght.
NORTHUP - The Rev. Jim
Chapman will speak , at the
Northup Baptist Church, Sunday, 7:00p.m.

CommunitJ Corner

11JESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Retail Merchants Association
will meet Tuesday at 7: lJ p.m.
at the Meigs lnn. Ron Ash will be
the speaker.
The
MIDDLEPORT OAPSE Chapter 17 will meet
Tuesday at 7: lJ ·p.m. at the
Meigs Junior High School.

Son'S

By CHARLENE HOEJ.FICH
'l1m8ll !leettneJ S&amp;afl
A Up of the bat this week
Gibbs, a philo,
sophy proles!IOJ'
ataschoollnNew
Mexico.
Btll' s g!tt to
Dad, just home
from University
Hospital, was a very
shared with us. It det&lt;tiled the
positive influence of a father on his
son .... so touching, so timely.
How often we leave things unsaid
until it's too late.
By the way "Dude" (WilHam A.
Gibbs of Gibbs' Grocery) is back
oome and corning alone fine. He
appreciated the many
remembrances.

homage

Daughter of Mr and Mrs. Larry
Young, Tuppers Plains, Uta graduated from Eastern and then
completed a program In computer
science at Hoc~ Tech. She flew
out of Columbus, rented a car once
she lanQed at the Logan National
Airport In Boston, and drove over
snowy roads In sub-zero tempera-

tures toduring
get from·
oneallplace
to
another
her stay,
without
Incident.
It was her first "adventure" and
she managed just fine.
.

tO

dad Shared

Sunday, plans are being made to
buDd on some rooms.
Again the folks at the church are
appealing for contributions. They
can be sent to Joe Buchanan, 42856
SR 681, ReedsvUie, or what they
would really prefer Is to have the
contributors just bring what they
want to give to one of the services.

port

'I

Seldon Johnson Is the pastor.

·-

'

The fingerprinting of , Melas
school children' scheduled to aet
undeiWay at Rutland this week was
postponed... just too many kids out
with the flu.

8)' GEORGE IR'JIODE
AP 8pcril Writer

Have a nice week!

r;::::::::::;:===============:.

OOLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - All-Ohioan Jerune
Lane's two free throws with four lllCOnds left
saturday capped his brUllant pertonnance and
cllnchecl a 75- Aleron St. VIncent-St. Mary victory
over Wheelersburg for the Class AA boys basketball
crown.
The6-foot-5 Lane, only a junior, scored23po!ntsand
helped the taller, stronger Irish sweep the boards. The
first-team ail-stater also collected al rebounds, five
shot blocks and two steals.
H1s final two foul allots gave the Irish their final
lead. Lane leaped with joy after he made each of his

n

Other traveUng Meigs Countians
and Jim and Linda Sheets. They left
Tuesday morning from the Chicago
Airport for Amsterdam, Holland,
and then on to Israel where they'll
spend a week sightseeing.

SlcUIId

has

~imes- ientiaut Section
March
clutch free throws.
Lane, woo sat out most of the fourth quarter with
four fouls, helped St. VIncent-St. Mary stave off a
turlot•s Wheelersburg rally.
The Pirates, tralUng 57-42 with less than eight
minutes to play, ckieed the gap to 73-n on Don
Brown's basket with 32 lllCOIIds left.
Fred Rollin traveled for the lrish siX seconds later
and Wheelersburg had another opportunity. However, All-Ohioan Todd Staker, who scored a
game-high 31 points, missed a five-foot jumper with 13
seconds to play.
Rollin, fouled after grabbing the rebound, missed

the front end of a one-and-one bonus situation. Don
Brown, however, missed the same opportunity with
five seconds to play and the Pirates' last bid to pull
even had tailed.
Lane seized the rebound, was fouled by Andy
Sroczynski and hit both ends of the bonus to cllnch the
decision.
·
St. VIncent-St. Mary, the 1929 state Class B winner
as St Mary, reeled off 12 consecutive points midway
through the second quarter for a 28-14 lead.
Wheelersburg, appearing In its first state tournament, finished with a 23-5 record.
Lane had 14 of his point total by halftime and the
Akron school was riding a 40-26 cushion.

·:~·1 ~

·. ·

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Don Beck's two free
throws with 10 seconds left cllnched Monroeville's
~ victory over Columbus Wehrle saturday and
gave the Golden Eagles the Qass A state high school
boys basketball title.
Beck, a 5-foot-10 senior guard, sank his foul shots to
provide Monroeville with a 6!Hi'llead, its 'lith straight
triumph and its first state basketball crown.
Wehrle, tralling by as many as nine points with 3: 21
to play, used a full-court press to pull within ~­
Chris Green's field goal with 11 secends trimmed the
margin to one, but Green touted Beck on the In-bounds
play.
Chris Ott's foul soot with two seconds left gave the
Golden Eagles their final margin. The MonroevUie
players ran around'-'the court, ooidlng their index
· fingers aloft as their tans screamed In delight.
The outside sOOoting of Mike Landoll and the Inside
work of Ott provided Monroeville with its nine-point
lead In the fourth quarter.
Monroeville, wrappingupa'll-1season, broke out of
a 12-12 tie late In the first quarter and led the rest of the
way.
Lanooll, a 6-foot~ senior center, poured in 16polnts.
Ott, a burly 6-5 senior forward who had aJ points In the
semifinals, accounted for 17.
It was a sweet victory for MonroeviUe Coach Dave
Augspurger, whose Richmond Dale Southeastern

'
VINTON- "The lmagfofthe
Beast," a ~minute film, will be
shown at the VInton Fellowship
Chapel Sunday, 7 p.m.
The pubUc Is Invited.

GALLIPOLIS - The Open .
Gate Garden Qub will meet at
Mrs. Paul Plant's home, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis Tuesday, 7:00p.m.

Happenings
Garden dub
Seeking alumni
to meet Wednesday GALLIPOLIS - The Qass of
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Qub will meet at the
home of Evelyn Hollon at 7: lJ
p.m. on Wednesday. Rosetta
Redovlan of the Columbus and
Southern Ohlo Electric Co. will
be the speaker.

Benefit game
CHESHIRE -

The Kyger

1944, Gallla Academy HJgh
School, Is seeking lnfonnatlon on
a number of members for the
June lJ reunion. Anyone knowIng where the following people
can be located should contact
446-2681.
They are: John Campbell,
W.H. Conley, Charles Elder,
Mary Ann Reed, Eimer Pickens
or Don Anderson.

HUNTINGTON - The Marshall
University Jazz Program, celebrating 15 years In 1~. Is featuring a
very special guest artist In concert
as part of the annual MU Jazz
Festival Aprll 5, 6 and 7.
Count Baste and his orchestra
will appear at 8 p.m. Friday, April
6, at the Keith-Albee Theatre,
Huntington, in a concert expected
to draw a broad audience. From the
1!ms to the 198ls Count Baste
i:ontinues to make musicallllstory,
remaining In the fore, even In this
day of rock, small groups and
electric sounds.
Neartng!li,Baste,anontychitd,
first learned music from his mother
and a "wonderful German lady
named Holloway" wbo gave him

piano lessons for 25 cents a session.
The Baste , concert is being
presented through the Marshall
Institute for the Arts with funding
assistance from the Music Department, Artists Series, MU Foundation, School of Fine Arts, and
National Endowment for the Arts.
The Institute, located In Old Main
Room 112, Is handling tickei' sales
with general admission at $10 and
$6.

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

~A~
Boosters are-r:=:=:==:============~----------~~------~
::ponsortngabasketb8llgame
between the WKEE Jox Sox and

the faculty on Thursday, 8 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek HJgh School.

The

Speaker set

Shoe Cafe

HOBSON - Dorothy Wittington will be the speaker at
mlssiQnary service of the Hobson Church of Christ and
Christian Union on Wednesday,
March28.

PANORAMA

$2995

Legion birthday
RACINE - The American
Legion birthday party plannEd
by Racine American Legion
AuxiUary Unit 600 for saturday,
March 31, has been cancelled ·
due to the Southern High
Basketball banquet.

r-------------,.
Coml'ng To
11

C0 IUm bUS
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By As*wiated Pree8
Marcus Dupree of the New
Orleans Breakers has become a

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Adults (children Frea), includes
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pruent upon ~htck,in.
Retl4ln'ali•Dnl required, some
restrictiions may apply. Nollppli·
to croups.

LEXINGI'ON, Ky. (AP) -sam
Bowie scored 11 points In the second
half as No. 3 Kentuclcy held off
tellaclous, sixth-ranked Dllnois 54-51
In the Mideast Regional cbamplonship game saturday to earn a berth
In the NCAA basketball Final Fwr.
The Wildcats, 29-4, goes to Seattle
on saturday to meet the winner of
Sunday's West Regional final between No. 2 Georgetown and

--- &amp;tc. o

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Kentuckyled49-44wilenBowlehit
a ~ of free throws with 4: 28 to
play, but Dllnois forward Doug
Altenberger hit a long Jumper from
the right sidellne and guard Quinn
Richardson added another basket
from the tQP of the key to cui the
defidt to 0048 with 2: al to play.
Kentucky point guard Dicky Beal
ran his way out of the Illlni's
pressing, trapping defense to hit a
layup with 43 seconds left.
Richardson hit 8JIO!her basket
with '11 seconds left to make It 52-50,
but Beal got another pair ·of fi'ee
throws with 14 seconds left to put the
Wildcats up by fwr again. Just
beforethefreethrows, Bowie left the

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ATLANTA (AP) - Kenton
· Edelln scored five straight points
after making a steal with 1: '11
remaining to spark llllherilded
VIrginia to a 0048 victt4'y · over
Ili4lana Saturday for the NCAA
Mideast Regional basketball championship and a berth In the Final
Four.
VIrginia, in Its first &amp;e8BOII since
. the departure of three-time Player
of the Year Ralph Sampson, was
trailing 44-4.1 when Edelln swiped
the balllfom Dan Daklch from the
blind side, drlllbled · three-fourths
the Jeagtbofthe flOc»' aild hit a layup
to put theCa~ahelld to~.
He then hit me of two free throws
with 1:03 to play and drWed a pair
withf1aeCo '""' left to give Vlrgtnlaa
411-44 advantage.
'Ibl! teams awapped balke'ta by
Daldch and a·palr of tra: throws by
Rick Car1l8le betDre Indiana treeh·
- men Steve Altord cllt the margin to

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game with an Injury to the left leg,
which sidelined him with a stress
fracture for two seasons.
Dllnols, 26-5, had me last chance.
Altenberger hit one of two free
throws with seven seconds left, and
the Big Ten co.cbamplon Illlni got
the rebound after he missed the
second sbot but could not score
before the buzzer.
It was the only time In the second
half Dllnols went to the free throw
line. Kentuckyhlt10of15freethrows
In the second half.
BeaiiiUIIed MVP
Center Melvin Turpin led Kentucky with 13 points, but Beal, woo
didn't even start until February
after recovering from knee surgery,
was named the regional's Most
Valuable Player. Richardson led
llllnois with 16 points, 10 of them In
the second half, all on long-range
shooting against the Kentucky zone
defense.
Kentucky goes to the Final Four
for the first time since winning the
national cbampionship In 19'18. The'
Wildcats will be looking for their
sixth national title.

Dllnois, a two-point loser to the
Wildcats In December, was the third
straight regular-season opponent
that Kentucky had to beat ln the
NCAA tournament. The Wildcats
also beat Louisville and Brigham
Young In earner rounds.
The Wildcats, who struggled to a
24-22 halftime lead on a Beal jumper
with two seconds left, had trouble all
day with the Big Ten's best defense.
They turned the ball over once In the
~nd half when Beal was trapped
near m1dcourt and again when Beal
was unable to get the ball across the
10-second Une.
Bowie hit two straight tip-Ins for a
32-26 Kentucky lead at 16:04 of the
second half, and a free throw by
Turpin 23 seconds later gave the
Wildcats thej.r biggest lead at 33-26.
From there, Dllnols outscored
Kentucky 10-3 to draw even at 3&amp;J6
when Etrem Winters, despite a
sprained ankle that had made him
questionable to play at ail, hit a
jumper from the right corner with
10: 35 to play. The Dllni were helped
during the streak by five Kentucky
turnovers.

good plan to pressure him. We're

going to gang-tackle him and get In
some good licks early ... The man
has got to pay his dues.''
poster boy - for the Chicago BU~.
The BUtz have hung a blown-up
And fellow Unebacker Tom Kilphoto of the 19-year-oid running kenny added: "We'll have bodies
back In their locker room "just for a flying around him wherever he
Uttle extra motivation," Chicago goes. It's a weicometoprofootball."
Coach Marv Levy said, looking
Levy acknowledged: "It's rare
ahead to Sunday's United States for a defense to face a back of his
Football League game against the calibre and we want to make sure
unbeaten Breakers.
they're ready." But he also cautiSunday's other games are Washington at New Jersey, Denver at
Memphis and Jacksonville at Los
Angeles. On Monday night it's
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- The CincinMichigan, the USFL's only other
unbeaten team, at Houston and nati Reds on saturday sent nine
Binnlngham at Tampa Bay.
players to themlnor league complex
The Breakers boosted their re- for assignment, seven of them from
cord toW last weekend by pounding the roster.
The roster players were pitchers
Jacksonville 38-9, with Dupree
rushing for 96 yards, 42 on a John Franco, Curt Heidenreich,
touchdown sprint.
Fred ToUver, Brad Lesley and Ben
"We understand he had a pretty Hayes; infielders Skeeter Barnes
good outing Monday night," Chiand Wade Rowden.
cago linebacker John Gillen said.
The non-roster players were
"But I think he'll find things a little catcher Allen Knicely and pitcher
different this Sunday. We've got a KeefeCato.

Reds trim roster

oned: "Dupree is not the only
problem. Concentrate too much on
him and those other backs (Mark
Schellen and Buford Jordan) wilJ
kill you. It's as fine a backfield as
I've seen In a long time."
Dick Bielski, head coach of
Washington's winless Federals,
thinks the 3-1 Generals are as fine a
team as he's seen In a long time.
''They're awesome both on offense
and defense. I see things I see In the
National Football League.
The Federals are a minus 2on the
takeaway-giveaway chart, compared to the Generals' plus 7, and
New Jersey Coarh Walt Michaels
says they'll become more competitive as soon as they stop seUdestructlng.

The Birmingham defense gave
Memphis quarterback Walter Lewis fits last weekend In the Stallions'
~ rout, Urniting him to completions on only siX of 19 passes for 68
yards and an lntf'rception before
Ken Johnson (6-13, 71 yards and a
touchdown) took over. But Lewis
will be starting against the Gold.

.Edelin sparks Cavaliers' win

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Welltte'1 Doa Fanner (14) Ia lbe lint period ol play
SMurday for lbe a.. A champinnob!p In Columbus.

Bowie paces Wildcat victory

'

LAY AWA'\ NOW
FOR BEST SELECTION

(2)

FINAL

~·· Doa Beck

movee 1aten11y to blodl a drtve by Columbus

(AP

CALL 614-888-8230
Expires 3-11-14

teams lost In the 1966 and 1967 semifinals.
Monroev1lle foiled Wehlre's bid to add a state
basketall title trophy to its Ohio baseball and track
championships. The Wolverines, led by Jerry
Francis' 16 points, finished wth a 2H record. Green
added 15 points before fouUng out.
The champions, from Huron County, used a 9-2
scoring spurt bridging the last two quarters for a 56-47
lead with 5: 40 left. The Golden Eagles were on top
ID-51 when Wehrle launched its last-minute rally
before a St John Arena sellout crpwd of 13,9'li.
Scoring balanced marked Monroeville's championship victory. Five players were behind nne and 17
points. Dan Jordan and Beck each had 10 to support
Ott and Landoll.
Monroeville. behind the shooting of Landoll, rolled
Into a 104 lead In the first four minutes. He hit three
long jump soots In the spurt.
Wehrle, however, countered by outscoring the
Golden Eagles 8-2 in 11-2 minutes to create a 12-12 tie.
Ott's basket with 1: lJ left provided MonroevUie a
14-12 lead.
A steal and layup by Don Farmer gave the Golden
Eagles a ID-14 lead with 3:55 to play in the first half
and Monroeville led 26-23 at halftime.
Lanooll had 10 of his points In the first 16 minutes.
Monroeville's 2-3 zone defense clustered around
Francis and held the ail-stater to three baskets and
seven points In the opening half.

Dupree poster gives Blitz incentive

1

I

•

The lrish, 23-4, expanded their lead to 15 points five
times In the third quarter and owned a 55-42 margin
after three periods.
Craig Brown, woo scored 22 points, hit five long
jump shots and added two free throws to keep
Wheelersburg In contention down the stretch.
Staker, whose 26 points had paced Wheelersburg to
a semlfinai decision over Willard on Friday, ran Into
foul difficulty In the first haU. Staker picked up his
third personal with 6: 28 to play In the first half on a
charge.
Hts absence hurt Wheelersburg, which trailed by as
many as 16 points In the opening haU.

Monroeville clinches
Class A championship

DRESSES:::

Uta Young, employed at Robbins
and Myers Inc., has just returned
from Bedford, Mass., where she
was sent by the company to further
her knowledge In computer
science.

25, 1984

Lane leads Akron team to Class AA crown

are Marion Michael, Harold Moore,

So you've wondered whatever
happened to Nellie Price.
After spending a Ufetime In
Middleport and many years In the
same house on North Second, she
has now moved to the VWageGreen
Apartments In Pomeroy, Apt. 39.
She's lll now. Loves to bave
company.

...

ona~~~~with~

sero1M11 to ,play, but the HOOI!era
filled tci foi'ce OYert1rnl! whl!n_stew

~~~~~~-~
I '

·-

. I'

Robinson's 18-footer bounced off the
11m and Vlrgtnla retrieved the
rebound to run out the clock.
VIrginia, 21-12: advances to the
Final Four In Seattle next Saturday
for a game against the Midwest

cbampion, which will be decided
Sunday In St. Louis when 19thranked Wake Forest tangles with
No. 5 Houston.
The Cavaliers, who finished siXth
In the Atlantic Coast Conference,
entered the tournament with the
second-worst record of all 53 teams,
17·11. Only Nevada-Reno, 17-13, had

Staker named to
all toumament ~ a'::a~~:hadappearedsetfor
Coach Bobby Knight's fourth trip to
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Je- the Final Fwr after upsetting
rome Lane, ~ led Akron St. . top-ranked North
72-68
VIncent-St. Mary to the cbamplon- Thursday nlght In the Ea5t
ship Saturday, was named as the semifinals.
·
MOlt Valuable Player In the Ohio
Thevtctorywasthefourthlnarow
Qaas AA boys high sc'hool basket- In thetournamentfortheCavallers,
bail tournament.
who reached saturday's game by
The 6-toot-5 junior guard, an beating Iona Arkansas and Alaoclated Press first-team ail- Syracuse . '
stater, had 23 points, a1 rebounds,
~appeared to be In control
five shot blocks and two steals In the when Alford hit a pair of free throws
tltlegame.
with 3:21 remaining for a 44-41
A panel of sports writers also advantagi!. But Carlisle's15-footer
selected teammate Fred Rollin, rolled around the r1m and fell In to
Todd Stakel' ~ Craig Brown of cut the lead to one point with 3
Wbeelersburg and Nolan Roblnl!on minutes to play, Setting the stage for
of WDlarcl to the Qaas AA Edelln's heroics.
all·tDumament squad.

carolina

)

A&amp;~a~M ulllverilty o1 VIral*'• 01twe1 w.oa (11),
A PAIR OF 11'• - Durtnc earb' action of the :
left, movee &amp;be baD pall&amp; .....M Ulllwnl&amp;y'e Daa NCAA EaR RectonaJ Basketballllnals Saturday' in :
Daldch (11). (API m.,ooto).
''

'

�March 25, 1984

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

Wheelersburg in AA finals
Wheelersburg, withStakerhlttlng elapsed. Then he hlt eight points to County, ran ott sbl conaecutJve.
10 foul shots In a row, swepttnto5745 lead the Plra tes Into a 27·22 haltllme points In the last 2: 16 of the llrat halt·
and 5947 leads midway In the final margin.
tor Its biggest lead of the o{ll!lllng
quarter before WU!ard rallied.
r-W_;h,;,:e..;,el..;,e.:,rs:..:b.:.u.:.:rg:..:.,.....:.;fr..::o.:.:.m;_s_c_lo_to__ha_lf._ _.....:..._ _ _ _ __
The Crimson Flashes outscored
the Pirates 9-2 In a little over one
minute to cut the deficit to61·56with
2: 10 left. Rex Adams paced the rally
with five points.
Willard, beaten twice In the
semifinals In its only state touma·
ment appearances, broke on top 12·5
on the outside shooting of &amp;-foot
junior Scott Brown and the Inside
play of Nolan Robinson, a 64
sophomore.
Robinson scored two baskets and
two free throws and Brown hlt a pair
of goals In theopenlngWUlardspree.
The Crimson Flashes, second·
ranked In the state during the
The Self-Pro~lled
season, owned a 1&amp;-lllead after the
5-in-1 Lawn-Hoy.'
first quarter.
Tllb LJ"••·Ill •1 :.df· prt~· lk•d O ll l~t.~ rrlll do tht
Staker, Wheelersburg's &amp;-2 senior
lltH1. ,,, fi lt' - n ~ .~~. and ~&amp;prt.&gt;ad dw•na-. lldt'
b:li. n·ar b:la. mt.ll..:h and lihrt'd ll:al't'l .
forward, dld not score hls first
Subd·:il.1lt' iW~it inn. SCWI"' lututt'd ~'Om ·
ba$ket untU almost 10 minutes had

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - All·
Ohioan Todd Staker, hitting 12
straight tree throws and scoring 26
points, led Wheelersburg to a 'ro-64
triumph over WU!ard Friday In the
Class AA boys state basketball
semifinals.
Cincinnati McNicholas met Ak·
ron St. VIncent -St. Mary In the
second Class AA semlflnal In St.
John Arena.
Wheelersburg (23-4) wlll make Its
first appearance In the state finals
after Its clutch free throw shooting In
the fourth quarter, staving off a
Willard rally. The Plra tes missed
only three of 22 foul shots In the last
eight minutes.
Wheelersburg overcame early
nine-point leads by Willard, finish·
lng with a 25-2 record. The loss
snapped a 24-game winning streak
. for the Crtmson Flashes.
Nolan Robinson scored 14 or hls
team-lealrig 24 points In the second
half to keep Wlllard In the game.

prt'liO III n •ii.'IM.'IIld ptink'r l.'arburetiOO
mali ~·, u QUidi and ~p.· rldablt- to start .

And tht- faniiMJii d~ Ll'&lt;'11·8o}' t'O·
1(11\c' rnakt:l ic J,!llllll and flj:l fur t•xtra
ft'al"'!' of tit-,,.:ndJ\bW k' f'\-.:t' .

DISHES

Fibqtas
Mesh
Aluminum
8 Ft.to 20Ft

MAIN

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RIDENOUR SUi»PP.
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•

CHISlER

PH. 985-3308

t

Lane leads Irish
to 65-36 AA rout

Qoosters lo meet
:CHESIDRE - The Kyger Creek
Alhletic Boosters are sponsoring a
b4sketball game between the
WKEE Jox Sox and the faculty on
Thursday, March 29, ~t 8 p.m. at
KYger Creek High School.

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Defending SVAC champs
open 1984 season Friday
RACINE - The Southern Tor·
nado defending SVAC champion
baseball team has been working
hard Ill preparation tor the upcom·
lng 1984 baseball season. Southern
has won the SVAC three straight
years.
Cone from last year's team are
all·leaguer Zane Beegle, a member
of the Southeast District all·star
team who received all state recog.
nltion, John Porter, Rob Cun·
nlngham and Jim Hupp.
Returning to the Southern line-up
this year are seven seasoned
veteran seniors headed by allleaguer Tony Rime, a pitcher and
hitter; Tony Deem, Wade Connelly,
Brian Allen, Paul Harris, Joey
Wolfe, and Charlie Wolfe who form
the nucleus of a capable ball club.
Other players, who came along
last year and showed great lm·
provement, are juniors David
Ebersbach and Darin Roush. Sophomores pushing lor starting
berths are Todd Adams, Ryan
Ollv~r. Jimmy Wolfe and Dan
Wolfe. Jamey Hensler, a freshmen,
has also shown a lot of talent.
Rounding out the team roster are
Je!f HOltz and Tony Connolly.
"To win the SVAC Championship
again depends upon finding a
couple of capable pitchers to go
along with Tohy Riffle," said Coach

Hilton Wolle Jr. who hopes to do
well In the league as well as In
non·league competition. The veteran mentor will be entering his 13th
season.
In closing Wolle said he thought
Kyger Creek would be the team to
beat Inside the SVAC as all players
from last year's team return again
this season. Kyger Creek, after
holding the lead last season, finally
bowed to Southern, finishing second
In the league.
Pia)oer-P•

St. VIncent-St. Mary, making Its
firth appearance In the final four,
scored the first eight points or the
game, but McNicholas rallied to pull
even at 1().10on a basket by Mlller.
Mlller, a 5-foot-10 junior guard,
kept the Rockets In the running
early. He scored four goals In the
first half.
After McNicholas created the
only tie of the ftrst half, St.
VIncent-St. Mary ran ott eight
consecutive points for an 18-10 lead.
They were never In trouble after
that, the Rockets moving no closer
than tour

---

Yr.

Tony Riffle. P.C·Inl .. .....
.. ........ 12
Tony Deem, SS.OI ............................... 12
Wade Coonolly. lni·OI .. .. ...................... 12
Paul HarTII, Of·lb .. ......... . .... .. . .. ....... 12
Brtan Allen, lni·P.QI ............................ 12
Joey Wolle, Jb. tnl .. .. . .. .......................... 12
Charlie Wolle, 01 ............. .... ............... 12
llovld Ebenbach
........ 2b-Ofll
Dann Roolh, Of·lni.C ...
.. ............ 11
Todd Adami, SS.21&gt;P .......
.. ........ 10

Ryan Ollvtr, 21&gt;1ni·OI .......
Jlmmv Wolle, p .fnf·OI

.. ......... 10
...... ........ 10

Dan WoUe, tnf.()f ................................ 10
Jamey Hensler, P ·tnl ............................ 9
Jell HoiiZ, lnf.()f .......................
.. .... 9
Tony CoonoUy, lnf.()f ............................ 9
....,_ llcloodoM
Dole - Team
.,_
Mareh :II Federal Hocking .............. Home

April 2 Hannan Tr~ ..................... Homo
April 3 Ook HW .............. ................. Away
April f Eastern .......... ................... Homo
April 9 Sollthweotern...
.. ............ Away
Apr11 11 K)'lel' Creek ................ ... ... Home
Aprlll2 Alennder. ............. ........... Home
April If Federal Hpcklng .................. Away
Aprlll6 Nonll GoUla ....................... Away
April lB Hannan~ ...
. ...... Away

April 21 Fort Frye ..........
. ......... Away
April 23 Eutern ...... ......
. ........... Away
April Zl Southwestern .. . .. .
.. ..... Home
April :II K)'lel' C,...k ..................... Away
Moy 2 North Gallla .......................... Away
May f South Web&amp;ter ....................... Away
May 8 Alexander ..................... .. ... Away

c-...,

Dole - Team

l'loce

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•Commercial
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CALL 446-3217

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....... Nooo·l p.m.·Fitneu ~m

--Ev(W-pan.... )

Sllnday. March Zl. BaJeball vs. Ohio Weoleyan, I p.m.. doubleheo&lt;ler.
Thursday, March 29, Baaeba.U vs. W.Va. State, 1 p.m., doubleheader.

NEW

YORJ&lt;

VANKEES-Sml

MlkL'

SEATTLE MARINERS- Unrondllkln·
·

n•lra!l('d Ron Rornldw. outftridPr. Mann,v
Casllllo. tntk&gt;ldA'. and Rldt Swf'(&gt;t ~ ratrh·

.....

N......... ~IIPf
HOU~ ASTROS-OpUoned WI'$ Ck'mmt s. lnfit'kt€'r. Rubt'n Robl&lt;'S, out·
fif'ldrr. ~ Ojorkman. tatrtx&gt;r, and
Brrl Pt'lla, intk&gt;ldN to '1'uC'5on of lhr Pa·
rlflr Coast l..i'nJltlr. and ZOC' Pari!, pltrh·
{"'", and 1): Galfk.&gt;Y, outftcldl"r. to ColumWs of thr Southrrn l.l'llgU('. A~ -..

25 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + 50# Purina . -

Chick Starter Med.
$20.00-Save $9.5(
50 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + 50# Purina
•
• Chick Starter Med.
$32.00-Save $14.50
· 100 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + 50# Purina
Chick Starter Mecl.
$50.00-Save $10.00
We w11 flU only orders pieced with Ul prior1D Apri11 0. All chlckl
will be HIIIVY·Breed, Straight Run.
.

w.

They .won't open an Individual Retirement
Account.
If you didn't take advantage of a Central Trust IRA
last year, you missed a $2000
tax deduction. You see, when
y_ou invest $2000 in a Central
Trust IRA, yoti'te investing
in a tax break. A $1000 tax
break for people in a 50% tax
bracket; up to $800 in the
40% bracket and $600 in the
30% brack~ And all the money

GALLIPOLIS

MODERN SUPPLY

Pomeroy, Ohli:
Ph. 992-2184
The Store With "All Kinds of St.uff" - For P~ts, Stables,
urae &amp;Small Ani1111ls, Lawns and Gardens

M•ml&lt;•f'l)/C

r'!llio . '

· ~
'

manied
that is
and both hold a
invested and int~&gt;r~&gt;c::f
.job. ($2,250 for
families with one working
earned is not taxed until you
spouse.) Substantial penalty
withdraw it at ~e 59}h.
for early withdrawal.
At Central Trust
we know IRAs and we hav,e
So stop by any Central
a number of IRA certificates Trust office for more informa7
availabfe to fit' your needs.
tion. But don't delay. Because
And remember, you can after April 15, you will have
start an IRA with any amount missed again.
up to a maximum deposit. of ·
c$2000 a year, or $4000 if

TilE:CENTRAL
1RUSTCOMPANY
lbur Financial Center
·

Main

(

""""'- ,...... ._
INVAD~

·-"........_

tx-rweom

Two t - brown &amp; t•n with contr..tlnt velour Interior, 302 VI eng, •uto. overdrive tr•ns, Iaciair cond,
tiH wfMel, cruise control, •m-fm QSM!Ie stereo, cb r•dlo, digit• I clock, v•l•nce lighting, TV, ice box,
running boards &amp;•lithe other extr.. you expect I

1984 CHEVROLET STARCRUISER CONVERSION VAN ........'.18.500
Tills- we lust got In Wednesay eve . . Two,_ gold &amp; t•n exterior with light brown velour interior,
305 VI eng, •uto. tr•ns, p. wind., p. door locks, lilt, cruise, air cond, Delco •m-fm cusette stereo, CB,
TV, Ice box, comer closet. plus • whole lot morel Tills one has Chevrolet's new optional swing-aut side
doors. Come check It out.
. .. '·"·

•

·4 I

1)51 0 li\R~

FOUR WHEEL DRIVE SPRING CLEARANCE SALE!
1982 FORD BRONCO .................................. Was '8,80000 NOW '7900
White with bl•ck vinyl Interior, 302 VI, 4 speed overdrive
Hres, running boards ·

manW~IIrans,

am radio, radial mud &amp; snow

1982 FORD F-250 4X4 TRUCK.................... Was '8,-900" NOW '8400
O.rk blue with ucenl stripe &amp; light blue vinyl Interior, 302 va, automatic trans, air cond, am.fm radio,
diUII ps t•nks.

1982 FORD '·150 4X4 TRUCK. ................... Was '8,90000 NOW '8400
Medium blue with m•tchint vinyl Interior, 351 VI, automatic trans, air condilionint. am radio, car.
petlnt. du.l g•st•nks, br•nd new mud &amp; snow radi•ltlres.

1984 FORD ·F-150 4X4 TRUCK ................ Was 1 10,90000 NOW '10,500
Red &amp; sliver with red Interior, Explorer jNick•ge, 300 six cylinder, 4 sp trans, p. steering &amp; brakes, am
r•dlo, Goodye•r Wr•ngler r•dl•l tires &amp; only 2,500 miles.

1979 FORD F·250 4X4 TRUCK ................... Was 16,50000 NOW '6200
Red with m•tchlnt vinyl Interior, R•naer XLT JNICkage, 400 Va, automatic trans, air cond, dual u-s
· t•nks, crusle controi,INind new mud &amp; snow tires, Qrome bumpers.

1980 CHEVROLET C-10 4X4 TRUCK ............Was 16,50000 NOW '6000
Red wllll matchint vinyl Interior, 350 VI, automatic tr•ns, air cond, am.fm radio, dWII gas tanks, lockout hubs

1979 CHEVROLET C-20 4X4 TRUCK ........... .Was 15,90000 NOW '5400
Yellow with t•n vinyl interior, 350 VI, 4 speed trans, lock-aut hubs, r•di•l mud &amp; snow tires, new
•lumlnum topper.

Shorlbtd, Qndy •pple red with bl•ck vinyl Interior, 305 VI, •utom•tlc overdrive trans, air cond, till
wfMel, •m-fm r•dlo, du.l g•st•nks, r•IIY wheels, r•dlal mud &amp; snow tlrH &amp;only 7,000 miles!

Carl

CLOSE-OUT

1977 GMC 4X4 TRUCK ...............................Was '3,500°0 NOW '3000

$4995

wing,

Fotlu and a spectator at

M.lllll""" ~~~~~f'\

16,900"

1984 CHEV. C-10 SCOnDALE 4X4 TRUCK Was '12,90000 NOW'12,400

for tl\ff'(' Ramel and aslt'IIPd h.lm a ml
as a mull d a ronfrontalion on Mart'h
Zl

1983 FORD CONVERSION VAN ................ SAVE! Now Only .!.15,900

Bl•ck with red vinyl Interior, Scottsdale ,.ckage, 350 VI, automatic tr•ns, am-fm cassette, dual gas
t•nks, r•IIY wheels.

Sullivan. ck&gt;fensl\·r llnm\an·lfaht end. Arquimt ~ Gllbrrl, 11j:ht. end. tnxn thr
Tampa Boy Bandlls tor an undt5rlaM'd
tuiUJ'C' draft chO\ct'. Platro David .kifrr·
!lOri.. llnrtl8C'kl'f', on InJured l"ff('fV(' .
HOCKE\'

NHt.-Sujprndl'd Nld&lt; Fol ... '"'

Almond exterior trimmed wllll brown &amp; gold, t•n velour Interior, 305 VI eng, •utomatlc overdrive
tr•ns., f•ctory •lr cond, tiH wiMel, cruise control, dei•Y wipers, p. whldows &amp; p. door locks, •m·fm
QSM!Ie s t - . CB r•dlo, TV, Ice box, v•lancellghllng, runnlnt boards &amp; the rHI of the toys. Only 16,000
. miiH on IIIII Joe. I OM owner v•n I

1979 CHEVROLET C-10 4X4 TRUCK ........... Was 1 5,80000 NOW "5400

roaniAJ.L

OAKI..!\.ND

1983 CHEVROLET STARCRUISER CONVERSION VAN ...... !.15,500

360 SECOND AVE.
446 0699
"
OTAOI34

LCli ANCELL"\ OODCEK.':t-1.-ul R.J.
Rt&gt;ynold'&gt; . •IUM' Gorrw.J(&gt;s and C('('ll Espy,
outnridl'rs. Sid Bmam. flnt butman.
Van('(' Lo\'f'ia&lt;'t' and Larry Whllr, pttrh·
rn, Clltrrlo RcyH and Davt&gt; Sax, rarrh·

rn.

cllgH•I cloc:ll, rumina boards plus much morel Re•lshl!rp Joe. I used v•n I

TODAYI

Give the slim, trim Whistler Z-70.
The speed radar detector that outperforms all its competition. And
proves you can get quality eng~
neering at the right price.
• Dash or visor mount • Earlier
waming • No falsing • One switch
operation • Pulsing alarm

Hl.ld.l«, lnr.Mdl&gt;n. Mark Shlfk&gt;n. pltrhl't.
and MaM Wlnlf'I''S, oulfk'idC'r. to tht'tr ml·
nor k'ftlilUc&gt; &lt;'IVY\P tlr n&gt;aAignf'!ll'lll .

allY

lr•nd new convtnlon jiKUge by St•rcrulserl O.rk blue &amp; sliver exterior willl ~rk blue velour Interior, 6 cyl. engine, •utotnatlc tr•M., •lr cond, tiH wheel, •m.fm c.usettestereo, cb r•dio, TV, ice box,

19• .4 PORP STARCRUISER CONVERSION VAN .................'.17,900

Give the
best radar
detector
in its class.

O'Berrv and Srott Bradley, calchrn,
Kr!lh 'Smith, M\1&lt;1' Paii!llarulo and Rf&gt;x

BIG DEALS·ON CHICKS 'N FEED

1911 CHEVROLET NOMAD VAN .....................................~] 2,'900

SERVING THE GENERAL PUBLIC AS WELL AS OUR MEMBERS

...

ORDER -NOW!

Crum colored willl m•tchlnt vinyl Interior, 11 ,.uenger sutlnt. 302 VI, •utom•tlc trans, power
atHrlnt &amp; br•kH, dual•lr cond., du.IIINt, •m-fm stereo, cruise control, dei•Y wipers, diUII u-s tanks.
dlgH•I cloc:ll, Mldlelln rMial tlrH, •II on~ ton chassis.

1983

•WILLIAMSBURG/NORFOLK BY THE SEA
APRIL 23-27
•ATLANTIC CITY • APRIL 28-MAY 2
eGRAND OLE OPRY/LORETTA LYNN RANCH
MAY 10-13 • JULY 19-22
•NEW ORLEANS/WORLD'S FAIR
MAY 13-20 • JUNE 10-17 • AUG. 5-12
•TULIP TIME • MAY 15-18
•INDY 500 • MAY 26-27
•CANADA BUS/TRAIN • JUNE 4-8
•GOSPEL SING • JUI:Y 5-8
•WISCONSIN DELLS/MILWAUKEE
JULY 23-28

Q

1977 FORD CHATEAU WINDOW VAN .............................. ~4900

Convtnlon by Roberts, two lone grey &amp; maroon with matching velour Interior, 351 VI eng, •utom•tlc
tr•M. f•ct. •lr, •m.fm c:..sette stereo, 1111 wheel, cruise control, dlgit•l clock with •!arm, v•l•nce
llflhtlng, TV,Jcebox,runnlntboards&amp;•lllherestt Leftover
Demo. - Was 1

1984
MOTORCOACH
TOURS

IIASDIML

~ton,

350 VI, •utom•tlc tr•ns, Hloh Sierr• rackage, am-fm radio, mud &amp; snow tires.

1980 AMC JEEP WAGONEER .....................Was 14,90000 NOW '4400

. WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

r.ontm

Light blue, VI engine, •utom•tlc tr•ns, two speed tr•nsfer Qst,lock.out hubs, air cond, am radio.

1979 DODGE W-150 POWER WAGON 4X4 TRUCK
Bl•ck wllll red vinyl Interior, 360 VI, •utomatlc, •m r•dlo, running boards, aluminum slot wheels,
tonne•u bed cover ' r•dl•l tlrH. .................................. Was 1
1\00 NOW
'4900

Thrmvn for loss

5,40u

CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati
Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson
has been thrown for a loss by the

Commonwealth of Kentucky after
Pleading glillty to liquor law
vtoiatlons In connection with the
beer dlstrtbutoi'Shlp he owris In
Erlanger, Ky.
The Kentuc!CY Alcohollc Beverage Control BOard has ordered a
lQ.day suspension of AnderiOII's
license or a $1,00) tine, claiming lie·
was gtvlng away beer, tnstaWng ·
beer tap llhes In bars and falling to ·
keeP &amp;CCIII'IIte records. ·

STOP IN AND SEE: Merrill, Jay or Alan Evans
Open Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.in. to 8:00 p.m.,
Saturday 8:00 a.m. • 3:00 p.m.
UPPER RT. 7-JUST ·
SOUTH OF THE
HOLIDAY INN

PH. 446-4517

..

.•

'

•'

. ......... .Away

........................ ... Noon-! p.m.·Fltl&amp;l Swtm
~10 p.m.-College Swtm
Mllrch 29 ~10 p.m.-CDIJegp Recreation ............ ......... .................... .8-10 p.m.-College Swim
March :II CHI p.m. .()pen Recreation ......................................... Noon·I p.m.·Fttneu Swim
CHI p.m..()pen Swim
March :n 2.f p.m..()pen Recreation ................................
. ...... H p.m.-Open SWim
Apl11 I i.J p.m ..()pen Recreation ............................. . ....................... 1-3 p.m ..()pen Swim
CHI p.m ..COIJeae Recreation ................ .............................. CHI p.m..COUege Swim.

Transactions

•'

May 14 Eutem .....

~================;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

GERNIE'S

..
.•'·

'.•

March 28 ~10 p.m..coueg., Recreation .....

said.
"Tomorrow
what we
"We're
not livingnight
In theIs past,"
he 1
came here to accomplish, and we
have our minds firmly set on that
goal."
Lorenzo Hunt, the Red Devils'
coach, said It was easy to sum up hls
team's loss.
"Tonight," he said, "we were
outclassed, no doubt about It, and I
can't get around that fact.
"We couldn't handle their pres·
sure defense, andwhatwewereable
to get away with all season, tonight
was denied us."

rr~========:::;i

ARE YOU THINKING ABOUT BUYING A VAN?
COME SEE OUR SELECTION· WE'VE GOT WHAT
YOU'RE LOOKING FORI

·''

April ~ Okler Alumni .. ..... . .
. Home
April If Federal Hocklna . . ..... ........ Away
Aplill7 Alexander ......................... Away
May 8 Alexander ................ ......... .. Home
May 9 Eastern .. .. . .. .. . .. . ... .
.. Home

March 27 S-10 p.m.·College RecreaUon ... ,

1«11\
'c:tP'

WE DON'T HAVE FANCY COMPANY JACKETS, NO
WINGTIP SHOES, AND NO DESIGNER UNDERWEAR
• JUST GOOD DEALS ON QUALITY MERCHANDISE!

May 11 Wahama ........................... Home

Pool
March Zll.J p.m..()pen Recreaton.
....... .... ...
.. .......... Ciooed
CHI p.m.-CDIJegp Recreation ........ ... ...... .. ................................................ Clolied
March 26 ~10 p.m.-College Recreation .............. ....................... Noon·I p.m.·Fit""'s SWim
~10 p.m.-College Swtm

CALL

Times-Sentinei- Page-C-a·:

MOTOR CAR BROKERS:

Dole- G~

Bulldogs'
defense
devastating

The

AT:

Lyne Center schedule

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -"Who
says defense doesn't win bal·
!games?" asked a jubilant Mike
Riley, Canton McKinley's coach.
He was fresh from watching hls
Bulldogs outclass Columbus
Marion-Franklin 7247 In the open·
lng game of the Class AAA
semi-finals Frklay night.
"Our defensive Intensity tonight
was as good as any game this
season," he added.
"It enabled us to create a lot of
offense from the 32 turnovers we
forced from Marion-Franklin.
"Wealsowereabletokeeptheball
alive off the o!fenslve boards and get
several easy second and third
shots."
RUey bristled atlhementlonolthe
so-called "McKinley jinx." The
Bulldogs have been In the semifinals
14 previous times without ever
capturing the state crown.

IDGH TRY - Wheelersburg's Steve Duncan jumps high lor a
rebound against WIUard's Rex Adams In the first period of play Friday
hi the Class AA seml·ftnU; In Colurnbus. •(AP Laserphoto).

CoLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Jenine Lane, an all-state guard,
scored 25 points and.fred Rollin 19
Friuay to pace Akron St. VIncent ·St.
M'luy to a 65-36 rout over Cincinnati
MCNicholas In the Class AA boys
state basketball semifinals.
!rbe &amp;-foot-4 Lane roamed Inside
and outside to lead the triumph. He
also dlrected St. VIncent-St. Mary's
attack.
.Rollin, a 6-3 junior forward,
rrianuevered In close to the basket
lor hls total. Both helped control the
reboundlng tor the Irish.
'Substltue Keith Mlller led McNI·
cl!otas, a 1974 semtfinallst, with 12
points.

1984

�-- ..
Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

'

'fl. Va.

March 25, 1984 .

Dayton Dunbar nips Toledo S~ott, 69-6Q
-

KC Bobcats have 11
returning lettennen

COLUMBUS,Ohlo(AP)-Derek drive the length of the fioor for a
Blunden's tree throw with1 five meaningless layup with one second
seconds left Friday night clinched · i'emalnJng.
Brian Wamsley,
P. OF ............... .... . u
balanced Dayton Dunbar's 69-68
Raymond Gaffney, a 6-1 junior
CHESlllRE -With 11 return1
Ing lettermen, Kyger Creek
~:J;,~~~;;h, ;:' 1;;i ...
:
victory over Toledo Scott In the guard, triggered Dunbar with 18
hopes to improve Its 8-11 record
Kc Scheduk
Class AAA state boys basketball points, threemorethanBiundenand
of 1983 under third year coach
Dale - Opponent
Looallon
semlllnals.
five more than Michael McCray, an
March l), ChesniJ('ake .. .
...... HoJll{'
Th W 1 in (24 3) Wtak
Jake Bapst. Lettermen include
March 31. Alexander 'DH 1 .... ..... Away
e Over es · W
eon all-state football player headed tor
two seniors. outfielder Duane
April 2• North Callla .... ...............Away
second· rated Canton McKinley (26- Ohio State on a scholarship In that
Apo
iiJ, Fairland ......... ............Away
I) for the big-school championship
Abshire and catcher Robert
Aprtl 4. Sout hwestern .... .. ... ....... HomE'
Sport.
Myers.
April 5, Trimble .......... ... . . . .A""Y
at 8:10 p.m. Saturday In St. John
Chris Poelllntz. Scott's all-state
Other returnees are pitchers,
Apri17· Pt . Pleasant tDH \ .......... Home
Arena.
guard, fired In a game-high 28
Steve Waugh, Chuck Vogel,
~~~: io.H;~~."nd'l'ra~ ; : ~':..':
McKinley, still seeking Its first points, but got little support. Melvin
Brian Wamsley, Larry Edge
Aprilll. Southern .. ............ .. .... .. A.-ay
state crown In Its eighth trip to the Newbern, brother of Miami star
'"" Bill Ward, all juniors·,
Apo1114,
Wahama .......
oDH I...... ......
final game, breezed by Columbus r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
"¥"""
Aprtl
16, Eastt&gt;rn
.............
.... Away
Away
lntielders. Barry Matthews.
April t7, ChesapPake ....... .. ........ Awav
Marion-Franklin 65-36 In the openGarry Pennington and Anthony
Apoil
1
8.
North
Callla
.....
..
..
....
..
Homr
lng Class AAA semifinal.
Apr1 121, Federa l Hockin~ IDHJ .. .Away
Bl d
"' t 5
I • r
Kitchen and sophomore out April l1. Southwestern ................ Away
un en, a .,.,oo · sen or •O April25,
HaMan TraC&lt;' .............. Away '
ward, sank the front end of a bonus
fielder Phil Abshire.
26 · Trimble... ................... Away
· Kyger Creek opens with 1984
April
foul situation that gave the WolveAprtl 28. Wahama ! 0 H l .......... .. Hol11(&gt;
campaign March 30 against
April :ll. Southern
............... Home
rlnes a 69-66lead.
Chesapeake. Other non-league r;::=M=•Y
:::2:::·E:::••:::t•r:::n:...::·::::·:;::
....
H=ome~
' _ _:Du~nba:::_rthe=n~le:_t:An:th:_:o~ny....:Y~an=cey~
•
Opponents include Alexander.
(formerly fulton -Thompson)
Fairland. Wahama, Trimble
110 Spring Ave .. Pomeroy
and Federal Hocldng. The Bobcats' 26gameschedule lncludes
PH. 992-5101
(our Saturday doubleheaders.
· During the past three season,
KC has posted records of 0-11;
5-18 and 8-11.

Marcus Newbern, was the only
other Bulldog scorer In double
figures with 11 points. ,
Dunbar,ln their aecond final four,
appearance, outscored the Bulldogs
9-2 1n a three-minute stretch tor a
5G4.'llead late In the third quarter.

g

But Scott wasn't llnl.llle!!· The
Bulldolls, trying to give the Toledo
City Le8gue their aecond stralaht
Uile, scored the last five points t the

March 25, 1984

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page C-5

· Pomeroy-Middleport~llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

.:

;·
::
•:

third quarter and tralled !!0-48 going : ·
to the last eight minutes.
•
•

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

ASs 0cIAJI D.
FA BRICAJO RS

INc

:=. .:::. . :=. .:::. . :::.

A TOTALLy UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

' KCIIooler
Yr.
Ouane Abshlrt&gt;, OF ....... .............. .... 12

IN STOCK

't\.nlhony Kltchf:'n, Inr ....................... 11
Barry Matthews, lnf ....... ............. ... 11

Computer designed and
stress tested, lighter and
s~ronger than original de-

Phil Abshire, OF.. .. .... .. . ... .. ........ 10
tarry Edge. P, OF ........................ 11

Tim McCJennan. C ................... ....... 10
!~&lt;&gt;bert

Myers, C ..

1979 INTERNATIONAL
1.8 10-B CARGOSTAR

New Bush Hogs

l'layet", Poo

.. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .... 12

~~ ~~~~gt~~~· i~ ···········:::::::::: ~~

Sign.

Ghuck VOj!el. P. OF ....................... 11

4 ft. 5 ft., &amp; 6 ft. cut. 42"
Self Powered Mower, Log
Splitters &amp; Grader Blades.

ltedmen lose
doubleheader

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY BEDROOM SUITE, DINING ROOM SUITE OR LIVING
ROOM SUITE SPECIALLy MARt&lt;ED FOR THIS SALE RECEIVE A FREE ROLL TOP DESK
VALUED AT $700 OR A FREE $600 GLASS, WOOD ANP BRA~S 5 PIECE BREAKFAST
SET OR A -FREE SEALY POSTUR-PED-IC BOX SPRING AND MATTRESS, FULL SIZE,
VALUED AT $499.95, QUEEN SIZED VALUED AT $599.95.

•f..

. ..

Tilt cab. 19' flatbed, oU6 VB engine, 5 speed trans., 9,000 lb. front axle,
19,000 lb. rear axle, 10.00-20 tires, dual tanks, Reel Good Shape . .

•aaoooo
MOTOR CAR BROI&lt;ERS
446-6592 - Gallipolis, 0 .
1

LA-Z-BOY &amp; BERKINE RECLINERS
20 TO 40°/o OFF

•
•

AND RECEIVE FREE YOUR CHOICE A 540 VALUE
TURTLE FOOT STOOL, A S40 OAK HALL TREE OR A
$50 SET OF SILVERSTONE COOKWARE.

north of HoiLt ~ r Hosp1t. 1l
on stalt! Rt. 160 north .

milt ~

'

-cHARLESTON - The University of Charleston overpowered the
Rlo Grande College Redmen in
Cjlarleston winning both games of a
doubleheader. 74 and 11-3. The
Io6ses dropped Rio Grande's record ·
t&lt;i_6-5 on the season.
i n the opening contest, AI Detteville started on the mound for the
~en and suffered the loss.
B{lrtY Schuster led Rio Grande at
the plate with two hits.
-In the second game, Charleston
j~ped out to a quick 6-0 lead after
l'.l'o Innings to go on to win, 11-3.
~~~ Montavon started the game
aad: was pinned with the loss.
SChiister again led the Redmen
with two hits.

Honor retiring coach

•
;COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Russ
Gi-egg of Columbus Whitehall,
retiring this season after 30 years of
OQachlng, was selected as the Paul
\'(alker Award winner Saturday
night.

WITH THESE DEALS
YOU CAN AFFORD AN '84

NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS LASTING AS A
PERSONALIZED MEMORIAL FROM LOGAN
MONUMENT CO. IT IS A WORTHY EXPRESSION OF LOVE AND RESPECT.

~

FORD LTD CROWN VICIDRIA
SO MUCH COMFORT, SO
MUCH CAR FOR THE MONEY!

OPEN EVENING AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.
W. MAIN ST.
VINTON, OHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.
PH. 388-8603

RECEIVE A $200 TO $60() DisCOUNT ON SPECIALLY MARKED
LIVING ROOM SUITES, DINING
ROOM SUITES OR BEDROOM
SUITES AND RECEIVE ONE OF
THE FOLLOWING

LTI) Cruwn VIl1t.fU
-

\l)u..f

'84 Escort

"ot"\bn

AGOOD
SELECTION OF

HIDE-A-BEDS

WITH INNERSPRING

MATTRESS
RECIEVE UP TO

S250 OFF
SPECIAL!

FREE

2-Door

5 Pc. Breakfast Set
$29995
7 PC. Breakfast Set
At $169 9 5

•Front wtw.l drhr
...._fM"t'd manuallranaaal..
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Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

•

'

March 25, 1984.,

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

..

•

Hard-working Eastern squad _opens campaign Thursday
By SCOOT D. WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - After several
weeks of "Spring training" the
Eastern Eagles' varsity baseball
team will open Its 1984 ' baseball
season with a non-league game
Thursday, March 29, at Ravenswood, W.Va .
Twenty-two players are currently vying for starting positions at
the Eastern camp, Including nine
seniors, three juniors, four sophomores, and six freshmen. Although
the 1984 team is comprised of nine
seniors, only four saw much action
last season as eight seniors graduated from last year's squad .
Lost to graduation were Mark
Holter, Deron Jewett, Jerry Larkins, David Gaul, Ray Maxson,
Roger Bissell, Jeff Newell, and

Leonard Koenig. Also missing from
last year's lineup is shortstop Jay
Carpenter, who as a sophomore
paced Eastern with a .388 average
last season. Carpenter has trans·
!erred to Meigs.
This season, Eastern is coached
by second-year coach Scott Wolfe
and varsity assistant, George Collins. After being "rained-out" In the
first 14 games last season, the
Baseball 111111
\ ' r.
Scon l'russell, Ot-P ........................ .... 12
Mike Collins, lB-0!·P ........ .... ............ .... 12
Larry Cowdory, C-OF ............ .............. 12
Troy Guthrte, 38-C ..... .......................... 12
Bob Malson, lnl-ot ................. .... ...... 12
Tom Everett. 18-P ........ .. .................... U
Rick Banon, ot ................................. 12
Jim Newell, 38-SS-P . .......... .............. .. . 12
Tim Proben, SS-28 ....
.. ................... 12
Jim Weber, Lf-Rf ........................... .... . n
Jet! Sis,., II, 28 -ot .. . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . . . . .. .. II
John Edwards. Of
.... ............... 11
Tracy Taylor, 38-C .................... ... ....... 10
Royce Bissell, 18·0!-lnl ........... ........... 10
Jim Caldwell, 28-Dr. .. . . .. . . .. .. .. . .. . . .. . .. . _10
Nwne-POf;.

OHSAA

David Edwards, Of ............................. 10
Ed Collins, lni·P ...... ...... ....................... 9
GT'E'g Leachman, P ·Of·IB ..................... 9
Doug Beavff, Inf-Or ......... ......... .... ........ 9
Brent Norton, Of ................. .................. 9
Rex JusUs, Of ...................................... 9

favors
proposal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio High School Association's
Board of Control has voted In favor
of a proposal to upgrade academic
standards for ellglbiUty to participate In high school sports.
OHSAA Commissioner Richard
Annstrong said the proposal would
require that an athlete earn a
minimum of four credits toward
graduation In the preceding grading
period to make him eligible to take
part In sports. Those periods can last
for six, nine, 12 or 18 weeks,
depending on the school.
Current rules say an athlete must ·
liave passing grades weekly and at
tile end of a semester In eourses
carrying at least 1'h credits.
Otherwise he or she Is Ineligible for
rut entire semester.
· Annstrong said the proposed
~es change would limit periods of
lilellglblllty to one grading period
rjlther than one semester.
· The rules change will be submltt~ toOHSAA member schools for a
rl!ferendum in October. Armstrong
sald the association has been
stUdying the Issue for several
m911ths and that It was approved In
response to higher minimum stand·
aids for graduation established by
thj!State.
'The rules change would not apply
t&lt;}extracurrlcular activities outside
of: athletics because the OHSAA's
aqthorlty is limited to sports.

Gary Cunls, ot .................................. 9

Other top senior prospects include Mike Colllns, Bob Maison, ·
Tom Everett, Scott Trussell, and
Rick Barton, while Tim Probert
and Jim Newell will be assets,
returning to the diamond after one
year lay-offs.
Besides Its large senior contingent, Eastern also has a spirited
group of underclassmen, who will
see plenty of action as the season
progresses. Varsity Coach Scott
Wolfe says, "We have a great group

Eagles came back to post a 3-7-1
rec9rd.
The main setback Eastern faces
this season Is Its lack of varsity
playing experience. Returning to
this year's squad Is SVAC honorable mention nominee Troy Guthrie,
a senior third o:.seman who
finished the sear •n s,rong last year,
and senfor cakh~r L&amp;rry Cowdery,
an outstanding contact hitter.

EMWm&amp;bOO~

Date - Team
Pla.t•e
Mardi !9 Ravenswood ............. ......... Away
Man:h 30 Wellsloo .................... ... ..... i\way
Man:h 31 Fedenll Hocking ............... Home
.\prll t Soulhw-m ....... .. ............... Home
.\prll S Wahama .............................. Home
.\prll 4 Soulhem ............................... .\way
.\prll s Ra.....wood .. .. ...... .... ........... Home
.\prll7 Wllerfonl .... .. .......... ........... . Home
.\prll 9 Norill GaUla ....... ........... ....... Home
April II Hannan 'l'rare ....... ............... .\way
.\prill2 Wellllon ............ .............. ... Home
.\prilll Trtmble .............................. llome
.\prll 16 Kyger c...k .. .................... , Home
.\prlll7 Wahama ............. .. .............. Away
.\prll 18 Soolhw-m ........ ,........... ... .\way
.\prll 19 Waierfonl ... .............. .. ..........\way
.\prll %1 MIDer ....................... ...... ... llome
.\prU U Soolbem ....................... ...... Home
April IS Norill GaUla .. .. .................... Away
April IS Alexander ........ ...... ............. Away
April :.t Hannan Trace ................ ..... Home
May t Kyger Creek .......................... Away

of underclassmen. If they maintain
their competitive determination
and. desire to play the game, they
can help us this season and give
Eastern something to look forward
to in the future."
A series of indoor-outdoor pracUees have kept the Eagles busy this
month as they prepare for Thurs·
day's opener. "Our fielding has
looked good so far and I've really
been Impressed with our hitting,
said Wolfe.

~~--~~~~~~~~ji~~~~rt~~~ti~~~ii

&lt;'

••

Wolfe named two things as the
key to the 1984 Eastern season~
"Our attitude and our pltehlng." W
4
have to be at our best In both of
these categories and develop some,
eoitslstency In order to win."
'·
Seniors Mike Collins, Tom Eve-·
rett, and Jim Newell will be the '
Eagle mound workhorses, sop~ .'
more Royce Bissell and freshman'
Eddie Collins will get the nod mucH
of the time during Eastern's 26
game schedule.
'

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PROFESSIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING

Thistledown resulls
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
-: Mark Salvaggio rode Native
Nipper to victory In the featured
eighth race at Thistledown on
Friday, touring the 5'1.&gt; furlongs In
1:'094-5.
The winner returned $10.60, $3.80
aim $2.60.
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Saturday, March 31, 1984- 8:30p.m.

..... _..,..

,.. ..... :u• ..n•••

MAIN EVENT
SHIEK vs. LOUIE MARTINAS
U.S. Champion
Two Referees lncludiRQ Walter Johnson

fit lntlo ... IllY

to-

With a beautiful

2ND MAIN EVENT
WALTER JOHNSON (Cleveland Browns)
vs. MALCOLM MONROE
Referees will be out of the rlno

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eomblnation of 9-7-6 paid $1,366.90.
:The crowd of 3,292 bet $431,458.

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my career when I should be playtng
weather.
"It's tough for me because Eddie everyday," he said.
"Last winter, I worked out every
Milner and I have been friends all
(SUPPLY LIMITED)
through the minor leagues, and I day and I thought I had a lot to look
know you can't bench the guy forward to, but when they signed
(Redus) who led your team In hme parker, I went back to the drawing
Alpha II Steel Radial
Skylark Steel Radial
runs (17) last year. I'm not going to board," said Householder.
Qty.
.
"My job as a player Is to do what I
Aty.
say I can't be a fourth or fifth
f6 P185/75R13 ...... .. ........... ........... 30.00
oultlelder, but I could ony be happy can tohelpthetam,andlwlli , but at
8 Pl65/80Rl3 ............. .. .... .. ........ 29.00
4 P185/75R14 ...... .............. ...... ......... . 33.00
DaveParker,andhasbattedoniy~
there If I'm actively eontrtbutlng. the same time, It's no tun sitting
2 P205/75Rl4 ....... .. ..................... .. 36.00
2 Pl85 / 75Rl3 ........ .. .................... 30.00
times In exhibition games this , I'm 25 years old and It's the time of anywhere," he said.
12 P215/75R14 .. .............. .... ........ ........ 38.00
4 P205/75Rl4 ........................... .. 33.00
spring. Friday was his start of the r---_.:.----,----"----_;_----------1
4 P225/75R14 ....... ............................. 40.00
4 P215/75Rl5 ...... .. .......... .. ... .. .. .. 36.00
9 P205/75R15 .................................... 37.00
spring.
4 P225/75Rl5 .................. .. .. ...... 38.00
17 P215/75Rl5 .... ......... .. ..................... 39.00
Manager Vern Rapp said there
11 FT SATElliTE DISHES
18 P225/ 75R15 .......... .. ...... ............ ... . 42.00
would bean open competition for the
4 P235/75Rl5 ....... .......... .. .......... 40.00
6 P225/75R15 .................. .................. 44.00
two other outfield positions. between
COMPUTER CONTROLLED TUNING
Househodler, Gary Redus, Cesar
MANUAL TUNING AVAILABLE
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COME AND &lt;,E~ OUR Dl'iPlA Y
"I don't think he was lying when
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31xl0.50x15
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he talked about It but realistically,
Super Stinger Mud &amp; Snow
31x10.50xl5 6 Ply .................. ............ . 62.00
you have to wonder," said
3lx10.50·15 4 Ply .............. ................... 56.00
Householder.
All Season Steel Radial
31x11.50-15 4 Ply ............ .......... ........... 60.50
875R16.5
8 Ply .... ............................. 73.00
''There has been eompetition,and
31x11.50-15 6 Ply ............... .............. .... 66.00
950Rx16.5 8 Ply ........ . ... .. ............. 80.00
will eontlnue to be," Rapp said. "I
33x12.50·15 6 Ply ........... .................. 70.00
31x10.50Rx15 6 Ply .......... .......... .... ... 75.00
don't know anybody who doesn't
33x12.50-16.5 8 Ply ..... ...... ................... 80.00
want to play more But I'll be able to
teU you more ~r this weekend.''
"1bey've got to move somebody," said Householder. "lfldidn't
Uke the city or the organtzatllon, I
Junction Rt. 68 and Rt. 2, Ravenswood, WV
273·3271
would raise a stink and ask to be
Open
Monday
thru
Saturday
8·5
985 3307
CHESTER. OH
traded. But I know I can play, and I
like the city. My wife is from
Fairfield (near Cincinnati), and we ~--------___;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.J._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
IIve there year-round. Our fans in
Cincinnati are knowledgeable.They
notice the llttle things, like running
oot ground balls or backup up plays
at tlrst base. There's no other place
I'd rather play, except maybe San
Diego, and that's only because of the

. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Oultielder
Paul Houaeholder went hitless In
four trips to the plate In the
Cincinnati Reds 2-1 Joss to the
Minnesota Twins at Orlando on
Friday and he's wondering if he's
really getting a chance.
Housebolder,lnhisthlrdyear,has
lest his J'lihtfteld job to tree agent

RIDENOUR'S

see how little

430 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
1-614-446-0840

Slump continues,· Householde~.--~---...~~-~~----.
Dean Saf T Bilt Tires by Cooper
ponders future with Reds
CLOSEOUT -ON

INTERSAT

your present cetlng, If
It Is In sound condition or staple them onto
wOOd fumng strips.

WE'LL LEND YOU THE MONEY
LOANS ON PERSONAL PROPERTY

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-7

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

~~~h- ~~~ !r~~~

u••

NEED CASH?

March 25, 1984

.

Perez's
future
•
remains
cloudy
SANTIAGO, Dominican Republic (AP) -Foralittlewhile,ltlooked
Uke Pascual Perez would be In an
Atlanta Braves unifonn before
opening day. Now, no one is sure
when he might be free to resume his
major league career.
"I'm ready to win ~ games or
moreforlheBraves. I'mnotgolngto
disappoint my fans, my teammates
on the Braves, and much less the
Dominican people who have supported me through this dltflcult
time," PerezsaldFrlday after being
convicted on a reduced charge of
cocaine possession, fined $l,IXXI and
ordered released from prtson.
But an appeal of the erlmlnal
court decision was immediately
entered by District Attorney Luis
Coss and, under Dominican law,
Perez was sent back to jail.
"People In Atlanta and the
· Dominican Republic can have
confidence In me, because I'm going
to play the role that everyone
expects," Perez said after the trial.
It was not known when the appeal
would be heard by the Dominican
Republic Supreme Court.
The 24-year-old right-handed ace
of the Braves' staff eould be jailed
past the major league opening day
ofAprU2.
Perez also faces a possible
suspension by Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. There was no
Indication when the commissioner
would make a decision on Perez's
baseball future.

Point Plaisant, w_.'l/a.
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YUMA, Arlz.(AP)- The ClevE.'iand Indians' offensive strategy is
not proving too popular with some of ·
their Cactus League opponents, but
· Manager Pat Corrales says thai' ·
won't dissuade him from plans to
rely on the team's speed to score
runs this season.
· "Does he think rni going to walt
for OUs Nixon and Brett Butler and
other guys like that to hit home
runs?" Corrales asked after San
Diego Padres' shortstop GIIITY
Templeton eomplalned about the
Ilidlans' reliance on OOJitlng during
a p&amp;tr of exhibition games.
The Indians swept a day-night
clou'*-header from the Padres on
Thliratlay, winning the first game
6-1 and the nlghteap 9-5.
In ' the, . two games, Cleveland
; batters tried a total of nine OOJits.
Five Ot them went for hits and three
were successfUl saci'itlces.
. 'l'helndlaiisalsostolellveba.sesln
&amp;tic trtes. All of this had ~~ direct ·

and iWing; bit Ill!! ball Ukea man/"
said one Indians' pillyer.

'.

1.66
Purolator

Criticism
won't stop
Corrales

beerb)gonslxofCleve~d'i15ruhS.
"Garry Templeton was yelling
'uieWhllle (secOnd) game;.'Comeon

5gc . . . . .

G60•15 ..
L60x 1S.
E70xl4 ..
F70x14 ...
G70•14 ...
G70Kt5 ...

REG

SALE

67 00
69DO
41 00
47 00
5 1 00
60 00
53 00
61 00
42.00
44 .00
46.00
48.00

62.00
64.00
36.00
42.00

Dorey
Motorcycle Batteries

Reg Fr om 9 95

29.95

46 .00

55.00
48 .00
56.00
37 .00
39 .00
41.00

Lawn &amp; Garden
Batteries

EZ-Ride 'Shocks

By Monroe Auto Equip . Co.

Remanufactured

Starters or AHemators
Re q 19tii1 w ro•t,.., •.1 ... ' •

o o me'!o t ~t c dr~ e• ~•' :

7.88

Timing Gears
F•om

}:, •r \". •• t ,, · • • • '
h iQ tl l ("UQuf' ~- ..... ' ' ' • ·· , . l" · ·
som e J' u•u'

26.88 A1•1;

211M A. ,., . ., · ·
""•eb'u·to •!• "I••• '"'· '' •t "· ·

Reg 15 95

12.88

Air Shocks

8.50

Timing Chains

Van &amp; Truck Shocks

22.88 At• c;

lo r l" h'Q'·' ' ' M.,• · ···• • • •.

Heavy Duty Shocks
Reg 9 gs

• ,.,... ,:· .. ...

Motnror,.

4.95

F• om

12.95

Timing Belts
F•om

....
· •· • · .

13.50

HO U" •l :&gt; •

From

S1QOFF
FOreign Auto
Alternators or

Starters

8.88

Foreign Auto
Brake Shoes or
Disc Pads

Reg. From 49.95

With. rebuild. e.ch . .

209 Upper River Road

I

.Galli

.OH.

3.75

Tun&amp;Up Kits
Eumple
C• C2 Fq ; VI'•

3.75

3.88

Spark Pluas

Reg 5 95 6 s()';;old 'n p&gt;s
or 4 Bosh &amp;. N tppo naenso

446-3807

Open
7 Days
A Week

�'

,-

... &lt;&gt;

-

-

- .....

.,

-

-

-

... • • ...

•

• '-,

•

' •

•

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•

-

~

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea.anl, W.Va.

Page C.8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.. .

Mardi 25, 1984

•

Wake Forest takes overtime win:from Meyer, DePaul
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports WrMer
· When lt was over, when42yearsof
recruiting, game plans and coaching were behind him, Ray Meyer
wasn't thinking of himself. He was
thinking about his players. his
replacement and his sport.

bounds but knocked It to Wake
Forest's Kenny Green. As the final
seconds ticked of1, Green passed to
Delaney Rudd, whose a&gt;-footer at
the buzzer tied It ff7.f&gt;7.
With the game tied TI-TI and 19
seconds to go In overtime, Rudd
fouled DePaul's Kenny Patterson.

"Basketball Is a part of me and
wlllalwaysbeapartofme,"Meyer
said after his fourth-ranked DePaul
Blue Demons were tied at the buzzer
toendregulationtlme,thenlost73-TI
to No. 19 Wake F'orest on Danny
Young's driving basket at the end of
overtime In the NCAA Midwest
Regional semifinals. "I'm sony we
didn't win. I'm not sorl}' for myself.
I'm sony for the players."
Meyer, 70. now hands over the
Blue Demons' coaching duties to son
Joey.
"I hope they don't expect too
muchofhim,"saidthemantheycall
simply "Coach," who compUed a
724-354 career record. "This ballclub has lo Improve and get better.
I'll be In the stands pulling for them,
just as I've been pulling for them on
the bench."
Meyer will be In the stands
without an NCAA title partly
because his latest team could not
protect a lead. Ahead by slxpolntsln
the final two minutes, despite
having four starters shackled with
four fouls through the last seven
minutes of regulation, the Blue
Demons got sloppy.
They had the ball with less than~
seconds to go, but trestunan Dallas
Comegys hurled a cross-court pass
In the direction of Tyrone Corbin,
whosavedtheballfromgoingoutof

who missed the front end of the
one-and-one. Wake Forest got the
rebound, delayed and then Young
drove In for the decisive basket.
"We panicked at the end. That's
the stol}' oft he game," Meyer said.
"We win with class and we lose with
class. We'llwalkoutofherewlthour
heads high. Maybe we didn't play
our best, but we trted."
Wake F'orest was at Its best In the
frantic final moments of regulation
and overtime before a St. LoutS
Arena record crowd of 20,143.
"They've done this so many
times," Wake F'orest Coach Carl
Tacy said of his 23-8 Demon
Deacons, who have won six times In
seven overtime contests.
This time they advance to
Sunday'sMldwestfinalsagalnstNo.
5 Houston, which dumped Memphis
State 78-TI.
In the West Regional at Los
Angeles, No. 2Grorgetown beat No.
13 Nevada-Las Vegas and will face
unheralded Dayton, a 64-58 victor
over No. 15 Washington, on Sunday.
The Final Four will be staged next
weekend In Seattle.
Houston, :n-5. moved a step closer
to making the national finals for the
third straight year as Akeem
Ola'juwon scored 25 points, grabbed
13 rebounds and blocked four shots.
The champions of the Southwest

:·Bo~d of

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

•Come to Baum Lumber. This is our 16th year
as a Wheel Horse Dealer
and we are here to stay.
•We have the service
to back up the sale.
*We have the parts to
back up 01.1r service
*We have a tractor for every need to fit every
budget.
*Stop in and see our complete line of Wheel
Horse and Work Horse lawn and garden tractors.

A.,;&amp;,~,~, in

I

I·'

BAUM TRUE VALUECHESTER
MAIN

ll)l!s b

ii'jI ..k!! 'Ti

1

'Bmbatand
The :UHI
Shoe Cafe tara~eue
...,.,.j"""""

Second :\ ve.

Man
Gallipolis. 0.

985-3301

TAKIN

TAKING 1'\

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

Big Discounts on all new Chevrolets, Oldsmobiles, and Chevy Trucks
Ill

50

35

(

NEW

New Pickups
In Stock

~

55

I'

MORE-ON

CARS

THE WAY

2-NEW CHEVROLET
CELEBRITY STATION WAGONS
HERE NOWI

• manager.

; Thomas said. "Wehaveanexcellent

: hourlyworkforceandwewantthem
··back on the Job."
~· Local 7·912 struck Sun after
~ ~rklng UDder tenns of an expired
i ~tract since Jan. 15.

~

::1.8 million predicted to vote in Salvador
, ' SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador

1982 FORD CARGO VAN

If you need a van to carry anything, this is it. 3Aton, auto.
trans., power steering, power brakes and new heavy duty ·
premium tires. Locally owned.

Z

WAS 17995

.S!

SALE

$6 8 .8 4

1978 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 2 DR.

1981 BUICK PARK AVENUE
New 98 trade. light blue metallic with dark blue leather trim. All the
power eq~ipment you would expect on the top of the hne.
WAS 1 10,495
SALE
$8984

Dark burgundy with white landau top. Slant Six, auto. trans.,
power steering and custom vinyl trim. Locally owned.
WAS '3795

SALE

$2784

~ t--19_8_2_C_H_E_V-RO--LE_T_C_A-PR-I-CE__
4_D_R-.4----1-9_8_4-C-H-EV_R_O_L-ET--CA_M
__
A-R0-----+---1-:-9-8-1-C-H-EV-.-M-O_N_T_E_C_A_R_L0----1
Beautiful two-tone gold &amp;beige. V-8 engine. cruise control. tilt wheel,
AM-FM stereo and only 31.223 miles.
WAS 19995
SALE
$7984

America's No. 1 sports coupe. Red. V-8. air. tilt and only 4,667 miles.
WAS s10 995
'
SALE
$9984

This intermediate has it all. Hop, two-tone paint. tilt wheel. stereo. Railye wheels and much more.
WAS 17495
SALE
$6484

1_u9m8b1ue1exten·orwrthmatchl·ng
root&amp;co~g~~-~~--1-9_8_2_C_H_E_V_R_O_L_E_T_C_A_M_A-RO_z___2_8-~---1-9_8_0_L_IN_C_O_L_N_M_A_R_K_V_I_ _~~~
Med1
Burgundy exterior wrth whrte tully padded vinyl roof. It's a Mark VI so you
Black T·top · AM ·FM Cassette • very sharp· only 18·944 low mles · The
Elega nce at the top level. All the buttons you would ex"""'
"""' only 39,53llow
Legend· continues.
know ifs loaded wrth equipment Priced to sell.
$
miles. Now Olds trade.
SALE
$9884
WAS 110,900
SALE
$9984
WAS 110,900
SALE

9 88 4

1984 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Whrte wrth gold landau top and matching bucket seats. 5,114 miles. AM-FM
stereo, wire wheel covers and much more.
$l O
WAS '10.700
SALE
, 2 84

1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 4 DR.
Dark blue with matching vinyl top, cloth interior. Slant Six and air con·
ditioning. Don't miss this one.
WAS 13995
SALE
$3584

1984 OLD CUTLASS SUPREME
White with blue cloth interior. only 5.8931ow miles. Balance of factory
warranty _ compare anywhere.
WAS 110•.200
SALE
$9984

1981
You must see this one.
~~·!IJ dl~~r~~!s. arctic

WAS 17495

$6884

Ught blue metallic wrth custom dark blue cloth interior, equipment includes
a1r, till, cruise. AM·FM stereo and only, 37,592 miles.
WAS ' 7295
SALE
$6784

1981 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
Burnt orange exterior with custom cloth interior, tilt wheel, AM-FM
stereo and only 36,873 miles. Locally owned.
WAS 17495
SALE
$6484

1979 CHRYSLER LeBARON
Dove grey with matching landau top and interior. Here is a bargain,
only 34,573 miles.
$
WAS 14295
SALE
3784

1979 CHEV. MALIBU CLASSIC
Dark brown metallic .with buckskin·cloth int.erior. New Impala trade.
This one owner is sure to be appreciated.
WA~ 13995
SALE
$3584

=
~

hasheenblackedoutdazensoftlmes
before.
l ~red clo$ed for the weekend.
Eight candidates are running for
1 yoters were told to leave their guns
the post of president. U none gains a
) tt home and a turnout It 1.8 mllllon majortty Sunday, there will be a
j people was predicted for Sunday's runoff between the two top vote., &amp;~residential election In El Salvador. getters.
f Oflk;lals saki tlleydid not expect a
The race has been seen from the
• II'IIIJOr disruption of voting by leftist start as a contest between two
.: iiJerrlllas, who appeared to be co-favorites and one dark horse, and
rrontlnlng themselves to threats, weeks of campaigning have not
assment and minor sklnnlshes changed that assessment. By law,
th the army. As a precaution, the . the candidates stopped campaigntary, on full alert, Increased Its lngWednesday.
.1
trols r!JI the capital and outlying
The favorttes are Roberto d'Au:!' districts.
.
bulsson of the ultra-right RepubU~ Leftist guerrillas wrecked power can Nationalist Alliance, known as
~ liner Friday night, leaving 1.3
ARENA, and Jose Napoleon
:: ·lflllllon people without electrtclty In Duarte, a fonner junta president
:; \be eastern provinces of Usulutan, running as the moderate Christian
•1 SimMiguel,MorazanandLaUnlon.
Democratcarididate.
:l petalls on the sabotage were not
The dark horse Is Francisco Jose
tmmedlately avaUable. The area Guerrero of the National Concilla-

:lAP) -Barsandllquorstoreswere

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

"

·

1983 FORD MUSTANG
The sporty one from Ford, only 6,590 low miles. 4 speed, power steer·
ing and much more. New Chevrolet trade.
WAS '6995
SALE
.$6184

~...;.,...;;...;;...__-+-----1-98_1_0_L_D_S_C_U_T-LA_S_S-LS--~

con ditioned . and on~
owne ·
1

1

SALE

Cl

'

1

1983 TOYOTA CAMRY 4 DR.
This compact sedan is a dazzler. only 11.388 miles, 4speed, air cond ..
AM-FM stereo and custom cloth interior. New Monte trade.
WAS ' 10,400
SALE
$9884

"We Sell the Future
•

I

r.n

Eve

Car We

. 1983 DATSUN 280 ZX
Sports fla1r at the utmost. All the toys, 8,8231ow miles. Tilt, cruise, AMFM stereo w/cassette. Just arnved and ready for your closest attention.

I

Chevrqlet-Oldsmo~ile, Inc.
446-3672
' '

.

1616 . EASTERN. AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

-~JIARGE

TAKING·
I
•

'

tton Party, who could emerge as a
key power broker If no candidate
wins a majortty.
The turnout predicted by the
Central Election CouncU would
exceed the 1.5 million people who
voted two vears ago In an elect ion for
a Constituent Assembly.
The 1982 voter turnout was hailed
by the Reagan administration as a
vtctol]' for democracy In a count!}'
with a long history of repressive
government, and came despite
death threats and attacks by rebels
on polling places around the nation.
This Central American count!}',
wracked by 4¥, years of clvU war,
has about 2.5 mUlion eligible voters
among a population of 4.7 mllllon.
Election observers from Honduras. China, Panama, Japan and
Colombia, the first of about 300 from
28 foreign nations, anived Friday

morning. The :n.member delegatlon from the United States was
expected Saturday. The observers
were Invited here by the Salvadoran
government to monitor the fairness
of the voting procedure.
About 1,BXJ foreign reporters also
have converged on El Salvador.
Rebel spokesmen have been
saying for weeks that the gueniiio/
would not directly t:J)' to hinder)he
voting as they did In 1982, but lf'Ould
continue to wage war~g t the
army "before, durtng
after the
election."
But rebelthreats lj.:l~e kept buses
off many roads in t;eeasternpartof
the count!}'. dis,~Upting the main
form of public Jtansportatlon, and
the guerrlllat have confiscated
thousands of 'government Identity
cards which citizens need to prove
they are eligible to vote.

~ U.S. boosts tro~ps in Central Arilerica

~ ; WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
·•
It expanded military
·vers Central Amenca by
troops to reassure governIn til!! region that they have
·
.

:!
·t

1

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

•

THUMBS UP- Waller Monclale gives the tbwnbs up as he arrived
on tbe podium at . .Y lntematlonal Airport in Windsor Locks
FrttlaJ for a campalp raDy. Mondale, who Is seeking the Democratic
preslcleatlal nomination, made the stop in Connecticut for the raDy and
a news conference. (AP Laserphoto).

The Black Elected Democrats of
Ohio endorsed the Rev. Jesse
Jackson the day after Glenn's
withdrawal, but support within that
IDmember organization for the
endorsement Is llQI unanimous.
Ms. Sheerer. Shaker Heights, Is
believed to be the first state
lawmaker to choose between Mondale and U.S. Sen. Gary Hart,
D-Colo., the other frontruJUler.
"I've been a fan of Walter
Mondale' s for years," she said
Friday. Although she had supported
Glenn, "my second allegiance was
Walter Mondale."
"I like where he's from, I Uke his
attitude, I Uke his style," she said.
As political liaison In Mondale's
Ohio campaign, Ms. Sheerer will
work closely with her colleagues at
the Statehouse.
"When you make your mind up, It
Is a gamble." she said, although
stressing that she had the highest
confidence In the Mondale
campaign .
Chris Hagan of Mondale's Ohio
campaign · said he believes Ms.
Sheerer's decision Is a sign of things
to come.
"I tend to think the New York
primal}' will be the time we see
some release." he said. The
primal}'. Aprtl 3, Is worth 252
delegates.
"My response Is we're dealing
with the legislators on a direct

' j

u

I

sides.

I

... .

"c:

.

l '' · "We don't want 12-hour shifts "

BANK AND GMAC FINANCING ON THE SPOT

troopslnGranaderol,anexerclseln
antl·guerrllla warfare In Honduras
from Aprtl 1 through June 30.
Panama, Guatemala, El Salvador
and Honduras also wlll participate.
but their level of Involvement has
not been set.
"The U.S. declsk&gt;ll to participate

In Granadero I reflects our resolve
to reassure Central Amerlc&lt;yt'
nations of our continuing supp6rt
and cooperation," the defense
department said f'rlday.
·
In a two-month first-phase of the
maneuvers. !OJ Army engineers
from Fort Lewis, Wash., will

prepare temporary air strtps for
C-Ul assault transport planes at
existing airfields in Cucuyagua and
Jamastran. Army engineers had
been carl}'lng out similar projects
on Honduran airfields since early
last year.

Helicopter crash, .Io.11s all aboard
.
'
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - A
U.S. Marine helicopter carcying 18

were)lbOilrd a U.S. Marine CH·53D
~elleopter which crashed about 4
Amerlc~~J~SaildllSouthKoreanshi\, ·a.m. Saturday approximately 24
the side of a mountain In pre-dawn mlles north of Pohang are belleved
darkness and worsening . ~ther to have perished In the accident."
l'atimlay, klning all ~,boilrd, · a U.S.
Aars said all U.S. Martnesaboard
the aircraft were members of the
mUitary spokesfl1!U(Sald.
.
The big ~talllon hellcopter, 3rd Marine Amphibious Force
taking
. earf' In Team Spirit '84, a
based on the southern Japanese
ma~lhing exercise Involving lslandofOklnilwa.
~iP'ftiJt(CIU~- 1)11
~ds!tU.S. and South Korean
The Pohar:: area Is about 200
"
.
IIIIIP / troops, was returning from a
mUes southeast of Seoul:
wlae • ~ mlsslonthatwasabortedbecauseof
The . spokesman descrtbed the
Carpi .....,....,.
bad we.ather, he said:
terrain at the crash site as
, Aawll " 111111 U .
Aflrespottedonthemountalnslde "extremely rugged."
.
~ ~! a JW ~ III&amp;Uda,J. . wasthearatlndlcatlon!tacrash.
. Aarssaldthehellcopterhadbeen
I
l'llllllllt . 8oulll . . . .. , Qll. Ra)lln J, AaJ'S, public atfajrs JnV.Olved Jn a night exercise JnVOlV·
~
~ Ill~ of!lcer tw U.S. Forces In Korea.. ing the movement and landing of
•·
alllciLI&amp;Id.
said: "All 29 ·U.S. and ROK assault troops.
~
(jr-~~~~~·lllaeGta•~·
(~lie of Korea) Marines who
"An Investigation is under way to ·

1

i!

"=·

k-

, &lt;¥"
'I

Mardl25. 1984

Regents said tlley had drafted the proposal with
"great caution." They repeatedly stressed the need to
avoid using money that othe1wtse would go for
operations to pay the debt on money borrowed for new
buldlngs.
"The board •s first prlortty ts the protection of
lnstructtonal subsidies from any further encroachment whlle attempting to maintain and develop the
capital facUlties necessary for the colleges and
universities to adequately perform their missions,"
the regents' report said.
The board said 80 percent of Its critical needs
budget was for renovation or replacement of current

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
Rep. Judith Sheerer has decided to
shed the caution being displayed by
most state Democrats and actively
support fonner Vice President
Walter Mondale tor president.
Uke others, Ms. Sheerer had
supported U.S. Sen. John Glenn.
Glenn· s withdrawal from the race
last week lett most of the state's top
Democrats reluctant to choose

l·

- - - - - - W E WILL LASSO EVERY D E A L ! - - - - - -

~entintl Section [Q)
facUlties. The other ~percenl covered new facUlties.
the $169.4 miUion listed by the regents for
universities to pay for crlllcal need projects, the
largest single amount of $39.3 million was for Ohio
State University.
The University of Ctnclnnatl was second highest at
$24.9 mutton followed by CIPVeland State University
at $22.9 mllllon.
Other universities and the dollar amounts, under
the "crttlcal needs" level for F'Y 85-86:
Akron $11.6 million; Bowling Green $12.2 million;
Central $3.8 million; Kent $1J .9 miUion; Miami $5.2
mllllon; Ohio $7.1 mUiion; Toledo $14.8 mllllon;
Wrtght $9.1 mUiion; Youngstown $6.4 million.

or

State representative decides
to actively support Mondale

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Supervisors can keep the Sun Oll Co.
refinery operating without a full
work force, say company officials
and striking Ull.lon members, and
some strtkers anticipate a lengthy
walkout.
A catering finn ls prepartng
meals and cots are In place for
supervisors and engineers who have
locked tllemselves In the refinery
since a strlke by the Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers union began
• Wednesday.
Supervisors and managers have
, ·run the plant during previous
: strikes, mostrecentlyforlOweeksln
:; eerly 191ll.
., uFrom what we've seen before,!!
.: looks Uke tlley could probably ··
: operate Indefinitely." said strlker
1 Mike Avers. "Thelasttlmewecame
l l)ack, the place was running real
4 good."
"It's an Inconvenience for them
• ~ we go on strlke, but really,
; 'there's so much automation In there
that we don't really havel much
. leverage," Avj!rs said.
, Dally reflnlngofm,IXXIbarrels!t
: crude oU Into gasoline, heating oU
~ jet fuel continues as more than
«XX union members take turns
1
pl,cketlng outside the east Toledo
· site.
: ' Salaried penonnel are working
1 12-hOur shifts and sleePing or
: relaxlnc·ln their Itt hours.
: : ''WeJPt highly automated and
. tan run the plant without an hourly
: work foree for a short time," said
: Dave 1bomas, acting reflnecy

~ GIGANTIC SPRING RO-UN~D_U_P_S-=A____;;,L~E---..~

"c:z

chairman.
The recommendations now are reviewed by Gov.
Richard Celeste's Office of Budget and Management,
which ls drafting, the capital Improvements funding
but which the administration Is expected to submit to
the ·General Assembly In May.
The bill wUI only cover FY 1985 and 1986. but wUI be
accompanied by a capital Improvements plan
spanning six years.
Adoption of the recommendation came at a brtef
public meeting Friday which followed a closed-door
commlttee session.

Long strike
plans made

WE HAVE ON THE SPOT
FINANCING AVAILABLE

TAKING ·CHARGE

by a long way," said Richard Krabach, regents

$.ll8.:t

The Timberland• boot shoe is the p«'rftct addition
to any wardrobe. It has wat&lt;rproof brown kather
upp«'rs that stay soft and supple, solid brass eyelets
that won't rust, M~d a p«'nnanently bonded soft, whit•
Vibram• sole for longer wear.
It's the classic boat shor with one big diiT•rence:
Timberland quality.
~

'limes-

Regents cuts school building plans

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - The Ohio Board of
Regents has ~ a sharp ftacal knife to the $!m
: mllilon construction project w!Jh llst of public
unlvenltles and colleges.
As a l'f!ll1llt, the llst was whlttlell to as low as $265
mllilon over the next two years.
Regents said Friday the lower figure represents
"crttlcat needs" to ,be met 11t state-assisted higher
education lnstltutlops In ftacal y~ 1!8&gt; and 1986.
But the panel alsq Included an alternate total of
mWion for the two-year period which Includes
$133 mllllon worth of "quality enhancement"
projects.
"It' sa bare bones thlng.lt Isn't what was requested

DO YOU WANT A GOOD DEAL
ON A TRACTOR WITH NO
SALES GIMMICS?

TAKING·CHARGE...

·CHARGE

ionaI

Dayton, 21-10 al)d on Its own second half.
.s corer 1n Dayton h!atory, did uolld
shocking rush for the Final Four,
The 6-4 Chapman, the only senior defensive Job on Detlef Schrempl,
ended Washington's hopes of quall· on the Dayton squad and the highest
the Huskies' leading scorer.
lying tor the tlnals !rills hometown.
Roosevelt Chapman had22polnts
and the Flyers, with no starter taller r;;~iiiimiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii.~;
than &amp;-7, broke the game open with·
an 11-1 surge In a 7:49 span of the

Conference also held All-American
forward Keith Lee to four points In
the secotld half.
Alvin Franklin added 24 points for
Houston, while Memphis State was
paced by frestunan 7-footer William
Bedford, who had 21 points before
fouling out.

.

deterlne. the cause of the crash," he
said, adding that Identification of
victims would be withheld untU the
next of kin have been notified.
The CH-53D, capable of carrying
upto38combat-ladenMarlnesanda
crew of three, Is a heavy-lift
helicopter designed to transport
assault troopsandequipment.lthas
a.max!mumspeedofl96mphanda
cruising speed of 173 mph. Its
maximum weight Is 42,IXXI pounds.
Much of the Navy and Marine
activity In Team Splrtt '84 has
centered In the Pohang area. The
Pohangbeacheswerelhescenelast
Tuesday Of an alnphibiOUS assault
landlnglnvolvlngnearly50,IXXIU.S.
and South Korean Marines.

basis," said John Kulewlcz, Hart's
campaign coordinator In Ohio. "The
Mondale-Hagan machine evidently
Is spreading that responsibility out.
We continue to prefer working with
them directly."
Kulewlcz there has been an
"upsurge In Interest" In the Hart
campaign among state lawmakers
since Glenn's withdrawal.
"Several of the lawmakers have
contacted me, and I've been
working with them," he sald.
Hart's campaign will benefit In
Pennsylvania from the services of
Gerald J. Austin, a Columbus-based

pollster and close friend of Gov.
Richard Celeste.
Austin, 39, said he accepted the
offer from Oliver C. Henkel. Hart's
national campaign manager, to
coordinate Hart 's campaign In the
AprU 10 Pennsylvania priJna!y.
Pennsylvania sends 195delegates to
the Democratic National
Convention.
Austin starts next week.
Austin ran Celeste'sl982gubernatorial campaign and former President Jimmy Carter's J.9!ll Primaiy
effort In Dllnols an'd general electj!ln
campaign In Ohio.
,

Ohio briefs:

I

Celeste names appointees
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste as chosen a
e on two state
Columbus attorney and a Cincinnati surgeon to
panels.
Paul F. Ward. 68, an attorney In prtvate p ctlce since 1947, was
appointed to the Ohio Ethics Commission .
Ward, also a special counsel for the atto y general, wUl succeed
John Benson for a tenn ending Dec. 18,
Commission members are paid onl)l or their expenses.
Dr. Sidney A. Peerless, 63, was
lnted to the state Medical
Board.

In private practice since 1948 e has served as Chief of the
Otolruyngology and Maxlllofac surgery department at Jewish
and Providence hospitals sl ,
·
Peerless succeeds Oscar rke for a term ending Ma~h 18, 1~.
Board members are paid -~ per hour plus expenses.

Corporatio

urchases plant

MARYSVIU.E ( ) -General Automotive Corp. of Ann Arbor,
Mich .. Is consider pu~haslng the vacant RockweU International
Corp. plant here e company's chairman says.
Mayor Tom ckles said Frtday the purchase could mean 400 to
500 jol)s.
at It vel}' hard," said Cruse Moss. General
"We're
Automotlv halrman. "It Is real prellmlnal}' at this stage."
Genera 1\utomotive owns F'lxlble bus manufacturing plants In :
Delaw
and Loudonville.
,
there became vacant 'llld 500 jobs were lost more than a •
The
when Rockwell moved Its truck axle division operations .
year
Nu es said at a Mal}'svUle City CouncU meeting Thursday night
that
era! Automotive Is expected to exe~lse its option to
~(!hase the plant AprU 7 and the pu~hase could be finalized by ·
gust.
The mayor said he has been working with Moss and Rockwell •
executives for several months. Nuckles said the City CouncU, Union
County commissioners. the local chamber of commerce and
community development officials have been involved with the Ohio '
Department of Development in efforts to solidify the sale.
General Automotive, a privately held company. pu~hased the .
Flxibie bus business from Grununan Corp. In July 1983.

Construction firms named in suit

.'

COLUMBUS (AP) - Construction firms in CenterviUe, Dayton
and Englewood have been named in a state lawsuit aUeging that
workers were underpaid for a Montgomel}' County construction .
project.
Attorney General Anthony J . Celebrezze said F'riday his office ·
filed the lawsuits In Montgomel}' County Common Pleas Court this
week against Construction Managers of Ohio, Cente nrille; QRI·Co .. .
Englewood; and T.E. Co., Dayton.
The lawsuit , !Ued on behalf of the Departmenl of Industrial
Relations, alleges that the companies underpaid 13 workPrs a total of
$10,566.53between September 1981 and Ma~h 1982. The sui I asks for
back wages plus a penalty equal to the amount of each .
underpayment.
The lawsuit stems from work done by the firms on the T.E. Tool
Co. Tool Terrace In Union. The project was pa11ially financed
through $700,001 In industrial revenue bonds authorized by
Montgomery County.
QRI was named as developer and recipie nt of I he bond money,
T.E. because It leased the project from QRJ and Construction
Managers as general contractor.

Ohio Tornado Safety Week
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste has declared next
week Ohio Tornado Safety Week.
Public officials and prtvate lndustl}' wUI combine efforts to
publicize severe-weather safety Information. The main activity wU! ·
be a statewide tornado drill Wednesday morning. D1ills are planned
for many schools and hospitals, and warning systems will be
activated.
An average of 14 tornadoes are reported annually in Ohio, the
National Weather Service said. Last year, nine were reported, and
on May 2, tornadoes kllled two people and Injured 52 ~thers.

,
•
..
•

Celeste sings industrial park bill
'

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste has signed Into :
temporary law a bill to aid development of an Industrial park In

Springfield.

•

The measure allows a board of park commissioners to sell,leaseor · •
convey park lands to a legislative or public authortty ·withoUt ,
competitive bidding or public notice of Intent to sell.
•

••

�...

984

Pleasant, W. Va.

•

k ··

,..""

r

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

The Sunday

W. Va.

Ohic.--Polnt

Old newspaper front pages detail events
By .J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALIJPOLIS- Two people the
same day handed Peeps some old
copies of Galllpolla newspapers.

worklngon&amp;.~s~

ceiUng from a scaffold were
story w as writlen by Homer Alley.
red-hatred Dr. John C. Markley,
Jack Carr, Phil Langoom, James
IF YOU KNOW where Homer
Betz. and the rector - Dick Ash. Alley Is now, please send old Peeps
Standing on the floor were Dr.
a postal card or telephone 446-2342
Charles E. Holzer, J r., Harold
and teU anyone; anyone will give
MacKenzie (the 19M rector's fa- . Peeps this information.
!her), John E . Halliday, a ndDickle
MacKenzie
COLUMN ONE - the first
·
- column on the left of the front page
TilE BIG HEADUNE over the . - was devoted to " Week's News
Roundup" by Dwight C. Wethertop of the page of the 1953
newspaper reads, "Scintillating
oolt. There were eight colwnns on
Blue Devils w1n 47-13." That was 72
the front page and the other pages
point with a »point ~akoff
in those days. Other front page
reading, "Completely revitalized · headlines covered the Rio Grande
grid team matter-of-factly overCollege announcement.
runs Logan, defending c hamps of
College autumn commencement,
SEOA League." There was this
Girl Scouts court of awards, voters
Nov. 3 will select trustees, school
subhead, too: "Defeat worst evet
handed Diller-coached team at
boards, and local officials, and
County Auditor Charles Bodlmer
Logan; evens score at 11-11 in
22-garne series; game not thrtller,
tells of revaluation of realty.

Church Interior. Working oil the

but GAHS operation exciting." The

ONE OF THEM, so old that it's
falling apart, was lent by Helen
Boster: It's the Gallipolis Journal of
July 28, 1864, when the Civil War
was still raging, though In Its last
iYI!ar. It's Volume XXIX Nwnber
36. There's a small all-caps line
right under the name of the
newspaper; the Une reads, " Equal
and exact justice to all men of
whatever _race or persuasion, reUgious or political. Jefferson. "
• FROM 18'74 TO 1901 THE CenierviDe Nalional Bank was located In
tJjls wooden building located on state Route 2'l9 In Cenierv!Ue ('lbunnan
PQIIt oflke). 'lbe bank was founded by Luther Beman wbo had come lo
OJdo In 1847 from CoonecUcul as a peddler, moving lo Centerville In 1.858
where be became a prosperous busiDesllman.

TilE OTHER was lent by Father
AI MacKenzie: It's the Gallla
Times of Saturday, Oct 24, 1953,
with a photograph of nine people

&lt;;enterville had bank; Beman
Agriculture imd our community
Jt.eld controlling interest
••
By JAMES SANDS
·• Special Correspondeol
GAUJPOLIS - One hundred
ye~. ago, the only bank In Gallla
cojUity to be located outside of
and
Gallipolis was at
operated by
LUiher Bemanv
The Centerville
National Bank
was chartered by
!hi government
lti.1874 'with cap!,
ta1 Rf $50,!XXI.
¥.t..~
_Beman
the controlling
Jnt
the bank.
!-u
rtse to prominence as a'rustnessman Is InterestIns. He wa. born In Hartland,
Coftnectlcut ln'827. At the ageof20,
r.uther set out f\1' Ohio with a Mr.
I:loiNdy, an old IT'Ill who peddled
oiOCks, brass ketles and other
aritcles. After a ft..v years of
~ goods, Bema. opened a
COQJrtry store In Wabrloo and
~ards Ridgeway (ne.r present day Rio Grande) .
: Uwaslnl856thatBemanca.,eto
(JentervUJe where he dealt In f&amp;m
prOducts and stock. For some yea:s
~.sold food to several of the !rot
,tmnaces In Jackson county. The
CJoril War period was also a
~!Jerous one as Beman sold
;livestock to the government.
" In 1864 Beman was made quartermaster of the 173rd Regiment,
f&gt;Slo Volunteer Infantry, a position
Jil!,held until June of 1865.
· , According to the " Pioneer Recoi-d of Southern Ohio," " Mr.
Beman had the faculty of doing
everything well which he undertook, and It never had to be done
over again."
• ·\FOR MANY YEARS Ste phen
:.l{eller and R. P . Porte r worked
·llolth Beman In his bank, a nd it is
said tha t during one of the country's
recessions, the rea dy reserves of
the bank dwindled to near nothing.
•. .One fa rmer had $1,!XXI1n the bank
,~d he had come to Ce nterville one
dily to see Beman, as the fa rmer
:!iid hear the rumor the ba nk was
· about to go under.
~'When the farmer as ked for his
~si;!XXI, Beman said: " Very well ,
"walt here a mome nt while I go to the
sg:J:e."
:~~tore Luther reached the safe
-1\ie farmer called out-: "Oh, well . if

~n's

you have the $1,!XXI!n your sate, It's
in no danger."
BEMAN WAs bluffing as there
was scarcely $100 in cash In the
sate.
Later the Centerville National
Bank was a competitive bidder in
the bond market and dealt In
government and municipal bonds.
Beman was Gallla County representative to the Ohio House as weU
as county commissioner and treasurer of Raccoon Township. According to the Gallipolis Tribune:
''Beman was good lo the poor lllld .
tbo8e In trouble, pa,y!Dg taxes of
hUDdreds of people."
He also was a trtend of children,
agreeing to buy their pelts or
exchange them for something the
children wanted. We also note that
Beman was a close trtend Of
Rutherford B. Hayes, and entertained Hayes at the Beman h&lt;me In
Centerville - the year being 1875,
one year before Hayes was elected
president.
Luther Beman died In 1901 and It
was his death that caused the
closing of the Centerville National
Bank that same year. All persons
who had money invested In the
bank had their money returned in
~ when the bank's charter was
Sl&gt;n!ndered.
. ·~ose owning Centerville bank
note.were allowed to convert those
notes 11 U.S. currency. Many of the
lnvestot, In the CenterviUe Nationa l Batk began In 1902 the Vinton
bank whicl.continued up to the last
few years. In both situations no
customer lost" any money.
By our reco--ds there have also
been banks In l'ldwell, Porter, and
Crown City. Tl~ BldweU bank
opera ted for one ye. r (1910) when It
surrendered Its ch•rter and returned all of Its mone,
IN 1871 the Porter\ 1v1ngs and
Loan was In bus iness biefly . The
Crown City Bank was me of only
three banks In Gallla history to go
ba nkrupt . The Crown Cit) bank
failed In 1914. The other two were
the Bank of Gallipolis a nd 'the
Fa rmers' Ba nk, both of which we-e
located in Gallipolis.
· All other Ga llla banks either stU!
opera te or when closed returned to '
their customers assets In full.
You can write to James Sands at
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.

Researcher's
claim refuted
,.
-. .,

· ..f;OLUMBUS, Ohio iAPl - A
sPok-eswoman for a group tha t he lps
allliooolics says she's "outraged" by
an Ohio State University researcher's cla im that som e a lcoholIcs. might eventuaUy be a ble to
re§ume social drinking.
. )~elth KUty, a professor of socia l
wor;k and a former a lcoholism
'counselor, said there may come a
time when counselors agree some
alcooolics can resume drinklng
socially If they can team tocontrollt.
"Some research has suggested
that one-third of aU people treated
for alcooolism return to 'normal
drinking,' one-third never drink
agall! and the rest never get better.
Many people are going to return to
drinking, whether we like It or not.
We might as weU help them control
their drlnklng,'' Kilty said.
But Laurie Stein, public re la tiOns
direCtor for the -Columbus Area
CouncU of Alcoholism, said she
disagreed.
"I , think you w ould find many
people who are recovering a lcoholIcs are outraged by that, " Ms. Stein
said.
KUty ~said he questions whether
alcoool IS an addictive drug.
"I( it's addictive, why do nine out ·
oflO people use It without becoming
problem drinkers? Truly addictive
drugs, Uke heroin, addict everyone
who uses them. No study has ever
f!rmiY established that alcohol Is
add!Ctlv~." he said.
Ms. Stein, however, said most
treatlnent experts consider alcoooi .
addlctiYe and consider alcohollsm a

dlseue.

·

S'TILL OTHER front paae " bald

Special Label from· your county
l!:xteaaloa A.-,
extension omce or farm supply
Ap1callure II CNBD
dealer. It gives dlrectons for both
GALIJPOLIS - Ohio citizens procedures and users must have It
ftghtlng Infestations of multiflora . to be legal. Also follow applicable
I'OIIeS have addltronal ways to
parts of national label on the Banvel
e&lt;mbat this bramble plant during · container.
the winter now that Banvel (dlThese two new dormant techcamba) Is labeled for dormant
nlques of applying Banvel can be
season appJicatlon.
used on fiw.en ground provided ·
Two dltferent Banvel applica- -water or snow does not Pl'l!\!nt .
tions methods - Spot Concentrate . gelling the Banvel to the specified .
and Lo-011 _Basal Bark - received ground or shrub parts. Tordon
special EPA :MCstate label for Ohio pellets also can be used during the
and West VIrginia In November,
winter but only when the ground Is
· 1983. Labeling was the result of not frozen. Research Indicates
research conducted since 1981 at 14 dormant Banvel applications perfteld sites In these two states.
form best during January, FebruObtain a copy of the OHIWV 24C

nonnal crop acreage - 1n order to
qualify for government price ~
ports and related benefits, Including
target price payments In case of low
market prices.
In the ftscal year that ended Sept.
00, federal farm price support
programs - primarily grain crops,
cotton and dairy - cost a record
$18.9 billion, not counting the
estimated $9.7 billion tor distributing free PIK commodities to wheat,
com, sorghum, cotton and rice
fanners for Idling extra land In 1983.
This year, according to USDA
budget estimates, total farm supports are expected to decline to
about $6.7 billion.
Except for a relatively small
version for wheat, there are no PIK
provisions for theothercrops in 1984.
However, those producers must idle
part of their land to qualify for
benefits this year.
The crops and amounts of land to
be Idled under the 1984 ptogram
Include: wheat, 17 million acres;
com, 4.4 mUJion; grain sorghwn,
810,00, barley, 540,00, oats,
145,00, cotton, 2.8milllon; and rice,
900,!XXI.
.
According to the latest revised
1983 figures provided to The
Associated Press, farmers Idled
about 72.3 million acres of cropland,
including: wheat,28.2mllllonacres;
com, 29.1 million; sorghum, 5.1
miiUon; barley, 1.1 million; oats,
:nl,&lt;XXl; cotton, 6.7 mUJion; and rice.

1.8 mJlllon acres.
Fanners signed up to take about
83 mJlllon acres from producUon In
last year's program but wound up
actually ldUng the 72.3mJlllonacres,

offtclals said.
The new report said the 19M
sign-up by farmers - which ran
from Jan. 16 through March 16 represented 52.7 percent of the234.6
rpllllon acres In the cropland base
tor the affected commodities.
Wheat farmers agreed to reduce
their base acreage plantings by 00
percent and had the option of
reducing plantings by an additional
10 percent to 20 percent under the
PIK provision.
Upland cotton and rice producers
will have to reduce plants by 25
percent of their base acreage, and
corn, sorghum, oats, barley and
extra-long s taple cotton will have to
cut back by 10 percent.
Meat production up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Commercial production of red meat In
the United States In February was
about 3.09 bUJion pounds, up 11
percent from ayearearller, says the
Agriculture Department. The extra
day last month was part of the
reason for the increase.
According to figures released
Friday, beef production, at 1.86
billion pounds was up9percentfrom
February of last year; veal, 36
million pounds, up 13 percent; pork,

•

, "'

.............."""'
..........
.,.........,_
........"...

. ... . . . . .tfltt-..,1

....

AIIIIIJIII I II'III I ~I I L.

3 Announcement•

pl~t::.

and Jamb ~
r.tton, 32 mllilon •
pounds, up19
t.

applicetlona for aummer and

lal quartero. Callll14-98211742 or 892-2094.

~

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
Soviet Union has bought an add\- •
tlonaJ :Dl,!XXI metric tons of
rom - about 7.9 mllilon bushels - ·~
for delivery this year IIJidel' a new
loni·tenn 8jll'eell'lellt that took ;
effect Oct. 1, says the Agi1cultui-e .
Department.
Officials _said Friday that half of.
the grain previously had been listed
as going to Japan and the olher half ,
to " unknown destinations" but was :
"
switched to the Soviet Union.
The sale was reported to the'
department by privateexporters, as' ·:
required by Jaw. No prices or other , :
details were disclosed.
However, the department says .
the latest estimated farm price of •
com Is $3.40 per bushel.
A metric ton is about 2,200 pounds.
and Is equal to-39.4 bushels of com or "
36.7 bushels Of wheat or soybeans.
Thus, the latest sales would have" :
an estimated U.S. farm value of· .
about $Z7 mJlllon.
· ·"
So far, counting the new sales, the _
Soviets have bought nearly 9.75 ~
miiUon tons of wheat and com under ....
tenns of the new agreement, ·
Including 5.54 million tons of com ~
and 4.2 million tons ot wheat. Also,
416,200 tons of soybeans have been ' :
sold.

•
•' "

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OhiO,,_ ..

0100

2 bedrm mobile home for
rent, niCe lot. Cheshire,

u,o. ,lw. . . . . ., .. , .., _,,..

OJOO

Ohio. Call 304-773-6882 .

·jl,-.... - ........,

Wanted To Buy

We pay caoh lor late model

BuYing dally gold, tllver
colno. rlngo.jewelry, otorllng

11

Help Wanted

Block It Concrete work
patios, sidewalks. garages.
basements, done by job or
hour. Free est. reas. rates .

education, counoeling end

36 yro. oxp. Cell 448-3394

record kaeplng required .
Trainlng available for mature
peraon who 11 able to take

travel regularly. Seturdayo
and

evening• to be ex·

pactad. Sand raoume lnclud-

anytime after 6 .

lng two employment refer·

encao by April 8. 1 984 to :
Planned Parenthood of Southeall Ohio, 8 N.. Court St ..
Atheno, Oh 46701. PPSEO
ulo an Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Hourly Patients Services AI·
alatant to work with

cliennto. Mull be oenoltlve
to reproductive heelth needo

Will do babysitting in my
home in the Bidwell Sauuge

Plant area. Call 446-8046 .
Will give piano &amp;. organ
le11on1 in my home to
beginners &amp;. advanced students, alto teach chording S.

tranopooing . Cell 814-9925403.

in education, counseling end
medical nrvicea. Accurate
record keeping required .
Training available for mature
person who it able to take

reoponolbllity. High ochool
diploma or equivalency required; additional educetion
prefened. Reliable tranaportation nece111ry ; must

trevet regularly. Saturdayo
and evening• 1 to be ex·
pected. Send reaume includIng 2 employment releren -

ceo by April 8, 1984 to:

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. recommend•
that you do busine11 with

people you know. end NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the. offering.

education, counseling and
medlc1l aervicea. Accurate
record keeping requirld .

accounts welcome . 428 Se-

· Auction every Tueaday
night, Pt. Ploatant. WVa.
~uct. Lonnie Neat. Youth
Clenter Bldg., Camden St.

Interior and exterior ·paint·
lng, sandblasting. water·

Training available for metura · blooting, paper hanging end
paroon who Ia able to take drywall liniohing. Free estireoponolblllty. High School motto. fully lnoured. Cell
diploma or equivalency re- 614-949-2888.
lt~-3117-7101 .
qulred; additional aclucatlon
Herper'a Adult Care Home
Rick Poaroon Auctioneer preferred. Reliable trenopor· has 1 vacanc:y for another
Service. Eatato. Farm. An- tltion neceaaery; muat raoident, elderly parson. Cell
tiqUe • liquidation oalea. travel regularly. Saturdayo 304-876-1 293.
and eventngo to ba e~­
l,loentad • bonded In Ohio •
wva. 304-773-17111 or pacted. Send reaumelncludlng two employment roler304· 773-91 8~ .
Schools
encaa by April e. 1984 "to: 16
Instruction
Auction avery Fri. night 1lf' Planned Parenthood of Southo Hartford Community theeot Ohio. 8 N. Court St.
C - . Trucldoada of n- Atheno, Oh 411701, PPSEO
me&lt;ohandiM -ry week. It an Equal OpportunitY The Looming Tree Child Cera
Conelgmenta of n- and El'!'ployer.
Center. 446-8878. Child
morchandlao ahoiayo
c:are , pre·achool. after
welcome. Rtohard Roynolda Someone to live-In with ochool cere. Ages 2'1&gt;- 10.
•uctlcnnr. 304 - 2711 - elderly couple. Charototte 11:30AM-&amp;:30PM .
Danner, 1114-2411-9643 . •
1011.

uNCI

Wanted: Part-lima LlcanMd
Practieel Nurlf i4-8PM. MFl for an lntermadlate care
fej:IUty lor the mentally
retarded In liclwell. Ohio.
Cu.....,t Ohio LPN Ucenoe
and Pha~logy or Napnn
'FLEA M"RKET; Malta Certlflcate required: expe•countY falrgrounc~a. rlenoe In tho liald of nlontal
' Roaltapringa. 13. 7 IIYDua. · re1ardatlon·d...• \opmental
, ~~~Oh. Apttl 1; '71 •
or In a human
11n'ollend ratao: diMtlllltiH
_ . . Httlng preferracl.
l'or lr.loinlatlon or c...-t Dave Weber, Rt. 3
ranMltlon oatt or write to lpx 1711, Bidwell: Oh
the loltGwlng: 114-112- 4'1181 4, or cal t1 4-3881300, 888·4111. P.O. lx 81811. Doadllno for appll742, l'oft*oy, Oh.
cente: 3-28-84. Buckeye
Community .....,._ Ia an
aqu.l opportunity employer.
8 ,Wented .T o Buy
.. Lalo oppO,tunity. Up to
Uead Melllle Hom•• • : ~t.tiiO.OO P., month. With
c:.~n~~~N. Travel Trahn. · unlimited potential. Thlo
• , . . . . 0171.
l~could~--~~~;__tho
_ _,;___

Mt . .. Aito . Auction. Every
Saturday II p.m. conalgn-aonptad 1:00ti11Mie
· tlmio. Emma Ball -tlon•r.
428817U!c. 421-84.

a.

... .

18 Wanted to Do

31

Homes for Sale

2 ltory house on large lot,
Broad Run Road . 7 room
bath &amp; 'h $32.000. 304-

882-2407.
6 room , good location. nice
yard , full basement, 8 pet.
111um. Farmers Home Ad·
ministration Joan to qualified
buyer. Homeetead Realty.

304-882-2406 or 304-8765540 or 304-8B2-2447.
Seven year okl home. 3
bedrooms. garden apot .

2896 Uncoln Ave. 304876-5047 alter 6:00.
Owner transferred. must
sell . excellent condition

Ftnanml

$88.000.- e 1 1 ,000 down.
Auume B'h -Pct. loan . 304676-1629 alter 6 : 0~.
Remodeled 2 bedroom .
large kitchen , dining and
living room. new bath, and
utility. All drapes and curtains. Front ~torch and lot

olre 46 'x205' . Wall inou•
lated end new roof. 304 -

676-8050 or 676-3431 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

For Sale or Lease, Country

Carryout II&lt; Dell, Upper River
Rd. Gellipolio. Ohio. Cell TRI - STATE MOBILE
614-446-2192 or614 -448- HOMES . USED - CARS .
9171 .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
LOCAL ROUTE FOR SALE . 614-448-7572.

No t elling, collection only.
Will net eppro x. $300. per
wHk. Requires 3·4 hours

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALpar week. Will toke $12,500 ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
ceoh. Write P.O. Box 59247, 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
Birmingham . AL 36269 - RT 36 . PHONE 614-4489247 . Phone 205-879 - 7274.
7388.
1- -- -- -- -72 mobile home. 1 'h acres

Night club lor sale. All equip.
&amp;. D -6 liscence. 3 miles
outside of Pomeroy. Call

end building. $4,500 . Call
446-0063 .

614- 992-8891 .

Bayview expando 12x60 .
excellent eond .• like brand
new. lots of extras. Cell

22 Money to Loan

446-9416 .
t 972 1 2x86 Kirkwood Mo-

HOME

LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates .
Fixed convefltionel FHA VA . leader Mortgage ,

Atheno. collect 614-5923061 .

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
priced regular tuningsdiscounts to Senior Citizens.
Churches &amp; Schoolo. Word's

Keyboard. 304-676-3824.

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardl Music Co., 446-

0687. Skill end integrity our
trademark .

lane

Daniels,

814-742-2961 .
THOMPSON BOOKKEEPING Monthly and Quarterly

bile Home . Washer&amp;. Dryer.

Air Cond. $6300. Cell 2469297 or 446-1312.
1979 14x70 mobile home
on appro . VJ acre lot. Cell

814 - 3B8 - 9957 alter
5:30PM .
'971 1 2x60, 2bdr.. gas
heat. underpinned . acre
ground M · l , near Eureka

31

Homes for Sale

Owner will give hottest deal
In townl Some beautiful

bdr., steeple ceiling , 12x20

General HauNng and Treoh
·removal Service. Reliable
and 'dependable. Call 4411·
31 Ill betw.en I and II.
Kelth'a Lawn Mowing •
Trimming Sorvtoe, Relleblo
and dependable. ReeiOllable ratea. Call 4411-31158 or
'2158-112151 .
Work: Electrical, RemodelIng, Plumbing, &amp; odd jobe.
No matter how email, Call
Mon-Thun., 1'.00-15 :30,
4411,4108.
.

mo:

108 form of the leto Relph
Reynolds, 564 one mile east

of Eno. Cell 448-3745 . or
814 -367-0618 .

34

Business
Buildings ·

1 bedroom Apt. t 196.
including utllltlao. Equal
1 2x60 2 bedrm mobile Houoing Opportunity. Conhome. Racine area . Call tact Village Manor Apta.
814-992-6858 .
614-992-7787.
WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14' Rlvaroide Apto. Mlcf J'-'t,
wide ell electric mobile S"peclol ratao lor 8onior
home. setting on lot ready to Citireno. t 1 30. Equel H - ·
move into. $200 .00 down ing Opportunltlaa . 1114- •
t 176 .00 MONTH . 304 - 992-7721 .
678-2711 .
2 room efficiency apart~
2 bedroom unfurnished, pri - in Middleport. call304-182vate lot. in Burdene Addn . 2566 .
S176 plus utilities. deposit
and references . 304· 675-

2484.
Mobile home for rent . 3
bedroom . unfurni shed .

Camp Conley $220. per
month . 304-676-1371 or
676-3812 .

24x24 2 room w -bath, can
be fllOVOd in 2 1 2 ft .

1 0 plus acres of bottom lend

TWIN RIVERS TOWER..

oecliono. 446-7698 or 814- along Shade Creek . Located
1'12 miles West of Alfred on
448-2776 .
Southoide of Co. Rd. 231 .
Cell collect. 1-513-2050 .
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
44 Apartment
for Rent
For ule 10 ac . Rio Grenda.

ESTATES
35 acreo off Rt. 688. behind JACKSON
Fairgrounds. Home sites or APARTMENTS !Equal
Opportunity) has
form . $37,000 firm . Cell Housing
one end two bedrooms. rent
446-2158 .
starting at $167 for one
bedroom and $193 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposit located
Chellor erae. Cell&amp; 14-985- near
Foodland and Spring
4174.
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 446· 2745 or leave
message.
36 Real Estate

For ule or trade 10 acres
with 2 mobile homes. in

Wanted

10x65 New Moon. 2 bodrm,

tion . $3860. Cell 304-B823673 alter 8 p.m.
1Ox62

1 984 Rlchordoon

traitor. 2 bedrm, new furni ture, porch, underpinning,

dining, double gerege, elr. ec, $6000. Cell 814-742226 7
llone, riverview, low UO'o. _ _ _ _·- - -- - - 1
Cell 448-0781 ·
73 1 2x60 Camero 2brw-tip
out lot of extreo. 304-876- '
Beuin AddltiQn, 3 bdrmo. 8484 alter 5 anytime week
ends.

lire piece. 2 potloo. woodo, 2 l- - - -- - -- gaa. TP Wlter. 1978 Men ohon mobile
$87,600. Qwner will help home t 2x66. wood otove,
finance or w;ll contlder land eir cond. • esoo. 304-895contract with t 1600 down 3983.
II&lt; paymenta of t8110.00.
Call 814-985-4387.
.
Going out of bualnaoo oelel
Baum Addition, 3 bedrm, Due to Ill health tramendoua
brick. 1'h ·bath, full baM- oevlnll•· Only. 7 new homoo
ment, family room, carport- to chooee 1from . Save 11
patio,.t67,000. Adjolntng \o\ much ao t4,000 per homo.
aero to~ available. Call 814- No reeooneble offer rolutacl.
Uberal bank financing, .1 0
9811-4201 .
pet; down monthly payment
2 atory, 10 rm. houoe.lront teoo than rant. Thlo lo your
• back porch, alum. oldlng. only ohance to buy new
atorm .wlndowa, gao fur- homao tt thitM prlcae. Open
nac:e, wood burner, carpOrt, Sunday llternoon. Hlt~ay
workahop, r~nge. refrigera- .bal"lfMn Huntington
Pt.
tor. OW. microwave:. Call Ploaoent on St. Rt. 2.
304-671-271 1
1114-992-7286 .

e.

Apartments nowa~blete

elderly &amp; dioabled with an
income

of

Ieee

that\ ·

s 1 2,300. Renting lor 31

percent of adjuotad " " ' -·
Phone 304-876-81179.
Furnished apel1ment. utili·

tiao paid . No peto. Cloae to
hospital . 304-676-22117.

Centerpoint Rd. Cell 61 4·
262-6916 .

Furnished apt .. 1 bdr ., 920

45

Furnished Rooma

For rent Sleeping RotMM
and light houee keeping
rooms. Park Central Hitter.

Cell 614-448-071111.

Sleeping room t 1 1II, lttlli,ties paid. Share Nth, -le
only. Renpo &amp; rofrit. 111

2nd. Ave., Galllpolia. Call
446 -4416 alter 7 PM .

4th Ave .. Gallipolis. $225
utilities pd. . Adutts. Call
House that needs repair in 448-441 6 alter 7 P~
City of Gallipolis or Townships of Clay, Green or Small efficiency apart .• cenGallipolis. Write to P.O . Box tral air&amp;. heat. 1 professional

633. Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .

Rent als
41

Houses for Rent

type gentleman only. 4460338 .
2 bdr. apts., newly decorated . utilities part. paid,
axe. location . Medium in·
come families. A -One Real
Estate, Carol Yeager Broker.
Howard L. Yeager Ill sales·

man . Cell304-675-5104 or
304-675-5386 .
Smell 4 rooms &amp; beth, - - - - - -- - furnished, loc. 735 rear 3rd.

Unfurnished 2 BR in Crown

Ava .. Gallipolis. Call 446- City. 256-8520 .
3870or448 -1340.
- - - -- -- - New 2 bdr. apts .• unfur.,
5 room house 58 Mill Creek, equip. kitchen . 5 miles out

$126 par. mo ., $75 deposit. Rt . 141 . 5225. Call 446·
Call 448-1340 or 446 - 4477 or 446-3888 .
3870 .
- - -- - - - -

carpeted. gas furnance .

1365.
2 or 3 br. excellent condi tion , full dry basement,
upper lincoln Ave . Refer·

4222 .9AM ·5PM .

Furn . efficiency apt. Private
entrance and bath . Suitable
for one person . Call 446 -

1 family unfurn ., 3 bdr .•
stove, refrig ., S250 mo.,
plus 1 mo. dep. no pets. Cell

446-3786 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. trailers. no city taxes.
beautiful river view in Kaneuga . Fosters Trailer Park.

Cell 446· 1602.
2 &amp; 4 bdr. mobile home. Call
446-0508 or 446-1609.
One bedroom. trailer. Eu -

reka .
Ref. end Dap .
814-266· 1629.
Very nice. 1 bdr. mobile
home. completely turn.,
new gas fumance &amp; •ir
cond., patio with ewniiJg

end off llreet parking. Excellent location. in Galllpollo
oity. Mull have dep. &amp; ref.
Call448-4,69 .
For rent mobile home. Call
448-0768.
1 2x80. 2 bdr. mobile home,
dryer

hookup. On Rt. 311. ref. II&lt;
dep. Call 816-9780 or 4484389.

-----------------1
2 bdr. mobile home II mi.
from town, adulto. no peto.
Call 448-11118.
·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home·
Perk. Route 33, Nortlo of
Pomeroy. large Iota. Cell

614-992-7479.

49

For Lease

IIC,...

Land for le11e. 60
currently hey field. fMIORI•

bla. Callovanlngo. 614-11924524: daytime, 1114-812'
4471 .
Truck Crop Land lor rant.
Call 614-843-6186, .tier 9.
p.m .

51 Household Goodt

1 bdr. turn. apt., no children.
no pets, 6 mos. lease. S50
dep .. $190 mo .. utilities

once Required . 304-6751962.

unfurn.. wether &amp;

46 Space for Rent

513 V, Third AVe .. Gallipolis.
3 rm . apt .. $135 mo . plus
utilities. dep. req . Call 446·

secluded. $250. mth. Call 1232 .
614 -692-4524 , evenings.
daytime. 614-592 ·4471 .
3 room upstairs apt. Adult
Cell 446-' 232 .

Small house for rent . References &amp; Adults. 304-876-

992-3324.

tor end otove. caatl14-9927314.

end Gellipollo. II 14-4468221 .

Newer 3 bedroom
farm
house. Chester twp . recently remodeled . Quiet &amp;.

Used 2 bedroom mobile
homes, furnished . 1Ox60
and 12x62 sizes . Your
chance to own a comfortable home. Browns trailer
Court. Minersville. Oh . 614-

•'
Downstairs apt. in town. ·
Totalektctric with r..,._.ol

APARTMENTS , mobile

1977 Nashua mobile home.
12x65, one owner, excellent
condition , all electric. can·
tral air conditioning, kitchen
appliances included, porch
anytim e.

3

bedroom. Middleport. CaM ·
614-992-2381 .

homes, hOUIII . Pt. Pleaunl ·

adults, no palo. Cell 446paid. Call446-3667 altar 5.
0958 .

also . Call 446 - 2974

Apartment for rent, 2 or

43 Farms for Rent

LR, must soli, $6,500. Cell
446-2930.

acret.

A to Z Handyman Sarvlceo.
Alao rubbioh hauling. Call
Don at 448-11319.

Farms for Sale

2 bdr. house. full basement.

114 acre farm . Will consider

2"12 baths, ac. wood burning

33

1972 12x65 Concorde 2

appliances. washer &amp; dryer,
vinyl uqderpinning, porch
included. Good clean condi-

4 bedrOoms 3 baths. family,

1 972 1 2x70 Kingwood on
80x1 34 ft . lol. 304-6758163 alter 5.

4 rooms and bath 53 Garfield Ave. Plenty garden
available.

furniture tool Call 614-9928941 .
trading lor houoe In Kyger
Creek school dl•lricl. Coli
81 4-388-B626 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

dem. $B,900 firm . Call
614-268-6409.

cond Avo. Celt 446-1136.

Real Eslale

Furn . efficiency apt. t11S ..
mo. city nrvicea included, ,
deposit a. reference re-: ,

7880.

Will do babysitting in my
home. days. evening s S.

moteo. Call 304-8711-8024

Earl Tope. 448-0332 dove:
448-0181 eve. II&lt; Sun.

1 2x80 2 bedroomo. fur- quired. Call 441-4807 or
448-2802.
:

anytime.

exterior. Roof repairing and
other odd joba. Free elti -

nice. ground floor; with .
covered patio, haa range -t4
washer-dryer hookup. . . . ·

nished, in Syracuse. $200.
mth. plus utilities. 992-

1- - - - - - - - -

reoponolblllty. High ochool weekend. Hove relerenceo.
diploma or equivalency re- Call 448-0648.
qulrad; additional aducation 1 -------~-­
prolorred. Railable tranlpor- Will do painting interior or
tatlon neceeeary; must

roy. Cell 992-6868 .

18 Wanted to Do

Hourly Patient Service• A s·
alatant to work with clients.
Must be Mnlitive to reproductive he,lth needs in
medical nrvlces. Accurate

Apartment
for Rent

garden opot. 11 75 mo. Cell
446-9384.
Furnished garage apt. 1 bdr .•
S 22 ~ . U!ilitieo pd . 28'h Nell
Mobile home f or rent , in Ave.. Gelllpollo. Call 441Recine . Cell 814 -387 - 4418 alter 7 PM .
7148 .
2 bdr. unfum. In city, wry

4M - U."

,. v......

44

Hous,ea for Rent

2 bdr. trailer on private lot.

1100.00 R-ard lor return
Planned P~renthood of Souor lrlformoti011 on Model 89 ken Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave. theaatern Ohln. 8 N. Court
3001avagertftaatolenfrom Middleport, Oh. 814-1192- St.. Atheno. Ohio 46701 .
PPSEO loan EOE.
HIM'fR..W.CO,'ncll Ridge l-34_7_8_.- - - - - Rd. Tli........,, Ohio. No
quntlorre eabcl. Alao -nt Cuh paid lor laney Iron or Easter Ia coming. Stan
a -.1 watch dog. 1114- heavy Iron beda. t160 and uvlng money. Earn se.oo
2411;81197. ·
up for certain Maigo Co. hour opara tlma. 304-876Ilona jaro. Old lima cup- 1429.
board . call 1 -304· B82~7t1
4
GivNway
Babyaitter needed in my
home. 304-875-4444.
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
Two malo golden hamatoro, FURNITURE. Bodo, Iron, Part time to full time Auiolo3 1110. old. can hold and pot wood. cupboardo, chalro. gill needad In Doctoro olchoota, buketa, diohao, lice. 304-875-.1,244-or 676·
them. Call 448-21188.
atone jaro, antlquet. gold 1246,
and ollvar . Wrlte -M.D . 1-._;..:__ _____
I yt. old gentle pony, !rae to
good homo only. Cell 814- Millar, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio Well Virginia Buddy Ple411789 or· call 814-992· toon. The Army Notional
742-2174.
7780.
Guard io currently filling
t · lt. brown male puppy. 7 Wanted old pianoo. Paying vacancies for the1984 basic
wlla. old· mother golden t20. and $40. each. Firat train ing buddy platoon .
retriever. Call 814-912 - floor only. Write giving Trelnlng. at Ft. Dix. NJ. wilt
begin on 9 June and be
2118.
directions. Witten Pienos, completed in late August, in
Box 188. Serdio Oh 439411. time for the fell school term .
t ~ blacll part Labadora Callll14·483-t
806.
High School Juniors end
pupplaa. 304-882-3872.
Seniors can join now end
Would like to buy pull golf begin earning pay for
Part Gormen Shephard and cart.
Call 814-992-5154 monthly meetings immeBorder Collie pup "Somediately. Call 304-676-3960
OIIHn dropped off at my alter 11 :30 p.m.
or' -800-642·3819 .
houM" 304-882-2882.
U , CASH paid lor recordo:
78'1, 33'o, 46'o; Buying
colllctlono. Cell Steve. 992- 12
Situations
8 Lott and Found
71110.
Wanted
LOST gray mate cat. Ka- Wlndohleld lor t 972
neuga vicinity. Reward. Call Chryloer. Cell 814-949The Learning~Tree Child Care
441-17112.
2053.
Ce~ter,
448-8678. C~ild
care, pre· school, after
LOST: pair of Lavender
ochool care. Agoo 2'1&gt;-10.
tlntad glauoo &amp; caoo. Reli!ipiiiVIIII~Ill
8:30AM-6:30PM .
ward offarad. Call lit 4-992Sl~l VII.I~S
7342.
Will care for the elderly in my
home'. Lots of references .
LOST; 32nd. dogroa Ma·
Men or women . Cell 814oonlc ring, with amall dia867-3402 .
mond . REWARD . Call 11 Help Wanted
Jamoo Clatworthy, 992Mercer'• Riverview Per31103.
Hourly Patient Servlceo As- sonal Care Home-has vacan tlllant to work with cliento. cies for elderly persons.
B
Public Sale
Mull ba oentltlve to repro- Betty Mercer owner. 304Auction
ductive health needo In 773-5BB2.

a.

'·

tl1r

nrh"'''''"

....... c......

Oooll•t-"

Ul - 111100•.,...

1 1·M-o1Mfl0"'"'""'"

f'r

fo llm• UJjli&lt;' I' 'IJhm!f'

41

12x60 2 bedroom mobile
home, appro ximately 5 mile
from Middleport or Pome -

Wire. old coine, large currancy. Top prlceo. Ed. Bur~

u.s. •

,,

~

World' I Largeat bingo game, Wanted to buy aquaro dancCharo!IH. North Caroline. lng clothoo. llza 10. any
For but Information &amp; , __ typo. Call 4411-41137.
vation cell 114-344-3218 1---- - - - - or 114-1182-8310.
Wantad to buy otonding
timber. Call altar 8 or
Thare'o a n- Poolo People anytime weekando, 614Store coming In April. for 388-9808 or 814-388 ohemlcat • pool needo 8817.
the Pool Peopla. Call 4411- 1- - - - - - - - 3015 t .
Want to laaoe tobaccd baoe.
will pay 36 canto now or 30
VICIIncy: Julla'o Paroonel canto now and give 211% of
Care Homo . Formerly poundage rented after to·
Mercer Conveleacence bacco ootd mlnuo 30 cenio
Homo. t B yoaro oxporl-o. alroedy paid. II lntereated
Clifton. W.V . 304-773- caN 4411-23114.
H71.
1- - - - - - - Wanted to buy or leaN
Wantad Information on Rul- tobacco poundage . Call
lcom family · of Melao Co. lit 4-266-t 1112.
ROIIIY to Oarratl Ruffcorn,
111• Ave. J .. Co. llulfo. Wanted to buy. N-. UMd &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy t
'
Iowa 1511101 .·
piece or complete houae·
A-1111 Hoelting Technl- holdo. Aloo complato Auctieel &lt;;ollege7 Loco! ratldent OIIHring oorvlco. Call
haa ttudent houtlng lor glr1a Rodney Howery 8 t 4-898In lljelaonvlllo. Now taking 7231 .

North Gallia
holds banquet
for FFA grou:ft.

'

. ..u......
...
..,..g,..,.

..,

Jim Mink Chov.-Oido Inc .
Bill Gone Johnoon
IWEEP!R and -lng ma448-3872
ohlne repair' porto, and
euppllea.
Pick up and
delivery, Davlo Vacuum Wanted to buy uoad coat &amp;
Cleo-. one hall milo up wood heatoro. Swain FurniG-gea Cr... Rd. Call ture, 448·3111g, 3rd. •
1114-448' 0214.
Olive St .. GaiUpollo. Oh.

'·

Veterans Memorial

:t.::-.!'!.T.!:-'

cl11n uaed cere .

'

"It Is the consensus of those
treating alchollcs -that It Is a
eight telephone stocks and two
department.
CBOE Is "terribly confusing" to~ ·"_
By JAMDF. PELTZ
disease," she said. "(Alcoholics )
based
on 20 transportation stocks.
"They evidently a re not satisfying public.
AP
"'
.......
Writer
cannot resume social drinking, nor
Both the New York Stock Ex- a need; with so much product
NEW YORK (AP) - Is the
do they want to If they're
change
and the CBOE unve iled
proll!eratlon, the public and the
index-option market creating too
recovering."
Indexes
composed
of
American
professionals look at this as somemany options?
Kilty said most former problem
Telepoone
&amp;
Telegraph
Co.
and
the
thing
that's maklng their lives more
That's a question Investors seem
drinkers who go on a binge alter
complicated," Winner said.
to be asklngglven thespottylll~t seven regional telephone compantaking one drink probably do so for
Some people also consider the
In some of these relatively new Ies created by the Bell System
psychological reasons.
availability of similar Index options
investments. Yet four new indet breakup last Jan. l .
"They've been taught that If they
The CBOE and the Amex introon two exchanges as diluting the
options made their debut this past
ever have another drink, then
duced
the
transportation
Index
popularity of both.
week, and more are expected.
VINTON -North Gallla's FFA ~
they're not going to be able to stop
options.
" U you have two that are
By buying or seUing an Index
Chapter
held Its annual banquet . ~
drlnklng . It's more of a self-fulfilling
Yet with 151ndexoptions to choose
essentially the same !~alng. It's
option, the Investor Is In effect
recently
at
the high school.
· '
prophecy than It is a physical
unlikely that both of those are golhg
belling on whether the Index will rise from, , investor interest varies
·given
by
TIIJl:·
;
Invocation
was
condition," he said.
to be super successful," said Ivers
or faU during a specific period. The widely as shown by the trading
Stevens.
The
welcome
address
was
"Alcoholics who drink In con:
Riley, NYSE executive vice presiOption also can be used as a hedge volume one d!IY this past week. And
given by President Joe Taylor, ..
trolled settings don't experience
dent for options and Index products.
against adverse prlcecl)anges in the It ap~~ears the broader Indexes are
Guest
speaker was State Presldi:&gt;q)" •
cravings. They can drink one or two · ac~l stocks Included In the Index.
more popular - for now- than the
The low volume of certain Index
Dale
Mlnyo.
' '
drlnks and then stop. But If they
options also tends to feed on Itself.
The underlying stocks do not subindexeS.
TWo
honorary
member
awards·
~
have a couple of drlnks wlth·friends
change hands In Index . options;
The PhUadelphl,a Stock Ex- , With few tra&lt;1e5 being made In one
went to Dale Taylor and Fred' ·'
and If they're convinced this
Investors Instead Collect cash for the change's Gaming-Hotel Jndex gen- Index, Investors are more Ukely to . Kruetz.
.at•(uncontroUed drinking) Is going to
4
.
~A
· dltferencebetween thevalueofthelr erated trading of only two cbqtracts stick with a more-popular Index
Awards w~re presented by Ad•'=
happen to them, then the chances
options alljl the value of the Index.
. that day; the CBOE's !)&gt;mputer- because there Is liquidity ln. that
vlser A1en Rees and Preslderli· -;
are It does, " he said.
li\dexes carrying options are Buslness Equipment Index also had market.
Taylor. Trophies were presente(l, •
He said each case of alcooollsm
' ' Btit David Helson, the Pacific
divided between those covering a
just two contracts traded.
Ar.dy' Adams for member of · the n
should betreatedon Its own and that
broad Jist of stocks and those
The Amex's Computer Technol- Stock Exchange's option speclaUst, year and runnerup to Patrick Da~ • •1
some alcooollcs probably could be
said Investor perception of an Index
covering a 1181T0Wly baSed ust,1Jso ogy Index recorded 3,316 contracts,
Crowning of ,the FFA' Queel{:~
allowed to drink In moderation.
called a subindex, that usually Is but that still paled when compared can chajlge · ·rapidly If · major Marie May, was Scott Roush.
,, •
"The problem Is that we can't
restricted to stocks In a p8rticular with the 146,435 traded In the developlpents atfect,.prlces of the
Changing
of
officers
ceremo~
:
Identify who falls Into that category.
Index's.stocks~
,
lndustcy. .
most-popular option- the COOE's
. was held. The new· officers are'&lt;"'
We've Ignored that possibility," he
A stgnl.ncant development ln. the
A broad Index Is the Standard &amp;
Standard &amp; PoOr's 100 indejc.
president, J&lt;ie Taylor: vice Pr:etll~l·~
said.
energy
. !n4ustry, for exari\~,
Poor's 100 Index, whose options are
The NYSE's new telephoile Index
dent, David , M!llllns; , secretary, •
traded on the ~ Board generated 492 trades, while the , mlgbt quickly creal-'! de1Jl81K! tor · ~.Davis; treasurer, John Pat-" '
6ptklns Elichange, wlille a narrow CBOE' s- telepoone Index recorded options on the Amex ·Oil &amp; Gas terion; [E'!JOrter: PatDay;' sentlnej, ';-.
Index.
one Is the American Stock Ex- 118 trades.
1
Joe Patterson; student advisor,: 1
Riley sa id he was "pleased with
Admissions - Reva Simms, change's Cunputer Technology
Why are many of the ·subindex
Kelly Chapman.
•
•·
our startup" of the Big Board's
Pomeroy; Mary Gilkey, MiddleIndex, which has 00 Issues.
.
aptlons so thinly traded?
Closing
cerefuonle5
were
"""::,,
J"-&amp; port; David Davis,. Athens, Sarah
Tbe.tour new Index optk&gt;ns Utted
"Lack of public and professional telepoone and transportation lndlix ' formed by the.new officers.
All~ ,
Congo, Racine.
tol5thetotalnwnbernowavallable.
Interest." said Stewart Winner, ' options. Bllt he acknowledged !hat officers attended officers trillntni The.
tour
newest
ones
are
subindex
Discharges -AnthonyShambiln;
manager of Prudential-Bache Se- the simultaneous arrival of those , last week a,t New Lexln~oli inorh . ' '
.:.- -;r &gt;4
Thelma Johnson.
options and Include two based on
curities Inc.'s options marketing options from the f';'YsE and the School
. ' .
:~ ~

9

"-

_.
.,f'..,_,..,._
.... . ,..
.... . . .......

--.. -

....,................
................ .
...,_..,111111

1.17 bllUon pouuds, up 14 percent; "

New index options create little mterest

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

U -C8. "- 1o 11.... 14..........

J·'f'lfll . . . . , ........... ,

erown. Examples of suliable spot'
applicators Include models No. 1 or - ·
No. 20 Chem-Shot or the 01'197 '
Spotlon Gun. See your county
.extenllon otllclals or fann aupply ·:
· dealer for additional lnfonnatlon ar
spot applicators.
' '' '
The Lo--011 Basal Bark method
Involves spraying a d1elel fuel emulstfler - wateJ;.- Banvel mixture
. to drench the lowest 12-18 Jncbes of
. basal stems and the crown, 1111ng a,
: low pressure sprayer that Is fttted
. with a single nozzle spray wand. • ;
The oil-In water emulsion must be •.
mixed according to dtrectlona and
agilated periodically. Only use up to
a maxlmwn of 00 gaUons per acre. ..

More

lt -........,..GtNo

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

on March 20 found one of the
balloons In the weekly reader
writing pals balloon contest. It
belonged to Canie Kaiser of
Martha Elementary School of
Barboursville, W. Va.

Report: fewer farmers idling acreage
By DON KENDALL
AP FII'ID Writer
WASHINGI'ON (AP)-Farmers
have signed up to Idle about 26.6
mllilon acres of cropland In 19M,
only a little more than one-thlrd.of
last year's massive $9.7 bllUon
payment-In-kind program, according to a preliminary report by the
Agriculture ~t.
Wheat tanners accounted for
most of the land to be taken from
production this year, about 17
miiUon acres, Including 2 miiUon
acres under a scaled-down PIK
program.
However, Congress Is considering
a bUJ that would Improve this year's
wheat program, and Agriculture
Secretary John R. Block says that If
It Is signed Into Jaw he will reopen the
1984 wheat sign-up. It will not be
reopened for other crops, however.
The report, released Friday,
showed that about 23 percent of the
nation's 1.03 mUJion wheat farms
were enrolled in the 1984 program.
'Those aceounted for more than 53
percent of the wheat base of 93.7
miiUon acres.
About 29 percent of the 1.3 miiUon
com farms were enrolled, accountlng for 54 percent of the com base of
81.4 million acres.
Under the federal program,
l:umers have to sign up and comply
wlllt certain acreage restrictions usuat.v a percentage of their base or

·....•-...........
. ...-..
. .....
·-..
••

ary, or March, but definitely use
them prior to spring leatout.
Results are comparable to swnmer
foliar sprays and from Tordon
_pellets. Some crown retjrOUtlng
results from use of all labeled
· herbicides, so follow-up treatments
· should be planned. Rate with both
- application methods should not
f exceed two gallons per acre of
- Banvel (4 DMA) .
• The Spot Concentrate method
: involves directing a meaaured
quantity of undiluted Banvel to the
ground within six-eight Jncbes of the
plant crown using a hand-ope!'ated
spot applicator. On sloping gro\lnd,
place the herbicide upblll from the

______

...;.· ·

MR. AND MRS. JOHN SwiJher,
Rt. 2, Box 263, VInton «5E86,
residents of the western part of
GaJJia County's Huntington Twp.,

Additional ways to battle bramble
By BRYSON R. CART£R

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

lions" tell of the bloodmobile, OAHS
band at Lollan, meeting on w~ter
problems postponed, Beverly.
Wedp-entera a bea~ty contett (abe
was Point Pleasant a homecomlD&amp;
queen) · There waa a front . p~~e
dilplay advertising a Halloween
carnival, VFW meetJna·potluck,
parakeet lost, and a boule tor .Ale
on Third Ave. for$9,700: ' 'ftveextra
large rooms and bath, built-In
liltchen, new2-ca,raaragewlthalde
drive" plus refrigerator and stoves.

Appliencoo. 827 ThiidAve .. Gelllpolio. 814-4481699. Spin waohert. ••• •

TV &amp;

electric dryen , auto
washers. gas a. ee.ctrtc ·
ranges. refrigeratora: TV
sets .
Custom draperies. 1 " ...,...
tian blinds, vertical lttind, .

Roman

shedeo. Sampl.

sh~wn at your home. Free

estimate. P. A. Sayre. 304·

458-1078.

.

HINK
MONEY
THINK

THE
CLASSIFIEDS
'

buy...
you'll save
money!

sell...
,. .
you'U make
.

money!

~.

'

'

-..
')

. !' ·~

�.

' '

....,.

'

Times-Sentinel

51 Household Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Used Berkline sofa and
chair . End and coffee tables .

Gasoline

Wathera. dryert, refrigera -

They'll Do It Every Time

61

welder : Hobart
excel ~

tors, rangoa. Skogga Ap· 304-676-1371 .
lent condition, 11,600. Call
plloncea, Upper River Rd.
bealde Stone Croat Motel. Cuttom drapes 1 '' venetian 614-367-0667.
blinds. vertical blinds. Ro ·
814-448-7398.
Bargains Trade Center .
Furn. &amp; appl. outlet. Ka nauga, Ohio.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables. (extra heavy

by Frontier). $685 . Sofa,

chair and loveseat. 8276.
Sofaa and chairs priced from

f285. to 1896. Tobloa. $46
end up to 1126. Hide-abeda. f440 . and up to
1525., Recliners, $175. to
$375., Lamps from 128. to
$75.5 pc. dlnottoo from
f99 .. to 436. 7 pc. 1189
and up. Wood tabla with aix

• cholra t425 to 1746. Doak
• - f11 0 up to 1226. Hutcheo.
· : • f550. end up, maple or pine
• flnlah. Bunk bod complete
with mottreuos. 1250. end
up to 1396. Baby beds,
8110.

·•:
. •
•
•:
••

.:

•

Mattresses or box

apringa. full or twin, $68 ..
firm, f88. end $78. Queen
1111. f196. 4 dr.· chilli,
f42. 6 dr. cheato, $64. Bod
fromoa, f20.ond $26., 10
gun • Gun coblneta, 1360.
Goa or electric rongea $376.
Baby mottroaata, 126 &amp;
$35, bed !romeo f20. 126,
a flO, king frame $60.
Good aolectlon of bedroom

. " ,.. •uitet.

cedar chests,
. .. rockera, metal cabinets.

.. · : ewivel rockers.

1 Card of Thanks
OF THANKS
I would like to thank all my
relatives and friends for
the many cards and
flowlrs I received during
my recent stay in Riverside
Methodist Hospital, Colllllbus. My -trip throuch

r

major SIJIIIIY was made a

euier knowing that so
.-· many were thinking of me.
&lt; Tllll* r.ou and God Bless
·'. You AI .
;-• lot

man shades . Samples
shown at your home. Free
estimate. P. A. Sayre. 304 -

458-1018.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St .• Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood living room
auite with 6 inch flat arms

1399, bunk beds complete
with bunkies $199 . 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
$199, antron recliners 699.
other recliners S 80. maple
dinette sets $179, box
springs &amp;. mattress twin or
full 8100 set regular-firm
8120, maple dinette chairs

136, wash stands

S34,

maple rockers 869, 7 piece
chroma dinette set 8149, 6
piece dinette $et $99, used
bedroom suites, refrigera ·
tors. ranges. chest, dressers,
wringer washers. TV ' s, dryers, &amp; shoes . Call614-446·

3169 .

Mobile home suppllaa: non toxic antifreeze-$6.60 per
gallon . Water heating elements. water heater. steps,
windows, doors. faucets.
breakers, etc . HotPoint
heavy-duty electric dryers.
this month only $279 .
Kingsbury Hom8s Parts and
Accessory Store. 900 East
Main St.. old Bookmobile
building in Pomeroy or call

53

Antiques

992-7274 or 992-7294.

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richardi
&amp; Son. Call 446 -7786.

get 620 a load, 130 delivered. Call 304-676-2991 .

Will cut and deliver fire ·

1 Whirlpool trash compactor, 1 3· pc. bedroom suite, 1

114 horse motor and grinder
mounted on table, Fatso
stove. 16 barn sash windows 29x30, submersible
pump heavy duty one third

Firewood for sale. Come and

gas grtll. 304-676-1731 .

Soft sculptured Cabbage
Patch type dolls for Easter.

Call 304-676-4014.

Truck camper sleeps 4, ice

bo• &amp; gas stove $400.:
Smith &amp; Wesson 38 special

$120 .: Bogan dark room

enlarger with accessories
$116 .; Sears sewing ma -

63

-4eio6 FOJ&lt;FIII&amp; 'Ill.,
fG4L.o#.MUQ),A'ICI4·

56

The world may chanee from
y11r to y11r.
And friends from day to illy
But will the one we low
From memory pass away.
Sadly Missed By
Family &amp; Friends.

pickup load. Call 614-2466804.

55 Building Supplies

Size 3 Prom dress never

Building materials
block, brick. sewer pipes.

Enameled steel kitchen wall
cabinets. base cabinets. 2
lazy susans. Cast double

windows.
lintels.
ate .
Claude
Winters.
Rio Grande,

worn. Call614-245-9278.

oink. Call 446-4044.

Cabbage Patch doll recrea tion. Order now for Easter.

Coli 446-1262 .
In memory of Dale
Rothgeb, Sr., who died
eight years ago, March

24, 1976.
We do noi iorcet you, nor
do we intend.
We think of you often and
will till the end.
No eyes can see us weep.
•· But many a silent tear is
shed
While others are asleep.
W'lfe, Glenna and family

3 Announcements

Maple dpuble bed bo•
springs &amp;. mattress with
matching sheets and bedspread. 2 chrome bar stools,
parakeet with cage and
accessories. Call 614-246 -

9246.

Low, Low Prices
Don't Be Mislead
We Will Not Be
Undersold
CALL CHARLIE TODAY
614-992-2181

MGM FARM
CITY, INC.
Jack W." Carsey, Mar.

&amp;

Farm Equipment
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Dobarmen puppioa:
Stud Service. Call 614-446- Troy-BIIt tilltra. Check our
special price before you buy
7796.
any tillere. Swisher Imple-

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614-367-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Professional All ~ breed grooming.
lndoor~outdoor boarding fe cilitiea. Engliah Coc'ker Spa-

niel puppies. Call 614-3889790.

Pleasant . Display Army Surplus, East · Ravenswood.
Weekends.

GIRLS - GUYS
START WORK TODAY
TRAVEL ENTIRE U.S.A.
Have openings for 8 to travel and work with group.
Transportation furnished.
Traininc program with expenses paid. Adventure job
with rapid adYil/ltement.
Earnings to be dicussed at
interview. Must have some
high school and be free to
travel. For personal interview see Paul Blackburn
Tuesday only, March 27th,
10:30 A.M.-4 P.M . at the
Econo lodge, Room 31.
No phone calls ~lease. Immediate departure. Parents
are welcome at interview.

interior, low miles. Sharp.

$6895
1

Auto~ ~P9s. ~-~-~~~ c~.~t~F M.~t !hPel~
~inyl
$

top, plush interior, low miles.

599 5

1979 Grand Prix

T. Top, auto., PS, PB, A.C., AM-FM, till, wire wheels, V-8.
Sharp, low miles, 1 owner.

$
5495

Auto., PS,

l~~~. 2~dd~~b~~Pe~n~

low miles.

$1795

121Y~!J£~Xv~utoGA~}L~~H.
PHONE 446-3417

STEVE FULLER

ment Co. St. Rt.7 N. Galllpolla.OH . Call 814-446 0476 .
Grast

seed

and tobacco

suppliea. Bidwell milia, 614388-9688.

VW bus-van and Ford tractor, both in good condition .

Cattery - Call 614-388-9909.
Kennelo. AKC Chow pup- Farm equipment for sale.
pies, CFA Himalayan, Per·
Dragonwynd

660 Oliver tractor with or

aian and Siameae kittens.
without bruah-hog. 304Call 614-446-3844 after 6. 896-3677.
Registered female Pit Bull.

10 weoka old. One non
registered male, 4 mo. old

Pit Bull. Call 446-3262.

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

Cocker Spaniel puppy .
Ready 4-16-84. Depoolt
holdo. No chocka. Call 614992-2607.
AKC Engllah Springer Spaniel puppies. liver and white,
champion bloodline. Ready

AKC black and ton Dachshund,

elso

Pomeranian.

304-896-3968 .

57

Musical
lnstrumen1s

Piano . 1500. 304-676 6028.

1-=====::::::=====
I·
58
Fruit
8t Vegetables

Reel Eatate Generel

Uvestock

100. Bring own container.

304-8711-3308. No Sunday
tole a.

FOR SALe BY OWNER

.

Ml•od Hoy, f1 .110 bolt,
304-875-111179 .

lookin1 for something unique? nrec1 of hlp utili-:
ties and neipbors too close for comfort? Then ::
you may want to consider this SJCiudld, low :
1111intenance, rustic cedar with architlct-desipd -.
passive solar room located on 2S.wooded
Yz ~
mile from city. 1800+ sq. ft.; 2-3 bedrms., 2·baths, built-in bookcase, woodbumer, decks, pr- ::
age, 16x20 barn, orpnic prden and all ltti'IC~ :
tively landscaped. City schs. 7r1s.
:::

For IIIIo 700 bulhtleor corn.
304-812-2862 .

acm

Llrge Hctlon of aggressive

rugged Duroc boors. Roger
Bently, Sabino, Oh 513584-2398 .

I r.Ul s1111 rI aIi ll n
71

Harris Ferms &amp;

Green

Autoa for Sale

Turn your personal property
into cash in ona day '1he Autlion Way".
llconsod and Bonded
In Ohio and W. Va.
Edwin Winter-Auctioneer
Millwood, WV

A cloaalc 1971 Cadillac
Llmoualno fully lboded
42.000 orglnol mlloa. body
In ••c. cond. lnalde ond out.
Firm f4.500. nnted windo-. Coli be -n ot 1183
~nd. Avo.. OoHipollo. Coli
oMS- 78~3 or 448-1833.

·-

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., MARCH 31, 1984
10:00 A.M.

located on Rt. 33, 5 miles east of New Haven,
W. Va., 2 miles -.vest of letart locks and Dam.
Owner, Emory_Roush, alter 50 years in the dairy business,
ts d1scontmulnl due to health rnsons and will sell the
lollowine at Public Auction.

1982 American Motora
doluu, auto, air,
AM-FM.aponrimo. t4,195.
1880 2 dr.. Ford Fairmont,

39 GRADE DAIRY COWS

auto, air. Wire rima. real

Spirit

thorp. U,895. 2-1981
Chsvlttoa euto. olr, U,196
11. John'• Auto Soloa, Bulovtllo Rd. Go!Upollt, Oh. Coli
441·4782. Open tit doll&lt;.

Owner has moved to Cincinnati and w1nts honte s1~ld ::1
this month! Exceptional home on the
features 2 femily rooms. larae
patio doors, 3 BRs, 2 baths,
cooktop, microwave, tye level oven,
and r1n1e. 14x2411vinl room, dinette,
2 car Prllt with electric opener.

BLACKBURN REALTY -446-0008

Age of cows and date ol breed1ng will be available sale day.
Cattle will be checked by veterinanan and health papers fur·
nished .

1888 Comoro 350. 4 opd ..
fiOO end 1974 Jaop PU.
'4•4, 8 cyl.. 3 apd. Coli
814-2411-5096 .

AUCTIN££R: Edwin Winter - Millwood, W. Va.
PHON£ 273-3447
lie. N 334-84

· ; 154 Misc. Merchandise

3 Announcements

Full line International Harvester Farm and Outdoor Products
Dealership avaialble to cover
the Gallipolis - Pomeroy market areas. Persons in Allied
Busineses are invited to contact

International Harvester Co.
2965

East Dublin-Grandville Rd.
Columbus, Ohio 43229 or
Phone A/C 614 890-2551

SOON .
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds ·

CIISTlWF·-

IIAII.cumD lliiS

Rock Springs/Rt. 33 &amp; 7 Bypass
Pomeroy, Ohio

..

ANTIQUE, 'COLLECTIBLES
NEW &amp; USED TOOLS
Truly Something For Everyone
DATES-Friday-Saturday-Sunday
APR. 6-7-8, MAY 4-5-6, JUNE

1-2~3

JULY 6-7-8, AUG. 3-4-5r SEPT. 7-8-9
.OCT. 5.-6-7
"Free Parking •security •concessions

For Rates &amp; Space Contact:
DAVID MANN-614-992-6300 or
MIKE MARTIN-614-985-4396
OR ·
WRITE P.O..BOX 742, POMEROY, OH. 45769
•

brokoa. Runo good. f776 . f1 .895 . Call 614 -388 304-676-8730.
9906 or 614-367-7624.

$16,500 - 1911 KINGSBURY MOBIL£ HOI~ W/EXPANDO
Side by side rel.-freezer, dishwasher, double ovens,
living room, Central iir. Large mvered patio. Underpinning
have to do ~ move in. Monthly payment $273 per month. In
school district.
·

FOR SALE
(1) HOUSE IN CHESTh:

$65,000 -: TARA ESTATES- Bi-level. 4 bedrooms, tormaf!iving·
room and d111111g room. Large lamily room. 2 w garage. Deck from
k~chen. Kyger Creek Schools.
:
I

OWNER FINANCING ro AQUALIFitD BUYER- Home, Bu~ness
or P..;,rtal property. Home has been completely redone. New · ·
plumbing, _carpet. etc. 3.bedrooms,,2 baths. modem kitchen,
.
room. lamiJy room, wb fireplace. Large building used as a bu~ness.
Look th~ over.
·

•

CllY PROPERTY- 2sloly, 3 bedrooms, large lot Excellenl :starte,r•·l
or retirement home. 3rd Ave. Priced in the 20'1
5 ACRES - More or less. Good building site on State Route. Priced ·
only $7,000. 90 lb. tobacco quOOI. .
.
8.6 ACRES
More or less,
Kyge~rob~~~;'~~u~~~P~~~~ij
mobile
home,- 3bedrooms.
2 extra
"'
the 20s.
HOM£, BUSINESS AND OORA BUilDING LOT or garden
all *'r u(lder $20,000. Business was used as
stat;011
,ocery. Cozy 3 bedroom home. ,

aas

'

.STAT£ lit. 211-·3bedroom home, 2haths, ~tchen lormallivlhltl· •
room, dinilli!lamily roam. 1,920 sq. I( Clflll)i( cilvered
carpet arid s!m.i cbn 1111 ~- SiJnge building, 1.5 ··-~·-·•
or less. City schools. Immediate fJ(ISSeS§ion.
. ·

'

'

'

'LOVELY 4 8£011001111011£,lN CllY- First ~woue.
'I

2 ACRES Ill located 011 st. Rt. 35. Go¢ btlllding site. Has
mobile home hook-up. Well water,· also nater tap and a
buildi!ll City schoolS.
·
'·

POIEaOY - Contemporartr.r~~~tb . An scri

lend more or "''-\\~f. "t.v_ot~
Priced in the 50lr . ...... nnanctna.

I '

... u~ 11l1S

•

:f
:l
,

~:

:~
·:
:
.;
;··
:
:•

Three acres with a nicely
constructed concrete
block home 26x30. 3
bedrooms. one bath.
12x15 living room and
24x24 family room. PartiallY carpeted, fuel oil
' furnace with facilities
for woodburner. 12x15
block storage building,
20x30 bloc~ aarace.
Ri&amp;ht off Rt. 248, country setting, Ill mile east
l of Chester, Ohio. (2)
TWO STORY HOUSE IN
RACINE: downstairs
equipped with kitchen,
livin&amp; room, din in&amp; room
and den; upstairs has
t two bedrooms ind one
bath; houst . ,also has
bastll\ent. Lot size ap" prox: 41'1308'. Needs
~rti. (3) 1971 SALEM
I!IOBILE HOME, 12'x55',
two bedrooms, kitchen,
dinin1 · rooin, family
room; needs work. ( 4) 40
, ACRES in Chester Twp.
Unimproved. On Town·
' •hip Road U. !f inter-

ested cOIItlct tilt HOlM

,,

1969 VW wind ow van . low

1973 Ford Pickup S 175 or
Call 614 -

mudder

' 78 Chevy '12 4x4 · low
miles, fully equip. wi th U ·
tras , axe . con. Call 614·

1979 J eep Renegade CJ ·7 .
Charles Wildermuth . Call

trad e for trailor

ft . bed, with topper. 6 cyl. .

949-2181 .

1968 Chevrolet ha lf ton
pi ckup truck . good co nd ..

S750 00 . 304-675 -5304 .

t~re s.

hk a

new.

51.000 . Coli 614 ·446 0319 .

614-992 -5621 .

1979 Ford 4 WD 24.000
miles. loaded. must see to
appreciate . $8,000 firm .

446 -1387 or 614 -446 ·
8064 .

e•c . cond .. Call 614-245 ·
6559 .
1974 Ford F-1 00

v, ton 302

AT. PS. P8, S1 .000 . Call

614 -256·6739 avenigns till

7:30.

71

Autos for Sale

1977 Pontiac Venture PS ,

PB, air cond ., good cond .,
V-6 engine. $1 ,750 . Call
614-388-9905 or 614 -3677524 .

71

Autos for Sale

1969 Volkswagen , S250.

Call 446 -2354 .
I- - - - - - - - 1982 Ford EXP. auto .. P8.
AM -FM radio, tape deck
$4,996 . Call 446-3631 .

1982 Dodge V-150 PU .
deluxe model. V-8 . auto ,
17.000 miles. serious in quires only. Cal l 446 -2300 .

1974 Jeep J 10 PU . 5600.
1970 GMC PU e400 . Call
446-2354 .

1tltl0111l lank in Racine;

' 2

o. '

REALTOR®

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

Put Nu•ttber 1 to work for you:
YOUR CHOICE - Buy this raised ranch home with 3.6
acres or 8 acr111 3 bedrooms. I \\ bath~ full basement
with 24x24 family room and stone fireplace. uhllty
room, workshop, outbuilding, pond and new fence with
8 acres. FHA assumable loan.
N551

SO IUClt TO OffER - This 4 bedroom ranch has 3

baths. kitchen complete, dining room. family room with
buift~n bar, large master bedroom with ~iding dooo to
deck and beautiful 36'x16' pool. 2 fireplaces, attached
garage. Approx. 2 acres.
#553

REDUCED $10.000- OWNER NEEDS TO SELL NOWI
- Route 35 West locabon. 3 bedroom tn·level, 1'1
baths. den. lormal dinmg. custom made cabonets 1n
krtcllen, family room. cedar i ned walk-m closet 2
hteplaces, attic fan. Natutal gas heaL 2 car garage
Don'l miSS this buy
#542
IMPRESSIVE INSIDE AND OUT - lmmaculalely
kept and beautifully decotated. 1900 sQ. lt. of hv·
mg space, 2'h baths, eQUipped k1tchen. lam1ly
room. garage. low monthly heatmg budget. Cen·
lral an. N1ce lawn. Rt. 35 locahon.
#
522
PRICE REDUCED $3,000 - On th1s modem 4
bedroom house. Chesh11e Township One story ranch
style. 1'h baths, attached carport. full basement
natural gas and county watet available. Latge
landscaped. lot. good garden area. Pr~ce d
nght-$41.000

COMMERCIAL BUilDING ALONG 2ND AVENUE - 7.~ square •
feet 1n buildmg, stuated on a lot w1th 22.500 sq. feet... Plenty of.
• parktng atea
.•

•

UNIQUE-DISTtNCTIVE! - 3 bedroom ranch.
one of Gallia County's very best Kllchen.
breakfast area family room. livmg room. master
bedroom has l;rge walk-In dosel-dtessmg room. 3'.?
bath~ shower stall. diVIded basement 9 acre estate.
Must see' Gteen Townsh1p.

Con~der

#544

MANY EXTRAS- Lovely tri-ievel with 3bedrooms. 11.\
baths, large living room, family room, utility, patio doors
df dining area, attached 2 car gatage, natural gas heat
~tral air. Aat lawn. Gas gnll. Pnced at $64,900.
#517

ACREAGE - 31 rollrng acres. Part111ly wooded.
C1ty school distnct. BUild lo su11. Pnced at
$15,550.
#507
YOU'll FAU IN LOVE WITH THIS STYLISH two story
home with1n mmutes of town. Modern k1lchen, 4
bedrooms. basement unattached 2-car garage,
40'x30' metal barn, ch1cken house. 47 actes. City
school distnct. Call 101 an appotntmenl today.
#521

SPRINGTIME SPECIAL- 24'x44' double w1de. 7
years old. 3 bed10oms, bath, living 10om. family
room carpeted. fireplace. Rural water. septic sys·
tem. LP gas heat. central air. Shade trees. Near
Southwestern Htgh School. $27.000
#535

WARM AND INVITING THROUGHOUT explatns thiS 3
bedroom ranch. Living room, dining and krtchen
combined, bath. utility room, I car garage,
maintenance free. nice size end lot Pnced in mid 30s.
#S25

MOVE IN QUICK - Immediate possesswn. 1038
Second Avenue. 2 bedrooms. livmg room. lormal
dining, bath, fireplace. Aluminum sidmg. Garage.
Nice lawn.
#494

21 EVANS HEIGHTS - PRICED RIGHT TO SELL This 2 bedroom home is located in the city and IStn
excellent condition. Nice kitchen, lormal dining room,
living room w~h fireplace, bath. basement aHached
garage. loan assumption possible.
. #534

DON'T MISS THIS brick and aiummum siding
home located in the Rutland area. 3 bedrooms.
full basement, 16'x32' in-ground pool. All this and
more situated on .89 of an acre. Priced in the40s.
#498

MEIGS COUNTY - Build your dream home on
lhis attractive lot. Baum's Addition. Water tap included.

#475
COME TO THE COUNTRY and get away from it all.
3 bedroom ra. :h, I \? acres. Wood burner. Storage
building. Only $21.500.
'
#477
64 ACRES - OWNER FINANCING to qualified
purchaser. Older 3 bedroom home. Barn. Tobacco
base. 2 gas wells. Addison Township.
#506
.
VINTON VILLAGE - 3 bedroom frame home with
k~chen. living room, bath, 2 porches, mce ~ze lol
' Priced to sell at $16,500.
#536
112.95 ACRE FARM - This older couple would
consider trading lor a nice ranch style home. Par·
tially remodeled home. 21arge barns, machinery
sl\ed, 3 other buildings, all in excellent condition.
2670 lb. tob. base, pond. 30 acres bottom land.
..
N474

JACKSON COUNTY - 105 acre larm. 2 story
older home, 3 bedrooms, bath. kitchen wlh buill·
in range and oven, dishwasher. living room.
Barns, cellar and cellar house.
#449
2 BEDROOM FRAME - 3 year old ranch w1th approx. I acre lawn. Amenities include: lull bath,
kitchen, dining rqom, living room. front porch,
sliding glass doors olf dining area. Possible loan
assumption with low interest rate.
#514
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - This 3 bedroom
ranch style home is looking for a new owner.liv·
ing room, dining room, family room, kitchen, furnace room. Forced air oil furnace, also wood·
burner. Barn, tobacco base, 6 acres. $25,000 .
#537
GOOD ·CONDITION is this l 'h story frame home.
Located near the Kanauga Drive-In Theater. 2 or 3
. bedrooms, 1\? baths, living room, nice kitchen
and dining area. 2 car garage·. 2 mob11e home hoo,
· d ld 40
kups. Pnce m • s.
#523

•
•

unnt~oul
•

• $50'&gt;
.ONLY 5 MINUTES BElOW GAlliPOLIS on Old Rt 7 4 Bedrm. •
home. w.b. fireplace, I.a. lurnace. I&amp; k1tchen. lull basement Good.
• VIew of OhK&gt; R1ver Pnce $37.500 00.
.REMODElED 2-BEORM. HOME along 4th Ave Acompact home
.with many new features. ideal begmner or retJremenl home. Only
. $21.50000
•

.11

ACRES, approx. 1 m1le lrom crty lim1ts. crty water. lronts on I
.Neighborhood Rd. Buy now for $20 'XJOO

- ATTRACTIVE HOMESTEAD
- 70 acres. 8 roomhouse, barn. mach1nery shed.
other outbwldmgs. Tobacco base. Approx. 35 acres
le.el cropland. The rest ~ pasture and woods. Perry
Township. Gallifl(JISschool system. Blacktop road.
#549

1

• APPROX. 'h ACRE wtlh 2 bedrm. mobole home. Fenced yard, •
. Bidweii·Rodney Rd. Some younglrees. Owner wtll sell nowlot on~.
.$14,00000
•
.151 ACRE FARM w1lh mce house and equipment shed.•
$86.000.00
•
• CONSTRUCTED DURING 1870. renovated dunn~ 1970, 3 .
• bedroom, !loft. Federal bnck home wtlh1n Gallipolis Formal dining.
&amp; I1V1ng rms .. library, fam1ly rm., 3 wb. fireplaces. 21.? baths, cent.
• A.C.. New Orleans courtyard.
•
• PERFECT lOCATION lor fam1iy or reurees. 2·3 bedrooms. across.
• from new court house. 2 full baths, 1 w.b. fireplace. cent all,
.detached garage, partially fimshed basement Pnce in 80'~
•
NEW LISTING_- Addison, near PO., 3 bedrm. house and ]lots. ~·.·
ltot wtth mot)le home "hook-up". lg. metal bldg. wrth two-car
. garage Fenced yard $29.000.00.
•

I
OlD CHARM - Spacious room1 some remodeling
already done. New ~tcllen. new bath. lovely fireplace
but still work to be done. I acre w1th rural water and
septic system. Pnced at $23.000.
#552

IJ SEDAM. IN SEClUDED VINTON COURT -lot 45'x78'. nat gas .
I heat cent A.C, fenced -m yard. Pnce $39.500.00.
•
I SIT ON THE FRONT PORCH and en1oy the character of th1s 8 rm. •
I home. N1ce lot which extendsfrom 4th Ave. to 5th Ave.. 2kitchens,.
I I 'h baths $60'~ Near c1ty schools
·•

I
1
• EUREKAII 2 bedrm. cottage, 2 baths. locale&lt;! 1n "Dowmtow~ I
• Eureka" close to Gallipolis dam ~le. Pnce only $22.000.00. :: I
I 2BEDROOM HOME located alonglnendly V1nton Ave. N1ce lot w1t~ I
I 2 car garage Pnced for $32.000 00
.I
•• 3-4 BEDROOM HOME alongGart1eld Ave Beaut1lut v1ew overtoo~ •

esWIMMING POOL w1th 3 bedrm home. lg. carport. family room,
. living rm, adapted for woodburner, Mad1son Ave _$46.900.00. ::

ASSUME LOAN - Very spaciOus 3 bedroom home 2
bath~ attached 2 car garage Over 1800 sq ft. with
additional 640 SQ. It lob e fimshed. Nice carpel
throughout large level lawn. C.ty school distncl
#495
- 3bedroom home
in excellent condition with ·
room, large kitchen,
bath, utility room, gatage with
· opener, central
air. natural gas with low heat bill~ large fenced 1n back
yard.
#519

•

•

r{t

I
1

PRICE REDUCED!' - Owner needs to selllh1s home
NOW 3bedroom natural gded ranch. Llvmg room with
fireplace and cathedral ce~lm&amp; 2 full balhs. mce
k~chen, central a~r. Over 5 wooded acres. Wrthtn
minutes of Holzer Med1cal Center. Call today.
#526
175 ACRE FARM - HARRISON TOWNSHIPPasture and hay farm. Suitable for caltle and
sheep. Some productive levelland , tobacco base.
over 2,000 small Christmas trees. Spnng develop·
ment. 2 story, 3 bedroom house. Some remodele·
mg done. Good barn and other bUIIdmgs. Call now'
#532

•
••
••
••
•
•

4 ACRES OF NICE LAND to bu1ld on. N1ce homes
in the area . Very good location . W1lh1n 3 m1les of
Gallipolis. Buy all and use for bUIIdmglotsor build
your own special home.
#468

..-...;.........e.IN

D. D. Evans, AttOrnay

48.000 mil es, short bed .

••c . cond. e3, 496 . Call 85,700 Call 446 -2107 or
614-388-9905 or 614-367· 614 -367 -0107
7524 .

Cathy Pope, Associate, 379-2748
Marpret Btyanl. Associate. 245-92n

IMo:ltWtal

'

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

Judy DeWitt, Realtor, 388-8155

................. w

.

1981 C-10 Chevy Pickup 8

J. 11terrill Carter, Realtor, 379-2184
Bec:ty Lane. Associate. 446-0458

1516 GUilD Cltmll lYINUI
YIIIIIIA, W. Yl. 261 OS

MAROt 31, 1984-10:00 A.M.
531 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Estate of Mary Persinger, Proboto #17,815

This is an excellent opportunity to buy very nice furniture
at auction prices. Most of these items are about two years
old and have been used very little.
.
Flexsteel queen size Hide-a-bed, la-Z-Boy recliner, brown
velour recliner, step tables, table lamps, Zenith color TV
(cabmet), G.E. alarm clock, sel ol Universal Standard
encyc_lopedias, Hoover.C_oncept I sweeper (self-propelled),
Ktnca1d solid maple dmmg room set, Corningware Pyrex
snack trays, McCoy mixing bowls, Cornin~ware coliee pot:
crackpot. french fryer, elec. frypan, wallle 1ron Oxford china
service for 8, Hamilton Beach mixer, elec. can 'opener, misc .
cookmg ~tens11s, Cosco stepstool, desk and chair, E. A. chair,
stde cha1r (old), rug shampooer, Montgomery Ward floor
model stereo w/8 track and AM/~M. Westinghouse portable
sewing machine, portable .record player, maple twin bed,
chest of drawers, full size ~d. lg. dresser, nightstand, ll!isc . .
1ewelry, clock rad1o, m1sc. lamps, , v•porizer · hair dryer
Lawnboy 21" mower, 5' stepladder, wood extension
stepladder, 3 speed fan, window tap, tool box lawn chaiis
misc. paperback books, pruning shears, grass clippers, oldei
set of end tables, GE washer, lloor model stero stereo w/2
speakers, Admiral side·bY·side refrig.,. Ward's' window air
conditioner, portable color TV 19", 1978 Fiat 4 Dr. Sedan.
TERMS: Cuh or Check with proper ID
Stle conducted by: llcGH££ AUCTION CO., Gallipolis
AUCTIONEER: II. l. "Bud" lcGhtt
PH. 614-44&amp;-0552
Steve lcGhn-Apprentlce AuctlonttrOur next scheduled Auction ·II April 14, 19~
Call .us now, Itt us http you plan your auction·

.-·
._,..~·
G• •

PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION

fenders 176. Call 614 -256 ·
1260.

cond .,

axe. cond.

CALL 446-1094
IEAIY TO FIISII FUIIITIII£

OHIO VALLEY FLEA MARKETS
OPE~ lNG

mileage.

· : · Maple Dinina Room Fur• ~ . niture, includes table &amp;
; ' 6 chairs. buffet and tea
cart.

446-4206
Bonnie Stutes, Realtor-

located on St. At. 124 approx. 5 miles from Ravensw.,od,
W. Va. and approx. 6 miles lrom Racine, Ohio. Sold home
and leavine state.
HOUSEHOLD: love seat, coflee and end tables, 3 pc.
bedroom sutte. 2 pc. living room suite, dresser, chesl of
drawers, baby bed, lamps, metal wardrobes, metal kitchen
cabtnet, books. stool, cha11, misc. dtshes. pots and pans and
odds and ends.
MACHINERY: Two wheel trailer, 501 Ford 3 pt. mower, plow,
3 pt. grader blade, dump rake, Bolen's garden traclor
w/ cultivators and cycle b~r mower, M.F. plow wheel (new), 3
pt. httch for M.F., 3 pt. slip scraper, 20 in push mower.
ANTIQUE or COLLECTOR ITEMS: Fairborn Morris small
platform scales, Singer treadle sewingmachine, cross-cui
saws, horse drawn mower, 11on beds (6), Oonohho stone jar
w/crack, mtsc. stone 1ars, 22 Mossburge rifle, hall tree and
approx. 50 steel traps.
MISC.: 10x8 H. Beam, 18x!O culverts, telephone poles, 20
ft. romts casmg, 4x4, 5x5, 6x6, - 1811. timbers, alum. beer
barrels, grease barrelS, approx. 30 hide stretchers
strawberry boxes, sweet polato seed, new kerosene heater:
like new \? hp Gould jet pump, misc. hand and garden tools
diving board, 9\? hp Even rude motor w/gas tank, 12ft. alum:
boat and lots more.
OWNERS: llr. &amp; Mrs. Robert W. lewis
CASH
EATS
POSITIVE ID
AUCTIONEERS - DAN SMITH
949-2033 or 992-7301
Marlin Wedem~yer, 24~-m~
"Not responsible for accidents or loss ol property"

Chevy doors $176 . Ford

1978 Monza 2 plus 2, exc .

FOR SALE

SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1984
10:00 A.M.

Chevy fendero 184 .9 5

1979 Chovotto PS, PB. 4

gil

Trucks for Sale

New truck fenders &amp;. doors

new condition, 16800 firm .
Call 614-985-3685 or 614448-1079.

1870 Cadillac ambulance,
good cond .. good draa, new
battery, 46,000 mllu,
f1.4&amp;0. Coil 448-2803.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Sheppard puppies. Call 614986-4296 .

1979 Dotson 280Z 211o2 .

1975 Mercury, 6 cyl. man- 1977 Mercury Monarch PS.
uel tronamloolon. 86.000 PB, air cond .. 302 V-8, good

73

1979 Ford F-100 Lariat PS, 1980 Chevy Scotsdale 4x4 .
PB , air con d., AM -FM radi o,

99 2-7160 .
72

GLP .option. new tires. like

1872 Cadillac Coupe. full
~- climate con1rol. etorto. fully loaded, ••collont
condldon. Coli 446-0577.

This is a good clean set ol young grade cows that Mr. Roush
raised and are in good production. Also selling 400 gal. bulk
tank; 400ft. of glass p1pe; 100ft. ol plastic pipe and a Oelavel pipeline milker.

p.m . Saturday and Sunday.
9 a .m . to 9 p.m.

Lots of extr11 • good con .

Aoklng f1175 0 .8.0 . Call
814-948-2181 .

good

Trucks for Sale

1974 0100 Dodge. 6 cvl .. 3 mHos. S600 Ca11614-3677750 .
spd .. axe . co n. N o rust
bulk package, Coli 304 -675 · Asking 6976. Call614 -992 - 1961 Willy 's J eep. aKcellent
6981 week days after 6:30 3798 or 614-742 -2143.
shape, 38' gumbo mon ater

'76 Oldo Cutlou Supreme ·

trans,

72

1980 Toyota Celica lift ·
back, 1 owner, excellent
condition. 6 speed, sunroof.

portlitlon. f900. Call 814985-4387 .

19BO Turbo Trona .Am low
mileage, Iota of extroa.
17.200. Coli 814-2116·
1841 .

23 Holsteins, 7 Ayrshires, 7 Guernseys, 2 Jerseys. 34 are
now mtlktng. 5 dry cows. 2 will be fresh by sale time.

quick oale. 304-773-6694.

metlc trana, , cheap tran•·

spd.

Autos for Sale

1977 Lincoln Towncar. just
complete ly reconditioned .
Priced below wholesale for

1977 Chevy 4 door. outo-

1881 Plymouth Chomp.
41,000 mi.. new tlroa. 4
cyl .. 4 opd. Coli 614-379272S.

59 For Sale or Trade
For sale or trade, English

1973 Pontiac Coullno ,
f800: 1974 Chevy Vega
ototlon wagon. f2110: Call
814-742-2788 .

71

1978 Grand Prix 50.000
mi .• loaded. Coli 814-3792726.

APARTMENT FOR RENT- I bedroom, kitchen, living room,
furnished, $150.00 month, water, sewage, you pay cas &amp;
electric, deposit required.
To Buy or Stll
Call Nancy Jaspers
. 949-2901

ltlflblr Ot W.V. AuctionMrs Ann.

by Larry Wright

·

loto~~~;~~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;~~
446-6610

NEW LISTING -Well kept 2 bedr~m ~9rne, U·shai'"" ••
kitchen, basement can eaSily be made into family room, 2 ·:
nice size porches, I car garage, level lot. Cell for details, _
don't miss this one. Asking only $21 ,000.
•,

Now Booking SaltS
For 1984.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE 'i

The Sunday

model uaod cora. Smith
CAS!ct paid
for Eoot;roP
8ulck·Pontloc.
1911
trn Avo.. Golllpolla. Coli
814-446·2282.

CENTRAL REALTY

Since 1973

Autos for Sale

11,996. Call 814 -388 ·
9906 or 814-387-7524 .
1971 Ford atotlon 1760. 1- - - - - - - - good cond. 1980 Honda 1971 VW Bootie, good
motorcycle 1750. 304-876- cond .. e696 . Coll614-388·
1293.
9906 or 614-367-7624 .

mllea. new tires, bettarv and

Reel Eatete Generel

WINTER'S
AUCTION SERVICE

304-676-7541 ovoningo.

71

cond .. V-6 engine, PS. P8 ,
23,000 mllos. loaded. 304- AM -FM radio. 11.796. Call
8711-5440 day or 304-876- 614-388 -9906 or 614-367·
65911 evenlngo.
7624 .

Call 446-7828. No realtors, please.

Public Sale
&amp; Aue11on

'74 Thunderbird runs good,
new tires. soma ruat e200.

1978 Corvet silver anniver sery edition. like new,

MR. EMORY ROUSH - OW"ER
Houoeo, Rt. 124, Portland.
Oh. Now open 10--dusk.

Autot for Sale

1979 Trona AM t-top, 403
V-8. dark blue very ahorp,
gr111 told, other form e&amp;,ll811. Coli 446·0877.
-do. CaM Vaughn Taylor,
114·2411-11084 or814-24111979 Cougar XR7. Coli
11111 ofttr IPM.
448-3709.
Both lergo 1ound end oquort
'.bella. Good quality. Opel 1977 T-81rd, am-fm radio.
.Fitapetrtck. Cell 814-aa9· Pl. pb. new tires, cross wire
apoke rims . Exc. shape.
4378.
f2300 or B.O. Call 814,For oole. Good condition 992-6922 .
hsy. 11 .80 . a bolo. Coli
'80 Chevy Chovotto 4-door
814-992-7201 .
hatchback white, 4 opood.
Hoy • cOfldltloned. oota. clean, sell or trade . 304·
clover. olfelh, orchard 8711-8288 .
grooo. Call 814·887-6164.
1974 Dodge Charger, S.E. 1
Ground oar corn f8.60 per Owner. 304-676 -2192 .

23 Iorge AI Bred Colfhooil
vaccination. Holetoln heHtra
freohon Iota Aprtl. 304-273·
284B.

Save 10% on Chlcka. Feed,
Supplloa. Order by March
31 . Boso Agri -Contor. Inc.
Call 448-24S3.

8

71

84 Hey &amp; Grain

Uveltock

Registered blonde female

1964) Phone 675-3334 Pt.

1981 Cutlass Suoreme Broullham

•

Now open for business,
Mountain State Block. At .
33, New Haven . Complete
masonry supplies, 4 ", 8",
12" block. Delivery service.

Suppl11::;
Llv es l ot;k

HILLCRE.ST KENNELS
Boarding all broodo. Hooted 61

POLITICIANS Save up to

Loaded, auto., PS, PB, AC, CC, bit, factory buiH in CifAMIFMstereo cassette, P.A, RWO, sports wheel, vinyl top, V-8, plush

•
''
•

$1 ,850. 2 bdr. wilderneos
home 13.960. See our
model. 1-614-886-7311 .

40% on Union Made Advertising Specialties. H. 0 .
"Sam" Somerville . (since

.- ----,~======,

ORDER &amp; TAKE
DELIVERY Of
YOUR SPRING
FERTILIZER,
SPRING SEED &amp;
SEED CORN

Shipped Direct-lowest
Cost, You build it or we will,
24x48 garage or barn

Phone day 304-882-2222.
evening 882-3239.

3 Announcements

MGM FARM CITY. INC.
Sorvin1 Mli&amp;s-Gillia-Mason

0 . Call 614-246-5121 .

Farm

Pe1s for Sale

Appro•imotely 300 ft. walnut lumbar. 304-676-3091.
•: : l-..:'..:C.::harles;;.;.::..:w:.;.. .::Leca=r•..:Sr:.:.. .-~ 614-256-1651 .
Old buffet with table and 4
~ .,...---:----Case 310 front endloadar chairs, storage cabinet. post
:. 2 In Memoriam
dozer. $4,000. Call 614- belt massager. 304-8822662 .
266-1427.
Firewood cut up slabs $16

63

Uveltock

Ohio-Point Pleosant, W. Va.

. 'f!jorthup King .Om. oHolfo &amp;

Reglatorod Angua bulla, 1-3
yrs. old. ••c. blood linea.
Slate Run Forma. Jackson.
Oh 814-288-5395 or 814288-1787.

ADBA rogillered pit bull
pupa $160. tach. 614-4463976 or 446-7120.

In Loving Memory of
Virgil R. Miller.

\•

-rA-Il~
~ROSE .

now. 1160. Ripley 304372-2173.

.·

this

we both
loot. Sldora Equipment Co.
304-875-7421 .

chine w-cabinet 6125 . 304882-3330.

horae- 116 volto- 6 amps 60
cycle made by Jaeger 1" 1.4"
outlet. 16' wood boat redwood and fur new, turning
plow good as new. Call

tractor•

anywhere etae or

992-2969 . 3 miles South of
Middleport.

JVC stero component sys tem, brand new. Call 614 -

Deut1

month. Coli ua before buying

2 door upright cooler. nightcrawlers, minnows,&amp; mill
worms. at Betty's Carryout .

B. &amp; R. WOOD SHOP. Patio
furniture, picnic tables and
desk, stone jar. 614-245- novelties. Call 304-6769446.
6405.
54 Misc. Merchandise SALE ENDS MARCH 2711
WORLD BOOK ENCYCKnauff Firewood Pickup or LOPEDIA SALE . Reg . $499 .
Delivered. 12"- 22 " stocked Sale $374. Save 1126.
in yard . HEAP vender , Terms $10 .00 down :
prompt delivery. 614 -256- $22 .00 a month. 304-6756246 .
3775 .

Control hunger and lose
weight with New Shape Diet
Plan and Hydrex Water Pills.
Fruth Pharmacy, Jackson
Pike.
·

new

S() GI/£SS WHO
MAI&lt;ES 7HE 61(}
CATCH OF 7HE
PAY 'P.

Safes, Round Tables ,
Chairs, plus many mora
more antiques. misc. Paul
Conkel, At . 7, Tupper Plains.

Oak bed, setof chairs, wash
stand. old cupboard, child's

wood. Call614-256-1628.

Wo ore making wild doola on

COUNTRY OAK FURNI TURE : Cupboords. Pie

Call. 614-986-3588 .

63

No. 12 Forguaon baler.
f2.000. 304-4118-1808.

992-5587.

267 Roberts Mauser action
rifla ;includes scope and
sling; $200 . or bast offer.

Farm Equipment

19115 Allla Chamber tractor
model CA. PTO. 3 pt. hitch,
gordon baled, plow, dlak. 2
whaol wooden cort. oaklng
fl,OOO. 2110 gel. fuel oil
drum round type with etond
oaklng · f10.0. Coli 4488128.

200 AMP, air cooled engine,

complete with leads,

1984

March

W.Va.

61 Household Goods

••

MINI FARM - 14 acres. New buildings. Modern 7
room house. 1500 sq. ft. Large rooms. k1lchen
excep!lonal, all carpeted. Bnck apron. VInyl ~d1ng. 2
new barns. runmng water. approx. 1500 lb. tobacco
base-baSIC QUOia. 4 level produchve acres. C.ty
schools
#543

the Oh1o R1ver. Owner will sell lor $30.000.00

3.
·

• APPROX. 2 ACRES OF lAND w1lhm the c1ty, has beautiful :e
I bedrm. bnck home. Picturesque VIew ol the Oh1o Valley 3 w.li.
I fireplaces and outdoor fireplace · gnll. Slepdown living rm:;l
decorated w1th sol1d cherry paneling and tnm. Pegged oak ffoori .
• l ibrary with ad1oimng solanum. 2'.; baths. Pnvale off1ce off master
I bedrm Call Ken Morgan for add1bonal mlormanon
·
• NEW llSTNG - Home w1lh 2 Apt s. hve-1n one. tenl t~l
• other 500 bloc k Fourth Ave $30.000.

I

REMODELED OLDER HOME - Th1s 2 story nome
1s 80% remodeled . Approx . 3,000 SQ. ft. of l! ving
space w1ih hvmg room, dtntng room. 3 bedrooms,
full bath. hardwood fl oors, fuel 011 furna ce plus
Kmg wood and coal slove. Pnced at $29.000
#515

;·I
I SPENO YOUR "YEAR AROUND" VACATION IN GALLI ACOUNTY~ I

NEW HOME PLUS ACREAGE - Approx I year old
bnck and frame b1-ievel. 3 bedroom~ 2 bath~ 2 car
garage. Can be purchased w1lh 4 acres or 35 acres.
27x36 metal bu1idmg. W1thm 9 m1ies oltown Take a
look today'
#502

1
;I
I LARGE STRUCTURE ALONG 4th AVE . w1lhm ~ghl ol Wash1ngt~l
1 School. wh1ch can be uuhlzed lor smgle lam1ly or 21

40 ACRES LOCATED AT VINTON - land 1s wooded,
has mtneral nghts. creek runs lhrough the property.
T1llable acreage on lop No lease.
#547

.OLDER. BUT STATELY. 3 bedroom home along locust % • ..;;1111
with1n ~ghl of Washmglon School. ga ~age "' 1ea1and plenty
• space lor a garden... Pnce· 40's

81-LEVEL HOME - Bnck and frame 1nten01 w1th 3
bedroom~ mce ~!chen. liVIng room. fam1ly room. !lull
and 1 half bath. 2 car attached garage, l 'h acrelawn.
Located Addison Township. Priced 1n the low 60s.
#505
LARGE VACANT LOT- Perry Township. County
water and electric ava~lable. level lot. Hard road.
#465
.
LIVE IN ONE and rent the other. Two 2 bedroom
mobile homes. Complete with furniture. Set up on
one-half acre tot. Underpinned, storage building,
patios. Within 3 miles ol Gallipolis. Priced in the
20s.
#501
_

-We have just listed 4 acres oliand winch 1ncludes 800 feet oil
• fron' Jge along Raccoon Cteek. Also has 3 bedroommodular home
l and 28'x48' metal bwid1ng wh1ch can be used lor boal slorageanal
garage Pnced 1n the 70s

• apartmentL Pnce $30.000

.

:e

I STEP OUT YOUR BACK DOOR ONTO THE GOLF COUR5E I have 3 two bedroom apls. for 1en1 Pncr slarts ltom $1 75
1 month Adults only. no pets.
I RENT OR LEA~&lt; COMMERCIAL BUILDING along Court
I across lrom ctty park1ng iol in downiOwn Gallipolis.

I NEW LISTING - 45 acre latm 1n Guyan Twp 9 room
I blfurnace. tob. barn and outbuildings 3.000 lb.lob Trac:e sc hon~
Pnce $45,000.

1

I NICE 2-BEDROOM MOBILE HOME along B1dweii·Rodney
Fenced yard. Owner anx1ous to sell. excellent buy. $13,900.

1

l150 YR. OLD, 2 STORY "FEDERAL" BRICK HOME, I mile
Icily. Situated on I acre of land, c1ty water, large
character. Also 2 adjoining building lots. Call for more ii~ loin~atio~·

I

. C!/1984 Cen~2t Rell Eawol:OrpOr,.;ion;.. .;;,,"'!'!or the NAF. ill and •-lradef!1arlr•orCenlury 21Real &amp;.iaie Corporation. Prlnled in ~. S. A. Equal Hou;ing IJpport,unilyGl

-

�·-~·

Ohio-Point Pl.,.,..,,,,, W. Va.

March. 25, 1984

~~~~~~~~~~T~im~~g~~n~~·n~e~I~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~9F~Oh~i~o~~~n~t~~~~W~.V~a~.=========T==============~==~N*==d~t~25~,~1tl=t4~ , .
GALLIPOLIS
There's A New
Pool.s
People Store
Coming In April
For Pool Needs &amp;
Construction Cost
Call
614-446-3051

BRIDGE

• 50
.A ti
t AJ98
+A j ti 4

WEST
• K 76

t 5

+J 9 8 2

388-8826
' BDRM. RANCH
Charming, large hvmg room
w1th wood burning fireplace,
new carpel, built-in range,
mcludes 5 acres of nalural
beauty and pond to fish in.

make six. Naturally Rubens
and Lukacs have arranged a

• 74
• 10 3

hand wher e neither works.
but the slam makes in spite

3t
4+
5•
6+
Pass

!'ass
!'ass
l'ass
Pass
Pass

South

spade.

4 NT
5 NT
6t

ing fork . He must lead either
a spade up to your A·Q or a

Opening lead • J

aod James Jacoby
For our last hand from

.

·

heart to give you a ruff m
dummv and a disca rd of

I

-While your house is for sale, who can warrant
-Who can offer over 40 years of experience in
9 major components of your home?
the business?
-Who can show your home to anyone,
-Who has 5 professionally trained Realtors
anywhere in the country in just six minutes?
ea~r to help you get a quick sale for the top
-Who can offer to buy your home and advance
pnce? ·
your present equity for a new one?
ONLY THE WISEMAN REAL EST ATE AGENCY CAN. LET US GO TO WORK FOR YOUIII

We have not c ha racterrzed
the amount of expertise nee·
essa ry to make this play~
SuHice it to say . It ts the

type of end play that come

up time and time agam.
(NEWSPA.Pl:R ENi'ERPRlS£. ASSN

t

POSSIBILITIES TOO NUMEROUS TO COUNT

POMEROY,O.

992·2259
N~

LISTING - Middleport
- Vacant double klt Approxi·
mately 100' x 95' wrth garage.
Utilities available.
NEW LISTING - PRICE RE·
DUCED - Allhe edge of Mid·
dleport fantastic home with a
gigantic family room with a
beautiful fireplace, large ~ving
room, 3 bedrooms. 2\i baths,
full basement, swimming pool
and approximalely I acre of
ground. $69,000.00.

When you see lhe localioo, size, layoul and qualily ol lhis
molel you'll agree. Very mce residence incenler, jjus 14 unils.
Gas, hoi waler heal. ~r cond. unils in each, CA II residence,
3.8 acres. Rooms are lurnishe1. Can lor more inlo.

Call 446·0552'Anytime
Beth Null 245-9507
Steve McGhee
446'1255
BIIR 442 -OWNER SAYS REDUCE! 1974 Shultz mobile home
(12x65) Tip Out indurlfo&lt; • g" ndin&amp; :arpet, awning &amp; patio,
situated on 1 acre m-1. Sale r e ... . ,.,uded. Cily schools. Was
$20,000, now $17,9()(,. call lor detai~!

IMPECCABlE MANNER- Solualed oo a 1.15 acre Hal kiJ i1
peaceluiiXIUnl!y surroundmgs. This lovely bricl&lt; ranch has a
lol ol charm and room (1750 sq. H.l. Beaublullrim and garage
door make lhe outside very altractiv! Inside lhe house
everylh~g is clean as a ~n. 2 bedrooms lone very
~rge--owner wil dl'ltde d desired), large iving 100m wilh
bricl&lt; fireplace wilh heatilalor, beaulilul kilchen with al
apjjiances, jjus lrash compactor, central vacuum and
intercom system, huge. uliily 100m

BIIR 436 - EXCEUENT STARTER HOME with 2 BR~ lR, DR,
nice kitthefl, utility and new bathroom. Carpetd throughout
Soreene:l patio, carport Large lot Call lor appointmertt.

"FINEST HOtiE BUILT IN GALLIPOLIS"
Aboull860 Reuber! Ales/lire buih (today we itM ~lor sa~.
tomorrow i could be yours- You can imaJ!ine lhe efepnl social
galhenngs lhallooi&lt; place in lhis house in lhe 1800's as you
walk lhrougll t The woodwork (and lhere's a ~I of il) is
beautiful and '" good condilioo. There's 91ireplaces in all 12 ol
lhemwith sobd marble mantles), 1411. ceilings. large windows
wilh lull ierlglh shutters iiiSide and new slorms outside, 2
beautilui staircases. 7 BR!, 3 balhs, ballroom library, den,
d1mng room, and much more. lfs wjjl ilsulaled and very
slur&lt;ly . - Will outlast so1ne homes bu~ lllday. Many
poss~bllilles: anbQue shop, reslauran\ mu~ple lamiy
dW&lt;ilin&amp; etc. Yoo'll never appreoate rt unbl you've seen it Cal
us looay lor appt As~ng $74.900.

BIIR 389 - OWNER SAYS SEU TODAY! Your family will enjoy
the roominess of lh~ house. indues 4 BR~ 2 baths, LR, DR. buih·in
krtchen. Situated on large corner klt Oose lo town in city school
district !Green Elem.). Cal: ID see th~ one1

WE NEED LISTINGS
for lleies Co. listincs Call: Cheryl Lemley 742-3171
Real Estate General

MINT COIIOITION
1975 12x60 Mobile horne an&lt;1 1o1 lor sale. Localed I mie
beyond Cenlenary on Rt 141. Lol ndudes se1 up lor anolher
mobile home wilh waler, electnc and sewage hooi!Ups. Trailer
has new car~ and • partly lumisherl and k~chen
apjjiances. Over ~ ac1a As~ng $16.500.

NEW LISTING - Union Ave.
- Approximately 21.75 acres
land with small four room
house and storage building. L
C.C.D. water lap and well. Only
$10,500.00.
IIINI FARM- Chesler- App-oximately 4 acres with 3
bedroom home, full basement
gas I.a. heat drilled well, barn,
crib, outbuildings. 2 garages.
llnly $23,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - leading
Creek Road - Aneal 3 bed·
room ranch, fireplace with heaijlator, full basement. deck. at·
tached garage. Owner needs ID
sell'
.
REALTORS
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Dottie turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 985-4466

m

A
a.

IULTOI

Reel Estate General

TEAFORD

1

VIRGil B. SR.

216 r.. 2nd Sf.
Phone ·

OUIET NEIGHBORHOOD - IN CITY, VERY NICE 2 BEDROOM
FRAME WITH VINYl SIDING: HARDWOOD FlOORS, LARGE liVING
ROOM AND KITCHEN. BACK YARD LARGE ENOUGH FOR AGAR·
DEN. CARPORT, MOVE IN CONDITION. WE THINK THE PRICE IS
RIGHT Al $35,000. JUST liSTED!
NEW ON THE MARKET- CHARMING. 2 BEDROOM RANCH. HAS
LOTS OF EXTRAS, WOOD BURNER, ATIIC FAN, WAllPAPERED
KITCHEN. OWNERS HAVE PLANTED AVARIETY OF FRUIT TREES,
BLUEBERRIES, AND THERE IS A NICE GARDEN SPACE. 2 CAR
GARAGE. A VERY NICE COUNTRY HOME FOR $34,900. CITY
SCHOOl SYSTEM.
. . •••v'=•v

NEW LISTING - Remodeled
10 rm. home, and almost new
one story bldg about 24x42 for
your hobby on 2 lg, lots, Just
$23,000.

NEW LISTING- You just can't
beal this river view near Krog·
er'~ 2 bedrooms. balh, gas fur·
nace and lg. ~tting porch with
shade. As~ng $25,000.
COUNTRY - On paved rd.
Nice 2 bedroom ranch a few
yrs. old. Gas furnace, bath, modem k~chen and almost 2
acres for $18;000.
4 INCOMES - Just what you
have been wanting. 3 trailer&gt;
and small house. Just $20,000.
RANCH- About 1176 sq. ft.
of living space plus aiull basement lg, fenced lot. 3 bedrooms. ele. B.B. heat wood·
burner, insulated, near Racine.
$35,000. ~
. DANDY - One fl., one bed·
room ranch. Oak floors. nat gas
furnace, bath, Racine water
and level lot above all floods for
$12,500.

lB

HELEI,CALL
BRUCE
SUE IURI'HY
IILTOI ROUSH .

992-3325

llousin!J
lit:'/( It Ill· If t I 'f -~

•

4000' m/1ol road ~onlage w~h rural waler line, proouclive
crop land ol40 acres m/1, rahng paslur~ Two barns lor hay
and cattle, 1wo ether storage buildings. older 5 rq&gt;m horne
with modern lealures. Cily schools, near pr(lected new Rt 35.
Cali us lor more inlormalion.

Ill MACULATE! EXTRA ROOMY 2 BR, 2 BATH HOME SET ON AlO·
VELY lOT OVERLOOKING THE VIllAGE OF VINTON. EXTERIOR IS
TASTEFUllY OONE IN CHARCOAL GREY, AND IN NEW COND. AT·
TACHED GARAGE. JUST ISTED! f45.000

1·(614)·992-3325

NEW LISTING - 6 rm. frame
with balh, furnace, full basement wilh garage and 2 lots in
Pomeroy on quiel street
$27,500.

68 ACRES, 11/L

THE ENTERTAINER: POOl. FAMILY RM. W/FIREPLACE. FORMAL
DINING &amp; liVING RM., 4 OR 5 BRS, 2 FUll BATHS. 2 CAR
GARA~E. AFUN PLACE TO liVE! $76,000.
BEAUTIFUl WOODWORK. OPEN STAIRWAYS, NOOKS AND
CRANNIES GALORE. AHOME YOU AND YOUR FAMilY Will LOVE.
3 BEDROOMS PlUS POSSIBLE FOURTH IN AniC, FORMAL
DINING, DEN, lG. EAT-IN KITCHEN, NICE FRONT AND BACK
PORCHES. AlSO SUPER SIZE GARAGE API WITH 3 BEDROOMS.
LG. liVING RM: AND REC. RM. IN CITY. $75.000.
SPLIT FOYER TUDOR WITH ITS BRICK STUCCO ANO CEDAR
CO~STRUCTION THERE'S NO MISTAKiNG THIS TRADITIONAL
TUOOR HOME. CUSTOM DESIGNED AND BUILT BY ONE OF THE
AREA'S lEADING BUILDERS. THERE ARE 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS,
SPACIOUS KITCHEN WITH GENEROUS EATING SPACE. l-SHAPED
RECREATION HAS POOl TABLE. TV AREA DEN OR OFFICE. 2 CAR
GARAGE. CEN. AIR COND. MOVE IN COND. JUST MINUTES FROM
CITY!
HISTORIC - lfS QUITE AN ADVENTURE 6XPLORING THIS
BRICK COlONIAl. FROM THE BASEMENT TO THE AniCYOU Will
FEEl UKE YOU HAVE OONE BACK IN TIME AT l£AST ACENTURY.
4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FORMAl DINING. EAT-IN KITCHEN,
FOYER WITH OPEN STAIRWAY.IFYOU NEED EXTRA INroMEAND
YOU CAN RENT SECTION OF HOt,1E THAT HAS BEEN CONVERTED
TO SMAll APT. AlSO FRAME DUPLEX CONVENIENTlY LOCATED
ACROSS STREET PRESENTLY RENTING FOR $120.00 WEEKLY.
PLUS 4 TRAILER PADS. THISISNOTONLY AGREATPLACETOLIVE
BUT AlSO GOOD INCOME PRORERTY: BETTER CAll FOR AN
APPOINTMENT SOON!
FARM. LAND, LOTS:
121 ACRES, 0000 fARM LAND, HOME. MINERAL RIGIITS...... $100,txXl
270 ACRES. FARMER'S FARM. MOOERN HOME... ...................:$llO,txXl
176 ACRf.S. MINERAL RIGHTS. TIMBER ..................................... .$&amp;1,500
GREAT INtl BUY! 38 ACAfS, MIN. RIGHTS wtl. .................... .$12.txXl
&lt;MR ?I ACRES. PARTIAL 'MlOOED, EXCEL BLDG. SITIS .......... '22,000

we nero ~tgt g

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

128 ACRES FAIII-I.O'IELY BRICK HOllE
Your wile .;111ove lhis 7 year &lt;*f qu~ily built home. includes
5 bed100ms. 2 ballts, 2 fireplaces. lormal dinin&amp; lull finished
basemert\ heal pump and 3 ~rge covered patios. The larm
indudes 28 acre crop (good lx!llomsl. 60 plus paslur~ Land
~ys real good. Fenced. 102Bib. lobaccO base, 21arJP.! bams.
several shed~ sio with 48' auger Ieeder, 2 ponds. m~khouse.
jjus a remodeled renlal house, 2 mabie home hoolwps.
92 ACRES 11/L FARM
Tobacco base, some 20 A. of good bollom land, 40 A.
productive W&lt;lllenced paslureland, along wilh some woods.
Energy efficient home, barns lor M!stock and lob. slorage. All
localed on S. R 218. han way belween Gampolis and
Huntinglon. Asijng $86,500.

.'

There~

walllo wa! carpel. large utility 100m·and

~g

area.

OUTSTANDING MEDIUM PRICED HOllE
localed in one of lhe bl!sl residential nei;lborhoods (Spring
VaHey!. This altractive 3 BR bHevel has had J)lld care and
indudes lormal dining wilh f6ass doOIS onto deck. 2~ balh~
lamily room wilh woodburner, 2 car pra~~~o prolessicnaly
ltndscaped lol, brick patio, nit gas heat and central air.
Owner translerred, desires a quick sale and has hollte priced
accordintl al $69,900. Buyers Pro1ection Plan proWled.
SUBURBAN P~SE ·
Tucked away on a I ~ ac. knoll just~ m.ile oul ollown. You
have adrriired lh~ attractive 3 bedroom brick each time you
pased l Fealures '2 woodbuming fireplaces, I~ batlts,
outstanding kitchen, beaulilul lami]y rOom. 2 car ~rage.
lftment al)d lois li privacy wilh oulstanding vieW. Priced II
$89.500 because owner wan1s rt sold~Pdi.

Chevy relley

aport hub capo. 304·876·
3136.

Serv1ces
Home
Improvements

PLASTERING • Now and

.

'..•

ucll

lorm

IUNMODI

I I I
KJ I

motot. 304-875-2295.

Y

end underpenning. Beckhoe
work . For complete lawn

care . Coli 304-676·201 0.
Remodeling . siding. pl11ter·
lng, repairs, textured coat.

WHAT A &amp;HOT6U~
W!I7DIN~

cracked chipped wallo, ceil-

le A

ing, Spenleh style stucco.

CA&amp;!OF.

304-675·1680.

Now AI'Tangl the drded letlert 10

"""'
"'"by"'"-...-,.
"""""" · u '"II'
gHiad

I I X) OR ( I I I I J

.

(~-y)

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine

ELDER DENOTE WOBBLE

Golllpolia, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
814-446-4477

Anl*ef: That oil tycoon sure was this! -

"WELL"·T0-00

~~====:;:=======-,r-==========-l
B1

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Pasquale Electric Co . all
phalli of electric work. ell
work guaranteed . Aerial
truck rental. 614 - 446 ·

4066 .
SEWING Machine repairs ,
tervice . Authorited Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sciuors . Fabric Shop .

Business
Services
MOVING
PROFESSIONAl MOVING
&amp; STORAGE
LOCAL&amp; LONG
DISTANCESTORAGE
ALLIED VAN LINES
Call Collect 593·6691

Pomeroy. 614-992 -2284 .

Insured .

eser
t ays I Jum- · GULLY
d

Stork'a Trot &amp; Lawn Care.
Landacoplng polio, awning

I []

IHASRIGj
[] K tJ
tTRUFUE I
(]
) K]
Anewerhere: (

Home
Improvements

furniture cleaning , free eeti -

·:'L,.,-r.=""- ..

IINHEW

81

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Wotor removal.

·

Home
Improvements

Alum . vinyl eiding, storm
doore, windows, gutter•.

RON'S Television Service.

Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola,

Quazar,

end

Hanna.

ponds.

ditches .

buementa, ooc. Call 614446-4907. Carter &amp; Evano

houae colla. Call 304-676- Tranaportetion .
2398 or 814-448-2464.

Good· 1 E•caveting, base -

Fetty Troo Trimming, atump ments, footers, drivewaya,
removal . Call 304-675 · septic tanka, landscaping.
Call anytime 614 -446 ·
1331 .

Dick Fuller Home Improve·

4637, Jemeal. Davison, Jr.
owner.

menu. Corpent,Y-Piumblng
ond Electrical . Formerly D &amp;
F Controctora. Call 4463313 alter 3PM.

D . Day Refrigeration Sales ·
Profenionel service for ep·
plienc11, heating, cooling
end electric. Sell and in stall
Amana , Gibson . Kitchen
Aid . Residential. Commer cial. Indust rial . 304 -675 ·

4819 .
85

Need something haul ed
away or something moved?

We'll

do~ .

Call 446 -3169

between 9 end 6 .
James Boys Water Service .

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rienced roofing. including
hot tar appliCition, c1rpen·
ter, electrician. m11on . Cell

87

Upholstery

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
CARPET CLEAN .

304 -876 -2088 or 675 Rutland , Oh . 814 ·742 4680.
2903.

M1rcum Roofing S. Spout·
lng. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 years experience,

scotchguard·Witer extriC ·
tion. deodorizers. FREE eeti·
mates. Reason1ble rates.

Water Wells . Commercial
1nd Domeltic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales end Service.

Dotson 's Tree Service. Insured · Free Ettimete. 304 -

304-895-3802.

576-2897 .

Lennox Heatinc &amp; Au Condi·

l1001ng. AU Types
£1ectrtcal Wu tnJ.

ln sul~tlon.

Coil 446-B5 1 5
or 446-0445 li e
SHEET METAL WORK
We make custom duct
work . We Repair Fur·
naces and Heat Pumps.
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO.
6 T4 -446-4066

Nu·Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl

4

.....
~

siding

Mobile home 1wnings
Aluminum utility

614-446·7833 or 61 4-446·
1833.

- 691 Miller IJrive

1163 Sec . Ave .• Gallipolis.

.,

How met Patio Covers
How met screen rooms

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

J .A .R. Construction Co .
Water Lines . Footers .
Drains. All kinds of Ditching.

81 4-266-1182.

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO .

General Hauling

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT· Call614·256 -1141 or 61481
Home
lNG . Rt . 1, Box 366. Galli- 446 -1175 or 614 ·446 ·
7911 .
Improvements
polio. Caii614-367-0676 .
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Concrete work • Driveway.
Call Jim Lanier , 304 -675·
aldawalk.buomonu. oct . 83
Excavating
7397.
Free estimetea. Cell 614·
992-2762.
DOZER WORK By Ted

roofing and room addition .
Call 814-387-0408.

opoclollzlng In built up roof. Gone Smith, 992-8309 .
Call 814-388-9867 .

5~

..

•

.'.
'

WfRE GETTING AIIXIOUS TO sm THIS
brick ranch with entrance Ioyer, lorm~ di~n&amp; 3
bedrooms. very nice kitchen and 2 car garage. ~ mie lrom
Holzer Medical Cenler and convenient ID shoppin&amp; cily
schools. Located oo a quiet street il good nei;.btihood.
Owner wil ~slen lo an ofler.

-:

byildlnvs

446·2642

~
~

..•

Free Estimates

Real Estate General

-·

.

'.

.•

·.:~~.~

=
Jr.

picluresque setlinP.

·.'
•'
'

roomy house. 3 BRs wilh hard
--··· '!''
mom.dinn&amp; room aru, 1!11-ln kilchen
new lamiy mom addition willl s10ne fi1ep1ace. GIS heat and
central air and !here's klads o1 sb- ......... S53 000
Owner needs ~ scld!
..... _,.
' ·

WU::'.::::e':'J

-loll

STOI' TH£ WORLD - Here's lhe place to gel off. Beaulifcj
stone house on lhe edge of lown. Includes 4 over sized 8Rs, 3
batlts, Sllllken lamiy 100111, formal dining jjus eat·irl kitchen.
iving room has fireplace and·~ver .;ew. Covered !lone pelio
and 2 car garage. Belore you buy you mlisl see lhis one.
Offered al an unbelieveable price ol $65,txXl.

.
N.fllli$TIN.G
3 bedroom home silualed oo 2 acres w«h up 1o II acres
..aitble. The home has 3 king sized bedrooms. lamly 10011\
lqe ltill:hen, a place lor a woodbumer, plus an &lt;*fer lllollile
home lhtllhe rent could hel~ ma!le yrur house j)lyments.
YMh 2 acres rt Is $37,500, with II acres ifs $4'1,500.

Ike WIHIIIIn, Broker 446·3796

Coch11n, Assoc. 446-7181 ·
CALL. OR Jim
Clyde Walker, Assoc. 245·5276
Assoc. 446-4240
446-3643 EVE. B.D1vidJ. Hairston,
E. WIH!ftln. Assoc; 446-3796

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NICE COUNTRY HOllE AND 2 ACRES
1728 sq. ft.livmg space plus 2 balhroorns. Full basement- unfin· .
is~. Front porch 15 ft. by 32 ft. 2 car garage 32 ft. by 32ft., all
u+ one roof. 2 acres more or less. 400 ft. frontage by 216 ft.
de4j!, all useable. New home ncl completely fin~shed. Has a gerden
bath tub - its own water system ldnlled weiQ. Buck stove healer,
pi~ electric heating system. Has aboul everything you would
wanL Priced al $59.900. Phone now'
#587

For Sale By Owner
Phone 446-8221

~
REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE-$24,900
ln·(lalfiPQfis. Walk ID shop downiDwn. 6 rooms. 3 bedrooms. full
baiement. nice large fronl porch. No upkeep. Nice large shade
lreiS. ~ taxes. HoJ!!6'YOU should check on.

11530

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IN CITY
3 jledrooms, storm doors and windows, 6 room ranch style wrthno
uli!leeP. ~nyf siding. Nat gas furnace. Nice modern kitchen. Pnce
O!jly $29.900.00.

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes.
plush cafP't, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 12 acres with stable. rail
fences, swimming pool, garageworkshop. Immediate possession.

Phone 742-3171

IIIIR 539 - PRICE REDUCED! Large 2 story home wrth 4 bed·
rooms. 2 balhs. din1ng room, lull basement and carport Small yard
with new metal building. Conven~ent ID stores and shoiJPing.
I.Dcated on East Main Streel in Pomeroy and now ONLY $18,()()()1 1
IIIIR 541 - Invest 1n th~ roce b11ld1ng overtook1ng mumcipal
park in Middleport Downstairs has lovely 2 bedroom apartment
Upstairs is anolher apartmenl with 4 rooms ~nd balh. There IS
even a th~rd floor for more possibilities. Full basement Can be con·
verted mlo one lovely spacious home. Many more dela1ls. Call us.
IIIIR 542 - Th~ slructure ~divided into lwo apartments. Downstairs is an efficiency apartment Upstairs ~ a larger 4 room and
balh apartment lei your home pay for rtself. Live mlhe upstairs
and rent the downstair&gt; Oose ID municipal park•ng. Asking
$24,000.
MIIR 538 - PRICEQ.fl.E!JI$U&gt;'.JIIitii9Uf.l!as 2 bedrooms. large
storage area and w~~D'IIGiliege Avenue 1n Rul·
~nd. Priced now al $19.000.
IIIIR 544- Handyman's dream. There 1s a lol lo work wrth here'
Th~ home already has aluminum gd1ng and ~orm wmdows, 3
bedroom~ n1ce size kitchen. Lot ~ 45'xl46' wtlh outbwd1ng. AI our
selling price of $16.000 thiS is a real bargain. .
IIMR 536 - Cottage on nver. Located on St Rt 338. AnbqUlly,
th~ one ~ a real buy. Lot ~ 125'x200'. Neat and pretty our sale
price 1ncludes 2 sets ol bunk beds, table and chairs. antique bu·
reau and TV. Nice summer get·away al $7.000.

PLANTZ SUBDIVISION - Easylerms ava1lable. You coold assume
lhiS 12% mortgage wilh paymenl of $315 per rnonlh. 1nclud1ng
laxes and Insurance. Ranch w1lh 3 bedrooms. lull basement
woodburner. carport Only $28.900
BIOWEll - Take a look al lh1s mce ranch w11 h 3 bedrooms
garage. 2 level lots. very good buy
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#2399
NEW LISTING- Located 1n lown. very n1ce ra nch w•lh alum1num
3 bedrooms_ lots of storage. pnce very reasonable.
#1285

~dmg,

LARGE FARM - Good rolling land 01 150 acres. approx 40 acres
bllable, 2 large barns. pond and lobacco base Oul of town owner
wants lo sell new. will con~de1 land contrct owner i1nancmg or
offer&gt; Located on Rt 141
#0021
5 ACRES - N1ce wooded ~nd w1th county waler available.
excellenl bu1idmg ~le. 3 miles from town
#1125

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ATIENTION CITY COWBOYS
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H ho~? See lhe fenced-in pasture with 4 acres more or less
i udin&amp; a three bedroom home, just a few m~es from GalhPQI~.
EJt le.nt land for farming as well as new home conslruction.Large
baiil pi~ lwo storage buildings, pond slacked with cad5h, bass
anjl bluegills, large concrete drive. Call for a showing and be sur·

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#437

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MULTI PURPOSE PROPERTY

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~ted on Ohio RL 7 near Gallipolis. Walk·ln cooler, display calli·
n~ lhree rental mobile homes - income now $660 per month.
Co4ld be 6 room brick home plus 2 rooms lor business - wha·
~ you have in mind. Flower shops. small grocery store, cany011( etc. lots of uses. Phone for appoinlment ID see. Live in part-

buJiness in other part Rent mobile homes. Greal opportunity!
,
#S80
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NEW BRICK APPROX. I YEAR OLD

white brick lront 6 rooms. 3 bedrooms. 2 balh~ nice modern step-

~~ k~chen, elec. heal pump w~h A.C. Two car garage. N1ce
lanliscaped shady back yard. Beautiful home. You must see !hiS

o~

Df,CEMNG..... You wonl feel ~lie you are closellllown in litis
Quiet neilhborhood bul you're Oflly aslllne's lhnlw- u...

krtchen wilh buiH&lt;n bar and possible mortgage assumption.
Localed In Lake Drive Subdivision. Owner anxllus 1o sell
~kilg $67,900.

~glt.*-

$.

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Ot.ll£11WO S10tY ._AT EDtlt: OF CITY- WallS. R
160. 21c:res of land wiltrpiclln booll Slllin Orilnlllnilll
on 011&lt; Irion lf!llnd Windows. dooos llld
lllir c:aq
·~ iiiiCif liSle. I-. . . hlssbltl ..... rodt
garden and nice lreos including lqe
1ree. Ollio
River and Cily view.lel us sltow you litis
older home il

2 STORY

M~GKEE

M. l. "Bud" McGHEE
Broker
Cheryl Lemley.
lleics County Associate

mo

RIGHT START - Newer 3 BR bnck and h11te ranch oo
Rodr\ev·Bidwell Rd. Excelently cared lor home wilh II! balh,
beautiful kilchen with ~~ ol cabinets and nice living room has
new carpet Nice lot in
ID shopJin&amp;
Possible loan
.

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()t~ 3 years old. This 4 BR house has 21uil balhs. 2hall balhs,
lull ~t family room wilh fireplace, 2 car g,vaat, nice

30 A. 11/L, OUALITY
HOllE &amp; SARN
Top qualily 9 room house
wrth 7 rooms .carpeled, 4
bedrooms, balh, and full ba·
sement plus 3 car garage.
Good barn approx. 30'x40'
plus chicken house approx.
12'x30'. Approx. 10 acres
II liable and 20 acres paslure
w•lh large pond. Beautiful
locaiiOn with . 'h m•le Iron·
lage on blacktop Stale High·
way.

ma

$4.000 DOWN - ASSU. 1011. IIOITGAGE
Owner says soil t now. Very allractive 3 bedroom 4 yr. &lt;*f
horne. Dealraled lo su~ anyone's lasla freplace, 2lul balhs,
nice large ltill:hen, heal pump, 2 car garage, workshopnd J
acre tree-studded yard. $59.000.

ASSUME F.H.A. MORTGAGE
Owners are anxious lo !i!lllh~ attractive 3 bedroom·lr&gt;level
near Rooney. This home ~ decoriled 1o suit anyone's lasle.
Includes a ~rge L1haped larnily room willl a warm and COl'/
woodbumer, fireplace II i~ng room. dining room, eqaipped .
kilchen, 2 ~ baths, 2 car garage pus 10Dx300 landscaped
yard. Cily schools. $61,900.

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~4x70' P.ATRIOr ~011~
All tsa!je land, 3 bedroonl!.
bath. storm doors and win·
do~ Nice, just like new
motlern kitchen with bwh&lt;n
cabinets, gas range and
refrigeralor, rural water system
Nice storage bulld1ng, ~I
mineral rights~- Must see thiS
set·up.
11601

RfDUC£D PRICE 011 WAifiiOUSE
The localicrt ol lhis buldilg is excelenl and wil greally
mprove when lite Upper H~ Brilge. is COfl1)leled.
Approx. 7000 sq. fl. ol sdid 1110ae1e construciloo, 2 heal
pumps, 2 baths, office and showroom fmished walls inside
and lluorescent liglllin&amp; Froolage oo RL 7 near Crown ~
fNIICirlg possible. Reduced lo $1Jl.OOO. Give us acalloday.

VACAMT LAND VERY CLOSE TO TOWN
2 tracls olland on Mill Creek (2 acres and 6acres). Close ID
town. Good building silo. Won'llasllong Call lor inlo,

good housekeelin&amp; lhis horne receives a HI rating from lhe
broker. Altractive 3 bedroom brick includes II! ballts. 2 car
g,vage, super nice kitchen. fireplace and a large corner lit

d1y, mech11nlc on

-to -··to

tour ordlnlty -

Sales. New 1nd ueed tir11,

alto, tiro ropalra. 1803 Jof·
leraon Avo. Point Pleuenl .
304-676-5405. Now open

eao .. One eet 1uper

Boats and
Motors for Sale

ono

Billy Lao' a Tlret and Banery

Four 14 "
wheels

76

unocr_,_..;;_, _....;.______

Service ell mekes
BURDETTE CAMPER Appliance
modele refrlgertora ,
SALES &amp; SERVICE . U.S. &amp;
wuhera dryers. ranges.
Rt . 60, Coolville, Oh 614· compaclon.
diehwaehers.
867-3386 .
microwave•. Heating &amp;
Cooling, Shoot Metal Work .
1972 Prowler 22 ft .. oleepo Gallia
Refrigeration Co .
8, A-1 cond. Call446-9669. 614-446-4068
.

f

INEXPENSIVE LAND
128 acres. moslly wooded oo klwer route 7. 3 possible
homesites oo ad Rl 7 and I excelent site on lop li ridge.
Over'ooking rNer and rest of Gaiia Co. Offered.al $35,txXl.

and

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuorles

ftiJ\}~ IDft ~ TIIATICII•-·DWOIID GAlli
~ ~ ~~~
byHinr1-llldBobLH
··~

Real Estate General

by, then call us.'

~calioo

76

window• Louver to lit '82 or
24 hre. 1
'84 Comoro or Flrablrd . duty.
Never utod . 304 -578 2119 .

SUPERMARKET IN TOWN

4.4 ACRES ON CHERRY RIDGE
Close lo lfu Grande. Galipolis schools. Beaulilul spol lor
building-paved road, wooded area. Rural waler close. Dnve

BROKER'S HI CHOICE
Because ol lhe quality construction, excelent

Correct Craft &amp; Ski Su·
preme, !emily tkl boata.
Now &amp; uaod, Parkoraburg,
WV 304-422-8433 or 304·
422-2387.

repair commercial and residential. free eltlmates. C1ll

Owner has loo many irons II lhe lir• b wiling 1o sacnfice lh•
wei established business. Very successlul and very den AI
1nvenlory, 5 walk-In ooolers and l!Qt141&gt;menl.lor sale a1 bargail
pnce. Cal Ike Wiseman lor delails.

39.4 ACRES - RIO GRAll DE
Nice wooded acreage along Centerplint (Cherry Ridgel Rd.
Has ltxXl black walnullrees panled 15 yws ago. WiD make
a good ~vestmerll lor anyone. $22,txXl.

DREAM HOME AND 11 ACRES M/L
With barn. paslure. woods, 4 BR horne, '.1 basemenL AI
localed IU~ 3 miles ~om cily limils in cily schools. Home has
llx27' larnilv room, 12'x23' ~~ng room. 24'x4(J basement,
balh and h~f. all in good slale ol repair. You need lo see lh~
new listing lo·appreciale.

8e1re dune cert 6 hp, reer

Boat• and
l\t1otorl for Sale

81

OWNERS MOVING OUT OF TOWN
Cily Schools - This is a nice 3 bedroom, brick and hme
ho11te just 2 miles weslli IDwn. lncltlles a warm and COl'/
f~replace, lull basement wilh lamiy room. central air, garage
and more. Call to see lh~ one loday.

lamily room wilh al'dher fireplace, IMge ubity room and
outside entranca Approx. I acre Hal lot lor gardenin&amp; pool.
elc. Ask~&amp; $79,900.

1981 Yamaha Vlnogo f760 .

. . TURN. YOIJR H088'1 INtO ABUSINESS
New IISilng on Roule 35 is periect lor an anbue shop,
msuran.ce office, health lood slore. or ccunlless oilier
IJOSSI~k Residence has over 2Im sq. 11. ollivin~ space: 3
BRs. rl4C2 balh, lar&amp;e, equpped eat&lt;n kilchen ~vmg room
w/lireplace, lami~ room w/wocdtlurner, olfice 0. study, large
..tlily room. and enclosed balcony. Over 1500 sq. It o1
wOOishop are., sltnge and ~0111 display area 2 car garage
wilh grease pil and caruinj 100m alsl. 1.3 ac. (partialy
lenced) lor garden, pod. etc. 8oyefs ProlectiOII Plan Provlled
OPwner anxllus lo sell lor oo~ $69,!QJI WHal a Barga~' ·

lor more inlo.

MINI RANCH - OVER FIVE ACRES WITH BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF
SURROUNDING COUNTRYSIDE. 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME RE·
CENTLY REMODELED, IMMACULATE CONDITION. COUNTRY
KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, REFRIG. AND WOOD BURNER
lG. BARN. BETTER CALl SOON. THE PRICE IS $34,900. JUST
liSTEO'

1981 YZIIO Yemohe dirt
bike, 1977 8M400 Suzuki
dirt bike, f150. Call 814·
892-113011.

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space. Buildilg has numerous possibilities. Cal Ike W..man

SPRING IS BEAUTIFUL IN THE COUITIY!
Bul you'l also enjoy being ooly minutes from 1own il lhis
deluxe bricl&lt; ranch. This horne is very nee inside and oul and
offers lois ol space wilh 3 bedrooms. 2 batlts, large eol-ln
kitchen wilh dining ar.ea, 13x21 living room willl attractive
bricl&lt; fireplace, 1M lull basement lhal has finished 24x24

Ridden only o low timet,
1982 Kowuokl KOSO,
•450.; 1877 Kowoukl400,
atreet bike. 1,800 mllea.
f800 . or beat offer 0 n both
blku. Coli 982·5889 or
514-985·3595.

76

&amp; Campers

32,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING IN TOWII
Masonry buildirl&amp; oo lsi and Sllru&lt;:e has 5 exll!rMJr and 3
inlerior kladirlg decks. Over 2,400 ,;ct II. ol improved office

u\Ud~e~ Cartaday CReaQtokL
25 ~ust,9tkeet, QaQQip~lr. ~kio

Motorcycle•

187, Herley Davldaon 1200 1979 15 11. Storcralt Tri· 77 Auto Repair
CC, ull drttt, f3.000 . Call haul. 90 HP Mercury, oxc. 1- - - - - - - - 814446-9370.
cond. Atklng •4.700 Call E &amp; V Body Shop Cuatom
448-7296.
pointing, A-C welding .
Crook Rd. 446Goorgot
81 Hondo. CM 200 T Twin Chrlt Craft cabin crulaer 36 9304.
Sta r good condition. ft . with trailer, f12,600 .
•13 0. Call 614 -992 · Call614-246-6032 or 304·
61111 .
676-1731 alter 6PM .
_7_9_ M
_o_t_o_r_s _H_o_m_ e_s__

BEFORE LISTING WITH JUST "ANY BROKER" CONSIDER A FEW IMPORTANT
QUESTIONS:

Poor West 1s on the to.1SI -

Broker-Auctioneer

E . ~irl.....

197. Honde Hawk CB 400
T2, IXCIIIant condition , low
mil~. f750 . Coli 614·
245·J504.

Selling Your Home Is A ·Major Decision

but the slam is home. You
simply lead dummy 's fourth
club and disca rd vour ltttle

••
3•

By Oswald Jacoby

Real Estate Generel

new

198, Kaw10akl 260 ttroot
bike,, UOO. Coli 448-4803.

you attack clubs . East sh\JWS
ou t on the third club lead.

your sPade queen.

Real Estate General

crulee,

188t Hondo CM 400 cua·
tom. !llkl now. 50po mil••·
Coli 4411·4401111fter ~:00 .

IN REAL ESTATE
SALES IN GALLIA ·CO.

and drawing trumps. Now

Dealer: South
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

c11~1tte,

ace of hearts. rurting a hea rt

+K Q '
Vulnerable. Neither
Ea st

N~·l

Bren\te ntw llbergleu mo·
torcyele IIddie bege, oelllng
cheef' Coli 4411·94 1e.

rubbiir, low mllu. ,xtellent
concltlon. Con 4411-44011
attor. e:oo. ·

IUllOI

of that
You start by winmng the

..tKQIOii
" 32

1\"orth

these things happens. you

EAST
• J 10 9 8
.. I(Q 9 5 4

SOl IT II
• Al./ 2

West

m

on. you make seven. If one of

'

187• Goldwlng OL 1000
lull dreoud. AM·FM etereo

Wiseman Real Estate Agency;

"Test Your Play as Oeclar·
er." we are back at a slam.
We won't discuss the bidding
except to say that the slam
is a good one. II clubs break
3·3 and the spade finesse is

NO RT~

Virginia L SmitiT
REAL ESTATE

'

Stuck in the end play

.. JI087 2
Estate General

.

Oswald Jacoby and Jamaa Jacoby

74

74 • Motorcycle•

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0.7

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ATTRACTM LOG CABIN - Thisiuoul &lt;*1 time
home silual!d oo ~ ecre - flo Grinde. includes alqe
stone li!eplace, elec. FA ~ 16d711it Ucelenilor 1or 2
m,~~'::'" llil~ and more. Priced mse11 11

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NEW LlmNG IN 101111
Greallocalion il.lown.'Qder 2~ home. 2BRs and I bath
eai·WI ltill:hen, d111ing 100m and livmg raom. GIS heat ~kilg
$20,txXl.

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¥, ACRE, 1969 IIARRIOfl HOllE ,
.
Soieened in front porch, 2 balhs, 2 bedrooms, 12 x60' mobile
hojne. setting on approx. '• acre of land. BuiH·in cabinets, gas
r • rural water system, fuel oil forced air furnace. All of lhis for
Olti $6,000.00.
600
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GOOD LIVING FOR SALE! 78\\ acres m/1. Lovely
brick and frame ranch displays 2 baths, 2 BRs.
16x24 kttchen w/ washer. dryer, double oven
range, refrig., OW. disp. large living room. artificial
fireplace. Master bedroom ~ 16x18. Cellar house.
shed aoo 30x50 barn. 44 acres of pasture with
spring and_pond. Localed in Cheshire Twp.

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HOllE - 2 ACRES IN THE COUNTRY . . .
Hoom house with 3 or possible 4 bedrooms. kitchen w~h bUih·ln
cabinets. storm windows and door~ large building, approx.
3~x60' located on State Highway. Call for your appointmeril now.
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#364

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WHAT A DEAL! $27,000, LAND CONTRACT

Qfne see fol yourself. Cozy 6 rooms and bath, dishwasher, refri·
Jlator, woodburner, all like new. SIDrage building and 2 car car~ Kyp~r Creek Schools.
#
552

J

VACATION CAMP BY BlUE .LAKE
.
Ol!lter financing, sundeck. rural water, septic system, eleclnc.
Bif1 ~ with camping trailer or without concrete pad. Great fishini
' and move right in.
.
#~4
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41
LOW DOWN PAYIIENT. OWNER FIN.AIICING . .
you looking for a 2 bedroom home overlooking lhe Oh10 River
little maintenance. Beginner home or retirement home. we·

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#260

6.95 ACRES VACANT LAN-D OF.F Rf. 35
_·
ng land - Beside old U.S. Highway 35. In an ilea lllat ~ de.
ng fast Rt 35, shlirt distance west of Gllli~ Get rt now..
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if ;
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&amp;ACRES } . . ' . '
n 10 minute drive ·to dawntown. Glllipois. City Schoof Sys. Has hookup fol mobi•d home. Gallia Rtnl Water, electric and
tan~ Night Nehl on pole. 200ft. !rootage on Graham Schoof .
Timber. Building sites. CaU now,
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N477
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MAKE THIS YOUR NEW ADDRESS- 2ffi Kineon
Drive. Th~ ranch style home offer&gt; 3 bedrooms.
!OxlO dining room, kitchen, large living room,
laundry, lwo storage rooms. attached garage. car·
peting, and cent air.
JUST GREAT FOR A LOG HOME! 12 acres m/1,
approx. 720 ft. level road Ironia~. Rural water ·
available. Oose to town. Call for more Information.
ADDISON-DAVIS LANE - HI story frame home
fealures 3BRs. 1'h baths, krtchen, lR. Remodeling
undeiWay. New insulation, wiring, plumbing,
windows and furnace. Skytik!IIS in bedrooms. patio
doors. sundeck. carpeting. KC school district
COIIIIERCIAl BUILDING - 62x80 all steel
conStruction with fireproof insulation. Overhead
crane has office and balhi Formerly used for boat
sales and repair. located across from Silver Bridge
Plaza with access ID lhe Ohio River. Potential
unlimited.
.
FHA-VA SPECIAl - 3 bedroom. maintenance
lree hOme. !\'~ran~ no doV!Il payinentl (FHA
"'~ approx.
$1,250
. down). located in ~odney ·
.v;;,:,~
. •
•· 11
DONT LET THIS SLIP BY! - Well kept ranch
hOme lealures natural wood siding, deck. cent air,
Woodburnin~ stove. carport carpeting and brand
new drapes. Approx. 1100 sq. It ol iving space
which inCludes 3BRs. 2 baths, lR, FR. dining room
end kitchen. Located just minutes from !own in lhe
ciy school dislrict Call i:lr an appointment.

.

ASTYLE OF ITS OWN ... describes this lovely white
brick home with 3100 sq. ft. 3 or 4 bedrooms. 3
balhs, 20x40 FR. dining room, krtchen w/ DW.
disp., microwave and trash compactor, inlercom.
cenL air, 2 car garage, utility bldg., deck and a
20x40 pool. Beautifully landscaped.
CREMEENS ROAD -53 acres more or less. 10 A.
tillable, ba~nce woods. remodeled homa l'h
st!l'ies. 7 rms. and balh, new ~ding, new well,
excellenl 24x40 sleel building, several old
buildings. Only $37,500.
FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION -Nice brick home lealures 3 BRs, 1'h baths, lR, kitchen w/range, d~p.,
OW, family room has wood burning stove, dinette,
patio doors, carpeting, gas heat cent air, attached
garage w/eleclric opener.

30 AJ;RES 11/L. HARRISON TWP.- $27,()()()11 1h
story home offers 3 BRS. bath, dining, living,

kllehen w/range..alum. siding, 24x60 barn. moblle
home hook-up and 1100 lb. lobacro base. Call for
an appointment
IIA!(E US All OFFER -OWNERS HAVE MOYED
TO FLOR:•u _And would 11.ke their home sold 111 ~
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~tlv.like new Sllltt .~ IS located on llebby
~and ofleB approx. 3,000 sq, ~ of.IMng area
Plus 2 car garage and ~ ol the area snicest pools.
Over $lOO,OOO.
JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR IIOBlLE HOllE La
·
- rge
~for sale. I acre or more lOcated on blacktop road
in North Gallia School D~trict Gallia Counly rural
water available.
lOTS Of POTENTIAl - GREEN TOWNSHIP 180 acre farm located in North,up area. Two story
frallle older home with seven rocims and bath,
coonty water. 16x60concrete sikl, corncrib, equip.
shed, IMk house &amp; blm. On ~ road.

HEY MR. INVESTOR -You can move mlo lh1s one
LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOME IN COUNTRY!
and
pay your paymenls w1lh lhe renl lrom lhe
Th~ one slory frame home can be your s lor just
other lwo. Duplex. double w1de and a lenced pool
$21,000. Two bedrooms. living room, kitchen
w/ range, very nice large wood burning fireplace, can be yours. Rear duplex un111s absolutely lovely.
Rust1c walls, 3 BRs_ loh. woodburner. beamed
concrete block garage. Fronts on Raccoon Creek
ce~llngs,
3 BRs. ava1lable 1n llonl uml v.1lh k1lchen
on 2.97 A. m/1.
. hv1ng room. ch1mney lor woodhurner. base'llent
NORTHUP - ASSUIIE 8~ lOAN on this lovely 3 balh. Doublewtde has 3 BRs. k1lchen. hvmg room
BR brick ranch. Seven yr. old beauty has 1488 SQ . and balh.
ft of living plus a 2 car garage. Special features are
a 16x24 LR. l'h baths, cent a1r. rrane, reng.. OHIO RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - Localed 3 m1ies
below Eureka Dam. Ideal 101 camp1ng. bu:ldmg or
,.asher &amp; dryer. Located on Scott lane.
mobile homes.
BEEF CAfll£ COUNTRY - l32 acres. mostly COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL - Th1s nme
clean hill paslure. good fences, I Y, story home. room lwo story home lealures two balhs. d•n•ng
large barn, lob. base, fronts on 3 roads near room. kitchen w1lh new cabmels. dishwasher.
carpebng, fireplace, lull basement gas heat block
Mudsock. P!ice reduced to $56,900.
3 car garage, v1nyl s•d•ng. Level lol w1lh h•ghway
COULON1 ASK FOR A BETTER LOCATION - fronlage on Upper Rt. 7
Hand~me Victorian home otters 3 BRs, I'h baths. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR ABRICK HOME? - Then
laundry room, living room, family room, carport. lh~ may be just lhe one Convemenliy localed on
unattached garage, 16x32 fenced pool. K~chen Rt 35 West !his home offers a large hv•ng room.
has range, refri~. rHI and d~p. Nat gas heal and dimng room. 3 bedrooms. lau ndry room. l'h baths,
alum. siding. located allhe edge oftown.Call for an equipped k~chen. carpel1ng, cenlral a1r and a 2car
appointment
garage.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP - 375 acres, rhore or less.
approx. 'h grassland and ~ woods. good bam, ~rge
tob. base, fronts on 3 rd&gt; $215 per acre.

CENTENARY -lOT FOR SALE -Super iocahon.
93 ft. frontage on Roule 141 County waler
available. Asl\ing $6.500

EVANS HEIGHTS - $27.900 - Th1s home
VINTON ARfA - U.n ACRES M/ L... Older two features 2 BR!, large hv•ng room w1lh firep;ace.
story frame home has 3 or 4 BR~ living room. k~chen. and ~undry room. New carpet and painl
krtchen, balh, carpeting, woodburning slove. in~de. .
$17.9()()1
LOVELY TO LOOK AT - A pleasure lo own!
Handsome ranch offe~ over 2300 sq. ft. of living
space. 4 BRs. 2 baths, kitchen with eye level range,
cook top, OW, and disp. 18xl8 fam~y mom with
fireplace, large living room with bow window,
laundry, dining room with fireplace.

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Inside today :

Times-Sentinel

Weather ·

DWI, aggravated burglary cases ·d ominate .c ourt docket ·
GALLIPOLIS - Daniel I. Jones
Jt., 22, Point Pleasant, and Harold

18, Rt. 2, VInton, DWI, case
continued to Tuesday.
Joseph R. Bennett, 00, 1811
Chestnut St., DWI, not gullty plea,
Aprll 2 pretrjal; Anthony D.
Burnhelmer, 39'h Court St.. dlsor·
derly conduct and assault, notgullty
plea. AprU 2 pretrial.

D. Rainey, 41, Letart, W.Va., were
each fined $lXJ, sentenced to three
days In jall, given a 6().day driver's
license suspension and 18 months
probation for DWI Thursday In
GaUipolls Municipal Court.
Jones was also fined costs for
speeding and Rainey was assessed
In traffic cases, Everett H. Carey.
costs for left of center.
75, 35 Henkle Ave., forfelted$40bond
A DWI charge against Debra L. for fallure to control; Jeffrey L.
Luzadder, 31, Point Pleasant. was Golden, 23, Rt. 2, Bidwell, forfeited
reduced to reckless operation and $40 bond for improper backing;
she was fined $100. An additional Charles D. Spetnagel, 00, ChUUcharge of left of center was cothe, forfeited $40 bond for passing
dismlssed.
on the right; Thomas G. Denney, 31,
A DWI charge against Gary A. Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was fined $15 for
Warren, 28, 412 Smith Drive, was speeding; John C. Stevens Jr., 21,
dismlssed by the complaining Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was fined $11 for
witness at pretrial.
speeding; Ted W. Stoney, 56,
Also dismissed at pretrial was a Kanauga, was fined costs for
domestic violence charge against drlvlngundersuspenslon; JamesE.
Gary E . Adkins, Rt. 3, Gallipolis. An Kessinger, 2l: Rt. 1, Oak Hill,
assault charge against Wetzel forfeited $40 bond for failure to stop
Kingery, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was also
for a stop sign; Bruce D. Henson, 21,
dropped.
Gallipolis, was fined $50, received a
Judy Bennett, Rt. 1, Northup, suspended six-month jaU sentence
forfeited $aJ bond for fallure to pay and six months probation for driving
·parking tickets, and John R.
under suspension.
Caldwell, 21, Cheshire, was flned$12
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
for fishing without a license.
Matthew A. Tipton, 00, Joliet, ill.,
Cases slated for continuation $36; Garrett R. Gorrell, 68, Parkerswere Brent D. Blake, 24, Point burg, W.Va. , $38; David W. WilePleasant, driving under suspension, man, 27, Canton,$38; KerryE.Ours,
continued untll Wednesday; Ed- 21, Rt. 2, Cro)VIIClty,$39; Charles E.
ward L. Kirby, 47, 45 Lincoln Ave., Wood, 40, South Charleston, W.Va.,
faUure to stop for a stop sign, AprU 5 $39; Terry J . Peck, 34, Brainerd,
trlal; Elizabeth A. Underwood, 19,
Minn., $40.
1
Rio Grande, speeding, case conTimothy L. Petrie. 23, Rt. l ,
tinued toAprU 4; BrtanL. Marcum, Ewlngion, $40; Irene M. Mclntosh,

50, Hamilton, $41; Eldon R. Thoance bond and scheduled for AprU 4
mas, 00, 425 Lower River Road, $42;
.
pretrial.
George M. Evans, 32, Bassett, Va .• . In traffic cases p~ through
$43; Shirley A. Neff, 58, Pinehurst, court, Robert L. Bates, 21, 2189
S.C.,$43; DarrellC.StoneJr.,37,Rt.
Eastern Ave., was tined $12 on
2, Point Pleasant, $44.

o

$1195

.

Roger E . Pace, ill, Rt. 2, Patriot,

temporarUy laid off, and Julie A.
Roach, 28, Rt. l, Northup, courier.
Albert Buck, 74, Ravenswood,
W.Va., retired, and Martha W.

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..............
.......,... _,... ..... . ,. ,.,..,...
here fo~r.
_,

1982 FTSOO ASCOT'"

Simil1r uvincs on other non-current models in stock.
MARCH 1'1 TII ROUGII APRIL 16, 19114

t .-....................
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1114

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UPPER ROUTE 7 JUST SOUTH
OF THE HOLIDAY INN.
433 UPPER RIVER ROAD
SALES
.PHONE 446-2240

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
PHONE 446-2648

___________iii:ij_____;;;;;;;;;;;i

.

·

In The s·tore
-Is Reduced

By WILLIAM KRONHOI.M
Auoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- The recent announcement
of $29 bllUon In oll company mergers Is prompting
Senate consideration of a halt to more petroleum
Industry takeovers whlle Congress studies their
economic impact.
Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La., hoped thls week to
win Senate approval of a six-month moratorium on
mergers among the 50 largest oU companies. The ban
" wlilllit'be"llttached to a ·blll providing additional U.S·.
atil to El &amp;ivador.
Johnston ordlnarUy Is an aUy oftheoU Industry. But
with three of the biggest corporate mergers In history
announced In the last month, Johnston said, some
study is In order to determine what effeet the mergers
have on oU explotatlon and on the economy In general.
1n recent weeks, Standard OU Co. of Caltfornla
announced It will pay $13.2 bllUon for Gulf Corp.;
Mobil Corp. said It plans to pay $5.7 billion for Superior
OU Co., and Texaco Inc. has said It will pay $10.1
billion for Getty OU Co.
Johnston agreed last week to drop an effort to block
the Socal.Culf and Mobil-Superior mergers.
But he cited Wall Street estimates that $44 bllllon to
$51 bUUon In additional mergers "walt In the wings ...
unless the U.S. Senate steps In and does something
about it."
Johnston, who is the senior Democrat on the Senate

~3.00

r

85.00

STORE
342 SECOND AVE. ·
GALLIPOLIS.

FREE

PARKING

and Joyce WoDenberg, lOth dlstrlct coordinator for

Walter Mondale.

Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said
every dollar devoted to the takeovers is a dollar not
used for oU exploration.
Johnston's rider would be attached to a
multlmiUlon-dollar aid package for El Salvador that
is likely to be controversial In Its own right.
Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn ..
said last week the Senate will vote Tuesday or
Wednesday on a plan to provide an additional $61.7
rnWion for El Salvador In the current fiscal year.
1lle admlnlstrattoil 'riiquested IRJPI)Iemental aid or
$1~ 7 m1lUon on top of $64.8 million approved last fall.
The amount has been whittled down to $61.7 miUion.
1n other action this week, the House Is scheduled to
vote on legislation designed to ease the rt'.-lew process
tor people receiving disability benefits. Hundreds of
thousands have been thrown off the dlsabUlty rolls In
the past three years.
Under the legislation, the Social Security Administration, with some exceptions, would have to
demonstrate a medical improvement In the condition
of recipients In order to remove them from the
disability rolls.
The Socal Security Administration announced late
last week that Health and Human Services Secretary
Margaret M. Heckler was considering an 18-month
moratorium on dlsablUty review~ whlle a panel of
medical experts clarifies the medical-improvement
standard.

Meigs fund raiser draws 175
Approxlma tely 175 people attended the Meigs County fund
raising bean dinner held at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
Saturday night.
Principal speaker was Mary
Ellen Withrow, state treasurer.
Withrow told about the invest·
ment program of Ohio tax dollars.

~

Others on hand were Jolynn Boster.
94th District Representative to the
House: John Kulewitz, Gary Hart's
campaign director In Ohio, and
Joyce Wollenberg, New Lexington,
lOth district coordinator for Walter
Mondale.
Local candidates attending were:
Sheriff James J . Proffitt; Joe Sayre

and Dan Mullen, candidates for
county commissioner; Peggy
Brickles. candidate for county
recorder; Mary Swain , candidate
for county treasurer and Dr. James
Witerall, candidate for county
coroner.
Henry Hunter Is Meigs County
chairman for the Democratic party.

Ohio lawmakers ready
for annual spring break
By ROBERT E. MILLER
A!l!ioclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Legislators are expected to take up
numerous pet bills and then adjourn
late thls week untll after the May 8
prtmary.

For the most part, majority
Democrats in both houses have
stayed away from controversy this
year, .and that' s unlikely to change
with legislative elections about six
weeks down the road .

Senate President Harry Meshel,
D- Youngstown. and House Speaker

Vern Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
expect to adjourn Thursday or
Friday.
All99 House seats are up for grabs
this year. while 16 of the 33 Senate
seats are at stake. Most of the
incumbents are seeking ~lection
and will be campaigning.
Much of this week's action will be
In committees. The House scheduled hearings on 82 bills at 23

commlttee sessions, and senators
will consider 52 measures at nine
meetings. Only those proposals
already approved by one house have
a chance of final passage this week.
The House Judiciary and Crtminal Justice Committee wUI open
hearings on some Senate measures
designed to help crtmevlctims. One
bill would waive certain statute-oflimitation restrictions for assault
victims who are delayed In learning
the identity of their attackers.

dismantle the Department of Education, fight for school-sanctioned
classroom prayer and seek tax
breaks for parents of private school
chUdren.
He has managed to deliver on
none of those promises.
The Senate has rebuffed his

Education. which Bell had the
foresight to set up in late 1981,
Reagan has succeeded in placing
himself In the lead of a crusade to
raise school standards. He and Bell
speak with pride of "the grassroots
revolution" that Is taking place in
state houses and school boards
across America .
There Is no disputing that In the
wake of the excellence commission's report entitled "A Nation At
Risk" and similar studies from a
host of ot her blue ribbon panels, the
American school system is in
ferment. Educators relish the

attention they are getting, even if so
much of It Is critical.
And Reagan , instead of having to
admit his fallure to achieve any of
his major educational policies, is in
position to take credit for these
developments.
Opinion polls have shown the
public generally regards Democrats as more concerned about the
schools and more likely to providE'
quality educallon.
But polls also Indicate that
Reagan has polished what was once
a tattered image on educational
issues.

Without spending an extra dime,
Reagan has moved to the head or the
excellence parade.
In a recent assessment of Reagan's education record, Denis P.
Doyle, director of education policy
studies for the American Enterprise
Institute, and Terry W. Hartle, a
research scientist for the Educational Testing Service. said it was
ironic that despite its commitment
"to diminishing the federal presence In education. the Reagan
admlnlstra tion has succeeded in
making education a national concern ofthe highest priority."

By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER
AleoclateciPress·Wrlter
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) -Officials suspended ballot
counting lli El Salvador's presldentlalelectlon after a dispute about the
impartlailty of those handling the
count, c;applng a day In -which
bureaucracy did more than bullels
to prev€11! thousands from voting.

The first results from Sunday's
eight-way election. were not expeeled to be avaUable untll this
afternoon, according to officials of
the Central Elections Council which
oversaw the voting.
Officials predicted there would be
fewerballotstocountlhanexpected.
'lbousaruls were prevented from
voting In the Central American

nation's first presldentlal election
slnce1977byashortageorabsence
ofballots,ballotboxes,reglstrations
lists and election oftlclals at
hundreds of precincts.
Gueri1Ua activity was Ught,
however, and ~edmore aimed
at harassment than preventing the
v0te. Tile leftist rebels had given .
confllctlng .advance signals about

whether they would try to disrupt
the elections, which they called a
farce.
Roberto d'Aubulsson or the far
right Republican Nationalist AIllance and Jose Napoleon Duarte, a
moderate Christian Democrat,
werethetwotopcontendersamong
the eight candidates.
It no candidate gets more than 50

percentofthe votetotal,arunoffwlll
beheldlnonemonthbetweenthetop
twoflnlshers.
The vote tabulation was suspended Sunday night after the chief
technician at the national election
computer center was accused of
favoring d'Aubuisson and ordered
orr the job.
.
The accusation was made by

Roberto Meza Delgado. the Christian Democratic Party representative on the Central Election Council ,
which Is made up of one representative of each of the eight parties
competing In the election.
Meza Delgado. vice president of
the election council. ordered the
technician, Morgan Bojorques. out
of the computer center

News analysis

20o/o
'

-v~te Jabulatioit suspended following confusing election day

Seven Bell ·System compan-ies ·turning to AT&amp;T competitors
.. . •

(

District Representative to the House: WWuow, Henry
HIDUr, county chalnnan for the Democrat party:
John Kulewllz, Gary Hart's campaign director In Ohio

is seeking a record $15.5 bUHon
budget for the agency, which his
counselor, Edwin Meese Ill, once
dismlssed as "a ridiculous bureaucratic joke."
And Reagan, who never set foot
Inside a School during his first two
years In office, scarcely lets a week
go by without visiting a school,
Inviting educators to the White
House or Inveighing In his Saturday
radio addresses about the poor
condition of America's $215 bUUon
educational system.
With help from the National
Commlsslon on Excellence In

·By NORMAN BlACK

.

MAIN SPEAKER - State Treasurer Mary Ellen
WltJuwo, second from left, was the principal speaker
at the Meigs Coway Democrat Fund raising bean
dinner Saturday night held at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center. Pictured are, 1-r, Jolytm Boster, Mth

andDonMulea,c!!!MidatesforcountycorruniMioner;

Pegy llrll*leB. cendldate for county recorder and
Mary Swain, candidate for county treasurer. RearHenry HIDUr, county cllalnnan for the Democratic

educa tlon policies twice In recent
months. killing a tuition tax credit
bill last November and last week
defeating a constitutional amendment to allow spoken prayer In
schools.
Reagan and Education Secretary
T.H. Bell never ev€11 mustered
enough support for their plan to
downgrade the Educa tlon Department to a foundation to put a bill In
the hopper. They were rebuffed In
1982 when they sought to cut most
federal school aid programs by a
third.
Now, In an election year, Reagan

55 ~ 00
L

\
I Settion , 10 Pog"
20 Cents
A Mult imedia Inc . Newtpaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 26, 1984

ByCHimTOPHER CONNElL
A.oolatecl Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
Ronald Reagan campaigned for
president In 19!ll he promised to

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110.00
55.00

en tine

•

After slow start, Reagan getting high marks for education

~Item

I

5Q.OO

66.00
55.00

aily

Consider oil merger halt

....... . .

SAVE -&lt;lN NEW SPRING CLOTHING FOR THE
ENTI. ~E FAMILY AND FURNITURE FOR ,
YO-UR .HOME

66.00
105.00.
83.00
115.50
88.00
55.00
55.00
77.$0
72.00
55.00
72.00
83.00

The final four...Page 4

paaty.

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AllociMed fl'el1il Witter .

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Like wayward children who sever a.U ties
' with hOme the seV€11 Bell System comp8llles may 80011 be tutning
• ' their ba~ on Ma Bell and her belt known product -long-distance
. phoJI!! aervlce.
.
.
; Two of the seven Bell companies crea\fd by the breakup of the
, American Telephone &amp;t Telegraph Co. are alre8dy experimenting
·with Uslni Jona-dlstance circuits flun ATI/r's cOmpetltora for their
, cu po1ate business calls. 'lbole two are Amerttech and Nynex.
Four of !lie other t1ve - BeUSouth. Bell Atlantic, PecUic Telesis
Sllllthwestem Bell- say~'~actlvelyexplorlngtheklea. Tile

:and

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Canton McKinley
wins first state

The Honda Open House. It won't be

Every

FIGURINES

SISTER
THOUGHTFUL
POSTMAN
LITTLE BOOKEEPER
MOTHER'S DARLING
LITTLE SHOPPER
SOLOIST
HELLO
BOOTS
HAPPINESS
BAKER
FOR FATHER
LET'S SING
MICHIEF MAKER
LITTLE SWEEPER
APPLE TREE GIRL
SURPRISE
SCHOOL BOY
JUST RESTING
$WEET GREETINGS

Honor 4-H students..•Page 5

Continues Thru SATURDAY, MARCH 31

HUMMEL
We heve just received the following Hummel Figurines. Recejve a new edition Collector's. Guide for
$~ . 00. with each purchase of figurines. Regular
pnce, $10.95

be

LOCAL CANDIDATE'i - Local candldalell at lhe
Melp Coway Desnoa·at fund raising bean dinner
Saturday, night held at lhe Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center, were,l-r, SherUf JamesJ. Proflltt; Joe Sayre

SUPER SPRING SALE

Anderson, 54, Charleston, W.Va.,
unemplayed.
Ricky D. Patterson, 27, Rt. 4,
Galllpolls, unemployed, and KStherine M. Boggess, 23, Rt. 1, Crown
City, unemployed.
Keith E . WWlams, 32, 1111 Mabelene Drive, therapeutic progniin
worker,andDeloresJ.WWlams,27,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, Ucensed practlcal
nurse.
Troy D. Mealge, 23, GaUipolls,
deck hand, and Melinda L. Wright,
19, Pizza Hut emplayee.

Clear this ev€11lng with increasing ciOudlnesa by Ia te
tonight. Low 37-41 Light easterly to northeasterly · winds.
Tuesday, rain likely. High 52-5'7.
Chance of precipitation aJ percent tonight and 60 percent
Tuesday.

-.

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

AwelcorilewlllbeglvenbyJarnes
E. Schneider ,)'rfarletta, president of
the Washington County Bar Assoclatlon which is hosting the meeting.
OSBA represents some 17,&lt;XXJ attarneys throughout Ohio.

. Couples fite for marriage
GALLIPOLIS - The following
· couples file!l for marriage licenses
thls past week In Gallla County
Probate Court.
Eugene C. Hoffman, 26, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis , substitute school
teacher, and Kathy A. Allen, 24, 1000
Second Ave., bank employee.

WAS
12195

Recent Civil Decisions of the Ohio JosephAttWtto,Munn'sattorney.
SupremeCourt"followedbyRobert
However, he added, "!twas more
B. Barnett, Jr., Colwnbus, of thanconsensual.Itwasencouraged,
Carllle, Patchen,Murphy&amp;AIUson, provoked."
who will discuss, "Recent Changes
The woman has charged that her
Marietta.
In the Ohio Estate Tax Laws."
friends had alrelldy left the bar and
District 17 represents some 150
A legislative update will be sbe was getting her coat when she
attorneys from Athens, Morgan, provided by WUUam K. Welsen- was accosted, pushed onto the pool
Hocking, Washington, Meigs and berg, Columbus, OSBA Director of table and sexually assaulted. ·
Noble counties.
Government Atfalrs, an an update
Christopher E. Veldt, Logan, In the Ohio Bar Llablllty Insurance r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;,::;;;;;;;;;;jjjij~M;iiiiiiii
OSBAdistrtctexecutlvecommittee- Company will beprovldedbyJarnes II
man, will preside over the late R. Burchfield, Columbus.
"
afternoon meeting which will Inelude the election of one member to
the OSBA Councll of Delegates.
R. Douglas Wrtghlsel, Columbus,
of Knepper, Whlte,Arter&amp; Hadden,
will give a "Summary of Significant

Here it comes again.
The Honda Open House.
Bigger and better
than ever.
Play Honda's Sl50000
Grand Prix Game. It's a
chance to win a 17-da.y European
holiday for twn A VI P
view of the 1984 San
Marino Grand Prix. And
520000 cash.
Other prizes include four·country
Alpine 1burs for two aboard new Honda
touring motorcycles,' plus $2,000 in cash.
Sony' Wai.Chman· personal portable
TVs. Kodak Disc Cameras. And Special
Ed ition Honda Grand Prix Tshin.s.
5.555 pri7..es in ai L
If your FREE Honda Gafll(&gt; Puzzle
mai.Ches one of ou r d isplay photos. you
win - INSTANTLY '
Collll' in and set• the hot new 1984
Hondas. Or make a great deal on
selected models. While they last.

a

~~:='~'o~:=.~~t~ 1d

POMEROY -JohnA.Carhahan,
Colwnbus, president of the Ohio
State Bar Association will address
theannualmeetlngofOSBADistrlct
17 Friday at Ramada Inn North,

Comlm-TV
Delltha
8port.l

Papa ll-6
Pall!l 6-1-11
Pap9
PapJO
Pages 8-4

Yol.32, No.243
Copyrlfhtod 1984

encouraged"bythewoman.
Indicted bar manager Scott F.
The slmllar contention- that the Bradley, 25, and bartenders Frank
woman voluntarily participated Decker, ~. and James H. Munn, ill,
had been raised by some defense on charges of aggravated sexual
lawYers In Fail River, Mass., ln the assault.
trlalsofsixrilenaccusedofraplnga
Tile defendants aU treeon$7500
womanonthepooltableatBigDan's bail pending arr~gnment, ~led
bar In March 1983. Four of those sexually assaulting the women
defendantswereconvlctedofaggra- wh€11 they were questioned by
vated rape, the last two on pollee, WanaquepoUceChlefDavld
Thursday.
Sisco said Frtday.
1n theNewJerseycase a Passaic
According to court papers the
County grand jury on 'Thursday .!ll€11offeredtotakelle-detector'tests
•
}
to support their contentions that the

•
ed
OSHA dIstrict
meetmg s at

separate charges of no muffler and
failure to display valid license
plates.
Jennings D. Marcum, 4(), Rt. 1,
VInton, forfeited $40 bond for failu~

GALLIPOLIS - ARt.l,Scottowri
man charged with aggravated
burglary will face a preUmlnary
hearing Tuesday In GaUipolls Municipal Court.
Twenty-year-old Ted A. Thacker
was arrested by the GaUia County
Sheriff's Department Frtday for
allegedly breaking Into the Dorothy
Beaver residence In Mercerville.
The department Indicated In Its
charges that Thacker allegedly
carried a weapon when the Incident
occurred.
Judge James A. Bennett placed
Thacker on $15,&lt;XXJ bond.
Tile court also accepted a not
guilty plea to a charge of moving a
moblle home without authorization
of the Public Utlltles Commlsslon of
Ohio. The charge was brought
against John P. Swain, aJ13 Eastern
Ave.
Swain's case was continued untll
March 00 for a hearing.
Entering lnoocent pleas to DWI
and slated for AprU 2 pretrials were
David K. Mink, 22, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
and Charles L. Whitt, 51, Rt. 1,
GaUipolls. Whitt was also cited for
speeding.
Kay N. Tackett, 21, Rt. 2, VInton,
also charged with DWI, pleaded not
guUty, was placedon$500recognlz-

Two indicted in separate rape case
PATERSON, N.J. (AP)-Onthe
day a Massac~usells jury found two
men gullty of a barroom gang rape,
a tavern manager and two·bartenders were Indicted on charges of
sexually assaulting a 20-year-old
woman on~ barroom pool table In
Ne:w Jersey·
An attorney for one.. of the
~ders said Friday ,an lncldent did occur at Conrad s Bar In
Wanaquelntheearlymomlnghours
ofFeb.2,buthelnslstedthat"ltwas

By lhe Bend
Cl•"""ed'

one exception is US West. But ev€11 there. spokeswoman Barbara
Srhlth says "It's not something we would ever rule out."
.
"We are definitely looking at It," says Pete Hoffman, spokesman
for Bel. Atlantic. "We (Bell Atlantic employees) all received a memo
recently noting we have to pay our own long-distance telephone bUis
mw and urging that .we be judicious with our calling. Our Internal
telecommunications bill is pretty high and it's only natural we would
look to ootslde COOlpetltors."
"We're kloldng at our poone costs just ~ M.Y other business
does," added Bill Hensley, a .spokesman for Arnetltech,.whlch is now
U81ng ~circuits from AT&amp;T arch-foe MCI Communications.
-"And that means actively Jooldng at other earners besides AT&amp;T."

a

..Jo

Whlle the amount of telephone traffic at stake appears relatively
small at this point, few competitors of the old AT&amp;T ever thought
they'd see the day when local Bell companies would consider
abandoning AT&amp;T. Not surprisingly, they like the Idea.
"I think you could characteriZe us as eager to serve them," said
MCI spokesman Gary Tobin.
AT&amp;T is not thrilled.
"We offer a gOOd, high-quality service and would like for all of our
customers to stay with us," said AT&amp;T spokesman Pic Wagner. "But
obviously they're looking around."
. Wagner blames the possibility of defection on the fact that untll
federal regulators resolve a tight over telephone "access fees," the
competitors don't face the same level of expenses as AT&amp;T .

\

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