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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentinel

Home resales up
_J By The Assoclaled PreBs
Home resales were up In Apr!l to
the highest level In almost four
years, a real estate trade group
says, but Its chief economist says
rlslng mortgage Interest rates may
dampen further Increases this year.
Meanwhile, wonies about interest rates and concern about the
banking system sent stocl. prices to
a 15-month low.
More than lour stocks fell for each
one that rose Thursday on the New
York Stock Exchange, and the Dow
Jones Industrial average tumbled
10.37 points to 1,103.43, its lowest
close since Feb. 23, 1983.
Bank stocks were particularly
hard hit. Stocks of a dozen banks hit
52-week lows Thursday as Investors,
ne rvous from the problems beset ting Cant Inental Illinois National
Bank &amp; Trust, sold off their sha res.

Manufacturers Hanover Trust of
Nev.· York. the nation's fourth -

Largest bank, led the bank declines
as Its stock plunged$.3.37)\ashareto
close at S27 62Y,. Some of the rumors
spectficaUy mentioned Manutactur-

AT&amp;T cuts long
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Consumers who rely on the American
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. to
handle their Interstate longdistance calls received one of the
first tangible benefits of Industry
competition this morning - ~
across-the-board reduction In Io)\gdistance rates.
Effective at 12:01 a.m. today,
AT&amp;T cut Its regular long-distance,
WATS and International calllng ·
rates by a uniform 6.1 percent,
complying with a MaylOorderofthe

ers. but the company denied It had
any financial dltficulltles.
Meanwhile, the U.S. League of
Savings Institutions said Thursday
that home buyers are borrowing
money for mortgages from the
nation's savings Institutions at a
record clip this year, with the
majority of the loans carrying
adj ustable interest rates.
So far this year, savings and loan
Institutions have loaned about $48
billion to home buyers, according to
a survey of 1,tro Institutions, the
league said.
The figure eclipsed the previous
record of $32.4 billion set In the first
four months of 1983. and if the trend
continues, It wlll top the annual
record of $135 billion set last year.
said W!Ulam B. O'Connell. president
of the league.
The average interest rate for
fixed-ra te mortgages rose to 13.66
percent from 13.07 percent In
.January, while the average rate on
adjustable-rate mortgages fell to
11.21 percent last month from 11.54
percent at the start of the year,
O'Connell said .

Todd Lisle, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Lisle, Syracuse, is a
Daily Sent Jnel carrier in Syracuse V!Uage. A seventh grader
at Southern Junior High School,
Todd likes carrying The Sentinel
because It not only provides him
with personal funds but also
gJves him an opportunity to
meet new people. At 13, Todd
likes to camp and fish and take
part in sports activities. H&lt;'
delivers The Sentinel to 65
homes .

Emergency runs
Six calls, including one at H: 25
p.m. by lheTuppersP!ainssquad to
Hudson Lake, the drowning site of a
Meigs Count y man, were answered
by units of the Meigs County
Em ergency Medical ServicC'
Thursday.
At 10: 2J a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Welshtown Hill Road a nd
transpol1ed Samantha Hysell to
Veterans Memorial. at l :4J p.m.the
Middlepot1 Fire Department responded to a call to 213NorthSccond
where food on the stove had caught
fire; at 7:26p.m. the Middleport unit
went to :t'\2 North Third for Ronald
Diles who was treated but not
transported; at 8:57 p.m. the
Rutland squad took Murle Hanis
from Danville to Veterans Memor ial Hospital. and at 9:32p.m . the
Middle port unit went to Meigs Mine
No. I where they treated but did not
transport Danny Brickles.

Elementary students oftheSouthe rn Local Sc hool Disnict responded
to a nationwide call for school
children of America to "Put In Your
2 Cents Worth" to help with the cost
of refurbishing the State of Libei1y.
Southern Local students donated
$51.74, Southern District Elementary Principal Robert Beegle reports Including $4.01 from Letart;
$4 .88 from Portland; ~.16 from
kindergarten; $12.18 from Syracuse, and $22.51 from Racine.

Mostly cloudy tonight with a
chance of of showers and thunderstorms. Low around 65. Saturday,
mostly cloudy and cooler with
showers and thunderstorms likely,
mainly In the morning. High 73-78.
Chance of rain 50 percent tonight
and 60 percent Saturday.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair on Sm1day. Chance ol
showers or lhunderstonns Monday
and cooler with a chance ol showers
Tuesday. Highs In tbe upper 00s and
low 70s Sunday, in the 7Us Monday
and in the 00s Tuesday. Lows In the
40s and low 50s SWlday morning, in
the 50s Monday and mld.41Js to
mld·50s Tuesday.

No paper will be published
Monday, May 28 in order that
employees of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company may observe
Memorial Day. Publication resumes on Tuesday.

Money suit filed
A suit for $13,701.49 was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Coun
by Diamond Savings and Loan.
Pomeroy, against Kevin A. Dailey
and Sharon A. Dailey, Lancaster.
and George Collins as Meigs County
Treasurer.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted : Lois Pauley. Pomeroy; Cora Fobner. Pomeroy: Mary
Divers, New Haven; William Tiemeyer, Pomeroy; Carl Shultz. Jr .
Pomeroy; .John Reibel, Pomeroy:
and Murl Harri,, Langsville.
Discharged: Ollie Hill. Gladys
Sigler. Shirley Wise, Christopher
Van Mete r, Lewis Ellis, and Lee
RudisilL

Area death
Benjamin Fortney

I

Benjamin Fortney, 61, Guysville,
died Thursday afternoon at the
Camden Clark Hospital In Parkersbu rg after an extended illness.
Born at Guysville, he was the son
of the late Harter and Evah Robey
Fortney. He was a member of the
Savannah Masonic Lodge 466,
Guysville; Scottish Rite Bodies,
Cambrtdge; Washington County
Scottish Rites Club, Marietta:
Minear Chapter 274, OES, Guysvllle: American Legion Post 414,
Glouster: and Disabled American
Veterans Chapter 37, Athens.
He is sur&lt;ived by his wife, Sylvia
Rummer Fortney, one son, Mark,
Millfield: rwo daughters. Mrs.
Larry 1Nina 1 Russell, Guysville:
Mrs. William (Marjorie! McPherson. Coolville; eight grandchildren,
and one great -grandscn.
Aso sur&lt;lvlng are a brother,
Richard Fortney. Guysville; and
three sisters. Mrs. Gladys Fuller.
The Plains: Mrs. Pearl Crov. and
Mrs. Virginia Hesson, Fort Wayne,
lnd . Preceding him indPalhbcsides
his parents were one son and two
brothers.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 1 p.m. at U1e White
Funeral Home in Coolv!Ue . The
Rev. David Couto will officiate and
burial will be In Greenlawn Ceme
tery at Lowell.
Friends may caU at the funera l
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
Saturday. Masonic ser&lt;ices will be
held at7: 30 p.m. on Saturday.

Nowhere else
at these Burger Chefs
North Charleston
Ravenswood
Summersville
Pomeroy

Pl. Pleasant

nte •room'Buick.

Conservative columnist James J, Kilpatrick
discusses sanity in gun laws-Page A-2

•

tmts

unba

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

room . and k•d's room of the SIX passenger Bu•ck LeSabre Bnng the
whole lam•ly 111 lor a tesl dnve loday

PH. 992-2174

Pomeroy, OH.

500 E. Main St.

t's ('lot Forget
To Remember

MEMORIAL
DAY
1984

II'

.Cut Flowers
I
•Monument Sprays
•Potted Plants
•Wreaths
•Anangements in
both real and
permanent flowers.
"The Way America
Sends Lave~

SHOP OUR SALE
RACK FOR
MEN AND
WOMEN'S
WEARING
APPAREL

FOR THE MEN

SWIM WEAR '" c.,,.,. ,.
KNIT PULLOVER SHIRTS

by Aobert Bruce, Puritan &amp; Arrow

DRESS SHIRTS
hv 4rrow &amp;- f.nrt'f' ' Clrlh, •horl or lang

SPORT SHIRTS

!

I
i

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
106

'':'' A rru11·. /_,. , .; &amp; Cnrf'f'r Club. lonj{ or

LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

.dN• r ••· .~
~hfJrl , fi'I'Pf' _l

•

b:-· tondmr F'of{. Mnint&gt; Gt.~id.- &amp; Dt&gt;Lun~

LEVI DENIMS-Straight legs, prewashed &amp; unwashed
MEN'S SUITS-Summer weiahl ond year round, sizes 36 to 50
MEN'S SPORT COATS &amp; BLAZERS - Slzu 35 to 52.
Nice Selection of MEN'S TROUSERS, Sizes 29 to 51

FOR THE LADIES
SWIMW£AR IH ltm t~'' " I{ Cn.wur m
SHORTS. TOPS &amp; BLOUSES
b~

}nni :Pn . IJul{/lflrl .il ., l'i. 111, ;,, . .'ito~{

SLACKS IJ~- /orll :.l' 'l . f)I!Jl/l"ll 'ir .• &amp; rr hill' Slnll
LEVI BENDOVERS
DENIM JEANS ,v,... .,. \um .• &amp;l••
LADIES SUITS lov &lt;II, .•. , ,., , &amp; '"'""'"

llfl'IIP---

Wo we
._
.
wire...,..
... ,..,...

BAHRMIDDLEPORT,
CLOTHIERS
OH.

ttttine
11 Sectionl. 114 Page•
A Multimedia Publ ic:ation

By the Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS Gallia and
Meigs joined most other counties in
the area by posting a decline in the
April unemployment rate. The
jobless rate throughout the region.

however. continues to remain above
state and national averages, reports
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
Meigs County registered it s
lowest level of unemployment for
the year with an April figu re of 11 .9
percent. The county's previous low
level for1984was In Janua ry, when a
rate of 12.8 percent was reported .
The Meigs posting for April
represents the second straight
monthly decline for the county . The
rate fell from a highofl:l.:ip&lt;'rccnt in
February to a March ftgurf' of 131
percent.
The April figure represents an
overall decline in unemployment of
1.2 percent from the preceding
month .
'J'heGallia County unemployment
ra te fell by onP-hall (0.51 of one
percent between March and April,
according to the OBES.
The April postlngofll. 7percentdown from the March figure of
percent- represents the reversatof
a two-month pattern of unemployment increases for the county.
Between January and February ,
theGallia rate rose by two-tenths of
one percent, from 11.6 to ll .B
percent. In March , the county
registered an increase in the jobless
rate of four-tenths of one percent. as
the figure rose to 12.2 percent.
The April decline m unemploy -

more.''

Under the rules. those serving
tlmeformlsdemeanoroffensesmay
not be In contact with those
incarcerated on felony conv ictions.
And. those awaiting trial may not be
"mixed" with those who have been
tried. Also, juvenile and female
prisoners must be physically separ·
a ted from all other inmates.
"It hits In spurts," Montgomery
explained, "over a period of time we
reach a point where tbe jail's
po)l'Jlatlon simply makes It impossl ·
ble to take any more."
By agreement between the county's vartous law enforcement agencies, stx slots are routinely aUocated
(Continued on page A-6)

'0-l

Area jobless
rates in A(Jril
Percentage

County

Athens .................... 10.4 (10.4)
Gallia ..................... 11.7 02.2)
Jackson .................. 12.3 ( 13.7)
Lawrence ................ 13.8 ( IU)
Meigs ..................... 11.9 ( 13.1)
Vinton ..................... 11.6 ( 12.3)

,JOBLESS RATE - With the
exception of Atbens, where tbe
jobless rate beld swady, Wlem·
ployment throughout the area
dropped between March and
1\prU. With a decre&gt;L.e of 1.2
perct.'flt, Meigs County registered the healthiest decline In lbe
region. In chart ahove, MaiTh
rates are shown in parenthesis.
mcnt for Gallia and Meigs was in
linf' with a dm.vnward trend registered throughout most of southeast·
e m Ohio. With the exception ot
Athen s- where theratP hPldstC'ady
- the jobless ratP in all surrounding

counties declined
O£lES figures show 1.6&amp;'5 of Ga lli a
County's estimated work force of
14,427 without work In April.
in Mei gs, the OBES rcpons 1.312
of thai county' s work force of 11.031
as johless during the month.
According to thP OBES. the state
jobless ra te stood at 9.R percent in
April, whilP the national rate was
reported at 7.6 percent.

Grand jury dismisses
inmate death case
at Lucasville prison

-

LUCAS'v1LLE. Ohio tAP) - A
union official representing prison
guards at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility is calling a
grand jury decision not toreturnany
indictments in t he Feb . 9death of a n
Inmate ther&lt;' " fantasti c."
The Scioto County Grand Ju ry
sa td Friday it could find no criminal
IJabUity on the part of guards who
struggled with irunate Jimmy
Haynes shonly before he died .
If lh&lt;' jury h~d returned Indict ments, it would have hampered
guards' ability to do their duty, said
Alan HiU. president ofthecorreclion
officer' local at Lucas,·iUe .
The grand jury de Libera ted Thursday and Friday at the Institute aftN
hearing evidence from a special

- ---·'"'"

prosecutor and 31 witnesses.

LOCKS MEETING - Coogressman Clarence MDier, Mhlo, at left,
examines plans by the U.S. i\nny Corps ol Engineers for a new locking
system for tbe GaiHpotis Locks and Dam. At center Is Frank Matthews,
a rorps official, and at right, Col. John Deveru~, HIDington district
engineer.
aid package for El Salvador,
Introduced by Sen. Robert C. Byrd,
D-W.Va., and Sen. MarkO. Hatfield,
R-Ore. , won Senate approval but

was dropped by House and Senate
conferees when they met to revl.e
the bill for approval by both houses
or Congress.

Memorial
Day

The grand jury previously had
seen a report on Hayni'S death
compiled by the State Highway
Patrol and had chosen not to act on
the case, said Sci oto County
Prosecutor Lynn Grimshaw .
But the Legislature, in the fa ce of
public pressure to invest iga te the
death, appointed Thomas Beal of
Columbus to serve as special
prosecutor and conduct his own
investigation .
The grand jury that repot1ed

Flida1· had all bul two of the 15
members from the prt•\·ious grand
jury.
Sen. Paul Pfeifer. R-Bucy rus.
said he believes Frida~ ' sdecision by
the grand jury mds state Involvement in the case. Pfeifer, vice
c halnna n of the prison inspet·tion
committee that appointed Beat, said
he will ask Beal 10 r&lt;&gt;pot1 his
investigation findings to tht:&gt;
eorruni t t ce .

AG files for
• •
•
•
lflJUnCtiOn
In
coal mine case
POMEH OY -An injunction has
been filro in Ml·igsCuun l)' Common
Pl&lt;:'as Court by Anthony .) Cci&lt;'brezze. J r .. a ttornrv general of Oltio
againsl Slanlcy Hunt and Larry
Hunt , Dark Diamond Coal CoqJ., e t
a!.
In his action. Cr!Pbrezze r hargPs
the

tv.:u

\~:ilh

dolating

Ohit/ s

envirunmr-ntallaw s in lhPOp('ratlon
of lhn&gt;e coal mines in Ohio .
Celcbrf'Zzc' s suit. brought a t the
request of Ohio Em·ironmr ntal
tContinued on pag&lt;' A-6\

Lawmakers unable to clear decks for adjournment
By ROBERT E. MJIJ,ER
All80ciated Preas Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
senators, unable to agree on a bill
earmarking lottery profits lor
LEAVES SENATE FLOOR

Butlllmut Ave.

Ponwov. OH.
Ph. 892-2038 or 892-&amp;721

GALLIPOLIS- Recognizing the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam as
"essential to tbe economic development oftheOhlo Valley," U.S. Rep.
Clarence E. M!Uer said he has met
with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
officials about replacing the aging
locks .
The Lancaster Republican has
sponsored legislation to construct a
1,IDfoot main lock at Gallipolis.
considered one of the worst navigational bottlenecks on the inland
waterways system.
Miller's bill is a major part of a
comprehensive water resources
measure expected to be considered
by the House of Representatives In
June.
Although corps officials detailed
the hazards Involved with the
47-year-&lt;&gt;idfac!Uty In their four-year
study released In 198l. two recent
accidents atGa!Upolls havedramat ·
!zed the situation.
A coal barge passing through the
600-foot main lock AprU 2 struck the
main gate, causing a 17-daydelay of
river commerce. Just eight days
later, another accident caused the
main lock to be closed. It was
reopened earlier this month.
Legislation to authorize and fund
construction of a main lock on the
West Virginia shore of the facility
has been Introduced several times In
the past two years.
A recent amendment to a military

Along the River ........... B-1-S
Business ....................... A-3
Deaths ......................... A-4
Editorials ..................... A-2
Fann ........................... E-3
Sports ........................ C-1-4

April jobless rate
declines in both
Gallia and Meigs

to be injured In the facUlty whlle
operating In violation of the rules.
"I lived through the jall being
closed once," Roderick said Friday
afternoon . "I don't want to see it
again."
While the facility is physically
capable of housing up to 18
priSOners, state regulations mandate certain restrictions on aUowable population mixtures.
"ln a worst case situation,"
Sherlff James M. Montgomery sald
Friday morning, "we could be
reduced to as lew as four prisoner·
s ... ll we had a female, a juvenile
female and a male juvenile In at the
same time as a felony lnmate ... that
would be It, we couldn't hold any

approved rules and regulations.
By LARRY EWING
Failure to meet those n'QUireTimes-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Local law en- ments could lead to closure of the
forcement officials see last week's jaU.
Additionally, the county could be
housing emergency at the Gallla
beld
legally liable II a prisoner were
County JaU as symptomatic of a
problem with the facillty and Its
ability to meet thecounty'sneed for
incarcerations, while continuing to
abide by state mandated
regulations.
On Wednesday, Common P leas
Judge Richard C. Roderick issued
an emergency order directing that
all inmates Incarcerated forDWI be
released. He further ordered that no
future DWI offenders be jailed untU
the cuiTI'nt housing problem at the
facility is corrected.
In issuing that order. Judge
Roderick wrote: "The present
Inmate population at the... jaU... presents a clear and present
danger and potential for violence
that must be aUevlated."
"It's all a matter of the mix," the
judge explained. "the makeup of the
population in the jail was simply too
dangerous ... and, was In violation of
the jaU rules."
The Gallla County JaU Is curJt\IL WA.ml - A door
rently certified by the state as a
leading
a cell block In tbe
temporary holding facility.
GaiUa County Jail is wliocked by
In order to maintain that certificaLarey Swift Jr., a jailer. i\n
tion, the jall- which was closed for
emergmcy was declared in tbe
a period of several months In 1981 for
jail last week due to population
state ordered repairs - must
discrepancies.
operate undf&gt;r a set of state-

(

Ohio weather:
partial weekend
clearing forecast
--Page A-6--

Inside

Sunday, May 27, 1984

Miller meets
.
with Corps
on locks., dam

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.

Dillinger Band in the Lounge
Armond in the Restaurant

992-9917

10:30 a.m. till Close

Say goodbye to the cramped quarte rs of compact cars and gel ready
fo r the storage room. Mom and Dad

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT

Middleport

Rabies clinic
is Wednesday

10Lomit

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

ENTERTAINMENT

992-6836

25C

Chester Council 323 Daughters of
America wUI take part in the
Memorial Day parade at Chester
Monday. Members are to meet at
Chester Elementary at 1 p.m . The
parade is at 1:30 p.m.

"Plan Your Get Togethers At
The Restaurant or The Lounge"

LOUNGE

Despite new safety measures, danger remains a
part of the racing world-Page C-1

unknown
honored
-D-1

Vol. 19 No. 16
Copyrighted 1964

indictments--D-B

Emergency seen as
symptom of larger
jail housing problem

Parade participants

OflT

LaSalle

Vietnam's

•

Gallia

w

~~
RACINE
ilfiDDtE;p

RESTAURANT

Hamburgers

All of the changes stem from a
new rate structure the FCC gradu·
ally Is In traducing to reflect the !act
that AT&amp;T Is now facing strong

CLEVELAND !API The
winning number drawn Thursday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 282.
In the "Pick f' game, played
Monday through Friday, the win ning number was 4296.

Welcome All Area Alumni
_\\~~~ ..
POMERoy

THE RESTAURANT WILl STAY OPEN LATE SATURDAY
NIGHT SO YOU CAN MEH YOUR FRIENDS &amp; CLASSMATES AFTER THE DANCE IS OVER

Memorial DaySpecial

Ohio lottery winner

LaSalle In Middleport

'

believes local phone customers
shouldbearthefullcostofoperatlng
their local phone network.
The new monthly access fee to be
paldbybuslnesscustomersstartlng
todaylsoneresultofthatnewpollcy.
Depending on what state the
business Is located In, the tee wiJI
range up to $6per month per Une and
wiJI be paid directly to the local
phone company. Nationwide, those
buslnessaccess!eesareexpectedto
generate roughly $1 bllUon over the
!lext year

rr:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=.

A rabies clinic will bel'Onducted at
U1e Meigs County Fairgrounds In
the cat tie sale ring on June 2 from 1
to4 p.m .
The clinic is being conducted by
the Meigs County Health Department in conjunction with the Meigs
County Humane Society.
Dr. Carol Osborne, DVM will be
administering the vacclna lions with
the cost to be rabies, $3. and
distemper-lepto-parvo and hepatitus, $7. Dogs are to be on a leash and
other animals must be confined. Pet
owners are urged to take advantage
of the low cost service.
Additional information on the
program may be obtained by calling
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment, 992-6626, or tbe Meigs County
Humane Society. 992-5427.

Weather forecast

No Monday paper

competltton for long-distance traffie. While the company sWI handles
slightly more than 90 percent of all
Interstate long-distance calls, competltors like MCICommunlcations
and GTE-Sprlnt are growing rapldly at AT&amp;T's expense.
The FCC says that competition,
combined with the Jan. 1 breakup of
the Bell System,lsforclnglttoscrap
a decades-&lt;&gt;ld system under which
AT&amp;T's long-distance customers
paid extra to belp hold down local
phone rates. The commission says it

That was the good news. On the
minus side for some customers, that
same FCC order aUowed AT&amp;T to
begin charging a 50-cent lee for
long-distance directory assistance
calls after the first two such calls
each month. And business customers with more than one phone Une
will have to start paying a monthly
"access fee" to tbelr local phone
company.

Carrier's
Comer...

Students respond

MPmorial Day sPrvices will be
h~ ld Monday, May 28 . at 1: ]!p.m. at
the Burlingham Church.
The Honor Guard of FN'ncy
Bennett Post 1.28. American Lcglon
and the youth or Burlingham Camp
of Modern Woodmen of America
will participate In services at the
cemetery.
Pa1iicipating in the program will
be The Rev. Cha~les McVey, guest
speaker, Coleen Dougan, Robet1
P icket t, Roberi White, Frank
O'Brien, Bud Wingett, and Mark
Kounck.

Comm~lon. CommunI c a tl on s

Feder a I

Todd usle

Meigs County happenings ..
Memorial Day
program planned

Friday,

Ohici

- Sen. ODver Ocaaek, D-Akron.
Jlstell!l Friday W debate 00 tbe
floor of the Seoa&amp;e In Colwnbll8.
Ocuek later left the Senate at
the menllon of bla wUe'1 lon1
lllne88 and death lasl year.

schools. wiJI try agaln next week to
clear their decks of business and
adjourn untn late June.
Although they had hoped to quit
Friday, an angry and often emotional debate In the Senate seemed
to preclude any immediate hope lor
compromise. But leaders said the
Senate wiJI reconvene Monday and
the House, Tuesday.
The debate centered on veteran
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron.
prompting his tearful exit after the

mention or his wife's lingering and
death from Injuries suffered In a car
accident.
The personal tragedy required
Ocasek to be absent from the Senate
last year lor long periods ol time.
The retired professor and dean of
Senate Democrats sald earlier he
had a deep conviction that the
Iottecy bill should send aU of an $Ill
mllllon Sllllllus directly to the
schools Instead out putting halt of It
Into a "rainy day" school fUnd.

He was brought Into the debate
after be joined minority Republi ·
cans to block passage after the
House restored the rainy day fund .
Democrats have a 17-!6 edge in the
Senate.
Senate President Harry Meshel ,
D-Youngstown, accused Republi cans of Invoking a unit rule to keep
their own ranks Intact to halt the bill
with Ocasek's help.
Meshel sald tbe Republicans also
had invoked tbeunlt rule last year to

block passage or a Democratic tax
paekagP. knowing Ocasek was with
his "ofe, who was In a coma after the
Florida accident.
Meshel said Republicans refused
requests by several Democrats to
provide a decisive 17th vote on the
tax package .
'
" We asked lor a Republican vote
so that we would not have to ask
Oliver Ocasek to come here tram
Florida and the bedside of his dying
wife but you refused."

�Comment

and perspective

May 27, 1984

1he Sunday Times-Sentinel
Page

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

Pome10y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

A-2

May 27, 1984

Sanity in gun law_______Ia_me_s1.,.~,-K_ilpa_trrc_·k.
~lb

A Division of

~~
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio
( 614) -w6-2342

Jll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
( 614 ) 992-21ii6

WASHJNGTON - THe event
passed with almost no attention in
the news, but it deserves your
notice a nyhow: On May 10, for the
firs! time since the memory of man
runneth not to th&lt;' contrary, a
legislative decision was taken that

made a measure of common sense
ROBERT L. WI NGE'I'T
Publis he r
HOBART WILSON JR
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publi sher-Controller

!\ MEMBER of Thfo A.'iNOtiawd Prt&gt;SS, Inland l&gt;aily
AmeriCIUl N~spaper Publistw...,. A.-....:latlc.1.

~.;;

.\.-.S()(ialioa and the

l.ETJ'ERS OF OPINION l&amp;tt' wckomt.&gt;d. ttK:y should bf' Ia .. than 300 w~ kin~!; . ,U
~ten are hubject to edltblg lUKI rnw;&amp; be signed with name, addres.oi !Uid at&gt;lephone numher. ~ UQillped I~ will hto publbhed . ~ ~uld lll' In goOO ta....te , add.re!t.~rlk issues, not personaUtlei.

State cars are being
equipped with airbags
1\s part of a six-state expertrnent in traffic safety. about ?~Ohio Highway
. Patrol cars are being equipped with airbags.
Ohio sta te troopers are already bound by rules to wear seatbelts. says Lt.
.Jack Holland of the patrol's planning and research section in Columbus.
"We're prtrnarily interested in misfires and the results of th('
effectiveness of the bag wh('n trropers arc involved in frontal collisions."
63ys Holland.
"We're very interested in lh(' 1 esults of this thing. Until they're in every
car. we're going to keep pushing the seatbelts."
: : "We've attacked speeders. the drinking driver. and we continue 10 do
: this. If we can just get more people voluntarily buc kling up. we can save so
)'nany more lives, " said Lt. Ed Waltz, patrol post commander al Eaton.
"We've done everything we can to keep vehicles apart . Now what we
want to do is keep people away from the Inside of the vehicle," Waltz said.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration invited Ohio lobe
part of the pilot test, along with Arizona, California, Maryland, Mississippi
and Wl.sconsin, Holland said .
"The NIITSA selects departments they think are best representative,"
for their various studies, Holland sa id . "It was our tum for airbags. We
JJave everything. We've got hills, nat parts, good interstate, metropolitan
areas ... ," he said.
Driver surveys show motorists are less likely to use seat belts on cou nty,
township and minor secondary roads, when they need them most, than on
interstates, and are more likely to wear them on weekends and on long
trips, Holland said.
Surveys of a quarter·rnllllon Ohio drivers ove r the last three years show
18 percent to 21 percent used seatbells. That's about double the national
liVerage, Holland said .
Only about 2 percent to 3 percent of drivers in fatal accidents were
wearing seatbelts, he said. "It's a state disgrace," he said .
A 1900 study showed abou l 47 percent of a U fatal accidents in Ohio were
on~ar accidents, killing close to 400 people. "Seventy of the people killed
were ejected from damage-free mteriors," Holland said . "In our opinion ,
\ t'l had these people stayed in their car, they would have survived."
That tally doesn 't include unbelted motorists who hit the steering wheel
j
heavily damaged their cars, he sa id~
.' Still, Ohio is the safest of aU heavily populated states for motorists, with a
rate of 2.16 deaths per 100 million miles of vehicular traffic, compared with
the national rate of three per 100 million. Holland said.
In 19:1i, the first year police started ke&lt;'ping records, the Ohio death rale
was 19 per 100,milllon miles drive n and has dropped stf'adlly ever since,
Holland said.

MJilli

Berry's World

"' "" """ rrr

-~

u

" .. .and being of soumJ mind, I hereby leave my
season tickets to the USFL 's WORST team

to ... "

:Today in history
Today Is Su nday, May ?:1. the 148t.h day of 19R4 . There are 218 days leflln
the year.
Today's hlg hlighl In history :
On May 'n, 19.17, the Golden Gate Bridge spanning San Francisco Bay
· was opened.
: On this date:
: · In 1929, aviator Charles Lindbergh married Anne Spence r Morrow in
: Englewood, N.J .
In 19li, the U.S. Supreme Court declared the Nationa l Industrial
Recovery Act unconstitutional.
· In 1941, the German battleship Bismarck was sunk by the British navy
France, with a loss of 2,300 Uves.
• · In 1949, Robert Ripley died .
: Ten years ago: Brttish soldiers guarded strategic gas stallons and oll
: depots in Northern Ireland in lhc wake of a general strike called by
· Protestant extremists.
· Five years ago: Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin announced a
:policy of open borders between his country and Egypt.
: · .Elne year ago: A Wesl German prosecutor said a dealer In Nazi
:RJ&amp;morabUta had admitted forging the "HIUer diaries" that were bought
·and published by a West German magazine.
: Today's blrthdays: Actor Vincent Prtee is 73. Novelist Herman Wouk is
1&gt;9. Fonner Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is 61. Actor Loui., Gossett
·Jr. Is 48.
Thought for today: "AU women become like their mothers. That is their
:tragedy. No man does. That Is his." - From the play "A Woman of No
Jmportance" by Oscar WUde ( 1854-1!100) .

:ott

on gun control.
If the decision ever materializes
Into law. we wlll still be miles away
from the effective control of
concealable handguns. but for the
record: Thank you. Senate Judi·
clary Committee. And thank you,
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.
This is whal happened : Sen.
James A. McClure of Ida ho had
Introduced a bill IS. 9141 to ease
rf'stric1ions on the interstate sale
not only of rifles and shotguns, but
also of handguns. The general Idea
was to assist the sportsman who

might find himself in a state far

from home. Under present law,
with some exceptions, ills a clime
for a gun dealer to sell a firearm to
an out-of·state customer. T he pres·
ent law strikes many of us as stupid
as to long guns but prudent as to
handguns .
Senator Kennedy came up with a
sensible amendment. To eve·
ryone's amazement, because sensl·
ble proposals are a rarity In this
field of law, his amendment was
accepted. The Kennedy amend·
ment will not affect McClure's
ease--up provision on long guns, but
it will preserve the ban on interstate
sale of handguns having barrels of
three inches or less- the so-called
"snubbles" or "Saturday night
specials." Thus, If the bill P.&lt;'Sses
both houses, It will benefit the
sportsman who sees a beautiful
shotgun he simply cannot live
without- and the bill will not make

the intolerable proliferation of
handguns a ny more Intolerable
than It Is rtght now.
The committee's vote to accept
Kennedy's amenqrnent marks the
first time to my knowledge that
congressional body ever has ac·
cepted a key distinction. In the
world of firearms, there are
handguns - and tben, again. there
are handguns. The marksman's
revolver Is a work of the gunmak·
er's art; lt is a precision instrument,
used !or tournament target shoot·
lng or, In the hands of a crack shot,
for shooting small game. Another
kind of handgu n - the kind of
handgun t hat concerns Kennedy
and millions of the rest of us - is a
very different matter. This Is the
sn ub-nosed weapon used by the
drug-crazed punk to murder filling
station attendants and night clerks
at drive--in restaurants.

s-c.

The mail
In my lit tie stories about Pension
Ridge, l may ha ve left the
Impression that the communlly
was in it s hey-day when l lived
there with my grandmother when I
was a hoy . Actually, it had been a
thriving community for a lmost a
hundred years and, even If I didn'l
know It allhe lime, was already the
victim of time and progress. Its
young people were leaving for city
jobs and the inevitable decay of a
rural localit y with an aging popula ·
lion was setting in . But with a -Civil
War veteran or widow in practl·
cally every house, it was a
wonderful place for a boy lo live.
l have always been a push-over
for a good story, whether true or
not . The Civil War veterans on the
Ridge were always grateful for an
audience. even if it was only a small
boy. With age, their slorles grew
wllh lhe scenes bloodier, their
personal heroism greater a nd the
cannon balls more deadly . They
would tell with relish how thPy had
waded In blood to their shoe tops to
rescue a fallen comrade. It made a
thrilling way to spend a long
summer afternoon hut when l
would repeat the story to Grandma
she would say, "Fiddlesticks' He
npve r smelled the smoke of a gun."
Then she would tell me about
Grandpa, who died before I was
born. Grandpa , who was an
Infantry Captain, was a real,
honest-to-goodness hero who had
served all tbrough the War with the
Army of the Potomac and survived
the Battle of Gettysburg a nd the
Wilderness Campaign. I was a Civil
War but! before I was six years old!
Grandpa must have been a
dashing figure In his blue captain's
uniform when he returned to
Middleport after the ClvU War was
over. A picture of him as he was
then hung on tbe wall of Grandma's
llvlng room with his dress swords

them ) in order to forestall calami·
lies later (which would be blamed
on their successors).
Typically, the Reagan admlnis·
tratlon has avoided assaults against
the bulwarks; It has confined its
fi scal crusading to the points of
least resistance. Weakest of aU seldom able to fight back -are the
sick and crippled pensioners who
have been arbitrarily struck off the
pension rolls In the holy cause of
cost -cutting. Hundreds of thou·

•

sands have been driven to the a byss
of despair.
Administrative law judges, who
rule on disability cases, are supposed to be Independent . But critics
have charged that the Health and
Human Services Department lndt ·
rectly Imposes quotas upon them .
Those who decide too many cases ln
favor of disabled claimants are
reportedly given bad personnel
ratings.
This alleged practice has outraged .Judge Charles R. Richey, a

no-nonsense jurist who sits on the
U.S. District Court. He took the
unusual step of urging a congres·
sional investigation of the adminis·
!ra tion's suspected quoia system.
My associate Indy Badhwar has
Investigated the case lhal produced
such a singular response from the
bench. The plaintiff was Arthur
Johnson of Washington, D.C., a
disabled auto mechanic . His dis·
ability claim was turned down In
1~1.

_____________________L_ow
__e_ll_W
__
in~g~eu

C~Ier

crossed below. The same picture
and the same swords hung on the
parlor wall of my aunt, Mrs. Edna
Carleton in Syracuse until her
death. So you see, most of my
childhood a nd much of my adull llfe
I have been exposed to participants
or mementos o! that terrible
struggle between the states more
than a hundred years ago.
Grandma must have Impressed
him as much as he did her for they
were married soon after his
discharge and moved to Letart
Township where they made their
home, reared nine childre n and are
buried In Fairview Cemetery a few
rods from their home.
I can't remember exactly how old
I was when I appointed myself
unofficial mall carrier for the
veterans and veterans' widows In
our immediat£' vicinity. Twice a
day, Nelson Dav1s made the trip to
Millwood, W.Va. to meet the mall
train. There he would collecl the

Ulric mall bag, row across the river
to Apple Grove, sling the mall sack
across his shoulder and carry It to
Mrs . Sally Sines who kept the post
office In her store on the Rldge. I
waited while Mrs. Sines sorted the
mall, usually with my nose glued to
the candy case while I planned my
next treat. Saving the old folks from
a trip to the post office for their mall
was my principal source of Income
a nd hardly a day went by when I
didn't add a few pennies to my littl e
private bank. Occasionally, my
love of candy would overcome my
miserly Instincts and Mrs. Sines
would stand patiently by while I
decided between the striped peppermint sticks or the Chocolate
Delight.
The mall I brought was the
highlight of the day for my mall
customers. Usually it was a penny
posl card from a son or daughter
away working in a n East Liverpool
pottery or a Weirton steel rnlll but

profits

The National Rille Association
lately has been running a series of
advertisements Intended to Jm.
prove the NRA's image. The ads
feature men and women members
of the NRA who manifestly are
Intelligent, attractive citizens. They
shoot for sport. They are tbe kind of
people you would like to know . I
hope the ads help tbe association,
for I belleve it has been unfairly
maligned in the past.
But tbe NRA's advertisements
fall to answer the question that
bothers so many observers: How
can the NRA j ustlfy Its adamant
opposltlon to ANY legislative effort
to control those handguns that are
of no use to NRA members? It is
this purblind opposition that has
given the NRA the image of a bunch
of gun nuts.
The answer, I am told, Is the
answer of the foot In the door or the
camel with its nose In the tent. The
NRA fears that If Senator Kennedy
is given an Inch he wlll take a rnlle.
But this attitude is preposterous. It
defies the experience of legislative
regulation In a hundred other fields .
To contend that a rnlld restriction
on the Interstate sale of snubbies
Invites wholesa le confiscation of all
privately owned firearms Is to
engage in paranoid pratt le.
Over the years, as editor and
columnist, I have steadfastly opposed bills lha t would require the
registration of firearms; such
proposals are futile. I have opposed
any regu)ation at all of shotguns
and rifles; these weapons figure In
only a tiny fraction of all homicides .
I have actively supported the
NBA's effort to enact laws that
Impose additional mandatory sent ·
ences for use of a firearm In the
commission of a felony.
But given the appalling record of
murder by handgun In the United
States, l am convinced we must
keep try1ng to draft a federal law
that will al least make a start. The
purpose should be to curb the
manufacture. importation, sale and
distribution of concealable hand·
guns a nd ammunition for them .
The Senate committee' s bill won't
gel us to all these alms, but It merits
support as a step in the right
dlrectlon.

No-nonsense judge _______J_ac_k_And_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - The Reagan
admlnistra tlon has gone the way of
all administrations: spending more
than it has and relying on future
taxpayers to foot the bill. The
multiplication of dPbt• has broughl
the nation to the edge of financial
ruin. It is already the basic cause of
unemployment a nd destitution for
families.
The solutions are painful bul
doable doable. !hat is, if
politicians would tmpoSP reforms
now !which would be blamed on

A.3

the hurried scrawl was enough to
tell them that all was well at the
other end of their lives. Most a!
them were subscribers to The
National Tribune published In
Washington, D.C. by the G.A.R. for
veterans and their widows. Like
Grandma. I would read It from
cover to cover. It had first -hand
accounts of distant battles !ought a
half century before and Its Illes, If
preserved. must have been a gold
mine for historians. I kept my mall
route by conscientious service until
my private enterprise was put out
of business by government inlerfer·
e nce. The Post Office Department
established Rural Free Delivery.
The mall was delivered to a mall
box In front of their homes and
small post offices were closed . Mrs.
Sines, Mr. DaVIs and I all lost our
jobs and It Is hard lo say which felt
worse.
It was the end of an era!

Richanl A. Burgert

LIMA - City Loan and Savings
recorded record assets and sharply
higher Income for the quart~r
ending March JJ, 1984, compared to
·
the same period last year.
The company reported assets pf
$890.4 million. an inc rease of .57
percent over $.1)66.8 millfon in asseis
reported at the end of the firSt
quarter of HID.
.
Net income was reported at $J.18
million for the first quarter. up 65
percent from $798 thousand re·
ported in the first quarter of 1983.
"This record growl h reflects our
con1inuro succes.'&gt; throughout our
Ohio branch network. " sa id Wa)'T]e

Thomas P. Watkins

James G. Haunty

Dalp M. 'fnonary

John R. Weeks

Utility promotes Weeks, announces staff changes
CQLUMBUS - John R. Weeks.
Pa.st division manager of Columbus
a nd Southern Ohio Electric Co.
since 1978, has been promoled to
ex panded duties as Athens division
manager as part of Ihe first phase
of a major rrorganiza tion an·
nounced by the company.
James P. Fenstermaker, president a nd chief operating officer ofC
and SOE. sa id this phase ol lhe
rt.'Organization involves the crea·
lion of three OJX'rating divisions t\t hpns. Columbus and Chillicothe
-a nd two Columbus-based general
office func tions.
Ot hl•r members of C and SOE
managPment involvf'd in this r ror ganization are:
DaiP M . Trenary. currPnfl.v wPst

division manager , becomes Chilli·
cothP division managPr.
-Thomas R. Watkins. curren t! \'
manager, transmission and distri·
but ion. bE-comes Columbus div ision
ma nager
James G. Haunt~' · currrnll.v
manager-constru ction and mainte·
-

nance. becomes genera l office
tr a n s mi ssion and distribut ion
manager .

- Richard A. Burgert. vice
presidenl, who will assume general
offiCP responsibility for the com·
panx· s purchasing and stores functions. in addition to his existing
automotive and building and servi ·
crs groups.
All the moves will be l'ff«livc

leristics of the C a nd SOE s~s t em .
The general offlcc tdivislon organi
za tlon loca lizes the responsibility of
providing quality serv ice to our
cus1omers." Fenstflrmaker said.
Weeks' expanded IPve ls of rt' ·
spons ibil!t y involve a ll sPrvicP

Monda~' -

" ln 191l0, C and SOF. formally
made the t··a ns ition fro m an
independent PlPCtric utility com pa n~' to an operating subsidiary of

American Ei('{'tric Pov.:er Com ·
pany." Fenst ermaker sa id .
"In aC'tuality. a ny rhangf' of this
breadJh tak,.; a long lime to
complete. These changPs rPprPsrnt
on ly a portion of lhP stPps involved .
Some c hanges have a lrmdy been
made while others will be made i'l
the mont hs ahea d ... he added. '
'
"Thi s change ro the general office
divis ion organization is dC'signNit o
be compatible 1\ilh l hat alrca d)'
existing in other AEP compa nirs.
but 11 reco_cnizes thr unique c·harJ&lt;:·

ac tivities

in

the

Athens area.
including customer accounts. mr ·
trring, customer servic£&gt;, line and
station, l'ngineeri ng and records.
The At hens division servf's custo·
mers in all or part of 10 southeastern Ohio counties a nd has offices in
Athpns, ( ;a uipolis and Wellston.
W('('ks. who joined C and SO F. '"
1!-f:)7, is a mrmber of thr Athrns
Chamber of CommPrce Industri ul

·.

Rotary, thf' Americ.:t n Legion and
the Masomc Lodge.
A tru stPP nf ThP Plains Unit r d
M et hodist Church . hf' has hPf'n a
board member of the Sour hrastern
Ohio Council on Alcoholism. Th(•
Pomeroy · native attended Ohio
Cnivcrsity.

Sutcliffe, presidPnt and chief exectl·
live officer of Cit y Loa n arid

Savings.
"Our customers have responded
c nthus ia s tica ll~· to thf' nf'w Sf'rvices
wf''ve introduced - specificaily
n('\"-' first and second mortgage
plans. expa nded thrifl products and
A u t omatC'd

TellE'r

Machi(')f'

services

nrvPlopmf'nt Comm itt w, At hens

Diversity helps country store owner
EDITOR'S l'OTE - Student
Am bas.sadors lor Free Enterprise
(S.A.F.E.) at Rio Grande CoUege
wlll he authoring a series of 12
articles, commenting on economic
issues and conditions that affect
southeastern Ohio. It L• the hope of
the program that through these
articles, the citizen~ in our area will
become concerned with the subject
of economics - a subject which
imposes major influence on all of
our indh-idual and community
decisions. This i• the sixth article In
the series.

I

1

By BRAD JOHNSON
For the Times-Sentinel
RIO (;RAN DE - The southeast ·
ern Ohio countryside is becoming
the growt h slle for business. Rural
pa rts of the four·county area are
now bl-'&lt;.·oming a haven for small
busim:sses. Thest&gt; businesses. usu·

b&lt;'come your friends ... stares Mr.
Ma rkham about the advantages of
·
"Y our 1oss 1·s usua 11 ~ ,
rura I b usmrss.
lower. that is. mainT cnanrr a nd
opera ting expensf's
Most import &lt;c~ nt to him is lhp
atmospher£1 that hC' is in .
"L'nlikPothPrbusinl'SSl'S, !hPrl' is
Jpss fin: protC'C'tion a nd polic£&gt;
protl'ction compared 1o thO!-iP in
tow n," Markham said about disad·
vantages. "Thosp would br the
major points in thf' case."

bus inPssPs do ha ve potential cu.sto·
mers_ As lhP r ural urras bC'COmf'
man~ populated, there is morf'
demand fo r goods and services."
.Just a word of caution beforp
sturting a bus iness: becomr famil ·
i&lt;.~r v..ith thr rural arPas. Common
sense mu st pre\·a il, anU somf'
rr lf'\'ant points should bP con'i i·
dc' n'd . Do I, or c an I j:!Pt Pnough
customPrs to run m y busim·s~ at a
profl t? Is thP a rPa I picked
acress ibit" tu m _\' potC'ntial rust o·
m ers? Who is mycom)JC't it ion? Will
thC' communit y bf&gt; bc1ter Sf'I\-'Pd as
a res ult of my business'?

years. The store itself has bC"en in

Markham l:x-lif'VC's that rur JI
businesses an" be'(·oming incrC':t s·
ingly popul ar .
··More j:X"'plP want to sC'tt Jr out of

In thC' bf'ginning v.-- ith an:· nP\\'
businPss. the dement of ri sk is
prC'Sent. But wit h hard work ancl
ca rf' ful planning . t hC' I'PW.:l rds ma ~·

E-xistence for 32 years . Mr. Mark ·
ha m bought thP storP from his
brothPr as a fa vor. and hP sa id that
it was thP best thing that Pvrr

town . same j ust to gp t out or t he
tmvn s ~nd rities. ot hC'rs bc'causP of
thP Pase of buymg land ami grtting
startPCI ." hP said. "Th us. sma ll

ally one owner or a famil y businC'ss,
are growi ng as thP larger corfX)ra-

tions set the trend by mo,;ng from
J~e c ity to the r ural area s.
The type of businesses vary from
1he country stores to arts and crafts
shops . car body shops and bar ber
shops.
In Jackson Cou nty the re is onP
particular busin&lt;'SS on which I will
focus. The Liberty General Store on
old Roule 124 is a good example of
th&lt;' diversity Ihat is practicPd by a
store in the country. The storC' sells
ever;,·thing fro m stove pipes to
candy.
I talked with the owner . Dale
Markham. Mr. Markha m has
owned the storC' for the past seven

happened to him .
"You get to knmv th(' pPOplr who
come in to yo ur store. and thf'_V

MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS

JUNE 1-2-3
HOURS: 9 a.m. Till Dark
"Dealers From All Over Will Be Here"
INSIDE &amp; OUTSIDE SPACES AVAILABLE
From 50'per ft. Frontage and Up

*

*

WEEKEND SPI':CIALS AVAILABLE
Junction Route 1 &amp; 33-Pomeroy, Ohio- Signs Wlii Be Posted
l

f~'-~1t~G

~ ..1'

lU~c~~~

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL ~v~~~~~~~
DAVID MANN
MIKE MARTIN

614·992·6300

614·915-4396

I~be;· ; g; r;e;a;t ;.J;u;s t;a;s;·k;U;-;a ;Ie;M;;;;ar;k;h;a;m;.;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

Ford requests more federal help
NEW YORK lAP)- Ford Motor
Co. Chairman Philip Ca ldwell
Challe nged Steelmakers to m atch
Ihe auto industry's strong recovery
t;~es and c hided
fro m recent hard '"'
the federal government for not
doing e nough to help American
b u s i n e s s men c o m P e I c
internationally .
Donald Traullein. nPWiy e lecled
c hairman of the American Iron and
Sleel Institute. meanwhile. said the
staggering sleet industry needs the
relief from cheap imports that
a ulomakers have enjoyed for the
last years to meet the challenge.
"We're not profitable enough todo
th&lt;' modernization job," Trautlein
said Thursday after his election to
replace u.s. Steel Corp. Chairman
David Roderick as head of the
indu slry group.
Given "reasonable" business con·
ditions during a proposed five--yea r
period of import restraint. "we
would generate ... lhe$(\ billion to$6
billion a year we need I to moder·
nizel." he said.
Caldwell, addressing a black tie
dinner at lhe Waldorf-Astoria Hotel
to close Ihe AJSI's two-day annual
convenlion, said U.S. automakers
invested $10 billion in new products
and machinery and $7 billion In
research despite losing$3.3 billion in
!980 through 1982.
That helped automakers stage a
$10 billion turnaround in profits over

Incorporation filed
GALLIPOLIS - Incorporation
papers have been filed with Secrelary of State Sherrod Brown'sofflce
for Sa lisbury Painting Service Inc.,
Gallipolis.
Incorporators are Daniel S.
Sa lisbury a nd Shirley Salisbury,
both of Patriot Star Route. Shirley
Sa lisbury is listed as agent.
The flrm filed 100 shares with
Brown· s offiCe.

ia unty
Volunteer
Emergency Squad

NOW OFFERING

FREE
Ambulance Service
8 A.M. til 12 Midnight
24 Hour Service
Saturday &amp; Sunday

446-8

2

the past three years.
"The aulo industry_ cannot sue·
ceed. however, without s imilar
practice on your part ... Ca ldwell
sa id, noting that automakers are

proposed Fair Trade and Steel Act.
.
bco
't t
The bill, pending m a su
mml ee
0 f the House ways ard. Means
Commit1 ee , wou ld restnc t steP 1
t flh d
t
imports to 15percen o e ames IC
market for five years
"Am I fea rful ? Ahsolutdy ...

steelmaker s' biggest custom ers.
But ste&lt;'l companies spent nearly
$lJ billion on mode rnization overt he
Trautlein told reporlcrs at a news
alf 1
conference
past 14 years. only about h
t 1e ,.::.:..:.:.:..:..::.:..:.:.:..:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
amount needed to keep even with
plant deteriorallon. according to the
AJSI.
Caldwell said growing federal
deficits have hobbled Amf'rican
businPssmen tryinglocompet ewith
low-cost foreign producers .
Financing the federal deficil
ra ises interest rates, inflates the
dollar's value against foreign cur·
rencies. "puts a crushing burden on
ourcxportsandglvesawindfaU ... to
our competilors, " Caldwell said al
the close of the American Iron and
Steel Institute's two-day an nua l
convention in New York.
Trautlctn said the governmenl
may miss a key opportunily to help
the steel industry fighl unfair
foreign competitiOn.
Trautlein said he fears Congress
will either reject or water down lhe

~~~~~~::.:_.:::_::.::_~:.:.::.::.::..J

Seafood Salad • Chilled Shrimp • Chilled Seafood Combo
They're cool ... crisp ... and a great way to beat the
summer heat. Long John Silver's CHILLERS .. .
Three exciting new meals ... Seafood Salad .. .
Chilled Peel 'nEat Shrimp ... and our Chilled Seafood
Combo. Three exciting lunch or anytime meals . ..
each delightfully cool and refreshing.
State Route 7, Silver Bridge Shopping
Center, Gallipolis

_____________-j

' .·- ·

...

,;:

~·

· jj.

We're
Open Memorial Day
Monday, May 28, 1984
10 A.M. to 10 P.M.

....

�Area deaths
Mildred Bailey
LANSING, MICH . - Mildred
(Shorty) Bailey, 58, 12l8Park Blvd ..
Lyons, Mich., died May 25 in
Lansing, Mich. Shewasborn0ct.13,
19:li In Lawrence County, Ohio.
She is swvlved by her husband .
Car l (Don ) Bailey; one son, Terry of
Portland, Mich.; one grandchild.
She Is also survived by her
mother, Mrs. Vernle Blake of Crown
City, two brothers. Curtis Blake of
Portland, Mich .. a nd Robert Blake
of Columbus; and three sL•ters.
Climita Kingery and Frances
Stalling , botn of Huntington , W.Va ..
and Edna Moon&lt;&gt;y of Crown City.
Two brothers and two s isters
preceded her in deatil.
Funeral services will be Monda\' ,
\:30 p.m .. from Neller Funeral
Home. Portland. Mich ., with the
Rev. James Rm;poffil'iatlng . Burial
willlx• in Dan bey Cemetery .

John Harry Morgan
GAU.. I.POLIS - John llarnson
t Harry· I Morgan, 73, a form&lt;•r
Gatlia Count)' resident. died at o: .10
p.m . Friday m Northside Hospital,

Eva Smith
Funeral arrangements wUI be
announced later by Miller's Home
for Funerals.

Rick Smith
REEDSVILLE -- Services for
Rick Smith, 23, ReedsvUie, who
drowned Thursday while swim ·
ming at Forked Run Lake, will be
held at 11 a.m. Monday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville.
Mr. Smith was born at Parkersburg, W. Va .. asonofHaroldSmith,
Reedsville, and Barbara Everson,
Veto. Ohio AesidPs hisparPnts. hPis
s urvived by his stPpfathPr, Jvan

Everson: two sisters, Tamm.Y
Congo and Anita Brooks, botil of
Veto; a brother, Harold, Jr .. of
Belpre; his materna l grandparents.
Cecil and Flossie DUion. and his
paternal grandparents, Richard
and Louise Smith. all of Reedsville.
Mr. Smith wasl'mpioyed with I he
W. W. Marine Service, MoLUidsville.
Offlcialing at sPrvices will be the
Rev . Roy Deeter. Burial will be Ln
Reedsville Cemetery. Ftiendsmav
call at the funeral home after 3 p.m .
Sunday.

Youngstown.

in Galli a
Cou nry. son of lhf' !alP Mella in a nd

EvaN. Weaver

New plant
dedicated

GALLIPOLIS F.va Niday
Wpaver. ~.a formpr Gallia County
resident, died Friday morning in St.
Joseph Hospital, Fort Wayne, Ind .
Born Aug. 8, 1903, In Harrison
T ownship, she was tile daughter of
the late Emory a nd Ladotla Niday·
Married since 1926, her husband
survives in Fort Wayne.
Also surviving are a brother,
Lasco Niday of Gallipolis; and five
grandchildren.
Shew as a lso preceded indPalh b)•
a brot her, Bill Niday.
Fune ral services will be held in
Fort Wayne.

Born March ll1.

I~Hl ,

By TIM D.&gt;\ "lS
HA''EN
us. . Sc nator
N,,,..
&lt;c "
'
Rotx&gt;rt C. B:.Td Friday dedicated
the town' s new pollution control
fJcilil\' to the citizens of this
communi!\. In his address Byrd
sJid, .. Here today we dedlcate a
monuml'nl for those lo come after
u ~. In

it grPat things ha ve come

from lhP hard work. dedica tion a nd
f•n lhusiasm uf you, !ht• c itizens of
:\ i&gt;W Ha \'en ."

B_
\TLI, minority leadt•r o f the
Scnatf' and New Havpn Mayor
Cr: t_vson "Pat" Williamson. were
amo ng :-,pveral guest speake rs at
the• df'dication ceremony.
Williamson sa id, "Mankind ca n
no longer disregard nor take an
indifff'rE'nt attitude to how essf'ntial
rf'sources are used. As fundamen tal a..- free speech is to our soci f'~ -.
thf' r ight of every person to thf' usf'
a nd c&gt;njoyment of clean water not
onl:v in New !Iaven a nd Hart ford ,
bulla a ll thoseatonglheOhioRivcr .
" I n this f'ifftion year. Wf' haW'
hc&gt;ard so m uch about thf' poor
husines..- clima te. but wp her£' in
Nf'w Havpn are \~o:orking with
mdu stry·, the feder&lt;ll and starr
gove rnmf' nt s. a long with our nrigh tXlrs, to Sf'f:'k fo r oursPIVPS 11 nd for
our childrPn a sociPty frf'f' from
polluted wate rs. We have accepted
thC' challcngf' a nd we ha vC' in thf'
wnrds of the Athenian citizens
"f'ndPavorrd to tra nsmit th.i s ci ry.
not onl;•. not less . but greater.lx'rt cr
a nd morf' lx'autifu l than l! was
transmittPd 10 us.· " William son

May 27, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio--¥oint Pleasant, W. Va.

Page--A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

·Munson
lawsuit
settled
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A $42
million lawsuit filed by the widow of
baseball star Thunnon Munson
over his death In a 1979 plane crash
was set tied for an undisclosed
amount as the trial entered its fifth
day.
Diana Munson brought the suit
against the Cessna Aircraft Co ..
which sold her husband the Cessna
Citation he was Oying when it
crashed at the Akron-Canton Air·
port on Aug. 2, 1979, killing the
J2-year-old New York Yankee
catcher.
U.S. District Judge David D.
Dowd announced the settlement
Friday morning to the six-member
jury. wruc h had heard two days of
testimony.

Dowd said details of the settle·
ment would not be disclosed .
"We're very, very happy for the
Munson family," said Daniel C.
Ca thcan, a Los Angeles a ttorney
who represen tedJI!rs. Munson&lt;;,
Michael Gallagher, a Cleveland
a ttorney representing the Kansasbased Cessna company, called the
settlement "amicable" and "very
pleasing" to tile manufacturer.
Mrs. Munson. 35, shared in tile
decision not to reveal thesett lemen t,
her attorneys said.
She has two daughters. Tracy,14,
KnUv
, . , 12, and as0 n, M'ch
1 ae 1, 8.
A settlement was reached Manday with Flight Safety Interna tional
Inc., tile school tha t taught Munson
how to fly the $1.2 million,
eiRht -passengerplane.
Mrs. Munson had alleged that
Cessna pressured Munson Lnto
buying the jet a lthoug h he had
limited fly ing experience, then
fa iled to provide adequa tE" tra in ing,
which was included in the purchase
ptiCf'.

r - - - - - - - - - - - - ---!:..:..:..:...___________-1

OPEN SUNDAY
OPEN

jUMORIAL DAY

OPEN
MEMORIAL DAY
10 A.M.- 9 P.M.

. We Reserve The Right To Limit Prices

facllit .¥ bPgan 1n thl' fall uf 19M and
was on li ne in December of l~Rl .
The nP\1." !Jiant was fundPd 7~)
pc'rcrn t from tht' EnvironmPntal

ProiC'Ction Agency and five JJPIT&lt;'nl
fro m thC' statP a nd thl' rvrnaindPr
b~· thC' lo('al sha rf'.
Roth sa id that the nPw f&lt;.tt' ilit\·
rc movps ~6 (X'rcf'nt of impuritif's
fro m thP wastP watt'r and it has a

ga llon-a-day capacil\ .
Firlds also ~ tated that !hf' nf'w
plant w ill ht&gt; a pilot sitP for training
nrw wasll' watf'r tiT'atmC'nt pl&lt;tnl

~(J.IXJO

OfX'I"Citnrs for !hf' Sta!P [.)(&gt;partmf'nt

of Educa tion .

I

~ I'

.i:!5 Ktlfl

\ \1ultinwdia "''it•w .. papn
l' uhl • "- h ~· d ,.,H h '-'u nd .i\ . H:.!'• Thtt'rl

,\u •n •w

In 1h1 '

Oh to \

,1111 ' \

l'ubli ~ h

:Vtu ltimf"'rll.i , In• · "it•
1n)! i ·o mp.l n\
co nll l't.J'-'- pt•'-l.t !-!1' pa it1 . 11 ( •• t i l t pol l'
c 1111n l'•ti:ll I· nlf•rt ·rl ,, ..., 'f'nm d l"lol'-'m . lt ll !l)! nl.t' lo 'l dl l' r• O lP'fn\
Ohio .

l '1" 1 I ltlt f'f'
:\lkmh• ·• Tht · -\ ~'i r)cJ:t iPd f' :T -...~ !n
1. 1nrl [) ,llh l'rl '"~ ,\ o.,~ Cl('i. tll n r• ,1nd lhP
.,hf"r o., -\~
1\ nH"T"I i ' dn ;\r•w'-p; ipPr l'uhli_
~ 1 1 ('t,lll (l n , ~. •l t on.tl A rl \·l' r lt &lt;&gt; lng H• ·
pr P'-t·ntat : \ ·f·
nranh :.~m . 11 17 \\· ,._~ ,
\:lnl' Mih• \{()ad . Su t lf' .!0·1. 01' 1rlllt.
!v1ichh.: an -UiO"j:,

Sl iRSf ' RIPTION K ,\TJo~ S
Ry ( "arrkr or Mowr Rout I'

om · " "p p J..

Si 1n

orw :\llonrh

.'S·I Kll

Sl~(ii..E

fOP\

I,RH f :
.~

Cl'nl!oj

:--.. 11 '- llh.. .- rt pl tf'n" h' m. u l pt' rrriirtroci
i n trrwno; w lwt"l' m o to r c.u t iP r '-''' \ "H"f'
a tlll'
1.., .1

,.,,,1

Timr-... -SI'nltnf'l w il l 11111
tw n·~f"Kln'- ibl( ' fnr ctcl \' ancf' pa\ nwnt "

.

BONE IN

FRESH

ROUND
STEAK

HICK
BREAST

J

)

$

$

•

POUND

SUPERIOR BONELESS

TAVERN HAM

1/2 HAM

CHUCK
ROAST
POUND

$1.79 LB.

$169

.........
FRESH

FRESH

COLE
SLAW

POTATO

LB.

TENDER &amp; J

CUBE
CORN
DOGS

LB. $

SALAD

FRESH

MACARONI
SALAD LB.
FRESH

WHOLE
249 FRVERS

3/$1

FRANKIES

99¢
LB.

BAKED
BEANS

LOIN &amp; END

PORK

CHOPS

$109

LB.

BACON

PEPSI - REG. OR DIET
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW
8-16 Oz.

Plus Deposit

Btls.

ENO GENERAL STORE

VALLEY BELL GAL.

388-9038

A Messaqe From The

TUNA

B~"ble ..

ONE BAPTISM

WiUiizmB. Kughn
"One Lurd, une fait h, one baptism" (E phesians 4 :5)
It i~ common ly taught there are three baptisms: t he baptism of
.John. of the Holy Spirit. and or rire . In orde r Lh•l we. may understand
and r('cogn ize the "one impt i.."-:'1" tt he one process _of_ iffif!lCTSlO~ which
m(•ans to dip ). let us hegin w1th the process of ehmmatton, usmg th e
scripturf's as our guide .
Baptism Of John
The "one baptum " exclu des the baptism of t.he Holy Spirit, for this
longer binding. "Repentance _a nd .. remiss-ion of ~ns" we~e _to be
preached in the name of Chnst among aU natwn.s, beg1nntng at
J erusawm"lf.k. 24:471. On Pentecost. in J erusalem. "Peter said unto
thf'm, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus
Chns t for th e remission of sins" I.Acts 2:38). From this day [orward ,
thl' baptism for the rP.missio n of sins was preached, and the ones who
wpre baptized into John's baptis m h~d .t o be baptized with the "~ne
lmpl!sm ... We have an example of thrs m Acts 19:1·5. The Ephesran
(lis('ip iPs who had het.&gt; n baptized ''unto John's baptism" were instructed
hv Paul of the bapti sm co mmanded by Christ, and "When they heard
rins, 1hPy IN' rt' hapf1:ZP.d in the name of the Lord Jesus" (Acts 19:1 -5).
Bapti•m 01 The Holy Spirit
. .
.
The "onr baptism" excludes the baptism of the Holy Spmt, for thls
or('urrt'd onl y tw ic«·. and it, too. had already been administered by t he
Lord . The apostlr s rec~ived the Holy SFirLt baptism on the day of
P 4 · nl«•('o~l !Act s 2: 1-41lo g ui~e t hem in al truth. to bring all things to
t h(' ir r(&gt; mf'mbr anc:~ what Chn st had spoken to t he m, and to show them
thon gs to come tJno. 14 :26: 16: 13L Cornelius and his household
received t he baptis m of t he Holy Spmt tn order to convmce the J ews
that t he Gentilf's were callt-d into "covenant relationship" with God
!Acts 10:44 -41\1: lh.refore, Peter asked. "Can any man f!YT'bid uxtter,
that th e sf! s huuld 110t be baptized, which. have received the Holy Ghost
tl.S WP.ll as we r· (Arts 10:4 7) .
Baptism Of Fire
The "one baptism" exclu des t he baptism of fire, for this is the
baptism yPt to come. The "baptism of fire" is not a part of t he "b!lptilm
of the Huly Sporit," nor was it promised to th~ ~postles. Had It been
promised to t he apostles and to have been admm1ste,red .by the Lord at
t he same lime. then Jesus would have spoken on this wtse. But, J~sus
sa id "For John truly baptized with uxtter; but ye slwl.l be baptiZed
'with the Holy Ghost not many days hence" (Acts 1:7). The "baptilm of
fire" is not mentioned . Why? Because the . "baptilm of fire." is to be
admin istered by the Lord ~t the end of. b':Jie ~pon the w1cked, the
unfru it ful, and the chaff . Whose fan 18 In hl8 hand, and he will
thoroughly 'fJ'Urge his floor, and gather hil whe~t into tile garner: but
he will burn up the chaff With unquenchabk fire (Mt . 3:12).-Conhnued
For Free Bibk Correspmu:lence Courre Writ e ..

2% MILK

STAR-KIST

$}6 9)

VALLEY BELL

¢

COTTAGE $}39
CHEESE 24 OZ.
BUSH

16

oz.

2/89¢

BAKED
BEANS
LAYS

WHITE GOLD

SUGAR
5 LB.

BAG

$ 59

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE

12Roz.

$ 99

POTATO
CHIPS

soz$}09
BAG

VLASIC

HAMBURGER

CHIPS
A-1

STEAK
SAUCE

IOOZ.

WILSON

EVAP.
MILK .. g~z

$}99

2/$}
LB.99¢

MARTHA WHITE
SELF-RISING 5

2LG.
ROLLS

TEA
BAGS

$ 09

T tw Su nd ;n

li'IMk h\" ( ,IITi('l'-

~UII ~ ~WRSf"RIP'TIONS

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Rul•~llle

Ro•d • P . 0 . Box 108
Gaitlpotts, Ohio 45631

Su ndtt.}' On l y
$:!ti fil}

OnP n •a r
Stx months

$1.100

llally and Sund a."
Mi\11. SUBSCR IPTI ONS
ln~idf' Ohio
:l2 W f'('K !'
2fi Wrl'kS .

1.1 Wt&gt;(•ks

1&gt;1\ 24
12

~~

$14.56

Rate~

Outl'lldf' Ohio
:,2 Wt'f'ks .. ······-···

2fi Weds .
1~

W(lflks

. 1'9 R1l

s:n.2o

. $1&gt;.60

s ... dty Momitt:
Bible Sllld' t :JO
WIKIIII, li :JO

S11nd1y t:•tllltl:
Wonlllp 6:00

Wrd..:tt, :

Blbk Sltd,
7:00p.11t .

...,.

HALF RUNNER
GREEN BEANS

'' M-t"fm•

TMI6blt''

DaiiJ' • wn:tt
11 : ~• · • ·

LB.69¢

TEXAS

IDAHO
POTATOES

lOLB.$199

BAG

as speaker, Principal John H.
Ellingson announced recipients of
honorary awards.

Academic winners
Named the outstanding senior in
academics was Krist in Cook,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.GriffCook
of Rio Grande.
Active in band. choir. National
Honor Society, Spanish Club, basketball, softball and Vars ityG, Cook
was also listed as outstandlngsenior
in science and shares the mathemat.
ics key with Sheila Whiteley,
daughter of Dr. a nd Mrs . Daniel
Whit eley, Rt. 4, Gallipolis.
During t he past four years, Cook
compiled a 4.0 grade point average
in all scien ce courses, as we ll as
mastering fundamental and ad·
vanced concepts in math.
Cook received the $:!XI Holzer
Science Award. Lssued by Holzer
Cli nic Ltd. She is alsothereciplent of
a four-year honors scholarship to
RioGrandeCollegeandCommunity
College.
Whit eley has also been nanned the
out•tanding senior in English. She
has achieved a 4.0 average in the
subj ect throughout her high school
career and scored high on the
E nglish section of the ACT . She
received a $100 a ward from the
Ga llipolls Lions Club.
Because Whiteley also achieved a
4.0average in scienee, she wlll share
a $100 award from the Gallipolis
Kiwanis Club with Cook for the

COOKING
ONIONS

3LB.gg¢
BAG

By CHEf CURRIER
AP Business Writer.
NEW YORK !API The
t radii lanai sta11 of Ihe fun -filled
summer SC'ason at Memorial Day
finds many Wall Streeters Ln a glum
and anxious mood.
The stock marke t is in bad shape ,
the bond market even worse. The
world of banking is beset wit h
problems a nd ugly rumors. Talk is
spreading of a new recession.
possibly bt:'ginning even before
yearend.
The approaching election, in
which PresidPnt Reagan was considered a s ure-firp favorite by many
business people until very recently ,
now is viewed wit h increasing
uncertainty.
Labor negotia tions are approach·
lng in the auto industry, and many
observers are worried they could
lead to new infla tionary pressures or
a strike that depresses the genera l
The Federa l Rese1ve, in itsefforts
to steer tile economy through this
minefie ld , appears "check-mated,"
as Edward Yardeni, economist at
Pllldential -Bache Securities, put it
in an interview on Friday .
If the Fed seeks to reduce the
supply of credit available in the
financial system, it might put an
intolerable strain on troubled bor·
rowers like many of the lesser d&lt;'ve loped countries, and their
lenders, the banks.

But If it loosens credit, increasing
thP supply of money available to
keep everybody solvent, it runs the
risk of giving investors tnl' impression that It has retreated in its long
battle against inflation. Heightened
inflation fears would logically
depress bond prices. pusrung int erest rates even higher than they
already are.
Sooner or later, pessimistic observers think, the high cost of
borrowing is going to stall tile
eco nomic recovery that began a
year and a hall agu. "There's a good
chance we'll see a recession either in
the fourth quarter or the first
quarter of next year." Yardenisays.
"Present interest r ates are taking
a toll thatwill soon becomeevident ,"
say economists S. J ay Levy and
David A. Levy in the latest edition of
thl'ir newsletter, Industry Forecast.
"Even m eager GNP 1gross national
product I grow til is questionable for
late 1984."
The leading averages told the
story of investors' mood in the past
week. The Dow Jones average of30
industrials fell 26.69 to 1,107.10.
hitting a 15-month low on Thursday.
The New York Stock Exchange
composite index dropped 2.44 to
87.12, a nd the American Stock
Exchange market value index was
down 7.12 a t 198.35.
Big Board volume averaged 84 .'27
million shares a day , against 89.56
million the week before .

BAG

TENDER LEAF

PAPER TOWElS

GALLIPOLIS - Gradua ting seniors a t Gallia Academy High
School were told to become active
panicipants in the community and
were asked to "move forward"
duringcommeneement cC'remonies
Fr iday.
"It's easy to be an observer of
life," said Sta te Rep. Jolynn Boster.
D-GaUipolLs, the guest speaker .
"Your life, and the life going on
around you is exciting. Begin now to
participate."
GAHS gradua ted 187 seniors
during the ceremony , held on
Memorial Field.
Noting that the date was the sam!'
as her gradua lion from high sehoul
in Dayton, Boster urged the
graduates not to look upon com mencement as the end of the best
time of t)leir lives, bu ttolookat those
years, evaluate what had happened,
a nd toward opportunities in their
lives a nd careers.
"Every year can be the best. if you
rake the initiative a nd shape your
life," shPsaid. "Time,responsibiUty
a nd good work can convert oppor tunities into reality."
ThP ceremony - the first outdoor
gradua tion since 19Hl-openedwith
a prayer of dedication and a reading
from thP BibiP by the Rev . William
Myers of St Louis Catholic Churc h.
Following vocal selections by the
GAHS Madrigals, Myers also conducted the baccaula ureate sermon.
Prior to the Introduction of Boster

E'COnorny.

32 OZ .

FLOUR

SCOTTOWELS

1\r'Win Cook

Shella Whiteley

Chris Ellcessor

sclenee key. Whiteley was also a
winner of the National Merit
Sc holarsrup.
John Bostic, son of Ruth Holley,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, was named
out&gt;tandlng senior in music. A
member of the GAHS marcrung
band for four years, Bostic has also
been involved in choir, Madrigals,
spring musicals, brass choir, wind
ensemble and pep band.
He Ls recipient of a $100 scholar·
srup in memory of Mallonee
Robinson, donated by Mr. and Mrs.
Don Ro binson.
Athletes honored
The outstanding ma le senior in
athletics key was shared by Chrts
E llcessor, son of Florence Ellcessor, 80 Locust St., and David Garber,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Garber,
Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Renee Halley, daughter of Mr.
a nd Mrs. Ron Halley, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was named outs tandi ng
female senior athlete.
E llcessor participated in football ,
cross country and baske tbal l. His
honors include most valuableplayer
In basketball, 1983-84; first team
SEOAL, 1984; SEOAL most valuable player. 1984; first team , a ll
district; and special mention, a llsta te. He was also student council
president .
With participation In football,
track and basketball, Garber was
named track MVP in 1984; was
honora ble mention, All-SEOAL

David Garber

~nee

Halley

football team in 1983; and was
recipient of the 1983 John F. Groth
Scho lastic Award.
Ellcessor and Garber will s hare a
$100 scholarsrup in memory of
Mallonee Robinson, donated by Mr.
and Mrs. Don Robinson.
Ha lley, who participated in basketball and soft ball , was SEOAL
MVP in 19/W; first team, a ll district;
1984 district co-player of the year;
second team AAA All-Ohio; 1983
soft ball MVP; and 1984 basket ball
MVP.
She was recipient of a $100
scholarship from the Rio Grande
Lions Club.
Receive scholarsiUfL'i
Other scholarship and award
wirmers were:

Tracey Hennesy, Bob Rees Scho·
larsrup , Rio Grande College a nd
Communit y Co ll ege; Allison
Woods, Robbins &amp; Myers Inc., $600;
Missy McDade, Ohio Valley Bank,
$500; Bernadette Garnes, Ohio
Valley Bank, $500; Lettie Stewart .
Central Trust Co., $500; Jennifer
Hatcher. Presidential Honors Scholarship, Marietta College; Sonya
Harold, F'F'A Outstanding Senior
Award, In memory of Terry H.
Oliver Jr.; Tina Jones, John Philip
Sousa Award; Marcia Finley,
McGuffey Summer Scholarsrup,
Ohio University.
Nineteen students were named
the top 10 percent of the class, and
received gold tassels . They were

Week's events
leave Wall Street
in state of gloom

SUPERIOR

12 OZ . PKG .

{

I

•
Gallia Academy graduates 187 during Friday ceremonies

•

POUND

of 50s

RT . 554

~
.John Bostic

Accord ing to Mike Fields. wa ste I~;:::=:~:;:;:;~~~~~~~~;:~~~~~~~~~~~
~nid.

wr11cr trratmPnt opc&gt;ra to r. and
Chuck Zf'rkle, assistant opt'rator.
C'Onstruction on lhP $2.5-milli o n

Prices Good thru June 2,

GO TO CHURCti [V[RV SUNDAY

PERIOR

*FRUIT TREES
*BEDDING PLANTS
*SEEDS
~-C-A-8-BA_G_E--,
*POP
TOMATO
*MILK
SWEET POTATOES
Sold In Bunches
*BREAD

May 27, 1984

DIPLO~lA RECEIVED- A diploma is handed to ,John Bostic, right,
son of Ruth HoOey, Rt. ~.Gallipolis, during graduation ceremonies for
Gallia Academy High &amp;:hool seniors Friday. Making the presentation
at left i• Joan Schmidt, president of the Gallipolis ( 'ltv Board of
Education. At Mrs. Sclunidt's left, lL'&lt;Sisting in the present~on, l• ,Jim
Pope, GA.JIS vice prindpal.

Kristin Cook, John E,·ans. Dec

Wclliam Matthew \olcK.innPy, Su-

Franklin. Uernadette Ga rnes, Jen -

zan ne Martin,

nifer Hatche r, Tracey Hennesy,

Christina Jones. Kirsten Koby,
Delx&gt;rah McCartney, Lorri McCov,

Timoth~ ·

Meadows,

Bel inda Pugh, KarPn Sue Sheets.
Terri Smcllzer. Leah Steel&lt;'. Sheila
Whit e ley and Allison Woods.

Beatrice Foods
ponders buyout
of rental outfit
By JAMES F. PEtTZ
AP Business Writ~r
NEW YORK tAPI
The
expected nt•w mvnrr of /\vis Inr.
like ly will say arrivederci to lhr
car -nm l al concern, accordi ng to
s0veral indu str~y obst'n.'t'rs.
Avis C'UJTf&gt;n tly is O\-'lTHX.l

THE GRADUATE - Gary Maxwell, 5, clutches ao American Oag
after graduatlon ceremonies for members of Lorain, Ohio Charleston
Center's c hUd care class. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary MaxweU of
Lorain. The cla.ss is taught by juniors and seniors from Lorain clly high
schools. ( AP Laserphoto).

Lady~s "ribs~

to he replaced

NEW YORK (AP)- The Statue
of Liberty's old "iron ribs" " 111 be
replaced with a new sta inless steel
skeleton as part of a $39 million
r estorat ion project, officials sa id
Friday.
The iron framework used to
support tile statue's copper skin is
badly lllSted and weakened, said F .
Ross Holland Jr., director of
restoration . He said the I,m iron
bars will beremovedanddupllcated
In corrosion· resistant stainless steel
donated by seven American specia lty steel manufacturers.
Meanwhile, the National Park

Serv ice announced that the s tatue
and Its pedestal wUI be closed to
visitors Tuesday and remain closed
whilP tile two-year project con
tlnues . The island on which il stands
and the American Immigration
Museum at its base will re main
open, said David Moffitt, superinte ndent of the Statue of Liberty
Na tional Monument.
Lee A. lacocca, chairman of the
Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Cen tennia l Commission, said that with
Its new ribs " l a m confident that the
sta tue will sta.nd for many yeau·s to
come."

by
Esmark Inc. But this r&gt;ast week
Esmark agreed to be acq uin'&lt;i b)'
Beatrice Foods Co .. and fol!owc'!'sof
lhc compa nies say- Beatricf' proba oty wilt put A vis on Ihe selling block
in shot1 order.
Th e a nalys ts note, howevor, th at
the sa m E' scC'nar io was l'orf'('ast
w hen F.smark acquirPd A\iS a s part
1ts bu.vout of Nor1on Simon Inc. last
summer. And Esmark still owns
Avis.
Regardless. Bcallice has made it
no SPCTet that thf' maln prizes of
Esma rk are its Swift- Hunt - W~sson
food unit and it s fnt rrnationa l
P la y tC'x

rn n s umrr -prod u cts

subsidJaJ:.'.
Beatrice Chai rman .lames L.
Dutt also has sa1d tha i oncP thf'
merger is completed. his mmpany
will "&lt;'mbark on an aggressive
dives titurP program of thoSf' com panies that do not fit our strategic
objectives."
Avis spokesman Harry Sa\·age
says the company's future "IS up to
Beatrice." a nd Beatrice spokeswoman Pat Brozowski says ''we'r£'no·,
saying wruch ofth pcompanips we'll
be divesting ."
In any casP. Beatrice "wants to

concentrate on focds &lt;..tnd tlw
consumer products areas." savs

Joh.n P. Larson of the J1vpstment
firm Blunt F.llis &amp; Loe~·i in
Miiwauk('('. "They don't have
par1icular

f&gt;XfX'I1iSf' in thp rr ntal -

car businPss."
Ads ra nk.s S('('()nd in thf' carrental bu sinpss lx'hind RCA's Hertz
Corp .. \\O th a market s ha re that
ranges betwpen 2.'i percent and J()
[X'r&lt;'t'n1. anal,v sts cstlmJ If'.

How muc h would the sa lf'of Avis
garnC'r? F'igurps of $400 million or
S:)()J million ha\'P bt'('n tossed about,
but ana lysis Sd.V thP pricf' would

largl'lv be detcnnim'&lt;i bv how fas t
Beatrrct wants tosllE'li th('unit: that
is, 1t might not hold our for the best
possr bte pricP.
Among de\·C'IopmPnls th&lt;' past
WN-' k :

-Stocks of major U.S. banks
tumb led Thursday arct id lllmors
that morp big banks were in
financial t muble. The banks and the
fC'deral government said the rumors
WC'rf' unfoundrd. and s tocks rt:'·
boundC'd Frida\ . Ana lvsts sa id t~·
react 10n to I hP rumors " 'as ev idenl't'

of thP &lt;Hl:l\iPt! · in thf' markpt cauSf;td

by tne bailout of Continen ta l Illinois
Nat ional Bank &amp; Trust Co. in
Chicago . ContinPntal requirf'd a

fC'dPrally din&gt;ct&lt;'fl rpsc ue package
of $7.0 billion a Wf'&lt;'k Parlier after
unsubsta nt iatPd 111mors that it was
in troubiP cau .~ a run on dC'posit s.
- Major t.; .S. Jutomakers 1\'·
porrcd mid - ~Ll.\" sa iPs rlim t)('(J 2:2
!l('rcC&gt;nt from ;J_
\"('. Irrarlirr.

Combined veterans groups slate Memorial Day parade
GALLIPOLIS The annual
Memorial Day parade and &lt;lbser·
\'ancl' by combined Gallipolis area
vPteransgroups will begin at 10a.m.
Monday.
Nearly ~ units have been
assembled for thf' parade, accord ·
ingtoCiilfDixon , parade chairman.
The parade shall leave the
GaUipolis Foodland parking lot a t 10
and move up Third Avenue to
Splllce Street to Second Avenue,
down to Court Street, from Court to
First Avenue, and e nd at the
doughboy monument .
Parade units are to assemble In
tile Fooctland parking lot a t 9 a.m ..
Dixon said.
The parade will be led by parade
marshals Ben Eachus and Edwin
1bomas. twosurvivingWorldWarl
veterans residing In Galli a County.

Other units mvuiVI'd are;
Veterans of Foreign Wars color
guard; American Legion color
guard; Army and Air Force
marching unit; VFW Auxiliary
color guard; Galllpolls police color
guard; Gailla County Sheriff's
Department color guard; Gallla
County Common Pleas Judge
Richard Roderick.
VFW , American Legion, Disabled American Veterans a nd
AMVETS commanders; VFW and
American Legion auxiliaries; Sons
of the American Legion; Cooties;
Forty and Eight; American Legion
popple queen; VFW Auxiliary
truck; Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce car; Gallla Academy
High School band; GABS cheerleaders; Julie Seward, Starlight ·
Twirlers baton group; lire trucks 64

and 65.
There will be 10 entries from the
Old Car Oub, a long with Patty
Fellure's baton group; Elks convenible; Gallia County Treasurer
Myron "Bud" McGhee; Gallia
County Recorder Evalee Myers;
state highway patrol Cllliser; GaU!a
County Clerk of Courts Louise
Burger; Miss Gall Ia County; Gallipolis city commissioners car.
John Taylor, Republican candidate for sheriff; Gailla County beef
queen; Gallia EMS; Little Miss and
Mister Gallla County; Starlight
Twlrlersbatongroop; liretrucks61,
62 a nd 63; Smith-Buick Pontiac;
0.0. Mcintyre Park District; Jim
Mink Chevrolet; Boy Scouts of
America; Cub Scouts o! America;
Brownie Troop 1515; Gailla County
Sheriffs Department "Jaws of

Life" ; Sheriff James Montgomery.
Centerville Fire Department;
J anet Sheets, car and wagon;
Gallipolis Shr ine Club clowns, fire
truck and hillbtllyclan: Rio Grande
pollee; Gallipolis fire truck 66; four
West Vtrgtnla Na tiona l Guard
units; Tetra Sheets, horsPS; .Jim
Montgomery, horses; a nd horse a nd
wagon. Melissa Randolph.
Hugh Graham will serve as
master of ceremonies In the park,
with Vance Rees as officer of the
day. The flag wtu be raised in the
park by VFW Post 4464. and the
national anthem wUI be sung by
Cheryl Enyart.
Music will be provided by the
GAHS marching band. and the
pledge o! allegiance wUI be done by
scouts.
Recognition of living and de-

ceased veterans will bt:' done bv
Graham. and an invocation will be
given by the Rev. Wi lliam E .
Curfman . Local veterans group
officers will bt:' recognized, and
prayer will be ted by tile Rev. Hugh
Price.
The guest speaker, GaUia Count \'
Common Pleas Judge Richard C.
Roderick, wUI be introduced bv
Gra ham. "America the Beautifu l' '
w11J be sung by Mrs. Enyart, a nd a
wreath for tnose lost a t sea will be
placed In 'the Ohio River by Warner
Halley. A wreatn w1ll be placed on
tile doughboy at the same time by
Sharon Dixon.
Post 4464 wUI conduct the firing
squad salute, while taps will be
sounded by John Dixon to conclude
the ceremonies.
Brief ceremonies will be observed

at Mound 1 fill and Pine StrP&lt;'I
crmf't eriNi .
Also on :\!londa~· . the annua l
l)('mration Da~ sPr\.: icC&gt; ,,·ill lX'
observed atGra \'f•lllill CemetC&gt;rY in
ChPshi rc al 111 .111 a m .
·
The wrlcomP will bf&gt; giH'n by

Hamid Mack. and lhP ll.cY . Bill
Price wUI be glrPst speaker. Spcocia!
music will bt:' provided by Bob and
Theresa Price .
Taps will bt' sounded and a salute
to departed veterans will be
conducted by Amt&gt;rican Legtoq
Feeney -BcnnPtl Post 128 o(
Middleport
A Memorial Day SPrvice was hE'Id
Saturday in Old Plnf' Cem l'tery,
south ofRioGrandconOhlo325, with
tne Rev. John D. Davis of Oak HUI
serving as guest speaker.

�'·

Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

----Weather:--....
8a.m . EDT. Sunday, May 27

\\E\11f.ER FOREC\.'iT - Til&lt;• 'iational Wrath&lt;•r Servie&lt;•
fm'l'('a.o,;t fur Sunda~: prt•dkts rain t'rom southt•rn ~t·w England
through Lht• Ohio and :\'lis...,.issippi Rin•r \'alit',\'~. Rain is also
l'n•dil'tPd from tilt' northt&gt;rn Plain.., statt·s to lht• t t•ntraJ plains. I :\P
La.o.;erphoto ).

Extended Ohio forecast
MO:\DA Y ·n1fWL'l ;H 1\'ED\:f·:SDA \' . ,\ chancP uf showprs and
thundrrstolms thrvugh the pt.•nud . High."i in the 70s. Lows in th(' 50s.

.

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea~ant,

j ai.)L.-_
. _______

,c_on_un_ued_rro_m_p_a_ge_A_l)

last week of six " hard timers" and
the expected return of at least one
prisoner froin the Timothy B.
Moritz Fort&gt;nsic Center In Colum ·
tm made that allocation impossible
under the rules.
The arrest on Tuesday of a
par1icularly violent prisoner is also
known to have compllcated the
situation at the holding facUlty.
While officials see no immediate
long·tenn relief tor the overall
pi'Oblem. il is hoped the current
housing shortage will dissolve
wit hin the next few days.
" II will definitely be a problem
through the holiday," Roderick
said. " I don't see any relief until
after the Memonal Day wl'&lt;'kf'nd."
While Wednesday's order directs
tha t there be no future DWI
111 carcerations . "until further order
of the cou r t." Roderick's directive
d()('S aUow for the housing of
..... am·•mP arrPSted by a law
mforcement agency for a DWI

May 27, 1984

W. Va.

present
emergency situation
passes.
"For the time being," Montgomery said, "all we can do Is work
with the courts and try to handle the
situation."
"Sooner or later," the sherttf
added, "we are going to have to
come up with extra space ... eventually, the public will have to grapple
with the problem."
"The long·tenn solution I most
support," Roderick said Friday, " is
a regional j aU facility Involving
threeorfoursurroundlngcountles."
"With that many counties In·
valved, " he added, "It should be
possible to find state or federal
finacial support."
Failing that, the common pleas
judge says another option would to
be to incarcerate DWis somewhere
other than the jail.
In 1982. the county explored the
possibllity of developing one of the
abandon&lt;'d cottages at GDC Into a
DWI holding facility. The cost of
bringlng that facUlty up to required

you want it...
you ·ve got it...

B,\' 111t' . -\.,'lK·ia.tt•d Prt'Ss
,\ hich ~.Hl'ssun· s•&gt;.sH•m wa s r:'\Pf'C'IC'd to produce clearing skirs

and l'UOIPr t('mp('l' U!Ur{'S in Ohio for at least th(• nrst part of thp
l\1t•rnorb! D ~l.\' 'J.'f'l.""•kl •nd .

Bu t ;1 low pn··s.c.;urp ':-·s rrm r1pproaeh1ng from the southw(·st was to
bring cloudy s ki(·~ Sunrld _
\ with a ch&lt;UlC'f' of' shO\\'ers in the aftC&gt;rnoon
ow•r \\'f&gt;S tPrn CCJUllliPc; , rhr· r\ariona l Wea ther Sef\·iC'C' sa id.
Showprs and I hundPrstorms rum blf'd ac ross Ohio earlv Saru rd av .
T hP.\' WPn ' Jssoc ialf'd w ith a cold front which movE"d ~to w(•ste;·n
()hio Lifl(•r midnig hr Forff·asters ('Xpc'CIC'd the tront to mow"\ e&lt;Jst of
the stat(' b.v l&lt;1tr fnrrnoon
Wind damagr nrcurC'd w 1th some thundcrston:ns in Indian a bu t
thr:- WPtl kPnrd ;Js they mon'CJ into Ohio and nu damage was
rf'(XH1rd. ,\ '.;('\'CrP I huncJcrstOJm watch \VJS in l'fft:'&lt;-'1 fur a small par1
o f sourhwf'c; t Ohin unt!l .1 a.m .
Thf' rhrPa t o f ra in u·...ts c xp&lt;'&lt;' fPd to d&lt;-'(Tf•asP Sa turday as the cold
front mm·fxl r•;,.L-., t ll igt1 prrs surr ~ hould sc•ttlt• over the state tonight
with mostJ:-· clt'&lt;n· and cool conctitions.

Stat(' ::.one for('casts
OlfiO
SOt r ll-! CENl l (AL
Satu rUa y nig-h r. par! I.\· clnud.v Lows around 50. Sunday, Uecoming
c Juud~· with ~l sli,l.:'h1 chance of shQ'v\'Pr s by latf' afternoon. Highs again
Hlpc'r-cent tonigh t and 30pPrcent

~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!'!!n

Protfftion Agt•ncy din'&lt;.·tor Rotx•rt
H. Maymrd. charg&lt;•s lht• Hunlswil h
UPf'rJting Coal Pow(•r. Inc, in

Sut l on Townsh ip end Dark Dia
mond Coal Corporcll iun and !he
Abundant LifP Coal Corp. in
Salisbury To"'11ship wil hout re
quirC'CI Ohio EPA permi".
Cf' if'brf'Z?.I' c h &lt; IC,IZ('~. ·· ohio law

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CLEVE LAND tAPJ The
winning number drawn Friday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
gam&lt;:'. " The Number." was 742.
In the ''Pick 4" game. played
Monday :hrough Friday. the winning number was 4178.
The lottery reponed earnings
Friday of $472.r1il .50 from wager ing
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MIDDLEPORT- Memories,
memories..... they bring such
sunshine to the sunset years.
For Mildred Fowler of Middleport a recent swing down
memory lane led to reminiscing
about her days as, a soprano
soloist studying In 'Europe and
singing on stages across the
land.
"Seems r could always sing"
r&lt;:'flects the 86-year·old Mrs.
f' owler who says she remembers when she was four or
five standing on a chair and
belting out " Won't You Come
Home, Bill Bailey."
The unusual quality o! her
soprano voice was recognized
early . and as a teenager she
became a popular soloist In
church choirs, lor school and
civic organizations and In musicals aboul the county.
Her sights were set on a
career in opera.
She began voice lessons with a
local teacher while she was still
in high school and then went on
to Ohio University to study. As a
soprano with the University's
Glee Club, she performed all
over the state.
It was dur ing a performance
at the Deshler Hotel with the
Glee Club that the Cheningtons,

long·time critics lor the Colum·
bus Dispatch, singled her out In
their reviews, corrunentlng on
the unusual tone and quality of
her soprano voice. That unique
quality was later described by
one of Mrs. Fowler's teacher as
''overtones.''
Manied at the time to the late

Upon her return in thP fall of
1929, Mildred was presented in
concert at the Heath Unil&lt;'d
Mf'thodist Church in Middleport
by the Women's Music Club. She
was .accompanied at tile piano
by the late Amy Lee and joined
in concert by Conrad Scholl,
violinist.

Roscoe Fowler and after the

Her repertoire w as extensive

birth and death of a child, the
couple moved to Athens where
Mildred continued her studies.
She became active in the
Athens Women' s Club entertain·
ing frequently and also began a
serious sTUdy of French from a
local teacher.
Her studies were leading her
to others interested In a career in
opera and in 1928, she joined
Clara Thomas Ginn of Clncln·
nati. also a Middleport native,
lor a trip to France to study

and versatUe; her reception,
magnificent.
Among her selections wet'!'
"Re Pastore" by Mozar1 with
violin obliga to, "Rispett i" by
Wolf·Ferra r l, "Made hen! icd"
by Meyer· Helmund. "Ungeduld" by Schubert, "Pappilon"
and "Cele que je Prefere" by
Fourdraln.
As she continued her sTUdies,
Mrs. Fowler appeared in con·
cer1 on stages across the area .
Meanwhile, her husband was
elected Meigs County sheriff and
Mildred was tagged the "singing
ja il matron. "
It was that appeal that land&lt;'d
her an invitation 10 appear on
Major Bowe's Amateur Hour in
New York. And she was a
winner'
That Included an
appearance contract which took
her to the Har1rnan Theatre
where she performed for a
week .
Everything w as falling into
place and Mildred's fuTUre as an
opera soprano seemed bright
and secure. when one m orning
she discovered a lump in her
throat. The required surgery at
a Columbus hospital and the
X·ray therapy which followed
cut short Mildred' s career
options.
"I lost all my high tones," she
reflects, "and !hat was my
distinguishing quality."
Soon after the couple moved to
Richmond, Ind .. where, now as a
mezzo.soprano, she sang with a
choir at a Quaker Church.
Her career options were
changed and lor several years
she worked as an Inspector of
nursing homes before going to
work with the Division of Aid for
the Aged In Meigs County. a
position she held for 16 years.
Mildred retired In 1962 and she
and her husband moved to
Florida where they Uved for 10
years before coming back to
Meigs County.
But through the years, this
gractous lady's love of music has
not diminished.
Music has always been an
important part of her life, and
while It takes a much lesser role
now ....... at 86, she can stil be
found at the organ or Grace
Episcopal Church playing Sun·
day services.

voice.
"Roscoe and my mother
scraped up the money and sent
me, and that wasn't easy,"
Mildred recalls.
She was there a year prepar·
lng for a career as an opera
soprano.
Her first teacher was an
American who had been a voice
Instructor in France for many
years. Later she changed to
another teacher from whom she
received a lesson a day for $&amp;1 a
month for the next year.

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Precision housing reduces
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AUTOMOBILE ClUB OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GALLIPOLIS OFFICE
360 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

Remember When
Mildred Fawler
looks m&gt;er some pictures and other memnrabilia. in a recent
~wing dawn memory
lane. The 86-year-old
Meigs Countian was a
soprano with a fin e
ooreer ahead, until an
illness ended that
dream .

TRS-80® 64K Color Computer 2

In eleven weeks
learn the necessary skills needed to
app)y for your Real Estate licen se'

Get the travelers cheque
that has the
services to help
protect your vacation. At AAA.
11ons w orldwide

'

../

Save 515-Eiectronic
200-in-1 Project Kit

go. you·re never far from help
So before you start o ff on -.... acC~ ti tln , stop o fT at
AAA and pick u p th e travel ers cheque !hal has
the most serv1 ces to h€'l p pro tec t your ~

..

advantages the INSID ER has to offer.

Athens ,

"':...,
,.

your hearing quality . Come in and we'll show you the many

"TM Dolby LaOOrarories Licensi ng Corp

Amen can Express has over 90.000 refund loca·

'

LoiiPry winning
numhers: 742,4178

ADMISSIONS OFFICE : 446-4367 or 992-7644

availab le with no service chmge to AAA m embers

. ~

!ha t Wednesday's order should not
be viewed as a pardon for DWI
offenders. The directi ve ca lls for all
cuiTent and fuTUre offenders to
SPJVE' their time when " ... the

GAlli POllS BUS INESS COLLEGE

At /'\AA . we do every thing w e can to make su re
your vaca11on gets o tT to !he n ght start And that
mclude s America n Exp rr ss " Travelers Chequ es -

' -·

Jp~h~y~s~ic~al~s~taJn~d~a~rd~s~v.~·=as~fo=u=nd~to~be=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
Word · ProcesSI ng:

.. ., Q

ufff'll
se ...I:Je&lt;'n
untilarraigned."
they have bonded out ,.. prohibitive, however .
ur
have

SKILLS YOU CAN LEARN
THIS SUMMER AT

rrquirf's EPS lit'(•nsing of all '-'UCil
m ining OpPration&lt;&gt; to a.&lt;..,~un· that lht·
industrial wr~stf' whi ch n·su lh f rom

'irimes- ~eutin.el

This is all
you wear!

.Mine suit...
tC ontinur'(J from pa gf' ,\JJ

·t he ri er

NTHI

L1w enforcement officials stf'(&gt;SS

Partial clearing for weekend

Js

Middleport

;•

in Roderick
tile jail forsaid
the housing
of OWls.
the incarceration

$hOwe's Aa1n Flurrtes

in th(• micl ~fb . Tht· ('haJI&lt;'f' of r·ain
Sunda .\ ·.

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

(

.

Love of music - Through the years this
gracwus fady'r love of music has not diminished.
And now, at 86, rhe can still be found at the organ
of Grace Episcopal Church playing Sunday services.

()

B

Performance portrait - This portrait of Mildred Fou'ler was made in
France in 1928 in preparation for her debut unto the opera rtage. Mrr. Fowler
studied abroad for more than ayear. Later. when her husband became sheriff,
she war dubbed the "rin~ing jail matron.,.

�---- ~- -~-

......... . -

Page---B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

....

'".

~

......

--

....

Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

Pvmen:ty Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

May 27, 1984

Karie's Korner

Ohio

'

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

·Meigs Museum open
By KATIE CROW
Times-Sentinel Staff
II&lt;' .u·p happy to report that the
\1 c lg, l'ounty · ~ f~!m
Mu~·um. But1er - ~,- ~Q
f - ·~:-:

A'·L~ nu l:' ' ;~

n•tr

"-.rurrta 0 fmm 1 to 4 p.m .
'riH · fulk.s at the museum report
: 1•.1! ".,·,·rat phot ographs submitted
1,'- 1t ·~ ich ·n t s to be&gt; uSf'd i.n the 197'9
:\l"H.!" ( \l unt~· History publication
, d ·( · now dl tht· museum and may be
p1d.z\ d durin,~;:: lhr n bove named
h1 .U1

&lt;.,

I knu11 a lol of people &lt;Nill be
i1.1pp1. to hear thr museum is open

haYt' had folks stop U1 the
~~r~tl 't · lllLJU irin g w hen the museum
\\·l·u ld I"X' &lt;J j1t 'n . especially residents
in .rr r I lUI nl rown

· ' " ll" t '

l'llt'

1'!';'~ !

g rarl ua11ng c l ass a t

~"1111&lt;'1 n Hig h Sc hool wilt hold a
i-r·IJJlloll o n .lunl~ S. at the Royal Oak
r .!l'k. arc h(•r;.· building at 7 p.m .
t··i,[lu,,·mg dinnPr a dance will bp
ri, ld l•'h.Tl ilning at ~ p .m . until
\II

·-;-~1

...,., ·It •!rll\ •

h'T&lt;.td~

and guests are
Tht Tt • \Yill bt.• CJ $.1chargt;_•

. I t ' ''u \\i:-.h &lt;Jdd itiu na l lnfurma -

tj• n.li ('111\ LH"l .Jdf Thornt on at
:ll . t.\, I.
: \ f1 n,d J!l('('lin.L.: to o r ganize· the
~I

\ I I ;u·J&gt; Soft balliPagucs will bP
r~ · ld I I '([ ~!_\' at 2: JOp.m . at thf' Royal
Ct m 11 Hottling Company GaragP,
~l •1'111 ~ '('Orld J\ VPOUC. Middlepon .
· IIH·j uniordivLslonisforgirlsage
H~ 1.1 :1nd s£ •nior div ision for ages
11 1!•.

In Friday's edition a headline
stated that a rabies clinic would be
hPid Wednesday . However, the
story r ead that the clinic would be
held on June 2.
So you won't be confused we wish
to report that the head linP was
incoffi'Ct. The clinic will be held on
Sa turday, .June 2, al the M eigs
County Fairgrounds from I to 4
p.m .
So sorry .

be sponsoring a Primitive Weapons
Rendezvous May 'l:l at Raccoon
Creek County Park. Registration
wiU begin at 9a.m., with matches at

10:30 .

GOSPEL MEETING
Westside Church of Christ
At Laurel Cliff Road off St.

Rl.

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Graves

Graves note anniversary May 6
POMEROY More than a
hundred relatlvPS and friends
attended the golden wedding anniversary celebration honoring Mr.
and M rs. Ralph GravPS.
The obseJVance was held at the
Meigs Multi-purpose Building on
Mulberry Heights on the afternoon
of May 6, following a cer emony at
Trinity Church that morning in
which the couple renewed their
wedding VOWS.
ThP gold and w hite color scheme
was carried out in the decorations
for the anniversary party hosted by
the couple's daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Don Thomas, and
their family . Assisting with the
SPIVing wer e Mr. and Mrs. Thomas,
M r . and M rs. N ic k Depoy, Miss
Fonda Rapp, Dan and Greg

Thomas, M g
William Swatzel,
Mrs. William Matlack, and Mrs.
WalterG rueser .
Music for the afternoon was
provided by Armand Turley at the
organ.

NIGHTLY AT 7:30 P.M.
SUNDAY-10:00 A.M. and 6:00 P.M.

JUNE 3-9

Amongtheout-of-countyrelatives
and
friends here for the observance 1rr==~~==============================:;::=======:::::;
.
were Fay DeWPese, Columbus; Mr.
and M rs. Harold Hinkle, Cross
" Lifesaver"
LanPS, W.Va.; Mrs. Evelyn Smith,
GaWpoUs; M r.andMrs. RandyVan
Meter and family, Clifton, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. HoweU Jake Jarvin
and Sherri, Gallipois; Mrs. Ken
Hopferandfamily,Dayton; Mr. and
Mrs. J lm Depoy, Bainbridge; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Funk, Athens; U.A.
Cornett, John Cornett Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Wheeler, Ga Uipolis, and
Leonard Fields, Nt&gt;~N Haven.

Monday thru Friday

J.\CROSS

:llitl Second .\ ve.

9AMto9PM
to 5 PM

with the purchase

any shoe.

of

Saturday 9 AM

'f'rt
1..

,. . . rIll ......r
.:, "tt

WAll\ lf'1 ()A t All

~ OR

AN A.PPQI"-1 fM{ t.il

446-9510

A NEW DIRECTION IN JIAtR DESIGN '

TO OBSERVE 54J'I'H - Mr. and Mrs. Garland Wllliwns of Route I,
, · J'... triol, wiU observt• thPir 50th wedding wmlversary June 3. They are
• . t fi, . r"rt•nl• ol l our children, Mrs. Ernest (Betty) Baker of Patriot; Jack
· and -h.-tin ol Gallipolis; and Dan of Pt. Pleasant ; grandparents of 14
· :.uul gTt•at-gTandpare nts of eight. Their c hildren are composing a
lll+&gt;moq: hook and are seeking memories of the couple and their friends .
o n :~ x;; t·ard.~. F rie nds may caU at their home on .June 3 from 2 until 4
p 111. 'l'ht&gt; l'IJU ple n•qm....ast."' that gifts other than memories he omitted.

·'"cr-:u:s

1AI' 1 -

The

.&amp; vnon

.1

CoqL

PiCI U I 'f'~

was anfour

Vine St ., Racine, Oh .
Phone 949-2571

: dt \ t"-lt lll". 1 1nn n Tf'lt'\' isinn fnc ..
• ( )!'Hi ll J! r ,nw \ 'i rl c·o. Orio n Pav TV,
: . Ill!! { Jn''" T\' ::-;\ nc!i car ion
.

CUCUMBER PLANTS

Of

&gt;.,;\·ndi
cal f'd . TV
,
•
1'1 .. 1 k•·1" . 1-.. v.:dl : 1s ltl (' rap ld.J y )'I "·'I ll \..: llr1 m( \' idt "() industry .

A
4

;.

p.i\

8 PACK
OZ. BTLS.

16

$1 3 9

Plus
LIMIT 1

With This Coupon
E.pire• June 3, 1984
C. K. SUPERMARKET

OJ'S CRAFT SHOP
446-2134

$1

39

LIMIT I
Plus De1&gt;&lt;&gt;•it

With This Coupon
Expires June 3, 1984

•
; r---------~~~~~------=-----=----------------1

COUNTRY AQUARIUMS

C. K. SUPERMARKET

992-6544
'VIEMO RIAL WEEKE'IID SPECIAL!
COMPLETE SET -UP

.

/O GAL OCT. 1 159"
5 GA L. 142 .78

"

10 GAL 151.22

20 GAl. LONG 189.98

VALLEY BELL

Othe r Spe e~a\1 on fi1h , She ll1 a nd Coral of allsi:r:es at the Counlry Pric:e

2°/o MILK

JOIN OUR FISH OF THE MONTH CLUB

$1 39

Open Daily I 0- 8

GALLON

LIMIT 1

With This Coupon

STOP

$25°0

AND

Expires June 3, 1984

Bur this Singer sewing machine, and get this
cabinet free.

REGISTER

C. K. SUPERMARKET

Worth of Groceries

j

ON SATURDAY
MAY 26TH

:..
:

JUNE 9TH
JUNE 23RD

!.

ICE MILK
IIOWOID

F--•'ZJe-Z..

MIC16wllodeiU7
Front drop-ln- • Extra-wide
zig-zag • Sews buiiOnholes, elastic
and stretch fabrics

MUST BE OVER 18 T01 REGISTER

~{Ohio Valley
:514 East Main

Pomeroy

ONE
e.wtc•anet

·

aa~il
~_

--

GAL

With This Coupon

finlrlh • Leaf cover opens to

Exp,irn June 3, 1984

cre/118 spacious sewing area

Counties AI Your Sillltr
Apt1rovtd Deller

Y2

American Beauty Bacon

Durable simulated wood greln

115 w.s!:v~nalleias &amp; Gaur:meroy

2 9¢

I 'With The Purchase of 1-lb. Kahn's

IIIIMeiiU

THE FABRIC SHOP

Bulk Food

992-6910

$199 99

Open house planned for 25th

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Pierce Stewart

Stewarts to mark 50th anniversay
GA LLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Pierce Siewan. HE Pine
St., will cetebral e !heir 50ih wedding anniversary on June 2. Alta
and Marvin Stf'wart wrre m arried
in 1934 el Urbana, Ohio by the late
Rev. Joseph Ca rter.
Alta Holmes Stewart , a former
elementary school teacher in Gallipolis . is the only daughtPr of the late
Cora and Ira Holmes. Marvin
Stewart, o retired licensed firem an
of the Gallipolis State Institute, is
the son of the late Vinnie and John
Stewart .
The Stewarts have two daughters. Dr . Joyce Stroud, a denti st in
~ incinmrt i ,

Wa.JiacP.

and Mrs. Maureen
pianist and music

a

tmc her at Fort Dix, New Jersey.
Alta and M arvi n Stewart also ha ve
four grandchildren.
Alta and Marvin Stewart have
been active in community activities
including Girl Scouts, World Council of Churches, Ancient York
Masonic Lodge, Lucy Ann Chapter
of the Eastern Star Lodge, John
Gee Melhodist Church, and Parent Teacher Associatlon. They are still
activl' in m ost· of these organiza-

tions and hold offices. They were
instrumental In forming Gallipolis'
Lucy Ann Chapter of the. Eastern
Star Lodge .
Thrn' will be a recPption in the ir
honor .JunP 2 al the Holiday Inn.

•

--In the service-

Ferguson returns from deployment
Navy Commissioned Wan·ant
Officer Garry J. Ferguson, son of
William J. Ferguson of 56 Mill
CrPek Drive, Gallipolis, recently
r eturned from a six-month deploy ment to the Mediterranean Sea. He
is an officer assigned to the aircraft
carrier USS Independence, homeported in Norfolk. Va.
At the beginning ol its deploy m ent, the carrier supported opera tlon "Urgent Fury" in GrPnada,
before heading to thP eastern
Medit£&gt;rranean . The ship earned
the Armed Forces expeditionary
Medal for it s effor ts in GrPnada.
The lndept:'ndence spt:'nt most of
the cruise on statlon off the coast of
L ebanon In support of the Multi national PeacekPeping Force in
Beir ut. The "Indy" mrned lhP
Navy Exped itionary Medal and thP
Navy Unil Commendation for l hP
df'ployment .
After spending over two months
at sea, lhc ship made a four-day
port visit to Haifa, Israel for
Chris! mas. On Christmas day Bob
Hop!:' visited the "Indy" with his
tr oupe lhal included Rroo ke
ShiPlds. Ann .lillian, George kirby

and Miss USA, Julie Hayek .
In early March, the "Indy" left
thP Mediterr anea n for the North
Atlantic lo Jake part in exercise
"Teamwork '84," the largest NATO
exercise In History. Afterwards,
"Indy" v i sited Portsmouth,
England.
The Independence is I.a/0 feet
long, has a c rew of 2,m, plus

for

modern

in vitrd to comf' and wa tch history
cnmp to life.

Myers

MIDDLEPORT - The children
of the Rev. and Mrs. James KPCset'
will host an open house in observanceoftheir parPnls' 25th wedding
anniversary at their residence in
Middleport today at 1: ~p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Keese&lt;' were
married on M ay 'l:l, 1959. They have

seven chldren, Verenia. James.
Dawn, M elinda and .Jonathan , a li at

home. and Mrs. ChartPS !Angela 1
Hall, and Mrs. Dwight 1Wanda 1
Ashley, and one gra nddaughter,
Jennifer A shley.
Pr&lt;'C&lt;'ding the celebration , th&lt;'
cou ple will repeat their marriage

vows.

POOL
OPENS
MONDAY
SEASON PASS RATES

CLEARANCE SALE

STUDENT (WITH ESCORT) .......$65.00
INDIVIDUAL ................................. ~85.00

NOW IN PROGRESS

COUPLE .. ..... ......... ...................... ~) 00.00

Further Reductions On

FAMILY (5 OR LESS) .......... ~ .175.00

GIFT WARE

1

10.00 FOR EACH
ADDITIONAL FAMILY MEMBER

Already Reduced

•Snack Bar and Hcst Hnom s IAwated In th e Dome

30o/o to 60o/o Off
._,,_,~ ~~

--~

Revc ra~ cs

•Pool Testt'd fur Proper Chem ical Balanrc bv
Department on a RcJ!ular Basis .

Ma~on

Count y Health

Str ictl y En forc&lt;'d .

•Free Pool Parties
•Pool-Hours -

• ....,..,

• Certifi ed

IIENIBER MIERICAH OEII SOCiiTY

ll :OO a.m .- Dark.

Llfc~ uards

On Duty . 11 :00 a. m.-5: 00p.m.

304-675 -6276

anothf'r 2.150 assign.C'd to the carr ier

HOLIDAY ACTION WEAR
COME EARLY &amp; SHOP- OPEN 1:00 P.M. TO 5:00 P.M. TODAY

Sale

25°/o off

.,

First Lt. Christine L. Myers,
dau~hter of Virginia D . Wooten of
1032 First A ve., Galllpolis, and
Henry L. Myers of Rural Route 1.
Patriot. has been decorated with
the second award of the Air Force
Commendat ion Medal at Grissom
A1r Force Base. Ind.
The Air Force Commendation
Me&lt;lal is awarded to those indlvidu·
als who demonstrate outslanding
achievement or meritorious S(_lfvice in the performance of their
dutiPS on behalf or the Air Force.
Myers is chief of the Quality
Force Section with the 301\th
Com bat Suppor t Group.
She is a 19'79 graduate of Rio
Gr andP College.

Red-i®
Junior
Sportswear
this
Sunday
Only!

Fireman ApprPntice Mark A .
Wilfong, son of RalphS. and Leslie
Wilfong of Route 2, VInton, recently
pat1icipated in Composite Training
Underway ExerciSP 2-84 (" Compu ·
ter 2-84"!.
He is a cr ewmember aboard the
guided mlssiiP destroyer USS
Sampson, homeported In MaYJXlrt,
Fla .
ThP two-wrek exercise, held near
Puerto Rico, included tactical
tratn1ng In anti-surface. antt-alr,
and anti -submarine warfare.

Regularly 14. to 21 .00

Now
10.50 to 15.76
•
•
•
•

Polyester/Cotton
Cropped pants
Shorts
Knit tops

)

on Aileen
Coordinates 9 .99 ·
Shorts or Tops
• Size 8 to 16

C.K. SUPERMARKET
N. 2nd Ave.

in Poo l Are n.

•Membership Swimming Only -

J ....,.,.
..:&gt;4 SECOND AYIHUI

•No Al coholk

air wing.

Wilfong

FOR

TO BE GIVEN AWAY

:..

campsite

Ret ·. and Mrr. }arneJ Kee.ree

DIET or REGULAR

Spring Valley Plaza

WATERMELON &amp;
CANTALOUPE PLANTS

dTHl

PEPSI COLA

I '

Call:

•VINING
•BUSH
•BURPlESS

• ~ -~~ ~ · rH'" r ll 'f~; Jni;a t io n w ill pro! du •·r· .1nd til" tnhuh ' prnduc l for the

,. rtl ·l ,_ \•&gt;l'k.

Cake Decorating
June 4
Soft Doll
June 19

CLELAND
GREENHOUSE

m·H 1.\ '-(·n ·aH'CI arm of

.. not1 nr 't'fl f't'&lt;'t•nrl\
flO
i'IH' J.-.:l'IIUIJ ('() Jl Si.l, t S

REGISTER FOR CLASSES

rr===========:;l

tnrm.lli11 n nf Onon E nt l' rlainmcnt

: ~~r'Oup .

separate

shPiter s available also.
All black powder shooters are
invited to attend and tPSt thPir rlfles
and markmanship against other
shootf'rs for prize's that will be
awardf'd f'ac h da)'. ThE' public is

DIFFERENT SPEAKER EACH NIGHT

Lafa~·ette ~!all

./n '/ I II ill

up. Food INill be cooked over open
fires for their meals. There will pe

7

Sunday Morning: Landon Hope, his choice
Sunday Evening: Landon Hope, Marriage &amp; Divorce
Monday Evening; Robert Rice, Apostacy in the Church
Tuesday Evening; Benton Cochran, Miracles
Wednesday Evening; Harold Davis, God's People at Work
and the Congregation at Work
Thursday Evening; Hermon Mason, The Jerusalem Church
Friday Evening: David Joy, The Sin of Ignorance &amp; Indifference
Saturday Evening; larry Hayes, lnstitionalism

The

,\ , I i
Ul~

lndlans and rnountainmen will &amp;et

A wide variety of novelty targets
will bP shot at distances ranging
from 20 to 200 yards. T here will be
special matchPS for ladies, juniors,
' shotgun, and pistol along with the
many other matches to trst your
markmanship.
·
Onl y Black Powder Muzzle Loading type firearms willlx' permilted .
Tomahawk and kniff' thrmving
accuracy \Viii be demo nstrated as
well as flint an d stf'el firemaking.
Com petitors ar£' l'f'Q. U€'sted to wPar

home wllh vaarlous member sof
the congreptton during hill stay.

Also, seaso n passes are now on
sale and may bP purchased at the
pool. The pool will be Opt:'n daily
from noon until 5 p.m . On Thursday
the pool will remain open until 8
p.m .

clothing from the 1770 to 1850 ~
period as we will be trying to depk;t
the entire weekend as close ll8
possible to the way that 1!11"
forPfathers did.
Cam psites will be center,ed
around tPepees and lean-tos that ~;hi'

GALLIPOLIS- The Backwoods-

man Muzzle Loading Rifle club will

supervision of RObed Mellon,
pall&amp;or, and AI ~. &amp;880clate pastor. In his IIUI1lJtM!I'
program , Ruffner will be given
tralulng in all phases of the
ministry and wm be maldllg hl!!

Don't want you to forget that
!here is frpe swimming rooay at
London Pool in Syracuse.
GrorgP Holman, manager has
bePn working beyond the caU of
duty to get evel)'thing ready for the
opening. He has Installed ni'W
benchPS on the outside of thP pool
and ni'W conrete tables Inside.
Understand therP will be two of
theta biPS equipped with umbreUas.
The umbrPUas sound great,
especially for those who just go to
kPep an eye on their yougsters.
The lmprovements sound great.
By the way the m aterial for the
benchPS was pw-chased by village
officials and the work was done by
students at Meigs High through the
efforts of John Bentley.

rj , :1 !nig ht
~

a junior at

;
'el

.~..

l '••n·ll 'i"f)). is now }; .
._;,
:··
•lf&gt;l.'ll on ..t pt&gt; r - ft. ~
-- · '
nunPnt bdsis .
·
Tht' mu.'*'um
• iA
;,it t I ~· UPE'll TuPsday, Friday and

B3

Primitive weapons event ~
set for Mcintyre Park

INTERN - Uoyd llullner U.
the Claclnnatl Bible
College, Is lllternlng for tbree
moalbs at the Middleport
Chureh of CluiR Wider the

Each league t&lt;&gt;am and any new
teams wishing to entpr the league
mus1 havp a representative present
at thf' ml'('tlng as scheduiPS wiU be
prepared for thP season.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

PH. 992-3480
Middleport, OH.

c.-..ong 75 r..,. ot

Fatn~l;

S8Mco .From Oursro Your&gt;

Sunday,
May 27th

• Pink, Blue,
White

• Regular Values
to 21 .00

�...........

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

Page-~- The

.......

.;

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

·-

Pomon~y-Middleport-Galllpolls,

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Oltlo

Poln~

Niday - Halter

West - Roberts

W•

RACINE- Mr. andMrt.Gordon
H.
~ Racine are aniiOUilCing
the 1'otlllcomlnc mal'l'llige rl. their
da~•.Rbonda Faye, to Robert
Mlcbael Roberts. son of Mr. and
Mn. Robert L . Roberts, Racine.
The open lawn ceremony will take
place JUne 16, at 2: :4l p.m . at the
home of the bride's parent, two
miles east of Racine, State Route

--

May 27, 1984

Ploaeant, W. Va.

Uf ..

MJBa west and berllallce m both
araduate. .ot Soutllem HIP SChooL

Miss West alteuded MUIIdngllam

~ Teclmlcal College.andRoberts
attended Otterbein College and Is a
gr&amp;Jiuate of the Hocklng Technlcal
College. They own and manage
"'lbeCove" In Pomeroy.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul D. Niday, GaUlpolls, announce
the engagement and approachl ng
mart1age of their daughter, Kim·
berly Anne, to Michael John Hailer ,
son of Mr. and.Mrs . John Timot hy
Halter, Columbus .
The open-church wedding will
lake place June 16 at 3 p.m. at

Cenl enar y United Methodllt
Church. Centenary. .
MisS Niday IS a graduate of Ohio
State University and 18 employed u
a.manager of Waterworks Restaurant , Columbus.
Halter Is a student at Ohio State '
University and an employee of Bob
Evans Farms Restaurants .

Dotson - Lear

Angc-la Harmon

GAUJPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Dotson of Gallipolis
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Rebecca Lynn, to Dale E .
Lear. son of Mr. and Mrs. Garland
H. Lear of Rodney.
The open-church wedding will
take place in the faith Baptist

Rebecca Dotson

Harmon Babbitt
I'( i:VWI~I!Y - Th~ Of)('n chwTh
·.\ t·dtltng 111 ,\ng(·la Harmon to
l .. n\ n•r w• · \1 !Sahhi!t at the Sacred

Neutzling
fisher

, Mlddloport-Galllpolll, Ohio

,., 'D, 1914

.Pom..o·-

Harris' to note anniversary

!wells will note anniversary

POMEROY - A card shower
bollorllll LeeR. and SUale A. Circle
Harris of Sprbigllet11, tonnerJy of

HARRlSONVJILE - Mr. and
Mrs. Robert L. Jewell, Harrison·
ville will observe their 25th wedding
anniversacy on June 3 with an open
reception at the homeofhermother ,
Mrs. Pauline H. Atkins, Route 1.
Rutland . In the event of rain the
obsuvance wlll be moved to 1he
Hart1sonvllle Masonic Temple.
Mr. and Mrs. Jewell were
married on June J. 1959 at the
Hart1sonvllle Presbyterian Church
with the Rev . Lawrence WOOdruff
officiating. They have a daughter.

MelpCounty,lno~Jfler.lanceofthelr

80tll wedding anniversary is
planned.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrb were
rnarrlellln Meigs County on May 24,
19'Jt. He Ia retlr!!d tram the Wright
Patterson Air Force Base, and Mrs.
Harris Ia a retlr!!d teacher.

They have three tlaughten, Mrs.

Arrold (Leta Faye) Thorclsen,

Cedarvtlle; Mrs. Kenneth (Mlckl)
Llrntng, ·Xenia, and Mrs. Kenneth
(Irene) Dudle, Sprtng!leld, and one

son and daughter-In-law, Russell
and Patricia Harrb, Xenia. They
also have 14 grandchldren and 22

great·grandchllllren.
Cards may be sent to the couple at
fJ56 Springfield-Jamestown Road,
Springfield, Ohio, &lt;l'i503.

Beat of the Bend

Church In Rodney on Saturday,
July 14. Music wtll begin at 7 p.m.
Miss Dotson Is a graduate of
Appalachian Bible College and
Cedarville College and Is employed
· as elementary techer a t Ohio
Valley Christian School.
Lear Is the owner of Lear
Photography In Gallipolis.

Middleport man receives
patent for his product

Regist ralion f&lt;*' is $5. and ma y IJ&lt;&gt;
paid ol Ihf' Gallipolis parks and
Recreation Departmf' nt , 51BSE'o)nd
Ave. For more in formation. call

Shiflet - Nibert
GALLIPOLIS - Wedding plans
have been announced for Kelly
shlflet and Robby Nibert. She Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Shiflet, 1741 Chatham Dr ., Galllpo-

lis, and he Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Nibert, Box 140, PSR.
The open-church wedding wUJ
take place June 2, 6p.m. at the First
Church of the Nazarene.

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
GLADLY ACCEPTED!!

PEPSI
RC- COKE
7-UP

i-ll; H'(' un .lun(' :.&lt;~I t 6: .'{( )p .m. &lt;.~t '2 19
&lt;..;\ ·l'amon · St. :vtiddif&gt;por1 HPia-

,md f l·it·nd s of thP cuuplf• t:trr

im ·it •1:1 to ;I!!( •nd IhP \~T'&lt; ld ing .

2 LITER

Rapp - Thomas

BOTTLE

STORES

- Plans havP b&lt;'&lt;'n

I~ IM~ ; I {()Y

, ·om piC'lt'CI

for I h(• open c hurch
wc·dd mg of l·'oncla H.app, daughtr•rof
\lr. :md ,\1rs. l.:wr)· Happ. a nd
I lan i(·i'l'htiiTI&lt;t'-. \ tin of Mr and Mrs
I ~Jn Tht &gt;n1&lt;~". l )nJnf•rm·.
Th f' ~ ~ - ~ '()dinj.! wil l takt• pldrt• at rht •
l'rirlll\' ( 'f111 1ch in Pomero~ · a 1 7· :v1
p.m .. run1· l with th e· l {c·\·. \tV H.
Pt' JTJn l!f!it·l:tting . Mu .., iC' b.\· R~l ~h

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SATURDAY
STORE HOURS: 9 A .M . TO 9 P.M . DAILY

SUPREME

"1'h''·' '· •.n il h11.·gin d !l p .m
~ !~- ~ · ptil lf l

WHITE BREAD

\\·ill i.H• hdd irnmP-

d lilll'l \ I• dl11\\' ing 1IH · ~\'( 1/d in g in 1hr'
'clf ' l,tl i'I ~H11 l l f

Your
Choice

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

\\f•JT\. ill'ga nl '-il, and Lm_
'- BUJ1.

1\

Cheryl Lynn, four .
Jewell, son of Cora E. Jewell :
Downlngton, and the late Glenn E.:
Jewell, has been employed at Ohl&lt;&gt;
University for 22 years. Mrs. Jewell:
Is the former Sharon Atkins.:
daughter of Mrs. Pauline H. Atklns ,
and the late Virgil I. Atkins, and Is a:
homemaker.
.
All relatives and friends of the
couple are invited to attend thO
re&lt;:eptlon which is being hosted bY.
Mrs. Atkins. The couple requests
that gift.s be omitiFd .

14&amp;-1789.

Hearl Catholic Church, Pomeroy,
will be an t&gt;Vent of Sa turd ay, June 2,
ai2: 30p.m. A reception will follow a I
I he MeigsMulti·purpose Building on
Mu lben-y Heights, Pomeroy.
Miss Harmon is a gradua te of
Meigs High Schoo l.
Habbitt Is employed al Ken Miller
Supply Inc .. Marietta.

lh1·dJUJ'd1

CLOSED

Hym n sing
set June 3
1:.\I.I.II'()I.IS

-

t ·nii&lt;'Cl

Th&lt;·

\fcll11 ,d l 'i l ~ · hur1 ~tl' ." 1d 1; ; tl l i ~ t
1 ·ount \ · H"lil Ci•l t 1t; r ;IIP :..'UI Y f'a r s o!

AITRACTIONSI
AMUSEMENTS

!\tk'lh&lt;Xlism b.v s ponsuri n ~ J ('om
n\unir v H~· mn Si n ~ in thl ' Cit\' Park
1n j ;,ll l tpnll .' on Su ncb\· af'tt•rnoon .

Zoo~

luni· '\. I Jt '!l.\ t'('f\ 2 . : ~o;md ·I

p.m .

Tll1· pniJ..'T; tm \\'ill ft'-.llun· gmup
h\·mn 'lll).! lllg .I IH I ' ~)(., · j;li '-Iii ilS,
l llh'I''-' I.M. T't 'd \I. till ..., h1 11r lli storit':_
d
.l f 'C'IIlHll .'-o o l TIH· !'&lt;trl _
\ r f'li giou\
Jrt \-· nl\t•nknl n l the l 'n ilt'(! :vlP!ho
di_s t (' hurcht•s.
pnn~r;ml

witt

1::-Q ht&gt;ld in ( ; l' ~l Cf' U nitf'd MP!hocli ..;; t
C tiurdl. The public is i n\'itf'(j 111

:tt1!'nrl and hnn ,E: a lawn nr olhf•r
!t ,j dl ng ch. tl t

Bookmobile
schedules
Ca llia County
i ;.\I.I.II'OI.IS -

Tl11• llr. Samw •l

r ., Ho~1"" ~' rd :Vf rm r,ri nl l. ihrar~ · will
IJf'' .tl lhr- f(i]lmring pLwf•:-. !hP v:t'f'k

,.c .\l:r\- 2~ 1

tu

:n

Tw· ... d;n - :vli!C'hl'll l&lt;d :~- :\: : ~n
p.n · : ~.tndr r Adf'lair! t•. -l --1:'\IJ
"" ' \1cCuin• Su lxl1·. I. II . ~ . i.' ·
~J . )", p n~ . I p( ;r :1n dr f. I I. :1: 2~Hi
;un . \t'll! ht.ll•l hood Hd . I , II.
J;: , ~) h , ~, p rll
Chatham. :~-."\:.'~
Hrl . I n a\·is Or. I ,

\\t·dllf '"fl:n · -

pm .

\ ' l'rl/

lc 10 I 1\ p rn. 1-;anc~ugd olh. ~ : :l(;o
ru n . . loh1hl 1n ,., Tr . Ct. S: l ~ - ~: .10
p.m . r; ,\· r; Tr &lt;'I .. '»1\ ·ti: 1o p.m.
Tll tu '-ll.t \ - &lt; ·, il':r. :2· -t:''l .' \: 10 p .m .:

:1: l ~l :l : .J~ p. m .:
Pain o! f'; IUII· \ ·· .....l :10-4 lf.l p .m .:

J{fH( 'Ill!ll Tr

('!.

1-',_Ji ri•ilf 'll . l 1114 ." {()p _m _: Gallh-1.
p rn .

~.,.t,

Meigs County
1'0\'II :IU JY - Rookmubll&lt;' ser·
vtct• in M1•ig ~ Cnunty Is brou ght by
rh.'-' :\-1f •i g~ Count )-' Public Lihrary
under cont r act with I he Ohio Va ll ey

Libraries .
· Bookmobll &lt;&gt; schroulr for Mon·

~ea

cJay.

Ma ~·

Slate Run Ltvmg Histotical Farm

Ash"'lle 16141 ~33· 1 880
S1rmgd True Mu ~ um Marion
161 41387 6140
The Wagnall s Me moria l
Li thopolis 101 41 837 -4765
Webb 1-f o u ~ e Museum
.\lt!wcuk (614) 3 4 S - ~ S 40
Wyandot Popcorn Museum

&amp; Theme Parks
An1 mal Cr~rker Ptuk
L1)~an (b l4 1 JKS 'N4ll

C•,lumhus Zuu
p,N,:l'll 1tll4 1HWJ ':l471
l 'ilr&lt;~rh~t' Lilk(' famtlv
f Tl h'! lili!Hnt•nl f\H h
C t1nl1n Cyo: i(J! 4' 4 ~ l ~

Milnon (6 141187-Hl96

:lOtl7

T1rnl•"' Ru11 Ardw ry Park
Ak•K,Hldna (hitl l 9 24

Hlsrorlc Sites
,1\dena State Memonal
Chilli cothe ihl4 ) 772 -I.SO!l
Buckeye Furnace
Welb!on 16141 384·3537

'1~1) 1

W " c~ndor Lilkl' Amu si.'mt''lt Park

P•1wd l ih l 41 H~IJ 112H.'l

-.Jn l ',tst · nf r: 1111 . !h(•

2H -

2% JONES BOYS

Ohio has a lot for you to do and see. And the best part is, you don 't have to go fa r to have fun You 'll
find m any events and attrac tions in your area listed in this handy travel guide
Check the guide and plan to yet away soon. And remember to phone Hrst before you leave.
information. reservations, directi ons. current weather condi tion s. for anything you need to kn ow

No service due to

MPmorial Da~· holida y.

• wronPsday , May :lO - Tupf)(&gt;rS
F'lalns 1 Lodwick' s I. 7:25-7 : 55 p.m ..
~igJi,;cr~sf Addilion. 8: JO.R: 40 p.m.

Jmpnrved survival rates
· The American Cancer Society
repor1s tha i the five-year survival
for early, localizes breast cancer
ITas ri.&lt;;&lt;•n from 7R percent In the
t'wrsto87p&lt;&gt;rceni 1Dday.

Mus~um§

Athen~ C11unl ~· Mu ~e um

Campus Martius Museum

AtiWfl'o (hl4 l .J9 :i h21b

Manena 1614 1373 3750
Dr Increase Mathews House

B..,lmont Count y· Museum
R.'lrnew: lle {bl 4J 425 2926
(,lmbndgc Gl(lss Museum
C&lt;1mb ndyl? 16 \4) 4 3~ J0 4 ~,
Cl'l1tl•r oi ~{ ll!iltL' &amp; Industr y
Columb" lbi4 122K fdol
Colon1al ln n Mus.:um
Old Wa~ hmgto n lh!4) 4K9 5323
n ,•ntdl Mu ~ ~um
8.1 1nhndge (h i4 16:14 -222H
L1t'!-JI'nhM1 l-'iljX'r.Ne1gh t &amp; G l as ~

Zanesville (614 ) 4S4-9SUO

1810 HouS&lt;e
Ponsmoulh 16 14 1354 5!\5 1
Fhnt R1dgt&gt;
Glenlocd 16141 787 2476
Fnends Mee ti ng House
Ml Pleasan( 16141 769 ·7576
The Georg1an
LMcas ter [6141 6.S4 -9923
HM by House
Wes&lt;ecville 16141891 69AO
Harding House
Manon 16141387 9630

Mu~t&gt;urn

C,,mb nd i]e (6 14 ) 11J2 '2626
f r1VI' ne Coun ty Mu 54' um
wd~hl!)g~on(~?Url House
th l4 1.n.) 2 J:d
rr,mklm Hou"" Musl'um
Clulhwtlw (6 14 ) 772 1936

f r&lt;mk lm P,uk Co n ~ rvatof\1
C()lu mhu ._, (614 ) 222 7'1·17
( ort.Hie nh ull en Mu )C um
(,rl&lt;tCI.! nh uttl':'n :b l4 12S4 4 14]
( ;u,,rn .. l'y County M u~um
Cambndge (6 14 1432 2959
,],lp.Jnes..· f-.d ucatton Cen ter
W..-~t e rville !hl41

Moundbullders S tatt&gt; Memonal

Newack (6 141 344 ·1920
Mound City Gro up Ni'lt'l
Monument
Ch&lt;ihco!he (6141 774-11 25
.Qid Toll House
fl!-ht&gt;sville (614) 452-4420
Our House State Memorial
Gallipolis 1614 1446 0586
Sherman House
Lancaster (614) b87 -S8CJ\

"i

Hl'l2 2964

Jefl-=-r~nn Co unl ~
ll1 ~ 1mici'll

Muse um
'-oteubenvdle !6 1,1 1lHJ 1133
Johnson Hum nckhouse Muse um
Coshoc ton ih\4 ) h2 2 R7 1( 1
Ko,lfun ! louse

Columbus 16141464 2022
N,\ttonal Hets€). Glass MuS('u m
Nt&gt;wa1k l h\41.145 29:~2
Nnt1onal Rood - lanP C.r(1 y
Muse um
Noew~cb 1614 1872 31 43
Ohto Htstoncal Center
Columbus 16141 4661500
Ohio Railway Museum
Worlhington 16141 885· 7345
Ohio River Museum
Manena 1614i37J .37.SO
Old T~mperance House Museum
Newcomers&lt;own 1614 1498.7152
Pilrry Muse um &amp; Dairy Museum
Cf,llicolhe 16141 472·1933
Rob bins Hunter MuS€um
Granville 16141587.0430
Ross Coun ty Historical Museum
Chillicothe 16141 772·1936
Sherwood -D avid son House
Mu seum

Newack i6141345 1898

Restored Communities
GPrman Village
Columbus 16141 22 1·8888
Histone Roscoe Vi lla_ge
Coshoclon (6 141622 9310
Oh1o \hllaQ€
c;dumbus (6141466 1500
N•tur•l Wonden
Olent.mgy India n Cave rns
DelawMe 16141548 79 17
Perktns Observatory
De11'!wMe (6141363-1257

Toun
lmpenal Glass Corporation

Bellaire i61416763511
Marie na State Nursery

Manenal614 13736574
Mosser Glass
Cambridge 1614 1439 ·1827
Nel50n McCoy Pottery
Rosev1lle (6141 6530620
Ohio Slate University Tours
Columbus 16141422.()428
Ohio University Campus Tou r~

Athens 16141 594·5174
Robinson Ransbonom Pottery
Roseville i6 14i697·7355

State Cap ttol
Co lumbus (614) 466-2125

Scioto Trail S tat~ Pil rk

Chill1 cot he

16 lt1 7-'66:r212'~l

Shawnee S tate Park

Wlneriu &amp; Breweries
Anheuse r-Bu!&gt;Ch
Colu mbus 16141 Bll8 6644
ext 270

Granville Vineyard
Gri'lnville (614 ) SH7 -0JI2
H ouse ol Wines
Mariena 16141 373 0996
The LoUI S Jmdra Winery
Jac kson i513i2R6·657R
Wyi'l ndot1 e Wine Cellar. Inc
Gahanna 16141 476 3624
Train &amp; Boat Rides
BuckeyE' Cen tra l Scemc Ra1lroad
Newack 16141345·9757
Hoc king Valley Scen1c Railway
Nelsonville !6141 753.9531
The Lorena Sternwheeler
Zanesville [614)454 -085 1
Montice llo II Can;,l Boat Ride
Coshoclon (6141622.3415
Valle~' Gem Sternwheeler
Manena 16141373 7862

OUTDOORS
State P11rkl

Portsmou th (614 ) 8SH -4Sb l
Strounds Run 5 tate Park
Alhens 1614 1592 2:102
Tar Hollow State Purk
Laurelville 1614) 8H7 4H ifl
Wolf Run Stat ~ Pa rk
Caldwell 16141732 503o

Austin Lake
Toro nto (614 ) 544 -5S68
Batte lle Riverlronl Park
Colum bus 16141 222 7521!

Richmond (614) 7&amp;5- 445&lt;:1
Lake Alma Stale Park
Wellsron i6141 384 4474
Lake Hope State Park.
Zalesk&lt;!6141596·5253
Lake Logan State Park
Logan 16141 385·3444
Lake White State Park
Waverly 16i41 947A059
Madison Lake Ste~t e Park
London 1614)852 ·2919
Muskingum River Parkway
S tate ?;,rk

Zanesville !6141452·3820
Pike Lake Slate Park
Bainbridge 16141 493·2212
Sail Fork S1a1e Park
Ca mbridge 16141439-3521

Bellevue City Park

S!eubenville 1614121l.1 612b
Big Darby Wildlife Area
Ashley i6 141 &amp;.9 2365
Big Isla nd Wildlife Arei'l
Ashley 16i41 648 7723
Bob Evans Farm
Rio Grande (61 4 )245- 5.105
Bri nkhave n Wildld e Area

Columbus 16141265·7044
Clendening Lake Park
Freepor!I 6141 6S8·3691
The Dawes Arboretu m
Newa rk

16141 323 2355 32.1 29 1)( '
Delaware Wildlife Area
Ashley 16141 747.291 9
Fernwood Forest
Steube nvi lle (614) 2t4 -S641
Friendship Park
S&lt;eubenville 16141 7\.1747 :\
Glasshouse Works
S!ewart 16141b62 ·2i 42
Griggs Da m Park
Colu mbus 16141 222 7520
Hammertown Lake

Jackson 1614i 2R6·2201
Hocking Vall~ Hunting Pw~cr\11!
Logan 16141 385 6473
Beany Park
Sleubenville !6141282 4 561
Columbus Metro Parks
Columbus 16141891 .()700
Killdee r Plains \AJ(Jdlile Area
Harpster 16141496·2204

\ 614 ~

4.'12 3441

l.a kl'

[!., r'.,

lh \ 1) ~'~ :!
1

7~,:;;-&lt;:

Watrrloo l-_JqWnlrlt''l: '-1 t.ll1&lt; •1 1
New Milrshfll'ld (t,J ·l J rv1'1 .O-'l r1
Wn yn·· f\'ot1 nnal r~ ''' ''l
Athem (014 :. ~ ~'l L 61Act

P•rk•

Cambndt]o'

Pwdmonl ;_ ,1k. · 1-'MI..
F rt!~ port ih \4 ) I&gt;St-l :nr1
Sa h f'm k Wildlde A1L',,

·h Jrl l

r,~., ~.~. I~;

Wnhkf'l'ni'l Nc)ftHt'
S u ljrlf

1 1 r&lt;.' ~··r..,·

L rrJVP /1,1-1 ) i- lh ~ ,, p ,

Fishing and Boating
Blackh;md ( "' ' ~'' Cnnm· I IVI 'T\..'
N'-"'V.JtHk (b\4 1 7td lj(~)(l
Clow'&lt;; Man na
B ov...Pr ~l o n 16 141 2hq r; .Hl
0f'f'r Creek M&lt;1n nr~
Mt S11•rling ((,J4) KUI 'I'Jcn
Hockmy V&lt;~llel.' Canoe l.tvl.'ry
Logan i!l l til :{:-15 -Srl;.&lt;,S
Lake Ku th onn~· Sttltl' :-.~,~ f ur~'
Prest&gt;rv('
Jackson lb l•l ) 2Hil 24.'17
Lali~

S nowd,&gt;tt

Albany 1.tJ 14r btJX 6&gt;!7:!
Ohto Power f~CC H'il !Jon Ar~'.'l
McConnelsv1ilf' (bl!IJ ' lh2 !IS2'•
Piedmont lake MMlllol
Fr\'l'(XH t (.-J!r1 ) (lSH :P ·6
Rauo1Jn Cr l:'l!k Cdl1ll(' L1wn,1
Rto C ttlndt' !6 14124:1 .rd\l 11
T,1pp..1n Mannd
Sn u ll!l4 1 :i6'-J '2 /U\
Will s CrPek Ldkto&gt;
(o-;ho(. ton (h lr1 1:\f!J t1h ti/
Zrln ~svtlle Statt&gt; Nul '&gt;!C TV

Lancw1ll"' (f, lt1 14:- d 'J4 7?_

Horses &amp; Riding
R&lt;1rll.1nrh Stubll!&lt;&gt;
Johnstuwn (61 /ll Y27 hh'o·1
Circle K Hdm h
Circlevllli.' !hlti) •17!J .!711
Flymg N RMICh Rtd·ng :,table

Rockhn dge (h l4 ) 1JhiJ 2912
Si!lt Fork Ridmg

~ ! r~h l "'

ARTS
Mu ~&gt;e um s

&amp; Ga lleries
Am each C,ll b y
Columbuc; 1hl4 J 4h l (fJRh
CiMrle~ Fol ,·~·

C&lt;llit"rv

Culumhu~ 16 14) 2:1:1 742 1
C(l\u rn bu~

Colur11hu~

Mu:.eum of Art
(bl4122 l 680 1

Culturo) 1\r l'i Center
L

dumbu~

1(1\4 ! ~'2'2 7047

l' 1wr\tv
Cc~l hpoli "

i(J\tl l -14&amp; : \K~4
H1.. thwn ( ;,ll le:-v
I olnul'-.li-'1 lbl4) h.'J.'l Obh3
'-;ol u th ern Olml Mu !&gt;l! Ulll &amp;
Cultural CcntC'r
P•) rlsmo uth (hl41 : FA - ~lh2 9
7.,Jnl:'willc Art C'' nler

z. lnl:'svil ll'

(( d 41 4 :,~ 07~ 1

Mus ic:
Co lurn h u ~
(l , l u mhu ~

Mu-.K

111

'-&gt;y mphony OrchP&lt;ilr i\
lh14 ) ~'24 r&gt;~H l

The Meigs County Humane
Society recorrunends nroterlng and
spaying of anJmals to cut down on
the unwanted population and Is
offertng an Incentive program to
encourage such action. The Society
wUJ glve a $5 rebate to any animal
owner having the spaying or
neurertng done on their pets. All
you do 1s send a verifYing s mtement
from the veteranartan that you had
It !lone to the society at P .O. Box
682, Pomeroy. If you have any
questions on the program, call
992-5427

ThemaU brought a cassette of the
latest record of the music of John
Mohler who has been at It for
several years now. It Is a gospel
song and John figures the latest
should be a hit. I'm looking forward
to hearing It.

lhl! /\u

Co lumbu~

1614 ) 22 1 2000

UJx&gt; ra Columbus
Colu mhu \ ib l4 14bl 0022
f'n.,~ um Hu n M u~l t f&gt;Mk
Cr0wpnr1

lh14) :-\:i7 t1 2H2

The Riverview Elementary
School In the Reedsville area will be
used tor the annual dally Vacation
Bible School which has been set lor
June~ from 9 a.m. to 11: :4l each

Theatre

morning.

C &lt;~r nbn dye 1\•rlor mmg Art s
C(•n ll!r
C.1mhnrlg.· lbl4 l tt:ld 79~&gt;K
Ltckm~ cllllfliV Pl,ly(-'15

The school Is llmlted to children
from all" four through the ninth
grade. Younger children attending
must be accompanied by an adult.
If you have any Inquiries direct
them to Mrs. Pat Martin, 378-6233or
Mrs. Marlene Putman, J7!1.6371.

N,·wdrk (IJ I4) :vl.S 7JK5
L1vmy W&lt;,H I Ou tdoo t Drama
C 1m bndg1' I1) \4 14 .N 2761
(!hlo ~Iilio:' ( lmwr-:.tt y Theatre
Cnlu rnbu s jh l 4) •122 229~,
O hto Thl'&lt;ltrr
Th~&lt;

Cnlu mhu; (bl4J ,1h'-) -f)CI :N

Pa lace Tht"a tw
Columhus ((, J4l4b9 4K50

GAL

BOX FANS

(&lt;IV 161 41~7S 3434
Road Go Karl Track

~,lftonlll

Th ret' R1w rs Ca no~: L1verv &amp;
Cn K,ul Tr,lrk
·
c~~~lu•c tnn th\4 J bl.'2 40K{)

Shawnee State Forest

Delaware (614) S4R -46.'11

G10ve

'-'not u Dnwns
Col u mbu ~ {b l4) 49 1 25 ! ~J

Ud r1 1 'l'!.! I· J~U
Knkm1 1llj Wildlt·, · r'\r,·.·
A~hl''l.. !ld ,11 'vi." 77:!. ~

Lak(' v.·~UVIU '&gt; J\,• ( H',1rl \I fl '\), •,j -Wilv ne Nil tlon.:~l l'nr . :~ !
lrurl!lil', lh\4 1 r, Q l i?~l
MuluLtll\ Wtldt-riiC'&gt;.,
Glenmont (bJr!1 ~ 99 b7'11
p,)fk ( II R· ,_,,,.,
Columhu~ lb l'I J n2 7•1tJ7

Ponsmou &lt;h 1614 1858.4201
Tar Hollow Stale Forest
Lond o nderry (61 ~J 8H7 4RIH
Zaleski State Forest
Zaleski (614) S% 5781

Cn!umhu'o Motor Srweclway
C ul umb u~ (fd 41 491 104 7
D&lt;~rhv Downs

Co lurn!, u ~.

St11te Forests
" Forest
Blue Rock State
Blue Rock 1614 1674 4794
Dea n State Forest
Pedco 16141 532 7228
Fernwood State Fore~ l
Bloomingdale 16141264 5b71
Hamson State Forest
Bloo mingdal e (614 12b4 Sr,71
Hocking State Fows t
Roc kbnd ge 16 i41JH.S 4402
Shade Ri ver State Fnr~s t
Reedsv;lle 1614137H 6l l h

A W M1'1 non State Park

Jefferson Lake State Park

L1ck1ng Co un! y P.1r k
Grnnv1lle lh l4 ) ~lXi' ~:J . t')
W!Xldhun: Wilrlltfl' (\r,•,l
War '&gt;.-JW i~&gt;lr11 .'-\;2 4 'tZII
HrxiVI' t Rl''-l.'fV!HT l 'r~t l..

Ctlmhn d~·

MILK

20" "FAMOUS BRAND"

l &lt;~k. · l ', u~-.

Co~ h •; ( l • m

Alum Cree k State Park

Cicdeville 1614 1474.3386
Bark.camp State Park
Belmont &lt;6141484·1064
Blue Rock State Park
Blue Rock (6141 674.4794
Buckeye Lake State Park
Millersportl6141 467.2690
Burr Oak State Park
Glouster 16141 767 ·3570
Dee r Creek Stale Park
Mt Slerling 1614 1869·312 4
Delaware State Pl,rk
Delaware 1614 1369 2761
For ked Run State Park
Chillicothe 16141 773 ·2726
Hocking Hills State Park
Logan 16141 385·6841
Jac kson Lake Stare Park
Oak Hill16141 682 ·6197

L\'L'S\'111•·

for

Bowt'f '&gt; llln i'll4 J bJ'J ',Ti l

OZ. BROUGHTON'S

2 SPEED

COTTAGE CHEESE

99

BROUGHTON'S
16 OZ. "DAN DEE"

BUTTERMILK

REG. s2.09

POTATO
CHIPS

/z GAl.

1

BROUGHTON'S "GENERIC"
JUMBO ROLL "BLUE RIBBON"

ICE CREAM

PAPER 4 ~~~
TOWELS COR

/z GAl.

1

BROUGHTON'S

8 CT. PKG. "SUPREME"
HOTDOG or HAMBURGER

FRUIT DRINK

ORANGE- GRAPE- PUNCH - LEMONADE

BUNS2FOR

GAL

~ -iE

.-... ~·
.

Barbara Mandrell was country
when country wasn 't cool and some
of us were jeans when jeans were

Pn13n&gt; Theal 1e

MCJrion l6 l!J1 :~: .; 2H II
Playl' rS Thca tr(.' of Col umbu s
Co lumbu ~ lfll4 J 2L4 OH.1 1
Showbont Beckv Th&lt;~tch e r

Theatre
Manetta (b l'l J : n:~ hU:n

'Tecu msl•h "' ~ .. ~ henandoah "'

Ou tdoor Dramd~

Low Cit y lb1~1 ·1WJ oOIH

Ch1 111colhe 1614) 775-0700

Sports
The Centrum Ska hng
Colu mbus 1614146 1 b466
Columbu s Chppers Bas~ bdll
Cnlumhu s 161 4 ) tl ~l7 5256

Dance
Bullet Mt? tropohtan
Columbu&gt; 1614 1224 1672
Dancentral
Columbu&lt; lhl41 ZZ4 8103

Scottish boomerangs
GLASGOW, Scotland (AP)- The
boOmerang, malle famous by Aus·
tralla's abortgines , Is now being
malle In Scotland and exported
abroad, according to the Scottish
DeveloliilSlt Agency.
What began as a hobby for Adrian
Green seven years ago In Doncaster
In the north of England, has now
becor'ne a business venture In
Domoch In the Highlands of
Scotland as orders trom home and
overseas have Increased.
Green, whollasaworkforceolslx,
also produces t~msportsmodelsand
a four-bladed mxlel called a
rotorang which Is malle from
laminated strips ot ash to precision
aerodynamic standards.

8-S

River Rec baton workshop set

'111liJUTOHT- ~~ and ~rs.
r 'll.tl"lt ·'- \~·uv. ling annuur:tl't-' thr•
.. ng&lt;!~l·mt ·nt and approaching mar
I j \gl' 11! lllt']J' ClJUg hh~ J', rheryl, tO
1&gt;.t\'irt f·'hhi· t'. "on of ~r" . &amp;·ssiP
\·' ,'- ht 'I
Tlw t•ul dl)llf" " '''(lcilng wJll lakP

TI\"4'.~

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page

Point Ploatant, W. Va.

RED RIPE

12 OZ. PKG.

CALIFORNIA

SUPERIOR
FRANKIES

t

WATERMELONS

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YELLOW
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�~~~~Y~=·==198~4~~~~==========================~P~o~me~~~y~M~idd~le~po~rt~Ga~~lli~po~lis~,~Oh~io--~~P~ol~·n~t~P~Iea~~~n~t~,~VV~.~V~a~.==================T~he~S~u~n~da~y~T~im~M;·~Se~n~t~in~e~I~Pa~g~e~~~~7
27

p •• 8-6--The

Times-Sentinel

MIJy 27, 1984

Allen, Huffman
wed April7
in Gallipolis
ceremony
GAWPOUS - Kathy A. Allen

roses.
Best man was Anthony T hnmp-

By DANIEL Q. HA.NEV
AP Science WrKer
: NEW YORK lAP ) -Husbands
: and wives seem happiest lf both
: have lull-time jobs and they equally
. split up the routine chores of
: housework and child care, a study
· shows.
: Depression is most common, on
. the other hand, when thewifehasto
:work tomakeendsmeet, but she and
:her husband wish she could stay
. home and she still does all the
·housework. The man in these

\

RICHMOND,Ind.-SusanMar!e
SWanson, 31 Portsmouth Rd., became the bride of Gary Dale
Cheney, 4021blrd Ave., In a double
ring ceremony April 7, at St. Mary
Church, Richmond, Ind.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas G. Swanson, 4428
Fouts Rd., Richmond, Ind. The
groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond L. Cheney, 402 Third Ave.
The Rev. Joseph W. Dooley
performed the ceremony, and
music was !lrovided by flutist Mrs .
Linda Sherer, lnclianapolls; orga nist Tom Walker, Richmond, Ind .,
and Jerry Feller, Richmond, Ind.
The church was decorated with
baskets of daffodils, Iris and daisies
on e ither slde of the alter.
Given In marriage by her father,
the bride wore a gown of silk mlst
taffeta with a portrait neckline
outlined In alencon lace and pearls.
Matron of honor was Jennifer .
Deluter Cox, Washington, D.C.
Bridesmaids were Heidi Saxon,
Richmond, Ind.; Michelle Milligan,
New York Clty; and Trac! Klute,
Dur.ham, N.C. They wore ma tching
gowns of tlssue talfeta In periwinkle
blue.
Best man was Alva Johnson,
Gallipolis. Groomsmen were [)o.
nald and John Cheney, brothers of

and Eugene C. Hulbnan exchanged

wedding vows April 7 at Faith
Baptist .Church. The bride is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Allen of Galllpolls. The groom Is the
son of Allee Huffman of Zanesville,
Ohio.
The double-ring cer&lt;'mony was
officiated by Rev. Lynn D . Lahaie.
Music was provided by soloist,
Kelly Graham, and organist, Dottif'
Esque.
'
Given In marriag&lt;' by her
parents, the bride was escorted to
the altar by her father . She wore a
formal gown lined in acetate
talfets. The front and back yokes
were trimmed in ruffled lace The
full skirt had an attache! chapel ·
length train. She wore a finger-tip
veil IV1th blusher. She a lso wore a
single-strand pearl necklace and
matching pearl earrings which
were borrow ed from her
grandmother.
Miss Lisa Allen. sister of the
bride. was maid of honor. Brides·
maids were Brenda Treible of
Gallipolis a nd Rebecca Dotson of
Rio Grande. Their gowns were light
blue taffeta covered with lacf' and
they carried white long-stemmed

Study says sharing work makes happier marriage

Susan Swanson,
Gacy Cheney
trade vows
April 7

(
_, \

f
Mr. and Mn. EttR,ene C. Huffman
son of Gallipo lis. Ushers were Dale
Adams and Daniel Lahaie. both of
Gallipolis. ThP g-room and his
at tenda nt s wor e li g ht bl ue
tuxedoes .

G uPs ts \\'E'rP regis tPr r d bv
Sharon Lahaie uf India napoli s. Ind .
A reception \'&lt;'as hPid in the

fellowship room of the churc h
following the ceremony. The four·
tiered weddi ng cake was prepared
bv Mrs. G le nna Williams of
Gall ipol is.
T he couple resides at 447 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis.

Smokey Bear 40
on nationwide tour

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dale Cheney
the groom from Gallipolis; Rona ld
Corbin, Gallipolis; and Thomas J .
Swanson, brother of the bride.
A reception was held immediately
following the wedding a t Forest

Hills County Club in Richmond.
The bride and groom are both
employed at Holzer Medical Center.
and they reside a t 31 Portsmouth
Rd .

Best selling video tapes
announced for the week
By The Associated P~
'The following are the most
popular vldeo cassettes for the week
ending June 2 as they appear In next
week's issue of Billboard magazine.
Copy right 1984, Billboard Publicatio ns, I nc. Reprinted with
permission.
VIdeo cassette sales
!."Jane Fonda's Workout"
{Karl)
2. "Making Michael Jackson's
'Thriller" ' (Vestron)
3."Sudden Impact" {Warner)
4. "Raiders of the Lost Ark"
(Paramount)
5."Trad ln g Places"
1Paramount)
6."Do It Debbie's Way" !Video
Assoc. )
7."The Jane Fonda Workout

Challenge" (Karl )
8. "U n co mm o n Va l or"
(Paramount)
9. "Nell Diamond: Love a t the
Greek" {Vestron)
10. " Risky Business" (Warner)
Video cassette rentals

I. "Sudden Impact " (Warner!
2. "Uncommon Valor"
(Paramount)
3. ' ·rr ad t ng Places''
I Paramount)
4."UnderFire" (Vestron)
5."Dead Zone" (Paramount)
6. "Gorky Park" tVestron)
7."WarGames" (CBS-Fox)
8."D.C. Cab" iMCA)
9."St.J r&amp;l" (Warner)
IO."Mr. Mom " (Vestron)

Mr. and Mr.r. Harry 1\. Lyum ]r.

Tamara Clark becomes bride
of Harry Lyons ]r., March 17
POMEROY - The Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church was the
setting for the March 17 wedcling of
Tamra S. Oark, daughter of Larry
and Joy Clark, Middleport, and
Harry R. Lyons Jr .. sonofHarry and
Wanda Lyons, Racine.
The Rev. Mark McClung per·
formed the double ring ce!'f'mony
with music being presented by Mrs.
Chrls Rouse, p!anlst and Tammy
Black, soloist. Selections Included
"You Light Up My Life" and
"Whither Thou Goes!." A decora ted
arcllway nanked by candelabra
provided the setting lor the wedding.
Escorted to the altar by her
lather, the bride wore a gown of
sheer polyester with sequin and
ribbon trim. The all-over lace bodice
had a modified Queen Anne
neckline. blshop sleeves with lace
Insert and deep lace cuffs. The
ruffled hemolthegownflowed Into a
chapel length tra in . Her headpiece
was of bandeau style with chantUiy
type polyester lace. She carried a
bouquet ol white and blue daises and
roses wlth baby's breath.
Debbte Jolutstnn. Racine, sister of
the groom. was matron of honor,
and wore a yellow ch!tfon polyester
gown. Bridesmaids were Rhhonda
Lyons, Racine, in a white floral
polyester, Llsa Hotfman, Middle·
port, In a blue floral gown, and
Penny Clark, sister of the bride,
Middleport, In a blue polyester and
cotton voile. All of the attendants
carried bouquets of blue, pink and
yellow dalsles In sDk. Amanda
Brinker was the flower girl, and
Scott Brblker. the ring bearer.
Scott Beaird of Peneyslvan!a was

the best man, and .Joe i\rvelo, Npw
York, and Richard and Jack Lyons,
bo th of Racine were the ushers.
For her daugher's wedding, Mrs.
Cla rk wore a gown of burgundy
polyes ter accented with pink lace
and had a corsage of white silk
carnaTions with pastel streamers.
Mrs. Lyons wore a mint green gown
with wh.lte lace trim and a lso had a
white s ilk carnation corsage.
A reception honoring the couple
was he ld In the church socia l roo m
lmmediat e ly following the wedding.
The tiered fountain cake was
trimmed with fl"f'S h blue a nd whtie
nowers a nd cand!Ps a nd fea tu red
bridges extending to sidf' cakes .
Mrs. Ke lly Hawkins regi•tered the
guests. Mrs. Nancy Roush, Miss
Lynn Sayre, and Mrs. Penny
Brinker served at the rC&lt;'eptlon
!.able.
The couple took a wedding trip to
Clyde, Texas. They nuw reside at
1102 NW ~7th S!Ieet, Apt. LBVF-3.
Lawton , Okla . 73505.
The bride a ttended Meigs and
Southern High Schools.
Lyons graduated from Southern
High School and is in the U.S. Army .
Among the guests were Mrs . Jana
Bowersock and son, Todd, Lima .

Gymnastics offered
GALLIPOLIS - Gymnatics is
being offered for the sununer for
children three and older bY the
Ga llipolis Parks a nd Recreation
Departrn€nt . Christy Moore will
teach tour skill levels, each group
meeting seven weeks either two or
three Urnes weekly.

Batyko appointed to info services
RIO GRANDE - Richard J .
Batyko has been appointed Coord!·
nator c11n1onnatlon Serv1ces at Rio
Grande College and Community

CoiJe&amp;e.
Bltyko s a gradullt2 of Ohio
Vnlwnlly .wth a B.S. Is Joomallsm,
majoring L1 public relatiOns and

He h as been pu bile relations
oltlcer lor Southeast Ohio Emer·
gency Medical Services and worked
with the Jou mal of Emergency
Medical Services and Athens
magatlne.
He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Batyko of Wadsworth, Ohlo.

WASHINGTON lAP) - Nearly
ha lf of thf' 11 millionAmericanswith
diabetes are not aware they havf' it,
according to the Health Insurance
Association of America .
The est imate is based on data
provided by Maureen Harris , direr·
tor of the National Diabetes Data
Group of the Na tional Institute of
Health .
Dr . Harris says " living with
diabetes - a c hronic disease for
which then' is no known cure-may
be more importan t than dying of it
134 ,00) Americans do annually)
because it is the leading cause of
kidney failu re. blindness a nd limb
amputations In I he United States."
Most important to diabetics, shf'
says, "ls the day·t&lt;Hlay manage·
me nt to prevent complications."

8

T hf' origin of Smokey Bear goes
hac k to the early days of World War

An important message for women entering
(or re-entering) the work force.

oz.$}39

16
BTLS.

de\'t'lt )p ( t )r sh: rrpen l you r edge rn thc Jt lh market

CAN POP SPECIAL

$5 9 9

r------------------,
':-..:•ult l ' I &lt;.., ( lql. ll ll l lt"lllllfLth~ •r().l up.uio ) IU I Ou ii i HJk ll;mdh~ k 'l-.

CASE

Pepsi, Pepsi Free. Diet
Pepsi , Mountain Dew, 7-UP.
Diet 7-UP . Orange Crush,
Grape Crush, A&amp;W Root
Beer. Hawaiian Punch.

1

Name _

1

I

Addfl.'~'

I

I

1

I

GALLIPOLIS
ICE HOUSE
709 1st Ave.

CitY ~

Gallipolis

I

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
529 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH . 45631
446-4367 or 992-7644

II

cognit ion, MU Pres ident Dale F.
Nltzschke has heen advised.
Designed by The Eggers Group
of Nf'w York and Robert J. Bennett
Associa tes of Morgant0"-11, the
fac iliT y is fea tured in the American
Sc hool a nd Uni versity 1983 Arch! ·
teet ural Portfolio of award winning
and other outs tanding school a nd
university buildings.
The design team was composed
of David L. Finci, principal and C.
William E llf'rs Jr., principal-in·
c harge.
: Four color photographs of Hend·
frson Center 's exterior, two cross
~ect l o n dra wings of tbe Interior and
e description of the building a ppear
In the publication.
: Henderson Center was designed
to expand a nd update Marsha ll's
~ramped physical education and
!ntercol!eg!ate athletics facil ities as
~ major addition, wrapping around
Gullickson Hail whic h underwent
renovations to Integrate It Into the
~w facility.
· The complex, dedicated In May
i982, conta ins 324,001 square feet of
space, Including a IO,OOseat bas·
ketbali arena , a n 800-seat natato·
•tum, classrooms a nd offices for the
Elealth, Physical Education and
[«&gt;creation Department a nd the
Athletic Departme nt.
: There are facilities for ha ndba ll,
wrestling, judo, tennis, volleyball ,
archery, gymnastics, badminton
a nd Indoor track, as well as the
training and Wf'lght rooms.
The university has received a
eertlf!cate from The American
School a nd University publication

1

Yr II .\ (;,:Ill.

Phone I

1
1

L------------------~

Phone 446-1862

REG . NO. 71 ·0?-04718

t

FINE
CORDLESS$
PHONE

Band Garden ! .a all

1983 ADM

65

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AME'S
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$3 .67

% INCH

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LAWN

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$5.33

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DIGGING/SPADING FORK

$J 0.53

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
1415 EASTERN AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

'"Public Welcome"

I,

magazine editing and production.

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avoid work by using froz.en foods,
throwing fewer clinner parties or
simply cleaning the house less often.
But once it becomesobvlousthatshe
is in the working world for good, she
is apt to urge her husband to pitch In
with the housework.
··Although the husband may
initially resist," he said. "once he
has become accustomed to the
eo :momlc benellts of two pay ·
checks, he is likely to be open to
negotiation. If hi s wife presses the
issue, he is likely tD make concessions rather than lose her earnings."
Among the study's other findings :

-When the man works and the
woman st.lys home and does
housework, she ls more likely to be
depressed than her husband Is.
-In some marriages, both
partners like the Idea tha t the wife is
working, but the woman still does all
the householtl chores. These couples
have about the same lE'Vel of
depression as those In which the wife
stays home.
-A big reduction in depression
for wives occurs in the equal
pa11nerships, where both man a nd
woman share the housework .
- In

general.

tx&gt;tter-Niur atf'd

m en do more huusewurk 1han thosP
"'i th less schwling .
-The hJghPr a wik'~ l'drnings
thE' more likely h{ ·r hu~band \A: ill
help out vlfi th th(• hous{'work. Bul
men generally do Jps ~ around thf'
house if theit !Jd.\ td r i'\('(i·d s th1 ·J1

"-ives' .
''Thus. rqualit \ in !h1 d i\·i:-.Jon of
labor at home. which
Ides tht
psychological bmrtits of tl"' fu 11.1

P""

paraiJel marri .:.~gP , dc·~·nrl '"i in P&lt;H1
on tht&gt; ou1C'orm • ul ()I , . &lt;,\JIJ.L;l!l" tr11
('('O fJOJnic ('qUJJil\' in ' 'II ' '.', 'IJCh:
pla C'f'," Mirov,::. J,\ '&lt; ltd

Jeanell Annett Oiler exchanges
vows with Daniel Warden
GALLIPOLIS - Jenllf' ll Annett

fire-s was considered a rea l thrPat to
the na ti on's sf:'C'urity . Forest fires
could destroy raw materials and

Oiler and D aniel Eugene WardPn
f'XChanged wedding vows F rida \.
May 18. The wedding was per·

divert resources from the wartime
effort. A nationwide campaign was
launched by advert ising a nd fore·
stry official s to rally Americans to
prevent forest fires.
Aft e r trying several c haracters,
including a brief appearancE' by
Bambi, a bea r was adopted in 1944

formed by the R ev. rhos tor Le mle)·
at the home of thC' brid e'~ parents
by the Re v. Chester I Pmtev

The bride is the da

'·

ba nner . In the first poster, a bear•

Lifestyle

pouring water on a campfirr . His
f'arliest message was. "Smokey

&amp;

FURNITURE

says care wlli prevent nine out of 10

He

, ,f Mr .

FROM

outfitted in ranger attire was s hown

fires ."

Tht• cuupl(' n r•l.l' r •·•ntr · rr: r • dili~
lis. Th(• IJddr· I ' I'!TI \J],,.,,.,j
BernadinE' ·, T rll' ~· r· .,,n ·r , '11.
plo~' • 'Ci,,a1 1 h r · f'JrH · S1rr·1·! ( 11 '.\ ',J

RESORT VACATION FRE E!

to carry the forest fire prevent ion

forest

and Mrs. RalphOil~ ·J "I \·,111· n :11ot1
WardPn . Ud;n' .11 t· . • 11H! \i . '.1rl t

s

was

named
Smokey arter a New York Cily

LA-Z·DOY ·
CHAttl COMPANY

fireman.
In 1950,

a living symbol of
Smokey was discovered following a
nearly tragic wildfire In New
Mexico. When the fire had passed ·
and the smoke had eleared, a
flreflghtlng crew found a badly·
burned American black bear cling·
lng to a charred tree. The cub was
taken to a ranger station. nursed
back to health a nd then. with great
fanfare, nown to the National Zoo in
Washin gton. D.C.
Smokey retired in 1975 afte r
greeting millions of visitors, and
was replaced with another bear
from New Mexico. The original
living symbol of Smokey died in
1977 a nd was buried in New
Mexico's Smokey Bear Historical
State Park.
Smokey represents one of the
most successful campaigns in
history using an a nima l system to
influence public opinion about a
national problem. But of course it 's
the people's efforts that have been
ma tchless In keeping forest fi res
under control.

recognizing Henderson Center's
selection for the design honor.

'

•Americana GNOI Googe Resoot
McAfee, New Janey
·Sheraton 0oeu1 Pork Inn

·Sheraton Palriollnn

•JGneriCana Hoot Farm Reood
Lancaster, Per!na'!'iwDlo

• The Forl&gt;ood Sheroton lf"'98"' Failo

WU!iamaburg , Virginia

• The Westin Bonaventure

~Cod,-

Monlreal, Quebec-Canada

Onlario, Canada

Receive a FJtEE 4-d.ay vacation! Have a fabulous time al u:'Y o~e of these and
more eKciting resorts . Buy any La-Z-Boy~ product or combiJ\8U?n of La-Z...S.Oy~

products andotherfumituretotalling S499 or more, an~ we'll gtve you a 4-day,

Mr. and Mn. Daniel f:u~e ne Warden

3-night getaway vacation FREEl Choose from 12 excltln g re sorts. 01fer ends

Saturday,June 16, 1984 . Transportation not included.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • «

Week's top songs named
By The Associated Press
The following are Billboard's hot
record h.its for the week end ing June
2 as they appear in next week' sissue
of Billboard magazine. Copyright
198l, Billboard Publications, Inc.
Reprin ted with pe1m ission.
Hot singles
l. " Let' s Hear It For the &amp;ly"
Deniece Williams [Columbia )
2. "Time After Time" Cyndi
Lauper 1Portraif!
.l "Hello" LioneiRichie (Motown)
4. "Oh. Sherrie" Stevf' Perrv
tColumbial
·
5. "The Reflex" Duran Duran
tCapit'oll
6."Sis tpr Ch ristian " Night
Ranger tCamei-MCA )
i.''Against AU Ortds" Phil CoUins
tAtlanticl

OVER 60 RECLINERS IN STOCK
TO CHOOSE FROM

8."The Hca11 of Rock 'N' Roll"
Hu ey Lewis&amp;Thl' News tChrysalisl
9."Breakdance" lrPne Cara
t Nctwork -Geffen 1
JO."To All the G irls I' ve Loved
Befor e " Julio Iglesias &amp; Willie
Ne lson !Co lumbia!

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

"Where Customer Sat1s1ac t1on
Is Our Main Concern ."

CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE • GALLIPOLIS • 446 3045

GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS

The account with
the extras ...
A BONUS* GIFT

IUM_

ea rned its ar chitects national rP-

I

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MAY 29th thru JUNE 2nd

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HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - The
design of He nderson Cente r, Mar·
sha ll Universi ty's multipurpose
physical education complex, has

Don't mi:-..s ou t. act now

s urvey of 680 married couples , was
conducted by Mlrowsky and Cathe·
rine E. Ross, both of the Univer sity
of !Uinois at Champaign-Urbana. It
was presented Friday at the annual
meeting of the American Associa ·
lion for the Advancement of
Scienee.
In ma rriages in which both
partners work and do housework,
Mirowsky said, it has eventually
become clear thai thf' traditional
division of household tasks no longer
makes sense.
At first. the wife may shift some of
her duties onto older children or

II. when the possibility of enemy-set

Complex desig'J;,honored
at Marshall University

l lll'r"L' will be: nH 1re Il l~'-· t JfX'ni ng..., I~ 1r ~l'Crt't.:.t rie.., irl!lll'
KO's than anr other .Wn!!,fe_joh"
In jus! a k"\\' short ffi ( lilt lb. yt lUcan gel thl' \VtJrd pn ll ' t ·s."
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SPECIALS GOOD

ASST.
STYLES

COLUMBUS - The gleaming
forest fire pumper pulls to a stop.
Behind it . a trailer door s"'ings open
and a tall. dark, familiar figure
appears. It's Smokey Bear, thf'
nation 's respected symbol of forest
fire prevention. who will make
several stops in Ohio during his
na tionwide barnstorming birthday
tour .
The celebrating occasion is Smokey's 40th birt hday . Parades, par·
ties and a baseball game are a few
of t h~ activities scheduled Mav
25-28 in honor of his visit .
·
To r ecognize this milestone. Gov.
Ric hard F . Celeste has procla imi'd
May 25-28 Smokey Bear Weekend .
: ·A costumed Smokey wil l travel
::across Ohio in a rustic trailer pulled
O:by a pumper supplied by the Ohio
:·;Department of Natural Resources'
: ·-Division of Forestry. The tra iler
:-:will includf' a variety of Smokey
-·:posters and uther fire-re la ted
:·-items. Smokey's first stop is St.
:::c la irsville on May 2'i, where he wUI
··:be feted at a bi11hday party at the
::::Oh!a Va lley Mall and later join the
&gt; city's Pio neer Days parade. The
&lt; next day, he will march in a parade
: :at the Utica Ice Cream Fes tival and
&gt; later visit Children's Hospital and
;.:Northland Dodge in Columbus. On
&lt; May 27, Smokey will attend Day·
.· ton 's R iverfest.
: : Smokey will spend May 28 a t
CIPveland Metropolitan Pa rks and
part icipate in Smokey Bear Day a t
the CIPvela nd Indians-Milwaukee
·Brewers' baseball game. The April
through September to ur, whi ch
started in Maine, is scheduled to
visit a ll 50 states, including Smo·
kry 's New Mexico home, where a
US. postage stamp will be issued in
his honor.

POP SPECIAL
PEPSI, MT. DEW
DIET PEPSI
PEPSI FREE

DiabeteJ kif/.r

relationships is even more likely to
be depressed than his wl!e, the study
inclicates.
"In adapting to thewife'semploy·
ment, tbe central problem for
husbands seems to be one of
self-esteem - of getting over
embarrassment, guilt or apprehension associated with the wife's
employment. For wives, the central
problem is getting the husbands to
share the housework," said John
Mlrowsky, one of the authors.
The study, based on a nationwidl'

: PENSACOLA, Fla . tAP I -The
l;lrown paper grocery sack was
ronceived in 1883 when Charles
StUiwell Invented a machine tbat
Olade self-opening bags.
. Stlllwell'ssacksopenedw lth anlp
of the wrist and stood alone on
oblong bottoms. Today, American
~perrnarkets use 22 billion suc h
bags annually, according to St.
~s, a maker of bags.

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(614) 446 -3832

•II

�Page

B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentine l

Mtay 27, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipoli5, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

Senior Citizens announce next week}s activities
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Acti\1tles lor
the week of May 28-Ju ne 1 at the
Senior Citizens Center located at 220
Jackson Pi ke are as follows:
Monday, May 28 - Closed .
Tuesday. May 29 - S.T. O.P.
Class . 10:30 a.m .: Ph ysica l F itne ss.
11 15 a. m .; Crall Class. 1·.1 p m .
Wednesday , May :ll- Picnl(' on
the L av.rn, noon and Award Oa\·:

Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursdav. Mav 31- Bible St udy,
11 a.m .-noon ; Vinton Crafts, 1·2
p. m.; Blood Pressure Check at

Tuesday - Hsh. oven-brow n
pota toes. ka le. applesauce. t&gt;read .
t&gt;utter. milk .
Wednesday - Ham tm rger on

Vinton .

bu n, picnic on la wn , rovered dish .
fu r nished by seniors .

Fridav, June I -Staff Meeti ng,
8: 1:,-k: 45 a .m ., Art Class, 1-3 p. m .;

over biscuit , green bea ns, plums,

\d)]

~ta t oes. pears . cake and ici ng , rol l,
butter . mi l k .

Sl'!\'f'

thP fo llowing menus:

Monday - C'losed.

Calendar
he

LETART FALL~- Thcn ·wilt
be a dinner at LPtart Falb
Commun ity Halt Sund;oY bP~in ·
ning a t 11 : 30 a .m.
RACINE - ,\ chr&lt;' kPn bar·
becup dinner wil l bP hPid at th!'
Racine FirP Statton Sunda)
bPginning a t 11 a.m. sponson -d
by th~ Racine FirP Dcpat1m&lt;·nt .
Dinners S:l and ch tckcn onl1
$2. ~1.

RACINE - rtartn&lt;' 1-&lt;'gion
Pos t ffi2. American Lcgton well
hold Memonal scf'\oet" at Grwn
wood Cemet ery Sunda) a t Ill
a. m . a nd Le ta rt

CC'mC't f' r~·

a t 11

a .m . L&lt;&gt;giona irPs to mf't't Jt
home a t ~: :~1 a.m .

P leasant \'i~\ · Chu rch,
7: JU p.m .

al

Su nd a ~ · -

'iORTH CP- Mark Irwin w iU
Sp&lt;'a k a t North up Baptis t
t ·hurc h, SundaY, 7: 30 p.m T he
pub lic is im·1tPd .
CIW\1".: CITY - T he Rev.
Sten• Eix'rt will bl' at Victmy

Ba pt ist ('hunch, Sunday, 7:30
p.m .
\'1!\"l'(J:\ - ~emor ia l set v i ~
\\:ill lx · lwld a t Vinton
Mem oria l Park, Sunday, 2 p.m ..
condu Cicd by I hl' Am e rican
I.RI(iorr post 161. Tht&gt; public is
cPs

im ·itrd

po~r

CROW)'; CITY- Yout h Rt·v·i ·
va l scrviccs arr being hf' lcl at
Wesleyan Chu rPh with the Rev .
Cro rge Holley, L lO p m . Sun da y. Singing hy Roger Cromlis h
and RodnPy S, nde rs.
ADDISON - Addison Fr('('will Bapt ist ChurP h will have the
Rev. J ack Pa rsons s pt;•akin g
Sunday, 7&lt;11 p.m . ThP public is
invitPd to a ttend .
CROWN CITY Do nnie
Johnson will s pm k a nd ordina
tion sPrv ice for him hr·ld Su nday.
7:.10 p.m . a t Ki ng's ChapPI
Churc h.
PT . PLE ASA.\iT 1\'.Va . The G tubb F am ily S ing&lt;'rs will

Cream ed chicke n

Craft Mini -Course. 1-3 p.m .; Evening Art idtiPs . 6-10 p.m
T hf' St:&gt;nior Nutri tion Program

Vint on Bible Studv. 1 p.m .: Car·d

SUN DAY

Thursday -

I 'Ill 'I A H R IDG E Tht&gt;
L&lt;·mlr·.' I{Jiph reunion will be
Su nda1· a t Poplar Ridge Church.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Memoria l Day
SPtv ic&lt;'S will be held Mond ay a t
lht• Burlingham Chu rc h and
Ccm e tprv at 1: 30 p.m .

lemon jello salad .
Friday - Roast beef. m ashed

Choice of bPverage served wilh
each meaL Meals subject to change
without notice.

Meigs County
POME ROY - The Meigs County
Senior Cit izens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. has scheduled
the following activities for the week
of May 28- June 1:
Monday - Closed for holiday.
T uesday - P hysical Fitness,

11: 45 a.m .; Chorus to Pomeroy
Health Care Center for birthday
party, 1: 15 p.m .
Wednesday - Social Security
Representative, 10 a .m .-12: :.I p.m .;
Physical Fitness, 11: 45 a .m .;
Bingo, 1·2 p.m.; Bowling, 1: 30 p.m .
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a .m .-2
p.m. ; Charlie Barrett and Bill
Brown of the Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department will talk at 11 a .m .
a bout fire safety in the hom e;

Marshall Forum series planning
•
music, theater and travel shows
I

HUNTINGTON,

W Va .

-

A

onp..m an show. a musical r evue and

film visits to the Orienl, Europe's
"Teacup" countries . the Riviera,
Australia. Spain a nd Scotla nd will
bP presented on the 1984-R.'i Forum
Di\1Sion, Mars ha ll Art ists Series,
MU Cultural Events Coordinato r
Na ncy P . Hind sley a nnounced
today.
Sea son membPrships for a ll elghl
Forum program s are a vallableat a
cost of $28 for a dults a nd $14 for
youth age 17 a nd under. Additional
ticke t information m ay be obta ined
by ca lling the Artists Series Office
at 1.10l I 696-6656 or by writing the
Artist s Series, Marshall University.
Hunt ington, W.Va. 25701 .
Opening the Porum on Sept. 10 is
Ed Metzger and his one-m a n s how ,
" Albert E inste in -The Practical

on the F orum's travel tour, sche·
duled for Dec. 4. Saint Tropez,
Ca nnes , Nice, Monaco and Portofino a re a m ong the ports of calL
"On Broadway ," a musical rewe

fea turing the hus band a nd wife
team of Jack and Sally Jenkins, is
scheduled for Jan. 22. The production will inc lude songs from musicals of yesterday and today, from
"Oklahom a" to "Chorus Line. "
,.
On March 4, s ubscribers will bP
able to tour - by film - Aus tralia ,
where sheep still outnumbPr the
·people 1l to L Among the highlight s
are scenes of the mode rn cities. the
vast outback country. opa l mining
and the Iron pits in western
Australia , plus footage of the
loveable koala bcars , kangaroos.
pla typus and Ta smanian devils.

Tha yer Soule on April 1l w,)ll take
his audie nce to Spain, a country
rich in his tory a nd art, for a tour of
yesterda y a nd today, featuring
glimpses of the cities, castles. the
Alha mbr a , olive groves, brig ht

Physical Fitness, 11: 45 a .m .;
Square Dance, 1·3 p.m.
Friday - Physical Fitness, 11:45
a.m .; Bingo, l -2 p.m.
:
The MultiphaSic Health ScreenIng will be beld theweekot June4-i,
A series of health exams will be
given; lfyouwishtotakepartintl$
program, please call the center ~~
992-2161 to fill out papers and make
an appointment for the scrEelling,
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Tuesday- Macaroni and cheese,
peas and carrots, '· tossed salad,
fruit.
Wednesday - Meatloaf, mashed
potatoes, green beans, pears.
•
Thursday - New England boiled
dinner, applesauce, biscuit, cake. Friday - Roast beef, mashed
potatoes, cole slaw, vanilla pudding
over bananas.

Choice of beverage available
with lunch.

be a ch es and s now -cover e d
mountains.

Closing the F orum 's 1984-85
season on May I will be another film
lecture, "Scotland" with Sherllyn
Mentes and featuring scenes of the
Borders ' gentle hills, the pine
fore sts a nd the Highlands' blea k
moors, as we ll as the' islands with
their distinctive personalities.
All programs are at 8 p.m . and
are scheduled for Old Main Auditorium, .with Jhe exception of "On
Broadway" whicJ. will be presented
in Smith Recital Hall.

Bohemian. " which, according to
critic s. draws on the gent le humor
and sensitivit y or Einstein to reveal
a w ar m human b Pi ng and

c; t'O\'('.

philosopher.
On Oct.lO, photographe r -ltx·turer
tra vel documentary, " Seven Wond·
ers of the Orient, " which s hows the
richly colotiul pageantry a nd cui tun' of the people of Japan , Korea
and the North Chin a Sea.
On Nov . 8. Frank Kli c ar will
prov idC' thC' narr ati vf' for a film on
Europco' s undisrover cd countries.

taking his audie nce to the "Tea cup"

countries of Andor ra . Lif'c htPnslrin. Luxemhurg, San M a rino nhl?

world 's oldest republic ). Malt a a nd

THE LORD BLESS YO&lt;J
AND KEEP YOU
E-4721

INNOC.:t:NCE £,
SCHOOL DAYS

Tope picnic
GALLIPOLIS -

Tht' TopP

Pr L"dous M o m c n l5 figu ri nes
ce lebrate th e t~ n der y~ars of
life wrth subJects that renee!
the Innocence - and m is ch~ ­
vo usnen - o f yo uth Each is
a touching or tickling memory
come -to -life as an inspira tiontal c::reclion. E.xpenence the
wo~:nmth of Precious Momenu
co llectib les .
Com e by and see the s e special
sculptures

famil y will ha vC' a picniC at

Whtie CPmetrry. Sunday . .Junc3, following me moria! serviCf'S

Danceaerobics

. . ...

. -- " .•. •. .... - .
.. . .'· ·· ...
~

' '

.,

FRUTH PHARMACY
'' S ATELLITES

·Cheer leading
workshop set
G ALLIPO LL~

dC e

PHONE 675-2303

bt1 5 ines~. "

our ON!.Y

ZSOI Jackson Ave.
Pt. Pleasant, W. Ya.

Chf'&lt;' rlm d
lng workshops emphas izing
gymnastics ami gmup form a ·
tion e x&lt;"rc iSo?s will be he ld thi s
summer in the Washing F.lt&gt;mentary Sc hool gym 6 and '
p.m . Mond ay and Wednesdays
or Tuesday and Thursdays.
They bcg1n .June 11 and June
12 and lasl t·or s£'V ( 'n \'-'ffks.

By MIKE HARRIS
AP Molorsports Writer
INDIANAPOLIS lAP) - The bullet-Uke racer
whistles down the backslretch at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway at more than 210 mph, heading for
the tight third tum .
Suddenly, a puff of smoke explodes from the right
rear, and the car veers toward thewhite concretewall
surrounding the 2 ~- mlle track.
It does a three-quarter spin and smashes the wall
with a gut-wrenching thud . Pieces of the l,&amp;Xl-pound
racer spew from the carcass as the car grinds along.
It finally stops near the entrance to the fourth turn,
more than l,OOJ feet from the spot where thew all now
ls marked with a dirty swirl from the impact of a tire
a nd a splotch of color from the side of the demolished
car.
The smoke drifts away and there L' an eerie silence
before the track safety crews arrive. The driver,
stunned by the impact, sits in the steaming remains,
semiconscious, his head lolling to the side.
That scene involving Jacques VIUeneuve, and
several sl!nUar ones, occurred thls month as drivers
qualified at record speeds for Sunday's Indianapolis
500.
All of the drivers survived. Villeneuve suffered a
concussion, which kept him In nearby Methodisl
Hospital for two da ys. Steve Chassey also suffered a

concussion and Steve Krlsiloff had a badly broken leg.
Michael Chandler, In an accident a !moot Identical
to VIlleneuve's, suffered a cerebral contusion. a
broken nose and cuts on his face. He has had to
undergo minor plastic surgery and is making steady
improvement after being in a coma lor 2Y, days,
doctors said.
Danger and death are part of racing's world, and as speeds climbed this May to a record average of
203.692 mph - talk of tragedy on the track has grown
louder. Those involved, however, say the cars are
safer than ever.
"The cars look fragile. but they're not," said Robin
Herd. the chief designer of March race ca rs. All of the
injured drivers except Chandler, ln a Dan Gurney
Eagle, were in Marches.
"All the new cars are made with space age
rna Jeriais," Herd continued, "like carbon fibers. and
they are made with honeycomb construction - not
because It's lighter, but because It's stronger.
"When these cars Impact. they appear to just !all
apart, to go to piece. But, what theey do ls absorb the
impact and fling Its energy away from the cockpit ,
away from the driver."
The key, Herd said, Is making sure the "tub" - the
central part of the car holding the cockpll - remains
intact.
"The driver Is protected in that coccoon as much as
possible," he said.

i\1' Sports Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP I -Speed ls
of the essence. It is what the
Indianapolis 500 is all about.
Merely finishing the race is an
honor.
But the idea is to finish first.
Thirty-three sleek, shrieking,
ground-hugging machines - they
are to aulomobiles what the space
shuttle Is to an executive jet- will
leave the starting grid Sunday, their
drivers taking dead aim on the
narrow turns and straightaways
that lead to a checkered flagand$2.5
million In prize money.
•
Eleven rows, three cars apiece.
needle-nosed, winged creatw-es
hurtling around a course more
suited to the Marmon Wasp which
the late Ray Harroun drove here in
1911's inaugural lndy 500 at the
the n-terrifying speed of 74.59 mph.
This venerable race rourse. 559
acres in the CltyofSpeedwayon the
northwest fringe of lndianapolls,
has undergone piecemeal overhauls
in the intervening years. SUII,
HarrounandTomSnevahave hadto
aim their cars through the same
50-foot -wide straightaways and into
the same 60-foot -wide turns .
The field Is the fastest ever, only
one of the 33 drivers - Chris Knelfel
-falling to qualify at morethan200
mph. And he is ln the field as an
alternate, the first since 1929, only
because Jacques Villeneuve, a
faster driver. was ruled medically

unfit after crashing in practice.
Sneva, one of the moot outspoken
critics of unbridled speed at this
anachronistic race course. put the
pedal to the metal two weeks ago,
qualifying his March Cosworth at a
record 210.02! mph en route to
winning the pole position.
"We don't need togotnlsfast to put
on a good show ," Sneva, last year's
winner at an avertage speed of
162.117 mph. insisted as race day
approached. "The name of the
game is wheel-to-wheel racing, not
sheer speed. I think we've got to be
ve ry concerned about it thls year."
Nevertheless. records are made
to bP broken, and when the
gentlemen start theirengJnes under
what promises to be a cool, dry
Midwestern sky, they will be
pursuing not only gold, glory and the
garish Borg-Warner trophy, but a
niche In the U.S. Auto Club record
books as well .
They are likely to go toSneva or AI
Unser or Marlo Andrettl or Rick
Mears or Gordon J ohncock. All
former winners. all favorites in
what may be the mool competitive
of68lndys.
The late Mark Donohue Is in that
record book. Twelve years ago, he
ran the Indianapolis Motor Speedway - affectionately nicknamed
"the brlcky ard" after the long since
paved-over track -at an average
s pet"'l of 162.692. He died barely
three years laler in a crash during
practice for the Austrian Grand

PHONE 697-2t51

101 Si•th Ave.
Hun&amp;tinton, W. Ya .

364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis , Ohio

J

PHONE 384 -2174

Tn"t y o u r syste m t o th e S PE C I A LI ST S
w tth th e m os t EX PERII:N C E .
(W e tn s t a ll cd th e first -e v e r ho m e s y s t e m
tn s ou t h er n O hi o 1)

Wellston. Ohio

CALL:

378-6158

GRAND OPENING

DEXCEL 'GEN . I NSTRUMENTS'ARUNTA 'PARACLI PSE'MTI"STS.

L&amp;J GROCERIES &amp; EXXON
ST. RT. 7

BARGAIN

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lwot ¥1lid with

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or discount

1
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get a FREE Burrito

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I Not nlid with

6/9/84 or discount

·.

rr" - - - - -... - - - - With the Purchase of any Barbecued Rib
or Barbecued Chicken Dinner get

I
I
$1 00 OFF
I
I Not volrd. wrth.
.,
!*.
·
I anyother coupon

I

-----or discount

Phone 446·0217

,

•

EUREKA

VALLEY BELL

Buy
Tac~
Supreme or Taco L1te
and get a FREE Taco

..
Ltmtt2

.

hptres

6/9/84

·

..2

ltmtt

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Expires

th:nt 'PON ____
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ac 0
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1
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GAL

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$}69
BETSY ROSS

2/99¢

8-16
Oz.
Btls.

BOILED
HAM

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PEPSI
PEPSI FREE
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$}89

$}29
Plus Dep.

POTATO
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99¢
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'hGAL.$189

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6/9/84

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__.

------·----~·~-----Located in Spring Valley Plaza
Spn. thru Thur. 11 a.m.·lO p,m.; Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m.

"The re's not much you c an do a bout that sort of
thing," said 1979 winner Rick Mears, who will start
from the outsid&lt;' of the front r ow in anothe r new
Ma rch . "There is an awful lot of s tress put on the part.s
of a r ace ca r at 200.
"But you have to have a certain amount of
conlldence in the cars. And, if some thing does
happen , these ca rs ha ve sidepods that give the driver
some protection against hitting another car or a wa ll .
The tub is very well built and the materials being used
In building the cars are also very good. The d r iver is
m ore protected. He isn 't a sitting duck anymore:·
Bac k in the late 19ffis a nd early '70's, Indy-car
d rivers actua lly sat on top of or bPtwcen met11J tanks
filled with vola tile fu eL Fire was the dri ver 's worst
e nemy, even worse than the unyielding walls.
"Tha nk God tha t' s c hanged," sa id J ohnny
Ruthe tiord, who was Involved in a fiery holocausl in
the 1964 Indy 500 in which Eddie Sachs a nd Dave
MacDonald died . "Bac k the n, you hit something- a
wall , anothe r car - boom, the thing just exploded.
" Now we 've got fu el cells developed by Coodyear
for the helicoptPrs tn Vietnam , and they ' re built right
into the car, back behind the driver in a spot where
they 're not likely to get muc h impact in a c r ash\ .· ....._,_
"And, If there Is any fire in a crash, it's usually just a
,
flas h fi rE&gt; from thr fluids released from the engine
',
hitting the hot parts of the eng1ne."

This coupon is worth 10' towards purchase of any
Betsy Ross or Purity 20 oz.

-------

Prix.
A.J. Foyt is there- and here. He
islndy'sonlyfour-Umewinner.Hels
starting his 27thh race here. No one
has won as much as the$1.499,616he
has won here. And no one doubts that
he will be one of the fans' favorites
when he climbs Into the cockpit of his
red-orange No. 14 on the outside of
the fourth row.
Unser is here, one of two
three-time Indy winners (Johnny
Ruthetiord is the othe r one ) here
this year and the last drive r to win it
two consecutive years, in 1970 and
1971. Unser is the middle man in a
family tradition. His father and two
uncles were race drivers. So were
his brothers, Bobby and Jerry.
And so, now, ts his son, AI Jr., who
tried to run interfe rence for his dad
last year before Sneva aced him out
in the final laps, leaving Al Sr.
second by 11 seconds. The elder
Unser starts from the lOth position,
the younger from the 15th.
This ye ar, Indy has another
father-son tandem, Marlo and
Michael Andretti, starting on the
outside and inside of the second row.
The children keep coming, and
coming back .
Tony Bettenhausen hopes, in his
fourth lndy start, to grab the
checkered flag his father couldn'J
clutch in 14 races here before a crash
killed him in 1961. Geoff Brabham Is
running his fourth race, just as his
lather ran four between 1961 and
1970 bPfore retiring. And Pancho
Carter is s tarting his 11th race. just
a s his father did before retiring in

1965.
And the rookies keep coming.
Michael Andretti Is one of fiveVilleneuve would have been the
sixth - in the field. But the term
rookies, as Sneva was quick to say,
"Is loosely used here." Brazilian·
born Emerson Fittipaldi, for one, is
drivinghisfirstlndy500-butheisa
two-time world champion In the
more glamorous globe-girdling
world of Formula One competition.
Anotherwordusedhere-andnot
so loosely - ls "spectacle." The
lndy 500 Is far more than an
automobile race. It is the highs and
lows of humanity.
Accompanyingthe260,00lspecta·
tors who occupy the seats ringing
the 2Y,-mile rectangular track are
another 150,00) or so who gather in
the Infield.
A few of them actually watch the
race-ormomentsoflt.theviewsof
astralghtawayortumbeingllmlted
at best. Mast of them are there
simply to be there, to picnic in a
piece of Amerlcana. A few come to
bP a part of the boozing, brawling,
mob In a comer of the inlield aptly
named the Snake Pit .
Long before the sun plerPes the
horizon, the roads around the race
course are clogged with cars,
circling, cruising - a Middle
American Craffiti. The gates open
al 5 a .m., the fans bPgin flowing in ,
the crowd begins building.
In the hour or two just before the
race, marching bands and celebri·
ties and beauties in c onvertibles
parade alongthetrack .

LONG WAIT FOR THE FLAG- A. J . Foyt, lei!, and AI Unser. Jr.,
sit at the annual drivers' meeting Saturday at !he Indianapolis Motor
Speedway. The drivers reviewed racing instructions and saft'ly
procedures lor Sunday's 68th rwming of the 500 Mile llat'C. lAP
Laserpho!o)'

round leader in
Memorial tourney

I ZO West Znd St.

Ta~
DAYS
tflf Pt" -----.,-----l&lt;.tlf'
PtiN·-----,I
Ir----A Taco,
I
a

Herd noted that both Villeneuve and Chandler were
injured by !lying debris, not the impact. VIlleneuve
was hit by a lire and Chandler by apiece of suspension
that broke through the face shield of his helmet.
"We've got to do something about that, especially
here at Indianapolis where the walls and fences are so
c lose to the track. The debris Is often flung bac k at the
driver.
"Putting a protective shield behind and at the sides
of the driver's head - mavbe some sort of c arbon
fiber- would help. That co~ld well be In next year's
design."
Gordon Johncock, a veteran of 19 lndy races.
reflects the view of most of the drivers about the
integrity and safety of t he race cars.
"We're going faster than we ever have before,"
said Johncock, a two-time lndy winner who will start
from the middle of the second row in a MarPh. "But I
feel like these cars are safer at 210 than older cars
were at 195.
"They are very stable and they' re forg1ving. You
make a mistake and It's not the end. Most of the time
you can correct. In the past , if you made a mistake, let
the car get away even lor a second, you were in
trouble. This way, there are less guys crashing, so less
injuries."
Most of the crashes at Indianapolis this month have
been due to the suspension failure or flat tires.

" &gt; Crenshaw second

PHONE 446-6620

! MP R O P E R IN S TALL AT iON CA N
' '. USE M A N Y PR OB LEM S '

-

27 1984

Despite new safety measures, danger, death
•
remam big part of today's auto racing world

By BRUCE LOWJ'IT

insidP the Vatic an .
"Riviera Por ts of Call" wit h
Chris Bor den w il l be the n('x t stop

Happenings

~imes- Jtntitut Section
•
Mta

Speed is what Indy 500 is all about

Gene Wiancko w ill present his

POME ROY - Schedule of
Drew WPhs tPr Post 39, Ameri·
can I .eglon. lor Memorial Da y
sCf'\'iC&lt;'S. a ll on Monday. 10 a. m ..
at EIPP&lt;'h Crave C.em e te ry in
Pom eroy ; 1J a .m ., Sacred He art
\eme tcry. Pomeroy; 11 :30 a. m .
Rock Spr ings Cem etery; l p .m .
Meigs Mem ory Carden; l: 30
pm. Cht'stc•r; :1 p.m . Hemlock

Sports

INDY POLE S1Tl'ER - Tom Soeva, Paradise Valley, AltL, the
111M pole winner a&amp; lbe JndlMapolls MotorSpeedw!Q', aclmowledpe the
app1a1Me of f111111 a&amp; lbe driven' meellurr Saiunlay a&amp; the Speedway,
SueYa qualllled Ills Texaco Star March Cor!worib racer a&amp; 210.0. mpb 1o
win 1be pole posldon. (AP Laaerpboto).

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
DUBLIN, Ohio -Good putting,
Masters champion Ben Crenshaw
says, comes !rom feel and
concentration.
Crenshaw proved his point Fri ·
day. He needed only 22 putts on
Muirfleld VUiage's swift , undulat·
ing greens lor the Memorial
Tou'rnament lead .
The 32-year-old Texan opened
with six one-putt greens. And, in the
last six holes, he required just five
putts, good lor a 2-under-par 70, a
one-stroke lead and a 36-hole total of
138, six strokes below par at Jack
Nicklaus' Muirfield VU!age.
Crenshaw took no putts on the 13th
hole. He holed a 60-foot approach
shot there for one of his five blrdles.
"Concentration has a lot to do with
good putting," the leader said. "You
have to be roncentrating every hole.
I have a good feel for It this week ,
too.''
However, Nicklaus, bidding for a
second title in his 10-year-event. was
a single shot behind in second place.
He shot 70 for a 139 total.
''I'm excited," said Nicklaus,
seeking his first otflclal PGA Tour
title In more than two years. "I'm
ready to play."
Tied for third place at140wereGU
Morgan , Bob Murphy and Gary
Koch . Koch shot 71. Morgan and
MlJ1llhy, tiedforthetirst-round lead
with Payne Stewart, posted 73s.
Stewart wmt tor 75 and was four
shots behind at 142 at the midway

point of this tournament, wrucn nas
a total purse of :t572,00l and a first
prize of $90,&lt;XXJ.
The conditions- the wind gusted
past 30 mph- sent scores soaring on
a course that had yielded a
first -round record of 12 totals in the
60s Thursday. Only Jack Renner
(68) and Ed Flori (69) broke70in the
second round.
Crenshaw matched his target
score of 70 and said: "I had a lot of
patience. I scrambled well. That's
what you neroect on a day like today
aJ Mulrfield Village. I had to play on
thede!enslveslde. Theguyswhodld
well had a little more pa lie nee. They
resigned themselves that they
weren't going to hit every green."
Nicklaus said: "We didn't need to
grease the greens. We just turned on
the windmill and It did It for us."
Nicklaus, 44, the winner of a
record $4.3 mllllon In his career,
spiced his round with an eagle 3 on
the 531-yard fifth hole. "It was as
good a round of managing my game
as J've had for a longtime," he said.
"I only made one error. on the 18th
hole. "
Nicklaus' mistake, three-putting
from 25 feet for a bogey, cost him a
share of the lead.
The creator of this course and
tournament says familiarity with
the grounds he hunted a~ a
youngster can be a disadvantage.
"It's hanler for me because I know
what's out there," be said. ''"The
other guys play It once a year and
don't know what's out there."

ASKING FOR HELP - Ben Crenshaw molions 1o his hall 1o slow
down as II slips pasllhe' hole on the 18th green Friday a&amp;'lhe Memorial
To Toumamenlln Dublin. Crenshaw leads lbe lleld with a obc·under par

ocore for the second round. (AP Laserpholo) .

�27, 1984

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

May 27, 1984

General Hartinger will take
part in Diles tourney June 21
MASON - Four star General Colorado Springs.
He will be joined in the tourna·
James V. Hartinger has Joined the
ment
by the PGA pros - Ray
tleld for the 1!114 Dave DUes golf
Maguire
and Blll Uzelac of the
tournament to be held Jtme 21 at
Detroit
area
and Tim Wilkins of the
Riverside Golf Club In Mason,
Klngs
Island
course designed by
W.Va.
Jack
Nicklaus.
The Middleport native has been
The steering committee for the
accorded practically every honor
sixth
annual chanty event said
that can be bestowed on a military
there
will
be additional prizes for
man but he's always remained
the 18-hole tournament. There will
close to the people In Ills home area.
The general currently Is com· · be awards at each of the par three
holes for closest to the pin in
mander In chlel of both NORAD
addition to the customery team and
and the Space Command with
Individual awards. The tournament
headquarters In Peterson AFB In
festivities wlll kick ott wlth a
illllbllly supper at 6 p.m., June 20 at
the Royal Oak Park. The tournament Itself has a 10 a.m. start the
followlng morning at Riverside.
MARlETTA - Marietta College
Cost of the entry lor the tourna·
senior Gene Cole ol Tuppers Pblns
ment and dinner (wlth one guest) Is
Is a member of the 10-man ground
$150 wlth all proceeds going to area
crew lor the NCAA Division lll
chanties. Applications are avalla·
Baseball World Series held annuble at area golf courses and banks
or by calling Bill Nelson at
ally at Pioneer Park In Marietta.
Working eight hours a day tn
614·992-6549 .
preparation for the series, Cole has
been digging ditches, painting
bleachers, sandblasting, cutting
grass and watering the field.
The six-team double elimination
tourney begins May 31 and goes
until the championship game June
3. The top ranked Marietta College
'Etta Express Is now 45-4-1 alter
winning the Ohio Athletic Conference championship.
A 1981 graduate of Eastern High
School, Cole Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. E . Cole, Box 211, Tuppers
Plains.

Cole member of
ground crew

VAUGHT "Doc" Smith, at Jell, owner of Smith
'. Bulck·Ponllac of Gallipolis, presents tbe keys to a
brand new 19111 Buick Skyhawk to 11m Davis, cenler,
co-chalnnan of tbe Second Amual Band Area Jaycee
Charity GoU Classic set for Salunlay, June 2, aJ the

Riverside GoU Course In Mason, W.Va. Thls new CW'
wtll be ollered to the golf tournament participants lor
a hole-l!Hllle on the 179-yard Hole No. 9 at Riverside.
Smith Bulck·Pontlac salesman Jim Cochran Is also
pi&lt;1ured at right.

Bend Area Jaycees Golf Tourney
will he held on Saturday, June 2
MASON The Bend Area
Jaycees have set Saturday, June 2.
a~ t)le date for their Second Annual
Chanty Golf Classic, co-sponsored
by Point Distributing and Point.
Mason Auto Glass, and will be
played at the Riverside Golf Course
·In Mason.
All proceeds from the tourna·
men! will go to the Mason County
Special Olympics program.
The 1984 BAJC Classic will be
open to both men and women and
Will have a lour-man scramble
format wlth a blind drawing on
Friday, June 1, beginning at 6:30
p.m. All entries will be classified as
A, B, C, and D players based on
handicaps.
Registration lor the 144 golfer
field Is now open to ali persons on a
first-come first -serve basts. Entry
deadline will he Wednesday, May

30, at 6 p.m. No entries will become
offtclal until their entry fee Is paid In
full .
E ntry fee for tills year's tournament wlll be $40 for non· members
and $35 lor club members at
Riverside.
Included In the entry fee are
green fees (18 holes 1. golf ca1t
rental. a cookout meal will be

Any person wishing to enter the
BAJC's Second Annual Charity
Golf Classic should contact 11m
Davis or Steve Halstead 67:&gt;-1333 or
the Riverside Golf Course at (304)
773.()527.

Racine resident

Ever wonder
II you're paytag
too much.for
car lasuruce?
Ask one ol your nelghbor8
about State Farm's low rates
end fast. dependable sel'ollce.
Than give me a cal.

Tigers a nd was their leading scorer
during the regular season with 405
points, an average ol20.3per game.
He also led In rebounds with Hill
For the second-straight year, the
6-foot4 McConnell has been selt&gt;CTed to the Ali ·South Central Ohio
League team.
McConnell also led his team In
points and rebounds during the
198'2-83 season.
McConnell's offensive output during his senior year helped him
break by five points a sc hool career
scoring record set during the 1964·67

seasons.
Frw opponents equaled McCan·
nPll when !t came to size and

strength on the court, especially
when It came to rebounding under
the basket .
More Importantly, McConnell led
his lea rn by example and always
malnt alned a high level of sports·
manship on and off the court.

A Southern Hlgh graduate, he is the
son of Mr . and Mrs. Don L. Beegle
of Racine.
The Be thany College Blsons
finished a rain -shortened season

with a 4·9 overall record and a 4-5,
fourth· place standing In the PAC.

Baltlmo!T'

Mllv.oaukR&gt;

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16

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Ca Ufornla
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Seatflf&gt;

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Kan.~as Cl~·

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Home 444-4511

Torool!l • •\I&lt;'M·

&lt;Jr~dfor.l--lr

Milwaukn: rSultoo J:1r tH Mlntlt':;Oia
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Sunday'~

PRICES

IN
EFFECT
THRU

6 /9/84

G&amp;lll£&lt;'ii

CIC"''Piand ll l Toronto. :!,
K,mo;;as Cir;. ill lh roo

M!lwauklY' a t
Bat r t~n&gt;

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York ar Oakland
!)('rroit at ~a lllr •
Mond~'s Ga1114!Ji
\olinru...;,:lf: t &lt;+ I nt..;tun
Yurk at 01llfomt&lt;.J

at C lr\'l'l&lt;md. mr
1r11
Dt•rroi1 at Oakland. 1nr
JJ,;,Jtimon• at Sr•alllr•. rn 1
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..:,\ST ()IVJoOION
W L

Monl l'f'&lt;d

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Allan I;• 11 , St l.uui.s &lt;1
~f'V.' Yor k 2_ Lll' An~·lr.., 1
San I l lf'£0 7 Phlladt'lphla .1

CASH·N·
CARRY

SPRUCE
FRAMING

PRICES HIGHER IF CHARGED OR DELIVERED

r;, llousloo

2x4
2x6
2x8
2x10

Starbuster 8'
Spun Aluminum

Dish
KLM Skyeye X Receiver
100' LNA
Polarotor I Feed Horn
MTI-2800
Remote Actuator

1.49
2.66
3.63
5.09

10 FT.

1.99
3.29
4.53
6.13

12 FT.

2.71
3.55
5.33
6.98

14 FT. 16 FT.

2.99
4.59
6.12
7.29

3.46
5.16
7.23
8.73

PINE

*This includes complete installation with up
to 1 00' of cable and connection to one TV set.

UNITED SECURITY
Communications,
44 State St.
Ph. 44 144

PRICES HIGHER IF CHARGED OR DELIVERED

8 FT.

2x4
2x6
2x8
4x4
6x6

10 FT. 12 FT.

14 FT.

16 FT.

2.09
3.15

2.77 3.49
X
4.99
3.99 5.49 6.46 7.35
l
X
5.89 7.46
8.99
4.69 6.69 7.69 8.45 9.99
X
14~29 17.99
X 23.89

ROOF SHINGLES
20 YR. PRO-RATE WARR. FIBERGLASS

: NEW YORK (API -When the
horses came on the track for the
Cotham Slakes at Aqueduct on April
7th, the odds-on favorite, Secret
Prince, was seen to be wearing an
WGYsual set of blinkers.
: ~They were In etlect a plastic
l)luzzle and made the colt look like
!IOI!iethlng held over from a jousting
Jiraich at the court of King Arthur.
'They were designed, according to
l}"alner BUI Terrill, to make the
horse "concentrate on running, not

CASH-N-CARRY s2199 sQ.
'2299 SQ.
15 L8ir 3QLa.fELT $999 c~~H
DELIVERED OR CHARGED '1 QH
CARRY
DELIVERED OR CHARGED

room . and kid's room of the six·
passenger Buick LeSabre Bring the
whole famtly in for a test drive today.

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

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.
PH. 992-2174

Pomeroy, OH.

CAROLINA LUMBER
..

AND

SUPPLY COMPANY
312 SIXTH STREET 675-1160 POINT PLEASANT
Store Hours: Mondar·FridaJ, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
SaturdaJ, 8 a.m.-12 noon

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FORD RANGER 4x4-

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Thu~. May :II

la;

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btun

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Hoston at 1..&lt;.,; J\nW•k -:-.
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f'rldlu. dUIM' 1\
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langbed·. dark fawn brown. metallt c wtth ltghl tan vinyltntenor 6 cyl en11me . auto . Hans..
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4 spd. overdrive , rack and pinion steering. front disc brakes . ra ·
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automatic loc king hubs
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l 1nlkd statH l' oothMIIl.t!&amp;I;IM'
.\ flrlllf..,.\!"&lt;. PANTHE R.\;-St~ · J i m
\'lll;fJI I. puntff, 10 :1 onP-~'f'w- rontrlK't
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I·"F,DF:RAL....._'.amr-d HO\Io·ard Sct\Jvilrn
bt"&gt;r"'('f h(&gt;ad ('();oCh I' MKT!I(' aflf'l ' lhl&gt; 1~

11-.. wtns

Sr Lout!' at Atlar1ta. rn1

ST LOUIS

CCA

om

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Cnnr&gt;r. dr&gt;fffi _,j&gt;.., haek

~

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a co ntraC"t

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ClnclnMII ar Chk'ago
San Franrl'iCO al Phlladt:lphla. rn 1

P1TTo;.turj!:h ar

Jt~ Anrwnrr:"d

YOHK

San Uk&gt;j;to a t NEw York

~ hut&gt;£' .

S2439° 0

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a,lt'N'l'mflflt

l .o5

Suturda,) "!l G~
'11 l.JIU!"\ rSh'l"' l '!:.! r al ,\ tlanta IM;oh
In I \1
~~ ~ Angell~ rl!l'\ls.~ :.!:!1 al Nl"...· Y0rk
'l.nwh ~ 1•
i ·;m·mn,tt l ' P ;ts !nn· 'l .l 1 at (lllrago
~ ~-hullr • 0-lh
Sa n l/il_'f..-'0 l'tllurmond J-21 at Phlla
o:k&gt;lptlla 1flvstrun ll, , 1n1
S&lt;\ n FranrlS&lt;"'O • l~o'ik"" 1-4! at Monlrt•al
lr; uUJ('kso n 141 . 1r11
1-'irt,;t:J.JrJ:h IDt&gt;l..r&gt;on 2 11 a t Houston
tHvan ~ ~ 1. 1nr
.
Sundlu''~G~
San ~ · ranr!So:\1 at Morli!T'a l
La&gt; An~('&gt;!. at N£w Yor-k
SHn Dltw at Ptlllafiolphlii
St Lou~ at Atlu1111l
C'tnrlnnarl ar Chicago
1'111-.buf}'!h ; rt Hntt~tlll . 1 n1

Mood..,..s

8 FT.

Mrkl • Whil••. H,u't'. Hamrrund . ~t'1UWth
.lnrll-... Alllho1\" MitKT'I'ill and Kr,.,·ln Kur
&lt;f;. ·lf'. ol fmslw•ll nN'nl'n. Mlkr&gt; \'arullo and
.-\.J1t.lr Ru~·. UIK'blK'k1'r.i. Wa l !~r Tal &lt;'
,,'fl!Pr, Hobfon Polf'O anti TOf\\' B.lJ&lt;f't ,
tkofNI,;Ivr f1ld.&lt;.. .l im CampbHI. \11ho"
Hakf't , [)(·Wavtlf' C'hl\'f'~. H&lt;'manOO Mell&lt;~
.mel Bob F'IA~ UWn ('Ofido;, and WalTN

-

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Pi!l~bur~ h

Gallv-

[)uan(-

way. and T~ )l;f!Piy, df&gt;lmsiVP back&amp;.
HIM'I!I ITI l.f~:Js . qoort r"f'biick . flU-".~ .J~Tif'l"
I .an'\ Wm ~ &lt;~I'd Ar1hur ('uolc Unf'back r-r:o

fi ~

~to
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11

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IIi

Marvin DUillll~. Dan£'\ Hambrlcil.. l&lt;.!•n
nf'l h Olivn" a~~d Mllw Whlr~dr. v.1dt'
n•f•Mn•rs. "'or~ an RNo\ t"ll. Char/(&gt;!, Tllomali. JarJII"!o BAtts.
8t&gt;JI Tal(&gt;. and
Arring~oo Jonrs. runnirl~ boch. tu-.·tn

Ramst"\', Rk'bard Duke,,

C-3

pion teJUcs.
"This series was good for us,"
Riley said. "The Suns' front Une is
very similar to Boston's. I think
we're ready for them now. We don't
have much time of1 to prepare. But
hey, I'm just happy to have this one
over and Phoenix out of the way. We
made the last play and that was the
key."
Trylng to become only the flft h
team In NBA history to overcome a
3-1 deficit and wln a playoff series,
the Suns tied the score for the
seventh time ln the fourth period at
97·97 on Walter Davi s' jumper wlth
1: 19left .

COlLEGE
Pct.

22

S; m F ratH'IS&lt;'O

J

n as h

t'int ituldll

i\tl;mt~

COLTS-SI,itnrd

11JI--SA ROUGHNH' K.&lt;.;- .'\CQlllt'l'd .Jur

k: Jm.a~ Cil\ &lt;JI Tr·~as .

"21

I!'IL&gt;IMAPOI.1."i

Wf'a!lll&gt;rspoon. Jaml'!l Bl&gt;nnen, Par Sncw.•,

{ ;ULDEI\' EL\Y EARTIIQUAKl-Joi- .V•

,\ol t l\l'dukr~ ·

.""

~idl' rt"l"('t\' ('t".

qum-d Mlkl' s~· - df'I'Nldfl . r rom thf•
\ 'i!nnru vr-r \\'hJtr"t; trv:- \11 (•"CIIaDJi!l ' luo
Jf'ff Slock. dr&gt;femk·r .

Toronlu a r C hk~

I 'hlladf&gt;lph.i;J
;-.;,"' Yot ~

BAY PACKER..o;;_..{\lr Mik('
Mlkt&lt; CurT"io, Uno:.C:W·kiY. BOO
Mlrnld . ttaht l'l'ld. lll'ld Stt'\'f' Fonl\11\c-.

"""'""

.\'r~

I 'IIH'OIJ.:U

PHOENJX, Ariz. tAP! - Los
Angeles Coach Pat Riley says the
Phoenix Suns "were perfect prac·
tice" for Ills Lakers, who now face
the Boston Celtlcs for the NaiJonal
Basketball Association's world
championship.
Los Angeles claimed its third
consecutive Western Conference
title here Friday night as Earvln
"Magic" Johnson's layupwlth 1:05
remaining resulted in a 99-97
victory.
The Lakers. taklng this besl ·ofscven playoff series 4-2, starT the
final best-of-seven set Sunday in
Boston Garden agalnst the wellrested Eastern Conference cham-

GRF".E!\

.Jolt~· , JW:d~·.

Nmh Amertc• Socot'Jl"l' lA&gt;ape
&lt;'OSMOS---SiK!lrd .kif ~an .
d! ··
lrndr1' Cur Hube-rt EUrk('flmri('r , goa l
k«tX&gt;r, An~ Dl&amp;rn.ardo, midflt&gt;ltX&gt;r, ar1d
ST I"I.' t• Moyt&gt;t'!oo. fl.I('IA.·&lt;HJ.I

Mln~ a

Chif'a~O :!I Tr•Ka.~

' ~'"''

MIOetauon.

""""-'1L
~--- FootbAll l..racw

rMawn

~ - 21, 1111

Df"'mlr

~

S.•.1phus . rli.N' IackM •

SaWrcli&amp;]''M Gamt'fl

Phone~6-42t0

l .u, Anl:l'll'!&gt;

MUXlle no help

Say goodbye to lhe cramped quarters of compact cars and get ready
for the storage room. Mom and Dad

tl

"19
"16

Sf&gt;al1k&gt; 7. [)rormlt .1
Oakland 111, Nl"W York 7

G•lllpoll•, Oh.

t'le Is m ajortng in computer science.

'

'""

Toron1o

.....ow -

I'd. GO

L
6
It

M\nrK'SOia 7, MI!WilUkN''
Ca Ufornia 10. Balllmon&gt; 2

'-----------------------------1

500 E. Main St.

w

o.......

TC'Ka.~

CAROLL
SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.

served following the conclusion of
the golf tournament and the r
presenta11on of awards.
As for the schedule of events,
"Meet Your Team Night'' will be
held on Friday, June 1, beginning at
6: :!0 p.m. with the blind drawlng
starting at thai time a t the c lub
house shelter. A social hour will
begin at 5:30p.m.
On Saturday morning registra tion 1\111 begi n at 8. Tee off time Is
set for 9 a .m. with a shot gun start.

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

: Sad to say, they didn't work.
~ Prtnce finished out of the
money, 24 lengths beillnd the
Wtimer, Bear Hunt.

AMDllfAN l.EAO\IE
lEAST DIVIBON

l.ol11!.

: Beeglehad
pitched
;jaines,
three 'll.61nnlngs
wins and oneInloss . I
HI&gt; allowed 15 runs for a 4.89 ERA
and had 20 strikeouts.
: In total games. Beegle was fourth
01 the PAC In batting wlth a .394
~verage. HP had a .947 fielding
l"'rcentage.
: Beegle has just completed hi s
treshman yea r at Bethany whe re

eating."

l.OJllvWeo of thf

FriclQ',. GIUJM'fl
Toron!o !'l. Clf&gt;vPiaJ'I(I I
KarL'i&lt;l.li Ci ty~- Jb;.lun 'i

We've got all kinds
·of lumber for your
r--;;;;;.r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;----j remodeling projects!

receives honor

BETHANY. W.Va. - Racine
resident Zane Beegle, pitcher and
short~top for Bethany College .
received All-Presidents' Athletic
Conference (PAC) honorable men
Oon recognition for the 1!1'.4 baseball season.

llatkalk!d Bill t_ycn. inatldtr. lrom

Majol'!l

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

Lakers oust Suns,
face Celtics next

Scoreboard ...

Grandson of former residents sets
riew scoring mark at Circleville High
· CIRCLEVILLE - Family at hletic tradition has kept up with Mr.
and Mrs . William (Dude) Gibbs,
long·tlme Meigs County residents.
am and Sarah raised two sons (Bill
a)ld Jetn who both had exeeptlonal
football careers at Pomeroy High,
have a great-n&lt;&gt;phew, Luke McCon·
nell, who recently set a Circleville
High School aU-lime cage scoJing
record.
McConnell is also the grandson of
fOrmer Meigs County resident5.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gibbs.
McConnell . son of Mr. and Mrs .
James McConnell. 108 Rosewood
Ave., will enroll at Capital Univer·
slty tills fall where he wlll continue
Ills education and basketball ca ·
reer. McConnell wlll be joining a
Capital cage program willch fin ·
!shed 23-6 last season and won the
Ohio Athielic Conference regular
season championship for the se·
rond consecutive year.
McConnell is a co-captain for th&lt;'

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

n-•

M.ti*lfl

Ironton 1
.1

At llvY£T
Bt'lla111' Sl. John ll. MhtabUld St John

' 'TUsca rawas Cffitral C'ath. R, IUilsdalr- I
"' "i'lllerVW('

Columbus fuoady ~ . N(ow En; ton

l~•pblt'5 •, _C&lt;tna't Wlndlf'Slr-r 3

1.

1979 FORO F-150 CUSTOM 4x4 T.RUC1&lt;
Scioto Downs

Super Cab . long bed. two tone si lver and maroon . \1-8 engme. 4 speed tm.s .. power
and btakes rear ste p hum per. new l1res and wheels

CO LUMBUS, Oillo (API-SIIent
Lehigh, Jidden by Ray Pave r Jr.,
won thP $7.~ third leg of the
CountPss Vivian Pacing Series at
Scioto Downs Friday night.
The 4-year-Qid !Uiy, In her first
sta 11 a t the track, ran themlleln2: 00
2·5, noslng out Gratlulty.

''"'""'I

SPRING CAR CARE
DAYS ARE HERE!!!

Silent Leigh paid $13.~. 6.00 and

3.00, whUe Gratuity paid $4.00 and
:!.20 Magic Gold paid $6.00 to show.
Theco-leatured $4,&lt;XXJ thlnllegof
the Belle Acton Pacing Series was
won by Hey Daddy, which was
guided over the mile ln 1:59 4-5 by
Bil l Long Jr.
The 5-year-old mare had no
trouble beatlng favored Dow Jones
by a lengi h and one-quarter and paid
$8.40, 2.00 and 2.60. Dow Jones paid
$?.60 and 2.20, willie third -place Hens
Gypsy paid$ 3.00.
The first race trtlecta. kept up its
big payoffs. The :i-J-1 combination
paid $1,21R. Earlier this week, one
first race trllectas paid more than
$ll,&lt;XXJ.
Friday's c rowd of 5,465 bet
$462,433.

Cage events will
begin on June 11
GALLIPOLIS Open gym
basketball for junior and senior illgh
student s will beglnMonday.Junell,
and not .June 4 as previously
announced.
The evening sessions on Monday
and Wednesdays are from 6 until 8
p.m . and not4 to8p.m.as prevlously
announced.

Summer results
Summer Parka and
llecreollon Doport..Foodland

L1 Holzer MEdk:al Center 4; Old

Brick Tavem 7 Southern Comfort 0;
01versllied Management 6 Man:-hl's l '
Sparkle SUpply 3 Motor car Bro~ 2.
Ga Uipolls J .C.'s l2 Elliott's 'M 7.

Randy Michael

Glenn Enslen

Brent Sisson

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coupon Expires 6/9/84

MGM FARM CITY, INC.
SERVICE STATION
FORMERLY MEIGS LANDMARK
JACK CARSEY, MGR.

614-992-9932

Dark blue metalli c with cust-om stripmg by ' lobo". vV -8 engtne. automatic hans ., powtt

steenna and brakes, AM / FM/ 8-Track/ stereo. lully carpeted ms1de and only 43 .000 miles_

$4,900
STOP IN A

Merrill, Jay
A n Evans
and Frank Gheen

Open Monday thru Friday 8 a.m.-8
8 a.m.- 3

p.m

�Page

C4

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Dodgers drop 2-l tilt; ·Reds blank Cubs
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
The New York Mets seem to have
cor(le up with a good 'un in Dwight
Gooden

"That kid can really pitch." Los
Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda
said Friday night after the Dodgers
ran afoul of the Mets' 19-year-Qid
phenom for the second I ime in two
weeks. "He knows what he's doing
out there. He has conurunand of his
pitches. hits the spots. You don't see
too many fastballs like that. It can
shock you. You can't throw it much
harder than that ."
Gooden tied Nolan Ryan's Mets
rookie record , S&lt;'f in 1968, when he
struck out 14 Dodgers before
ne&lt;;ding ninth-inning help from
J(·sse Orosco. who pl'f'S&lt;'rvf'd New
York's 2-1 victory. F.xartly two
weeks earlier, GoodPn blanked the
Dodgers 2-0on a four hitter. strtking
out ll.
In other Nationa l League games,
t.hr Cincinnati Reds stoppf'd thl'
Chicago Cubs' six-game winning
streak 3-{), the San Dipgo Padres
tx&gt;at the Philadelphia Phillies 7-3.
the Atlanta Brave--s do\\ored the St.
Louis Cardinals 84, the Montreal
F.xpos nipped the San Francisco
Giants 3-2 and the Pittsburgh
Pira tesdeff'ated the Houston Astms
6-~ .

Gooden allowed only two hits until
Pedro GuPrff'ro opened the ninth
with his third homer of the season.
Mets Manager Dave~' John son wa~
booed by theslrikeout-happycmwd
when he camr out to lift GOCldcn.

"It wa s a tough hook ." .Johnson

said. "I knew he had a lot k,&gt;ft and I
expected to gPt booed. However,
there were three left· handers com-'
ing up so I had to go with Jesse. No
question In my mind that I would do
it all over again."
However, Orosco l"{'C()rded his
. seventh save only because the
potential tying run was thrownoutat
thP plate to end the game.
Pinch-hitter Jose Morales singled
with two out and R.J . Rey nolds
doubled to center, but the rpJay fmm
S('COnd baseman Kelvin Chapman
cut down pinch-runner Dave Anderson trying to score.
George Foster homered in the
S('COnd inning for the Mets' first run
off Rick Honeycutt. In the third ,
Mookie Wilson doubled with two out
and scored on Keith Hernandez's
single that cammed off the leg of
shortstop Bob 13ailor. New York's
Hublc Brooks collected a pair of
singles in three at-bats to extend his
hitting streak tol9games, longest in
the rna jars this season.

Gooden has st ruck out lO or morP
batrrrs in four of his nine m ajor·
)~ague statt s.

He has 73 strikeout s in
ol J-:1 Innings and his 14 strikeouts
were the mos t by a Met s pitchPr
since Tom Seaver did it in 1974.
"Strikeouts. I don't really thi nk
about them, don't really care about
ljlcm." Gooden insisted." It's just an
but. I want toget thebatter out. Work
on him. l'dbe happy to get 'email out
on grou nd balls.··
Red-13, Cuhs 0
Tom Hume pit ched five stmng
innings in his first stat1 in almost
five years and Brad Gulden rapped

and a two-run single by Royster.

a two-run single In a three-run tlrst
Inning. Hume allowed only three
hits and struck out six and Bob
Owchinko and Ted Power finished
up to preserve the Reds' first shutout
of the year. Dickie Noles, making his
first stBrt of the season, retired the
first two batters before Dan
Driessen singled and Dave Parker
doubled. Both scored on a single by
Gulden, who took second on the
throw to the plate and scored on
Dave Concepcion' s single?
Padres7, Phlllles3
Craig Nettles drilled a home nm
and three singles while Tony Gwynn
slammed a triple and two singles.
Winning pitcher Ed Whitson went
fi ve innings and gave up seven hits
and all three runs. Sa n Diego took a
2-0 lead off Charles Hudson in the
first inning when Alan Wiggins
singled. Gwyn n tripled and Nettles
singled. The Padres made It 5-0 in
the third , knocking out Hudson on
singles by Gwynn, Steve Garvey,
Terry Kennedy and Kevin McReynolds. Tug McGraw allowed a
run .scoring doubll' to Garry Templeton and Nettles homered in the
rilnth off Kevin Gmss.
Braves 8, Cardinals 4
Gerald Perry had three hits,
scored three runs. drove in one and
stole a base and Dale Murphy
homered for Atlanta. The Braves
jumpf'd on Dave LaPoint for two
runs in the second inrilng on singles
by Bob Horner and Perry , Glenn
Hubbard's double and Jerry Royster's sacrifice fly. They chased
LaPoint and increased the lead to 5-1
in tho third on Perry's RBI single .

~3.GUmb2

Miguel DUane scored trom third
base on Tim Raines' eighth-Inning
grounder with the winning run.
Dllonestarted the Inning by hitting a
slow bouncer to shortstop Joe
Pittman, whosethrowsalledlntothe
dugout for a two-base error. Dllone
went to third as Bryan Little
grounded out and Raines then hit a
chopper to third baseman Tom
O'Ma lley, who looked toward the
plate beforedecldJng to throw to first
as Dilone scored.The Giants tied the
game 2-2 in the topot the eighth when
Chill Davis, who singled home a
fifth-Inning run, led off with his
fourth homer.
"In that situa tion, in the eighth
inning, If you've got any shot at all,
you've got to throw home," said
Giants Manager Frank Robinson.
Astros 6, Pirates 2
Dale Berra drove in three runs for
Pittsburgh and John Tudor scat·
tered nine hits. The Pirates jumped
on Mike Scott for four runs In the first
inning. Singles by Lee Lacy and Bill
Madlock and a walk to Jason
Thompson loaded the bases with one
out . Lacy scored as second baseman
Phil Gamer booted Tony Pena's
high hopper and Johnny Ray
followed with a two-run single. Pen a
scored on Berra's sacrifice fly .
Berra doubled home two more runs
in the third.
Joe Sa mbito, Houston's one-time
relief ace, pitched two hitless
innings. II was I he left -hander' s first
major-league appearance since he
injured his elbow April27, 1982.

you want it ...
you ·ve got it ...

Lansdown{' Street and landed on a
warehouse rooftop.

wC'rC' l:xJund to lose ;·a gamP on thf&gt;

of the season and gavp hi m five RBI
for the' night .
Motley's slugging offset thrf'e hits
apiece, including home runs, by
Boston's Mike !::aster and Rich
Gedman.
Dan Quisenberry pitched three
scoreless innings for his 12th save of
thf&gt; season.

road. Unfortunawly for tllPm , that
loss came onf' gam e sooner than

they had hoped.
After blasting off this season by
winning their first 17 road ga mes~
tying a long-standing major league
record - the Tigers fell back to
ean h rriday night when theylos t7-3
in Sea tt le to the Mariners.
"I would have liked to have won
the ballgame," said Tiger Manager
Sparky Anderson, whose team has
blazed to a ~6 start this year. "But
we got the American League
record."
As it is. th e Tigers remained tied
\\Oth the 1916 New York Giants for
the most

consecutive road tri·

urn phs. Detroit set lhP AL mark on
Thursday night when it beat
California, surpa ss ing therecord set
by the 1912 Washington St&gt;nators
The Tigers a lso won their last four
road games last year, although

those
victories
do not count toward
tho recoed
.
"It' s clear teams are aiming for
us." sa
Detroit'
Darrell
Evans
after
theidTigers
hads their
nine-game
winning streak snapped. "We've got
to look forward to what we've got to
do. wecan'tluokbackward...
Despite the loss. theTigers haveto
look 7V, gamL-'S behind to see who's
s..&gt;cond in the A.L East, the Toronto
Btue Jays.
In other AL ga mes. Kansas Cit y
bcppcd Boston X-); TPxas trounced
Chicago 11 -!J; Oakland sla rruned
N&lt;&gt;W York 11~7; Toronto stopped
Cleveland :&gt;-!; Minnesota downed
Milwauk('(' 7-4. and California
clubbed Baltinoore 10-2.
Chief culptit sinending[)('tmit's
string were reliever-turned -starter
in rPiie!
EdVande
VandeBerg,
Bergwho
and pitched
Alvin Davis.

The two-run homer w as his four1h

All~etics

10, Yankees~

Dave Kingman crashf'd a grand
slam to cap a six -111n eighth inning
tha t snappf'd a 4-4 tie and gave host
Oakland its first victory under nPw
Manager Jackie Moore.
New York starter Ron Guidry . 24,
took the Joss and the win went to
Keith Atherton. 2-2.
Moore replaced Steve Bums. who
was fired Thursday nighit.
Blue Jays 5, Indians I
Georgr Bell, who entered the
ga mP with a .345 batting average,
dtilled a two-run double to back
Dave Slieb, who held visit ing

Clevela nd to three hits in eight
innings.
Stieb. 6-l . mmed hi s first vi ctory
since May 15. [)pnnis Lamp pitched
the ninth. allowing two hits.
It was the fourth straight victory
for the hostBiucJays,who havcwon
nine of the lastlO.
Will it&gt; Upshaw added an RBI
triple ""d Jesse Barfield had a
run-scoring double for Toronto.
Ra11gers 11, \\'hlteSoxO
Charlie Hough pitched a fine
three-hitter and Texas put the game
away early by shelling Tom Seaver.
Hough, 3-6, struck out nine and
walked four ln ' shiltting out the
visiting White Sox.
dmve
three and
runsMickey
apiece.
The
LarryinParrish
Ri vers
Rangers scored seven times in the
third innin g, two on Parrish's fifth
home run of the season.

Syracuse
resident
injured

I

'l'wlns 7, Brewers 4

Kent Hrbek, with three hits, and
Gary Gaetti, with two hits, each
drove in two runs to pace host
Minnesota.
Winner J ohn Butcher. 3-2, wen t
eight innings and benefited from
Minnesota's 14-hit attack.
Milwaukee reliever Bob Gibson
struck out nine in three innings,
including six straight batters.
Angels JO,Orioles2
Rookie Ron Romanick hurled a
seven-hitter in shackllngBaltlmol'!'
for his sixth victory in nine decisions
this year. Romanick struck out
three and walked none in pitching
his third complete game of the
seaso .

THE BIG BEND CITIZEN'S BAND RADIO CLUB, INC.,
WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE FOLLOWING BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS FOR MAKING THEIR SEVENTH ANNUAL COFFEEBREAK ON SUNDAY,
MAY 6TH, 1984, AT THE ROYAL OAK PARK A
COMPLETE SUCCESS.
POMEROY
l·ln·One, Francis Florist. Lopn Monument. Dan's Exxon. Dale H111 Ford Tractor, Goodyear Tiro Center, Crow's Family Restaurant, Pomeroy Flower Shop,
Farmer's Bank. G&amp;J Auto Parts, Top of the St~irs. Myrtis Kay's Beauty Shop,
Bank One, Clark's Jewelry. Downine-Childs. Ins .. V. D. Edwards. Ins., MGM
Farm City, Cleland Realty, Pomeroy Cement Block. Diamond Savines &amp; Loan.
Excelsior Salt Works, Kroger's, J&amp;R Sport Shop, Forest Run Block Co .. Porter &amp;
Little. Allys .. Jim's Gulf. Sugar Run Flour MilJ , Sugar Run Ashland, Jeff's Carryout, [wine Funeral Home, Chapman's Shoes, The Daily Sentin-1 . Simon's
Pick·A-Pair, Jennifer Sheets, Atty .. Mareuerite's Shoes, Swisher &amp; Lohse
Drues. New York Clothine House, Nelson's Drugs, K&amp;C Jewelry, Ebersbach
Hardware, Pomeroy Bowline JAnes, Crow, Crow &amp;Porter 11 , Davis, Quickel ins.,
Meies Inn, O'Brien &amp; O'Brien. Allys .. Main Street Market, Jones' Boys, Burger
Chef, Adolph's Dairy Valley, Twin City Machine Shop, Duckett's Plants &amp;Thines. Dabble Shop, Powell's Super Valu, Kingsbury Mobile Homes.

American flags around the base of the monument. SIK&gt;
was assi.'l&amp;ed with plantings In the rum by her
daughter, EUeen Bowers, and granddaugher, Janet
V enoy, with the Dowers being provlded hy a grandson,
Eddie Durst, who operates Ed's GreenhntL'ie on the
Noble-Swrunltt &amp;ad.

Happenings around Meigs &amp; Gallia

TUPPERS PLAINS
Keebaugh's Shake Shoppe, Lodwtck's Market, Tuppers Plains Hardware, Hawk's
Amaco, Cole's sohio.
CHESTER
Newell's Sunoco. Gaul's Grocery.
MASON, W. VA.
Pickens' Hardware. D&amp;J Save Mart. Janet's Hair Go Round, Bob's Market.
GALLIPOLIS
Bob's Electronics
ATHENS
20th Century Sound

6.

.

DECORATED - The area around the war
monument on the MeigsCowtty CourtHouse lawn was
decorated with Dags and Dowers Friday , in
preparation for the observance of Memorial Day.
Helen Miller of Middleport, 86, the last of the
Daughters of Union Veterans In Meigs County,
&lt;.'Onlinlled her practice ol many years by pladng small

MIDDLEPORT
Quality Print Shop, Ace Hardware, Valley Lumber, D.J.'s Trading Post, Brenda's
Boutique, Willis' Chain Saw shop. Rawlines-Coats-Blower Funeral Home.
Max's Restaurant. Pat Hill Ford, C&amp;K Supermarket, Ginza, Middleport Dept.
Store, Middleport Book Store. Central Trust Bank, Ben Franklin, Shoe Box,
Bahr Clo_thiers. Locker 219. Burkett's Barber Shop, Dan's, foreman &amp; Abbott.
Village Pharmacy, Country Craft Cottare. Sear's, Plastic Engraving.
RUTLAND
Miller Bros. Grocery, Rutland Furniture Store, Rut land Bottle Gas. Rutland
Dept. Store, Frye's Pennzoil. Hilltop Grocery, Tiny's. Dairy Delite .
RACINE
Cross' Grocery , Tessie's Craft Shop, Village Cut-Rate , Star Supply, Wagner
Hardware, Racine Home National Bank, Baer's Grocery, larry's Grocery , Hub·
bard's Greenhouse.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

MAIN DOOR PRIZE WINNERS
'200.00 ~ Terry Seidenabel, Pomeroy
'1 00.00 ~ Ben Bohl, Marietta
'50.00 ~ Clovis Betts, New Marshfield
'50.00 ~ George Flowers, Marietta
'50.00 ~Clara McKinney
'50.00 ~ Mike Caton, Pomeroy

OF GIFTS OF YOUR CHOICE
Jnvt.tu"Y POOLS, INC. WHEN YOU BUY
IN-GROUND POOL KIT AT THIESE
DISCOUNT PRICES .

J.lUA.U . ..... ............... ....... ....... . ..... .... ... ..

$2,25

POMEROY - A Syracuse man
.lOA.&gt;~ """'''"'"'"'""""'"''"""'"""""''"' $2,55
suffered minor Injuries in a one20x40 .................................................. $2,77
vehicle accident on Meigs County
Road 35 Friday, according to the
We Carry Supplies and Equipment in Stock
Gallipolis post of the state highway
patrol.
Robert B. Gibbs Jr., 19, was
reportedly southbound at 5 p.m.
304-492-4788
when he los! control of his vehicle on
a CUJVe , went olftheright sidPof the
mad and struck a fence.
Gibbs' vehicle then overturned . rr================~~==~~~~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~
He was not treated for his injury·,
and was cited for failure to contml.
The patrol cited Richard V
MUter, 19, Thurman. for failure to
yield in a two-vehicle accident
Friday in Greenfield Township nPar
•LOANS ON PERSONAL PROPERTY
the J ackson County line.
Miller was reportedly northbound
•BUY USED ITEMS
on Gallia Ccunty Road 19 (Frank
•GUNS •TVs •STEREOS
Shaffer Road) at 6 p.m. and collided
on a Nllcrest with a southbound
•GUITARS •JEWELRY •TOOLS
vehicle driven by Aus tin W. Leonard, 55, Oak Hill.
•SELL OR TRADE -- GOOD SELECTION
Leonard's vehicle was severely
damaged, and the Miller auto was
slightly damaged.

Marriage license

Veterans Memorial

RACINE - Trash co llec tion in
Racine Villag~ will be on Tuesday
and Wednesday this week due to the
landfill being closed on Memorial
Day.

POMEROY -Issued a marriage
license in Meigs County Probate
Cou rt were Pat H. Ross, ~.
Syracuse , and Mary A. Ross. 49,
Columbus:

Admitted--Donna Ross, Por·
tland; Herbert Gilkey, Middleport.
Discharged-·Roy Scarberry, WUliam Williams.

Schools receive funds

Court actions filed

POMEROY - Meigs County's
three local school districts received
a total of$461.958.73afterdeductlons
for employe retirement as their
portion of the May State School
Foundation Subsidy payment.
Amounts received by districts
included Eastern, $106,606.41:
ME'igs Local, $248,863.70, and Southem, $106,488.62. In addJtion, the
county board of education received
a direct allotment of $24,246.12.

Fund raising
concept changes

POMEROY -In Meigs County
BURLINGHAM~ The concept of
Ccmmon Pleas Court, a foreclosure
suit was filed by Diamond Savings the annual fund raiser of the
and Loan, Pomeroy. against GaleE . BurLingham Modem Woodmen and
Wolfe and Charlotte Wolfe. Middle- the Community has been changed
port , City Loan and Savings and this year.
Usually, the fund raiser has been
George Collins as county treasurer.
Also tiled was contested election designated to raise funds for an
on local option on the sale of beer in emergency unit or a similar group.
However. this year, the camp and
Orange Township.
Paul R. Roush, Reedsvllle and community will donate its pl'OC('('(js
Nancy E. Roush. Reedsville flied for to Jan Pickett for medical and
surgical expenses.
Pickett, a
dissolution of marriage.
resident of the community, was
seriously injured in a timber cutting
accident. The fund raiser has been
Meets Tuesday
set lor Saturday, June 2, fmm 9a.m.
RACINE -Racine Village Coun- to 7 p.m. and will be In the form of a
cil will meet in recessed session at 7 fish fry . dinners and sandwiches and
p.m. Tuesday at village hall. The will be held at the Burlinham
Modern Woodmen Hail. Donations
meetings a reopen to the public.
to Picket t will also be accepted by
the group.

POMEROY- ThP April distribution of slate motor vehicle registra-

tion fees for April in Ohio tolaled
$15.490.783.75, SIBle Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson reports. Meigs
County's part totaled $9.291.07.

r:=~----------L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Open on Monday

Seaver, who was knocked out in

the third , fannf'd four and became
the fifth pitcher in major-league
history to reach .1 ..100 career

Gold

$4r295
Interstate"

$5,5 9 5
TOURING ELITE

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-J

Aspe ncade '

$6 •995

51.ightly
Htgher

Any rider who knows the road I rom two wh eels, know s th e Gold Wing ... reput at1on lor lu xury and
reliability. Now all ri·ew for 1984. it remams the pre m1er motorcycle tourin g lin e_ All three mode ls
share a completely redesigned low maintenance 1182cc engine and a redesigned, more
comfortable chassis. Plus the array of luxury features offered on th e Aspencaae·· and Interstate'"
make them the most completely equipped to un ng mach 1nes on th e road More and more the
Gold Wing models are the standards of exce llence in motorcvcle to urinQ.

BETZ HONDA SALES
Upper Rt . 7

Gallipolis, OH.
Just South of Holiday Inn

SALE - SALE -

SALE -

SALE

lAWN MOWERS, LAWN TRACTORS, TRIMMERS
AND CHAIN SAWS

•

.JA COBSEN
HOM ELITE
TRIMERS AND
CHAIN SAWS
ALL ON SPECIAL

_,

IT'S AUDIOTONE . .. HAVE YOU HEARD?

OH.

Win9~

HEARING EVALUATION AVAILABE FOR All AGE$!
LISA KOCH
INHEARING
417 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

446-7619- Ph. 992-6601

Gallipolis,
446-0840

Aew view mtrrors

POMEROY ~ Due to Memorial
Day observances on Monday by the
federal government and Wednes·
day by Ohio state government,
unemployment compensation lJe.
nellt checks may be delayed one of
two days. The Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services will be closed
Wednesday, May 30.

A TOT AUY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

f YOU think YOU need a hearing aid,
don't put it off! You·re missing some of
the fUn in life. It'S easy and affordable.

430 Second Ave.

Checks may be late

GALUPOLIS- Two state offices
will remain open Monday , according to officials.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment
Se rv ices will be opPn Monday and
will observe the Memorial Day
holiday Wednesday.
The state liquor store will also be
ope n Monda y and closPd
Wednesday.

strikeouts.

FRANK'S PAWN SHOP
PH.

Pick-up dates changed

Fees received

PROCEEDS GO TO CHARITIES
IF BY ANY CHANCE, THE CLUB HAS ACCIDENTALLY OMITTED AN YONE FOR THEIR CONTRIBUTION. PLEASE ACCEPT OUR APOLOGY.
THE BIG BEND CITIZENS BAND RADIO CLUB, INC.

Hear·ng
··s
I
Be1•1eV1ng.
• I
I
PH.

.,,.,.,,u

IFRI;i; $1 00

QUICK CASH!

.... ..1·1\~-"'-~ ';dd, .'if' . ;:~ ..
~ .;..,. ll/ill:l."f ::'T:"" ""'"'"" ' . t:: J ' . Oc f I"

MICRO WAVE
OVENS
As Low As

)

T'uf'Sday. ga v(' up just one r un in

seven-plus innin~s.

" I nf'ver was so nervous in all my

life." sa id the l5-year-Qid left hander. "I had trouble going tosleep
last night and I had to keep busy all
day."

Vandr Flerg. i -2. got reUef help
from Daw flc&gt;ard and Pau l Mira bPila, who gm tlle game's final two
ou ts for his second saw.
Davis led the assault against
Detroit starter Mil! Wilcox. who won
ni ne straigh t games over two
seasons and lost his first game in
seven decisions th is year. Davis
upped his batting average to .344
with a home run. double and single
as the Mariners raked Wilcox for six
runs on nine hit s in 4 2-3 innings.
"I fell the best in the batting cage
since I broke my nose and it carried
over Into the game," said Davis. a
rookie. " I could feel it when I got to
the park today, the adrenalin
start ing to now. The Tigers had
something to do with that. "
Bob Kearney belted a two-run
homer and a double for Sea ttle,
which rebounded from consecutive
shutout l&lt;Eses at home against New
York.
Royals 8, Red Sox 5
Darryl Motley, a muscular young
outfielder, did the damage for
KansasCUy .
In the third inning, he lined a
bases-loaded triple as the Royals
erased a 1-0 deflclt. In the fourth,
Motley blasted a ball that soared
over the screen high a top Fenway
Park's left-field wall, earned across
~-

DAVE DILES- APPALACHIA SEMI-CLOSED
GOLF TOURNAMENT and HILLBILLY SUPPER
1984 REGISTRATION
(Registration form must be filled out and accompanied by a check for '150.00
payable to Mergs-Mason Charities.)
(PlEASE PAINT OR TYPE)

JACOBSEN WALK-BEHIND
BASE STICKER PRICE

stic~er price excluding title, taxe' and destination charges
Whitewall tires as shown $59 extra .

NAME _ _
ADDRESS

$tandard Features

-~~-

-,c ~ A street

or box)

(city. state, zi p)

TELEPHONES WHERE REACHABLE ~-------,---c----(Home and Offitel
(aiu code)

I PLAYED IN THE TOURNAMENT IN
1979 _ _ __

~

1980 _ __ __

0 power disc brokes •
front
0 front-wheel·drive

0 electronic fuel
conlrol
0 halogen head lamps
0 corrosion protection

0 rock·ond-pinion
steering
0 Iso-strut suspension
0 color·keyed steering

Automatic Transmission
Manual Transmission
1
Package: Discount: $439.00 Package: Discount: $209.001
O console
0 2.2 engine
0 outomalic transmission 0 center ormresl

0 2.2 engine

0 center armrest

0 5 speed

0 rollye wheels

0 power steering
D AMIFM slereo

O AMIFM stereo

0 dual remote mirrors

Oconsole

tDiKOunt ba t.d on sticker price

0 rollye wheels

1981 _ _ _ _~

1982 _ __ _~
1983 _ _ _ _~

Send this sheet and your check to: Tom Wolfe, Racine Home National
Bank. Racine, OH 45771: Bob Miller, B1nk One, Pomeroy, OH 45769: Ted
Reed , Farmers' Bank, Pomeroy, OH 45771, or leave with Gary or Bob
Roush at Riverside. or with Bill Childs at Jaymar.

ENTRY DEADLINE MAY 31 - FIRM!!
..
'

•

-••
••
•

5 year/50,000 mile

Protection Plan is standard.

VINTON. OHIO
James 0. Bush, Mgr.

Ph. 388-8603

POMEROY. OHIO
Lao Vaughan. Mgr.
Ph. 992·2688

BUDORYU DOJO

of options if purchased 5eporotely.

346 lower River Rd .

Limited warranties on power tro in ond outer
body rust-through for 5 years or 50,000 miles,
whicheYer comes first . Deductible applies.
Excludes leases. Ask for details.

See your Chrysler-Plymouth dealer today!
C hty~ le r

Plymouth

CARROLL NORRIS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
BVCKLE VP FOR SAFETY

••
•

•

'-------------------------------------------------------~~~~~~~~--~ . _:

16 HP TRACTORS
WITH 44" MOWER
DECK

ONLY

S1695

ALL OTHER SIZES
IN STOCK

KOREAN KARATE
School's Out! Karate's In!

COLOR
MONITOR
AUTOMATIC
COLOR

New Beginner's Classes Now At The

'

0

LK 18 ................. $196.95
LK 20 ................ . s209. 95
L 20P ................. S379.95
T 20 P................ $399.95

LOGAN MONUMENT COMPANY, INC.

Galliplis. Oh.

Ph. 446-8161

This will be my
first time _ _ __
TOURNAMENT DATE: Thursday, June 21. 1984, shoteun start IOa.m., Ri verside GC, Mason, WV; hillbilly supper, June 20, Royal Oak Park, Pomeroy, Oh., 6 p.m. for contestants and spouses or friend.

wheel
0 deluxe intermiHent
wipers
O ond more!

.•

MTD TRACTORS

MOWERS

/

• Base

INSTRUCTOR: Jerry Massie, Shodan
Classes Begin Thursday, May 3~st
Course Length: 12 Weeks
Tuition: s3.00 Per Week
Class Time: Each Thursday, 6:30-8:30 P.M.
To Enroll: Simply attend the first class, or
Call 446-8161 for more details.
learn Self Defense, Tournament Competition, or
Get Ready for the 1988 Olympics

20 CU . FT. SIDE-BY-SIDE

REFRIGERATOR

~~~~!~~RE~G~.$853.95

ONLY

$650

G&amp;W BLACK
&amp; WHITE TV

Only

$89°0

PUSH MOWERS

WE WILL NOT

AS LOW AS

BE
UNDERSOLD

$

95

...:'.
,

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC.

llr,!!!i!!i!!i!!i!!i!!i~~~~~~~~!!i!!i!!i!!i!!i!!i~~-~

1

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Vo.

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

Seattle snaps Detroit road streak at I 7
By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Writer
Sooner or latPr, thP [)ptmit Tigers

May 27, 1984

May 27, 1984 .

r-~~~----------~

•REDI CRETE
.•MARBLE
•STEEL POST
STONE
•CREOSOTE
POST

MGMFOfM~L~!t.tsSJ!XJ INC.
JACK CARSEY. l\IIGR .
614·992·2181

�~imo- ~•ntinel Section D
Court to hear arguments on briefing papers ..

OPEN
MEMORIAL
DAY
8 AM to 8 PM

your business!"

IISIIYI THIIIGIIl TO LIMR IIUAIITITIIS. NICIS GOOD THIIIIUIII6.i/•2•/1•4•._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _llllll

•

4

FUEL PUMPS

w1th rebu1ldoble

e~coonoe

~
fROM

FIX A

169

Oo/o 99C
Off

QUARn

59~

DELUXE lOW-40
SALE PRICE 79'

01 .

Mfg .
List

AmR MANUF _REBATI

LIMIT 12

QUARTS

SUPERB 100 lOW-40
SALE PRIG 79' OT

WITH PURCHASE Of 12 QTS ,

CAR
RAMPS

Motorcraft

Motorcrafl

EXCEEDS THE NEED

BAnERIES

SPARK PLUGS

40 MONTH

~=-======13 28 g
f

Motorcraft

AFTER MANUF REBATE
WITH PURCHASE Of 12 QTS,

NON RESISTOR
· ~\OO • r ~I)O( ' ' •

I OU. \ !0 11
PAl~

388

JACK
STANDS

50 MONTH

EACH

RESISTOR

ailfilter
FIRST 2

PER PLUG AFTER MANUF. REBATE
WI TH PURCHASE OF 4. b orB PLUGS

GASTANK

Mf. 'J

REPAIR KIT

249

OIL FILTERS
PASSENGER CARS

BONE SPONGE &amp;
BAG OF RAGS

MINUTE
AX'M
~.,;-,

999t"----::;;:::--t..;;,--;n;;;;;;;-.
'"",..."""""

-il:.lt

REG 11.99

PRIMER
PAINT

·~,p

Westley'S

AUTO
BODY
UNDERCOAT

BLECHEWITE

BLACK

PREVENTS
RUST

RED
GRAY

DEADENS
SOUND

1~11

9o1 ....

14~
FIRST 4

SAND
PAPER

THE WO RU' S
BEST
SE LLING
WH ITEWAl l
CLEANER
:20 OUNCf

WET 011 ORY

3 SHfET PAk

S..

·,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP\ - The state Public
Service Commission wants assurance that the buyer
of Wesl VIrginia's largest gas utility will have a
healthy supply of fuel and a way to transport lt.
The PSC on Friday approved sale of Columbia Gas
of Wesl Virginia lor $65 million with the stipulation
that conditions regarding supply and transportation
are mel.
The 210,oo:kustomer utility, now owned by the
Columbia Gas System, would be sold to Charleston·
based Allegheny &amp; Western Energy Corp. A&amp;W
would set up a subsidiary, Mountaineer Gas Co., to

..: "N,•

YOUR CHOICE!
PASTE,
LIQUID OR
SPRAY CAR WAX

PERFORMANCE PARTS

• MINUTE WAX 3.119

'"CH AfTER
MANUF. MAIL-IN
REBATl

MOTORCYCLE
BAnERIES

~

.. LOOR

INDY 3 SPEED

SET

ASLOW AS

SALE • BlUE POL V S. 99
PRICES • RAIN DANCE 5.99

~CAL CUSTOMIHA-

~

CRUISE CONTROLS
SAVE $15 ON EITHER
MODEL

MAT

SHinERS

OR
INDYMATIC

• SINGLE WIRING HARNES~
• RESUME SPEED SETIING

4 PIECE
CARPET

CYCLE
COVERS

64~;~

SALE 69.99
REG . 79.99

rebate

TRAILER HITCHES
SAVE

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GAS
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$10

ELECTRIC
FUEL PUMP

• EASY INSTALLATION
• COIL PICIC:UP FOR

HITCH

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• RUUME SPEED
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sALE 79 .99
REG . 89 .99

. ,OPEN 7 DAYS
MON . th•u FRI . 8 to
. SATURDAY 9 to 6
SUNDAY 9 to S

B

"WI MAll
IT liGHT"

" WE MAKE

IT RIGHT"

Silver Bridge Plaza

-

chamber. Only the guards' footsteps
and the whirring and clicking of
cameras interrupted t~ silence.
"Now that he Is known only to
Yow- grace, he will forever be an
Influence to ali people of this beloved
country," said Rear Adm. Nell
Stevenson. head of the Navy
chaplain corps. Richard Halverson,
the chaplain of the Senate, read
Psalm 90. And Rabbi Simeon
Kobrlnetz, director of the Veterans
Administration· s chaplain service,
Intoned: "May his self-sacrifice be
an Inspiration to all Americans ."
Among those in the audience was
retired Gen. WUIJam Westmoreland, conunander of American
troops In VIetnam.
No one knows when or where the
man fell, but he met the legal
criteria for being placed In the Tomb
of the Unknowns. He was an
American, a serviceman; he died In
battle, and he remained unidentified
despite a decade of effort.
The ftrst serviceman, killed In
World War I, was burled beneath the
79·ton marble tomb on the third
anniversary of Armistice Day, Nov.
11,1921. TheunknownsofWoridWar
ll and Korea were Interred there In
1958.
Not long after the 15-mlnute
ceremony at the Capitol was
concluded, tourtsts began filing past
the bier. Thedoorswlllremalnopen
untll two hours before thE! coffin Is
carried to Arlington National Cemetery on the traditional hor~rawn
caisson.

prosecutor In the matter. Under the 191ll Ethics In
Govenunent Act, the decision on whether to appoint
one Is made by a panel of judges appointed by Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger.
Smith appealed, and the appeals court suspended
Greene's order and scheduled arguments on whether
he acted constitutionally for as late as Sept. 28.
The suit had been brought by two law professors,
Jolm H. Banzhaf m and Peter H. Meyers of George
Washington University. They asked the appeals court
to spee&lt;l up Its hearing, contending that the delay
would have the effect of putting off the special
prosecutor's lnvestlgatlon until after the November
election.
On Friday, nine of the appeals court judges Issued

an order !lxlng arguments lor June :m.
"I'm delighted," Banzhaf said. "It Indicated they
recognize oot only the importance of the case, but Die~
need lor a pmnpt decision In order to get a ~:
prosecutor before the election."
· ~:
Albosta and House Speaker Thomas P. O'NelO•
called lor the appolnimerit of a special pru;ecutw:
alter Albosta Issued his subcommittee report.
• ::
Albosta said his panel was unable to find the cuJpdt:
- the person who !llched papers from several Whit! ·
House offices and provided them to the Reagan·lfus~:
campaign committee - because It lacked
.rubpoena power and grand jury powers that aspeclal ·
prosecutor would have.
::

!he:

Monument t~
honor Ohio
Vietnam dead~

By The "-'elated Press
Ground will be broken tills
weekend for Ohio's ftrst statewide
memorial to Ohio VIetnam veteraii$
ldlled or missing In action.
The $250,IDJ memorial In Trentoti
will list names and be similar totW
national Vietnam Veterans· Metf!:
orlalln Washington, D.C., saldE&lt;Oi
Corell, president of the Cincinnati
chapter of the Vietnam Veterans Or
America.
Groundbreaking 1s scheduled for
3 p.m. Sunday at Buller Coun~
Memorial Park.
"'If everything goes well wtt"ii
have the dedica lion Memorial Day
•4 1986,'' said Corell, who led theeffo~
for the recently dedicated memorfal
in Cincinnati's Eden Park. Thal
memorial was designed by Kefl
Bradford, who Is designing .t.b{!
Trenton monument, Corell said. ·
The dark brown granite rnemoc·
iai will lisl Ohio's 3,009 mUJta1y
pers01mel killedorrn!sslnglnactioh,
or who died as prisoners of war. I.t
also will have a 24 -footcrosssetofltb
the side.
tours In Vietnam, and Burke was awarded his medal
PAYING RESPECf- Vietnam Veteran Larry
Corell hopes to raise an addltlonat
lor hi• part in kiUing 100 enemy soldiers during a
Roberson wearing fatigues, and Uoyd Burke,
$250,00J for a college scholarship
battle near Chongdon~. Korea, on Oct. 28, 1951. Burke
wearing his Congressional Medal of Honor, salute the
fund lor children of VIetnam
Is from stuttgart, Arkansa.•, and Roberson l'i from
casket bearing tbe remains of the Vietnam War's
veterans killed In action .
Buffalo, New Vork. Otbe.-. are unldentllied. ( AP
Unknown Serviceman In the Rotunda of the Capitol
About 116,00) Ohioans served In
Laserpholn ).
Friday. Roberson was wounded twice during his two
VIetnam. said Corell , who serveil
from 1!lffi to 1970.
Meanwhile a drive is underway In
Miami County Lo raise funds for a
"We can preserve and prolect the memorial for ail velerans, scheCLEVELAND (AP) -U.S. Rep.
crippled chances for meaningful
envlronmenl and the economy of duled for dedication July 4.
Dennis Eckar1 says a new acid rain
The Rev. Henry Reinewald.
acid rain control legislallon this
thL' nation with resp:lnsible iegisla·
control measure lhat he and fellow
pastorofthe
UnitedChurchofChrlsl
year.
lion, and I am committed lo doing
Ohio Democrat John Seiberling
But Eckart sa id Friday at the
in Covington. designed lheS.by-7-bJt·
just that :· he said.
Hoot monume nt now undey
Cleveland City Club that he Is
Introduced is better than one that
Eckarl
said
he
would
support
working lo control acid rain in a way
construction
stalled in a House Energy a nd
reauthorization of the Clean Air Acl
Commerce subcommittee on his
thai will nol decimate Ohlo"s
The apex of the of Ihe ro"""olored
and "a resJXlnsibie acid rain control granite golhic arch wtli have ion
tie-breaking vote.
high-sulfur coal industry.
provision that does nol deieleriously American Eagle. \\1th e mblems
Environmental groups attacked
Eckart is from Menlor, and
the economy of a Midwesl the Army, Navy, Air Foree,
affecl
Eckart for his recent vole, sa;1ng il
S&lt;-iberling is from Akron .
region :·
Marines and Coast Guard, he saJd.

Eckart defends acid rain vote

:or

PSC attaches strings to Columbia Gas sale

'

Minute

ggc

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• PLUGS

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• 3 SPRAY WANDS AND
ACTIVATORS

NON RESISTOR 64C
RESISTOR 94C

turtle wax

IN(LUOf:S ,
• 3 CANS INTER lOR
FORMULA

• 2 CANS EXTERIOR
FOR UM LA

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LIMIT 16 PLUGS
AT SALE PRICE

FOR MOST U.S.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Only a
dozen senators and twice.that many
congressmen were present when
the remains of the Unknown
Serviceman · of VIetnam were
placed In the rotunda of the U.S.
Capitol, to He In state until they are ··
Interred on Memorial Day.
"We pray for the wisdom that this
hero be America's last unlalown;·
said President Reagan, before he
placed a wreath Frlday at the feet of
the man designated to Tl'present the
58,012 Americans killed in VIetnam.
"We may not know his name. but
we know his courage,'' the president
said. "'He is the heari, the spirit and
the soul of America."
In the silver coffin lay the only
fallen serviceman not Identified in
the war which ended 11 years ago.
He will be interred Monday at the
Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington
National Cemetery, behind the
Unknown Soldier ofWorid War land
between the unknown servicemen of
World War II and Korea.
Flags throughout the country
were ordered by Reagan to be flown
at haJf.staff until after Memortai
Day, in honor o! the Unknown.
The !Jag-draped coffin rested on
the funeral bier hastlly constructed
In Aprll 1865 after the death of
President Abraham Lincoln. It was
the 26th ttme remains lay in state In
the rotunda - three of those times
were for the other unknowns.
An eight -man honor guard. representing ali the armed services,
carried the como into the hushed

27 1914

..
Responding to Casey. Rep. Donald Alll9Sta.
!).Mich., chairman of the subcommittee, defended
the report, calllng H "evenhanded."
"It presents all the subcommittee's facts and urges
an Independent counsel to fully resolve the Issues. All
conclusions In the report are fully substantiated,'' he
said In a statement.
The effect of Frtday's action by the appeals court
was to speed up the timetable lor a heartng on the
question of whEther Attorney General William
French Smith ·can be forced by a court to seek the
appointment of a special prosecutor.
Earlier this month, District Judge Harold H .
Greene directed Smith to petition lor a special

Vietnam
unknown
honored

LIMil 1?

SUPER

CARB
AND
CHOKE
CLEANER

FUEL FILTERS

WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Court d. Appealll
has agreed to hear arguments next month on an
attempt to Ioree · the appointment of a special
prosecutor to Investigate how Ronald Reagan's
campaign headquaters obtained Jimmy Carter's
campaign papers In 191ll.
Meanwhile, CIA Director WWiam .1. Casey, who
ran the 1981 Reagan campaign, has dismissed as
"clearly a partisan document In a political year" a
House subcommittee's 2,400-page report which
concluded Tuesday that he bad received materials
taken from the Carter camp.
Although he denounced the report Frtday, he did
not deny Its !lndlng. He has previOusly Said he could
not recall seeing the Carter papers.

''

G»:-

~-~Jet-Spray

ional

State/

,,

BBL

.

Phone 446..:9335

Bill Kelly
Manager

take over service to Columbia's retail customers.
The PSC said it expects the sa le lobe completed in
June.
The main conditions attached lo approval require
that:
-A&amp;W make a wrllten commitment to provide
Mountaineer with "adequate gas supplies" from
A&amp;W sources In Cabell. Roane and Wayne counlies
and the Cabin Creek area of Kanawha Counly.
-Colwnbla of West Virginia a nd Mountaineer
obtain a wrttten commitmenl from Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp .. a Columbia Syslem plpelinP

Iran says it won't
attack oil ships if
Iraq does likewise
By The Associated l'm1s
Iran has pledged that Its air force
will not hit commercial vessels In
the Persian Gulf If Iraq does
likewise. The offer camE' after Iraq
claimed its jet!lghters and warships
attacked a convoy of ships near
Iran.
The U.N. Security Councll, which
held an emergency debate Frtday,
was expected to pass a resolution
calllng for a halt to the attacks when
It meets again next week.
"If they (the Iraqis) abide, wewill
abide," said Iranian Ambassador
Rawjaii'-Khorassanl, who boycot·
ted the debate.
In Toyko. Japanese shipowners
decided late Friday to suspend
Qlnker traffic at gulf ports In Kuwait
and northern Saudi Arabia, the
Shipowners· Labor Relations
Agl'ncy said Saturday. Japanese
tankers will continue to go to the
Saudi Arabian pJrt ofRasTannurah
but not north oflt, the agency said.
Arab diplomats and gulf shipping
sources said Iran could were
expecting Iranian attacks lnretalla·
tlon for the hits claimed ·b y Iraq on
Friday.
Iraq said In a communique that Its
WIIJlllanes hit and destroyed six
naval targets, and two other

unidentified targets were destroyed
by Iraqi Ooatlng mines, " which they
nit while trying to escape our !Ire...
Shipping sources say at least Tl
ships have been damaged during
Iraq'&amp; blockade of Iran's major oil
exporting terminal at Kharg Island,
at the north end of the gulf. Iraq
claims It alone has hit 31 ships.
Arab diplomats have said Iraq ts
trying to shut down oil exports from
Kharg Island In hopesolchoklngofl
the Persian state's major source of
Income and forcing Iran to negotiate
an end to the war, which began In
September 191ll with an Iranian
Invasion in adlsputeover Iran'sonly
waterway Into the gulf.
RajaJe.Khorassanl, asked at a
news conference about Iranian
threats toclosetheStraltofHonnuz,
the entrance to the gulf, said It
•'remains open unless Kharg Island
Is totally out d. use."
Nearly :m percent of the noncommunist world's oll passes
through the strait, which the United
States has said It would not allow

closed.
Kuwait, one of six Arab gulf states
that requested the Security Council
meeting, asked the CO\IIICU to
condemn Iran alone lor attacks on
commercial shipping In the gulf.

company, to lransJXlrt A&amp;W·produced gas lo
Mountaineer for one year after July 31, 19ffi. Thai is
when !lie pipeline company's presenl transJXlr1ation
commitmenl 10 Columbia of West Virginia expin's.
-Mountaineer and A&amp;W, "if necessary and
economically feasible," build pipelines to transJXlrl
A&amp;W·produced gas from Cabell, Wayne and Roane lo
lhe Mounlaineer system.
- Mountaineer. for two years after the sale is
closed , offer lo buy gas from independenl producers
"at the lowest JXlSSible prices conslstenl with" sla te
law and PSC regulations. The PSC order included a

schedu1Pof maximum allowable prices for purchases
from indepcndenls.
·
Th&lt;' conditions regarding pipeline transportation
reOect lhe fact thai Columbia of Wesl Virginia doe$
not own the inlercity pipelines thai link its re!a\1
diStribution racllllies In 40 counties. These belong tc
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. and are nOt
included in the proJXlsed sale.
··
The PSC said thai, provided il s conditions are met,
lerms of the sale agreemen l ·· are reasonable" and
"the implementation of the agrt'&lt;'mcnt does ndl
adversely aflecl the public ill lhis sta le."

Salvadoran military insists
defense minister was not
involved in murder coverup

SECURITY COUNCIL
MEETS -Iranian Ambassador
Said Raj ale-Khorassanl ges·
lures during a news conleren..,
at the United Nations In New
York Friday after lhe United
Natloas Seeurlly CouncU mel In
urp!llt debate on the Persian
Gulf crisis. Iran said that Its Air
Force wiD nol hit commercial
vessels In lhe Persian Gulf U
Iraq also agrees to slop such
attacks. The Iranian envoy
boyeolted lhe debate In the
15·nallon council. ( AP
Laserpholo ).

By ARTIIUR ALLEN
1\ssociated Press Writer
SAl\! SALVADOR, Ei Salvador
1/AP \ - E l Sa lvador's defense
minislerplayed no part in acoverup
in the case of the murders of four
U.S. churchwomen, a SJXlkesman
for the Salvadoran armed forces
says. Five former nalional guards·
men have been convicted of the
siayings.
A U.S. repor1 said the minister
could have played a part in lhe
roverup.
The political leadership of El
Sa lvador's leftlsl guerrilla movement, the Democratic Revolution·
ary Front . said Friday night that It
would be willing to talk with
Salvadoran Presldenl-elect Jose
Nap:liron Duane. but only If It
shared equally In the governmenr s
power.
Duarte has said while he favors
dialogue. he will ··not talk with those
who come Lo the tabiewlthanns and
demand a piece of the pie."
In the c hurchwomen's slaylngs
case, an independent report Issued
by the U.S. State Department said it
was "quitE' possible" that Salvadoran Defense Minister Carlos Euge.

nlo Vides Casanova, former head of
the national guard, "was aware of,
and for a time. acquiesced in the
coverup" of Ihe 19&amp;1 murders.
BuT Ll. Col. Ricardo Cienfuegos,
spokesman for lhe armed forces .
said of Vides Casanova: "He's the
one who has made the greatesl
efforts in this case. first during lhe
govcrnmcnl or Duan~. and later In
!interim President Alvaro\ Maga ·
na's govenunent. The U.S. Em·
bassy is fully awarp of this fact."
Clenfuegos said there were no
Indications thai higher authorities
were involved in a coverup. Duarte
has Indicated he plans to reappoint
Vldes Casanova to the defense post,
saying the minister supJXlriS demo·
cracy in El Salvador.
The U.S. report. by Districl Judge
Harold Tyler. said ranking
members of the Salvadoran Na·
tiona! Guard made a concerted
effort to conceal the involvement of
guard staff In the siaylngs.
Five lonner guardsmen were
convicted on Thursday of the
slaytngs.
The judge's reJXll1 said the
coverup was shattered when U.S.
Embassy officials lnEISalvadordld

/

\

.

..

their own investigation and lden~­
fied the killers. The report w&lt;{s
commissioned by Secretary of Stao:'
George P. Shult z and completed. In
~ber
•
The repor1 said the guard~
were arrested on Vi des Casanova's
orders in Aprll 1981 after thl!lr
names were presented to Salvaf0.
ran officials by U.S. officials.
In another development. In Nici.·
ragua, the leftist Sandintsta goverament said Friday it plans to im~
tight controls over news media.
Reports would be required to rev~l
their sources. The law would cover
foreign news organizations with
permanenl opera tions l'n
Nicaragua.
:
In Managua , the tiny opposltiQn
minority In the Council of State,::an
appointed body that acts
legislature. denounced the pendllig
press law as '"highly restrlctiv("
and said It was styled after la":S t'f
Communist na tlons.
• •"
"II even 10 percent of this ~~
passed, It will be the end of even iJie
last vestiges of press freedom- In
Nicaragua." said Pedro Joaquth
Chamorro, a publisher of ' La
Prensa, the only oppositiOn

as: :a

newspaper.

··

. ., ..

�}

,,

Poge-0..2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

ft/Gy 27, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh~Point Pleasant, W . Va.

Partial eclipse set for Wednesday
at the sun. The sun will never
completely disappear and the
intensity of the Ught from even the
small visible area can severely
damage the eyes.
Because of their positions in the
sky, the moon appears to be a bit
smaller than the sun when It moves
In fronl If the moon's surface were
smooth, a rtngofllght would format
the height of the eclipse

states
Residents of every state except
Alaska will be able to see at least
part ofthesunecllpsed,accordlngto
astronomers at the Naval Observa·
tory III Washington But the experts
warn against looking directly at !he
eclipse
Observatory officials said that at
no time will it be safe to look directly

WASHINGTON tAP) - The
dragon the ancient Chinese believed
ate the sun during an eclipse won'!
finish his meal on Wednesday , but
be'll take a whopping bite.
The partial, or annular, eclipse of
the sun at noon will be visible across
most of the nation, with more than 99
percent of the solar surface covered
for viewers m the Sou theastem

Tribune - 446-2342

Sentinel - 992-2156

,_, 27, 1984

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Card of Thanks

Gorilla twins return to zuo

Bradbury Church ot Ctmst and
the1r mtntster Rev John

Wnght doctors and nurses of
Veterans Memonal HospJtal.

( 01 l ''VII!LS - 1 he Rrst gonlla !~Ins bom mAmen caare backal
' hr 11 ( olumbu s Zoo birthplace f01 a I'Wo-m ont h VLSit before returning
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Still knr"' n only as Baby 4. and ll.rb\ B. the unnamed 15-JX&gt;und
Jll .JIP:') \h l f' born Oct ~

Mrddloport EMS

Masonrc

Lod&amp;e and Evangeline Chapter
0 E S Unton Avvenue and
Grawe! Hrll ne J&amp;hbors and
fnends &amp;mptoyees at 0 V E C
and our co workers at G&amp;J
Auto I B M Farmer s Bank
Gavm and Sporn Plants also
to the Ew1n1 Funeral Home
pallbearers and Shentf Jam

mol her Bndgettr, to Ohio to

tndiC' \I. Jth the Columbus Zoo s Osca1

I c&gt;ch zoo techmcally owns onP of the lwlns unde1 a breedmg

Hospital hostage
wants money back

Protf1tl

Ita Daonell Ray Blackmore

Linda Mayor Paul Darnell Jr
and Famtties

COLUMBUS, Ohio {API - Not
only did guard Thomas C Strausbaugh have to endure hours at
gunJX&gt;IIIt as a hostage, he lost $l,oo:J
m cash that he says his captor
burned
''I'd really llke to get that money
back,"sald Strausbaugh, 41 "lsure

CARD OF THANKS

need It ••

The COITt'Ctlons officer was one of
several people taken hoslageearlier
lhls week by Paul R. Brumt!eld, an
lrunate of the Southern Ohio
Correctlonal Facility at Luc8SYille.
Brumfield surrendered early Wed·
nesday and released the last hostage
unharmed
Strausbaugh said he had the cash
In his wallet as the result of a horse
sale After Strausbaugh escaped,
Brumtleld used aclgaretteUghterto
burn the guard's money. which he
had taken earlier

Witt 01Uifllt1. llotheo,
fisttr Brattier
and famlhts

·~

4

lu !! o"'

~

~··

.. _,.,,... ·~·

.,00
«00
"00

Giveaway

4 yellow kittens. blue eyes, 1
bob tall. 4 Calico 304 8V5

3637 alter 2 30 675 3442

Your lawn cltppmgs. I will
collect Mason New Havett

area 304 882 2024
School bus seats 304 896
3633 after 6 00

27

4

Giveaway

Su( 5 wk

old krttens end
mother cat Call 446 1275
5 part Beagle pups

614 446 0294

Call

614 379·2 115
1 female black k11ten

5

N~-'lti.il

304 -676 67 51

Pupptes

l!.

German

pherd 304 458 1656

GymnastiCS by Kar e n
Wa ugh at Hannan Trace
Htgh School Starts June
4th every Monday &amp; Wed nesday Ca11614 256 1621
or 614 266 6315 to regrs
ter $1 50 per lesson
Cleland Greenhouse flow
ers flat s o r pots hangrng
baskets vegetable plants.
tomato plants Geraldtne
Cleland V1ne and Mam St
A acme
Band s at Jones Bar, Wes t
Columbia Frrday Saturday,
&amp; Sunday nrght Mean
Streak Lad•es N1ght rs Sun
day featurmg the Mud Atver
Band &amp; free draft beer for
the lad1e s
Everybody
welcom e
OhiO Val ley Flea Market
June 1 2 3 at Metgs Co
Fatrgrounds
the Valley s
fa st es t grow1ng market

~~~elso~~~ke~~~~~Y s~~~~
Area Show your used car.
truck boat. camper or cycle
to thousands for only $2 per

::r~rt:f~r!:~t~~e~~~d6 ~4r
Or

614 985 -

_4_3_9_6________
PHOTO SPECIAL I Now thru
May 31 · color reprrnts from
your negatiVe&amp;
1 2 for
$1 89 May use different
negative tOr each prtnt 1f
desrred Hockenberry Phar
macy North 304 676

CAi:u

2

She·

In Memortam

In loving Memory of our
Mother Audrey L Porter
We never lose the one we
lo11e

For even though th~'s
gone
Within the hearts ollhose

who care

Her memooy lingers on
Sadly m1ssed by Mary Lou
and Bobbre
In Memory Of
Clarence (Btll) Jones
Who passed away
May 26. 1979
The years go by so qu1ck!y
Already f1ve have passed
Trme stands strU for no
one
Our day w1U come at last

Your trme came sooner and
Thos we aU reg&lt;el
The memones aoe still w1th
us
That we never w1U forget
Sadly missed by wile
children, grandchildren
and great·grandch!ldren

3 Announcements

•• Till

\WAitT AffiJ
Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
Regrettably 11 w11l not be
possible to Individually
thank each person, who tn
some fashion or manner.
displayed your thought·
fulness and kondness to
us We would hke to say
thanks to all We appreFI·
ate the floral and mone·
tary gtfts, foodstuffs pro·
v1ded, the cards. the tele·
phone calls. those who
were able to v1sot us per·
sonally or who v1s1ted our
mother and SISter dunng
her stay tn the rest home.
the prayers and good
wishes of all. Our gral·
rtude to those who mt·
nistered to her and us
durmg her lengthy til·
ness and at the funeral,
whether by sana. word
or deed. lest we fail to
recognize anyone's par·
ticular contribution, we
conclude
by saymg
many thanks to each and
everyone.
Smcerely,
The F1111ily of
Anna Ballard

~-~~· ",'lfV•'-1 {lfi.VJIIMPS

······aaliij;olii........ .
8t Vicinity

REVIVAL

EUREKA UNITED
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Beg1nntng May 27
SPECIAL SINGING
NIGHTLY
Rev Ellswrck, Speakeo

1HI

'

eervlce atatlon . June 1 a 2 .
1-1 lnolda If rolno. Clothao.
gii11W8N, pOtl, . PI MI . ltC

Frezlar1 Bottom Flee
Merkat

Every weekend

Cheohlro United Mothodtlt

Woman

U S 36 Fraziers Bottom,
WVo 26082 Don Frozrer
Operotot 304 756 2779

TOBACCO
WAREHOUSE
FLEA MARKET
Chotce ms1de outstde spa
cea available. move tn 1f 1t
rtuns North 26th St
Huntmgton. Every Sat &amp;
Sun Arts &amp; Craha featured
th1 a week Muttcal wee
kend commg 304 523
2131. Tom lrwrn for space
Yard Sate Addtsaon FWB
Lad1es Atd June 1 &amp;. 2. 9AM
to 9PM, ram or shule at
1 1 27 Second AVe Lots of
everything for all ages
Yird Sale Sat 10 to 7 At
Gnff1th Grocery an Kanauga .
Oh Gas cook stove and
mangle
Garage Sale Tues &amp;. Wed
9 2 go 1 4 mtlea out At
160 turn rtght on 0 J
Whtte Rd Than go 1 2 mtles
turn left at Charolraa Hills
Lake Estates second house
on left Watch for !Ugns
Yard Sale Mon &amp; Tues 28th
&amp; 29th 486 Upper Rrver Rd
(Rt 71 Across from Gallia
Co Rural Water Metal lawn
cha~rs porch swrng. desk
round coffee table breakfast set tools mrac glass ware mtsc clothtng mclud
ing. some army tssue Call

446·2342

Auctionee r
3069

Yard Sale, May 28 Memor
tal Day, Dusky St
Syra
cuse
G o rdon Ftsher
Res1dence
Barnyard Sale W Va Rt
62, 6 miles north of Pt
Pleasant &amp; 3 m1tes south of
Pomeroy bndge May 25
26. B. 28. Fnday. Saturday &amp;
Monday
Cattle
pon1es .
mule hogs, horse equ1p
ment. tractor equ1pment.
m1sc
Items
Watch for
stgns
Yard sale 206 Spnng Ave.
Pomeroy May 28 through
May 31 Noon t1ll 1 Prom
dresses brand name nurses
umforms lots of good Jumor
mtss clothes mtsc

Pt Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

7a:.JL. h
ARRIVES

please call 304 675 5722

Oh
Oltve St
ture
446Galltpo1
3159 1s 3rd

&amp;

388 9906 o&lt; 614 388

Wanted to buy t obacco
plants Call 304 458 - 1997

1- - - - - - - - - - datly

gold.

sdver

coms nngs Jewelry. sterhng
ware old cotns large cur
rency Top pnces Ed Bur
ke1t Barber Shop 2nd Ave
M1ddleport Oh 614 992

1- - - - - - - - - Cash pa1d for fancy tron or
heavy 1ron beds $160 and
up for cer1am Me1gs Co
stone jars Old trme cup
board
call 1 304 882

FURNITURE ,., Beds
tron
wood. cupboards. cha~rs

lost black &amp; wh1te Boston
Bull dog on parktng 101 tn
Pomeroy Reward No ques
t•ons asked Call 614 992

Rro Grande Oh10 45674
R10 Grande College and
Cammuntty College tn·
vites letters of application and nommat10n for
the posttton of AdVISor
to lnternaltonal Stu·
dents· Appointment for
thts posttton ts effec·
ttve July I 1984 Part
It me adm1n1strattve. fiscal year contract Qual tflcahons mclude· mtnl·
mum of H1gh School
education or equivalent,
wtth Bachelor's degree
preferred related expenance workmg wtth
lnternaltonal students
destrable,
leadership
abtltty and excellent
commun1catton sk1lls
Reportmg dtrectly to the
Execultve dtrector of
Student Development,
the Adv1sor to lnterna·
!tonal Students wtll be
responstble for developIng and matntamong programs for the tnlerna ·
!tonal students, mont·
tormg thetr general wei·
fare and helptng them to
understand the vanous
college actmltes and
academic programs, on·
cludmg work1n1g dl·
rectly wtth the students
tn counseling, onenta·
tton, and soctaltzalitll
processes
Salary is
$3000 to $4000 per annum dependtng on educatton and exper~ence
factors Send letter of
Interest, resume tnclud·
mg three references. by
JUNE I. 1984 to
Off1ce of Personel
Box 969
P 0 Box 00412
Rto Grande College
R1o Grande. Oh .. 45674
R1o Grande Collea:e 1nd Common
1ty Collere ISan (qual Opportum
ty/ AHnmatrve Act1 on Employer

OFF

It's orne to hunt for summer tobs agam If you're
ill h~gh !Chool, you know asummeqob !Sa speoeson the
brink of exnocoon
But suppose you could get asummer JOb that was
fuU-ome, gJt you away from home, taught you amarket·
able skill, and even ke~t you on oneweekend a month
dunng the school year
Asumme:;ob ill the ArmyReserve dCM:S all that
and more You1learnover$l.l00meil!htweeksofinilial
entry trammg You11 earn another $1JOObyservingat
your local Reserve Center one weekend a month And
here's the best pan You can learn avaluable skill, like
medical or oomputer ll.'clmology.And you 11 ru-ly have
asummer job set up lor nextyear(and another $1,100~
Want to know morel CaU us at the number bekY.v

6932

6

Lost and Found

Lost wh1te 11 month old
cat Chtld's pet Lost around
5 2nd Ave Mtddleport

Call 61 4 992 5069

Lost 1 white golf shoe left
foot 1n Rock Spnngs area

Free male beagle to gtve
away to good home Call

Call 61 4·992 3231

N1ce m1xed breed dog. gen11e, make a good ch1ld s pet

8

614 843 6164

Call 986 3320

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

Sahabury Elem . or on
school bus no 33 If found
please call 992 3603
Reward Lost Apple Grove ,
Jerry Run Rd Pan Poodle Pekmgese male black-grey
Nama PeeWee need• medtcal attentton Any rnf of
whereabouts cell John

Chrosty. 304 576·2377
Lost mens w1re frame pre•cnptlon glasses m downtown area Please call 304 -

675·7362

Auct1on every Tuesday
mght Pt Pleasant WVa
Auct Lonm e Neat Youth
Center Bldg
Camden St

614 367 7101

Rrck Pearson Auc11oneer
Servtce Estate Farm An
trque &amp; hqu1datron sales
Ucensed &amp; bonded tn Oh1o &amp;
wva
304 773 5785 or

304 773 9185

8

Mrller, At 2. Pomeroy , Ohro
46769 or call 614 992
7760

Rear 12m b1cycle tire wtth
nm 304 895 · 3633 after
6 00
Wanted old p 1anos Paymg
S20 00 and 940 00 each
First floor only Wnte g1vmg
dnect1ons Wttten Ptanos.
Bo~~; 188
Sard1s, Ohto

43946
1605

Lost. 1 pr ch1ldrens g lasses
m a yellow case Lut seen a1

Call 614 · 483

Wanted to buy 1 or 2
bedroom trader preferably
on Yl acre lot or less Wnte
p 0 BoM 203 Pomero y , Oh

45769
Ch1lds s wmg set frame
Phone 304 675 4082 af1er

Rio Grande College
and Community
College
R1o Grande. Ohro 45674
The Off1ce of Ftnanctal
Atd of Rto Grande Col·
lege and Commun~ty
College 10v11es letters
of Application or nom1·
nalton for the pos1tton
of Secretary II to the Dl·
rector of Fmanctal Atd.
Appotntment for lhts
postlton ts eHecttve
July I. 1984 Non·ex·
empt, classtfted post·
tton . Qualtftcattons m·
elude· mtn~mum of Htgh
School educatton or
equtvalent. typtng sktlls
of 60-65 w.p.m. Ad·
vanced secretartal tram·
tng beyond High School
or comparable work expertence
preferred.
Knowledge and expenence '" Accountmg or
Bookkeeping desirable.
Reporting d11ectly to the
Director of Fmancial
Atd. the secretary IS responsible for typing, ftling,
processing and
mamtaining records for
the student employment
program, mamtatnmg a
master list of all ftnan·
ctal aod awards, processing loan applications,
assisting the Fmancial
A1d D11ector wtth fe·
deral reports and appll·
cattons for funds, processmg Ohio lnstruc·
t1onal Grants. and other
dultes asstgned by the
Dtrector of Ftnanml
Aid. Entry wage rate rs
$4.45 per hour. Fringe
Benefit
package included. Send letter of
interest, resume and
three letters of refer·
ence, by JUNE I , 1984,
to:
Off1ce of Personel
Box 969
P. 0 Box 00412
Rio Grande College
Rio Grande, Oh., 45674
llo Gr.,,. Collea• lltd COMMn·
1ty Collllt II an EqMII o,ort:Mnl'

Help Wanted

Retatl Outlet must employ 3
consctentrous, trustworthy.
mstde retail sales clerks
lmmedtately Retatl expe
nence destred . but not ne
ceuary Must be able t o
work wtth mrmmum super
VISion and be able to m eet
pubhc must be prof1c1ent 1n
baste mathmattcs Qppor
tuntty for advancement for
nght persons Please reply m
own handwrlttng reforen
ces requned to boM 800 tn
care of the Gathpolrs Dally
Tr~bune
825 3rd
Ave

Galllpolrs Oh 45631

Governm e nt

Jobs

$I 6 559 &amp;50 553 -vear

Now h1nng Your area Call

1 806 687 6000
10169

e•t

R·

Babysttter for summer parttime 2 chtldren Must be
excellent sw1mmer some
weekends Call 446 2956
after 7PM
Teaching pOsiti ons up~n
Ktnderg a rd en elementary
7 12 Math &amp; Sc1 en ce No
expenence necessary Send
resume to Gatlra Chrtstran
School BoM 486 . Gallipolis
Oh 45631 Before June 8
Cocktarl waitres ses &amp; bar
tenders needed Plea se ca ll

446 3523

Help Wanted

The Gallia M ergs Commun
lty Act•on Agenc~ (C AA} IS
currently placmg eligible
htgh school semors and
other ehg1ble applicants 16
to 21 years old m the JTPA
Job Search Program Apph
cants must be residents of
Gall•a or Metgs County to
qualtfy Enrollments Will be
made on a hrst come first
served bas1 s Applicants will
rece1ve professronal assrst
ance mall aspects of lookmg
ior employment from as
sessment to gettmg 1he JOb
These JOb seekers are 1m me
dtately ehgrble for on the
JOb trarnmg and youth tryout
employment, mcent1ves for
employers to hrre program
partiCipants Employers are
on wattmg lists to htre
people enrolled tn the pro
gram For further mforma
teon call446 1018 m Gallra
County or 992 2222 10
Me1gs County V1s1t the Job
Search Cen1ers 1n Galhpolrs
or Pomeroy for a vtdeo
demonstratiOn from sat1s
ired former JOb search par
t1crpants The Galha Me1gs
Commun1ty Act1on Agency
ts an equal opportumty
employer and serv1ce
prO\IIder
Secretary needed for small
o tftce Baste secretar~al
slctlls and organizatiOn al
abdtt1es requ~red Send re
sume to Job Search P 0
boM 514 Galhpohs Oh

1- - - - - -_
-_
-_
--_ __:__ _ __
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

Wanted someone to care for
elderly lady tn her home on
wnttn
toth Pbas1
0 s Box
682tn
12 hr g sh
Reply
Pomeroy Oh10 References
req01red
---------HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
GAADUA ES If vou a&lt;e
w on dermg how yo u ca n get
a 10b w1thout w ork expe
nence. the Wes1 V~rgm1a
Army National Gu ard mtght
be the answer for you Earn
good money whrlelearmn g a
sk1ll Full t1me pay while you
tram part trme pay on ce yo u
come back home ca lt 304

675 3950 or 1 BOO 642
3619

Part t tme men and women
work from your home on
te lephone program earn up
to S25 to $100 per week
dependtng o n ume avatlable

Call 304 576 25 18

Used cement m1xer. good
cond With or without mo

tor 304 676 1058

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
SALE VERY SATURDAY NIGHT 7 00 PM
Many Items of Interest to Everyone

AUCTION

Have somethtng you want to self1 Bnng 11 to the Pa·
tnot Auctton Barn and we'll sell1t lor you Constgn
ments accepted from I 00 5 00 P M on Saturday

The personal property of the late Fred Larkms
located I block from post offtce at Long bottom
Oh1o, w1ll sell as follows
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES Fl oor mod el rad io
German wall clack 011 lamps, ant1que cha us stand s,
chest of drawers shoe la st nvete r baske ts stone 1a rs
1ugs, wood en v&lt; se buck an d cross cut saws d&lt;shes
sa usage gnnder large porch swrng
1966 MERCURY COMET. 6 cyl auto 2 door w&lt;th ap
prax 54 000 miles
HOUSEHOLD AND MISCELLANEOUS Warm Mornm g
auto gas wculatmg heater 5 pc di nette sel hutch, 3
k&lt;tc hen cabrnels Ma g&lt;c Chef gas ra ne Gi bson 2 dr re
fngerato r Coldspot chest freeze r, 2 rec l&lt; ners odd
cha~rs, rocker color Tv , 3 po rtab le rad1os rec ord
player, 2 bPds complete lot of bedd &lt;ng 3 elc razo rs
Maytag wnnger wa sher Hoover swee per ce1 lln g fa n
floor and desk fa ns gun rac k lue proal sale lot ca r
pe nter and garden tool s, lot of power hand tools 2 too l
boxe s. alum&lt;num stepladd er small ext la dder bench
grtnder batte ry cha rger canm ng 1a rs bushel baskets
garden sprayer 18 10 Huffy lawn mower and many
m1 sc 1tems
Lunch Served
Not responsible for aCCidents
VERA WEBER Owner
0. "Mac" McCOY Auctioneer
Phone 985· 3944

MARLIN WEDEMEYER, Auclloneer
245 · 5152 or 388·8249

Saturday, June 2-10 A.M.

Not Respon sible too Awdents or Loss of Property

PUBLIC AUCTION

SAT., JUNE 2, 1984-10 A.M.

Th1s IS an auct1on to ra1se money for a f~re depart
men! bu1ldtng 1n Sc1p1o TownshiP at the Pagev1lle
Town Hall
From St Rt 143 1n Hamsonv&lt;lle, Ohio, take 684 3
miles to Pagevtlle
Thts ts a brtef ltsttng so come to sell. buy or
eat 11
Pot belly stove sc hool desks Holstern call TV sets,
lawn mowe o br cycles old rad&lt;o crea m separater
ston e 1ars lots ol ne w rte ms wMches popcor n popper
tools and lois more
Wtll also sell consignments Contact the Sc1p1o F1re
Department
EATS
POSITIVE 10
CASH
DAN SMITH - AuctiOneer
949 2033 or 992·7301

lntornotlon•t otHI buDding
manufec1urer aw•rcllng

dul1rahlp In ovotlallfa - •
lOCO groat profit potaortlel
In an expanding lnduotry
For appll011tlon call Wedgc:or

Concrete &amp; block work
retamtng walla garages pa
ttos. concrete floors Free
estrmates Call 6 14 256

Open e beautiful JHna.
Sport !l weAr or Chlldrelu
Shop Free brochure Top
brands' Low prlc••'
Sl3 975 to S17, 97!5 "to
completely se t you up . Call

1632

1 404 469 4438

Would ltke to do typmg 1n my
home Expenenced Refer
ences provtd ed upon re
quellt Call 61 4 388 9730
after 6PM

Beer Wrne Carry Out Over
6 dtgr t f1gure m gross annual
1ncome Beer sales 6 dlgU
figure annually Lonery ttrmmal
Contact Gu1do J
Grrolam1 606 W Ma10 St.
Pomeroy

W11i do tutormg can start
1mmedtatel y
Call 446

'

22 Money to Loan

Gtve p1ano &amp; organ lessons
tn mv home t o beg mners
advanced puptls &amp; adults
Also teach chordmg &amp; tra n s
p osong Ca ll 6 1 4 99 2

5403

HOME

lOANS

FIX~D

RATES Below market rates
Fued con1.1e nu o nal FHA
VA Leade r Mortgal(e .
Athens
collect 614 592-

3051

Financial

23

Professional
Serv1ces

21

Busm ess

I

NOTICE I

THE OHIO VA llEY PUB
LISH ING CO re co mmend s
that you d o bu sm ess w1 th
peo pl e you know and NOT
to send mon ev thr ough the
ma1l unt1l you have tn vesu
gated the offenng

Babysrtter needed m home
Galltpohs Ferry 304 675
5595 5 days a w eek

3

TUNING lower
p11ced regula r tuntngs
d•scounts to Sen •o r Clttzens
Ch urches &amp; Schoo ls Ward 's
Keyboard 304 675 3 824
PIA N O

Opportunity

Ptano Tuntng and Repatr
Brumc ard1 Mus•c Co 446
06 87 Sk1ll antltntegnty our
trad emark
Lane Damels

614 742 2951

Announcements

S1tuat10ns
Wanted

12

Dep en dable r es pons1ble
mother wtlt do habys1tt1ng 1n
her home Ca ll 614 367

78 32

Wtll care for the elde rly m mv
home Lot s of references
Men or women Ca ll 614

667 3402
Would ltk e to do babys1ttmg
m my home Reaso nable
rates Call 614 949 2779

17 Mrscellaneou s
Frtendly Ho me Part1e s
Any one wantmg to h ave a
party cal l Marilyn Powell at

614 742 3188
1 B Wanted to Do

From Gallipolis take Route 141, turn left onto Route
775 turn nght onto Patnot·Cadmus Road Watch
for s1gns

Bu1lnaaa

0 pportunlty

(701)262 7380 ext. 240.3

5 30

3 Announcements

SECRETARY II

11

1 HP Jet Waterpump Call

R10 Grande College
and Commumty
College

Lost and Found

11

304 882 2194

baskets.
drshes
stone Jars,
ant1ques.
gold
:~~:::::::;:::::::-t:=========~ chests
and stlver
Wrtte M 0

6

l-==--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!J

961 7

10 5 7 COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

mdes out Rt 2 North JUSt
past Maplewood Dnve-ln

Ca11412·833·4175

Wanted t o buy standmg
ttmber
Call after 6 or
anytime weekends 614

2711

(no charge)

ANO

21

1).3

Gen•rel Hauling For aale
Umeatone. fill dirt. and top

7426

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swam FurOI

Call 446·

Catt 814 · 992 · ooll Catt Call 614 256
1427

Faahlon Retail Sales We are
growmg In the Gallrpohs
area &amp; need you. tf ypu are a
ca reer opented
self
mot1vated . dedicated,res·
pon slble lndlvtdual wh o
lo'lles workmg w1th the pubhe Positions ava1lable full
ttme store manager part
ttme seles assoc1ates Send
resume w1th s8!ary ht story t o
G1nza 224 Allenberry C~r
cle Ptttsburgh PA 15234

7HE. "7€1'1

3476

The Henderson Jr Order
Poltce Henderson Span
sonng yard sale and flea
market Memonal week end
May 25 thru 28 1f mterested

and Wed

mature
6698

446 3672

Buym g

lues

c:t.y1 • week. eummer only
Muet be dependable. neat &amp;

A ,ff(}A'Tfl

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
Jtm Mtnk Chev Olds Inc
Btl! Gene Johnson

18 Wanted to Do

Help W•nted

!obyolttor lor 8 yr cld 3171
Approx. 2'h houro por doy, &amp;

304 . 275·

Wanted To Buy

11

FrH eatlmetet

!A7E~

9

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

W, Va.

Aoalotant Orgonlot nHdod Roofing and gutter work,
ot Orooe E~lacopol Church mttel work. houHpelntlng.
carpenter work Exc ret
Colt 814·•82·3188

u•d merchandtee alwev•
welcome Richerd Reynolds

429 84

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

month

LATE llllrH/T TY
SALeS l"trc;{· .,

B1g S•le Mt Alto Auctton
Barn Sat June 2nd , 6 p m
Don t MI SS thiS one Emma
Bell Aucttoneer Ltcense

Pomeroy

Flea Market ChtUicotha Mall
Shopptng Canter , Junal -2 3 First week and each

ty/ lfflrroa1"1 Acllon llllll!oytr

'

Hugo Yard lolel Clwohlro.
OhiO, Rt 7 , ICFOII from

Auction every Frl night at
thl Hertford ·Community
C.nttr Truokloeda of ntw
merohandlat every week .
Conalgment• of new and

ADVISOR TO
INTERNATIONAl
STUDENTS

weeks old to good home

Balloons for Get Well Ann.
versarys Birthdays part1es
Smg1ng Gorrdla Call Bal
loons &amp; Co 446 4313

1

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3 Announcements

SWEEPER and sewrng rna
chme repair
part s
and
supplies
Ptck up and
delrve ry
D a v1 s Vacuum
Cleaner one half m1le up
Georges Creek Ad
Call

The Fam1ly ot Paul Darnel l Sr
w1shes to extend our heartlelt
thanks and apprecratJon tor
the sympathy extended to us
at the death of our husband
l11ther and e:randfather to the

........

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Ann ou ncem ents

CARD OF THANKS

Pm11gf' co unltPS

I I do• tnoo!t""'

All
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992 6300

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t1 A•-&gt;v( nuP $ 1nt nq mn

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U1 loton fOIII

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1h&lt;' department s Division of Wlldltle will conduct fishing clinics
md demonstrations for novices and experts throughout the state
- during !he week. Th1s year's theme Is "Take A Kid Fishing "

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l lt tll h'-'dlfl

f1s h m c1 n agf'mPnt and resear ch ln la k es and streams
1' 1s c1 1 1-&lt; t t\d lon.t l tr .Jdltion 1oo ted In Arnencan history , '
1 It ...,,t .,,ltd m h1 s proclamation

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II l MPl S - f lnl\- 11\f' conJ tml('Cl &lt; ases of meas les 01 1ulx:&gt;lla .
It I \ r 11('1 n repOJ't (&gt;d tn Oh1o c.;o f.1 r thts VC'J t a nd thp sta tP shov.s no
" l"'rJts 'f I t Pf:'dl mg last \&lt; '~' .;; ou tbJf'ak, the O hto Dt~p artment of

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( OL! IMI!US - The week of June 4·10 has been proclalmed
I'Ishmg Week m Ohio" by Gov Richard Celeste, part of the
'l c&gt;llon,rl I tshmg Week SJX&gt;nsored by the Amertcan Tackle
M.rnufacturers Association
l'hr Ohio Department of Natural Resources said there are two
million anglers m the sta te whose purchase of fishing licenses helps

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1 •I 1 five per cent
ofh1 s btd lrr • r • v rTI••••II-'
I l I
11111 I H '- Hl ) dr,JJ I
Tl I
, 11 1 1 r ten percent of h1 s b1d

11

proclaims fishing week

01

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Cele~te

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They a nived h er£&gt;

ho

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\ o measles out brealc predicted

k l nd r~nci Sf'f'S thr m, " h f' said
I h 1 1~,.~,. m &lt;-. wPrf' clnvrn har k and forth m a van
I r 1d l \ .lft&lt; rnoon

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I hop&lt;' thPy arpn't split up It would be mce if they could grow up
trrgl'th~r
Jack Hanna, dlreclm of lh&lt;' Co!tunbus l'L&gt;o. saJd
I m gl,rd to haw them back I hope everybody comes up this

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Oh.io s four outdoor dramas aJl

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sa trl moi P th rtn 100 art1sts are to
rx hlhJt \\or ks and there w ill bew tn C'
tastmg from SPveralloca l w meru?s

4.fter their fO.d av slay mColumbus they 'll be nelumed to
Om.&gt;h.I Ulltii Sept l1 when a d('('lS JOn lS to be made on what to do w1!h

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Ohio Briefs:

I h&lt; Oma ha zoo had sent thr

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In additiOn the Art and Wme
I CSII\al lS scheduled June 22 2J at
Hr r !I age Vmewrds m \\est Milton

o

LAFF·A·DAY

3 Announcements

\!y luuw-.h

l lld]f II

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County and Meier s Wmp Cellars
l'h~ Offtce of Travel and r ounsm

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W t-.,li tlq ton

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ln additio n to spec1al C\ enl s at a ll
v.rm f'nPs fo1 lhC'wPf'k the Southwest
OhiO AI1 and Wme r estt v a1ts set for
lunc 1 m Sih erton. Ha milton

v ••••

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eoJ .t. ab .. CT n
J7ll w"'""'

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jrl hes . ] Utces or"" mes

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04\1 - GI!OODO o
JG7 - Choohu o

311

10 F • c T "'o l6 '1o l yo l!o

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UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
FAG·OOOR{149!
SAG·OOOA{129!

PmgJ am said Las! year Ohioans
consw11ed 14 6 rmllion gallons of

Golho tou~ "

GJ hcn oung

... , ,o,

6 00 P M
1n 10wn h Jl l
d1sr u ss p1onosed uc:ps

Contrae1 Sales Legal
Copy No 84 505

Su1nmer tourist season underway
1 1 ~1\1!

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U 5ooo &amp;. lo

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BJ O umbong&amp; Hoo

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hold l mf'P.t nq J tm e 5 19 8 11 at

Another 130 non umon salaried
employ""s also ha ve worked
lhrough the stnkc
r llday as In the pas! few days,
non umo n workers m automobiles
were !'scorted across UAW picket
llnes bv pohcP wit hu ut senous

nor

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The Clay r w p

stay lil busmess w ithout thf&gt;m
plant

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1 1 Foo"' lQY!s&gt;mont
Bl .,..., ... "a"'

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PUBUC NOTICE

1 I 111 -., p nt LJ I n 1 _al um
t,
0~ l
.n t il l OC O 1 m
Ot n Sr 1 , ! u r! 1 1 nf' Tu PsCJay
j ,, 1 • 12 I ')84 tor mp •ove

manufactun ng

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They'll Do It Every Time

Public Sale
llo Auction

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SJ f c• 8 olo., l •o &lt;loo

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

!he picket lmes
SmcP thP st nke began, the
company has hued about 120

tPms

MOI &lt;W&lt;¥~lH

1J AY!C A"!'u
1B Com~"'tE~u

Oil h" pmo ~ &gt;o Ron!
og Fo leooo

w.... oa !on.,

average $5 ;&gt;~ hourly, m wages and
beneflts that previOusly averaged
$20 an hom The company li'YlJX&gt;sed
the cuts mMarch savmg ll couldn t
1 he mufflers and exhaust sys

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Public Notoce

some

H

lo•folo

OIWOO!OOtO ~ tm

Mav 11 1984

modPn1

II\ I011:-.. ( HALF f\NT
,,..,m l.ttA•d P n&gt;s."i \\'ntt•r
'O il \ IBL S 1Jhmu\P &gt;-0hiOi'

•8

'- , lod pr ~ po, t h Wt ll h1
t'i
v j l t he o il "
lh "
D r J()r I th -' Qh,n Or p lr!

non umon repla ceme nt

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Columbus Ohto

,

~ .,

Public Notice

beanng clubs and bnck s Pollee
arrested 41 peopiP
S); kes sa id he would " plaCf' a
hundred percPnt guarantee' on

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m m e v tol ence tf the firm contmucs
t o brmg non umon workers across

over a cut of 35 percent, or an

Fnda\r!l ttlh: lng 1 11\f' member panel s hr

... r

Bob Sykes !manna) sec• eta I'! !01
UAW Local 14, sa 1d umon offiCials
~ dikf'd out of the talks when the
company pt OJX&gt;sed a wage package
w hic h v.as worse than be fore
W01 kers struck at lh&lt;' plant May 2

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IS~od o r~&amp; Ca fl oo o

workers passed through a line of jeering and spillb1g
picketers and apparently n'Stnned opemtluns at the
plant for tl1e first tbne sinee violenee closed the plant
ear6er in the week. tAP Laserphoto)

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'iard Sa\es

Register - 6'75-1333

MJelllliJll[Aii@JM

Pomeroy- Middlf,port- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleaeant,

General Hau hn g and Tra sh
re m ova l Servrce
Aehabl e
and dependable Ca ll 614
256 6251 aft er 5 30

1HIS

It snme to hum for summet1obs aga1n ~you re
mh1gh schml you know asu mmer Job tsaspeoeson the
bnnk of exnncnon
But suppose you muld gel a'ummer 1ob that was
fuU time got vou J\\J) !rom home t;tugh ! you a marketahie skt11and C\CI1 kerr y"u ctn mt weekend amonth
dunng the school year
A. sum mer Job 111 dw Ann1 Reserve dm all that
tndmore Youlleam u, er SI Il\1 me tghtwccks of m1oal
enIT) tr;Jmtng You II cam another $1 200 b1 semng at
your local Reservt G mer ont 11eckcnd a month And
hcrn the best pan ! uu can b ma valuablcskill hke
med&lt;cal or com rUler techn11lo~~ And vouUalready have
" 1ummer JOO set ur for nt'\1 )ear I anJ another $! !00)
\l,tm 10 knell\ more' CIll u' at !hc r umbcr bclo\\

Lawn Mowmg &amp; Tnmmmg
Reliable and dependabl e
Reasonable rat es Call 614
256 6251 after 5 30

8

OFF

44o ll!l- SSC M&lt;charl l Lanrherr

ARMY RESERVE.
BEAUYOU CAN BE.

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION
OLE CAR CLUB, INC.

3RD ANNUAL
OF THE

OF GALLIPOLIS OHIO

54 M1sc Merchandose

SAWMILL
Has To Sell
Thts Week
446-9777 or
446-3592

SATURDAY. JUNE 9- 10:30 A.M.
49 Pme St -" Behmd Gillingham Drugs"
1959 Fleetwo od 4 Dr HT 60 Senes Spectal 196 5
Corvatr 4 Or HT . d1nnette sel chest of drawers
bathroom s1nk. antique doc too s bag old cameras
old smtcase. toys games bo oks d1 shes rad ros
can opener. coffee pots (ele c ) ant1que Sin ge r too l
k1t. tools 1957 Chev 2 Dr BelAir and Item s too
numerous to mention
Sale co nd uc ted by

THE McGHEE AUCTION CO
Gallipolis. Oh10 45631

TRAILER LOAD
BARB WIRE
1 21° 0 Roll

" Wheel Rakes

Setters
J1m's Farm
Equipment Center
Toba cc o

446 9777 - 446 2484

Phone (614) 446-0552
Auctioneer Myron l Bud' McGh ee
App Au ctiOneer Steve McGhee
licensed &amp; Bonde1 Ohio &amp; W Va

11

Help Wanted

SPECIAL
Kl NG KUTIER WEEK

500 New Tools

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JUNE 2-10 A.M.

LOCATION: From Gallipolis take Rt. 141, 14
m1les to Cadmus-3rd house past Pope's M1ll.
LISTING IN PART· 1953 Ford V1ctorla, 2 Iron kettl es
cream cans blanket chest ~ron wheels old books sad
1rons, brandmg IrOns Hamlton &amp; Jones stone Jar
P&lt;lcher pump, horse col la rs horse drawn cultivators
flour chest, lnd1an ax 10 gallon stone 1ar, garden
layoff plow, garden tractor, 8 HP rotot&lt;lle r auto pa rs
lots of t~re s, hydrauli c tack. electnc molors, tool ox
new lmcoln welder 224 amp , elec gnnder, lurn1ture
clamps set dnll bits, hand tools of all kmd s la rge v1 se
box of ha mmers battenes, elec hand grr nder, solder
1ng ~ron s, large wheel pullers motor 011 power saw
se~eral elec dnlls, weldmg rod, fence charger, gas
cans. water ta nk, stereo, tra iler httc hes, au cond1t10n·
ers, heavy electrrc cords, electrrc al w~re, large log
cha1ns, n1ght slick, bolt cutters cham bmders, garden
spray, shovels new mufflers and ta1l p1pes, apple
crates, cham ho1st, ftshmg eqUipment, 4 steel drums.
chtcken leeders, chtcken coupe, Dayton I HP a1r com·
pressor, 2 full rolls barbed w1re, water softener, wheel
balancer, 34 new foldmg padded cha1rs magazme
r~ck , several ltghts, deep frye; rce cream freezer. 2
gallon blue pamt

PUBLIC AUCTION
FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1984
TIME: 10:30 A.M.
All listed anttques &amp; chattels from the lg. bnck
home of the late Dr &amp; Mrs Norbert W. Compton
wtll be sold at auctron at the res1dence located
at 210 W Matn St tn Pomeroy, Ohto
ANTIQUES &amp; CHATTELS Thrs w1ll be a lg full day sa le
w/ many qu alify 1tems nol listed Two pc wal marble
lop bedroom set rd oak ped table w; 6 boatds set of
6 oak chatrs, 5 oa k stack bookcases wal d I table . wal
rose ca rved arm cha11 m I stands VIet stands many
nrce oak furnitu re pes (Murph y bed sta nd s h&lt;gh
chest etc) brass bed many lme V1ct furn&lt;lure pes 2
lg cherr y 1eweler s wall cupboards, Jewe ler's bench .
antiqu e optiCal 11ems. store 1tems toys &amp; dolls 2 oak
wa ll re gulato rs, 1850 Fr clock, S T clock stnngmstru
ments pnm 1trves of all types baskels, p1ctures chll
dren's furn&lt;ture. curly maple full stock nfle. ant&lt;que
d&lt;shes &amp; gla ssware, many tnnkets &amp; whatnots !g amt
sm an&lt;lque 1tem s house hold furniture, lawn 1tems,
lamps, beddin g, k1tchen rtem s plus hundreds of un
listed 1tems
Thts home has been occupted by thts famtly stnce
1872 w/ everythtng saved .
Terms-Cash or good chedk w/ ID. lunch

OWNER: JEFF PETRIE

Auctioneer-MIKE CLUM, INC.

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE

THORNVILLE, OHI0- 614/246·6851
Mtke Clum, John Clum, Rtch Troup- App Auct.
Sale by order of Ramona Compton

AUCTIONEER: Kenneth Swain and Assoctales
Ph. 256-1552 or 446-3159

COMPUTER SALES

All Kmds
All Pmes Reduced

Excellent opportumty far the nght person
Sales expenence a must Some computer ex·
pen ence helpful If nght pers on wrll tram

Jtm's Farm
Equipment Center

If interested in th1s new exc1tmg ca•eer
m Gallipolis Area , send resume and solory history to ·

Rt 35W Ga!hpohs Oh
Ph 44 6 9777 - 446 1484

REGIONAL COMPUTER SERVICES
46 Publtc Square

Nelsonvrlle Ohro 45764

As an Avon Representative, you're offered the best earn1ng opportunity tn
the direct-selling industry. w1th our
Earnings Plan, YOU:
•earn up to 50% of everyth1ng you sell
•PLUS earn eKtra money by s ponsor~ng
others as Avon Representatoves
•make your own fleKJble hours
•receove free sales training

Avon, cherishmg a friendly sp1r1t, 1s a
company you'll be proud to represent.

To discover more about the rewards of being An Avon Representative, please call 614-446-

3358.

CLEARANCE SALE
MF 1135 140 165 Dsl
Ford I N s 800
J 0- LA w/ Cu!tr
C- G w/ Cultr
Cub wl Cu!t t
H Farma ll
1 Forkhfts
1 ax le trarlers 14 11
4 horse trailer
J D 450C w/ wmch
Case 350 w/ wmch
1- ll50 D-8 way blade
580C Backhoe
1980 Ford ' ton w/ 4 spd
1980 Chev 1h ton 6 cyl
1971 Ford 1 ton flat
15 road tractors
Flat tra&lt;lers. boxes.
Releo box

Jim's Farm
Equipment Center·
Rt 35 W Ga!lipohs, Oh
Ph 446-9777- 446·2412

�Sunday Tomes-Sentinel
23

Pro f e ssional
S e rvo c es

31

I NG Mon t h ly and Quarterly

accounts welcome 428 S e
co nd Ave ..Call 446 11 3 6
Pro fessiOna l El ec tr ol y sis
C ltn 1c Probe T yp e Electroly

AM A

SIS

F DA

&amp;

FC C

Doctor ref e rrals

304 675 5568

One acre lot w11h large
1n -ground pool torn liner
and partially fm11hed bne·
ment For Information call

813-666-1232

H o m es for Sale

Pn ce reduced f o r qu 1c k sa le '
55 0 Jay O r 3 b dr tn level

lor

sa iP. by ow ne r qutet
ghbo r ho o d
G alhp olts

C tty Sc h oo l centra l a1r

g as

hea l
I&lt;H g f! above gr o und
pau ls &lt;Jitachttd double ga r
aqe larg e fl a t ya rd wh er e
Blue B ~r ds t ee d All th• s f o r

S59 900 Ca ll 446 1 02 8
Bv

o wn er

love ly

2

bdr

home on waterfro nt

bo at

ramp &amp; dock close to t o wn
pr~ced S34 900
Will h elp
I nll nce
Ca l l 61 4 25 6
I 2 16
4 bdr
1 '1 ba th 5 ac res
q;:nden s p o t ', m 1 b e lo w
E ur~k &lt;l W o rks h o p wtt h ca r

po rt S29 500
4222

Uaed 60•1 0 mob1le home .

$32 900 Call 1 614 678
2613

Tretter on large wooded lot

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO B U YIII 14ft w1de three

bed room bath and ha lf
mobt le ho m e sr ttmg o n mce
lo t re ady to move tnto
S225 00 do w n 52 25 00 per
mo nt h 304 5 76 2711
O w ne r t ran sfer red
must
sell exc co nd S66 000
S 11 000 do wn Assume
8 J pet loan 304 675
1529
Stwen year o ld home three
b~drooms
garden spot
2605 l1ncoln A\/e
8%
p e n e nt ass umable loan
304 6 75 5 04 7 after 5 00

3 be droom Ranch on At
160 S38 5 00 00 9 per
cent ossurnable loa ns call
304 675 77 46 o r 675
21 8 3

3 yea r o ld total ele ctnc
home f enced ba ckyard and
d ~c k 8 ' 1 percent assumable
loa n Luw 5 0s 304 675

664 3
BELOW

Call 614 -992

Baum Addttt a n
3 bed
ro om s 2 % baths a c fam1ly
roo m w1th fireplace 2 acres
567 500 No down pay
ment owner w1ll carry at no
tnterest for 5 yrs loan
assumptton possible lease
o pt ton available June 1st
9550 per mo 614 985

4387
8 yrs old 3 bedrm 2 baths
fam1ly room w1th wood
burner Stngle car garage on
8 flat ac res With stocked
ponllt C1ty water m Racme

APPRAISED

VALUE Tr1 level thr ee bed
room house on 14 ac re lot
Famr ly room w fireplace and
1 1 7 b a th s
Carpeted
th ro ughout atr co ndlttoned
la rge roo m s wr1h plenty of
c l os~ l spac e laundry room
Three m iles south on At 62
30 4 6 75 2 497 after 6 p m

Beautrful home for sale 160
lmcoln Hill will comuder
any reasonable offer Ready
to sell Sabra Mornson Call

614 992 2650
Owner has to leave sta1e 2
bedroom 1 v2 bath dmeue
kttchen &amp; hv1ng room plus
nver nght awav On 338
across from Ka1ser Alum

Coll614 247 3012

Baum Addttlon 3 bedroom,
brtck 1 V2 baths full base
ment family room carport,
patto a c $57 000 adJOin·
1ng Vz acre lot available Call

614-985-4201

Mobile Homes
for Sele

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS
AT 35 PHONE 614 446
7274

238 1

446 1340

576 2353 0' 576 2621
For sale or t rad e 2 '11 bed
roo m a ll modern house w1th
(la th atta ch ed garage vmyl
at eel alumn Sell or trade tor
2 o r 3 bedr oom tra1ler and
land 30 4 882 3690

5 4 M1sc Merchandose

1 976 Nova Tri-Ster allelec .

18.000 btu atr-cond Ouanr
m1crowave oven Both hke

8x14 Sundock 10&gt;20 en
ach•d room Wtth wood
stove 304· 896 -3911

now 304 773 6397
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

19B2 Clayton. 1 4x70. 2
bedrooms 2 ba1ha central

Sofa cha1t, rocker otto
man, 3 tables. (extra heavy
b't Fron11er) , 8685 Sofa
chatr and loveseat , 8275
Sofas and cha1ra pr~ced from
$286 to $896 Table&amp; $45
and up 1o 8126 Htde abeda $440 and up to
t525 , Recliners. $175 t o

cond S16,600 00 f~rm
lots of eMtrea, 304-773

&amp;If

5550
1981 Hollyperk, 14x.70
eMc
cond
12x8 deck
d
d 1
un erpenntng an
arge
room atr cond Included
3600
304 895 3896

or

895

- - -------69 PM~ 12•55 mob•lo
home 304 676 7610

33

farms for Sale

8 75 6
~~~~=·=,======:=r::;:=~==::=::=~1$376

42 Mobole Homes
for Rent

44

Apartment

f

R

or

614 388 9967

614 379 2116

ent

12•60 2 bd' &amp;4 900 Call
614 446 0175
1973
Quail
Pnced
callers

Baron mob1le home
Creek tratle park
reduced Interested
only Call 614-246

1972 mobtle home. 12~t.65
good cond
2 ~r , AC

$5 500 Call 446 7171 at
tef 5 call 446 8288
14 x17 Wmdsor, central Bit
dtshwasher
mtcrowave
stureo aystem, vmyl undera
k1rt1ng, e11tra ntce utlhty
butldtng Pnced reasonably

Call 614 246 9296
Clostng Out Tratler Rental
Busmess Had 22 ONlY 6
LEFT
S1ze1 1 Ox 50 &amp;
12x62
2 bedroom fur
ntshed A comfortable home
for a l ow Prtce Brown'a
Tra1ler Park M1nenvtlle

Oh1o Call 614 992-3324

$16 000

only Call 446-41 10

36 acres more or le11, 3
bedroom houaa et Oak Hill
Ohto Reaaonable 614

N1ce 3 BR Mobile Home on
At 7 Convenient locat1on

Coty Call 446 7838

No inside pets 246 6818
N1cely furmahad mob1le
home 1n c1ty, allelectrtc, 1 or

Newly remodeled 2 bdr .
equtppad kttchen, central1
a1r 8260 821Y2 Second
Ave , Galhpoha Call 446·

2 adults only 446 033B

2168

Mobile homes for rent. fully
2 bdr
adult•

fu rntahed

682 6892 alter 5

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

8221

1 4x70 total electrtc tra1lar
on pnvete lot, 3 bdr ,
completely furn4ahed. tn
cludmg walher &amp;. dryer, dep
required, t200 mo plus

utiotoes
1393

513 3rd Ave, Galhpoh1 1
b..dr $136 mcludea water,
depoSit req • adults only
Call446-4222 between 9 &amp;

6
Fum1ahed effiCiency. 920
4th • Galltpolta 1176 Utth·
ttea patd Single Call 446·

&amp;8,000 Call 304 895
3398 after 7PM

mobile home fully
furn1ahed , Eastern Ava Wa ·
tar &amp; MWer p11d 1226 mo

Ftrat atreatOn the righ1 after
croas1ng. Northup bndge
Approx 130 foo1 frontage

adutts, reference• It dapoai1

requorad Call 446 3671

Call 446 -3485

2 bdr mobile home, furn , all

1 bedroom Ap1 t196 mo
includtng utilit1es Equal
Houa1ng Opponuntty Con
teet Village Manor Apt1

electnc. aduhs only, no peta

614-992-7787

29 acres 1n Maaon Coun1~
loca1ed 4 6 mtles from .nter·
sect•on of At 62 and R1 12
near McClintic Wildlife Sta
11on on County Rt
12
(Robtnson Creek)
$17,400 00, 20 per cant
down 10 par cant APR
call Charlea1on 304-342-

2 bdr

Call 614 367-7438
1----------2 bedroom mobile home, 2
bedroom cottage. good lo
ca11on. references, depo1it
required Call 446-0143 or

4416 otter 7PM

Rtveratde Apta Middleport
Spactal ratea for Santor
Citizen• $130 Equal Houa·
1ng Opportunttles 814

992-7721

tween 6 and 1 OPM

446 0571

mon1hly 304-675-4424
2 bedroom unfurnished. pri
veta lot Burdette Addn
t 176 month. plua ut1ltttea,
deposit and references

Rentals
Houses for Rent

3 BR house 2 full batha,
close to town No children or

pets Call614 245 6281
6 rma &amp;t bath, 2 car garage,
2004 Chatham, $200 rant,
depollt &amp; reference• re
qutred Rodney area modern

3 bdr ranch,
$285 rantdeposit
&amp; reference•
re
qutred Blackburn Realty.
Baum Addtt1on 3 bedrm.
2% bath famtly rm wtth
fireplace, b..ement, central
a c , bu1lt in range &amp;. dla
hwasher. 2 refngeratora, on
2 acres w1th fenced yard
Rent or lea .. with opt1on

$650 Call 814 9B5 4387
4 bedroom houH, ltncoln
Holl. t300 Dop &amp; rot cell

614 -992 - 2815
2362

or 992-

N1ce 3 bedroom houaa near
Mme No 1. t225 mth

t100
2126

deposot

814 742-

304 676-2464
1982 trader, 3 bedrooms, 2
bath. fumlahed, washer and
dryer. 8160 00 month

$100 00 doposot 304-8963828
Furn11hed, 1daal for one or
two men, AC Folf8f'a Mob1le Home Park

!:

614 992 7607

992 2509 ovonongo

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furn1ahed
opts Coi1614-992-6434 or
992 -5914 or 304 2566
1 bedroom furmahed ap1
Dep e. ref requ1red Call

614-992-2816
2362

44

Apartment
for Rent

1- - - - - - - - - - JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Houamg Opportuntty} haa
one and two bedroom a. ren1
atar1tng et $167 for one
bedroom and $193 par
month for two bedroom,
with •200 deposit located
neer Foodland and Spr1ng
Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ant Call 446-2746 or leeve
me11aga

3 bdr unfum gerega apt ,
depoan

glo Call 446-4416 alter
?PM

Mobile home for rent new.
fum11hed, •176 00 month
e 1 00 00 deposit Waahar
and dryer outbulldmg .
porch 4 m1lea back Glen·

Furniahed Mobile Home,
central atr, mila below ctty
overlooking the river One or
two edulta only 446-0338

wood 304 676 2288

Up1111rs furnished 4 rooms
bath. AC. clean. no peta
adulta only, dep S. ref req

2 bdr apta n&amp;wly dec
ut1htiea partly patd, t146

304 675 3030 or 875
3431

mo Call 676 5104 or 875
63B6

Call 446 1519

and

Galhpolis

44

Apartment
for Rent

1969 121164 Schult mobile
home share
Call 446

4298

LET US PAY THE BILLS!

1979 WHEELHORSE .... ... ...........

TWIN

NEWHAVEN,WV

1983 ALLIS CHALMERS ..... .. ...... 12595

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED IN lENT

16

HP Twon IC.

42'" Mower

1975 WHEELHORSE, 10 HP ........ '1449
" TILLER, Slightly Used .. .......... '600
&amp;&lt;-U&gt;&lt;U C SERIES

WHEELHORSE DOZER BLADL ...... s175
TINKER'S DREAM - FIX-UP SPECIAL!

1960 MODEL 10 HP TRACTOR ...... 1149
USED WHEELHORSE ......... ........... 1850

BAUM LUMBER
OHIO
CHESTER,

985-3301

A Say'e 304 468 1078

Pla111c c isterna Ita.. approwecl . plaabc septic tank1,
plaat•c culvert. metal cul-

verts, RON EVANS ENTER PRISES, Jackson, Oh 614286 5930

Coffee table stereo, ltlftiO,
Surplu s s1 oc k, new and used
apphences , furniture 304-

675 4424
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Ohve St Galhpohs N ew
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves.
6 p1 ece w ood hvtng room
sUite With 6 tnch flat arms
6399 bunk beds complete
Wl1h bunk1es S1 99 2 p1e c e
antron hvm g room su1tes
$199 antron reclrners 699.
other recliners S80 maple
d1 ne tte sets S 179 box
sprrngs &amp;. mattress twm or
full $ 100 set regular firm
S1 20 m aple dmette chairS
S 35
w ash st ands S 34
maple rock ers s 69 7 piece
chrom e dmet1e set S 149 5
p1ec e dtn ett e set 699 used
bedroom su1tes refngerators ranges c hest dressers.
wrtnger wash er s TV 's dry·
ers &amp; sho es Ca11614 446-

CaD Either Number:

Twin Ritt11 Tower, Point Plt111nt, WV
675-6679
Rlnr Itt~

PIKe, ... Hann, WV
112-3121
OfFICE Mf)URS: t-5
IOIDAt 'THIU FRIDAY
LIMITED IIUIIIi Of .,AifiiEITS
AVAILABLE FOf PEISOif BE1WE£1
ACt AIID &amp;2.

'

dononetable Coli 814-25116417
Shrubs pruned. lawn reseeded. retaiJtlng walla,
Stdewalka patloa. fill dirt,
topaotl, bark mulch &amp; 18W·
dust Contact Bruce Oav1

••on Call 61 4 266 1 427
Ftrawood cut up alaba $1 6

p1ckup lood Cali 614 246
5804
1980 Honda XR80, 3 boys
btcycles, color TV, go cart,
Kelvmator dryer Call 814 ~

388 -9083
8107

0' 61 4 -38B -

Pool for sale m good condl·
tton Call446 -3668oraea at

76 Court So

BUilt on your lot a new home
you can afford over 1,100
sq ft 6 rms &amp; bath. car3159
peted ready to mowe into
.926 500 Also garegea 8t
basements Celt Patriot
54 Mo sc Merchandise Home Butldara anytime
446 8038
Will consider
mob1le home as trade in
Knauff F~rew o od Reduced 1- - - - - - -- - - prtces th ru July 31st Have Gtrls 20 tn bicycle. 860
you r own se as oned wood Call 614 388 9905
thts w mter 614 256 6245

66

lawn mowers 8t bicyclea,
used &amp; reconditioned
Frank '1 Pawn Shop. 430
2nd Ave • Golllpollo Call

Briarpetch Kennels Prof••·
sional All-breed grooming
Indoor outdoor boarding fa·
ctlit111 Engliah Cocker Sp•·

448·0840.
1 0•20 ft. movable 1 piece
galvanited met1l building,
with windows. •l•ctrical

outleu. llghto. wltfe door
and •k•d• f~r

OPEN HOUSE

Apanments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled wnh an
Income of leas than
•12,300 Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income
N1ce 1 and 2 bedroom
unfurn1ahed apartmenu

304-675-2218
pm

boto'e 6

Small furmshed apt Po1nt
Plaaaant, reference and dep ·

Brown studiO couch, blonde
detk. end table•. twin maple

bod, bobvbed I mattreu
Call448 -3786

30 m wh1te electrtc range
eKe con. •100 19 •nch
color Qua.,r TV 8160 26
tnch True Tone color TV

&amp;100 Call 614-992 6259
Small deak, 7 drawer, 17 tn
by 43 in h1gh w1th chair,
exc con $160 Call 614

986 -4227

992-6461

Why pay more Trade Center
Furmture Outlet
Rt 7
Kanauga Oh Open 9 7PM
GE 18,000 BTU atr condt
t1oner new cond used 2
mos 8500 Portable d1s
hwasher 885 Call 614

Auto Call614-992·2094
Electrtc hot water tank, axe
con
&amp;60, works good

120.000 BTU gat lurnonco

couple 304·876-6267

45

Furnished Rooms

For rant Sleeping Rooma
and l1ght houae keep1ng
rooma Park Central Hotel

Call 614 446-0758
Sleeping room S1 16,
t1e1 paid Share beth.
only. Range &amp; refrig
2nd Ave Galhpolla

ut•h·
male

919
Call

446-441 6 alto&lt; 7 PM

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call

, 614 992.7479
2 trailer Iota, 1 amall ch1ld

47 Wanted to Rent

Ftrewood for aale. *20 00
p1ck-up load. 830 00 deh-

vered Call before 1 1 00
altar 6 00 304-676 2991

2 Enghah setter b~rd dogs 1
rabb1t dog , best offer Call
Mtntture Schnauzera $100
All mete Jean Stout Call

57

Musical
Instruments

Upright ptano. good cond1
t1on •100 or beat offer
Glent aead beana,

304-578-

58

New galvamzed corrugated
culvert 12 36 ft up All
atzea Flttlnga Pipe, beama,
structural atael new, uaad
B1g d11counta
Delivered 1
Anywheral Nowl Eat1mate1

FOLLOW SR RT 141 TO PlEASANT HILL SCHOOL
ROAD - TURN RIGHT AND FOLLOW SIGNS
3 bedroom frame ranch sotuated on I 3 acre lot Lovong room kotchen dono ng area. 2 baths. utohty room,
2 car attached garage Heat pump , central aor, rural
water

free 304 925-0884
LUMBER-Rough cut. oak
poplar, 211.4, 2x.8, 2x8, 1 "4 ,

1 x8. 1 x8. length available. 8
h through 16 ft Hogg &amp;
Zutpan. 304-773-6654

CENTURY 21 Southern Hills R.E., Inc.

446-6610

Now open for bua1neaa,
Mountam State Block, At
33, New Haven. Complete
maaonrv auppllea. 4". 8".
12" block Delivery aervice

Real Estate General

Phon• day 304-882-2222 .
ovenong 882 3239
Staal bulldingt, one of a kmd
closeout. uratghtwalla,

30"•60' wao *8746 now

Realty lB.

LISTING

Older
remodeled home m town wtth
large ~t Three or lour
bedrooms Bargam pnced at

16044.

$24 900

40'x76'

wea

*17961
now $9986.
60'•100" woo $28226 now
$16767· Muat aall, Cheap
delivery Call John 13041
883-6870

446-3636 @

66

ter. Rt 36

Pets for Sale

Boardlng all breeds. Heated
lndoor-ou1door flcilitiel
AKC Doberman pupp•••

NEW LISTING in lhe
oountoy Three bedroom oanch
With full base ment Appx 2

•AJI0 8 4
t J09 6 4 3

.,

WEST
.AKJ 053

.Q ..

EAST
• 92

•s

• J 76
• K "' 3 2

+AK
• A 10 6 4

Vulnerable North South
Deal e r So uth
W~it

North

Eul

Pass
Pass

2t

2 NT

Db I

P ass

Soulb

,.

I NT

4•

Pass
Pass

Openon g lead

Pass

Pass

•K

Here 1s J1m Jacoby s
favonte hand from more

than 30 years o r tournament
pla} Th e deal occurred 1n
the 1965 US trtals In that
event the top SIX pairS wer e
to represent the Umted
States m the 1966 World
Patr Olympiad m Amster

MF 1100 tractor 100 HP
tobacco setter, tobacco
sttcks 20KV PTO generator
4 tn pump 300 gal 8 row
spray outfi1 Call 614-682

dam

International tractor and
Fontame tra1ler for sale Call

3 00 304-675-5412

614 379 2775

69 For Sale or Trade
Wan11 to trade 19in color
TV and a cuddle couch for a
roll top deak 614 ~ 446

The respon~ of two d1 a
monds wa s the Jacoby tra ns
fe r h1d askmg South tO bid

&amp;

2 tractors. 1 M farmall, 1 H
farmall &amp; 2 14 f1 hay
tra1lars
Call 614 949

63

2558

1 Reg Morgan mare 5 yrs
w1th 6 wk reg stud colt by
stde S 1 500 Call 614 379

$2195
4454

Farm Equipment

Tractor, modal 8 w11h cult1
vators Call614-266 6417
Jrm'a Fann Equipment Cen
ter. Rt 36 W Galhpohs.

Love stock

of barb setter.
were t21
roll,
tobacco
2 ule
trallera-17 ft long USED
Wheel d1ac. 3 pt dtac, 2
amall pun type 16 blades.
plowe 2 3 -4 bottom, post
drtvar, ah•ver rotary hoea
NH
MF. Ford mowers

351 Ford mod1f1ed engtn~ . 4
speed truck trans . two 9 32
trac1or hr&amp;s and wheels 3pt
h1tch dtsc, 2 tratlar tongues,
four 6 5 ttres and wheels
7hp M F r1dmg mower

64

304-895-3441

6143889078

Alhs Chelmara tractor good
cond Call 446-2544 after

Call 614 992 7617

Hay &amp; Graon

PRICE REDUCED - App&gt;
105 acre larm near Rullallfl
house barn and olheo build
onRS Producmg ~ I well Call
aooullh1s one $75 000

-=

Standmg hay 6 acre s Call

614 388 9078

Transporlalion
71

Autos for Sale

1- - - - - -- - -- TOP CASH pard for late
model used cars
Sm•th
Butd Pon11ac 191 1 East
ern Ave
Galhpol1 s Call

Hay &amp; Graon

Pure T1mothy

hay

S2 00

bolo 304 458 1656

614 446 2282

1- -----------------

1981 Cougar XA 7 goad
cond sharp hght grey on
grey Call 614 245 5818

-

Broker· Auct1onetr

-

Call 446-0552 Anyt•me
Beth Null 245 -9507

-

Steve McGhee

446-1255

BMR 436 -

EXCEWNT STARIER HOME wrth 2 BRs. lR DR
utility and new balhroom Carpetd lhroughout
Screened patio carport Large lot Call fur aPflOontment

noc;e kitchen,

SPACE FOR A GARDEN PlUS A SUMMER KITCHEN IN BASEMENT FOR
CANNING - WEll MAINIAINEO 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH RANCH
BEAUTIFUl WAllPAPER IN MOST ROOMS GAS HEAT CENTRAl AIR
COND NICEBACK YARD JUSTliSTED AT $42000 SUPER lOCATION ON
ROUTf 588 JUS! MINUTES FROM CIIY

BMR 444 NEW LISTING - POSSIBLE 8% LOAN
ASSUIIPI'ION - Brick &amp; frame 3 BR oanch slyle house srtuated
on 235 acres m/1 Includes lovong room. lg eal&lt;n kitchen, balh
utility room Family room wilh w b fire~ace, electnc heat Possobie
loan assumption Call for an appoontment

KERR BETHEl ROAD - SPACIOUS DOUBlE WillE 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS l SHAPED LIVING ROOM WITH NICE DINING AREA MOSTlY
CARPETED '' ACRElOT NICE COUNTRY SETTINC'. JUST liSTED! $39 500

BMR 445 -First Time on Marl&lt;el - 1974 Shultt moble home

$28 000

(14x65), lg. tif)OO! liVIng rom, DR, 2 BAs, balh &amp; uloloty room

ESTABLISHED BAR - DO'I/NIOWN AREA. LARII SEATING CAPACIT'I
WITH SPACE FOR EXPANSION SET UPFOR EASY (f!RATIDN MOOE~
EQUIPMENT If YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A GOOD BUSINESS IIJTER
HURRY ITS PRICED 10 SEll'

Includes centr•l aor, declt. underpmnong Mwe 1llo your locahonl

Calllodayl

WE NEED LISTINGS
For 11eiP Co Ustinp C.ll· Cheryl lomley 742-1171

WE JUST LISTED A SUPER NICE J BI:DROOII MOBILE HOllE WITH
EXPANDO IN THE KYG£R CREEK AREA NICE l EVEl LOT FREE GAS HEAT

--

-

-

72

Tru ck s f o r S a le

8 1 Chev S 10 lg bed 6
cyl w 1th t opper auto PW
Sr &amp; Bk11 Call 6 14 3 6 7
7 156 Ro ush Lane Cheshu e

1 983 S 10 Chevy PU 4
sp d
AM F M ltk e new
56 395 1982 S 10 Chevy
PU 4 spd
A M FM ta pe
vmyl cove rbed sport r1m s
S5 995 19 8 1 Chevy Luv 4
spd
AM FM ta p e v1 nyl
cove r bed S3 996 19 7 9
Chevy l uv PU 4 spd ra d1o
shar p S2 595 Joh n s Au to
Sa les Bu lav1ll e Ad Gal hpo
Its Oh 446 4 782
For sa le or tra d e 198 0
Chev( ' '~ t on 4~&lt; 4 Stl\/e
rado Call 4 46 0157

-

9539

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

If\

l acrrs "XCPI.enl loca

!lon Var ani

Virginia L Smith
Real Estate
388 8 82 6

Real Es tate General

Quality al a pn ce ,.ou can
a!lord LO\Piy 3 bcdrao
bal h br1ck and !r anll'
Fully eQurpped kt!chen
larg" hJrng room all oo

n l
tlurne

lanrl '&gt;CiH1fX1 01 Prrre

1r1

r :-:tf a
n1 Ph

ION

•607

BRICK HOME FUll BASE
MEN!
REDUC ED TO

$59 I}J()

-

Fr11 .:.air or ttade

llct~ 111CJ-pc,hltf:' 7 r rn~ 3BR
l bath ~ lanu l~ room d1nrng

r1om nrr r mOOr-r ., ran rh 'i1yle
~'~ th wuurl or cnJ I burn r
l &lt;! hpt ,., &lt;"~ 1 +-'r bd c,ernt&gt;n1
h"a\tr 1 y tPr'l •nodr rn -;lep.
wr ~rtr lir n rll wnorl !l\ rn e

tH)rn
N II

M,olla ,.,,,od

l1 1rr1 I' Ud ~ rrt~'

M r::.t

ltln1&gt;- w n 1011.
1
1r.1 lr1r
) C,lll ~II I

(

bedrooms 1

bath 6

.. 'H~l IPI 1'M t (j

10011''&gt; 1011

10 dO

p,ntral ba ~ P il l ' rt
lamlscapffi yard w11h ch&lt;lul ltn~ h r ff'

aoprox

mJdP r o~

~~

' Jn Jet~

1h n Nrre

11604
4 YEAR OLD HOM£ 5 ACRES

ra 11clt siVIf' 111 5 .tr rr , rnnrr :Jr lp', t~ H1wrro' 1
acres tillable Barn t~ nd tnrpp (3) nj l' I ~1 1..1 :1) t' bLJIIdlllgS Surne
trn CtnF! rn pood shaPf' Wood or cotl,1ovt t(n lr 11 r- M 1r~,.on fwp
Real n1ce homr

3 betl room:.

11602

For sale or trade Reg
Quarter horses 1-5 yr old
bay mare and 1 -1 yr sorrel!
mare Call 446 4792 or

DU TC H STYL £ COUNTRY HO ME
4 benwoms 21 tJa1 hs 1u11y equ pp•'ll ',t r1~ ~ ~ h\ 11

For Sale By Owner
Phone 446-8221

446 2445
9 N Ford tractor with 1 2
plowa &amp; grader blade good

Four Bedroom brrck home wrth Chandler
kitchen, custom drapes. plush carpet. attached 2 car garage , s1tuated on 12 acres
w1th stable. ra1l fences. sw1mming pool. ga rage-workshop 8'11% assumable mortgage
lmmed1date possess1on

Call 61 4

Rey1atered Arabtan f1lly
great ped1gree Call 61 4

3B7 0659 0&lt; 614 367
7379

1111 lldl ::Jm n~
room tamrly room wtt n MXJ(JllUI !l! 1 ~ o ca1 ~art~p,P w11h au to
oprnrr Styl e beauty char rn &lt;1rl1 ( 1 mtnr1
~1 1 r1f•'"rr ht- lb

hon•e p11ced $74 900

room rec room ? bat h~ 3 car

REAL ESTATE

REAIIOA

446-4206

appoil1lment
ASSUIIABLE LOAN - 91\'lllnt Rate. approx $9 000
down Monlh~ payment $491 06 oncludong taxes and
ons Modem brick home, 3 ac~ 3 bedrooms, balh
complele kitchen and large eabng area Large hvong
room wilh WB fireplace Huge laundry room Farm
pond Priced m the 50s.

Cl"'
" PROPERTY - 2 storu
" 3 bedroon1s lao"e
, lot
Excellent ~arted or retoremenl home Jrd AVe Proce~
on lhe 2~

Possible loan assumptoon Pnced only $33 900

237 ACRES - More or less Counly atmosphere only
4 moles lrom lown Modern home 3 bedrooms I

baths, 2 wb loreplaces hvong ooom fa m1~ ooom newly
decorated krtchen Garage 16x46 barn w1l h large lort
~ails for oorses or caltle Clly school&gt;

HOME. BUSINESS AND EXTRA BUILDING LOT or
garden space Ali fur under $20 000 Busoness was
used as gas station and groceoy Cozy 3 bedroomfllme

2ACRES Mlllocaled on St Rt 35 Good buol&lt;ing s•le

Has a mobile home hookup Well water also awaler tap
and a slorage buoldong, Clly school&amp;

OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER - Si'rt1ng '" 2 356
arcoes ol woodlan d 4 bedroom l shaped ranch
ebalfures' lor mal hv•ng room d1mng room lamM1iy w•lh
w •replace shd 1ng doors leodrng lo a dec k odern
lu ily equopped k•lchen 3 full ceram•c loie balhs l arge
rec or lam1iy room downsloaros wl • b fi replace and
shdoro g doo" ••d•ng lo pat1o New lw nace and carpel
Workshop and 2 Cal carport and storage area An
add1honai 44 acres can he purchased Owneo waniS lo
sell roght a wa~

lOVElY 4 BEDROOM HOME IN ClrY - f1r&gt;l Avenue
STATElY HOME - S111lng on 656 acre oi woodland
and I 6 acres m/ 1 can also be purchased Only 2
mmu1es lrom coty f eatures a foomai erotoy hvong 'oom
and formal dmmg 'oom modem krtchen rozy f9mliy
room wb hreplace 3 bedroom 2 balhs w111llu b and
shower 2 car garage

81;. D'O 1nterest rate assu m a ~e

quallf1ed buyer Shown by apiXJinlmenl

to

-

-

-

=
=
-

-

-

#593

garage beau t1lu1 rn ~r ound
sw1 mm•nr pool 4 acrrs Cttv
sc hools

IN TOWN -

I I REO OF CifY
Molh f' r Natu re ll&lt;~ ' pr ov1rlr&gt;d a per: rl 1 r: t' 11 th1 1 trw mrl e' ot
G..!thpoll'i yel n dlf l.1!)' ~ nool Sv !1 rn litl'~ \ 1!1) ro~ rfl rlr1 1tr g
room 2 lull bal h ~ umutw klllhPn .,o; n plpnl\ 1 ' bu111 rn fi! btnels
an d conlit&gt;ntent work n ~ rliland f 11 r I p0n h p111 .., nat1rt 7 1 ar
~a rage len no~ heal pump wood 1'1 IJII rr ~Ill! D\'-' r '2 Kit'S ultr111d
call lo1 persor.JI :.howmg ol lh15 "' " 111 .md •1 ' t1n .., &lt;&gt;unrr clean

SIJrler home or

reltr ees 2 br ltvm g 1m bath
lull basement f1nt shed up.
~1il tr ' garagr. a1um 1nu m s1d1ng
VnliOII Sl

-

-

ho r m~

pnced n l~e $60s

#586

#3501
PEACEF Ul ARE A
ClOSE TO HOSPITAl - Nr"
ranch 4 bedrooms 1 baths
wllr approved kii ChPn C ltr

garage Best buy lor &lt;~ lar~ e

ho rne

#1584

A hall

ncre

moH' 01 lr.s~

Nll h !r urt 1lt'+'\ ll U\ 1 trllf'E' Jeclroom
home ltv11rg toom kttchPn wtlh b ullm • &lt;~ hme1 rJ!r ltl'~ roflm lut1
ba sefTient and garage th al1:, f-U!rlln lll r Hhr'n'l ntr1 a r!1 n Unltn
tshed room ..vrlh ii hral"~la! Pt l l rf p1;
~J r • t111t "rl 1 , 11i C&lt;~ l l lor
rtrla•l'l

• 492

HAPPINESS FOR SALE
Qua l1ty bu 111 bn1 ~ homr ea! m
krtrhPn 3 t&lt;drooms lull
ba::.ement wrll 1rPC 10om l ca •

INVE &gt;TME NT IN CO ME
w~
In• rt 1 V'l
1
nef'd Lo\ell moif rn ~11\tlt rcnf p 1
cellenl con t1rtton CompiPIPI)' lurr11 !l•r~ ,r 1 11
•n Aroro~ R2!! ""and &lt;&gt;lor kP&lt;I[Xn I t 1 , '
You r.?l n ow'l vow nwr1 bus.me&lt;:\ lu 1 ,11 11
Nt&gt;ed ,., llomP plu \

garage plu:-, lalgf' bu1lcltnR.
cl'n1 ;m Kr. c,rllO!JI~

1n 111 (l'ilt

,•nf 111 I t. lill ~ Ill
• 11 I Ultl u "~
t\1 tn Llo I' mow
,., \I at ' H 1 lh.,.a)
111 It
Jt&gt; !lliS

"649
TENDER

Th t::. 'Pill lt:vPI home '" t!l
excellenl condtt1on Has 3
!x&gt;drooms mas1er bPt1room
vr•v lilrrge t 1 b~lh c, lullv
c;upplf't1 l)l!hc~ an d ca rport
Lonted on tl largP levPI Iot on

Rl

160

PIICP d

Vel

y

re i&lt;;onab!e

#2499
rYCOON lAKE -

N1&lt;" HOlly

Pa1k mObllf' ho me Wllh €~
panclo large wood deck largf'
irvri loi VNV good buy

#2 169
LARGE COMMERCIAl BUILD
lNG - Has 4000 SQ rt wrlh
add1honal storage overhead
ilv1ng Q uar t er~ w1 1h 2
bedrooms

#1445

N1lelal gt&gt;lot!OO~hy]U4 H ],"'• 1,' ' '1 '
hrl•hnm.•m
rxcPII en 1 ~...onO it1Un 2 rt1 1 t;ar&lt;~ 1w r1 r
11t r~ ,
rr•r r 10., 1 lt1
Gal l 1poil~ Lnnfl 1lorlll ;Jil(l ~o iJ~lf' 11 1! 11111 \ h •Of It 11 !l(lW

•

you lhl" onP llOI"i

•589
104 ACRl FAR M

2 !arm houSB

- onr 6 •nom s ttnrl haH1
r, 1! 1 1nr m Nlo11
burnPr hPa1rr 2 barn '\ ? c hu-: ~r n hnu , r II ,r t.1tt1 \rTW k"' NllrSP
alxwr All mtrwral rt~hl \ 1.'0 l'lllh \ tit Af1111 ' • t{l 1rr r tllahl" dlld
M .?ll r r~ pa ~turc l~nd rr1cr clll ~ . ,• 'M'l 111 Ot1r 1 IPI !11 ' lrl r1
Ret .?~ v..a~

•594

101 2 SQUA RE FOOT BL OCK BUilDING
Many usro;- user! to tN? .t grocerv \lnrl' 'ill"" I 1 Hh' 11110 111 room
plus bath homf' ruel Oll 'lf'nter fUI.-11 "'atr1 y li"ill [1I th rlr1 llrrl well
at lyc00n lakP

#592
SPRING VAllEY SUBDIVISIO N

w•"

Vacant lots N1cf' s•rr burldmg loh
101 8 llV 111 7 Beitel ~el um """

Jllttl1l1ll r&lt;: ll'lriP l ot ')IZe

BEAUTIFUl WOODED LOTS

- 5 acres or
1own

$12 500

more Clo se to

Excellent

#599

CITY SCHOOl SYST£ M

LOVING CARE

-

IIIUIIIIIIIIIIJIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll·llllllllll~
'

Aop rowna tely 2 arrP\ ol mo 2 11.1 1 l hi-'d •w v• r1nt,o wood
Strl1n2,. ntC€ rnode1n Step '..-1VEt kt11 'n 1 l \ r t I II I I f lilH 1 lrv
mg room Land ha~ a s prm~ ll::.h•n? pn 10 1r Pit' 1nr! pt'arh 'IPF.S
n ce peare1ul SRMtnr, Pnor f 'odi1V

#IH34

rn §
-----

'32 2

6 ROOM S CATHf DRA l CliLI NG
CHAMPAGNE TASTE - Very
ntce bnck In level 4 bed rooms
tully caroeled rlen fom1ly

Real Estate General

I

t'lr&lt;

to1a ,

#595

1- - - - - - - - - --

shape. $ 1 500
379 2115

\r't

P\1 111

BRICK RANCH 5 Mill S FROM GALLIPOLIS
ln Gall1~11s City Sc hool~ \\ 51Pm !(1r Pf' n ~rhuol1 l1y [ t&gt;nlnrwrv J

614

OWNER Will TAKE MOBilE HOME IN TRADE _
Moxlern 3 bedroom ran ch mce family mom 13 , 24
hvong room Modern eal on kotchen Coly sc hools

=-~

ktl ti1Pfl With bUilt

LOlJfl !ry

(614) 464-3563
(614) 881-5784

lAND CONTRACT - ·10% lnt Rale Terms can be
worked oot Price redoced In lhr 50s Moxlem bi ~v.-.
4 bedroom,lorm~ hvong and dimng room Large fam~y
room, 2car garage, 2'h baths Give us a call today lor
more onfurmatoon
BEAimFUl L-SHAPED RANCH - A spac~us home
fealunng a lorrnal enloy lovong room WB fireplace,
donmg room, large famoly room, patio doors 4
bvedrooms. 2 full baths a complete kttchen Large
garage. lots of storage space &amp; ..ectnc dooo openeo
Veoy well landscaped Pnced at $67 500 Excellent
location Kyger Creek School Oistr•ct Shown by

lovong room. Enclosed porch and \\ basement Pnced

7 7 LTD II needs b ody w o rk
ru ns good SBOO 0 0 3 04
895 3633 i:lh e r 6 00

But:~ Slow llcud
NOOd floors orl ht&gt;al centra l a1r

288 1787

srurEs

A-fRAil£ HOME - Sitting on 69 acoes ol partial
WOO(Iand Modem 3 bedroom. Jlh balhs. kitchen.

bes1 offer

Real Estate General

RENT WITH
OPTION TO BUY
$55 900 DO - l ow down
pJyment assume loan - 4
BR •anch very latge ca rrel [•d
hvtrt v ronrn woodbur n.n~) ltre

Call:

Regtatered Angus bulls 1 3
yrs old e"c blood ltnes
Sla19 Run Farms Jackson

4•0D

=

19 7 3 Old s Delta 88 au10
good co nd Call 446 7230

77 Gra nd Pn 11

304 675 52 89

•Wolhs T leadongham Realtor Ph Home 446
•Ed Evans Reallor Ph Home 446-0825

175,000

992 6191

-

75 J eep s 1600 7 8 Olds
S2 10 0 7 8 Cobra M ustang
S19 00 El Ca m 1no best
off er 78 T top Tr ans A m
best off er 77 M G con'ol ert l
ble S1900 Ptck uptru ck
S400 camper u t 1hty t rail or
T &amp; G Auto Sales 541 W
Mam S t un der Pomeroy
bndge

9 143

1974 Opel Manta needs
t1mmg cha1n body ex c 2
new mes 5250 00 Fa c tory
roll bar S100 00 3 0 4 882
2012 Or 88 2 295 2

60 acres.

Dotloe Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Holl 985-4466

Real Estate General

2 dr red 1 977 Old s Cutlass
excellent co nd1t1o n 6 14

For Sale by Owner
3 bedroom farm
house w1th barn.

REAlTORS
Henry Cleland Jr

-

992

1979 Plym o uth Volare 6
cyhnder auto low m tleage
cl ean ask1 ng $ 3400 992
3 79 8
O n ly ser1ous
rnqutnes

REAL ESTATE

Real Estate General

livestock

Bonnie Stutes, Realtor

-

0'

$40,

IIIIIIIIIIIIII~IIIIIIIIIIII~IIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

PRICED TO SEll - 3 BEDROOM 2 STORY FIREPlACE liVING ROOM
aiUNIRY KIICHEN HASWOODBURNER HOOKUP LARGE GARAG£ PlUS
CARPORT VERY AFFORDABLE AT 132 000

614 992 5742
2094

1980 D1esel Rabbtt ac 4
speed 4 door radto 43 1o
50 miles per gal 304 675
3119 call after 5 00

r dfl ~e

Stand1ng hay, 6 acres Call

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - Be.utolul
ranch lype house •n the
countoy Three acres w1lh a
beautolui v•ew Two WB FP 1 ~1
basem€11[ garage many other
features $79 000

1971 Fo rd Bronco 1966
Chevy S S Canvertabl e Call

Real Estate General

mgood co ndtbon

'35000

1 9 80 Sunb1 r d Pon11a c
19 64 p rckup 304 773

W1lll s lnt:llngtlam
RaaltOI

I===========

Farmall cub trac1ur ttxc
cond • w1th cultivators.
other equ1pment available

Judy Taylor Groomtng Call

1980 Dodge Colt 4 c y
hnder 4 speed twm st 1c k
fr ont wheel dn\/e hk e new

2441

1-::----,--------

Call after 4 30. 61 4 256
6848 or 614 -266-6791

614

4454

Wanted Gravely for pans
muat be LCD Custom Con
vert1able model 304 - 576

0,

C ~l

1968 Ambas sador PS PB
t1lt wheel 5300 or trade for
motorcycle Cal l 614 9 92

Wanted to buy toba c co
plants Call 304 -458 1 997

Oh 614-286-5396

1979 Chevy Ceprtc e C las
dr, ac, ps V 8 engme
good cond1t1on, e ~~: c
performance Will con stder
all offers Call 614 99 2
7412 after 5 p m

S IC , 2
bod~

992 25 31

1978 Chevy Monza 2 plus 2
hatchback
V 6
AM FM

675 6799

1 : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : : : : :: : - _
1

63

6 00

tape

1972 Impala 60 000 actual
m1les Engtne v g body en d
tntenor fatr Call 614 367
754 7 evenmgs

PS PB S1 695
388 9905

Call 614 388 9905

place Ntl h

Greenbrier Stables we buy
sell or trade horse s 304

Rabbot 304-675 7380

AM FM

83 496 1981 2 dr Chevy
Chevette auto sun roof
$3 , 196
1980 Renau11
leCar 4 spd AM FM AC
sun roof S2 49ti John s
Auto Sales, Bulavtlle Ad
Gallipolis, Oh 446 4782

6799

sucks and two
tobacco bailers 1977 VW

Rokas 3 P MF Nl pulllype

gravtty boua wtth wagona.
1 0 f1 Chteael plow, uaed
tractor parts Ford, Ferg ,
Oliver 60 77 farmall H-M .
o1her uaed parts for plowa,

4 spd

(NEWSPAPUI F.~TF.RPRISE ... SSN l

64

Call 614 9B5

62 Wanted to Buy
hogs -40' 4 5 - 6 7 II
plows 1 2 bottom, c u l t t w a - 1 - - - - - - - - - -1ors 1 -2 row Ch1esel plows
6· 7 9 shank, rear blades
4 6V2 6 7 8 ft. peat hole
diggers 9-12", Vork raltea
ro1ot1llera 40 52 - 60-70",
potato• plow1, boom poles
regular &amp; HD Carry alia.
sunflower rakes. tra•ler load

' 81 Cehca Toyota GT lltt
ba ck 304 675 5 149 after

States

Greenbrter Stables now
boardtng horses 304 675

OH 61 4-446 9777 or 446- Tobacco

2484 We spectahze m K~ng
Kuner equ1p See us and
uve on 1he followtng New
Ktng Cuner toola. bruah

1979 Fo rd Courner good
cond , new 1trea 8 2.495

2413

Masaey Hams pony tractor
&amp; equtpmen1 Exc Con

L ivesto ck

304 676 62 86

bled enabled Jacoby and h1 s
partner Dr J(Jhn Fisher to
quahfy to play 10 Amsterdam 1n 1966 wh er e they won
a si lver medal for the Umted

992 2282

Farm Suppli es

Call 61 4 388 9905

~--~-----T~--------~

Ford Tractor 9N
good
cond1t1on 9950 Call 614

4658

Now Jacoby was tn control,
prov tded tha t East s three
dub~ were the K Q J He
cashed his club ace ruff ed a
cl ub c ame back to hts hand
With the diamond kang,
ruffed another club ruff ed
dummy s next to last dJa
mond wtth tus last trump
and cashed the dub 10 for
the game-gomg tn ck
Makmg four hear ts dou

8 0 Ho nda A cco rd 6 apaed
2 doof hatch back c lean car

AC $1 500 Coll446 2418

1982 2 dr Chevy Che\/ette

quackll took the kana and

Aut o s f o r Sale

71

1976 Pont1ac Aatra 4 cyl
1tandard, good cond $650

1976 Corvette 61 0 0 0
m1101. 1 969 Chevy PU good
cond Call 875 6961

ace o spades and a spade
ruff Back came a dtamond
Ja coby won wtth hts ace but
was now at the crossroads
If be played the kmg or
hearts and t wo more hearts
endmg m dummy he could
not mak e hts contrac t
Instead he played a heart to
dummy s 10 Now he played
dummy s ace of hearts and
led a heart to has kmg At
thas pomt dummy held tw o
he arts and four daamonds
East had to play from hts Q
J x x of dlamonds and K-Q-J
of clubs to come down to stx
cards It would have been
sutcadal to chuck a club so
he let a smaU dtamond go

+QJ 8S2
.KQJ 83
+9 7 ~ 2
SOUTH

Autos for Sale

1976 Ford Torma one
owner, 64,000 m1 AM FM ,

1980 Datsun 310 GX good
cond
low m1leage Call
446- 1406 attar 6PM

able vulnerablhty
West doubled the fma t
contract and the defenders

1969 Ford ton truck 1 row
tobacco setter Call 614

after

Stud Service Call 614-4467795
814 387-7220

•

71

Autos for Sale

or 446- 1416

The two no-trump
bod by East d..crlbed a
mmor two-sutter and was
jiJ.SitJfled 011 such a paucity of
high cards only by the favor -

16 a.

8)' Oswald Jacoby
aod James Jacob)

baler~

HILLCREST KENNELS

~

•Qe •

3931 after &amp;PM
call

James Jacoby

hearts

NORTH

52 Ferguson 30 tractor A 1
cond
plows culttvators
mower S2200 Call 682
6010 after 8 p m

fruit

Strawbemes

J~coby and

The Sunday

71

It all rides on one hand

2484 We apecllllze 1n K1ng
Kutter equi p See us and
save on th• followmg New
Ktng Cutter tool• brush
hogs - 40" - 4 -6 -6 - 7 It
plows 1 2 bottom, cuh•v•·
tors 1 2 row. Chteael plows
5· 7 9 shank. rear blade a
4 -5 V2-6 -7 - 8 ft peat hole
d1ggers 9 12", York rakes ,
rotottllen 40 62 60 70 ·
potatoe plows. boom poles~
regular &amp; HD Carry ails
sunflower rakes. 1ta1ler load
of barb wtre $21 roll
tobacco setter
2 axle
traders 17 ft long USED
Wheel d1sc. 3 pt d•sc. 2
small pull type 16 blades
plows-2-3 4 bottom po st
dnver ahaver, rotary hoes
NH
MF Ford mowers
Rakes 3 P MF Nl pull type
grav1ty boxes w1th wagons
1 0 ft Ch1esel plow used
tractor parts Ford Ferg
Ohver 60 77 farmall H M
other used parts for plows
balers
We buy f8t'm &amp; mdus
tnal equapment

We buy farm &amp; mdus
tnel equ1pment

u\udkfi~ Ca11actay c~eaQto~L
25 ~ocust gt~~eet, (}aQ~tpoQir ()~lo

Oswald

w..

GolllpoiiB,
OH &amp;14 -446-97n o' 446

&amp; Vegetables

61

Building Supplies

SUNDAY, MAY 27-2:00 to 4:00
LOCATED AT FAIRFIELD CHURCH ROAD

J1m 1 Farm Equipment Cen -

9280 Call614 38B-9905

!ramo 304-675-3677

56

BRIDGE

Farm Equopment

Multi Vox electnc p1ano.

typewrtters.

good cond.. U6 00 aoch
Size 1 1 wadding dreaa. good
cond $75 00 304-6763784

-

'Real~

One female treemg walker
pup 2 mos old. cheap Call

Schedule 40 pipe clothaline
post. p1pe A frame awing

thur , Ohio 45661

M~GHEE

manual

to Ht, •ao oo
2467.

Small oHtce three rooms &amp;
bathroom mmlum Reply to
Dr M V Mandettck Chlro
praetor. Box 462. McAr·

~wt'

446-4178

61

379 2145

Tobacco planta, 60 ft ready

992·2259

acres ground

3369

614-992-4464

Canaday

NEW liSTING - Two or lhree
unrt apt bwldmg on Middleport
Owneo has moved and m u~
sacnloce Lei's look at lh1s one
Only $1 6 900

Part black Chow 1 0 wks
old female all shots
wormed, 876 Call 446

for bu1ld1ng or garage Call

Logan

E Matn
POMEROY,O

NEW

E1k1mo Sp1U 8 wka otd
shots, wormed, 1 male, 2

814-992-6611

304-676 -41179

268 1166

608

Call 614-446 3844 alto' 6

614 992 -6846

Uaed grasa 1ttmmar &amp; ch11n
aawa- Pomeroy Home 8t

614 446 739B

For sale table &amp; 6 chan s
brand new Coli 446 3668

Dragonwynd Canery
Kennala AKC Chow pup
pies CFA Himalayan. Per
11an and S1ameae k1ttena

614 266 1415

For sale tomatoe stakes.
Ohio Pallet co Call 614·

Washers. dryers refngera
tors ranges Skaggs Ap
phancea Upper A 1\/er Ad
be11de Stone Crest Motel

Call 446 8033 Hupp sAp

nlol puppies Call 61 4 388
9790

For aale male Ptt Bull Call

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

Whtrlpool washer dryer patr
wh1ta Other wash ers &amp;
dryers all guaranteed Also
vegetable &amp; flower plants
Corner of Rt 141 &amp; Rt 7

Pets for Sale

female Coli 448 7230

phone 304-675-2130

osot adults 304 676-1 365
2 apartmenta, downatairs
near downtown area, unfur·
niahed, aurtable for 11ngle or

•••v moving

Uke new. 1950 Call Paul
614-753-3740

Two

Real Estate General

Porne10y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Plea&amp;ant, W. Va.

54 Mise. Merchandise

614-446 0322

RIVERS TOWER

RIVER BEND PLACE

1979 WHEELHORSE .. .... ............ 12195

12 HP Kohler. 42"' Mower

Custom drapertes , mtm
venettan blinds Roman
woven wood shades verti cal bltnd s Samples end
estimates tn your home P

na&amp;

TWIN RIVERS TOWER

Housing fer 1M Elderly, dltallled and lla,._
dlca,..... RMIIII 3D perant of Mflustecl lllcoma
Ill IIUIIIIffed tenlnll wltll an 1 - of len lllen
tl2... per .,..,. •

10 HP Kohler Motor. 42"" Mower

limestone, ~and, Oravel.
Delivered In Ma10n~ Mefp.
Gall1o or pick up 11 Richardo
&amp; Son Call 448-

B221

POINT PLEASANT, WV

1 1795

Country Oak Furniture, te
bles chatra, cupboard• dry
sinka. pte safes, lots of m•ac:
Conkles At 7
Tuppers
Plains OhiO

27, 1984

614 -446·

accepted 304-676 1076

Call614 992 6712

54 Mosc. Merchandlae

1-=~=::::::==::;===homes, house• Pt Pleasan1
state General

Call

Furnlahed efftcJency. 919
2nd . Gallipol11 t146 810 ·

Refngara
Used Furmture
tors cha1rs, dryers and
TV's 3 mt1es ou1 Bulevtlle
Rd Open 9am to 6pm Mon
thru Fn 9am to 5pm Sat

51 Household Goods

APARTMENTS. m obolo

Phone 304-675-6679

3 bedroom farm houae with
garden apo1 S260 month

USED TRACTORS

or 992

=========

$260 plua
446-3786

3 bedroom houae recently
remodeled $226 per month
plus ut1llt1e1 Oepoait re·
qutted In Middleport Call

Call 446-

1 02
:6::

cha1n 1425 to $745 Desk
1110 up to 9225 Hutches
$660 and up maple or ptn e
fmish Bun) bed complete
wtth mattreuea S 2 50 and
up to 8395
Baby bed s
•110 Mattresses or box
sprmga full or tw1n 658
f1rm. &amp;68 and $78 Queen
sets, 8195 4 dr chests.
842 6 dr chests &amp;54 Bed
framea $20 and $26 10
gun Gun cabmets $350
Gaa or electriC ranges$ 375
Baby maHresses S25 &amp;
S35. bed framea S20 525
&amp; t30, kmg frame $60
Good selection of bedroom
1u11ea, cedaJ c hest s
rockera metal cabmets
sw1vel rockers

phance &amp; Glassware

1- - - - - -- - - -2 bedroom apt1 tn M1ddle
port Water &amp; electriC pa1d
2
bedroom mobile home on
74B9 or 304-882-2787 beAt 2. Pt Pit . $200 00 Call 614-992-2381 days or

614 742 3033

pm 614 985 -3697

2 bdr '"Crown

Call 614 256

2 bedroom house 304-6764046

1970 london, 12x60 3
bedroom Call after 5 00

614-446 4782
Unfurmahad

1980 R1chardaon 1 Ox 50 2
bedroom unfurn1ahed
S 1800 or make oHer Call
Tra1ler wrth added room
large hvmg room w1th wood
burner, garage wtth work
shop large garden apace &amp;
fenced yard Extra bu1ldmg
frun treea Askmg $20 ,000

Ntce new pnvate downs1alrs apt qutet near HMC.
1 adult only No petl. ref
req Drapaa, a1ove, refng
Furntshed t200 mo Call

Call 446-B658

446 0008

73 Manor 14x70 2 bdr hke
new S7 900 69 Detro1ter

2 bdr 1ra1ler fully furntahed
good locatton, aec dep req

pc dmettes
from
lamps
from S28
to

999 to 436 7 pc S189
and up Wood table woth " '

9 7 acre mint farm 12•60
mobtle home, 5 outbu1ld·
mgs, new houae started
Mus1 aell
266 6620

41

1979 3 bdr mob1le home on
1
h acre lo1 well shaded
Must sell both together Call

5863

New 3 be droom ho use 34
JJ c r es Glenwood ar e a
665 0 00 or be st offer 304

dock

1966 121160 mobile home
unfurmshed S3 900 Call

1971 ltberty 12x60 remo
deled mstde wtth wood
burner eskmg 84 500 Call

1 21 1 Mam 6 room br~ c k
l!rP.pl!lce
bas ement
new
fur nace l arge yard many
e xt r a!&gt;
40 s
304 675

and

4 acraa for aale. off Kerr
Harnaburg Rd, on Vtnev Rd

House an d 5 3 acres of land
rn As ht o n W Va 304 675
3526 after 5 00

4656

RAMP

House &amp; 3 lots for sale
S1 0 000 m Hartford, W
Va Call 614 882 2831

304 882 2831

Co untry re tre at 9 room
hom e 1/~ acre rural water
also 2 lot s 4 ~c r es 6 14 446

BOAT

electric dryers
auto
washen, gas 8t electnc
rangaa refrtgerators. TV
aeta

apece Call 5 8 evemnga
304 -675 -6448 Terma

3-5 acre homas1tea near Rt
36 at Rodney 3 m1 from
Holzer Hoapital Call 446 ·

32

Household Goods

TV&amp;. ApPhancet, 627 Thtrd
Ave • Golllpollo. 814 448
1 699 Sp1n washers gas &amp;

$696 00 304-675 4424

1 1 0 Maple Place Pomeroy
2 bedrooms, famtly room
large lot Must sell to se1tle
es1ate Pnced 6 18 500 no
reasonable offer reJected
Call collect 1 614-891
0442 Vtrgtnta Crew

1979 Oakbrook 14x60, 2
bedroom. gas heat &amp; ftre
place wtth many extras Call
367 0658 or 446 2929

Ho use 3 lo ts 5 10 000 00

61

Coli 614 949 2641

Call 446

3 blh ran c h s t yle hom e on
'la nd ers Htll dm mg room
f.rtr.he n ba th a tt ac hed gar
aye AC yas hea t S47 500
.c uy sc hools Call 4 46 2151

Houaa traiiiH' 8•40. 2 bed ·
room. 8K31 elumnium eyt~n ­
tng Extre me•. *2500 t;ell

6 rooms , basement , double
garage 1 &amp; one thlfd acre
lot
Rose Htll Pomeroy

$63 900
5420

n~:;

Men:handise

614-992-3640

Owner transferred must sell
beauttful 3 bedrm bm:k
home F~replace deck
wood s pnvacy sunshine

Real Eslale
31

KIT "N' CARLYLE ,•

32 Mobile Homes

May 27, 1984

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

for Sale

THOM PSO N BOOKKEEP

approved

Homes for Sale

Ohio

'es1d e n~a i

I 57 ACRES -

~4 56

7 ROOM S

M1ce home Cenlral arr rural water svsl em f;u12e lamtly room

26 x22

Garage stora ge bu rld1ng storm wrndow\ and door~ Ntce

home See tl no\11

#570

,((ClASSiflm ADS sure to gat mauna))

LARGE ACRE - APPRO! 190 ICRES JUST tJF RT 35 NEAR I()LlER
HOSPITAL MT ZION ROAD UNLIMITED POTENTIAl JUST USTED

!••

J

�72

74 ·

TNcka for Sale

Motorcycles

M Ford 130 d~mp tNck. 1979 Hondo XR 500. good
runt goqd, dYmp In excellent cond .. *900, new motorcy·

, ... eo..

19 ft . Flborfo•m 81 185.

tlnce new, h .. been ttoNd
In v•r•ge, exc . cond .,

Va111 &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 J - CJ-5. I cyl. , 3
epd.. to1ded with extras.
13,000. Coli 441-0516.
1978 Chevy van. 6 cyl. .
euto., AM-FM tape, $3,496 .
John' a Auto Sales. Bulaville
Rd. Gallipolis. Oh 446 -

4782.

ace .. all the extras. ex cond

$2,250. 992-2381 o• 992 2509 .

For sale, 1975 Harley David son SuperGiide . New paint ,
low mileage. good condi tion . Call 614 -992 · 6234
1978 Kawasaki KZ 750 with
windshield , lots of extras,
S1 095 See or call Gary F

Hv•ell. 614 -992 -5388 .
1973 Jeep CJ5, 8996 .00
Will take trade. Phone 304-

Siders

Equipment .

t 976 Dodge Van for sale or
trade. fully carpeted. bucket
eeata. 41 . 000 miles ,

UOO.OO o• best off... ·304 176-4090.
1981 Sabaru Gl Brat. 4
whNI drive am-fm, a -c,

30.000 miles e5.200 . 304·
895-3681 .

1984 Honda XR 100 dtrt
bike, ridden 4 times rn yard

Call614 -985 -4119
1974 Honda 750 , full
dressed . 14.000 miles,

clean, &amp;1 .000 00 . 304
675-6622 or 675-7733 .
1979 Yamaha 1100, full
dress. stereo. exc . cond .
large amount of tire wood.

cheep 304-675 -4338.

79
UniCtambltl thue bJt ~0111-totiCO-,tG'Jorm

4~~111;aB&lt;oiiHH;on;;;dho;i;;;;i;;;;,ft;;-ulii;lv

1977 Honda Goldwing
GL 1000. full dressed. new

875 - 7421

Boats and
Mote~ra for Sale

cit t&lt;tllor, '280. Coli 4484094.

1811 Chivy 4x4, 301 VI.
tpd, heovy l&gt;llton, duet 111 dronod , groot ohopo ,
tonko, • heovy duty hitch, •4 . 700. Call 114-388 A· 1 ohtpe. •a7oo firm. Coli 9905.
114-742-2844.
1 - - -- - - - - -

73

76

470 Mercrul11r motor, open
bow. l'tllniHI ttHI pro·

ollopo, . , ,100. Coli 81 4·

Ohio-Poilit

27, 1984'

Times-Sentinel

rour O&lt;Ulrwy -

·

I LAWRB

rJ

pollor. boat hoo only 21 hr.

u .ooo.

1

11"1 ft. Crtoo..ft lnboord,
Outboord tr811or. U.400.
Cotll14-211-8472.

I

a

79

Coli 114-317·
77&amp;0 or 014-317-0185.

1871 18 ft. oomp" Wtldor·
nooo troller. fully oolf·
oontolnecl, etotpl I, otrofrH
awning, tlntum whetlt,
oxc. oon. UIOO. Colll14·
112-8219.
19711 F•onklln 27 ft. lth

I I

15 h . fiberglall Star Crah
windshield 65 HP Mercury .
Bilge pump lights. horn
trailer. excellent $1 .000 .

BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES S. SERVICE. Open
dally 9 to 6:30, Set. 9 to 4.

I

·-·· --~ fk

'DAHLER±

Coli 614-256 · 1909.

446 -3637

I GLAARNt
I

KJ

Correct Craft &amp; Ski Su preme , family ski boats.
New &amp; used, Parkersburg,

WV 304 -422 -8433 or 304·
422 -2367

Prmt answer here:

Yesteraays

I Answer
Jumbles

75

OK XI I I I J

POKED DANDY NOBODY BIGAMY
What business was at the dynamtte

1979 Sunkist 19ft. 464 cu.
inch Chevy mboard motor.
Jet drive. Berkley Pump,
tandem trai ler . exc. cond.

304-675 -5919 .

1961 Hydroclyne motor
boat, 16ft. '78 trailer. 80 hp
Mercury motor SBOO. 304 -

576 -2231 .

75

rooft. 30

yeera

exptrltnae, :

Wiseman Reai ·Estate Agency_.. .

PAINTING- lnterlo• ond OX· ~
teno•. plumbing, roofing, some remodeling. 20 yn. ·
axp. Cill 814-388-96112. "

Boats and
Motors for Sale

IN REAL ESTATE
SALES IN GALLIA CO.
Fetty Tree Trimming. stump removal. Call 304-676- -

Home
CA,..,PER SALES &amp; SER - B1
VICE. U.S. Rt . 50, Coolville,
Improvements
Oh 614-667-3386 .

22 ft. self contained RV
tandem axles. sleep5 6.
Pontiac to tow, complete
reese hitch. transmission
cooler. Call 446 -0614 .

1331 .

STUCCO and PlASTERING
- Commercial and residential. free estimates. Call
614-266 -1182.

RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and :
Motorola . Quazar, and
house calls. Call 304 -576- 2398 or 614 - 446 -2454 .

WE NEED LISTINGS BADLYn''""'~•v
HOME AND 10 ACRES - Th1s • a 5 year ~d. 3 be!hoom
OOme that has a large kitchen. full basement lam1ly room.

-======~=:::;::=-!~~====;:=====:..:

woodbur01ng furnace, new 181(24 earage and !lorage

building. The 10 acres Includes a new 38x50 bam and some

Real Estate General

woods. Owller.l anxws to se{l.

condition, salo cheap . 14ft.
fibe•glaas canoe $125.
Heavy duty Reese hitch . Call

614 -388 -8437.
16' 1972 Glastron motor
boaJ. trailer incl. for $1200.

Call alta• 7:00. 304-676 5106 .

20 ft. Self contained, A - 1
condition. $1660 . Call 304882-2466 anytime

You'll fall 1n love wrth evef)1f1mg about thiS home
Locat10n-wittun wa~ng distance of town Ner~1borhood ·
-Quiet and secluded deadend street Vtew - Overlooks ctty '
C()fistruction- 20 vr. old brick rarch o! too quafltv.
DecoL- Receolly remodeled in very l."od ~sste. hardwood
floofs. trick fireploce. beautiful thrck ca rpet, etc. Stze-3
8Rs, 2 baths, long hvtng room and dtmng area eat ·tn ktlchen.
beautful lam ~y room, Extras-Front and bac k porch
(covered). 2 car garage. aa cond and p!li.'it~ e owner
ftnirlcmg. Oonlmtss lookmg before rt sells

68.000 milea. new clutch.

81,160 . 00 . 304 - 675 7669 .

74

TR£E SHADED lAWN - Wnh large k&gt;t area uarage, gow
garden area, trailer space rental. Alsu that e.dra space you
always wanted m a OOme 3 BR and bath upstairs, 1 BR. 1h

446-6610

Motorcycles

bath,. l1v1ng room. kitchen, drn1ng and family

1980 Harley Davidson wide
glide. Can be 1een at Betz
Honda

760 Hondo $976. Call 614246-9239.

II

OLDER HOME IN V(RY GOOD CONDITION - 6 rooms Ln all
~us partial basement Nice lot with shade. garden area ~us
storage building. Th1s IS ooe you neW to viSit to apprectate.
Located

1n

Rio Grande 1ust off campus.

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

Put ~utnber 1 to work for you:

Real Estate Ge11eral

FOR SALE

(I) HOOSE IN CHESJ[R:
Tine aaes with 1 nicely
conslnlt1ld concrete blod
homll 26130, 3 bedrooms,
one blth, 12xl5 IM"
1110111 and 24124 family

BARGAIN'!! - Owners would like a QUick•sale on thiS
11h story home. Kitchen complete wilh range,
refngerator. dLShwsoor, lam1ly room Of formal dinintr. 3
bedrooms, bath, utility. Attached garage. Storage
bUIIdmg N1ce lawn Only $24,500.

Partially tarpllld,
fuel oil fumlce with facilities lor woodbumer. 12xl5
block slllflll! buildq,
20x30 blocll .... ~
off AI. 248, country setti"y, mile east of Chester,

EDGE OF TOWN -Neat and dean descnbes th~ 2 or
3 bedroom hom• situated on nice comer lot Living
room, krtchen w~h range, lull basemen~ garage plus
carport Priced 1n the 30s

1'0011.

Ohio.
(2) TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE:
Down·
stairs equipped with
kitchen, livin&amp; room.
dini111 room and den:
upstairs has two bed·
rooms and one bath:
house also has basement Lot size approx.
, 4fx308'. Needs work.
If interested contact
The Home National Bank
in R~eine. 949-2210.

NEW LISTING - CAPE COD STYLING - 2 story
home w~h 3 bedrooms. 1'h baths. liv1ng room w~h
fireplace. lormal dimng room, krtchen plus sunny
breakfast room. family room in full basemen~ I car
garage. storage b!LLidin~ Th1s home o 10 excellent
coodition

ST~~~

DEENIE DRIVE - Take a
rnai11rtaiiied
bi-lev~ . Can be 3 or 4 bedrooms, Ronda room, 3 baths,
family room. den, krtchen W11h range, dishwasher.
disposal, fireplace 2 car garage Heat pump, ce ntral
air. Lawn landsca!X'd. A ~t of home for the money.

39 ACRfS WITH Moii!ERN

garage and workshop. land 5 mostly mce
approx. 5 acres bllabte Large tobacro base. Owner
needs to sell and wLII listen to any reasonable offer
Perry Township.
#512

#594

VACANT LAND - Approx. 52 acn!S Mainly pasture,
woods. scme crop area, sm~l tobacco base Good
wildlife rover Some limber Walnut TownshLp. Pnced at
$27,1XXJ.

#581
LITS IIIOVE AND BUILD - Get your house plans
together because here • I 0 acres. more 01 less.
partially deared. partiajly wooded, wamng lor your new
horre Spnng water. blacktop road.

#564
OWNER HAS REDUC£D THIS SPRING VAllEY home
and would listen lo any reasonable offer 3 bedroom
to-level. 2 baths, large bulff·ln krtchen. famLiy room w~ h
fireplace, 2 car garage f1nancmg ava1lable. Pnced at

$59,900

#573

218 IICRES - free Gas. II

RISING -

BUY NDtll

FREE PARKING

- Frame and brick 3 bedroom
.
Space saver kitchen and dimng area. living room. large
family room, bath. full basement 2 car garage. All
srtuated on large lawn. Addison Township

#575

NEW LISTING -BE YOUR OWN BOSS - Look•nglor
a good small town bu~ness' ThLS gas stabon and
garage has ~ all. Already stocked and ready to~ Call
today lor all the details

#596

$18.500 IS THE ASKING PRICE of thLS 5 bedroom
older frame horre. Partial baserrent S•tuated on I •;
acres. 30'x40' bam Cellar. Make an appomtment
today.
#530

NEW LISTING - BEAUTIFUL VICTORIAN in a small
town. Exc~lent condition. 4 bedrooms, HI baths,
formal dinin&amp; nice kitchen. basement. garage. Nice
lawn with large shade tree. Garden Owner anxious to
sell.

#595

#561

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE surrounds thiS 3 bedroom
mobtle home klcated on I acre, more or les&amp; Oug wei,
two outbu~dings, small pond, frurt trees, strawberries,
grai&gt;' arlin. l'llssible owner financing
ONLY $16.000! - Can you believe you can still
purchase a mce home lor thiS price' 2bedrooms, living
room, formal d1m n~ bath, krtchen. enclosed fronl
porch Basement Storage bu1ldin' Call for an
appomtmenl

#496

PERRY TOWNSHIP - 140 acres of good tarm land.
Approx 60 acres tillable. rest pasture and woods. 2
bedroom older hoine. Large barn. Garage. Tobacco
base. 2 gas wells I producbve and free gas to home.
Located Cora MLII Road

#557
7 ACRES- Close to RKJ Grande. Build to sud yourself
Rural water ava•lable. Road frontage St Rt 325. No
LeslrLCbons. $10.500

#541
A UTTLI SOMETHING EXTRA LS loond in th•
comfortable bnck ranch. 3 bedrooms, sunken lio.ing
room. lormal dinin~ 21; baths, lamiy room w*h
fireplace. 2 car garage, Intercom, central air. Close to
Rt 35 shopiJing area. Can be purchased with extra loL

#497

•

COMMERCIAL BUILDING •n ~nton. has 2 apts. w1lh polential for •
rentrng 3 unrts. Pnce reduced to $30,000.00.
OON1 OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN m Eurekarl 2 bed rm. homewrth :
2 baths and bts ol room tor expan~on Located lUSt off Rt. 7. near
dam . Pnce $22.000.00.

1
I

A HANDY. DANOY LOCATION along Gartlfld Ave Home can be •
used lor 3 or 4 bedrms. and within walking distance lrom most all •
serv•ces On~ $30,000 00
•

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THIS HOME NEEDS A UTILE 'TLC.'', however, the locahon is so •
good w1ll olfset any expenditures. A !X'rtecl home lor someone •
wanMg lo live •n a mce neghborhood and close lo serv1ces and
you can buy rt today lor $42,500.00.
•

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PRICE REDUCED - 4 bedroom home. A well buitt
modem horre. Located Route 7 above Cheshire. f ull
baserrent, large kitchen, large ~eas1ng living room. I '&gt;I
baths, attached garage. Large well landscaped lot
,,. Reduced pnce $41,200.
#571

•

2.m·~OR Ybed"HDERA L" BRdiCK HOME apbprfiox 2 m•les from City •
·~
rms., orma 1 •m ng rm., 2 w. . replaces with "Honey
Bee" ovens. Lg. lamLiy or TV rm , srtuated on approx 1acre of land •
buy, or renl"
· •

1

3

1

INVEST PROPERTY - L•ve •n one Side ol thiS double and rent the •
other. localed on Gall/a St. GallipoliS. Buy rt all lor only $23.000.00. •
A FINE DUTCH COLONIAL HOME srtuated 1n Gallipolis across from •
new court I'll use
bedrms, formal dmmg rm .. 21ull baths. part •
ilmshed basement I w.b fireplace. parki ng &amp; garage 1n rear.
Pnced Ln 80's.
•

n

SITUATED NEAR RADIO STATION - 3 Bed rm home. family rm ..
attached garage, approx. 2acres very pnvate, oowever, less than 1
m1.le from crty limrts Also, a beaublul '"ground sw1mmmg pool
Pnced 1n 50's
COMMERCIAL BUILDING ALONG 2NO AVENUE- 7,500 SQuare
feet in building, ~tuated on a lot with 22.500 sq leeL Plenty ol
parking area.
lARGE STRUCTURE ALONG 4th AVE. w1th1n "ght of Wash1n1rton
School, WhiCh can be ubliZed for ~ ngte lamily or 3 apartments .
Pnce $30,1100.
LOCATED ONLY I BLOCK from sc hool and Situated along a tree
lined street. ThiS story home ~ presently arranged tor 2
apartments, however, can be converted back to single lamily
resJdenre. N•ce lot Pnced m the m1d 50'&amp;

z.

a

PRICE REDUCED on this i story Federal brick home locab.d along
I""' .Vine St, Gall polLS 3 bedrooms, 2~ baths, cent air, formal dining
room. library, family rm .. decks and inany more ~111embes. CaH
•
• ·today lor an appomtment
•

RE~ODELID 2-BEDRM. HOME along 4th Ave. A compact home

Mth many new feature&amp; Ideal beginner or retirement home. Only
$21,500.00.
TAKE NOTICE - This 3 bedroom Ira me horre has a lot
to offer lor $28,000. L1~ng room. large krtchen. bath.
good carpel natural gas heat Unattached garage.
Large lawn Home LS 1n excel ~nt condition. Located in
city.

#569

CITV LOCATION - A gOOd buy. A good l&gt;der home

wrth 3 bedrooms.

l1vmg room, dmmg room . k1tchen ,

bath, carpel. Vinyl SLdin&amp; nat. gas, utility area. garage
and spotless clean Pnced al $25.500

#558

UNIQUE - DISTINCTIVE' - 3 bedroom ra nch.
Consider one of Gallia County's very best Kitchen.
breaklast area, lamily room. liv10g room, master
bedroom has large walkin doset-dr=ng room. 3 ~
baths, shower stall, diVided baserrent 9 acre estate .
Must see. Green Township.

#544

NEW HOME PWS ACREAGE- Approximat~y I year
lid brick and frame bt-leY~. 3bedrooms, 2baths, 2car
garage. Can be purchased wrth 4 acres or 35 acn!S.
27x36 metal buildiO&amp; Wrthin 9 miles ol town. Take a
look todaY'
#502

.011184 Cot&gt;tury 21Reol Eltete Corpol'llion astru,...forllle NAF. ~and ~ -tL odemarl&lt;s oiCenluL')21 Real I:SteteCorporalllm . Prln/Ald ir l'.S. A. Equal Housing OpportunLivtil
EACH OfflCE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND !IPBIIATI!D.

I
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#529

RANCH STYLI -lmr.Ledl3te possessi0/1. 3 bedroom,
lamily room, li~ng room, ~rge eat-in kitchen Large
patio, fireplace, chain hnk lence. House bui~ in 1973.
~ good condition. located off St Rt 35. Owner
leaving area. Must sel.

•

3 BEDRM . HOME - Ranch style. I~ carport. adapted for
woodburner, fenced yard and m-grou nd swtmmmg pool. Price •
reduced lo $42,00000.

•
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•

#SW

ACTION NEEDED NOW on tho ranch style home. 3
bedrooms. living room. large kltcht!O, I ~ acre lawn
Country atmosphere. Pnced at $21.500

•

•

#546

VERY TASTEFUL best describes thLS 3 bedroom ranch
style home. N1ce k~cllen, bath. hvmg room. utility,
attached garage Natural gas heal central air.
Shrubbery and cham hnk lence. One you must see to
appre&lt;~te . $49,900.

APPROX. 2 1/3 ACRES wrthm c1ty lim1ts.zones commercial, along
St Rt 7. Pr~ce reduced Ia $25,000.00.

•
•

COUNTRY CHARMER - Is the ooly way to describe
th• immaculate 3 bedroom raoch. Family room.
fireplace, 2 car garage. In-ground 16'x3Z pOO . Bam 3
acres of land tenced w~h PICnic area next to Raccoon
Creek. City Schools. Call today to look at th• fine horre.
Reduced'

POIIEIIO\' - lam~y horre
near Kroger's Central hea( 2
baths and tg, kt Asking
$34,500. Offer needed.

lllf11S¥1Uf - 6 rm. frame,
central heat, bath and view d
nver.
IIIT£R£ST RATES All£

OON1 HAVE IIIUCH EXTRA MONffi - Nobody
seems to these days. Thafs whv th1s older 2 or 3
bedroom home o an attractive buy. Remodeled
Aluminum siding Can be purchased With ooe acre or
28 acres. Raccoon Towns hip. Home and approx. I
acre. $27.500.

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11 ACRES, approx. I mile trom c1ty brrits, city water, fronts on
Ne1ghborhood Rd . Buy now tor $20,000.00.
151 ACRE FARM w1lh nice hous. and eqULpment shed.
$86,()()() 00.

..

~

ADDISON: Near P.O. 3 bed room house and 3/ols I lot w1th mobile
home hookup. lg.metal bldg. w1th lwo ca r garage. Fenced yard
$29.1100.
APPROX. 2 ACRES Of LAND wilhm the c1ty, has beaulllul 3
bedrm. br&lt;k home. P1cturesque v1ew of the Oh1o Valley 3 w.b.
fireplaces and outdoor fi replace . gnll. ~1ep-down ~~ ng rm
decorated w1th solid cherry paneling and tr.m . Pegged oak floo~'
L1brary ••lh ad101ning solan um 2 ~ baths Pnvate offiCe off master
bedrm. Call Ken Morgan tor addLtlonal • nlo rmat~n

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NEW LISTING: 15 acres olland near H&lt;&gt;zer Hosptal, S pringfi~d
Twp. Topo: level to rolling. 9eautlful view. Developers welcome.

Upholstery

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo ·

GET

your

0&lt;

carpet

1163 Sec . Av e.. Gallipolis .
614-446 - 7833 or 614 ·446 ·

1833.

Business
Servict&gt;s

Water wells, drilled &amp; serviced . Free estimate s. Call

614-992-6006 o•614 -742 3147.

rlenced roofing , including
hot tar application, carpen ter , electrician, m1aon. Call

304 -875 -2088
4660.

TAl STATii

UPHOLSTERY SHOP

AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO .

RUSS

176 ·

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

lennox Heatmg &amp; A11 Condr
lionmg All T~pes ln sulal1on.
Electrical Wi nng.

SHIP

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

Call 446 -85 I 5

Peaquale Electric Co . all
phases of elec1ric work. all
work guaranteed . Aerial
truck rental 614 - 446 -

STEAMER . Water removal ,
furniture cleaning , free esti-

mates. 304-676 -2296.

or 446-0445

SHEET META L WORK
We make cust om du ct
work. We Repau fu rna ces and Heat Pump s
GALLI A
REFRIGER AliON CO.
614-446-4066

4066.

Water wells commercial and
domestic, test holes, pump
sales and service . 304 -895 -

SEWING Machine repair s,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissor s. Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy. 614 · 992 -2284 .

B5

,~'~ rMPROVE f&gt;9ENTS"

General Hauling

N ee d somet hing hauled
away or something moved ?
We'll do it . Call 614 -256 ·
6261 afler 5 :30.

f::

J

Bill 's

Nu-Pnme repta ceme n1
windows
Storm wmdows a. doo rs
Alumtnum &amp; 111n yt
siding
How met Pat1o Cov er s
Haw m et screen room~
Mobtle hom e awnmgs
Aluminum utrlrt y
bu ildings
691 Miller Dnv t•

James Boys Water Service .
Also pools filled . Call 614 -

256 1141 or 61 4-446 ·

I B2 &amp;Plumbing
Heati11g
I
'S PLUMBING
', R,I~ 1 CARTER
AND HEATING
.I
614 ·446 -3888
I 614 -446-4477
I JIM'S PLUMBING HEAT ·
I
I
I 675-5420 .
I
I B3 Excavating
I
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tic

1175 or 614 -446 -7911 .

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lanier. 304 -675 ·

7397 .

:J

446 -26&lt;12

Free

Esftm .::~tes

-~~ _ SOLUTION

&amp;
lNG . Rt . 1 . Box 355 . Galli polis . Call 614 -367·0576

AffiNTION INVESTORS

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, 211 Stx1h St .,
Point Pleasant, W . Va 304 Licensed and
insured .

overloo~1ne the crty pa~ ~tnd lhe rtver Two 2 bedroom
apartmeoti and one I bedroom. Total rent could reach
$10.001 per year

Good -1 Excavating, base·
ments . footers . dri11eways ,
septic tanks. landscaping
Call anytime 614 - 446 4537, James L Davison , Jr .
owner.

4 BEDROOM HOME WITH RIVER FRONTAGE
II roo're mterested rn qual1ty r•mstruchon, a wcarm
comfortable 4 l):!droom home Wtlh lots ol prtvacyon a large lot
Wllh nver frontage al t11e edge ol town. you must see thts one

..

:-1
I

CHARMING NEW liSTING - located •

-I

:J

::JI

Dozer W o rk free estima te
Call anytime , 446 -8038 .

~~
"""'
~~ II
CLiy

ILmil&gt;

II '1111

10 ill

e~cellenl ne~ghOOrhood. Soaoou!l hom: tllffall bul layout
PHIYtdes cozmess Extra mce d1mng room with hardwood
floors and tx'rck fireplace, large famtlr room wrth anott1er
attrac~v e hreplace (lnOOor BBQ), Hv111g room has an
ootstandrng vtew. 4 BRs. 2 battrs, screened tn paho and mc.e
kLt Won'llasl ~ng al $61,501l

PRIVATE LOCAIION

SUNDAY PUZZLER

AttraCh\1€ 3 be droom bt·levet located 8 mtl es fmm town
Includes 18x26 famrly room w1th wood bumer and bar. 2
hillhs. 7 car garage. l2x l 2 deck. 12x l 6 patro. plus P~ aCJe

· · · '"· ·

ya~ d

$49.900

J

Ill
ACROSS

OWNER MO'IING 10 COWMBUS

1 M ore sec ure
6 Pe eled
1 1 M ake ready
18 Levels
19 M use of

Check the leatures ot thts ootstandmg 2 story coiootal Has
been completely remodeled. New metal srdtng, new roof. ne w
modern basement. completely new kitchen w1th nejjrly 30 It
ol catlnets, 2 woOO burners plus lorced a11 furnace. 3 bt~
bedrooms. 2 full bath!&gt;. lor mal entrance. formal dtnrng, patiO
door leading to a huge new 5Unde&lt;:k l~ t ed near R10 and
8LJCkeve Hrlls on 21h acre flat lol Owner wants tl sold -

poetry
20 To ld
2 1 Concurred

Pnced at $72.000.

~I

23 Stalk
24 Confederat e
general
26 Locallon
27 Hypotheti ca l
terce

-I

~~:I

:I-·

OHerd at $54,500.
MltSI see

INDESCRIBABlE
to apprectate the many ootstand1nR

t eatur ~

~·
=•
:I
~·

8% ASSUMA8tE WAN

$52.000 oov s thiSouhita00111g OOrne. Attracltvet 2 si~JY w~ h 3
bfdrooms Jl~ bath s, mce tam11', room l'l'lth ~~joo:Jburnet ,
formal d1nrng, l car ga1 a ~e excrltent netghOOt'hOOO crty
water. sewer and sctroJs. concrete streets Per1ed placP to
rat:if' chtldren

Alll!ACIIVE liSTING IN JAY DRIVE
IJery roomy ranch style lllme with 3 BRs. 11-11 bath. mceeat·m
krtchen. llv111g room and fam1ly room. ~c:e for woOOburner, 2
car garage, alummum Siding Mth redwro:t froot Very

anractLve JIL'LCf- $44.900. Buyers Pr&lt;ledioo

~an.

arr woodbumer and elednc furnace heat efficiently New
de&lt;:~ .

9% •t.resl. Asong $37,900.

PART nME FARIIIN GOOD STATE OF PROOUCIIOII - 68
A Mi l "all. 40 A Mi l ol cro(iand. b~ance'" pasture il1&lt;l

located on a ChOice lot tn Spnng Valley lh1s bnck homt' has
had melent care and m a tnlen~n ce Featur~ mclude 31arge
BRs, 21'? baths, large l1vmg room wrth fireplace. dtmng room
and den Super Mchen txJasti new cabtnets and rountertops.
double 011en and 00 111·10 BBQ Stdtng OOors otl den open onlo
coveral patro and recreatun court. Hardwood floors
(carpeted) and beautiful trim. Buyers Protection Plan

CLASSIC 2 STOIIY,

home. 3 5 iLC near Day

$95.000

Sc~ .

Remodeled kitchen. large ltvrng room wtth fireplace, 2
baths, and stcrage area 13 illdtt1onal acre; also ava tlable
Consider trade lor smaller ho'me rr moDie homP. and lot

Pnced al $57.900

area around OOme and bam. 5 rm. t-ome wrth ba1h, forced air

lurnace. 3 Bl!. 2 Iiams. l;1lOd view of IJO)let1j 1rom home.
4001' m/ 1ol road trootlge wilh waler ine (lty schools
15 ACRES lORE LESS OF LAND - lndudmg nLLX/em 5 BR
home 1.-ge bam. part time larm1ng operation. Beautilul home
""" Land for oommeraal use. ~n see aU LX part deperldmg
oo buyer need&gt; /oJI oo Rt. 160, I mie ~ ot HOOer Hosptal

WE FOUNO PARADISE
If you CJ110~ part ttme tofmn&amp; woodworking, hun~n~ ftshmg,
trapp1ng or anv outdoor acttvrtle5 STOP what you are OO tng
11r1d C.JI us Reheat deluxe oHen all thrs and much more.
custom bwlt brtck horTI€ wrth HW floors. beillJt1!ullr~tng room
wtlh c ~thed ra l ce111ng, cozy ~repl;! ce and lilrgf' deck
QIJeric»kJng 1? mt. of Raccoon Creek and OOttom land
COMPlETELY eQ Uipped woo:lwocKtng siK(J, larm shecl.
ammal a11d hay ham (block and he.:wy bmbff oonstruchon) .
and 81 &amp;:res of gocd farm land Gdden oppor1unrty to relax
and ro~y hie

LARGE MODERN COUNTRY HOME

Call us for more rnklfmatlon.

WAN

Own&amp;' transferred

and wants a last sale. Qualrtv
btnlt Mme in Spring Valley 1ndOOes 3 BRs. I I? baths, dtmn g
room and living room Also full ba sement and Buye ~
Pnm:tiOn Pl.11. New gas furnace and roof. 1 car carport

NEW UmNG- State Rt 58&amp; 4 niles .est of ciy. 3 BR. I ~
bath. livi"'!llld fami'L:,m with firOIIIace.Welliept nice lar&amp;e
yartl. Green school · ot $47,500.

[lfOVIded

Super ""ghiDrtxlod Pri&lt;e lor quLCk sale at $50.900.
QUIET LOCAnON IN COUNTRY
OIL~ 12 miles trom CLty just elf ~acl&lt;top road Illy school
svsrem. 55 A more LX tess in al, wLih /rootage"" lxlth •des ot
road. Good tences, moonlain type rocky tdtom stream runs
year &lt;Wnd. 8 A. of cmp, 20 A. paslure Balance mwoods witiL
m111y JIO(I saw Ogs and wowing trees- fine hunting and
wood sujiPY. ~tv 6 room home.luma&lt;e. wood stoYe ~ep
Y\ing kitchen. 44'x/2' garage, shop and bam. ToballXl base.

...
.....m&amp;
Jltl~~=-m.-=

CALL OR
446-3643 EVE..r.r~~alratli.
Auoc. 441--4240
linN(.·-·
Auoc. 441--3796

5,200 sq It of total peace and qwet Srts on a 40 acre tract
Thts home leatures an 11-ground SWimmmg pool, thermopalle
wtnlilws. burl1 'fl barbeQue fit. 2 woOOburnrng fireplaces. 4
llefY large bedrooms, a spaetous but~ tn k~ c hen, large covered
porch, atlractrve ~ght h tures. sltdmg IIi~ dtxn. some

hardwood l'ool&gt;. all closets are cedar ILned. 3 balhs and
oversaed 2 car garage. Thrs rs a place YA'Iere you can have al
ktnds ol activibes, huntmg, swtmmtng, dtrt bike ndtng,
horseback ndrng, gardenmg kids could ra1se a beef It's also
bUJ~ of quality matenats and craftsmanship Kyget ()eek
sctlocr.. 8 miles tram city. Owners movtng rut of state

20 ACRES 11/ l with l!oocllhree Bl! home, ~g !Jirage stLXage
~ woods, ~ open pasture land. road

l*lt. larm pond,

frontage lor additional OOusing Very desira~e rural locationto

ive. Priced al 155.600.

IN GALLIA COUNTY

WISEMAN

A

HOU

WORD

------·--·-- -- -·---; -

-- - -·

82 Stitch

64 Lttted wilh
lever

129 Scollish
cakes
131 Stnp ol
cl ol h

132 K1!1
133 Worm
134 Wooden

Main1e ~

nance
92 Pat&lt;l nottces
93 S!rrp ol
leather

95 Slet!ping
quarters

colloq

tremen s

a!Jbr .
140 Cry Ol
Baccha nals

!

J ., .r l '

' 1

0:

·•rr :•

1.. •\

f

!H t.. 1 •I

bmdm a

23 Cha1r
25 01n c
27 Son of

Jb

non
28 Dtsa c;r ••r
m en I

,q

lt(&gt; fn• d

00 Wo •1r ,,
' II ,' t rTl!'&lt;

31 Hair
33 W nl ~ on
J5 lmtat c
3G Cl ass rf y

14 3 Decl ared

l()f,

111.

l'r rJr r ,
I· •· J1 •

con cern
1 ' '

1"( 1

area
44

'l

l

D• a l ect ~

&lt;l7 Aevea '

,. , p.

' I '

measure

99 Hebrew

149 Accede s

50 Countr v q1

·•

112 lnd1gc nt

101 Drawtng

&lt;13 Algo nqu1an

room

tnd1an
&lt;1 5 Frock
&lt;16 Negattve
47 Badger
48 Cav 1l
49 Caravansary

103 One 's
relatt ves ,

56 Compltcalion

60 !n dlcatron
61 Aying
mammal
62 Bog aown
64 Sarnt abbr

couec ttve ly
104 Twisted
105 An ctent
c harr ot
108 Legal
matter
1 10 PretentiOu s
homes
11 2 Ahgh!
113 Hi gh
moun tarn

114 Coroner ·
Dbbr
115 God or love
117 Mon ster

119 Misplaced
119 Edges

120 Basebal l

65 Frenc h

dlv

artt cle
66 Former

121 Fath er s
123 Untt of

Broadway

play

67 Measuring
devt ce

Japanese
currency
124 Poses for

portratt

15n Aemarn l3d

erect
t51 Female
horses
DOW N
1 Contmuer1

story

si

lndulgr' I•, •
I·

R o dent ~,

56 Drows·,~9 Fore•gl •(•r•,

'",

·' " '' '

·..v

1.'t

61 To ha ppPn

1. II ~\'

63 Shake s

I Ill

4 Goal
5 Rupees
abbr

66

7 War god
6 Male shee p
9 Latrn con IUnctr on
10 Unit ol
curr ency

11 Ptece ot real
estate
12 Symbol lor
rhentum

13 'lohengnn"
nerotne

14 Buckets
15 Be present
16 Female ruM

"

60 rulllellle

2 Avord
3 Tolls

6 Part Of
fiOWOI

, .• .

• I ~' • , ' I ,

€J;C~~~

55

o'

{

Europe
tl4

,.

I Lf I
' A ··, .1 pI

Cloth

le!!er

~- ' •. ' '

, •'I '• ' " '

48 Heeled rl v• ·r

&lt;1 I MaiOf!ly

1o •

I

r1 c ie.~ 1 · I' ,·{
l',·,u• 1· •1 1,

49 Medttcr
ranean
vessel

Traps

{I

I T):_ :.

M rm1! e~t s

39 L1m b
41 Posl

Ri ~er

rslands

&lt;' "•'

r .. . · 1

141 Kn ock

142

•q

'lH

lo1J f

37

,11 1:-o

vrn t 1u' l or

"' I

vessel

136 Emerald tsle
137 Fo od fish
138 FreSilet
139 Delirium

I'(

146 Krng ol
btrds
148 Look fuc:edly

53 Be 111

BEAUTIFUl CALIFORNIA RANCH

73 Stop
tempOJ artly
74 Pr opher
76 Annually
79 Place for
combat
B 1 Ch rcl&lt;en

sheep
127 801!

144 Gill

54 Sep arat e
55 Feels mdtg nanl at
57 La ir

1
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monkey

97 Europecm
98 Overhead
ratlway
abi.Jr

out floor plan IS desi!lllW for comfortable ltvtng At1ractrvety
decorated wrth formal entrance. ntce I1Y1n g room, kttchen and
dtmng room. 1\'1 ~ths. 2 car garage. gas heal l ocated 1n
convement s~ close lo twJsp1al. shoppmg, hut doesn't
sacriftce prwacy Owner IS mov'flg to Columbus Asktng
$59,500. Wants an offer.

Ask•ng 153 500

low Lbwn payment kJw monlh~ paymeniS. 2~&lt;&gt;\' home oo
Bolavil ~ Rd. NL&lt;:e peo&lt;ef~ settin~ 3 BRs, I bath, large eat-in
kitchen. 1t111ng room. diring room and fuU basement Forced

map
Acl ual
Quiescent

5 1 Partn er
52 Accom pli sh

nn Georgr's Creek. Br1c~ ranch Includes 3 BRs. l ·/; bath. full
baserrw.:nt and I car garage large garden area Wllh frurt tr ees.

abbr
21 Alltii C ~
22 1aoel1k f'

90

QUAliTY IS THE BEST INVESTMENT
And yoo'U lind plenty ol rt m thts 3 ~room bnck ran ch Latd

ENJOY THE BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY VIEW lrom lh• I acre lot

17 Rc .. lsed

con tame rs
126 Nahoor

30 Edible

35
36
38
40

$159.11011

125 Seed

!1arl
7 1 Capu chtn

29 Couples

3 1 Bndge term
32 Beverage
33 Preli•
three
34 Real estate

mce bnck home with lull basement and 2 car garage. lar~
~ quLel OOgtllxlrhood. ctJse lo NerytilLnt 3 Bl!• I ~ bath.
tiifge krtdlen, hvmg room. famtly room wrth woodburllef

69 A&lt;1m and

85 Doctrines
87 Nerv e
networ k

seeds

IN BETWEEN rnE CITY &amp; COUNTY - ldeallocabon.

STEP OUT YOUR BACK DOOR ONID THE GOLF COURSE - We ••
have 2 two bedroom apt&amp; lor rent Pnce starts from $175 per
mont~ . Adults only, no pets
•
NEW liSTING: lma~ne " tting on your lront pat1o andwatch•ngthe ••
beaubful Oh1o flow pa~. 4 bedroom home wrth 2 baths nestled in
trees and waibng lor your lamily. 2 wb fireplaces. onelocated in the
comfortable solid pme paneled der~' Wrthin '1, m1le from c1ty limits.
ApprO&gt; . 3.000 SQ. It 2 car garage.... Pnced in 90s

Gene Smith, 992-8309 .

Remodeling , siding. interior
and exterior, textured c oat ing, simulated brick and
atucco , thermo replacement
windows. 304 -675 - 1560 .

No belter location avatlable m town Excellent professronal
office wrth 3 apartments. Very n1ce 4 room ollice oonrplex

I

•

#567

$23.1XXl

rms. 3-car garage, and otl&gt;!r
farm buildings $95.000

#593

COMPLETELY FURNISHED - 2 bedrool)llrame home
ready tor you to move 1n. Eat-m kitchen. living room,
bat~ bas.ment metal ~orage b!LIIdong Listed fo sell at
$21,500 Call tor more details.
·

IIIIDDLEPOI!T - Lev~ klt
near siOfes and schools 3
bedroom horre wrth I ll baths.

HAIIIILY- Both rented, I ~
baths on each. furnished
krtchens and one acre. 2 yrs.
ol:l. Only $58,1XXJ.

NEW LISTING -GREAT STAI!Tl:R DR RETIREMENT
HOlliE -: Owner will con~der helping wrth financing 2
bedrooin remodeled horre. Aluminum " dmtr.
insulated. Storage buildin&amp; I acre lawn w1th garden
area. Pnced to sell at $29,900.

But rou'tl also enjoy bemg only mtnutes lrom tow n tn thrs
deluxe OOck ra~ch Th1s horne ts very ntce tnstde and oot and
offe-s K.Jts of space Wllh 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large eat-m
kitchen wrth dtn1ng area. 13x21 livmg room wtlh attractive
bnck ftreplace, plus full basement that has ltmshed 24x24
famtly room with anothet fireplace. lar ge L111lrty room and
outside entrance. Approxtmately 1 acre ftat lot for gardenmg,
pool, elc Al~ng $79.900
'P'

I

:

#509

1·(6M)-992·U25

3 YR. OLD - 3 bedrooms,
rmd. kit, " family rm.. prage
and shop on 2 40 acres.
$39.500

11566

NEW LISTING - 3 Bedrm home along Chestnut st Lot with
servtce alley tn rear 2 car garage. with mce garden area. Pnce
$38.500.00
•

•
•

POSSIBLE lOAN ASSUMPTION - Tho ranch style
home has 3 bedrooms. living room. nire sile kitchen
and dining area, bath, ~nyl sKim~ level lawn. Priced at
$34.1XXJ.

Pt1011e

ranch, nice kichen. dining area
wittl nice view, patio, 1, leoced
kit for your pets. A91ing
$35,000.

#518

SPRING OUT RIGHT wrth an iocredible buy. 4
bedrooms. 2 story Bnck and vinyl 3 years (jd, House
has I 'h baths. fully carpeted, Buck stove, garage, rural
water, outbuildin~ Trees and more all 5ituated on I
acre on blacktop road. $45,000.
#579
71 ACRE FARIII- 3 bedroom modem horre. Home
has been extensiv~y remodeled. Pole barn. worksoop,
cropland. tobacco base, pasture and woods. Borders
Rac(l)()n Creek. Close to county park. Beautilul set11ni
The bme to buy IS now.

•
•
•

•

wooded wrth IX)SSible marketab~ nmrer Pnced

at $16,000.

VIRGil SR.
21' E. JJIIISI

NEAR RACINE - 3 bedroom

#572
M~ n ly

TEAFORD
B..

RACIIIE - Gel a treak of this
home by lix111g rt yourself. Ten
rms. and WOI1&lt;shop about
24x24. Asking $23,(XXJ Offer
may buy.

m1les from Vinton.

TAKE NOTICE - Here ~ the !X'rtect house lor the
family wanting a maintenance free home w1th low
heating bills. Home has li~ng room. large kitchen, 3
bedrooms. bath, I car garage, storage buildm&amp; central
a1r N1ce leoced lawn. Pnced right
#592

42 ACRES - Hannan Trace Road. Oh~ Township.

Real Estate General

IIIINI - FARIII - 9 acn!S with
trees, Jllll(l, and a 6 rm. horre.
Eastern schooti Ju~ $35,1XXJ.

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP - 4 acres. more or less.
House shell 24 x28' Land partially wooded . Approx 2

#598

#517

NEW USTING 5 rm.
btlngakiw, bath. 2 bedrooms
and carport Only $7.500.

#574

•
•
•

ENJOY THE PRIVACY olli,n g on your own 2 h acre ''spread". 4
bedrms. I~ ILVong rm. w/ w.b. fireplace, formal dmmg rm., modern
krtchen WLth breakfast bar 13'x36' recreation area wrth 1'18
fire place 1n basement Lots ol storage Auto. garage door. Lower
RIVer Rd. $85,000 00
•

•

#562

1

scotchgu1rd -water extriC ·
deodoriura. FREE eatimates. Re11on1ble tltea.

Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone
or

SPRING IS BEAUTIFUL IN mE COUNTRY'

••
••
~~

B•aamenta, Footera. Concrete work , Backhoe 's.
Dour &amp; Di1cher, Dump
truckl. &amp; wlter - gaa - aewer~
electrical linea.

p . m . Rogers Baument
Waterproofing .

room with a very

once. All 101 $34.000

Judy DeWitt. Realtor, 388-8155
J. Merrill Carter. RialtOf. 379-2184
Beciy Lane, Associate, 446-0458
Cathy Pope, Associate, 379-2748
Margaret Bryant, Associate, 245-9277

GENE'S OEEP STEAM
CARPET ClEAN,

614-237-0488. 9 a.m. to 5

Ofdered tl yClJ're lroktng for a lrttle peace and qutet when you
come home tn the evenrng You'll f111d thrs handsome 4
bedroom w1tt1 ~tn Engjtsh Tudor accent. tucKed back at the
end of the dnve surrounded by huge trees on the 5 &amp;:.lot fhts
, One oHers and unusually far~e family roorn, 3bathsand a very
n1ce krtchen Oty school d1stnct See 11 and make an offer
lmmedtate [))Ssesston.
,.;

B7

EKcavati11g

tland. Oh.614 -742-2 903 :

PROOFING . Unconditional
lifetime guarantee. Local
references furnished . Free
estimates. Call collect 1 -

HERE'S ABEAUTY IN THE WOOOS -Jus/ whallhe OOctor

Timii$-Sentinei-Page-D-7

J .A .R .Conatruction Co .Ru-

BASEMENT WATER -

effiCient and attractive fireplace down, along with full

basement and endosed back ~&lt;.:h Yoo just can't reat the

83

Home

3802 .

REDUCED 17.000 - 169.900

Real Estate

'74 Joop t&lt;uck CJ10, 6 cyl .,

I
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spectoll1lng In built up roof• •
Co11114·388-8887.
"

Serv1ces

We will be closed for Memorial Day. Sunday S. Monday. Have a safe and enjoyable weekend . BURDETTE

Now arrange the cirded letters to
form the autpriM answ.~r . u aug·
gestec:l by the above cartooo

Boats and
Motors for Sale

...

Moroum Roofing • lpotn•
lng. Now lnotalllng rullber "

Call 61 4 - 992 ·

and accessones . Exc cond. ~~~~~~~=··~
c~lo=ry=-~B~O~O~M~IN~G~~~~~~~=-117 ft. Beeline camper sleeps
$1 , 200 . 00 . 304 · 576 · 1
6, self contained, good

2392 .

B1

Home
lmproveme11t1

1-----=-==---=

(AnlweraMonday)

·

ctmptr. self·
contlined. newer ref .• ac.
rear bath with tub-shower,
complete hitch, exc. con .

$6800.
Coolville , Oh 614 -667 - 3110.
3380 .

I!E WHEN 'rOll
GoAMI!OL ACR055
THE 6TI':EET.

J

wheel

Sun. 1 to 4 . U.S. Rt . 60 ,

WHAT IT M16HT

16 h . fishing boat2 motors.
oan. swivel seats. priced
reduced to S 1. 750 Call

14ft . Sean Jon Boat and
trailer , 9'h hp . Johnson
motor plus trolling motor

Motor• Homea
It C•mpera

81

Motora Homea
&amp; Camper•

The

Va.

pea rlflfl

''

1,

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Grefl~ IP 1tf·•

67 P hyS ICiiill

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abbr

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68 Occ up rl!ll
70 1 ests
71 Posed fo •
portra rt

I I K I 'l.1;

72 Ex tsl
73 Pen y rule1

1-1 11 H•ll •'l ~ · · · r

75 Recomm1 1
77 Co nau ctod
76 D1s tanCf•
~a~ ur f'

pi ab br
80 Se1nes
83 Cusr orn

86

Dmm~r

cour :;e

88

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·

�Ohio Point

Tim• S.nliMI

W.Va.

ODOT opens bids on 38 projects

Miller
undergoes
.
testing following
4-count indictment
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man
secretly lhdlcted for grand theft,
assault al!d two counts of crlmlnal
damaging was transported to Co
lumbus Saturday for Jl5YChiatrtc
testing.
Herbert B. Miller Jr., 36. 316\1,
Second Ave.. was taken to the
Timothy B. Moritz Forensic Center
to detennlne his competency to
stand trial.
Pleas of not guilty and not guilty
by reason of Insanity were entered
before Gallla Count y Conunon
Pleas Judge Rlchard C. Roderick in
a unique Saturday morning
arralgnmenl.
The lhdlctments were handed
down Frtday after a one-day session
of the grand jury in court .
Miller was arrested May 22 in
Point Pleasant after he a llegedly
stole a gun from Jim Baldwin'sFine
Guns, 305 Upper River Road. He
waived extradition to Ohio in Mason
County Circuli Court a nd has been
he ld in the Gallla County JaU sincc
then.
Miller Is also charged with assault

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AI&gt;) - The
Ohio Department of TransportatiOn
opened law bids totallngnearly$:n.5
million dollars Tbursday on 38
projects.
The largest project was an
· apparent low bid of $4.2 rnDIIon by

on his wtfeand thedamaglngofacar

r

ownedbyGienSimpkins,939Second

_

Ave.
The jury Indicted two men for
aggravated robbery at the c~ of
Friday's session.
Harvard L. Eberling, 18, San
Antonio, Texas, and Michael E.
Camphell. 19, Great Bend, Kan.,
were arrested May 7 in Lawrenee
County after they allegedly robbed
brothers Delbert Martin, 72, and
John Martin. 84, at their NorthupYellowtown Road residence.
Delbert Martin was reportedly
struc k on the head with an ashtray
during the Incident, the sheriff's

der~:;;~~~"&amp;~pheu.whohave

Clintllll Asphalt Paving Co.. WD·
mlngtOII. for a CUntoo

CountY:

Features

May

highway widening project along

u.s. Roote 22.

AMERICAN CEMETERY mark the graves of
Americans ldlled durtng World
War U at the Colleville sur mer
American oometery In Nor-mandy, France. In the United
States, there are now 1111
national cemetertes. ( AP Laser-photo)

Other bids were lor Imp~
mmmandoo~n~

c.-

the state.

...

NATIONWISE AUTO PARTS
POSTMASTER R.El'Iru8 - Deputy POI!iUnaster James J11nch, at
left, congaAdates the family or retiring Rio Grande Poslmaster Perry
Honon at a rooent ceremony. At right are Honon and his wife, who l&lt;i
postmaster at 'llunnan, and their two sons, John, at left, and Daniel.
Uonon, who has served at Rio Grande since 1979, resides In Oak Hill.

Rio Grande postmaster retires

been AWOL from the USS John F .
KeMedy since It docked at Norfolk,
Va _, on May 2, have been lodged in
the Gallla County Jail since their
arrest.
Also Indicted by the jury was
Glenn E. Parsons, 23, Lockbourne,
on an aggravated assault charge.
·Parsons a llegedly assaulted Do
natd Scott Mlller in a Feb. 4incident.

Gallipolis man faces
molestation charges
GALLIPOLIS - A preliminary
hearing has been set for June 4 in
Gallipolis Municipal Court for a
Kanauga man charged with gross
sexuallmposltion. .
Kendall M. Lemley, 18, was
arrested by the Gallia County
SherHrs Department Thursday in
roMectlon the molestation of a
5-year-old Galli a County girl.
Lemley was placedon$4,!XXJ bond .
Dorothy McGuire a nd Jack
McGuire, both of Rt. 1, Crown City,
each charged with assa ult. were
both continued for June 4 pretrials
after entering not guilty pleas.
Donald R. Goff, 25, Gallipolis ,
charged with resisting arrest, OWl
and speeding, pleaded not gull ty and
was continued until May 29 for
pretrial.

RIO GRANDE - After 36 years
of service Postmaster Perry F .
Horton has exercised his optional
decision to retire.
After 21 years of letter-carrier
duty in Ross County, Horton
a pplied for the vacant Postmaster
position in Rio Gra nde and was
appointed to tha t posltton in
January. 1979.
Postmaster Horton's wife, Edith .

was appointed Postmaster of Thurman in August, 1979.
Mrs. Horton will conttnue to
serve the T hurman-Cente rvllle
area of Gallla County as Postmaster of Thurman.
After Friday, Mrs. Ma rtlyn

~

'Inn..- tadh..t Section 27, 1984 .

NOW ACCEPTING JOB
APPLICA liONS AT THE
HOLIDAY INN

TUESDAY, MAY 29th
By Phone Only!

10 A.M. 'TIL 2 P.M.
PHONE 446-0090

~~~~~~~~================!
THE FOLLOWING GALLIPOLIS
Pan causes mobile home fire FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS WILL
BE CLOSED MONDAY, MA.Y 28th
IN OBSERVANCE OF MEMORIAL
DAY.
mouth, wlll be Officer-In-Charge
Partee, Postmaster of New Ply1OIC 1 a t Rio Grande untU a new
Postmaster Is selected .

Memorial Day '84:

Honoring those who rest
in 'gallant ranks'
"II is lor us, the living, to be de&lt;licate&lt;l here lo the unfinished work, which they hove thvs hu so nobly
advanced, " said Abmham Lincoln. "It is lor us lobe here de&lt;licated lo lhegreol tusk re'l10ining before vs thai lrom these honor:u dead, we take increased devotion ... 11

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The
Chesterhill man accused of holding
several Athens workers hostage at
gunpoint last January Is to stand
trlal June 18 on charges of
kidnapping.
Judge Raymond Rice has found
Ralph Stover Jr. , 42, com petent to
stand trtal and denied Stover's
request to represent himself. The
trial was de layed until J une after
ruce appointed a public defender
represent Stover.

4

HAY TOOL SALE

Youth dies Friday
By The Assoclaled Press
At least one person has died
Ohio ltighways this holiday weeke nd, the Highway Patrol said.
The patrol counts fa tail lies fm•n ~I
p.m . Friday until midnight Monday .
The dead :
FRIDAY
BRYAN - Christopher A. John ,
16, Montpelller, killed whe n his ca r
collided with a semi-tractor trailer
a t Ohio 15 and a Willlams County
road about six miles north of Bryar.

486 Round Baler 1600-1800 lb .... ss590
484 Round Baler 800-900 lb ........ S7850
509 Mower &amp; Conditioner 9 ft. .... S6790
507 Mower &amp; Conditioner 7 ft. ,, s5750
555 Square Baler ........................ s5190
9\12 Ft. Hay Rake ......................... S2250
New Hay Tedder ............................ s700

I Tractors
EQUipm ent

EMPIRE fUANITUAIIS READY TO RECO,.STRUCT ITS MIDDLEPORT STOltE.
EVUYTHING IS READY TO GO liUT Wt NEED JO SHL 1300.000" (Thr"
Hundred ltlouund Dollars) Of OUI \1, MilliON D()llAA INVENTORY . IE
MUST SEll TMIS NOW REGARDlESS Of Plrorll. COlE IN AND WI WILL AC·
CEPT ANY RUSONAilE OffER. TRY US ..... vcu·u BE SURPRISED.

$300,000 OF OUR

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10-5 .
SUNDAY

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(FORMERLY MEIGS LANDMARK)

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BARB WIRE
ONLY

$2295

BASSETT

1-6

SINGER

OPEN MONDAY
MEMORIAL DAY

Lowest Prices

89¢

THE AREA'S MOST COMPLETE FARM
AND URBAN CENTER

MGM FARM CTY, INC.
FORMERLY MEIGS LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY. MGR.

614-992·2181

OVER 100

LIVING

ROOM

OVER 25

SLEEP

SOFAS
OVER 20

DINING

PULASKI

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LANE

90 DAYS SAME
AS. CASH
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U.TUlO.&amp;Y , SUNOAY , MONDAY ONLY

-

MEMORIAL - The Nationaf Ce!lneteTies
brought the system to the Veterans Administration
and authorized the Administrator of Veterans i\ffairs
to establish new cemeteries and expand existing ones.

policy was announced: only Arlington would be
enlarged.
In 1873, Congress opened up national cemet eriPs to
all honorably discharged Union veterans of t hP Civil
War. One hundred years late r, the policy of
non-expansion was reversed by Congress.
Passage of the Nationa l Cemeteries Act brought the
system to the Veterans Administration a nd a uthorized the establishment of new cemeteries a nd th e
expans ion of existing ones_ Today, the re are Jillloca ted in som&lt;&gt; of the most scenic regions of our
nation _Each of these wooded, rolling, natw·aJ shrines
is a resting place for our nation' s veterans and their
dependents
President Ileagan elabora ted on their appropria te·
ness by saying: "No c it izen will ever receive hig her
committment than the ha llowed ground of our
nationa l cem e teries. No greater honor can be
bestowed than to rest in the gallant ranks of lhoS&lt;'w ho
struggled to preserve our s piritual and national
values for all poster ity."
Today , we salute all !hose in "gallant ra nks" who
he lped defend our country a nd preserve it s fre('(iom .
Those on active duty will be remembered - as will
the various branches of services towhieh they belong.
But, moslly we honor our war dead .
More than a million In number, they died a t home
and a broad. Each had their individual experiences. in
!He and in death. Each sacrificed in a particular way.
in a panicular action for a part icular objec tive.
Only their closes fr iends knPw their hopes a nd
doubts, their successes and disappointment s, the ir
dreams and fears. We know only that they deslrf'd.
and deserved, to live.
Yet. In simpleobedlence toduty , asl hey understood
It, th ey were willing to pay freedom's highest price . In
so doing, they remind us to be apprecia tive and to ga in
strength from their devotion and patriotism. They
inspire us w honor our dead and the cause for whic h
they died.
So we mark this day by remembering it is up to us to
give mearing to their sacr ifice. For they havedoneaJ I
tha t they can do.

'

.

"' '

.'.

..
MONUMENT TO DEAD SO(J)JER - A f&lt;la.'t
Guard photographer came upon this monument to a
dead American soldier on the siM•U-hlasted shore of
Normandy, France, after the World WarD lnva•ion
In ,June, 1944. (AP Laserphoto)

ROOM

1-7

2 LITER COKE
ONLY

MILLION DOLLAR
INVENTORY

USTBESOL
REGARDLESS
OF PROFIT!

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR

251 W. Main

31
"I 4

Prepared By
The VeterdliS Administration
Many Americans observe an emotional Memorial
Day t/adition. Remembering those who live on in our
lives - and in the life of !heir home land - we mark
th is day.
This IIodition dates back to the opening of the first
national cemetery in 1862. One hundred years la ter
there were 85 such cemeteries. And a non-expansion

OVER 150

RECLINERS
OVER 50

DINETIES
HOURS

MON.·FIU.
10·1

SATURDAY
10·5

SUNDAY
1·6

GALLANT RANKS - "No
greater honor can be bestowed,"
said President Reagan, "than to
rest In the gallant ranks ofth&lt;lsl'
. who struggled to presen-e our
spiritual and national values."
At right. Mrs. Edith Haynes and
U. C&lt;JI. Hattie Brantley visit the
grave ol Col. Rosemary Luciano
at Arllngtoo National Cemetery.
The three were Anny nurses In
the Phiiiiplnes during WW U and
among S1 women prisoners of
war.

�Pta

E-2-The

Ohio Point

May 27, 1984

W.Va.

President's. campaign pledge:
simplify income tax forms
WASHINGTON 1AP1 - l'n·&gt;~ ·
dent Reagan says h&lt;' rf'&lt;·ciq-d a
~roposa I rC«'n tly for a 'impli lir-d
income tax fonn with on !~· f\\.'o lim·"
The first line said , " \\ ' h &lt;..~t did -'UU
m ake last year';'"
And the Sf'Cond one , ,lid. " 'i&lt;•nd
it."
'Til be lht&gt; fir st one to ddmil th.1t
there are good w a.vsa nd bad "-,n "ut
simplifying tht • ta:-: ctxh· .' l ~c ~t L; . 1 n
said in his most rt&gt;c !'nl n•ndilluno/ .J
joke that a l wa_."~ grts him a good
laugh from a big crowd
But Rf'aga n·s ptf'tJgf' to ~l m[J l ll _\
t he ta x codt&gt; is his on• · nt •w t.'tlmp;tl f.,'T l
promise of 19X4. A nd 1ht' ot"tici, d ~ ht,
told to come up with &lt;J fJl"O~J~&lt; il b.\
the end of thf' VL'ar .Jrt' finding thr-\
have literally thou s.: tnds of d1 I( · i~ion ...
to make, m an,\" of thl'n H·ompliLt f{ 'll
by political nm.&lt;-.idt•Llt lutb . lq.;.J I
obstacles and 1hl · qut ·~t i~ 111 o t
fairnE'Ss that Rf'a ~an · ~ lTit it·:-. ,m ·"-\I
quick to r aist? again~t him .
Reagan · sordt ·r is fot wh.J t t lt~ C"alb
"a complf'te o\'l·rhaul o l uu1 1.1.\
sys1em to rnCtkP it n 1on · l.lil &lt;~ nLI
provide g rl'&lt;:i lt'l" i rt&lt; 'l 'HI i\·~ ·~ lo t
l::'veryonp 10 work, sa\·t•and 111\'l'" ' ..
Adminis1ration ot1ici ;li ;., ~ ; t _\ lh(·
propoSdls tht'Y an_· l uo kin ~-: ;1t im ·luch'
va ria1 ions of what i.e: hnuwn J~ ;1
"Oi:i l ·ratl' '' Ia.•.;, d ~ .\ ~ h ·m with rml.\
one or VP I:. r~~w til\ t;t tt ·~ &lt;~n d
w ithou t most of tht • t • \r•rn pt inn ~ .
exclusions. dPdu c t to n~ and C'n&gt;tlit o..,
tha t ex ist now . Th ei l would twlp ltJ
eliminat e thl' m~Tiad t;tx sht•l tt'l'"- .
loophoiC'&lt; and S&gt;H'i cil l11 r·ak s &gt;hat
work to givf' o nf' laxpn _vt ·r Ll \ 'nJT"fl
tll:"atm ent mT•r a not h(' l '.
ThPy al~o an • cu n~ id r • rin,L; wtw1

they ca iJ u ··consumed inconu' 1a.'\ .··
on&lt;' Ihat would tax 1he m11n' ') ' !J&lt;'Opl&lt;'
spend but not wh&lt;Jt tht '\ ' .-.a\·t· ot
inves t . Such a :-._\'str•rn would
f'ncouragP saving ,md would tn ··
mPndous l~' simplify ta x w or k for

\~ ' hJ.H'\ . t ' r S\.!-ilem

administ ra tion

\l ffkiah come up with may be
tomt&gt;inN Wll ll somr sort of " Yalurdlklr•rl' t;1.\ ~ in df('('f. a national
-..,a i('S t;lx
\\' ith bipdl'l !s an su pport tor a
whull'~&lt;Jl ( ' rP\ \T iTC' of th r tax cOOr
c~ppan'n li l grow ing S&lt;&gt;n. BUI
l lra dil '.' . D~ !\ .I . and Rep . Richard
Ct'pharcl t. D Mo. a~·md~· have
int rofl u&lt; ·f'd a ma jor proposal of t hr ir
own - While HousP and Treasury
[)(opa n ment offi ci a Is agyf'&lt;-d lo
discus ~ th&lt;'ir lhinking on thf' subjecl
hut on l.\ on &lt;'onflition they not bP
namPd
"Ow· t· thP .\'Prtr s. thf' tax systPm
has IX't"&lt;tmr pre·! ~· much of a m ess,'·
onpufth rsco fficJ at sa1d . ''lllPrPare
c1 lot iJ I (•-..:elus ion.'.;, df'duc tions.
Pxcm pti ons and (T0dit s in lhe lax
C'Odl', sOnlPOI \\' hi ch makf' S{'nSc&gt;a nd
somi.: ol \\'hich don' t E\'en if they
mLikt• S('fl Sl' ln p1inc iple. they don't
n~ al!y makC' sense when you add
them a ll togclh&lt;'r and create the
"l\ot on!~· is the systf'm more
cnm plicat('() than it nrws lobe," the
official addr-d . " It 's also unfair. A nd
pc'rhaps f'VC'n m orP imp:u1ant , it's
Pf't TC'iw"Cl to 1x&gt; unfair.''
That pt•rcrplion, he sa id , has led to
.1 widC'I\' ht'ld v ipw a mong 1axpayPr s
1h&lt;tl it is uk;.t.Y tu ch(~ &lt;Jt on tlwir tax

•',,

:

'

POPPY POSTER CONTEST - The American
Legion AuxWary held a Poppy Poster contest al
Washington Elementary School. Winners were
awarded ·prlzes of $15, flrsl place, $10, second, and $5,
third. Presenting awanls were Mrs. Sharon Dixon,
president, and Mrs. Becky Pasquale, second vice
president of American Legion Auxiliary. Pictured Jell

.

. . i7' •. •

,...

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

to right are fow1h graders - MlcheDe Sims, Lorie
N eal; liflh graders - Dawn Baker, Amanda Spencer,
Christy Clemens; sixth graders - Sammy Morris,
Kim Morris and Kalhy Gellles.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Travelers given help
from postal service

Syracuse.

-

tiH ·ir gooct ~ and sc&gt;rv icC's. Most
lunr r:tl homf's pre.'·iou slY" offerf'd
p.:w ka g&lt;' pr ic'f's for !h('ir srrv ic(•s.
..\bo, tht• lll'W F'rC I"UIPS J'(~Uil't'
lunr·ral dirH·lnrs to giv0 pril'P
mform at ion m ·pr the• tl'l ephonl' to
;mWillt' who t'l '(jUf'StS if.
l·'n n rr~ d
hnmC'S arp offC'r ing
mdi\' iclual pricf's for such S&lt;.'rv iccs
;1" Pm halm ing. visit ati on. hca rSC's
,1nd othr-r items. al\O\\-'ing custo·
m1·rs tn sh(!p at·ou nd
· It ' ~ kind ol likr going int o a
n·~taur ; ~nt -'"·here they have spN:"ial
d inn(· r~. · ·~ai d /r ima Uishop, PX('(' U·
11\'t' din•ctnr of thf' Ohio Funeral
Dirn: t o 1·~ :\ssociJtion . " Do ,vou go
H·it tl t h&lt;~ t ur go a Ia ca rtf'·: Now, the
f.m1i h · L'd ll pi\ ·k &lt;.tnd choose'."
Hmn•vr•J, fum Ta l clitT·c tor s S&lt;Jid
J ll ~J~l farnili l's pmbabl.\ · w on'1 I)(•
iHh Tt •sh •d in p:-;,unini ng t 'H'JY d~ · tail
olthP fum•ral.
" \-\'c don 'tthink pf'O[Jlt' w ant to sit
tlH•n• ;tn&lt;.l gu through t'vPr)" iiPm ."
"' id Holx•rt Wei! of I ht ' W&lt;'il Fu nl'I'Ji

Ph. 992-5776

NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete line of vegetable &amp;
flowering plants , shrubbery, fruit
trees , 1\zaleas, Rhododendron,
House Plants . 4" to 10'.
Foliage &amp; Blooming Baskets
Daily

9to 5

r~;;~;;~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;S;u;n;·;l;t;o;S;;;;;;~;

The tough 2-cycle

Funeral packaging services
to continue despite new law
1,\I' I - F urwr .il
direct ors ( 'X pt '&lt;'I to kt 'l' P .-.t · !lin .~ t ht ·1t
usual parkagl'(l .-..~ ·p;ict •.., 1'-'.t ' ll
though d now fr'(lr •r Jl Jt •guLt : illll
requires ttwm tu i1L 'I1l ll.t ' 1-JI' it ·t·~ fot
cost-conscious l'U .., \ UJTH · r~
Ronald KPn: hc•\·al, pn ·s idt'nt ql
the GrPaiL'r Cincinna ti F unt•r.ll
Serv·k'£• Ass(x· iat iun. .....:1id mo'-1
customprs prubabl~· wil lcunl imu • tu
choose th(' tradit ional ~ac k ; l l:i ' prict •
for Sl'rv icl's r CJ llwr ll ld ll go in ~
through a del ail&lt;od li!-' I of tlpt irm"- ~~ 111!
cos ts.
" Pcopl£' J r&lt;~ in a sta ff • of rninrl or
are Ln a time when th ey do n't wa nt 1o
hf' harassro with details." sJ icl
KNcheva l. of t ht' .l&lt;&gt; ckm&lt;&gt;n
K ercheval Func·ral H omi ' in ! Lll'l'l
son. "PeopiP comr in ~1nd ,o. ,;_t _\· ·y ou
burled M omyPnrsagD \\'r•w;Jnt l hr
same thing.· ··
UndPr a Ff'fiPrn l Tradt · Comrnt ~
sion regula tion that 1nok 1·fl ••c·t :\pri l
30, funeral dirPctnrs mu ... t ptm·ic!t '
customers w it hdct a ilr 'tl pr ·it ·t' !i . . to.., t 1f

Oh .

Open

•

('INC!N~AT I

SUPREME "19"

PUSH

MOWERS
AT

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

r

&amp;~

ihem . It' s like going to the dentisl ;
tlte families trust we're going 10
trea t lhem fair ami do decenl,
r ppu table service.·'
~'un era l direclors will have to Ill'
gentle w ith fami li~ in discussing
pricing, said Jay Gilligan of John .J
Gilligan &amp; Son.
"In times of need, this thing can be
upset ling," he said . "Bul people
have a right to know w hat they're
bl'ing charged for so they can say , ' I
don'! want ll1al.' To a degree,
funpral direc tors never educated
Pf'OpiP to w hat their se1v ices are.''

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SILVER BRDIGE BRANCH

CHUCK COLLIER SERVICE STORE
. d Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.

262 Th 1r

PH. 446-3314

· ·

B•lens.

Dependability to Eliminate th e Ha rd Work From Yard Work

'

By BRYSON R. CARTER
EKtenslon Agent
•
Agriculture and CNRD
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Tra nsplanling
is one of the most critical stages
during lhe tobacco season. Plants
must be of the proper size,
preparation prior to pulling is
n&lt;.~essary . m echanica l transplan·
ters must work propPrly and
adequate water is impor tant for 1he
new transplonts . Plants should b&lt;•
transplanted w hen they arc six 10
inches tall , w11h a sta lk diameter al
least the size of a pt:nc il.
However , hea vy r ainfall can
make it impossibiP to transpl &lt;:~ nt
during the lim p whf'n pl ants an~
ready . If this sltuatlon occ u r~.
plants can bP successfull y ston_&gt;d
for se\'era l da ys.
P lant &lt; lo IJ&lt;&gt; stored musl bl' puiiPd
from the bed w hen !hey are dry.
wrapped snugly in burlap or other
porous materia l - feed bags are
com monly used - and kept under
cover in an upright position wilh the
r oot s down.
T o prevc&gt;nt roots from drying out.
bundles should IJ&lt;&gt; placed on mo ist
soil or sand and space for air
circulation should be lC' ft bf&gt;t\veen

proach a black shank preventative
program on !arms \111h a history of
the disease or where the potential
for spread Is great.
Vigilance is particularly lmJXlr ·
I ant along river bottoms or In fields
adjacent to roads in communities
where black shank is active.
The best proti'Ction against black
shank is to plant In sites free of I he
pathogen. If tobacco must be
planted whcr&lt;' the pat hogen eXIsts .
then a resistan t variety of tobacco
tsuch as K y 17. VIrginia 500. or
Buri&lt;'l' ~7 1 and R ldomll should be
used .
Use Ridomll at the ra te of &lt;'ith&lt;'r
two JXlU nds 1such as MS K y H X LB
and Burley 21 X L81 usually will not
pr ov ide ad equat e pro t ec t i on
aga inst black shank under med ium
or hig h disease pressure.
Howev er , significant prol C'Ction
againsl black shank under low
disease pressure can be obt ained
with just Ridomil on a suceptible
variely, but I he procedure is risky .
Plant beds should be examined
closely for black shank before
tran splanling . Do nol US&lt;' any
transplanl s from beds with black
shank.

the bundles. Plants should be
examined dally for signs of rot.
They should not be watered while in
storage.
Two or three days prior to pulling
plants from bed, covers should be
removed to promote hardening or
toughening of the plants.
Burley plants should be trans planted Into the field in rows spaced
3842 inches apart. Plant spacing in
Ihe row varies from 16 Inches to 20
inches. T he usual spacing Is 18 x 40
inchf's, \Vhic h gives a plan t population of 8,700 plan is per acre.
Wa trr should be drawn from
JXlnds and springs that are free
from cont amination. River or creE&gt;k
w ater should never l:::lf' used for
transplanting because of the JX&gt;SSi·
billty of spreading di seases ont o the
farm
Black shank cosl Kentuck y tobarco farmers $35 million last year.
Recent weather indicates the fun·
gus could be a costly threa t again
this year.
When I hear this kind of
information I can't help but think
we should IJ&lt;&gt; on the alert her e in
Gallia County.
Growers should aggressively ap-

Hprp arr curr ent recommendations and lips on controlling blu&lt;'
m old in Burley lobacco.
Appl y Ridomll plus a protPCt ive
fungic ide spray on a weekl y ba sis to
any beds present 70 days afl&lt;'f
seeding. if Ridomil wa&lt; usr-d at
seeding.
Completely destroy all beds once

Good drainage pays...
By DOUG I'AU LEY
District Conservationist
SoU Cons. Service
GAL LIPOLI S With tile
Wf'atht?r we have had thf' past thrPE'
or four years, evC'ryone shou ld
know if and w here t hey have a
drainagf' problem .
Poor drainage cau ses many
problem s, but they all come down to
lowt?r yields and ll1 SS monPy back
for the dollar invested.
It lakes the same am ount of fuel.
seed. fertilizer and limp to raise a
crop on poorl y drai ned soil as it docs
a well drained soil. Delayed
planting alone can reduce yields
considerabl y !Two bushel s per day
aft er the lOth of M ay 1.
G ood drainage ha s many· IJ&lt;&gt;ncf.
il s. With improved drainage you
ca n gel Into th&lt;' field two to four
days sooner. Better soil aeration
pPrmils healthier and more extensive root development t a deepPr
rooted plant does ben er when hot
dry wea ther comes) Soil compac ·
ti on from equipment is tess of a
problem on a well drained soil. All
of thes&lt;' add up to hig her y ields,
with 40 to 60 perCf'nt increases quite

common.
It costs approxim atel y $450 per
ac re to systematically drain (60 feet
spacing) a field. Yield increases
wil l pay for lhe installation of a

protective fungicides are topped
and transplanting is complete.
Keep up protective sprays until the
bed is destroyed.
In the fie ld , the grower needs to
crea te a less favorable environ·
m ent for blue m old by using proper
cultural practices and by att ac king
the blue mold fungus wi t h fungi ·
cides . The followi ng steps are
suggested for cont rolling blue mold
·
in the fi eld.
11 Take stPps to rf'ducp lf'af
wet ness and shadP which are
necf'Ssary for bluP mold df'VPlopm c&gt;nt. Select fiPids tha t are open
and avoid low, wPt and shady area s.
Open up hill and row spacing to
improve air and light penetration .
Avoid sites with a history of blur .

Sunday

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Farm Bureau Boanl President Clay
Baker announced earlier this month
Gallla has 152 new members this
year. giving the county 423
members.
"This represents a gain of 69 over
1983," Baker added.
, Gallia earned a Golden Tractor
Award for a gain of 50 or m ore
members and a Silver Plowshare
Award for sign ing 50 or more new
active members.
This Is llte l7 tlt straight year tlt('
Ohio Farm Rurea u has had a gain in
membership, and 14t h conseculive
year the Gallia County Farm
Bur£'au has shown a gain in it s

Times-Sentinei- Page-E-3

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

\

,.

M.nber FDIC

membership.
Baker said volunteer workers are
resJXlnsible for the increase in this
year's m emberships. "Without th&lt;:
help of our workers, we would hav~
been unable :u rr.eet ow- goal ," he
continued .
In conclu sion, Baker said: "The
Farm Bureau is tlte largest and
strongest farm organization in the
state which Is dedicated to helping
its m emi:Jf'rs impmve their stand·
ard of living ttu·ough legis lation and
pmgram s at the local , state and
na tionalleveL"
Ohio has 94,212 family members,
an a U - lim~ high for tlte Buckeye
State.

~----------------------mold .
21 A fundirrdP progyam is the IJ&lt;&gt;st
Insurance ava il able at presen t for
preventi ng bl ue m old . Whic h pro·
gram you usf' should be ba sed on
the amount of ri sk you choosC' to
take and lh&lt;' disea se pol ential
suspect r-d. For hrgh di sease potential arPas. usP R idomil applied
prepla n!. Areas \\'here blue mold
dcVf•lops late in the grow ing season
should be nefit by eithN th&lt;' split
application IRidomi l I qt prepl an!
plus 1 qr. at las t cultivation) or thP
sland ard preplant plus la y bv 12 qt.
preplant plu&lt; 1 qt. layby •. For low
ri sk arf'as (i. e.. arf'as w ithout any
history of blue mold in r rcf'nt
years ). usc one of thf' fol ia r
fun girid r progra m s 1 m a nwb,
7ineb, etc. :1.
Continued on E -6

liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii-~E~~i:liiliiliiliiliiiiiiiili~~;::::---:L------:-.-=::---::~-=--------

drainagr
in a few drainage
years.
Bencfltssystem
of improved
1
begin immediately .
A dr ainage system needs to be
properly designed and Installed to
get the most heneflts. Different soli
types require different tile spacing
and depths. Tile needs to be the
corr('('t s ize and placed on the
prope-r grade to r emove excess
wa ter. Most important a drainage
system nf'&lt;-ds a good outlet such as
a ditch or stream.
A propPrly designed and inst alled
drainage system can reliev e some
of the pressure of a wet spring and
increase y ields. Contact our office
for help in designing a drai nage
system that is right for your land. so
you can begin receiving I he benefit
of good drainage.
Soil Conservation Servlce and
Gallla Soil and WalerConservation
District l ated at 529 Jackson Pike.
Ga llipolis, phone 446-8687 .

~

ft., ... 1 n_q· Sunday 1·6
'

419

Regular Prices M~eVaf'i

_...----.
•
PI

The saving

ac

At

e"'

Somecstg~~e1 iuon

to l oC 01

vinyl latex
exterior

Sold tn bldg Supply Depl

4~~

lso1J

Save 5 30

DISHES

•

Fiberglas
Mesh
Aluminum
8 Ft. to 20 Ft.

ONE WEEK
ONLY
MAY 28th THRU
JUNE 2nd

• 42 "

The

Gallia has 152 new memberS
Tobacco transplants should be done between 6 and 10 inches in Fann Bureau Federation

POMEROY - You won' t tose
" We want to help our customers
get our best," he added, "and tltese
touch or lose time during the
summer months when you take
two servlces can give you more
time to enjoy the summer monlhs
advantage of two conveniences
olfered by the Postal Service lo
ahead."
people on the go, Postmaster Jim
Soulsby of Pomeroy reJXirts.
"People on the run can save time
when they use Self-Servlce Postal
Centers located in m any JXlSt
olflces and shopping areas," he
said. "The centers offer m any
JXlSlal supplies and servlces for no
extra charge at the touch of a
button." Customers can mail let·
lers and packages, the postmaster
said. and buy stamps, JX!Slal cards
and stamped envelopes from these
centers.
"A second tip is that people on the
move can make I he change more
easily when !hey use a free
change-of-address kit available at
local post offices." the postmaster
said. The kit's handy JXlStcards can
be used to notify the posl office,
fri ends, business correspondents
and magazines of your new address
so m ail w ill find you :n your new
Homr.
home.
\lifforcl Hod app Jr. of John
"Lasl year , the Postal Service
Hodapp Sons said more lhan 80
forwarded 45 m illion pieces of
pPrrent of thai home's busin&lt;&gt;ss is
mail," Postmaster Soulsby said .
from r'Cpca t families .
"You can avoid paying forwarding
"We don't find people shopping
charges, and JXlSSible delays in
funeral s." Hodapp said. "Doing thi s
getting your mail , by lel llng
CHESTER, OH.
PH . 985-3308
makes it so much likf' a business
everyone your new address a
deaLThefam iliescomc inhere.and
month before you move
you know them . You want to help,.....::..::::::::..:::.::.:..:.::::_:::.::.::.:__ _ __!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

prol it"C'r &lt;~li on. "

/

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

Agriculture and our community

retum"\.
"W&lt;' wan t to make It simpler. so
that propk&gt; with relativl'IY simple
&lt;"CO nomic affairs don't have 10 go to
a tax preparalton se"•lce In onlerto
haw I heir tax n'tumsdoneandalso
... to elimlnale the pPrception of
unf&lt;\irness." the official said.
A key to simplifying the laX
system Is broadening the tax base,
which would pt'tmlt thegovernmenl
to !owN 1ax rates and ellminate
man~· of th&lt;' brackels thai now
scparat(• taxpayers acrordlng to
thei r taxable income.
One wa) · to broaden the base Is to
eliminate itemized deductions. ex·
&lt;'mpilons. exclusions and credi ls,
and the administration proJXisal
undoubirdly w ill attempt to do some
of thai. I t also may expand the
definition of in~"omP to include some
of th&lt;' m any benefit s millions of
taxpayers now receivP but never
have to pay I axes on, such as health
insurance premiums paid by their
Pmplo:ver s.
B ut " the concept of itemization is
unlikely to disappear," said one
T reasury Departmf'nt official.
"Thf'l't' are certain itemized deduc ~
lions that makeseTJI'!', and there are
others that m;:~ y make less sense but
have substantial JXilitical supJXlr!."
Pres ident Reagan bowed to a case
from the latter last week when he
announced lltat w halever plan he
comes up wilh will preserve the
deduction for home mortgage
inter est payments. Budget director
David Sloclanan is said to believe
t hal deduction should be restrtcted,
however. to peoples' principal
residences and should not be
available- as it is now- to second
horn('S or vaca tion houses.
Nor is it likely that a single tax
r al e, as has be&lt;&gt;n suggested from
l im P to time, will emerge from the
pn: S£&gt;nt study.

mdn·1dua ls .md rorporahons th&lt;Jt
now must makf' "PparatP ca lrula·
lions lor d£'pt'('('Jation . capital gain••
and other changf'.., in nC'I w ort h that
m,t\ or rna \' nor hP realized in a
gl\'('n lax ~ · par .
How0wr. 11 might Opt'n a wid&lt;'
r ange of new opJXlrtunities for
"' aSion and complicate things
sornPw hat for t~·picnl t axpa~·er~
~\ llo now IU5t kPPp track of thC&gt;il'
in('ornt · &lt;..tnd wou ld han' to tx·gln
kN•ping lntr k of sa\· ings and lossf'..,
d~ \\'f'll.

May 27, 1984

..

~
Our 9 .53
Gallon

House Paint

One-co al vinyl latex
p01nl. White and colors.

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad would like to say a big THANK YOU for the
donations. physical help on fund raising projects, and the support of the
community on the purchase of a Jaws of lile.
On Saturday, May 5 , 1984. we had enough money to place the order for
I he Jaws of Life . This was following the auction that the soront1es of the
.
county sponsored for the Jaws of Life Fund.
The squad would also like to say a special thanks Ia Eltzabeth Cutler. Ms.
Cutler gollhe ball rolling last year for a Jaws of L1fe. by g1V1ng us the frrst donation and suggesting that we needed a Jaws of Ltfe for our communrty.
It is nice to know that the people of this county and surroundmg commu·
nit1es care about one another. If the Jaws of life can help just one person. it
makes ali the work and support of this project worthwhile. What price or value
can we put on a person's life7
.
. .
. .
The following are individuals. bus&gt;nesses . c1v1c organ1zatrons and clubs
that supported the Jaws of Life Fund : (II any name IS omrtted . please accept
our apologies and our appreciation for your support) .
JIIWS OF LIFE CONTRIBUTORS
Arlee and Trecie Abbott
Dairy Valley
Elizabeth Cutler
Thelma Henry
Meigs County.1981
June VanVranken
Alice Bai ley
Paramedtc Class
tl:ermit Walton
H1rold Lohse
Norman Baxter
Leona Karr
leonard Jewell
Red Hoce (In Memory)
Pauline Roush
Pomeroy Church of Christ
Past Matron's Club of Pomeroy
Marie Chapman
Btll &amp; Carrie Kennedy
Pomeroy Chapt. Nl86 o.E .S
leland &amp; Rose Sisson
Marcaret Eskew
Neva Grimm
Marion Ebersbach
Venda Landers
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Grace Crow Eich
United Mine Workers of
Medical .s~atf
Mildred Fowler
America Mtil$ #1 Mine Pomeroy Auxthary of
Gerald &amp; Artie Reuter
Jaymar Coal Company
Eagles #2I71
.
Edna - t. F. Schoenleb
Joseph Zwilling
Norma and Davtd Goodwtn
Gertrude Mitchell
George &amp; Lena Nesselroad
Walter and P1uline Kennedy
Grace Whaley
Eva Oessauer
Middleport -Pomeroy
June &amp; Georgia Kalatta
Bessie and Roland Duut
Rotary Club
Wilson &amp; Bernice
Maurice &amp; Marcella Durst
R. Crail Mathews. DDS
Carpenter
Dave Diles Charity Golf
Georce &amp; PhyUis Ski~~er
V. D. Edwards Insurance
Tournament
American L11110n Aux111ary
Herman Ohtinaer
Tom and Mary Ann M~ers
feeney-Bennet Hl28
Jim Hall
Modern Woodman of America Simmons Olds·Cadillac
Bill Radford
No . 1230
Lillron M. Gress
Charles Gilileo
Catherine Mees
Gene and Lila Mitch
Theodore Reed . JJ.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Paul Darnell
Rocksprinp Grone• *2565
Joe &amp; Cheryl Hubble
Mr. &amp; Mrs . Ralph Grave!
Star Gron1• #778
R. C. Botllina Company
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Pr~ceptor Be~ Beta
Farmen Bank &amp;
Bailey. Sr.
Onto (tto Phr
Savine:s Co .
Syracuse Fire Depar1ment
Xi Gamma Mu
Ewinl Funeral Home
Charles and Ernestine Wmy Pomeroy Health Cart Center
Bank One of Pomeroy
Betsy Ross Thrih Store
Evelyn &amp; Chorlos Strauss Sharon ond Bob Smith
Chorles Swisher
Pomeroy Fire Deportment
Wiliam &amp;Buena Grueser
Jtne Snouffer
Pomeroy City Hall
Fritr Buck
Shommy's Corryout
Pot HiU Ford
Addiscn Seamon
Jack Satltrfield
Irene Gilmore
Community Wives Club
Ohio PoUot
Joseph C. !willin&amp;
of Chester
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Elberfetds
Or . R1ntin Aay Pickens
Tholmo DiU
GlJ Auto Ports
Arthur Strouss
Horriott (. Thompson
Jono ar..n
lVI &amp; Myrtle Adkins
Chopmon Sholl
Bia Bond C .8. Rldio Club lowrenco &amp; liDonno Clark
David and Audrey Slater Nelson's Drua Store

"

Save46%
Olymp1
Beach
Towels
30x60"
35x62"
36x62"

1:"57

Quality K mart'
Air Filters
Sizes

for many U.S.
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Save at K mart"'
Develop And Pftnt
KodOCOIOr'"' And Focal' Color Prtnt Film'
UpTo12hp . . l 97 Upto1 5Exp . .
Up To 24 E~~:p . . 3.47 Up To 36 Exp .
·stonoarc , ~ze pnnts lrom C...d l

Kuttomat~

4" Color Pftnts

3 71L Larger Pho l o On G lossy Paper
With NeoatNe In Protecttve Sleeve
Up To 12 E ~ep . 2.97 Up To 15 E)(p ., 3 .~7
To 24

.. 0.97

...cl n • •• ' '

COUPON

Canou

Umtted edition Olympic design

W'oC.IuOfiCQnOI'I " U~~

me . 1 ·'110f~lmlte0

worront1'11t~llotton

•Avtoftlmtood
• lullt-tft ~

• Auto octvanc•

c~a
lsosll' Auto ..wtndlng
Sale Price Snappy 20 Comero
35mm camera with
automatic focus .

seg

185 Upper River Road. Gallipolis

3.97
Royal

20-lb .
Oak Charcoal
Conven&gt;ent.
Relrable .

�9.48 sale price 12 qls
·2.40 mig' s rebate

Autoliu

59C Your cost
per quart after

1.48

69c
age

1.48 Your cost
alter mig 's rebate

Your cost alter mig's St.OO rebate

AC or Motorcraft
Oil Filters

79c
ggc

Standard
Rcc o 7C
L 1r• ' •h

Resistors
Req 1 o;l 11TI1] !6

Autolite Spark Plugs

Sa le or~ce 2 4d LITI•t 2 t1 !C'~' .
AC I 1\ t'IS Ill most GM c a r ~
M&lt;JWrLJa lt I li ter s t1t most For e ca rs

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

._..

.._._..

"WUVU

.. ..

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Resistors

.

,.«at•

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

.... . . u

•••••

....

2•88 ::~: ~=!s

THE MOTOR OIL WITH Z 7

Reg · 29
L1m11 16

2 88

sJ rebate

•

Borden Rain Dance

Champion
Spark Plugs

Save 18S per plug

2.88 Your cost
after mfg' s rebate

2.88 Your cost
after mfg' s rebate

-··

Save 75C

Yourcost

after

mfg's

s1 rebate

Armor All Protectant

Turtle Wax
Minute Wax

Sale pr1ce 5.88
Reg 7 95

Reg _ 1 75

H elps keeps dashboards. vmyl and leather
sea ts, vinyl tops and t ~res 1ook1 ng new
Penetrates beneth the surface to protect
aga1nst fad1ng , cracking and peeftng

Sale pr1ce 3.88 T 15 or T17RE.g 595

Save over $5 after rebate

-

~

"C:-.Jo•TI

· ~'
~
r..: "'' "

Save up to S10

13.88

From
Reg 1588

Remanufactured

Tribute Mufflers

Fuel Pumps

17.88 Reg

..... . 1

'1

'-1 :1

,1 • l )r, rl"l•",l••. hH 'I ~'l,rlll)'j

L

4.88

_:"]!

19 77

F&lt;.1r rn os t domes 11 c ca rs and I1 Qh t
truck s 25.000 m1l es ra1ed ax !e se t
2 wheets

OH

Perfection Test Tubes

Big G Mufflers

Example: '17041 Pr·g ? 91 cow

DLI
.
:Jimate

Relined Brake Shoes

Exhaust and Tailpipes

$3

·.:•;c

88C Brake

Fluid

i

So lder Seal or Snap Prnt Reg
t 09 1 J9 • s262 o r M4 3·12

4.95

4.88

Giant

or Ulira

Reg 1 79 &amp; 2 29

Turtle Wax
Metallic Car Polish
Spray
Reg 6 49

965.966 1.19

2 112 sq ft Dry &amp;

Shine

3 !12 sq ft Dry &amp;

3.88

~

7.98 safe price
-2.00 mfg' s rebate 2 gal

Starters
or Alternators
:.
'

'1 ..

• . '

'

. '.A'

24.88 ..

10.88 Req

Remanufactured

Matics
E Z R1de Shocks bv Monrn1'
Auto Equ1p Co

··~ r rr

47.88 2 BBl
72.88 4 BBl

32.88 ' ',

From

5.50 Jet

Hoses
rom

7.88
Heavy Duty
Rell 9 95
Carb Rebuild Kits

Thermostats

2.49 safe price

·2.00 mig 's rebate
-

49C Your cost
after mig 's rebate

49C

u

lj

-

.

CAitBUinOR
lllutlmt!M
ClJUI!

STP Power Steering Fluid
After mig 's S2 rebate
Req

Prestone
Flush 'N' Fill Kit or
Anti-Freeze Tester

t

119

STP Gas Treatment
Cleans Drr l y Carbure/O!S

Rt:LJ 1 39

Brea ~.do wn

Rcq 1 54

1.59

Gumout Carburetor
Fuel System
Cleaner
RL•lj 1 99

1.29

1 ;'

2 1::l'll .\ .l

•

t• l . , r , , ·l '

uu r II...!· pr:lill

..,.

l&lt;om 2.50

l•om 16.25
Tie Rod Ends &amp; Sleeves

4.95

Rack &amp; Pinion: Spec1al Order
~..-..

r..tl.....

r;;

From

11.95

88c
ggc

STP Oil Treatment

Control Arm &amp; Bushings

11om

,

W!a '

Frg .nr s Mo101 Or!

per

(:~~
~~

9.49

Reg 1149

Foreign Auto Fuel Pump

New Brake. Shoes
7.88 Reg Y Y5

Reg I rom 16 95 W1th e~ch

New Disc Pads

' ,; r--:-:----c-c:=--,
tr 11.88 safe price
·2.00 mfg ' s rebate

,1

Your cost per quart after mig's S3 rebate
on 12 quart purchase

·· .

quart Valvoline 10W30

l•om5.95

OPEN MEMORIAL DAY:
MONDAY MAY 28TH 9· 4

--

Prestone Coolant
Anti-Freeze
Sal e
.1 gg per gal Lrm11 4

Wheel Bearings

Foreign Auto Starters
or
Alternators
Reg From 49 95 With rebu1 ld e• c h

'"d ii :¥11~

per gallon
after mig's s2 rebate on 2 gal

'

....••

llflJff.ll

1.88

Rc•q 2 29 695

Rl' ll 1 9'1

Idler &amp; Pitman Arms

39.95

PI esllPI.I

p11Cf~

12.88
Van &amp; Truck
:r

Ball Joints

3.95

Req 1 19 1 29 11\ o z or 160.'
Rern ov f"' &lt;; grease. pa 1n t (lrnn dnd :i1r1
thai nrrl~tlarv clf';mr-r :, t d n 1 !('J• 11

~

---

2.99

2.88

Reg J 9') 4 .!!:l

Monroe

Carburetors
\'·.', •h ''' t riJild

Fan belts

I J &lt;J:,

Save 30C

DL or Lan-Lin
Hand Cleaner

.~.

·-~ ~--- -

\_

1

BBL

99C

( r::;J _ ~
2.99 Your cost per gal
after mig's rebate

36.881

1 qs FR -1 Fn ~)lr f' 13r rt e or fLI::l- 1
Foamy Eng1nc B ri! c
Removes gr ease. d1rt an d (IJ1mc Salf'
on underhoocl rubber . pla 51• C. or
PLJ tnt when usee! dS d11cctcd

Shine

Instan t l1qurd o r c re me
Spray rt un w1p e 1\ o tt

sale price 12 q1S

-3.00 mig 's rebale

Remanufactured

Re~

2.88

Reg 11 19

"·30
7.68

soc
Gunk Engine Brite
Save

Sponge

9.88 Your cost
alter mig's rebate
~.,

SJil' ;.. ,, ,. 64C L1mrt 12 on a!! sale oils

44c
49c
54c
5gc
64c
74c

sac

All er rnf g's S3 rebate on 12 quart purchase

per quart

~.d !t

-

•' G9C L1 m ll 12 on all sate ori s

Ahe• mig's S3.60 rebate on 12 quart purchase

per quart

Kendall 10W30
.
Sah •::, · 79t L1m 11 12 o n all sale 011s

Reg 17 88 per pa1r

14.88

Jack Stands
Reg 9 90 per pJif

1•76

4.88

Save over s1

24.88

Universal Side
Lift Jacks
Req 29 95

Fender
Reg6 95 ' 5'36Covers

Save over $1

Heavy Duty

9.88

Your cost
after mig's 12 rebate

RC Industries
Fire Extinguisher
Salf' pnc e 11 HH 2 P3 Ck

One tor the car and one tor
the home.

After mig's $3.60 rebate on 12 quart purchase

per quart

Kendall 10W40

S.-l~&lt;': · ' ·· H41: L1 m 11 12 on al l sa le o il s

Affer mtg 's S2.40 rebate on 12 quart purchase

per quart

Quaker
State 10W30
19C L1mil 12 on a ll sale oils
SLJ I• ; ., •

After mig' s 12.40 rebate on 12 quart purchase

per quart

Quaker State 10W40
Sa l",;"" " 84C L1m 1t 12 on all sale oil s

Alter mig's 13 rebate on 12 quart purchase

per quart

Valvoline Dexron or Type FA
Transmission
Fluid
Sa
99C Limil 12 o n all sare 01 1s
I'

per quart

97C

209 Upper River Road .

Valvoline 10W40

Car Ramps

. . ...,I . ~_.~_.

per quart

;r, . •'

Pennzoil
10W30
Rf'C'I
Limit 12 o n all sa le OilS
il' 0"1 Cfl99C

sac

Air Conditioner Freon

Re g 1.49

Pennzoii10W40

Save over s1

79.95

Air Conditioner Recharge
and Leak Detection Kit

AC Compressor
Reg
1.25 AC Fuse R
eg
84 95

1 79

Reg' a1 c.rrce · 19 L•mit 12 on all sale oi ls

446-3807

OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK

HOURS:
Mon. • Fri. 8:30-8
Sat. 8:30-6
Sun. 10·5

�PDITieroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point•Pieasant, W. Va.

Page- E-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

t.kty 27, l984

'

.

Limbless child faces numerous questions :..

, ..

DENNIS. Mass. t.APJ - Life Is
filled wilh queslions lor ~ . year-old

'•

·'

••

.,
.,.c;; '
•·

I

ltECEIYES AWARD - SIRveDail&lt;·y.lelt, waspresentedanawanlof
appnxialion lor t.•ing a sport.oring rnt&gt;mher of the Meigs Count)' Beef
('attk ..\~..;ociation by .Jim Lu&lt;:as, president. The as....~iation met
m·~ntb at Diill•·.v 's Restaurant in Ra.ine, hosted hy George Clayton of
.\nd10r Lal&gt;oratori&lt;'s and Plill Thomas of American Cyan:mid Cu .. who
wt•rt· a lso the h'lltosl spea.kt&gt;rs. Otht-r offieers and din_ol'tors of the
a."i-.;oil'ation are \\'arren Pkken~. \'i&lt;:e prt.-sident. Mary Ann Danner,
.~'(Tt-'tary·tn·a.~urer, 1.0. Me('oy, Boh Montgomef)•, Ran-.on Calawa~· ,

E. !\&lt;'Wl'U and .Jim Sh&lt;'l'ts.

Unidentified remains
enroute to Washington

trunk. James' lone appendage Is a
l1Jpper·like growth wtth three toes.
James Franchino.
"The firs! day when we brought
On his first day attheNa usel Head ' him home. we were lost, " Fran·
Starl program on Cape Cod. a
chino told The Sunday Cape Cod
curious· schoolmate asked, "Why
Times. "We wondered, was be just
don't you hav&lt;"anyarmsand legs?"
going lo lay there?
" I was born wilhoul lhem,"
"The flrs1 nighl we woke him up to
James answered.
feed him, he was completely turned
To his father, Jimrm·. the child
around in the crib. II was just
sa1d one day · ·
amazing. and from that moment on,
"Dadd)·, wh1· didn 't God g~,·e me
he has never stopped."
any arms a nd legs?"
At Head Stan, Jam!'s brushes his
.. I !Old rum. " Franchino said 10 a
teeth holding his brush by his toes .
He painls holding the brush in rus
rrporf(' l'. " th at Cocl must han' had a
g&lt;XM.J rf'ason for it and that he must
moul h. He pulls his friends' wagon
han• something special for him to
wf lh a $.1.400 miniature electric
do"
wheelchau- and eats with theafdofa
Franchlno and his wife. L~' nda ,
$1.500 elect ric feeder.
sa id the~: w('re stunnC'd when the~·
His food is placedon a plateheldin
sa"-· tl1r ir son shm1 ly a fter his birth
place by three pegs. Two mechani·
,\pril 15. 19~ . But thpir shock soon
ca l anns hover over the plate.
gavewav to lo\'r .
James operates their controls with
" I was numb." sa id Mrs . F r anrus toes. One arm shoves the food
r hino. ''All of a sudde-n , there was no
int o a mechanical spoon. A control
mon-. pain
All I saw was his
lifts lhe spoon to rus mou lh. He
bmuliful fa ce."
drinks through a straw.
Franchino said hf' slarf'd ou 1 a
He son s his records with rus toes,
v.indow tl'('O\'C'r ing his comJXlsure,
pushing I hem over lhe spindle of rus
then walkr&gt;d to lh~ baby's bas·
rC'COrd player.
SinPII e. klssc'(] rum and sa id . "That is
His mother places him uprighl on
my son.
a carpeted step. With his head bent
Doctors cannot C'xplain w hy
back, he maneuvers his body over
Jamf's was born with congen ital
the edge. He lands uprighl. on the
quadrophocomelia . in which aUfour step below and continues I he rest of
limbs arr missing and any hands or
I he way d0"-11 the sta irs.
f('('l al'l? a llached directly to lh&lt;'
He is the lone Head Sian student

wttha physical handicap.
"He Js just one of the chlldren,"
said head teacl"a'r Wendy Wade.
" Herequlreslessattentlon because
!"a' Js so independent. He Is more
mature than many clilldren. He
wants to try things, whereas some
children are afraid offallure."
James has received a letter from
President Re~an andoHersofl"a'lp
from all CNer the country.
Philip Barone and Ernie Hans·
beny of West Babylon, N.Y.,
aerospaceenglneersforGrumman,

r-=:::::==~~=.:..::::....:::..:::::=::._

want to build hlmanelectronicchalr
!"a' can raise and lower to the noor
and have speculated about making
him a robotic ann. said his father.
They are investigating bulldlng
him a chair with ltsowncomputerso
he can work when he reaches
adulthood.
"Everything he does, he does on
his own," said his mother. "Wedon't
know how 10 teach him because we
have arms and legs. He just adapts
rus life around the fact he doesn't
have them."

____________

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
·EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL ( 614) 992-21 04
or (304) 675-1244

f.' ,\JRFIJ-:l . D. Calif. 1i\P' - Afll'r
.1 nighT on pul1lic dispb ,\ ·. !h('
f!J. g-drapt"\.l l ' &lt;ISkf'! of an uniclenli -

!iltl \'ir· tn&lt;.~m ~~·n · icP rn an 1.\'JS
IJound for Wash i n~~o n Frida.\ ' fur
tnh'rmcnt in t h(· Tomb of the
l. nknown Soldjt~r .
'Ill{' door ~ of t hf' 'l'r&lt;J\ ·is /\ ir ForTI'
B&lt;.~sP ch;I!Jd Wl'n' clost'Cl to thl'
public at -l a.m
Frid a ~·
CJ .~
pr('paratlons were madC' to Sf'nd t hC'
remain' to Washington aboard a

f
ite
loan answer is

plane.
On Thur'Sdae·. about 2m dignitar·
if&gt;S Jnd mourners tumf'd out to

&lt;· 1 ~l tra n spor1

hunor fh(' unknown ~·n·icf'ma n as
thf' rf•mains. guan.k'tl by J M\:::lrim •.
\\'('!'(' (' ,1 !Til'd in thr bOW Of !h i' CS.~
fi i'C'wton !11 Alamr'Cia :\a,·al Air
"\tatiun .
Th(' n•m._ti ns hJ\-t' bf.t..·n in C .S.
c ustod~ - for 10 _
vPars. During tht'
riN·adC'. th(' gm·f•rnmcnt has triPd to
id('nltJ\ thP rT•mains, which \A-'OU!d
br onf' of 2.~11 casualfips still lisIt'd
J S rnissin):! in &lt;J etion . Thl' \' iptnam
\\-' nrdf'ath toU WJS~I.Y:r.1 .
In 1~1~2. offficiais at an armed
servicf's idPnt ifi cdt ion laOOratory in
HCiwaii announn'tl thl' rf'mains of
four txx:iif'S could mwt rr itPri a for
dc~i gnr~.tio n as r~. n unknown soldier ,
said Connie Smith, c h.if'f of mcd1a
rC'Iations for thf' bth Armv .
Sinn• rtum . two bod i P~ Wf~rr
irkn tifiPd and rr turnl'fl to survivors
wh iJf' a possibilily ofiden t ific&lt;:~t ionof

drad,

brass und local

dignilarif's attrndf'd rhr silf'nt
piprsidP 1rans fer of thC' cask('! from
thP vessf'l. "'h ich lx•gan it s jou m Py
in Hawaii.
·'This is quilf' a distinct ion to thosP
who sen:C'd ovC'r thf'rf' . It shows the
v:ar is tx&gt;i ng n'Cognizrd asonpofour
major co nfl icts," Ncn:.v joumalist
BU I Wint4'r &lt;.;a iel.

Worried aboutthose year -end bills? Ready
for a vacation? Whatever good reason you
have for a loan ... we're ready to say YES!
We won't keep you wp.iting, either. Our loan
officers are ready to say yes the day you applywithin hours if necessary. And if you've borrowed
from us before, we may be able to give you cash
on the spot. Or even over the phone!
For a new car ... a new coat of paint for your
home ... for baby furniture or college tuition ...
call the bank that likes to say yes:BANK ONE.

Tobacco ...
Co nt inuN:I from E

:~

Hidomil is not lal:lf'Jpd for use in
th f' sptler wat('r and co nsf'CJut'ntl .v I
ca nnot r0c 0mmf'nd usi ng it this

wa_v· .
man:v pN)pil"' cl o US(' i l
111 transplant watPr and if :'t'' OU
chousP to do so, thrn do not f'xcrE'd
f-! OV\{'\'('1".

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 2, 1984

FHA extends
loan deadline
ATHENS - Farmers suffering
losses from the adverse weather In
1983, In Athens, Meigs a nd Vlnlon
Counties have a n extension untll
October 14 to flle an application for
Farmers Home Administration
!FmHA) loan assistance . The
Fanners Home Administration L•
lhe rural credit service of lhe
United States Department of Agriculture. This Information Js pro·
v1ded by Archie R. Stegall, County
Supervisor, for Athens, Meigs and
VInton Counties.
FmHA emergency loans are
made lo eligible farmers to enable
lhem to return to the lr normal
operation. A farmer must have
suffered a 30 percent production or
su bstantial physical loss as a resull
of a natural dlsast!'r In order to
qualify for a n Em!'rgency Loan.
Loan a pplications will be received
al the County Office, P.O. Box 589,
211 W. Second Street, P omeroy,
Ohlo 45769 unti l October 14.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Chuck Roast

lB.

•••

SMOKED

Picnic Hams

lB.

• •••

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steak/Roast •••••
lB.

GRADE A

Whole Fryers. ••••
CORN KING BONELESS

5
9
Ham s........... ;~ .. $1

r und£'rstand thrrr is df' flnltcl y
some stun ting of tobacco plants
using thC' c hf'm ical in this manner.
If thf'n' i!-&gt; ~omp solution left in
your Sf'ltf'r barrrl r ar h tim e you fill
up, thf'n the concent ra ti on of
Ridomil k€"€'ps increasing so 1:x&gt;

aware of thi s possibility a nd make
allowanr f' for it.

Announce bond sales

Meets Tuesday

l f NO{P

BANK ONE .

Potatoes. • • • • • • • • •
10 lB.

VALLEY BELL

.
$159
2o/o Milk • • • • • • • • • •
GAL

Speaker chosen
William Stewart, Racine will be
the speaker at Memorial Day
services sponsored by Racine
Legion Post 602, American Legion
on Sunday, May 27.
Racine Legion will hold services
at Greenwood Cemetery at 10 a.m.
and Letart Cemetery at 11 a.m . The
band a t Southern High School wUI
participate.

Gl

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

A marriage llcense was Issued In
Ml'lgs County Probate Coun to
Walter Keith Dillon, 22, Reedsville
and Karen Sue Barber, 16,
ReedsvUie.

usin g 1 pin I of Ridomi12F: pc'r acr~ .

TheOH KANCoin Club will hold a
meeting Tuesday !'Vent at the
Riverboat Room of tllP Diamond
Savings and Loan Co. in Pomeroy. A
social hou r will precede the 8 p.m.
meeting with coin dealers presenl
for trading. A coin auctionwtll follow
and refreshments will be served.
AnyonP Interested In coins or paper
currency Is Invited to a tlend th&amp;
meeting.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

James S. Golden, 24, Patriot Star
Route, city employee. and Patricia
A . Nibert, 28,Rt. 2,Gal ll polls, Holzer
Medical Center employee.
Lewis W. Sturgeon, 21, 3(17 Upper
River Road, service sta tion attend ·
ant, and Nancy L. Hively, 21.
Eureka Star Route, Rax employee .
Steven L. F errell, 19, Rt . l ,
Bidwell, carpenter, and Paula C.
Pasquale, 18, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
unemployed.
Ivan L. Lane, 21. E ureka Star
Route, mechanic, and Lyla B.
McGuire, 16, Rt. I , Crown City,
student.
Oliver W. Norris, 29, Rt. I,
Bidwell, coal miner, and Debra K.
Hill, 26, 2145 Eastern Ave., McDo·
nald's employee.

killed ..
\.~:;tr

STORE HOURS
Mo11.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

oousewtte.

killed is dl'libo&gt;ralcly withhc•ld " bp

of

JACKSON - Delpgates rep.res.
enting over 4,300 members of
OHio's V.F.W. District 12 wUI rnet&gt;t
at 1 p.m . June 3 at V.F.W. Post 9942
at Beaver. The delegation, headed
by District 12 Commander Don
Bailey of N£&gt;1sonvtlle, wUI discuss
issues pertaining to Veterans'
entitlements and National Security.
Election of officers for the 1984-85
administrative year wtll also be
held. Expected to Succeed Salley as
Commander is WU!iam Bulger of
The Plains.
District 12 Is comprised of 24
V.F.W. Posts from throughout
Ross, VInton, Athens, Pike, Jack·
son. Meigs, Scioto, Lawrence and
GaUia Counties.
William Hawk of Columbus, the
Department of Ohio Assistant
Adjutant, wUl represent the State
organization.

GALLIPOLIS - The followin g
ruuples flied for marriage recently
in Gall!a County Probate Coun.
St!'Ven L. Hayman, :?D, Rl. 2.
Crown City, unemployed, a nd
fWsemary Lambert, 30, Rt. 2.
Crown City, unemployed.
Kerry E. Ours, 21. Rl. 2, Crown
Clty, self-employed, a nd Kelly R.
Hamilton, :?D, Rt. 2, Gallipolis .
student
Elmer D. King, 2.&lt;;, 74 Spruce Sl. .
self-employed, and Diana L. Sta·
pleton, 17, Eureka Star Route.
student.
Hollis L. Moon!'y, 21, R t.l. Crown
City, laborer, and Pamela K Dyer.
17, Rt . 1, Northup, student.
Melvin E . Cross, 59, Kerr, retired,
and Carol .J. Myers, 39, Kerr.

rausr thi s is to rr prr sent a ll thOSf'
fa miliC&gt;s

Entitlements
on June 3
VFW agenda

Marriage licenses

who c;ln not tx• idf'nri fif'd . \Vi ll hfo
intr rrf'd a t Arli ng1on N ational
( 'prnrtrry in th(' T omb of thf'
L1nknown Sold in, v.-hich also hold s
the hoflil'S of unidf'n ti fiN"I so lrlif'rs
H ho dif'd m World War:;; I and II and
in KorP&lt;-:L s hf' ~&lt;:Jid .
" In \ ' ipt nam . onJ .\ · om• S('l of
r(•mains mt'{•ts tht· lrgal critPria."
:V1s. Smith "cud . ad ding th&lt;Jt thP
location o f lhf' soldi(•r w hPn nP was

Some

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page 15-7 :

lB.

a third suriacPd. s h~sai d .
Thl' rt'rnains of thr fourth so ldipr·.

VP IPr&lt;.HlS, militar~.

27, 1984

---

Theodore T. Reed , Jr. , Meigs
County savings bonds chairman,
reported the purchases of $9,123 in
United Slates savings bonds credits
to the county for January, 1984.

Meets Tuesday
There will be a special meeting o1
the board of directors of Leading
Creek Conservancy District Thes·
day, May 29, at 7: ll p.m.

GRADE A

ZEST A

Crackers • • • • • • • • • •
lB.

ELSIE

GIANT VALUE

Bread

16 OZ. LOAF

• • • • • •• •• •• •

·····couPON·······•

•
:

•• •• • •

• • • •

JERGENS

•

BAR SOAP

:4.5 Oz.
:Bath Size

•

Large Eggs ••••••
lB.

6/$1

limit Six Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires June 2. 1984

:

•
•
•

•
: KOOL-AID CANNISTERS
PRE-SWEETENED 10 QT. CANS
•

• •
•

•••
•

IIBA6P5-75+8

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offtr Expires June 2, 1984

Ice Cream • • • •
'• •••
• •• COUPON
TIDE DETERGENT •
171

oz.

$599

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires June 2, 1984

NESTEA

INSTANT TEA
3 Oz.

Jar$}99

�Page

E-8-The Sunday TimetAentinel

Nay 27, 1984 :

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

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

_

•

Heather Smith scores high in national figure skating
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Heather Smith.
daughter or ex-GaUlpolltans Dr.
and Mrs. Gary Smith of Midland.
Mich.. scored high during the
munth or May in na tional Figure
skating. She Is the granddaugh ter
of Mr. a nd Mrs . Vaught (Doc i
Smlth or Rodney. tDoc Smith is
Ga llipolis' Buick -Pontiac dealer) .

TJOS HOUSE AT 426 First Avenue was a home for CivU War
veterans who were on pensions. At least a por1ion of the house Is ahout
the same vintage as Our House ( t'll. 1826) and was once the home of
Sarah Varner and later the Zenas Baxter famUy . The Baxters ran a
bakery on thi.• lot in the pre-CivU W,..- penod. Mrs. Varner was probably
GaUipolis' first woman storekeepe~ (1820s) .

5-6.

City

HEATHER Smith and her teamrna tes on the Counterpoints represe nted the Midland """""o

PRECISION skating Involves a
group of 1)! or more skaters
;;..,.,~.~ ·ln9 various maneuvers and.

HEATHER a lso won a sUver
medal for Individual competition In
Lansing. Mlch., last year.

Special Corn~pondent
GA lLIPOLI S - Memorial Day
was first crlrbrated in Ga llipol is
just afa•r thl' Civil War to honor t h('
Union soldiPrs of that war. T hP
house Wf' fea ture

todav a t 426 Firs t

0

Av ,~ nu c.
at thf'
rurn of thf' ce ntun· was :1 home
. -\ • ·
fo_J: Ci\' i l \'\o'ar 111111111111111 .

\'E'terans w h o wrrr o n pPns ion. Somp of lhf'
soJdiC'rS li \'C-d in lhL' hOUSf' \',;hj]p
othrrs had ~ma ll l'otwgrs in thf'
back th at haw' long sincf' ~n torn

down .
Thr sold irr~ \vould sit amun d th e
dinnr r wblr in thP liirgf' housc and
tradf' war st orif'&lt;.; or stroll out to thf'

park a nd wa trh thC' riW'r traffit' .
One of Gall ia &lt;·(1unty's mon·
int erest ing pl'nsi o nfTS was .J . It
Sharp w ho li \T•d most tlf his lih• ; 11
Cf'nlerYillf'. Sharp w a . . . ; 1 memhi'r
of Comp;111 _
, . G. S4'\'flnt h Ohio
Cavalry. and rodt• witllthat unit in
it s ve~riou ~ pngagcmf'nt s in Ken tucky and Tonnf'SSf'f'
Sharp w ;1" capturN I at Rough
and Rf'ady Sta ti•m ( ;4'1'''gia (nf'ar
A11an tat, on St p t f'tnb1 · -'· lHt~. For
most of thf' nt•.xt ..,.,\ ., ·rt m •m:hs anti
22 day·s Sharp \.\' ;:..; .1 p t L..,! il14' 1 at
Andersonvll It .
I ro ni ca l]~· it \1,: ;_, -; Sharp's old uni! ,
thP Sevf'nth 0 1 .i11 C.l\'~llry· . th &lt;.ll
c3me to A. ndr·rsonvilil' tu fr('('
prisom•r s w hrn thf'~ · w r n • met with

a nog or truer .
I t was undf'rsh1od 11\ thf' Sflvf'nth
Ohio th a t I he fla g nf I nlr't · V&gt; as givC'n
only to huy ti mf' so ltl.tl th(' officbls
of Andersom·illf' migh t tid.v up thP
at.dul mC'SS thf're.
Captain Hankin in hi ~ hi~luq: uf

his St:-venth Ohio Cn.:alr.\ ' statp~
that "the onh•r w~L"i J..riVI'n to l' har~-:('
thC" prison, hut WP arTivf'd onJ)· to
SN' a train moving out with a m 1L'i"i
of skeletons. Thf' :{-I nu·n ll'ft in th• ·
prison p('n heg ga rt•d all

dt-scription. ''

oc

·

WHY PAY MORE!

HEATHER' S team - Midla nd
Figure Skating Club's junior precision team, the Counterpoints came In sixth in the first na tional
prPCision tea m c hampiorushJp ever
to be he ld In the United St ate&gt;;.
THE E VE!\T was na tionally

Paroled steamboat blows
up with prisoners aboard
By ,J!\MES SANDS

formations to music. The rhythm
and movements of precision skatbe com a red to the Radio
lng co;ldkettes !cept on Ice.

Oub to earn the right to compete 1n
the prestigious event by capturing
the sliver medal In the midwest
SECtional held In Kenosha, Wis.

televised on ABC's Wide World of
Sports program. The contest was
held 1n Bowling Green, Ohio, May

BRAND NEW!

1984 BUICK REGAL SEDAN

2.-100 prople on board .
Wrote William Dixon or the tOth
India na Cnva lry: " \VC' wf'rP all

Air conditioning, AM/FM/Stereo, clock, remote mirrors, tinted glass, side
mouldings, and much more.

talking of home and f riends and the
many good things we w ould have to
C'at. Wf' consoled ourSf'lves that he

$10 350° 0

had lived through it all and now
wpre in thr land or the Free We had
no thought bu t tha t we would be ot
hornP in i.l f('w da~:s feasti ng \\'ith
our lun-•d um-&gt;s one(? rnore."

About t a .m . on i\prU 27. 186.1,
some 10 miles south of Memphl•,

tlw
boilers
of the
Sultans
\\'rote
Frank
Levstlk
in exploded.
the Ci\il
1
ar times illustrated: "For hour
after hour, men, women, and
children continue d to pour into the
water from a U areas of the sinking
ws.wl. By 3: 15 a.m. not a single
living person remained aboard the
shi p."
.1. R. Shar p was sleeping on the
dl'ck fmwo r·d of lhP cabin when the

HEATHER SMITH, daughter

of ex-Gallipolitans, has chalked
up honors as a figure skater. She

f--;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;:M:;ich;.;;;:;;;;;!~;:;:;~~~;;~~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;:;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

A Guide to local
Television pogramming
May 27 thr~ ~une 2

"

Includes complete

f'X pl osion occ urr ed . He ra n dm\·n
thf' stair wa\ a nd ro thC' fl ags taff.
Tllf' crowd on the bow was being
hlistPrPrl whC'n Sharp decided to
j um p ovrrboard.

&amp;&gt;fore jumpmg Sharp took off all
his clot hf's and he later sa id he owed
his life to thi s fact as people were

grabbing ol wha tever they could

listings

reach and wr rc pulling each other
down undPI' the cool wa ters. One
ma n did get Sharp by the a nkle but

he kicked him loose.
Getting away· from the m ain
cTowd, Sharp f'a ught hold of a four
foot long pif'CP of wooden r ail Which
w.1s ahlf' to suppor1 him in thE'
W&lt;tlrr. l lr drif't ed into back water
,lnd after som e time got hold of a
( nttonwood bush and hrld on until a
r t'liPf boat ra mP from Memphis. He
H .1.... in thr \\·a tpr some si x hours.

Sharp w:c• given a sheet and l~t
ofr at Memphis whereupon hr
walkt•d to the Soldiers' Home
dressed only in that sheet. One
Ponwmy paper in interviewing

Sharp wrott•: "Con•lderlng that
Sharp had ,just L'Ome out of prison
and was WPak and sic k, his escape
from tht•1 rin•r was almost
minu_. uJou."i."
!t ,.,·as ('StimatPd that ovrr 1,700
li\'l•s wpn-• lost whf'n lhf' Sultana
,._,plodrd . A murt or inquiry

With Great Pride We Congratulate
all of our 1984 graduates!
Hi g h school and college students have always been an important part of our stort&gt;
team. Wt&gt; are proud to have been able to provide them with a valuable portion of
their learning experience. Some of our graduates plan to leave us and continue
their etlut•alion, some will embark on new careers, and we are pleased that some
will remain and grow with us. Whatever their plans may be, we thank them for
their services and wish them continued success.

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Gallia

Gallia Academy H.S.

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Ohio Valley
520 Jackson Pike
Rt . 35, Gallipqlis
"

Gallipolis
252 Third Ave.
Gallipolis

Huntington. WV
Home lloll Office

MAX

Cinemax

THE SECOND YEAR- Pay lelevlslon's ''111e PaperChaae," executive producer Lynn Rolh
sharelt 11 moment with one of her .tars James Stephen&amp; during a break Ia the show's laplag recently
1n Lo8 Angeles. The series staried u a hit mot1n picture then a CBS lelevllllon series, with a nm on
public lelevllloo now the series ill In 118 second year on the Showllme Enterialnmenlsyslem. (AP
Laaerphoto ).

Show beat
Page 7

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Teresa Neal

Rio Grande College

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A DIFFERENT WORLD
OF CRUISING

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WSAZ
HBQ

Christian Netwrk
CBN
Sports Network
ESPN
Atlanta. GA
WTBS
WTVN Columbus. OH
Parkersburg. WV
WTAP
WCHS Charleston. WV
Huntington. WV
WPBY
WBNS Columbus. OH
WOUB Athens. OH
WOWK Huntington. WV
WVAH Hurricane. WV

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rex , F~ll River t:nroute: to Nf:'w York herbor where your coact'!
will M: welting to return you hom&lt;

"Channel 23 listings inclUded
in this week's guide."
Station listings

Sharp was t akf'n tn :t pJrol1'&lt;i
&lt;'a mp ;-~t \ 'icksbur L: 1\'hl'i'{' M ctj tll
f'ff'nf'ra l ~ ;;tpoi~"'n .f .tr ·kson T~·cum
sph Dana wa . . . plan•U in dldl l!l' 11!
findin~o:: a woJv north 1t1r 1h•• :-1.1n1
paro!Pd !JrtSUnt'rs
lr "'"" thl'
rlr \(·r min('(l the ca use of the
df'Cisi on HI romm ;J ndt't 'l lhl' tirq
1''\plosion as :1 lark of wa tC'r in the
fpw srrarntl11;1h t11 diH 'k ,tt \ ·i, k-,
tj( Ji lt'r" H'hich n·f'rf' ulso rE:'garded as
hurg J h f' ~l&lt;lcd n(l t·t h 1 !1 11" I I'lL" t:t-.;k
rldr·cti\'f'
On Apri l 2\ !Kh\ tht • la:-.t o! !ht ·
If ,\-'OU want to "'rite to ,James
paml('('s m.nc hf'd tm t)l,,lrd tht·
Sand~, his addn__os..., i~ Box 92,
Sultdn.J stramtx&gt;;lt: IJo; •rcb bf'g &lt;Hl
&lt;'lfi:rkshurg, Ohio 43115.
to nTak as huncllt""( l" llf lht•rn
~qUl&gt;t 'Z I'tJ in i tl 1'\'t't') inch ol d\';lil;t ,----~-----------1
hlr sp;w1·
[)pck ll; ll ld.-; wt•n·
hroug hr f(l i'!h 11 1 place &lt;.i l i lnr'hi on"
undf'r rhr· lou Si l,E!.L,'1ng hurric ;tnt•
rlf'ck
I. Till
Th f' SL; If.nLt ·~ , t -. dt •-. :gn txl lu
c Jrr:· :r;,; pol-.:-.t·n g•·r-.; hut when sht·
pullf'd out 11!' \'ick " hurg lwadr'fl f11r
Ci nr inn;tt i. th•' n' ~.~~ · n , up&gt;, ;u-U:-i of

D . LAWI:P+CI SlAWAY lboerd tM S1 YIIAQUZ
Aug. 'l'l · ~pt. ~ - 8111 hhe:naur rrom Galllpotls A.A.A hOsts thiS
tour thet IUIWI S from this aru by motorcoech to Montrul to
board the SS Veracruz . Festlvltffl art plen~ In Montreel to
Include: U h :stln du Govcmt:ur In the Ok:l Fort on ttM: 1~ Ste.
Hf:lf:ne ln tM 51. Lawrenu Rtw:r. R~lry , musk:, food and drink
~und In tM 17th century etf'r'IOSpht:rc whtre dlnncf 11 tc:r'l'rd by wtnches In COttumc o ' that period. We ' ll tour the city
lxforc boarding th&gt;t ship tOf KW:n dey\ Of reltxatton, bauttful
IK ene:ry, entertatnm«nt, cxcel~nt food and pemperlng by thl
crew . LOOk for whale where the Sogucnay ltlw:r meets the
AUsntk as you slide' toward your ports of call - QuebeC, Hen-

Private Eye
Page 3

N

Richard Hill

T

Pt. Pleasant H.S.

Point Pleasant
2550 Jac;kson Ave.
Pt. Pleasant

Serving Gallia,-Meigs and Mason Counties

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