<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13755" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/13755?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T17:26:34+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44852">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d8d5050678142f28991ff83b8c3fafc0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>65a48c09e7fc9f66afbd078293682040</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43041">
                  <text>12- The

Sentinel

22, 1983

Initiate
plans

Glenn's campaign
theme leaves echo
By MICHAEL HOLMES
AsMclaled Press WriWr
In declaring himself a Democratic candidate for president', J lui
Glenn sounded a campaign theme
that might have leftl the current
resident of the White House
wondering If there was an echo
somewhere.
Glenn mentioned hls hometown,
little New Concord, 10 times and
mentioned traditional, small·town
values I2 times during the 21·mlnu te
speech In the high school tha t bf'ars
his name .
Before talking about the Issues of
unemployment, nuclear weapons
or taxes, Glenn talked about his
memories of "sleds and bikes and
· Cbrlstmases" and "the stor1' on
Main Str1'el" and even " the
swimming hole down ln . Crooked
Creek."
Then he said, " All Americans
share the simple values we learned

A committee composed of (;e.
raid Rought, Frank Vaughan and ·
Eiza Gilmore was appointed to plan
for annual Memorial Day services
when · Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, met in regular
session.
Th.e annual parade and program
of the post In Pomeroy will begin at
9 a.m. a nd the ftrlng squad of the
post will visit Beech Grove and the
Ca thollc Cemeteries following the
service.
All post members will then h\lve
dinner at the post home before
going to Meigs Memory .Gardens
for services at 1 p.m. and then to
Chester to take par11n a parade and
services at 1: 30 p.m .,
The post expects then to conduct
services a t Hemlock Gro\le at 3
p.m . and Rock Springs at 4 p .m .
The post voted to again handle
the parking of motor vehicles at the
Meigs County Fatr in August and
a pproved co-sponsoring with
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Mtddl!'port, the Amertca n Legion baseball
team this summer.

in this small town - the values of
excellence, honesty, fairness, com·
passion for !bose who have less and
confidence in facing the future.
"Those values are truly the heart
of the America n experiment and
they must bf' the soul. of ~ur
government as well ."

•

Those aren 't declarations likely to'
bring criticism. Certainly not from
Ronald Wilson Reagan, who grew
up in tittle Dixon , m., swam In the
Rock River and who sounded a call
for traditional values when he ran
for president - successfu lly - In

1900.
And In Glenn's speech - Inter·
ruptedl9times for polite, but hardly
overwhelming appla use by the
a udience of students, fa mily
friends, political associates and
New Concord res ldents-heechoed
much of what Reagan has sa id
bf'fore.

Area deaths
may call at the funeral home
Sa turday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Nina R. Dillinger
Nita R. Dillinger, 75, Rt. 6, Athens,
died Thursday afternoon at O'Bll'ness Memorial Hospital following
an extended IIJness
Mrs. Dillinger was born In
Canaan Township the daughte r of
the late Earl and Elma Crawford
Butts. She was a lso preceded In
death by her husband, Oscar
Dlllln~r . .and one brother, Or1ho
Butts.
·
·
Mrs , Dillinger was a llfelqng
res ident o( AJhens County was a
gradua te of Canaanvlll.e Hfgh
School and received her B. A. and
m aste rs lneduca tiondegree a t Ohio
University . She taught a t Lothidge
school for 30 years untU It closed In
1900. She was a memher of the
Nazarene Church a t Chester, a nd a
m ember of the Ret ired Teachers
Association.
She Is survived by two sons, Floyd
D. Dillinger, Rt. 6, Athens and Lloyd
R. DUIInger, Rt. I, Shade; seven
grandchildren, six great gra ndchildren, one sister. Louise Moore,
Columbus and several nieces a nd
nephews.
Funeral services will bf' held
Sunday at2 p.m. a t Hughes Funeral
Home, Athens. with the Rev.
He rbert Grate and The Rev. David
Couto officiating. Burial will be In
Soutll Canaan Cemetery. Friends

~ork

Michael F. Canter
Michael F . Canter, 63, Route I,
Stewar1, formerly of Meigs County,
died Wednesday at the Veterans
Administration Medical Center In
Dayton. ·
He was a boilermaker at the
O'Bleness Hospita l In Athe ns. He
was born Jan . 31, 19al at Cheshire a
son of the late Oral and Ollie Holley
Canter.
Sui'Viving are three siste~s·J n·
)a w; Ruth Ci!.ntl,r, Syracuse; FJos.
sle Canter, East Canton, and J essie
Canter, For1 Lauderdale, Fla.,
nephews, Charles Canter, Syrcuse;
Danny Cante r , New Carlisle; Ra y·
mond Canter, Apple Grove; Ronnie
'f!lompson. New Haven; nieces,
Pamela Clark , Syracuse; Anna
Mae Bruner, Shadyside; Ruth Anna
Dlckeroff, Powry, Calif.. Becky
Thompson, Cqlumbus . Besides his
parents he was pneceded In death by
three brothe rs and two sisters.
Mr. Canter was a ve terans of the
U.S. Army In World War II.
Services will bf' held at 2 p.m .
Sunday at the Ewing F uneral Home
wlthg the Rev. Frank Han officiatIng. Burial wUI be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery . Fr1end• m ay call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 this
evening and all day on Sat urday.

lags on project

MARIE'ITA - Whilework onone
Ooodlng project on .SR 5M In
Cheshire Township a ppears to be
moving forward, a second seems to
·bf&gt; Jagging bf'hlnd.
According to Howard Clfford .
design engineer for the Ohio
Deparirnent ofTra nsporlatlon, bids
should bf' let within a few weeks for
the raising of a portion of SR 5M east
of Africa Rd. near the Elmer
Spaulding farm which, at various
times, has been covered by hig h
water In recent years. That section

has been taken over by the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
as a mine reclama tion proj ect.
Gifford said the right of way has
been acquired and acontractshould
bf' let soon .
Concerning the port ion of SR 554
west , of Cheshire closed severa l
years by high water pmble m s. the
0001' Is continue It s work on
detailed plans a nd Is expected to
purchase right-of-way this summer
but no deflnatQ date has been set tor
the job's sa le.

Continue further court action
According to an entry flled
recently In the Meigs County
Common P leas Couri, fur1her
action mncernil]g thre&lt;' defendants
chrJ.rg•ed 1.VItlh br'&lt;¥1klng and ente ring
will be
May l6.
The three
. Shawn D.
Gilmore. Ricky
Lunsford a nd
Danny Haggy, Prltf•rf'rl pleas of

Emergency rurts
Fourcai!Swere anl:wered by local
County
units Thursday, the
Emergency
Serv ice
repor1s.
The 1\rppers Plains
p.m . took BeatrieeSelllers, Mil. Olllve
Road , to Camden-Clark HD!'{l"·arln
Parkersburg.
Mlddiepori at 8: 35 a·.m. took
Bobby Kuhn from Route
to
Veterans Memorial; Porner·ov1 a t
3:59p.m. toolt Do'nalrj G r·imrn ·fr~{ll
Pomeroy Health Care Center
Veterarls Memorial ancl Mlldd.Jeporl,
at
8: ',1:1Norih
p.m .Fourih
took St.,
Florence
nolds
to Veterans
Memorial.

Planning meeting set
The · Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission will meet a t
3 p.m. Mon(!ay at the agricultural
conference center of The Farmers
Bank Building.
Philip Rober1s, county engineer,
wlll discuss the Meigs County
Highway · Department program
and tile Ravenswood bridge road
comdor Is up for discussion .
Knopp;,director or economic
and commwlity development of the
Buckeye l:lllls·HQCk!ng VaiJey Regional Development District, Will
be on hand to speakpn current and
prospective economic development passlbilttles.

Tim

gullty to breaking and e ntering
charges_ A prl'-sent enclng lnvesti
gat ion was order with action to be
mntlnued on May 16.

Taken to fal'ility
VIrgil P . P hillips, 32, Mlddle por1 ,
who was sentenced to a te rm of not
less than two nor more tha n 10 years
on four drug char ges by Judge
Charles Knight will be take n today
to a Columbus Correctional fac Ulty
by David Ohlinger of the Meigs
County Sheriff' s Department .

Veterans Memorial
Admltt.ed .. Bobby Kuhn, Ch!'shire; Donald Grimm, Pomeroy;
Florence Reynolds, Middleport.
Dlschargect.. Philllp Blackford,
Harold Carson, Ronald Thompson.

Heritage Sunday
plans underway
20o/o OFF

na mes lis ted _before a tea . and
Pia ns for the observance of
recep tion which is tenta tively
Heritage Sunday on June 26, lri
scheduled ' for t he third 'Sunday tn
conjunction wlih Btg Bend Rega tta
Weeke nd , were made whe n the · J une. Life rnel'nbers' paym e nts are
placed in an endowment fund from
Meigs Co unt y Pioneer and His toriwhich
only interest Is used . T his
cal Society held It s quarterly
proccdurP a nd through other fund s,
meeting.
operat ion of the museum over the
Nancy Reed outlined pla ns for
ne xt ~ years will be guaranteed .
the observance not ing that tentaMrs. Parker re ported excellent
tive pl ans call for presentations
respo
nse to the series of historical
throughout the alternoon by the
presented at the Ches ter
programs
Sweet Adellnes. Also planned are a
£1eme
ntary
School over the school
petting zoo for children, goat
year
through
the sponsorship and
milking a nd food tast ing demon·
lion
of
the Cheste r PTO .
cooper
a
stratlons as well as special dtwlays
A
committee
to · m a ke recoma nd a special new slide show of
menda
tions
for
the
purchaSP of a
older noted houses of the count y.
microfilm reader printer and the
Randy Houdashelt of the Im age
netrssnry census and newspaper
Seekers Camera Club presented a
film
was na med a nd includes
prelinlrnary set of slides showing
Norma
Ne w land , Margare t
many o l the houses of Meigs Counry
Parker.
Kl'ith
Ashley a nd Charles
which will he ready for the sli de
Blakeslee
.
Favorable
re(X)rts were
showing on Heritage Sunday. The
give
n
on
the
last
issue
of the Meigs
club Is continuin g to IJ ke pictures
Historian
edited
by
Ms.
Newla nd
for ind iv idual nominations still
a
nd
Cha
rles
Bla
keslee
with
RSVP
heing received .
volunteers
under
thedirection
of
M argaret Parker , viet? pr£'siSusan
Oliver
handling
the
maili
ng
dent. pointed out that more than 40
c hon•s.
pictures being used ln th•• newly
redecorated dining room of the
Meigs l nn were take n from .the fil es
of the &gt; Meigs County Museum.
Recognition wilt be given the
soc iety for usc of the photograp hs.
Curren t membership of the
society now stand s at 145 yearly

·. DRAPE SALE
Select from our stock of self-lined Malimo drapes,
unlined open weave drapes, thermal back drapes, lined
jaquard drapes or unlined polyester drapes.
All drapes are 50 inches wide and come in 63, 72 and
84 inch lengths.
·

sATURDAY SPECIAL20o/o oFF ·

members and 35 life mem bers,

Daisy [Jtakes tee, secretary. repor1ed . A plaque listing a\1 life
members Is hel ng pr, pared. Addllionallife mrmber s m ay have thelr

Villag£' cleanup

Sate Ends Salurday

~~-----------, ,------------~

s~ t

•$3!~

To coordina te the efforts of
Racine V lllag~ with I he upcoming
littl'l'

cont rol progra m , ge~ ral

cleanup ln Racine Village lwll he
April 29·30.
All garbagr !n proper cont n iners

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OH.
PHOIIE 992·5776
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASOII
Complete lin&amp; of vegetable and bedding
plants, loliap plants and hanginc
basl.els. Also a la1111 selection • of
shrubbery and dward fruit tiees.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5
SUNDAY I to 5

sggg
Deadlock

Silicone
Caulk

a nd trash should be pla ced a t the
curbing on these days. Prope11y
owner s and rente rs are · a lso
reminded that their· lots should be
moved, c leaned of rubbish and ju nk
and propery main! ained.

10 ) ·O&lt;J I'ICI CII'IIWIQB

~~ I

'-""-"'·

Single Cylinder

W l'Hit! 1!&gt;8?

A

8

~
-

!/"

69¢

4 ·0VOCI 001111

(170· o18!l)

$399

Caulking
Gun

Glue
PoJVV~nyl '"'"

$588

$199

~-

U1U t&amp;qYtaJ

1196·1]31

sore tuoes "" SOOlll

Liquid Nails
XH;ll,onceca"•"''e (017·135)

Lock
Installation
Kit
'

f01 j!l 1. o•lnC:h locU~II8 With I ·
11\Cr'IIO.ICh (182·9!!6 )

....

AJIMUUB

t ·~·· '~

ss!~

$649

Shovels

Weed Cutter

Made In U.S.~.

14"

Sprayer

Serralad Blade

Polyethylene

TEACHER: LOIS PAULEY
$10.00 Per Penon IPiua Supplies)
Canvat.IPoppiea)'

804 W, Main St. '

OH.

1\andled IQIInd 1)1)!,1)\ and
110uare 001n1 Aouoo !SO't-1791 .

,lOIIQ

~···· flll

0701

3(j ond\lli 111f191h o.·~trall

69»1

$3288

(l'J? ·

•

Clothes Dryer
Outdoor

T•nk

CIIP-'I:•IV 1 .. qaitQI1t 100&lt;1· 768 1

STAR SUPPI.
PHONE 949-2525

Story 011 Paie D-1

Gall-polis Rotary relays
Story, phc)tos 011 Page c-1

tmts
Vol 17 No. 8

r ,,..,,._.19&amp;3
---

10 5ectionl , 70 Paget 35 Centt
A Mult imedia Inc Newtpaper

Middleport--l!omeroy-Gallipolis-Point P18Cisant Sunday, April 24, 1983

--

---------

-

~----

-------

-

-~

---

-

-

--

--- -

'

Man charged in '81 shotgun slaying
by Alma Woods, owner of 1he trailer In which
Richards resided with Woods' son- Char les Miller.
Co-habitant Miller was originally ta ke n Into
custody on the night of the discovery of tile victim . HP
was released on the evening of Jan. 13.
According to Information released a t tlle ttme by
the sheriff' s department. Miller had bf'en questioned
In conn!'Ct lon w ith th~ allegro homlclde; and , was
held t)troughou t the next day, at his request. In
"protective custody ." No c harges were filed against

Wednesday by the AprU term of ttie Gallia County
Grand jury.
On the afternoon of Jan. 12. 1981, Richard 's body
was found just Inside her Taylor Road moblle-home
residence, otf SR 775. The victim was 52-years old a t
the tlme of her death.
An autopsy conducted by the Franklin County
coroner's office showed theca use of death as a single,
polnt·blank shot to the head from a 12-gauge shotgun_
The sheriff's department was notified of tile deatll

By lARRY EWING

Miller a t tllat time.
Two days after his releasP from custody in 1981 .
Mtller was admitted to til&lt;' intensivl' care unit of
H olzer M edica l Center, where he wns lt'C' a trd for thP

consumption of "an undetE'Imined quantity of paint
thinner ." He was later transfl'n '('(l to a rrgular room
and then '"leased from carP.
A spokesman tor the s h~rlff's &lt;lepartml'nt S&lt;rid
Friday Miller Is scheduled to apJ,X•ar tor arraignment
on the chatge on Tul'Sday .

County
board
COAL.goes on-air to explain
•
muslleplace
objections to l()ngwall ·
Bruce Stout
within 30 days
By KEVIN KELLY .

Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT . "What
price do you put on making
Meigs County a ghost town?"
That question, and the area's
economic dependence on min·
ing, colored questions posed to
and answered by a representa live of Citize ns Organized
Against Longwall1ng (COAL ) on
a local radio call-In program
Friday.
Appearing on WMPO's "Kaleidoscope," COAL President
Betty Wells said ' tlle organization Is not trying to stop mining
at Southern Ohio Coal Co. , only
to stop damage It claims has
been caused by the longwall
mining device.
The program, station news
director Kim Taylor pointed out.
was not to take sides but to
provide Informa tion on tlle
Issue. Taylor said she had
contacted coal company and
American E lect ric Power Co.
olftctals a bout sending a repr!'sentatlve to speak on the
program. but none confirmed
her request.
Since residents of norihern
Meigs County living near Meigs
Mine No. 2 began pointing out
structural and surface damage
to their homes and reductions In
their local wate r supplies, the
company has chosen to settle
privately with landowners.
Financial settlements have
· been reached wltll two of the
damaged property owners.
A decision on a company
permit application to continue
mining Is due from the reclamation division of the Ohio Depart .
ment of Natural Resources May

ON 11IE AIR - Betty Wells,
president of
Citizens Organized Against Longwalllng, prepares to
answer a question during an appearWJCe on a local

rndlo call-In program, while Gladys Monis, COAL
secretary, listens I!! right.

Mrs. Wells said that agreements made by the company
with landowners contain a nondisclosure clause, in which th~
amount Is not revealed .
"I've heard figures. but J
haven' t seen the m ,.. the ca ller
said.
"I'll tell you, I haven't seen
them eit her," Mrs. We ll s
replied.
" If It hadn't been for AEP In
tile past 11 years, I don't know
where Meigs County would be,"
tile caller said.
Mrs. Wells as ked the caller
what wUI happen to the county In
40 years, when the company
predicts It will finish mining out

the area . With the longwa ll
procedure, she sa ld the company may be out In less tl!an 20
years.
In response to a not her quest ion, Mrs. Wells said COAL
wants to find alterna tives to
longwall , or work with the
company to make cha nges In the
procedure to preve nt fur1her
damage.
"We have no objection to
m nventlonal mining," she said,
alt hough coal m mpany and
United Mine Workers officials
have said Iongwil illng Is tile
salvation of the eastern mining
industry In the face of foreign
and non·unlon-produced coal.

steered the vehicle too hard coming
out of the curve, causing the car to
drop off the right side of the road.
Hutchinson then apparently lost
control of the car, tra•relil!d approxl·

mately 105 feet, struck the embank·
ment and went sideways nearly 63
feet bf'fore coming to rest.
The department said the car was

CALL !POLIS- Action tonamca
successor'lo a Ga ll Ia County Local
Board of Educa tion mc mhf'r who
died Friday night must txogtn a t the
end o!lOdays.
Bruce S. Stout , 52, Rt . 1, Bidwell,
died of a heart at tack a t his Ohio HXJ
res Ldence near Porter .
According to Ohio Revised Code,
the board Is ma ndated to appoint a
successor in case of death or
resignation. But If no decis ion is
made ln JO days, or If the board Is
unable to a ppoint a s ucc~ssor, the
decl&gt;lon mu st be m ade by Gallla
County Proba te-.Ju vmlle .ludge
Thomas Moulton.
No Immediate date for a board
meeting to take s uch action had
been set Saturd ay. Dr . Cary
Toothaker , county schools supcrlnt~ ndent . a nd Fred [)eel, board
pres ide nt . a n• IJOt h In San F ra ncisl'O
this weekmd atte nding the Na t lonat
Sc hool Bwrd Assocla tlon' s ·an nua t

Bruce S. Stout

convent ion.

Since the mimos yit'ld approxi ·
mately $78 mUlion in rax IT•venue for Meigs Coun t ~·, onC'
calle r wa nt ed to know when&gt; the
money goes.
" I don't know abou l down here
arou nd the-.r.!vc.r. IJut 1n th~ little
S&lt;oocl ion of Columbia Town shi~
where I live, I """ no chang&lt;&gt;,"
Mrs. Wells rep li ed .
Asked by Taylor if the com·
pany's recent call-back of 1.100
miner s Is

an

indlcH t lon

lhC'

ThP las t limP a 'succC'Ssor
appolntmPnt had to hf' made locally
wa s in 19HJ when .Juy Stmm.s, a
m&lt;omber of thcGJU lpollsCIIy Board
of Educat ion. res igned aftPr two
year s In office. Th~ bom-d appointed
Roberi Marchi to fill out 1h&lt;'
rPmaindPr of Simms' l&lt;'rm in t.'a rl.v

19R'2.

rrpn: 'SC'Illi.i llvP wit h t ·a rl Wat.:gh .
I\ l&lt;on•etn War vetC'ran
assisi&lt;Jn l shi rt •·nginrvr at Ohio

and

V:lilt•y l·:l&lt;'·l riC' Curp.·,, 1\ygl' l'
r rt'f'k plant , Stout. w ho was aC'tlvf'
in Nm1 h c;a llin ;tttt·ndu ncr arc'a
scho.&gt;l and t ·ivic act i ~ · i1if ·s , sen 'I'(\ 1Jfl
North (;a ll la's 1&lt;•·: 11 sC'h&lt;XJI l&gt;&lt;anl
pl'ior to qmsu lld:tt !on.

Stout's SUCCCSSOI ' ma y a lso fill lhP

l·lf' w as Pll'cttd to lht• &lt;'ou nty

rPmaindf'r of H term on t hl'
Ga llia -.Jackson-Vlnt on Joint Voca·
Ilona! Board of Education . whPrt•
Stout served as a county schools

board in HJ7.i and lo.o., t rPdt'c:l ion in
1977. Stout fil&lt;'d as canrlldatP for 1hP
OOard ln \!IH\ and won :t four yPar
t.Prm wlth I,:im vnh '!'l .

permit will be approved, Mrs.
Well s answered In t h e
affirma tive.
"We ass ume It will be
grarted, with certain stlpu la·
lions," she sa id .

City of Jackson
wants to construct
Letart youth di~s in Pt. Pleasa~.~ accid~nt hydroe~ectric plant
POINT PLEASANT - A 17-year·
old Letart y'outh was .kllled In a
slngl~vehic!e accident shorily after
. noon Friday when the car jn which
he was a passenger struck an
embankment on sand HUI Road .
liN!' Point Pleasant.
Marvin E . Smith, a ~nlor1lt Point
Plealant High School, died or a skull
fracture, according to Dr. John
Grubb, Mason County mroner.
The c1rtver of the car, Terry D.
Hutclllnson, 21, Point Pleasant, and
two otller (lllliSimgers, Charles
Smith and James C. Piercy, we~
treated for Injuries at Pleasant
-Valley Hospital and released.
'Ole Mason CountY Sheriff's
Deplrtment said charges are
IJI!IIIIIng In connection withe ace!·
dent, which is stili under
lnVettlgatlon.
..
The departmellt said Hutchinson,
llriVIIW • 19811 Mustan&amp; ow1lfd by
Pten:y, wu tested toward Point
•nt and had just paslll!d Gun
Club Road wben he entered a sharp
left C\llW. Hutchinson apparently

n

RACINE

Some freedom for Billy Milligan

•

ldentlffed as a mine employee,
said he understood the company
has offered fair moneta ry
settlements:

Liquid NailS

~

···....-~·

SAT., APRIL 30, 1983-9 A.M;· • 5 P.M.
At The Gallia Co. Fairgrounds

CRAFTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT .

T\l guide ..... ...... ........... Insert

6.

CIOar (01J.E!90 i

TOLE &amp;DECORATIVE PAINTING SEMINAR

(Funy Animal)
In Gelllpotio 446·21 34
dNdlne II April 28th 11:

Sports ........................... . c-1-6

One of the callers, who was

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

For

Editorial .......................... A-Z
Fann ......... .... ....... ··· .... ·C..'1-8
Loc!') .......... .. ... .............. A-5-8
State-National ................... D-1

Remember:
forward

cor~: test

Feahlred 011 Page B-1

Along the Rlv~r ............ .. B-1-8
Area dealhs ...................... A-6
BWIIne8!1 .............. , ......... .. D-2
c• i "'fteds ...... ... ...........:. D-3-7

Tlrnes-Senllnel starr
GAIJ..IPOLlS - A 55-year old rura l Patriot
resident has been arrested and charged In connection
with the alleged Jan. 12, 1981 shotgun slaying of
Lilclnda E . Richards.
·
Olarles Miller, Patriot Star Route, was Incarcerated Friday afternoon In the Gallia County jail on a
charge of murder, a felony of theftrstdegTee. Miller's
was one of five secret lndlctmen ts returned

waves to suppor;.,rs Thursday
finishing his presidential
candidacy speech In John Glenn High School In New Concord, Ohio, his
homerown. In background is Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste. (M'
l..aserphoto ). .

lnJemational chicken -flying

Today's
Times-Sentinel

ln,theopposlte lane of traffic when It
calne to a stop. It marked the third
tralfic fata lity In Mason Count y In
IWO \¥eeks.

FATAL Aa:JDENT- A ..._ c-.t,r ' .... oa s.dllll Rolld _ ..... n 11111 Friday,
depu&amp;y ...,Veys 'tile ~ Of • CU' In ..... • tlrl!rnan ' - ckiwn the lmrnedlllte acene. ·
M8rvla E. Smllh, 11, W
In Ml IO&lt;kJooll;
. , WMidDed
'
.
.

JACKSON. Ohio tAP)- The Jty
of J ackson wa nt s to bulid a
hydroelectric power plant ori the
Ohio River a nd has applied to the
federal government for perml-.lon
to do so.
City Council this week authorized
the m ayor to flle the application
with the Federal· Energy Regula·
tory Commission for a license to
buUd a 42- megawa tt gene rating
plant.
The pianf would be at the
Belleville Locks and Darn on 'the
Ohio River, some 50 mlles from
Jackson. W.M. Lewis &amp; Associates
of PortSmouth prepared the appl~
cation and Is bypassing the normal
two-year permit stage.
Terry ,Turner, a hydrologic tech·
ntclan at \\'.M. Lewis, said the firm
had been working on the application
for tile last three months . He said the
firm approached Jackson officialS
with the notion In Novemhf'r 1982
because the city was one of the
firm 's oldest customers.

plant would be ot the
Bolleville Locks and Dam on the Ohio
River, some SO miles from Jackson .
WNt. Lewis &amp; Associot"' of Porl&gt;mouth prepared the application and
is bypauing the normal two-year
permitotage. Ron Speakman, 1he city
tervice dir«tor in Jackson, said bonds
would be used to fi nonce the S96
million p!ont and paid off in 35 yeart
with revenue&lt; from electricity soles.
The

Ron Speakman, the city serv ll\e
director In Jackson, sa id bondS
would bf' used to fina nce the $~
million plant and paid off In 35 years
with revenues from electricity
sales.
He said the plant would le t the city
produce and sell electrlclty tor 4.8
cents a kllot.'att·hour, which is the
current rate. But he says the plant
would let the city keep ratel\ low . .,
New Martlnsvllle, W.Va .. Is also
Interested In the site, Turner
Indicated.

,.

'

'

I

- '

' '
\

\

�•

•

Commentary and perspective
Suffer little
~'h
Bm1i:,l

A' Division of

~~---·~dtF==t

qjv

825 Third Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio
(6lt) 446-2342

ll1 Court St., PomHQY· Ohio
1614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
' Publisher
PAT WHITF:HEAD

HOBA RT WJI SON JR.
Exceuti ve Etlittw

A s~ i Slant Publi s hl' r~Control ll!r

A Mfo:MRF.H nrTtw As~udaU&gt;d l'n•S!i, lu la nd lla ily l' rt"s~ AssoH·ia ti•m &lt;~rid lho• Anwrit·a n '
Nt"\j,-~Jllllpt'f l'l.lhli ~ h t• r:oo A ~~ udatlom .

BATON ROUGE , La. -Almost dual system of pubUc schools. Such
29 years ~e passed since the was the law of that day. In 1965, the
Supreme Court h;lnded down Its parents of several black children
landmark decision In the school brought sult tohastenUjeprocessof
segregation cases. It seems incredl· . desegregation. The original plain·
ble that federal judges ·stUI should tlf!s long ago greW up and left the
be formulating detaUed decrees, system, but the suit goes .on. On .
school by school and chUd by chUd, March 30 or this year, !or the sixth
I n a futile effort to fix ldeallwels of time, the 5th U.S. Court a! Appeals
racial Integration , but they are.
tackled the problem anew.
Consider, If you please, UJe
This was the particular dl!fleulty
melancholy case of Rapldes Par· that engaged thE' power, might and
Ish, La. At the time of the Supreme majesty of our judicial system:
Court's
1951 decision in the Brown The Cheneyvllle area Is too black;
l
case,' the parish was operating a the Forest HUJs area Is too white.,

Berry's World

-

f-W HOLE

wrnwuT A

- ~

t8

cd

f:J·

....

..

Apil24, 1...7
By BW..BERGS11WM
A ...... a!ed Press Writer
PIKEVILLE, Ky. (AP) - KentuCky Power Co. Is Investing in a

school In Forest HUis, and (3) to bus
the uprooted children tn two other
scnools In the town of Lecompte.
The 5th Circuit, wltli evident
weariness, affirmed tlie trial
court's decision.
It was too much tor Cblet Judge
Charles Clark. The two communi·
ties, he noted In dissent, now stand
to lose their only schools. The
greatest costs, he sald, are tn the
!amWes tl1P-t · include school·age
chlldren, but repercussions extend
throughout the area.
"Parents In both communities ·
asked the court 19 leave their
schools open, at least tor their
youngest chlldren. Their petitions
· were Ignored. ~ children,
ranging in age from kindergarten
through early elerile.,tary gtajles,
must rise early, OOard buses, drive
past their, community scl\ool
houses and go Into a distant town
and then reverse the journey in the
evenings ...
"In 13 years on this court I have
participated In the attlrmance of a
number a! public school segregation plans. Most have been, as most
are, successful in theory only. I
nevertheless remain readUy obedient to follow precedent. But that
does not keep me from knowing
what everyone knows: Zones,
pairs, clusters and busing are
workable remedtes only In extreme
cases. When the problem Is reduced to dealing with people of
good will who bave done no wrong,
maximum use of the neighborhood ·
school Is the key to assuring equal
. educational opportunity. That
equality 0! 1 ol\pprninlty Is the

WASHINGTON - A little·
publlclzed area of U.S.·Sovlet
rivalry Is student exchange. There
ls evidence that the Soviets are
winning the battle for the minds of
futu re leaders of the Third World.
Even the traditionally hardware·
oriented Pentagon recognizes the
Importance of bringing foreign
students to the United States tor
educa tion. The most recent
military -posture statement by the
Joint Chiefs of Staff declares that
the funding of foreign students at
U.S. mllltary schools Is "possibly
ihe most cost-effective or all U.S.
security assistance programs In
many regions of the world."
The Joint Chiefs' report includes
some astonishing figures on the
subsequent careers of foreigners
trained In our service academies
up to 19!KI: 1\venty-tlve had become

presidents or heads of state; 160
were cabinet members, legislators
or ambassadors; 258 had berome
military chiefs or staff, and 1,83:1
had berome generals •or !lag
officers In their own countries
One area of particular concern Is
Central America and the Caribbean. A landmark report prepared
for the National Security CouncU
concludes that the Soviets have
taken a "most disturbing" lead in
the numbers of students It trains
from tbat region .
The study was done by an
Inter-agency team from the CIA,
Defehse InteUigence Agency, Joint
Chiefs and Commerce Depart·
ment. My associate Dale Van Alta
has obtained a copy of the group's
findings which are classified
" Secret."
"In the Third World ," the report

says, " the Soviets have placed
.heavy emphasis on academic
excbanges as an Instrument of
policy." Meanwhile, It adds, the
United States Is missing an lmpor·
tant opportunity by raUing to
expose "upcoming young foreign
leaders during the formative years
ot their careers ... to American
Ideas, political phUosophles and
social patterns."
Such exposure could "stimulate
a lifelong lnteres! In and understanding of the United States," the
report notes, adding: "Most lmportant, such an exposure to our
society also can create 'an orienta·
tlon to Americans, their Institutions
and their technology once the
foreign students have returned
home tn pursue their careers in
their own countries."
The secret study estimates So-

Justice, priorities
perjured themselves under oath.
People could be dying because of
what they did. Is this a high pr1or1ty

Expert believes Hitler
diaries are authentic

item? "

"We're obviously looking into It,
but the department can spread
Itself just so thin . Many of our
lawyers are tied up writing br iefs
as friends of the court concerning
all the bleeding heart laws now on
the books. These brtets must take
precedence over a few misdemeanors committed by a handful of
zealous people In EPA who were
only trying to do their jobs. We're
not going to become a vlgllante
organization because of publicity·
seeking environmentalists."
"!don't Imagine antitrust prosecutlo and SEC violations have high
priority In this administration?"
"We have a very active antitrust
depariment? But our philosophy Is
that It's much better to settle

tucky Power'sAshlandotnces, saki
" I! we had gdne to coal tram some
other place, It would have been
more expensive, which would be
~ In customers' electricity

co!lts."
"Fuel Is a blgpartofourcosts," he
said. "Our commission Is to
consider the lowest cost electricitY
to our customers.''
• He said low-sulfur Wyoming coal
can be burned at the Rociqxlrt plant
without Installing scrubbers and
still meet clean air standards.
. Indiana and Michigan Electric
Co., which is buDding the plant, has
signed a JO.year contract for
Wyoming coal forthepJant, which Is
scheduled to begin operation next
year.
Ruthertord said the Bum Ken·
tucky Coal group will challenge a
Public Service Commission decl·
slon last month to allow Kentucky
Power. which serves 143,&lt;XXI custo
mers In 20 eastern Kentucky
counties, to invest upto$313 mllllon
for a 15 percent share in the plant.
But Lovegrove said the company
showed the commission that was
the most economical way to meet
projected power needs. Both Ken·
lucky Power and Indiana and

LONDON (AP ) - A British
Hitler's strategic thinking, exercise
expert on Adolf Hitler said today he of power and personality," the
believes 00 recently discovered Times claimed.
volumes or spidery blue handwrit.
For example, In his entry on
ing are authentic diaries of the Nazi
"KristaUnacht," the night in 19:1!
leader that may force revisions in when synagogues were burned and
the history of the Third Reich.
Jewish shops vandalized and Jews
In the docwnents Hitler "nwer were terTOrlzed, "Hitler deplores
hlnts that he had any direct
such destruc tion. complaining
knowledge of or hand in organizing
about the breaking of so much
the Holocaust," In which the Nazis valuable glass," the newspaper
murdered 6 million Jews, the !;ald.
London Times reported today.
"But he complains that if they
(the Jews) could not be resettled in
the East and since no other eountry
would accept them, they should be
sent to sea a nd the boats sunk:"
Some historians doubt the diaries
are real.
But Hugh Trwor-Roper, author
of "The Last Days of Hitler," says
he believes the manuscripts are an
authentic "archive of great his tori·
cal slgnlflcimce."
"The standard accounts of
SALE PRICE NOW ·
·
·
Hitler's writing habits, of his
BRi NG THIS ADII
··. personality, and wen, perh,aps,
• Limited time offer .du ring April /May '83 only.
· some public '€Vents may. in conse•
Save $25.00 (Regubr Retail Pric(• $'104.95)
quence have to be revised,"
Trevor-Roper wrote in today's
Times.
A ~ R. jOHNS LrD EXCLUSIVE AVAILA BLE NOW AT
The Times' sister weekly news·
paper, the Sunday Times, begins
publishing excerpts from the dlar·
ies on Sunday, and the West
German magazine Stem, which
also has access to the material, Is to
begin Its selections on Monday.
The documents, now belngheldin
a Swiss bank vault, will "slgnl!l·
can fly alter historical judgments on

MlcJIIgan 81'!! part of the Ohio-based
AmeriCan Electric Power System.
Rutherford objected to spending
money from eastern Kentuckians'
electriC bills tor Western coal and
It amounted to shipping "coal
by wire into the middle of the best
coal In the world."
He said the Bum Kentucky Coal
group will monitor negotiations for
further coal contract$ for the plant
and oppose use or Western coal.
He said the group also will P\!sh
ror legislation In the 1!&amp;1 Genef al
Assembly to restriCt use of coal
!rom other regions.
Gerald Blackmore, American
Electric's vice president lor fuel
supply, told the Interim Joint
Committee on Energy earlier this
year In Frankfort that Kentucky
coal would be considered tor the
second unit at Rockport, Lovegrove
said.
He also said Kentucky Power
burns eastern Kentucky coal at Its
current generating station, the Big
Sandy Plant at Louisa.
"Since we are tied in with the
AmeriCan Electric Power System
we can get electricity from another
company and there are times when
we export electricity," he said. "So

said

that's eastern Kentucky coal by
wire, you could say, to other slates."
Lovegrove said a Tennessee
Valley Authority study .of 26
southeastern utllitles in January
ranked Kentucky Power's res !den·
t1a1 rates as the lowest.

Postal examination
POMEROY - A clerk-carrier
examination has been scheduled for
Pomeroy, Middleport and Racine
post offices to establish an eligibles
register for future vacancies.
Applications are available at any
of the three post o!!lces during
window service hours . Mond~y
through Friday. No applications
wUI be accepted alter Friday.

viet expenditures on foreign scholarshlps worldwide at $1 billion
over the last 25 years. of the 68,1XXJ
students trained in the Soviet
Union, only ahout 2,600 were from
the Caribbean-Central American
region.
·
But that relatively smaU number
Is deceptive, the report warns:
Soviet programs In the area bave
been growing consistently. By the
end of 1979, an estimated 1,100
working-class students from the
region were studying In the Soviet
Union - most of them at Patrice
Lumumba University In Moscow,
which numbers among Its alumni
such notorious terTOrlsts as Carlos
the Jackal (Ilylch Ramirez
Sanchez).
In addition, 800 Latin American
students were studying elsewhere
In the Soviet bloc.

~on little

arnmr~
"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER"

113 COURT ST. 342 SECOND AVE.
GALLI POLIS
POMEROY , OHIO

/o

30 Month

Certificate

0

•

flqHT!

HICKORY SMOKED
CHICKEN &amp; RIBS

A.P.R.

Rib Dinner-Includes roll and choice of two : .. . ... .
Smoked Baked Potato, Barbecued Beans, or Cole Slaw
Rackol Ribs . . . . . . . . .. $10.25 Hall Rack of Ribs ..
Hall Chicken Only . . .
...... ..

0

•

Potalo, Bdrbecued Beans, or Colo Slaw.

A.P.R.

HOT OR COlD

Federal regulations require a substantial interest penalty for
premature withdrawal of .certificate · funds and prohibits
compounding of interest.

••

''
•'
!

•

•

.'

.

\

r w~n

tl o~r 1na

$1. 10
65

(saucr : ,,
OniOfl

1

••

,,

., •• • .uri

I. •

. 15 ex ira

...... .. $1.10
. . . $1.65

(kraut an: I rnu st &lt;ud)
(swiss and stkup c hoesc.

tomat o. lelluce)
.. St.65

(corned beef, SWISS cheese ,

kraut. Thou sand Is land
Dreesing)
Hickory Smoked
Pork Barbecue
w/Siaw .... . . ....... . ..... $1 .65
Submarines .. . . . . ..... .... $1 .90

~DIC
•

I

Foot Long ..
Shorl Dog .
Slaw Dogs
Smoked Sausage
Special Cheese .

Reuben . . . .. .. .. . .

Stop In Today and Take Ad~ntage of Today's High
\ \ Rates While They. Are Still In Effect

\

Pepper Loaf
Sa lami
·
Pickle Loaf
Olove Loaf
Bo log na
h·• .1: ;t Bee f &amp; I urk. e y
'il'•'t1 111 11'1 w•l fl vo ur

SANDWICH SPECIALS

EACH DEPOSITOR ·INSURED UP TO
$100,000 by the F.D.I.C.
\

.40ca .
...... .65
. $1.20

Turkey &amp; Ham Combo
(Att nandwt c tl es w e serv ed on a fr esh ~esan11 ·
chorr:n o t th e follow inq c lwc '-&gt;C. IP.t!u cc . rnm 1:
pe pp r.r~. salad dr !lsslng, mu ::; rarr l . Ci:th up)

·'

I

$1• • 65

Corned Bee t
Honey Loaf

MINIMUM DEPOSIT ON BOTH CERTIFICATES IS $500.00

\'

. ..... $3 .95

SANDWICH SELECTION
Roast Beef
Cooked Ham

I

.$2.75

Individual Ser, ings of Beans and Colo Slaw
Hickory Smoked Potato ..
Pint s : Barbecued Beans .
St .40 : Cole Slaw .

Tutkey

Today in history

. . $ 5 .25

Party Trays : Choose fr om many ki nd s ol cheesus anu moats l or an y
nu mber of guests .

'\

\

.. $4.50

Half Chicken Dinner , In cludes roll , and choice of tw o : Smo ked Baked

/o

36 Month

Certificate

.

THIS IS AN ERROR
NO REBATE ON
THIS MODEL

WHEN .YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A HIGH RATE OF RETURN
O~ ~ YOUR MONEY,
THERE'S A SIMPLE ANSWER.

~t~r····. I!ICfltt..

..

SH&lt;MS A $4.00 REBATE
ON G.E. COFFEE MAKERS.

•

"It didn't untu you explained It to
me," I said.
"Nobody Is happy with any
administration's Justice Department, and we've been getting a bad
rep by the press, because the cases
we work on may not jell with their
Idea of what laws we should
enforce. But our nrst loyalty Is tn
the president of the United States,
and we have to see that hls wishes
are carried out, even I! It means
going to the Supreme Court and
trying to get them tn reverse
themselves on the bad decisions
they have made In the past.
"What are you personally work·
lng on now•"
"Prayers in school. It's the big
one, and lC we win it, It will be the
greatest legal victory in our
department's history." ...

I

IN TOOAY'S CIRCULAR IT

FULL NAME
OPTION ·$7995*

constltutlonall~f!lll;lr." .

1961,

COR

FREE

Art Buchwald
white-collar crime quietly. We
refuse · to tie up the courts with
cases where no violence has been
committed, since we have bigger
fish to dry."
"Such as?"
"We supported the State Depart·
ment's decision not to penni! the
widow of Chilean President Salvador Allende to come to the !)nited
States to lecture. The McCarran
Act of 1950 speclflcally gl ves us the
right to deny her entry I! It Is
prejudicial to the public Interest.
Mrs. Allende has been involved
with Soviet peace groups, and Is a
definite threat to our national
securtty. That certainly has more
legal slgnlflcance than going after
some poor guy who used Inside
ln!onnatlon lo make a killing In the
stock markl't."

sald Friday.
. The PlkevllJe.based Mountain
Truckers Association Is forming a
group called " BurnKentuckyCoal"
to challenge Kentucky Power's
partiCipation in the RockpQrt Generating Station.
Association president Wayne T .
Rutherford says various coal inter·
ests an;&gt; expected to join In opposing
sales or power in eastern Kentucky
generated with coal !rom
elsewhere.
But Lovegrove, reached at Ken-

share of an Indiana power plant
bee{luse that Is the least expensive
way to meet projected power needs,
a spokesman sald.
And the Rockport, Ind. , plant will
burn coal from Wyoming because
' 'the most inexpensive coal to meet
all the environmental standards
came from the West," Kentucky
Power spokesffiiUl Dick Lovegrove

Student .e~chang~e~r~i=v==·a~ls~==:====:=:::;==::::::;::~Ja;;:::::ck::::::A::=::nd=·er::=::so==n

The Rl&gt;agan .Justice Department
has heen criticized for foo t·
dragging when It comes to prosecuting wrongdoers. But In fairness
to the people who put In their time,
there Is just so much they can do to
Our mother was buried on March
\\'ere gone leaving !he pink uphold the law of the land.
26. 1983 at Gravel H.lll Cemetery
carn ations.
l had a discussion recently with
between 2:30p.m. and 3 p.m.
May the )Jl1 r son who wanted a n attorney who works at Justice,
The spray of pink roses a nd pink
them so desperat ely asIa la ke Ihe a nd he told me, " We cannot
carnations, so carefully chosen by
roses within tht'l'e hours a fter the prosecute e very taw violation on
her five daughters, was placed on
funem t. have p&lt;'ace of mi nd. l the books. Each administ ration has
the grave.
cou ldn 'l.
to set priorities when selecting
'fie aga in visited the grave slle at
Paul ill!' Thompson cases."
about 6::!0 p.m. and the pink roSf's
Cheshire. Ohio
"What are lhls administration's
priorities•"
"We're concerned wit h the laws
I hat will harm the country and hurt
Innocent people. For example, the
Canadians tried to sneak in two
films on acid rain , and one on the
medical hazards of nuclear war.
The law specl!lcally states the films
IH~'I' ~itfT
had to be labeled as propaganda.
\~KIN'
and were produced by a foreign
agent . So we put a ll our best people
on It and won our case. That was a
high priority Item."
"We can a ll sleep safer because
of It," I said. •
"Anothe r pt1ority we have Is to
narrow the Freedom of lnformallon Act, to make sure the public
does not .get access to government
documents they have no business
reading. We also have been
directed by the president to make
sure that anyone In the government
who leaks classified documents Is
prosecuted to the fullest extent ot
the Ia w. You can Imagine how
much time the department has to
spend on this . But It's worth It,
because I! an admlnlsiratlon can't
keep Its secrets, It's Impossible to
govern the country."
. Today Is Sunday, Aprll24, the 114th dayofl983. Thereare251 days left In
"Wha t happe115 I! a government
the year.
secret covers up. a crime?"
Today' s highlight In history:
"I didn't understand the
On April 24, 1704, The Boston News Letter was published for the first
question."
.
time, beroming the first American newspajJer printed on a regular basts.
"Let's take the EPA scandal" I
'
'
6n this date:
said. "Apparently a lot or crimes
!n 1877, federal troops were ordered removed !rom New Orleans, were committed there. Documents
thereby ending Northern post.ClvU War rule in the South.
were destroyed, sweetheart deals
In 1898, Spain declared war on the United States after receiving
were made with chemical comP.n· '
AmeriCa's ultimatum to withdraw !rom Cuba.
·
les, cons11ltants to the agency were
In ·
Soviet cosmonaut Vladlmlr Komarov was killed when the
on the payrolls of pollulers who
p81'achute straps or hls spacectatt got tangled during h1s landing attempt. · were being investigated, and an
In 19'70, China launched 11$ !lrst satellite.
awful lot of otflclals may have

'Peace of mind'

Earlier efforts tn tinker with high
school enrollment had resulted In
an exodus of attected whites, but
the high school ~dents were not at
Issue In the case at hilr. This time
the court was concerned with
children !rom kindergarten
through the eighth grade.
How was "the constitutional
.Imperative of desegregation" to be
achieved? The draconlaJi remedy,
fashioned by the trial court, was (1)
tn · close the predominantly black
K·8 school in Cheneyv\lle, (2) to
close the predominantly white K·B

0

Withholding: an issue
not quite resolved

Letter·to the editor

A-2·

children~=======~1ames=
· =J.=Kil==pa=:=tric=k

Lt:TTERS 01' OJ•INION lm · \ldt•umt•IL Tht•y stwuld ~ k·s~ thu :100 ~nrd s Inn ~ . ,\II
lt'III'I'"S an• s uhjl'l' l lnl'd itin)( _;uul mu.'tt hr si)!.nrtl ~o~ilh nanu· .. Hdrln·ss and trkpht~IW
numtwr . Nn un~i~ nt'd h-Ut·r.; ~~o til bt· puhlis ht·IL l .dlt'r t- s huu ld tw tn j!uoKI tltsh·. ;tddr•• S.'i lll~
it&gt;li UI'S, nul pt• r :o~nmtlilk~ .

The Senate voted to delay interest and dividend tax withholding by at
least four years. But the L•sue Is hardly resolved.
President Reagan, It Is said, Is dete rmined to win his way as a matter of
principle, notwithstanding his opposition to a similar measure in President
Jimmy Carter 's years, also on principle.
Agreeing with Reagan, Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill, D·Mass, the House
Speaker, said he opposed the Senate action, because, appa rently , that a lot
of' cheats are denying the government Its due revenue.
In the battle over the law, which Is still to be dealt with by the House and
which Is still scheduled to go into effect July 1. there also was a side issue
oV,er the Identity of those who oppose it.
purtng the months of contf&lt;!versy, Congress was inundated with letters
and postcards In opposition to the law. Who were these people who
expressed oppos ition: IndiVIduals - or agents of the banks 7
The White.House blamed the latter, almost as if no Opposition at all came
from individuals. Reagan and Treasury Secretary Donald Regan seemed
to make that clear in sharply _worded st~tements .
· ....
· · But If individuals aff~ th"lr.slgnatures to apreprlnte&lt;l·letteror postcard
·d!l they au tomatically beCome bank agents 7 Or are they merely using a
convenient device to express their wlshes 7
The banks exerted an enormous Influence on public opinion. and
~king industry leaders today are congratulating the m selves on one of
thelr best public relations and lobbying campaigns ever.
Individuals wrote the signatures. and nobody threatened them with
penalties lC they did not sign. What the banks did was perfectly legal. And
what individuals did was of their own free wtlt.
Still, the banks In the long run might have generated some ill wut ,
because neither elected officials nor those who elect them are particularly
pleased with shows of power.
Were those who opposed the law were making ah Important political
staiement? There are .indications they were.
1\rhong the millions who voted for Reagan, for example , were those who
agreed with him that it was time to get government off the backs of people.
T~x withholding seemed badly at odds with that notion.
Backers said It would reduce nonpayment of tax on Inter est and
tiiVjdends - which incidentally are doubly taxed. The revenue. perhaps a'
milch as $18 billion yearly, was badly needed. Reagan sald.
~ut Reagan. wad also elected as an advocate of reducing government' s
financial needs, and many of those who otherwise supported him were well
aware that money sent to Washington lsn'l always spent \\1sely.
Jt seems likely that many believed that If fra ud were to be cut and
revenue raised, then there were quicker and easler ways of doing II.
!rhe Office of Management and Budget, for example. sa id last
sePtember It Is writing off more than $1 billion a year in bad debts , and that
bllUons owed the government are delinquent or In default .
\vhen you consider ali ihe possibilities, Ihe disapproval or the law by so
many probably wasn'l so mych a ba ttle of the big ba nks against the
at1Ji,inlstra tlon as It was anger on the part of ordinary people.

' l'agl

(salami , ham , provo lone
cheese, lcttuco , tomato,
pi ckl e , onion , ban ana

peppers, .salad dressing ,
ep&amp;ciat seasonings)
Extra Cheese . . .. .. , ....... ... 20

•

••

�Page-A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

PomerQy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

,..---Weather · • - -Showers
- -likely
--.
.
.
.
for weekend
The Forecast For 7 p.m. EST
, April 24
•

i,

By The Associated Press
Rain was elqlE'&lt;;ted to develop in southern Oh.lo Saturday afternoon
and spread to the northeast by late Saturday. Lows overnight were
expected to be 38 to 47.
Temperatures Saturday morning were in the40s across the si.ate.
The 5 a.m. extremes were 50 degrees at Cincinnati and 40degrees at
Akron . A high pressure area drifted slowly east Saturday, while the
low pressure center moves northeast to Tennessee Saturday n,lght
and theq northeast to the Delaware coast Sunday night.
It was partly cloudy over Ohio during the night. Clouds were on th~
increase as the low pressure center deve loped.
A narrow band of showers j:&gt;opped up during the night from the
islands due east to northern Ashtabula County, Reports indicated
only light rain .
·

Showe rs

t:

•
':."di ',"/P.t ' ,.l•r $ r.', . .:.-,

:.o;.. :, uc:..

The nation's weather

__,

~) (· [~

c:c lu d~c! ....-

l1r:w ::"-' • •
WEATHER FORECAST - The· National Weather Service
forecast for Sunday predicts rain In the Northeast re~on .., well a.•
most of California and parts of Oregon. It will also rain In parts of the
Virginia.' and Nevada. There will he showers on a band stretching from
the Canadian border in Montana down to North of Utah. ( AP
l.a.o;erphoto ).

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY : Fair through the period .
Highs in the 50s Monday and in the 60s Tuesday and Wednesday .
Lows near 30 Monday, mid 30s to low 40s Tuesday and in the 40s
Wednesday.

April 24, 1983

W. Vo.

By The Associated Press
Tornadoes, large hail and gusty winds buffeted the South
Saturday, driven by thunderstorms that w ashed over Ok)ahoma
across east Texas and through Louisiana.
Heavy rains also blanketed an area from southern Kansas to
northeast Texas and from southern Missouri to Louisiana . More wet
weather hung over the Pacific Coast and s tretched inland to the
Western P lateau. with rain changing to snow at higher altitudes in
the West.
The weather-makers were a trio of cold fronts, one over Lake
Superior :lnd Saskatchewan, a second from northeast Louisiana
across to Mexico, and a third over the Pacific Northwest and
northern Ca lifornia .

roronrr's autopsy scalJ'X'I when a

detective not ICed her breathing as
she Jay on a murgu&lt;•'tabir, says she
cannot bring herself to imagine the
scene.
" I haven' t rea lly put together
everyth.lngt ha t ha ppened to meyet,
but r do think a bou t it," the
23-year-old waitress sa id.

that her ordeal had given her a
"different outlook on life" and a
resolvr to develop a closer relation·
ship with family members.
" J leer l d id survive through this
for a purpose." she sa id .
·Miss Woods was pronou nced
dead Aprlll4 after police found her
apparently lifeless body on the

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- With thecar-bombingoftheembassylast
Marine sharpshOoters polsed on the Monday.
alrport roof and American flags . . - - - - - - - - - - flying at half-staff, a camouflaged
U.S. Air Force plane took off for
Washington Saturday with the
bodies of 16 Americans ldlled in the
U.S. Emllassy bombing.
Patibearers from the U.S. Ma·
rlnes, the Army · and the Navy
marched slowly, carrying the
wooden fla~:.-draped coffins from
hearses and ambulances to the
C-141 cargo plane. One Marine
fainted under the hot morning sun
and another dropped h.ls rille .
There were no speeches and no
rifle salutes. Thehushedsllencewas
broken only by the coirunands of
officers.
Lebailese and American officials
looked on. One woman from the
embassy staff wept.
U.S. Undersecretary of State
Lawrence Eagleburger. who flew to
Beirut on Friday to escort the 6odies
home, was aboard the plane headed
for Andrews Air Force base.
The bodies of 17 Americans- 16
embassy staffers and a freelance
journalist- have been identified in

STORE HOURS:

.Mon.-ThuB. 9 am til 9:30
Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

living room floor of her a partment.
Doctors Ia ter said she was in a
hypothermic state.
Hypothermia is a condition involving s ubnorma l body te mperatu res that can be fatal, but also can
reduce the body's need for oxygen.
Po llee said the door to Miss Woods'
apartment was open and a chilly
bree--&lt;e was blowing ln .

ClDSED SUNDAYS
Sat ., April 30 , 1983

"The worst part is imagining r~-:--,--:---,--------,.,..-----....'-:----:-'-....j
being· In thr morgue. Now I fee.J
· secure a nd well taken care Of, but It .
frighten s me to think o~oth er people .
who wet·en' t 're&lt;'ogn ized and rreated
the way I was."

PER SET

Galli polis, Oh.
Phone 444 · 4290

Home 446-4518

I rk r• 11

LB .

(/lltXJ r!f•IIJit/Jfll

SIU i e l il'"'

/t

)!fH'

11/q

f"

.t~ lo '

HI'

rt '"'

1

"tH 11"'

$}59

1/lfHfl

WHITE CLOUD

.... u .....

• •

II

•

PEPSI, Reg. or Diet
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

TOILET .
TISSUE

•!&gt; 1 v
r

The Sundoy Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

Remember
power plant disaster
.
Wll.LOW ISLAND , W.Va. lAP )

local residents plan no special
- They plan no memorials, no
events lor Wednesday.
ceremonies, 'but there will be no
"It's not forgotten ," said Doty, 49,
forgetting for the people of P lea'
sitting in the Uvingroom ofh.lshome
sants County.
about three miles from the plant.
It was five years ago Wednesday
"But I'm not sure people want it
that the scaffolding on a cooling
brought back In their minds that
tower under construction collapsed,
vividly.
plunging 51 men to their deaths
"When it happened, the big
amid a twisted mass of steel and
question was whether they would
rubble 168 feet below.
ever finish the tower. Of course,
The accident at Monongahela
they did. I think It stands as a
Power Co.'s Pleasants Plant, wh.lch
memorial to the m en."
,
became known as the Willow Island
The power plant, with its two
tragedy, was described by the
428-foot cooling towers and twin
·federal Occupational Health and
smokestacks, dominates the skyAdmlnlstratlon as one of the
line of this section of the rnld·Ohio
nation's worst non-mining Indus- Valley, belching steam hundreds of
trial accidents ever.
feet Into the air a bove the leriile
Robert Doty, then mayor of.! he · farmland and rugged ri(lges.
nearby IQwn of Belmont, helped
One of the towers is weathered
direct . · the ·cleanUp . operaitoriS,
and unremarkable,. but the other
lncl~ding the. retrteVai
identifi· . ·tias a slight, a )most lrnpereeptible
cation of the victims' bodies.
difference in · color about 160 f eet
He acknowledges tha t it 's not a
above the ground. It marks the point
memory he'll easily forget , but says
where construction was halted for

Cbarleston. W.Va., $36: Everett J .
Varney, 21, Point P leasant, $..16;
Sandra A. Kopack, 31, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, $38; Terry D. Adams, 20,
Rt. 4, Galllpolls, $39; David K.
Johnson, 29, Rt. 2, Crown City, $39.

GALLIPOLIS-JudgeJamesA.
Bennett found a Gallia County man
gu llty of petty theft In Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
Wilford H. McGuire, Rt. 1,
Patriot, was a lleged to bave stolen
several Items from the Jones Boys
store, 137 Pine St., on April 15. He
was fined $50, received a suspended
six-month jail sentence and was put
on 18 months probation.
Roger W. Taylor, 37, 1117 Cbest·
nut St., was fined $3Xl, sentenced to
10 days In ]all, given a lal-day
driver's license suspens ion and put
on lB months probation. Also
charged with left of center, fine and
costs were suspended.
In another drunken driving case.
Bennett fined J annes L. Wall, 23,
Grand Canyon, Ariz., $D), 10 days
in Jati, a 60-day driver's license
suspens ion a nd 18 months
probation.
Jolul W. Rose. 34, 23 Berger St..
was fined $15, received a suspended
six-month jall sentence am! six

Twin
CAROLL S NOWD E N
411 Second Av e.

W. Vo.

from left, Jtmmy Pullins, Jeremy Bucliley, JeJTY
Ughtfool, David Woolard, Emmo~ Holstein
Congo, the recorder, Rod Newsome, assistant
leader; Wlllle Adams, Vince Helber and Jlnun,y
Parker.

Man sentenced for petty theft

If your mortgage
outlives you,
Mortgage Life
Insurance can
; help keep your
homelnthe
family.
Check with
. State Farm.

&lt;, t Jlt • I ortn I

MAKE TOUR - Members of Cub Scout Pack 235,
Chesler, the 'll~ .Cubs, toured the Melp County
CO!lrthouse and COWIIy jail Friday attemoon.
Plctul!ld In the office of the ~rder's omce are•.

ancJ

·

Miss Woods told a Burnham
Hospital news conference Friday

r&lt;,

Pamei'C!y-Middleport-Gollipolis, Ohio-Paint Pleasant,

Bodies flown to Washington

She can't imagine lying in morgue
CHAMPAI GN, Ill. lAP) -Karla
Woods. who was saved from the

April 24, 1983

39
RED LINE SUPER SALE!

17 months while a federal investigation into the accident was
conducted.
Tha t investigation revealed that
the accident occurred for two main
reasons: the scaffolding was all·
ached to concrete that had not been
allowed to set properly. and a line
supporting the scaffolding put too
much stress on the strurrure.

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - Filing for marriage licenses this past week in
Gallia County Probate Court were:
Drexel L. G ullett , 49, Rt. 1,
Scottown, farmer, and Pamela S,
Frost, 24. Rt. 2, t:;;a llipolis,
unemployed.
GregOry A. :robl!1 .26. Langl!ford.
S.D., student', and E lizabeth A.
Tope, 25; 5:!5ThitctAve .. registered
nurse.

Dana C. Bickle, 19. Bidweii ,
unemployed. and Teresa Y. Ha lley.
21. Rt. 2. Patriot . unemployed.
Char les G . McMillbt, 27 , Rt. 1. .
VInton. fork truck driver, and
Carolyn K Mayles, 24 , Rt.l . Vinton,
unemployed.
Terry A Halley, 18. Rt. I, Crown
City, unemployed. and Alison L,
Fulks, 17, Rt. l , CrownCity, student.

FINANCIAL QUESTIONS?
fHE NEW FEDERAL LAW PROVIDES
ANSWERS.
BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13

Call for Information
1-221-5379
t.ee

c. Mittman

Pamela N. M a ggied
Anomeys-At-Law
8 E . Broad St.
Columbus, QH . .4321 5

months probation for no operator's ~~~~~~~~~~~~::::~:~:~~~~~~
license, and was also fined $~ for ~
fictitious registration.
Pleading not gullty to an assault
charge, David Sands, Mill Creek
Road, was placed on $500 recognlz·
ance bond a nd had a pretrial
scheduled for May 2.
In traffic cases, George F . Kelley.
69, Rt. l , Bidwell, was flnedcostsfor
speeding, and Kenneth L. Hylton,
27, &amp;Mill Creek Rd., was fined$12for
driving wrong way on a one-way
street.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Jolul E. Furst Jr., 18, Rt. J,,
Gallipolis, $35; Melvin Lee, 41,

I

NOW IN EFFECT
WAGNER

BLUE

ORANGE
DRINK
900 CUSTOMS
750 CUSTOMS
650's

SUPER
SAVINGS

54

Junbq tim11 · Jmmut

BON~ET

Margarine

USPS S25-8tll

A Multlrnedla N~ ,

Published each Sunday, 825 Third

The English

Avenue. by the Ohio Valley Publishing

Company . Mulllmedla, Inc. SOC'Ond class

Club Chair

p:&gt;.\tage patd 111 Gal1lpolls, Qhlo 4~1 .
E nterEd as second class maUlng matter
a t Pomeroy , Ohio, Post omce.

l he E ~g!l~·'

Member: The Associa ted Press, Inland
Dally ~s AsSIOC'Iatlon and the Amer1·
ca n Newspaper Publisher~ Assocl at1CI'I,
National Adwrtlslng Repre!E"nta l:i\lf',

oz.

Branham. 1717

W~l

Cltii J 1 t,c;J

l :. ~n.J f:f,ln(· 'IV:h'o0"

,,, .1

I·

n .,,;•,
j'hv.t· '&lt;JHr J

N;::r!IJJ•, Jl• .~n.l •.IP•~l '
bill.."\&lt; 'J'''(' IJ()Jt- q&lt;,1JII'

'I&gt;'

1

1&lt;,~

C01T11')~

Fr0rt 1 i ,J&lt;
•j dh f
JY'·I/'I•r{j ': 1P : tiJif d I I•.'Ul'

NlnP Mile Road .

Suite !)4, Detroit. M ichigan, "*175.

SUBSCRIPI'ION RI\TES
By canter or Malor RoWe

LB.
PKG.

One Wf'ek ........ ........................... $1 .00
01'1£' Month .......... .............
. $I .riO
One ¥ear
............ $52.111

SINGLECOPV
PRICE
35Cents
No subscrlpdans by maU permlt1ed In
IOtNM where home carrj.er setvice ls
avallable.

FAY GO

POP

4l&amp; oz.$}

SHURFINE

BLEACH

BTLS.

GAL.

WE'VE GOT THE COMPLETE
LINE - SEE THEM TODAY!

The Sunday Ttmes-Senttnel wlll not be
responsible for advance payments made
to can"'lel'!.

SUN·... The Germ Hunter!
SUN Chlorine is clearly more effective. More effective
because SUN Chlorine products are completely
soluble, 100% active and easy to use. In
addition..they have a built-in stabilizer so
they fait up lo 4/t loilger.
-....r~~

...

one ~ar .................................. m.lll
Slx months ... ...........•. ; ........ ...... .SlO.tO

llolb ... - . .

MAIL S\!II8CIUPTION8

•

BET
Z
HONDA
SALES
UPPER ROUTE 7

-OMo

112 W...._. ............ .................. :.. .15U8

'w...._. ..............................
--OWo .,..

:II w......
~

•

KANAUGA, OHIO

•

w...... ,.................. ,............... 114.01

!IIW..U ............................ .'..... SlM.Ii
:IBW..U .... .......... , ........................

l3

I

.................................. ~ .:1}

'"

\

11$.21

Phone

TRI-CQUNTY MEDICAL
56 .Stole Strnt, Gallipolis, OH.

.
$UN TW!fMC COIIIPOMTIOH

446-3856
I

Your SUN Pool Professional

Sale

•t99

Regular '299

�.t

A-0----The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pome~y-Middleport-Galli

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.

April 24, 1983 :·O

lis, Ohio-Point 'Piecimnt, W. Va.

Request filed ~o continue gambling trial

Area deaths
Post No. ·161 and VInton Masonk;
Lodge No. 131.
He married Virginia McClaskey,
GAU.IPOLIS - Cora Rowley
who
survives, on June 16, 1951, at
'Miser, 94, Cheshire, died at 9::ll
Porter,
a.m. Friday In Holzer Medical
Also surviving are four sons, Mike
Center.
of
Charleston, W.Va., Terry of
Born Dec. 14, 1888, at Kyger, son
Rheinmain
Air Force Base, West
of tile late Dr. Charles A. and Lydia
Germany,
Pat
of Gallipolis and Tim
Matthews Rile, sl)e attended Rio
of
Rt.
1,
Bidwell;
five grandchildGrande College and Columbus
ren;
a
brother,
Clarence
of Rt. 2,
Business College, taught school at
Bidwell;
and
four
sisters,
Mrs.
Opal
Kygervllle, and was employed by
PhllJlps
o!Bidwell,
Mrs.
Lydia
Jane
Columbus Optical Co. and ColumGilliam of Grahn, Ky., Mrs. Juanita
bus State Hospital. She was a
Howell of F1ortda, and Mrs. Sophia
member of Old Kyger Methodist
Phillips of Porter.
Church and lived in Florida for 20
He was also precede9 in death by
years.
two brothers.
Shemar!jed John Franklin Miser
Funeral services wlll be held at 1
on April 23, 1917, and he also .
p.m. Monday In VInton Baptist
pneceded her in death In 1937.
Church. Burial wlll be In VInton
Surviving are nieces and
Memorial Park. Fr1ends may call
nephews.
at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Funeral servtces will be held at 2
Vinton,
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
p.m. Monday In Miller's Home for
Military
graveside rites wlll be
Funerals in the former Warehime
conducted
bY Vfuton American
Funeral Home, with Rev. Frank
Legion
Post
No. 161.
Cheesebrew officiating. Burial will
Masonic
services by Vinton
be In Gravel Hill Cemetery. The •
Masonic
Lodge
No. 1.31 wlll be held
body will Ue In state In the funeral
at
6:45p.m.
today.
home from 11 a.m. untU 2 p.m.
Monday.

Cora Miser

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

atto~foroneoffourmenlndlcted ~
on federal gambling charges stem·
mlng from infonnation provided by
Baltimore Colts quart:e.~:,back Art
Schlichter says more information·Is
needed on the government's case.
The motion was flied Friday In
U.s. Distrtct Court here bY Howard
L. Cardin, attorney for Samuel R
AJascla of Catonsville, Md.
The other three defendants are
Charles T.•Swlft, 41, JooephA. Serlo,
24, and Harold E . Brooks Jr., 26, all ·
of Baltimore.
A request to extend !rom Monday
to May 2thedate that all motions are
due in the case was filed Friday by
Serlo's attorney, Robert Cahlll. The
attorney also asked Judge John D.
Holschuh to postpone !rom May9 to
May 20 a hearing on all motions tiled
In the case.
Cahill said the defendants need
more time to rue motions because
the government has not yet provided all the information needed.
He said rescheduling the motiOns
hearing wlll not affect the June 6
trial date.

ogs .400
GALLIPOLIS - -Despite recurrent money problem$ ~ supplies
and employees, GaJIJa County
Sheriff Jam81 Montgomery .said
COO'IPlalnts received by hlsdepartrnent In ~ !lrst quarter continued
nlJ1IIIng hlgh, w;tth a f1naJ count
pJ,aced at 400.
. ·
·Of 107 classified offenses, the
departi1lellt cleared 35. or 33
perce1,1t, Montgomery said.
' DepUties ~~~tve Investigated 21
aCcidents -In the county and 'have
ai-restect 91 pel'$011S. The county jail
hils howled 271 prisoners who have
served 1,173 daYs and served 2,740
meals. ~ were received

,

CRAIG

611

AM-FM
8 TRACK

CLOSE-OUT

'$4995

in first quarter .

from the sherttrs department, city
pollee, Meigs, Jackson and Vinton
counties' arrests and tllose !rom the
Ohio Hlgl)way Pa trot.
Montgomery said that at tills time
there Is $27,500 left In tile department'ssupply fund.

"We have less than ~.tXXJ of this
amount left for gasoline the
remainder of the year. We have
ilsed $12,7!Y1 for gas so far tills yellf,"
the sheriff said. ''According to these
ligures on gas consumption, I am
going to ask my deputies to cut back
on mileage and patrol once again."

Dlspatchei"s w1ll also be requested to screen complaints, and
Investigators wUI handle only
. "serious" !'ases, Montgomery said.
The deputy sheriff's association
·has volunteered 1,562 hours to the
department so far this yei"'. For the
past three years, regular employees have worked all overtime
without pay, working, on the
average, 60-hour weeks on 40 hours
of pay.
·
"I call this dedication ahove and
beyond the call ol duty," Mo~tgo­
mery Sllld.
Since Its revival earlier this year,
.the crtme
's

ldent!Hcatlon project has marked
approximately 5,1XX1 Items and
IsSUed 170 identlflcation numbers. • .
Involving ~ hours, the ID
progr~ has been worked by two
Green Thumb workers at no cost to
the county. About 40 ID numbers
have been issued per week.
The Crtme Watch program has
received "excellent" response !rom
neighborhoods. Montgomery said It
hopes to achieve a closer relationship with the public and law
enforcement; people learning to
help people; and an ' 'outstanding"
reduction of crime In the county.

1980 FORD THUNDERBIRD

ThN

Tuesday

Dark Green Metallic w/ brown vinyl top and brown rntenor, V-8. automanc trans.,
JllWef steering and brakes, AIC, Mwheel. cru5e control. rear Windowdefog .. AM
rad!J , wsw radial tires. Only 34.000 tires.

INSTALL A COBR

CB

WE HAVE FILLED OUR LOT WITH
OVER.30 QUALITY USED CARS &amp;
TRUCKS •..
COME SEE US!

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

Sunday

GOING ON VACATION?

Va •

•
'

$4995

•1

Danny W. Smith
GALUPOLlS Danny W.
Smith, Tl. Rt: 1, Bidwell, died
Friday morning in University
Hospital. Columbus.
Born March 4,1956, In C.oiumbus,
son of Mr. and Mrs. WUUam C.
Smitll, who both survive at Rt.-1.
Bldweli, he was employed by Ohio
Valley Publishing Co.
Also surviving are a son, Shannon
of Columbus; a sister, Sue Frey.berg
or Bidwell; and aunts, uncles and
cousins.
Funeral services will be.held ant
a.in. Monday in Woo:!yard East
C~pel, :rnJ E . Livingston Ave.,
Columbus, with Rev. Avon Archer
officiating. Burial wUI be In Glen
Rest Cemetery, Reynoldsburg.
Friends may call at the chapel from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

-.·-~·
....'._;-. .. . ...

;;:loi-... "'"

Box office movies:

The Perfect Gift
For Mother's [)ay.
"She Can't Llve'Without It!"
·And the Cuisinatt DolCh ' -cl.e llilblos youto i~~e~d .
· "'~e batches of breid doullt ·eff0itle551y and ·
perfectly.
Homemade brNds cost about haH as much as the
bost commen:ill bnlnds, and lhey taste awhole lot
b -.
lonpr,

First
Blood
, ..

'

Wolfen
Workout (Jane Fonda) Sale •49.95
Many more comng next month:
Sophie's Choice

,1

6295

.
Porky's

· ·. BOB'S ELECTRONICS ·.. ·
UPPER RT. i • SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

,

·.

Phone 446-4517

4···•9·9'·

·,··lEa1·.• g·" l ···c

''EVERYTHING-IN TWO·.WAY RADIOS; ANTENNAS ·.&amp; ACCESSOR.IES" ..

··

·

"Andover" Teny

.

24x42"
Bath Size

..

Ou l
Reg

7.27

•

Bath Towel

Children's Lamps

mn1 Cdton/polyester, dobby border.

~right, co lorfull lamps. Large ass ortment.

~Hand Towel, 1.57; Wolhcloth, 87(

Bruce S. Stout
VINTON - Bruce S. Stout, 52, Rt.
1, Bidwell, died Friday.
Born Aug. 8, 19.1l, at Notomlne,
W.Va., son of the late J.D. and
Dan!red Dunn Stout. he was an
assistant . shift engineer at Ohio
Valley Electrtc Corp.'s Kyger
. Creek plant, where he was employed for 28 years, and a member
of the Gallla County Local and
Gallla-Jackson-VInton Joint Vocational boards of eoucatton.
He was a Korean War Army
Airborne Division veteran,
member of VFW Post No. &lt;1464,
Gallipolis, VInton American Legion

Library opposes
new legislation
••

POMEROY- Small libraries
such as tllose in Pomeroy and
Middleport are joining other
libraries about the state·ln
opposing proposed Ohio leglshitlon
changing the source of their
funding.
Ruth Powers, librarian at Pomeroy and Middleport libraries, said
tile legislation proposes abollshment of the personal intangible tax,
100 percent of which goes to funding
Meigs County llbrarles.
•
'!be new legislation, If enacted,
would allow libraries to receive
money from 6.3 percent of the state
Income tax, specially set aside for
libraries. The legislation does not
guarantee. that Meigs libraries
would receive that percentage of
income tax paid by Meigs

countlans.
Local llbral'les could receive onlY
~ a part of the 6.3 percent, with

College of Business Administration

Ohio University
Peddler's Pantry
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

The word "eilt," translated hom the Greek "dorea". is used six times in
regard to the Holy Sprnt (Acts 2:38; Acts 8:20: Acls 10:451; Acts 11:17; Eph 3:7;
Eph 4:7) "Dorea" means the spiritual or miraculous &amp;itt of the Holy Spiritand is
so used to describe the miraculous operations of the Holy Sprril dunng the
miraculous aee !from Pentecost lo the destruction ol Jerusalem) when God was
revealing Hrs word by inspiration and confirming the word by the working of
miracles.
On Penlecost, when the prophecy of Joel was begmning _to be lullilled, the
people witnessed the miraculous &amp;ift (dorea) of the Holy Spirit bestowed uponthe
apostles. that is, !herr spea king with other tongues or languages (Acts 2:4). Every
man hearing the apostles who were Galileans speak ing in h~ own language was
amazed !Acts 2:6-8). Their being concerned about the aposfles speakingin tongues
(languages) asked. "What meaneth this?" (Acts 2:12). Sorne said they were lull of
new wine (Acts 2: 13). Now what were they concerned about, and why did they
make such an accusation' They were amazed over the "dorea," supernatural or
miraculous gift of th e Holy Sprrit. whrch enabled them to speak the tongues or
languages miraculously
Peter began the great lesson by showing them thai what they had seen and
heard (the supernatural or miraculous gift of th e Holy Spirit) was no! the result of
!heir being drunken (Acts 2:14, 15) bul was !hat which was spoken b1 the prophet
Joei !Acls 2:16-21) . After conyincing hi s hearers that they had crucrfied Christ of
whom DaYid spoke !Acts 2:25-31), Peter answered !herr question by commanding
repentance and baptism for the remission of their Sins and then promrsed them the
"&amp;1ft'' (do rea- miraculous &amp;ill) of the.Holy Spirit. On thisday, the only &amp;if! of the
Holy Spirit with which they were acquainted was the supernatural or miraculous
ailt. therelore, ~ was the miraculous gift Peter promised:
Keep in mind, that during the miraculous age of the Holy Sprril. from
Pentecost to the destruction of Jerusalem, the apostles had to prove their being the
ambassadors ol Christ by confirmina the iilord that they were speaking as ooing .
inspired with sians, wonders , or miracles. Since the word was not completely
revealed during this time, the "lift" or "dorea" (miraculous aift) of the Holy Spirit
was needed rn the first century church . Thismiraculous &amp;ift was imparted only by
the layin&amp; on of the apostles' hands unto those who had repented and were
baptized for the remis~on of sins.
·
The '"elation of God's word is now complete and recorded in His word , the
New Testament, therefore. there is no nHd for the miraculous "&amp;ift'' or "dorea" ol
the HOij.Spirit today and no such promise ismade to the Christians today The Holy
Spirit works through the word of the gospel that reveals unto us all things pertaining
to life -and godliness Ill Pet. 1:31, containing the power of God to save !Rom. 1:16)
and not separate and apart from the word. There is no need ofthe miraculous "lift"
or "dorea' of the Holy Spirit today since it ~irects usthrough the complete realm
of truth. When we receive the gospel, the wrod ol truth, and obey illrom the heart.
we receive that which is of the Spirit, and in this figurative sense, the Holy Spirit
lives in us the same way God and Cllrist are said to be in us, by way of the doctrine:
"Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Ch11st hath not God.
He tftat abldeth in tht doctrine ol Christ, he hath both tht Father and the Son" (II
Jno. 9).

(For Free Bible Correspondenre Coo~ Write ...)

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
ButevNII Rood • P.O. Bo• 308

Our Reg. 6.27

$5

[!B

Pkg. OI
6Pr.
Men's Tube Socks
Over-the-calf. acrylicnylon blend. I 0-13 .

Our Reg . 3.37

2.38

[]Qll

Our Reg I .

1.37

Our Reg. 4 .78
Your

Choice

Sale Price

2.38

Beverage Container Hetty· Food Servers
Plastic Sink Set
2-quort size with
9" flat or comport- Drainer. board. soap 'n
and plastic cap
! ment plate: 12x9" tray. utensil holders. more.

1.42 Ea.

Sltkience '" Hair Core
Shampoo or co nditioner. Each 7-fl. oz.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPARTMENT

structured so that all academic requirements can be com·
pleted within 21 months, while the executive continues to
hand(e his or her professional responsibilities full·tirne.

e

1979 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SJ

offered at the Ohio \Jniverslly lancaster Campus.

~:

e

designed to be offere~n one Friday and three Saturdays a
month, over three acad lc terms of 11 weeks each, with a
five -week break beiween Jhanks9tvtng and early January.

ktl•• thon o solid .
Mor• tt'lon o 5pi'Q\I

e

for mid-career executives with seven to ten years of
expeilence .

e

designed to reduce the risk of personal and professional
obsolescence in the dyn11mic business environment.

Our Reo. 1.11

77ft;

e

tAught by a highly qualified, ~perienced faculty and In- ·
volves,a specially des111ned currl~ulum.

Twice As Fresh ·
Air lreshener jn variety
of scents ..095 oz.'

e attracting participants from as far 11way as Wheeling to the

Cincinnati-Dayton to the west, Parkersburg-Marietta to·
south\ and Cleveland-Akron and Toledo to the north.

Our Reg. 27.97

22.97

QUAKER

STATE .

f()~
•

Sate Price

89(

Qt.

Cv'zman Cooler

10W40 Motor 011

.42 quart capacity.
Tough steel belted.

Helps clean engine.
Improve performance.

...

'!

8 1'976

':1.

~ ~973 AMC WAGQN .................. S595 ~

f"
,_

'

'

u

.;
I•

MOTOR c\,R·BRoKERS
'
PH .

.
\
' 1'1! miles north ol Holzer Medical Center on State Route .160.

,;
"'l .

'
\

.,:j

446-65~2

SEE ALAN - JAY ..!;-\ MERRilL
CARS, UKE EGG~. ARE "CHEEPER" ·. THE CX&gt;UNTRY.
Open Mon. thru Fri. 8 A.M.-5 P.~.
8 A.M.·3 P.M.
.

\

\

t1:11 A.ll .

1HS UPPER RIVER RD., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

\

·•

8

~-

:j

Dli~·WJIH

CHM ~ONZA ......_........ s1200

••
•

the

······················~·······················································
Director, Ex,1clll~ve MBA'Program

BOX

~N I'·n975 MERC~RY
MARQUIS ....... s1495 ~
\
N

•

For detl.tla, call ~141594-6289 or 614/594-5446, or complete
mml It to:

BARG~IN

WAGON ... .... ... .. S1895 AB
: ~976 CHE~ LUV·TRUCK ........ s1595 ~

~-

RMio

S2700

B
. i. .
. A 11-977 VO~RE

••

Ohio Ul)lveirsll\1 College of Business Administration Is
American Assembly of Collegiate

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

Red . 4 door, 4\speed. factory air cond .. AM radro: radial 11r ~s
'

~-

PI- Hncl m, in~tton on the Executive MBA Program.

Two tone blue, 2 door, V-8. auto.. JllWer steerrng ancl br•&gt;es, lactory T·lops, JllWCr
wmdows Jllwer door locks, trll wheel. arr cond .. rear window detog.. factory wrr e
wheels. raised while letter radial tires, cloth ~'""· AM rad1o. Only 41 .912 miles.
SHARP''
S5995

\

oatteml!d to !!Ike a limited group of only 25, which will
Int\lude representation from various types of organizations and
dfv,~I'SE functional areas.

College of
Administration
Copeland Hell,
Unlventty
Athena, Ohio 45701

4 4'P""'

SJ5QO

e

tbtbalaneepaJdbyMelgscountiana
~to other counties.

'

'

a two-year (weekends·) intensive course of graduate study
leading to the master of bu.siness administration degree.

W•dn•ldiV
l!venlrlg
7:00
~

.

e

OA~LIPOLIS,' QHIO 4S031
lunct.y IE~Int
Wot~hlp e :bo

1·- '

Red wrth cuslom stnpe by "lobo", cyl ,
ws--: r ad~a i!II P\ slrcllll]', """
wrndow. rea r step hurnpei. AM radro. 68,000 nulr•s SHAI\I

currently recruiting the seventh group for this ve_ry successful and worthwhile course of study. Coursework will start In
September, 1983.

William B. Kul{hn

Red w/ black accent stripe, short bed. 4 cyl., 4 sperd, power siL-rnng, rad,al trrL'S.
tactory AM/ FM!Cassetle/ Stereo. chrome rea r step bumper. slrdrrrp, rear wuidow
t 7,000 mrles.

1978 CHEVY LUV

e

THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT

.

,

The Ohio University Executive MBA Program Is:

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

lundey Mom5nt
II~ ltudy 1 :10
W«lfllp10 :JO

I

Executive MBA
Program

Where else....

1982 CHEVY S-10

-~
r-'-'- ~- ~--

an 4fi;; alfN oaton ~-

' ·,

Tan with matchrng velour rnlenor. 4 door . 4 cyl., auto.. power steenngand brakes.
air cond, AM radio. wsw radial tires 28.921 miles.
$

Man-in E. Smith
POINTPLEASANT-MarvinE.
Smith, 17, Letart, died !rom Injuries
received Friday In a car accident
near Point Pleasant.
Born Sept. 16, 19ffi, son of Charles
Smith, who survives at Point
Pleasant, and Delores Newberry
Jones, who survives at Letart, he
was a senior at Point Pleasant High
School.
Also surviving are his stepfather,
Jesse Jones or Letart; a sister. Mrs.
Donna Watkins Dalton of Point
Pleasant; a brother, Charles Randall of Point Pleasant; a palemal
grandmother, Mrs. Gertrude Smith
of Point Pleasant; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Newberry of Rt. 1, Point Pleasant;
and great-maternal grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Newberry of
Rt. 2, Point Pleasant.
Funeral servlcL'S wUI be held at
1: :J) p.m . Monday In Wilcoxen
Funeral Home. Point Pleasant
wlth Rev. Marvin J. Goodin
olflclating. Burial will be In Forest
Hills Cemetery, Lei art. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 5
p.m. today.

'

198J BUICK SKYLARK LIMITED

DON'T FORGET OUR VIDEO MOVIE RENTAL
Airplane II
Halloween Ill

' . .. ....:

.' \

\

\

'

'

�W.Va.

O'Brien·ends
25 cases

I

theri

POMEROY - Twenty-five persons were fined and five others
for1elted bonds In Meigs County
Court Wednesday.
·
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Gary Pickens, CorapoUs, Pa .,
Thomas Stutes, Thurman, and
Teresa Souders, MOton, W.Va.,
speed, $21 and costs each; WU!lam
Johnston, Shade, passing bad
ch!""ks, restll\ltlon and costs; Wll·
Ham Schuttinger, Portsmouth,
reckless operat!on. $100 and costs;
Donald Shackelford, Parkersburg,
speed, $23 and costs; Richard
Russell, Athens, failure to control,
$25 and costs, no drivers license, $50
and costs, nine days to obtain
llcllnse; David L. Dunn, Vinton,
speed, $22 a nd costs; David Ward,
Mineral WeDs, W.Va .. speed, $19
and costs; Kenneth Gray Jr.,
Gallipolis, speed, $21 and costs;
Mark Beegle, Racine, failed to
display valid registration, $10 and
costs; Monica Mannon. Parkersburg, W.Va ., speed, $22 and costs.
Phillip Fisher, Racine, disposing
of litter to be carried off by streams,
$25 and costs, fine suspended If
garbage picked up; Charles Mays,
Reedsville, !allure to register, $10
a nd costs; Richard Houck, Sliver
Lake, speed, $22 and t-osts; Gregory
Taylor, Pomeroy, !allure to yield
hall of roadway, $:11 and costs. no
motorcycle endorsement, $75 and
costs, one year probation; Richard
Huffman , ReedsvUle, possessing a
deer which had been taken with a
gun clurlng closed season, S:l!O and
costs, hunting privileges suspended
three years; Donald Guinther,
Pomeroy. DWI. $250 and costs, 10
days confinement , license suspended six months.
·.Claude Eb!4J, Pomeroy, expired
drivers llten5e, $40 and costs, five
da)IS · Corifinemen! suspended If
.license obta ined; Vtrg'U· P a,is6ns,
Hockingport, DWI, ·s200 and -costs,.
three days confinement or a ttend
driving school , license suspended
for 60 days; Marlene Matheny,
LangsvUie, left of center, $10 and
costs; Linda West, Racine, Jack
Dunaway, Long Bottom, Alan
Young, Pomeroy, and Terry Bell,
Racine, disorderly conduct. $100
and costs, $90 s uspended, one year
probation.
ForfeRing bonds were Charles E .
Mays, ReedsvUie, failure to control,
$41.50; Paul VanBu ren, Nitro,
W.Va .. speed, $42.50; John Yonk,
Ironton, speed, $46.50; Sheldon
Capehart, no address recorded,
possess a deer which has been taken
with a gun during closed deer
season, $260; Richard Gillian,
Coolville, extended load , $4150.

•

••

rrFly or Fry!" ts '-·- contest cry at Bob Evans Farm

•

•

•

r•

'

..

by Lee Ann Welch
Times-Sentinel Staff

•

Look! Up In the sky! It's a bird, It's, er. it 's a CHI~N?
That's right. spring is In !he air. and so are the chickens, at Bob
Evans Farm at Rio Grande.
Every year about this time, the buzzards may go back to
Hlnekley, but the chickens go back to Bob Evans Farm, in full force,
ready to try to set another world's record in chicken !lying, that's
right, chicken flying. And you had doubts the birds could make it
very far.
The big day is May 21. and the record is 302feet, eight inches, set in
1979 by Lola B., a 15 ounce barnyard bantam owned by Sherwood
Costen of Point Pleasant, W. Va. ·
According to Information supplied by the International Chicken
!flying_As=lation the feathered fowls do fly, from many high
places in the barnyard like haylofts and trees.
The assoelatlon says the meet. also called the ICFM, was inspired
by the recollections of Bob Evans about this boyhood sport: From a
small cliff in Gallla County, the story is told, Evans and his friends
would induce their chickens to come to them off the cliff.
Now, every third Saturday In May, the chickens fill thealr, mostly
of their own free wUI, but sometimes reveivlng some gentle
persuasion from a bathroom plunger in the area of the tallfeathers
Just like the Wor ld Series. the Superbowl and the Stanley Cup,
·there's big bucks to be awarded at the Internat ional Chicken F1ying
Contest. .
If your bird wings Its way to the longest distance in Its weight class.
there's $100. If It c-omes in second, the prize money Is $50, and for
third pJaee the award Is $25.
However, If your chicken makes the longest flight that surpasses
the old record by Lola B .. there is a $500 award.
According to the offlcal rules-of the IFCA, !he chickens must he of
the genus and species of Gallus Domestica , and will he broken down
Into four classes on the basis of weight.
They are Class I. · .Featherweight, 32 ounces or less;. Class II''
Bantamweight. 33, but less than· 48 · ounces; Class III ·
medlumwelghl, 48, .. but tess · than &amp;I ounces and - Class . IV •
Heavyweight. &amp;I ounces and over, All weigh-ins will take place just ·
prior to nights.
·
..
·
·
·

n

-z

....

~SI
· . · ZO

.,...,.

:

r-m ,

m

(jl

fLY.G.IRL, FLY.' In last year's International Chicken Fly ing Meet, tbi.1
with a little ge-ntle per.wasirm. This )'ear'.r conte.rt take.r off MaJ' 7.

OJie

mrulc it.

,.

11'1

""'

6

/
I

J

The Big DaJ/s events

•
~

POMEROY - Gregory S. King,
19, Parkersburg, W.Va ., and Rusty
Cremeans, 19, Rt . 2, Coolville. were
returned to Meigs County from the
Columbus Correctional F acUlty
Friday, according to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department .
Soth had been senteced oh
breaking and entering charges and
have flied for shock probation.
Judge Charles Knight ordered them
returned for the shock probation
hearing. Both are lodged In the
county Jail pending a hearing
scheduled for next week. ·
The department Is Investigating
an attempted breakl!1g and enterIng at the Keebaugh Shake Shoppe
in Tuppers Plains, that occ'urred
Friday. Locks were broken on two
free'l.ers at · the rear of the
establishment.
The department is also Jnvestiga t.
Ing the theft of two front tires and
wheels taken from a pickup truck
owned by Mark O'Dell. Rutland .
The incident occurred sometime
between 3: ~p.m. Friday and 12: ~
a.m. Saturday. The tires were H
Inch with a luinnlum sport wheels.

9 a .m . -Rooster !:row Contest. Crows judged by tone, length , .
intensity, number and crowd appeal.
.
11 ll.,rn. - Chicken Run Contest. In heak-to-beak heats, the
chickens· run or walk, not fly. a 40-yard dash.
12:50 p.m. - Parade o( Chickens. An Olympic style parade ted
by "Top Bird" Bob Evans to lhe launching site.
1:45 p.m. -Chicken Legs Contest. For m a le and female homo
sapleris only. The best "chicken legs" win!
3 p.m. -Chicken Scratch. A children's contest to see who can
find the most burled nickels for a prize ilgg-full of sliver dollars.
3: ~p. m .- Wing-Ding Giveaway. A chicken snack reminds the
champ chickens a nd the " chicken chickens" of the "fly or fry"
motto.

'/ he Parade of Chi&lt;J.'cil ,

How to have a chicken flying contest. ..

Chicken Legs, the best lookers are here

Emergency runs
-

There .is a lofty purpose
behind the flyers friends

•

'

Veterans .M emorial
Aqmisslons !ne-t Stivers,
Pomeroy; Bridget Roush, New
Haven; Benjamin Upt 0 n,
ReedsvWe.
Discharges - Charles Reltmire,
VIctoria Priddy. Ida Young.

- - -\

1983

•

Return prisoners

PoMEROY - Four runs were
made by loca l emergency units
Friday and one early Saturday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reported.
AI 2:32 p.m . Rulland was called
for Gloria John~n. who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center; at 3:59
p.m. Pomeroy for Inez Stivers, who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 4': 26 p.m. Rutland for
Garnet Williamson. who was taken
to HMC; at 7:12 p.m . Tuppers
Plains for Frank Upton, who was
taken to Veterans.
Saturday atl: 41a .m. , Racine was
called tor Donna Hayman, who was
taken to Veterans.

Section~

'i!imts· ittdiu.el

. '

---

---.,

'

What is the International Chicken
Flying Association?
The ICFA has been organized
with the purpose of promotion and
holding of recognized International
Chicken F1ylng Meets (ICFM )
under humane conditions, and to
perpetuate for posterity the tradl·
tiona! rural sport of chicken flying.
The assoelatlon consists of InternatiOnal headquarters, national,
state and county organizations !llld
local clubs.
The levels are known as, the
lnternational, Division, Wing,
Group and SquadrOn, In order. ·
The t~ bird and ' lnternatiOnal
ConrunAnder ls Bob EVans, prelllderlt of !lob Evans Farms Inc., at

RloGrande.

·

Chicken Flying is not restricted to
Ohio. There ate Wings and Squad·

.

'

.

.

' ·-'

.'

How do you have a chicken flying
meet ?
. Easy, according to the official
rule book, you need basic eq uipment, a field long and wide enoug h
to provide ample room for the
chickens to Oy without danger to
them or their trainer .
Next. ,you need a roost, consisting
of at least one launching pad of
suffleclenl size to comfortable hold
the largest chicken.
For the roost, you need a pole or
platform on which the roost rests
and Is securely fastened . The
distance from the pad to ground Is
exactly 10 feet.
To determine the we ight of the
chickens. a scale Is needed .
A step ladder Is also necessary for
use by the Flight Director, Glyde
Marsh, · DVM. He wlll place the
entrants into the launching pad .
In determlriing the distance of the
flight , a tape measure Is a lso
needed.

rons in Arkansas , Arizona. California, Delaware. Florida , Georgia,
Illinois. lndlana. Maryland, Michigan , Minnesota , Nebraska, New
York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas,
VIrginia, Washington , West VIrginia and Wisconsin.
. According to the official ICFA
rule book. fledglings who want to
organize Squadrons alid have
chicken flying meets must register
their Intentions with the ICFA by
letter to the lnternatlonal Secretary
andenclosingthe$2reglstrattonfee.
EstabliShment of the Squadron
automatically makes the lndlvldual
a member of the Group, Wing and
Dlvl!rton In wh~ the Squadron In
located, aJid a member of the
International.
.

And fin ally. a net to capl ur'C'

J·luwt•vt•r, if aftt'r a (X'riod of :«1

errant chickens wllhoul harm to lh&lt;·
c hicken or bystamfers.
Along wit h lh~ equipment, there
must be rules of order to the m eet.
First, the County Humane Society
or similar o rganization should he
nollfledoft heda lc. tlmeandplaee of
the m eet, a nd a re present a live
Invited to observe.
The birds mu st bco~thegen u sand
species of Ga llu s Dopmestlca . Only
entra nt s in the peak of hea ilh will be
accepted.
Thctraincr-ow nermu st fill out a n
entry form for each contesta nt
before the flight .
The entra nts must be caged or
held by their ow ners at a ll times,
except when competing . As the
entra nt Is called, It s trainer-owner
will give II to the ICFA official
presiding at the launching pad.
No electrical device may he used
· to Induce the Pnl ranl to leave the
pad .

second, l hf' &lt;'11 ic kr n has notlrftthP
box of It s own [Pw w will, I hey will h&lt;&gt;
f'allrd a " ehicken chicken, " and ! h1 •

Y.
I

&gt;:
I

-,'

ICFA orrtcial may gently nudge t ht•
animal wit h a suti(Jble humane
inducPI', u ~ u a!l y a bathroom

plunger appllroto the tall feat hers.
Foll owing the nigh! , lhNtist:mc'f'
wUI be measurr-d from! he base of
tht• roosr to the point whPre the
chicken first touched the ground , or
permanent sl ructu r&lt;' affixed to 1he
ground . This lsdonelnastralght Unc
between the rwo points.
The c hickl'n ' flyi ng the longesl
- dl~ tan cewlt hln thcdcslgna ted arca
as measured by the judges shall be
declared the winner.
Ther p will !Jc no unspor1 smanl ik&lt;·
conduct tol!'ra led , and any tmlnN.
owner or accomplice who acts In
such a manner will be " pluckl'&lt;l"
from the m eet a nd disqualified .

_,

,

�.I

,

Apil24, 1983

Pamenr· Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasont, W. Va.

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

I

•

Beat of the Bend

Reunions upcoming

Preconceived notions on prtvate schools misleading

students."
RIO GRANDE - Preconceived
through the availability of ftnanc·
the conditions (ecommy) around
RIO Grande also .offers the
notiOns can sometimes be mislead·
lng aid;
us," Brown explained. ''Times are '
·"We're reaching out to those
tng, - at Jeaat that's what Dean
tough, but · we want to let people corlvenlence ·Of a modem, seJt.
contained campus, he noted.
students who have economic
know that college Is still
By BOB HOEFLICH
to raiSe funds with proceeds !;Oing Brown thinks as far as Rio Grande
"You don't have to takeasilbway
CollegeaandCominunltyCollege!s
needs,"
he
said.
''Those
studentS
affordable."
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Carrt&gt;ll to cystic fibrosis which Is the
or
a plane or car Just to get from the
concerned.
'·
whQ
have
the
talent
to
altend
Costs
however,
are
not
the
only
Teaford of Racine will be having a number one genetic klller of young
cafeteria
back to your dormi1Dry,"
As
director
Df
adJjrlsslons
and
college,
but
won't
unless
t!1ey
get
his
parents
elements
a
student
arid
public bean dinner he!itnnlng at 4 ~hildren and young adults In this
he
explained.
"We care and we
records
at
Rio
Grande;
Brown
Is
help.
We
encourage
prospective
Into
account
when
should
take
p.m. Friday at the American ~ country. Progress Is being made tn
want
prospective
students to come
charged
with
the
task
·Df
attracting
students
to
tum
In
their
financial
choosing
a
college,
the
.
admission
Legion Hall In
fighting the disease, however.
visit
with
us
and
see
what tlleJtio
students
to
the
school.
Over
the
aid
applications
and
go
through
uie
director
added.
Fifteen years ago, a child with
Racine to help
Grande
College
expertence
Is aU
years,
however,
Rio
Grande
has
whole
(aid)
process
and
test
hte
"Another
thing
you
have
tn
raise funds for
cystic fibrosis seldom lived long
.
about."
developed
a
reputation
.
c
entering
system.
consider Is that you get what you
Ci ndy Grafton
enough to enter school but today,
BroWn said that accep!aJices lor
"Financial aid Is a se!Vlce that's
around two preconceived notions;
pay lor," he said. "Here at Rio
nearly hall the 'chlldren with QJe
Wheaton, a niece
--the
fall 1983 rerm are already
available to all people and the
that once a student leaves the
Grande we· offer a lot or personal
of the Tealords,
disease will su~V~ve past the age of
running
ahead of last year's reCord
attention. You don't have to worry
community college and enler!j the
amount of help yoli ~ve Is based
, who is In need of a
20.
'
pace.
He
said the college expects to
about getting lost In a crowd."
l).riv;ue college costs sky-rocket,
upon your situation." '
liver transplant.
If you want to help as a rider or a
have
approxlmab11y
1,500 students
and that It caters only to Gallla
Among the sev.eral financial aid
Brown Indicated that this "we
The group slag!ng the Friday sponsor, contact either oi the
In
the
fall
.
.,
optio!IS that Rio Grande offers Is a
care" attitude permeates the entire
County students. The admlnlstra·
event are nor only in Racine but go co-chairmen of the event.
Brown said that 291 studenrs
new pre-payment plan tl)at enables
campus from the admissions office
lions dlrec!nr thinks that both
as far upriver as Letart Falls. They
been accepted so far comhave
to the classroom. Classes, for
students to freeze their coSt of
will have hean soup, chill, vegetaGrocers' Cancer Day will be notiOns are unJustlfled.
pared
to last year's record perfor·
example, are purposely kept small
"With the founding of the com· attenll!ng. By comm!tlng to this
bles, chicken and noodle soups, omerved May 3 at Vaughan's
mance
of Z74. Of these, 75 are
program, the students would have
so that students can benefit from
munlty college In the early 1970s,
desserts and beverages available Cardinal In Mlddlepori, the fourth
personalized, one-on-one lnstruc· resident males, 119 resident feat the public.
year. Displays pertaining to the .Rio Grande has become an instltu-' guaranteed tuition rates over their
males, 38 commuter males, and 59
lion
and not "worry about being in a
sei"VIrig
the
people
of
Jackson,
academic
career.
tlon
disease as well as Informational
commuter
females .
lecture
.
hall
with
500
other
Meigs,
Vlilton
and
Gall!a
counties.
"We're
Just
trying
to
respond
to
A celebration lasr Sunday t.o materials . will be available and
Over 1,000 of our students come , - - - . . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omerve the 251h an11iversary of the balloons wU1 be distributed to
ordination of the Rev, William youngsters during the obsel'llance. from these counties and a good deal
Mlddleswarth, paslor of St. Paul Vaughan's wlll give a percentage of of our programming actlv.!tles are
centered around serving the people
Lutheran Church, went extremely the total sales of the day to the
of th is total four county
well . During lhe observance, Mid· Meigs County Unit of the American
NOW WE WILL BE IN YOUR AREA WEEKLY
·
community.
dleswarth wa~ presented a color Ca ncer Society.
THIS IS THE PROGRAM YOUR NEIGHBOR LOST 5-15 LIS. THE VERY FIRST WEEK
"We do everything possible to
television and a microwave oven
VIRTUAUYWriHOUT HUNGER OR FAnGUE
from well-wisher s.
·
This Is one of those years when 1 make students from ,all cultures
welcome to our Institution, We care
wlll especially look forward to the
We keep los ing alumni members omervance of Heritage Sunday by
about the people of this area ahd a
lotDf our developments In on- and
and with the annua l reunions the Meigs County Pioneer and
MONDAY, APRIL 25--0:30 P.M.
off-campus currtculum are dl·
coming on strong - that's bad.
Historical Society. Among the
Gallipolis Developmental Center .
Vlrg!n!a Crew, 18)..&lt;; Forest Wll· features planned tor this year Is the
reeled at assisting the people of tHis
low Ct., Columbus, Ohio ~3229, Is appearance of The Sweet Adellnes.
region In being more employable."
TUESDAY, APRIL 26--0:30 P.M.
As lor the prtvate college being
attempting to get members of the Thls group appeared at the annual
Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant
too expensive, Brown says the
graduating class of 194.1 tngether Meigs County Farm Bureau earlier
for their 40 year reunion. She has this year and they're great 1n their
notion Is developed because of the'
THIS IS AN OPEN MEETING
been unable to cont act three of her close harmony renditions of the old
significant difference betwen the
SO EVERYONE CAN COME
class and they are Gale Kincaid, tunes. Most of the group live tn the
cost of the community college and
AND
FIND
OUT ABOUT OUR PROGRAM.
Eileen Stansbury and Margarer Athens-Nelsonville area.
private college.
Weaver . If you can help, plea•e
· "The difference Is phenomenal,"
WHAT HAVE YOU GOT TO LOSE!?!?
drop VIrginia a line.
Most of the movies tnday appear
Brown says. "It costs about $675 to
. Then, there's the Pomeroy High . to be rip snot"ters trom one
a~nd the community college.
M(N- WOMEN· TEENS
SchO&lt;_JI class of 1933 planning a 50 standpoint or another. However,
compared 'with $3,001 . for the
-year reunion , No one has been able you have to . travel a number .of
privaterollege. Avetagedoverfour
E"ROLLMENT ~EE '15.00
Ia locat.e · Kalhryn ,and · Esther · ·.inlles to attend a movie ·these days,.. ' . years you still have one of the most
TerrelL If ybu can help out there, · · so you can't really say that yOU · ~x-pen5ive coil~ iid!lcadons you.
please call Roy Miller al 985-3817.
didn't know what YO'!-Weredolngcafi get anywhere."
it really takes effort ,
Although attending the private
A reader sends along a list of the college may appear to be high, It
Mrs. Clara Roush, formerly of
Racine, will be observing her 94th movies showing In late March of does not have to be crippling. Rio
Grande officials recognize that
birthday on April 28. She keeps up 1949 when Pomeroy and Middlewllh her friends here lhrough pori had at least three "picture
money Is scarce. Brown acknowl·
. reading The Dally Senlinel and Is shows." At the Meigs tn Pomeroy · edged, and are attempting to deal
. doing quite welL You can send a "Act of Violence" with Van Heflin,
with the situation by stressing the
card or letter to Mrs. Roush In care
Robert Ryan, Janet Leigh, Mary
af!ordabUity of a college education 1
of her daughter, Helen Banks, 9314 Astor and Phyllis Thaxter was
~
Sue Helen Drive, Jeffersontown,
playing while the Temple In
Ky. 40299,
Middleport was showing "Key
Largo," now you've seen that a lot
nights, among those on the trlple
Kathryn Hill and Libby Fisher lately on the late mov.le - starring
bill being Buck Jones In "Oearing
wUI be heading a b!ke-a-thon In Humphrey Bogard, Edward G.
the Range" and Hoot Gibson tn
Racine beginning at lO a. m . on May Robinson, Lauren BacaJ1, Uonel
"Adventures o! Frank and Jessie
14.
Barrymore and Claire Trevor.
James."
· As the pattern goes In these
The Bendv.ue In Pomeroy had
Well -Happy Trans and do keep
.
lhtngs,
riders will secure sponsors westerns on Friday anq Saturday
sm!ltng.
.

.,

..

c•

RUSTIC - The historic site of the 19th century
vOlage onlhe Bob Evan5 Fann
Adamsv.llle log

Enrollment Fee or
Vita bee with This Ad

~~~~~~~~====~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

. RIO GRANDE - The good old
' · days will come aliv~ again In the
1983 sunimer program of the School
of Homestead Liv.!ng, and the
•• historic arts of wool spinning,
: _coopertng, blacksml!hlng and pew:: terlng wtll be perpetuated.
Sponsored by Rio Grande College
- and Community College In cooper·
- at(on with Bob Evans Farms. the
- program that will run from June 20
through Aug. U wUI pfQv ide an
- oppOrtunity for Individuals to lea rn
: Early American homestead skills,
fjlteen weeklong classes will he
~ taught by some of the region's most
~ skilled Instructors at the Bob Evans
Farms Craftbarn. one·half mile
east of Rio Gra nde on U.S. 35.
Registration ra nges from $40 to
$100 which Includes tuit.ion and
·· supplies.

-

11-15; during the School of Homestead Uvlng.

Workshops offered Include chair
caning, Introduction to sta ined
glass, antiques· and collec.tlbles,
furniture reflnlshlng, basic wood·
carving and more.
Each workshop lasts five days.
No ready-made kits , or short curs
are used. Students lea rn to s~lect
raw marerlals, use basic tools and
lea rn skills once practiced by their
forefathers with pride.
"We believe lha l many skills
developed by our forefathers
should he preserved and passed
a long to future generations ,'' salll '
Bernard E . Murphy, ass!stanl
dean, continuing education and

off-campus prog ram s al Rio
Grande. "These time·lesred ski lls
exemplify ttie hegrt of our cullllral
herilage as well as demonstrate the
mas tery of work In art"

A weekend craftbarn program at
Bob Evans Farm from Mav
through September enables vl~­
!tors to see many of the same crafts
and skills taughl t hrough the
School. Sever a l demonstrations
lake place each weekend with more
than 50 area craftspeople partie!·
paling throughout the summer.
More than one cla ss Is taught
during some weeks of the Sehool of
Homeslead Living to appeal ro
different family me mbers. Living
accommodatons are available to
lhe Rio Grande College campus,
located one-halt mile from the
crafrbarn . Reglsrra lion for classes
is limited.
For more lnforma tion, write for a

free brochure to lhP School of
Homestead Living, Rio Grande
College, P .O. Box 453, Rio Grande.
Ohio ~5674 .

:·~Cello symposium scheduled at Marshall
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Cel·
· ~- lists are · lnv.!ted .to the ·Marshall
~ University campus Sarurday, April
. 36,.' lot ·:Cello x· 5, '.' a full da y of .
- .·tnlort'rial talks'a nd demori~tratlons'
: with five cellists who teach at
universities in region and two
Instrument makers .
Sponsored by the MU Deparl·
ment of Music, the event Is free to
• cellists of at least high school age
· and will be of Importance to
:_ collegiate cellists and othi,rs per·
- forming In the field , aecordlng to
James McWhorter, MU cello In ·
_ structor, who organized the event.
::: In addition to McWhorter, guest

=-

cell!sls Include Paul ;\!len Whear, duing Buttet1lfes," a discussion of
instructor of · cello and ·chainber ways to reduce performance ten,
music, Sl)enandoah College and
slons a nd atixlelles. ·
&lt;;:.onservatary of M.ustc ; · Suzanne
All sess!o~ .will be in. Smith Hall
· Mcint osh, '-ass!$taht' prolessor ·or ·'. Room 154. A. luncheOn will take
cello. Universlly of Kentucky:
place on campus for panlclpants al
Leighton Conkling, profes&amp;or . of a cost of $2.75 per person.
Violin design , construcllon and
cello. Ohio University: and William
Skidmore, celllsl of Ihe American repair will be discussed by Kenneth
Arts Trio and Amart Quarter In
K Beckmann . Cincinnati Baroque
resid e nce a r Wes t Virg inia
Violin Shop, and Harold M. Hay·
University .
s lett, Charlesron inslrumenl
Topics to he addressed are
maker,
"Unaccompanied Literature of t.he
The day begins at 9 a.m. wilh
20th Century," "Janos Starker:
registrat ion, and concludes at 8
Ma n and Teacher," "Galamian p.m. with an informa l concert of
and the Cello," "Vibrato Can Be
those In anendance . Participants ,
Taught," and "Catching and Subare requesled to br ing their cellos.

on all phases of bridge ln~pection,
lhe new bridge Inspection manual
and the actual physical Inspection
of a bridge by participant$.

well as all other squads In the
county have my continued support.
I would like to a dd that the nurses
a nd doctors at HolZer Medical
Center were outsta nding and . I
thank you all so very much for the
excellent trearment a nd kindness!
received. •
The care wa s great- however, 1

I personally wish to extend my
sincere thanks to my wonderful
is ever so
fam!!y and friends who were so
grateflll.
kind and thoughtful during my
·recent illness.
Norman Heil·
I would be remlss If I failed 10
man, West Lib- .
mention the men on th~emergency
erty, who
h squad, Clyde 'l'r!pletl, Gene lm·
birthday on March 22. extends hls
boden, Eber Pickens . and Bill
sincere thanks for the 37 cards hE Halley. Si nce l speak flllm cxpe.
received from his friends In Meigs
rlence the treatment I received was
County. Mr. Hellm an thinks It Is excellent. The Syracuse Squad as
wonderful th at so many took time
ro remember him .
Another !hank you comes from
the Southern Local Band Boosrers.
A recent bake sale by the group
was very successful and they
appreciate very much the help
extended to them .
·
The band boosters have sort of
been out of touch and are trying to
revive the organization.

don' t want a repeat. now or ever.

But we dldn 'l come wtth any
guarantees, now did we?

Personals
Mr. and Mrs . Garth Smith visited
With Mrs. Howard Young at Paden
City, W. Va .

ACROSS

Mon.Pav thru Friday
q AM fO ~ P.M
S.-l l ur dit y 9 AM to 5 PM

'fi·IE

·r
r
·J "·c t
r-

\' .\, . ,,, !"\'&lt; • "''
.&gt;. r. Al ''"'fiUII

I) I" ...

l ' t l'l
IVI i .. ,

446-9510

Officers recently elected were
Jane Beegle, pres!denl , Janice
o4 NfW DIREC ri D N IN HAIR 0£ SIGN
Deem, vice presidenl, J oan Tullle,
secretary-lreasurer and Lola Prof·
fltt. reponer.
The group asks lhet former f - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - members check their homes for
a ny band uniforms they may have
forgotten to return . It seem s a
number of unifol'ms are missing.

The boosters meet on lilt&gt; second
Thursday of mch month In the
ba nd room ell he high school al 7: 30
p.m. All parenl s of ba nd sludenls
a re asked to attend the meellngs In
order to get the organization off Ihe
ground and back In Ihe "swing" of
lhings.

30°/o OFF

ON FANCY WEDDING BANDS
Now
ti II
May

P hilip M. RobeMS, M e!g~ Coun ry
Engineer, Ted Warner, highway ,
super!ntendenl, Dave·Spencer, of.
rice managPf. ~ Walt er Morrts, ,

5th

br idge forr m an. and Don IIC'n·
drick s and R.a ndy Py lf's, ('m

ployecs allendcd lhc I!IPJ Blidgt'
lnspeclion &amp;om ina r ht'lcl in Callipo
lis on April

1 ~}

and 20.

The sc hool wa s condu ctf'&lt;l by llw

1-/, Ct . Gold for n 'f't't •n,qu·•· Fon •r•t•r!

Ohio Deparl menl of Tra nsport;o ·
lion in l.lccord aner wlth the Ft'fif'ral
H ig hway Adm inist ration's CuldP·
!inC's for Bridge ln ~ J)(·rtion .
ThC' sPmin a r ('Onsistl'Li of to p lt' s

TAWNEY JEWEU!RS

424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH .
- - - - - - - - -- -- l - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - -- - -AO VERm WJ I EM POliO'
to &lt; ~ ol Ohooo od• O•tt o..j llo mo 10 ' " 'l"' ' "d 16 bo &lt;Ood ll j o•o ll a b lo lo&lt; ool o In u1h

"''"'il"'

~I&lt;J&lt; O n••PI In
o ~ot l l l co ll , ~o r o .! In thlt ad I! ... ~o ' "" a u I a l on Dd¥• ol loed ' ' " "' "'• ,..111 a ll•• T O~ ' " "' &lt;lo alc•ol Gt o"'pa•alll•

·, JUST RECEIVED.
.

.

li e "' "'h"" ao~ l lahle ulle oll n9 th • ' ""' • ooo lng o a • a ••lnolo..: ~ .. ~ k h will e ftl ltlo yo\1 lo '"""''" tl.o
odo eo·floo d ' ' ' "' " ' ·~• oohl!tl ud pol &lt;• w ithin 10 dftro

'

ONE WEEK ONLY!
Sale ends April 30th.

'
'

Is where log cabin r&lt;Storallon classes are taught Juty

~:Homesteading for college credit

OPEN MEETING

Blood donation thanks

By KATIE CROW
The farnlly of Donald Grimm.
New Haven, extends their sincere
thanks to the many persons who
donated blood in his naine at the
recent bioodmo·
bile. The family

·~

KEEPING AMERICA THIN WEIGHT

Katie's Korner

Jo·Ann Fabrics
:
l
.f

'

.

f'"'

KRoW CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY .

WE HAVE OVER 100 REMNANTS AND
SHORT ROLLS, SOME LARGE ENOUGH TO DO
A LIVING ROOM HALL AND STAIRWAY OTHERS THAT WILL DO A BEDROOM OR
BATHROOM ·:_ AND WE WILL GUARANTEE
THAT YOU CAN BUY ANY ONE OF THESE
PIECES FOR LESS THAN FACTORY COST.
WE ALSO HAVE ROLLS OF CARPET OF ALL
TYPES. BRING US A QUOTE FROM OTHER
CARPET STORES IN THE AREA AND WE GUA·
RANTEE WE CAN BEAT THEIR PRICES.

2• , 'HiOUGH SATUiOA V. APRil 30 , 1913 . IN GAlliPOliS AN D POMEROY STORES .

WE IIESERVl THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOlO TO OEA.LUS.

Ii

Lane
your$ ·
choice

MAYO MONUMENT
CO.
.
'

LESS THAN 29¢ EACH

32 OZ. PKG. ONLY $3.99

DECORATION DAY DELIVERY GUARANTEED

No. 8008 Pin knotty oak
veneers In brown , emboss-

1 SANDWICH STEAKS

14 Oz.
PKG.

16 SANDWICH STEAKS LESS THAN 2S¢ EACH

ed front . 48 x 16 x 18 1/:"H .

• STEAK-THINS TACO.·. a tortilla

No. 5007 Rustle pine ve neers In a light countrv pine
tOQe. 48)1( 16x 18 1/:!"H

. -...-'

No. "sooa Rich tradition al
cherry veneers in frultwood
finish . 48x 16x l8 lf2" H.

•

• STEAK·THIN S PIZZA
WICH · a little I

sauteed
melted
on ion roll .

or taco shell with diced
romatoes, snredded lettuce,
grated cheese. taco sauce
Ole I
•sTEAK·THI NS HOACIE · with
sliced tomatoes. onions and
mavonnatse on a toasted
hoagie bun .. , sensational!

love is special every
But. on her Graduation Day . you
a chance to show it in a more
enllearlng way . A Lane· love c hes t is a
~~• ·•nn gift to hold and prol ecl lh e lhmg s
f..,;,,,; .. It's a gitt of rraditi o n ,
0
'
" ' " " of the finest cabinel ·
d verteers , an_::.
d ..:...lined
the sweet·
eSt qmAllinn Cedar.
And no
specially
priced to
you say
" I love
a way
she'll
orget .

• STEAK·THINS 'N CHEE SE 'N
BACON · on a fresh bun

ummmmmm•

• STEAK ·THINS STIR· FRY · SliCed

mushrooms, diCed cererv,
onions. snow peas. etc .. stir·
fr ie d to vour liking with small
Strips Of STE AK·THINS, served

over rlcet1!1

30

ASH

STICKS
MAll! I ROM
t..oiiNCI! I 11c,l l

SPRING .SPEOAL - $49500
VISIT OUR LARGE fliSPLAY, WHERE ·PRICES ARE LOWER AND
QUALITY IS HIGHER

•

s

MONDAY

••
•
•

BRIDGE PlAZA

TURDAY 10 A.M. TIL 9 P,M,
1 P.M. TIL 5 P.M.

,.
842 2nd '~venue GaiDpolls, Ohio
253 N. Second Avenue
Mldd~port,
Ohio
.
.

•
•
•
•
•

\

••

!:

WE DO CEMETERY LETTERING
FREE INSTALLATION IN CEMETERY
All WORK GUARANTEED
OPEN 8:00A.M. ·9:00P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

Located on State Rt. 141 at Centenary, Ohio, 2% miles from Gallipolis, Ohio

l 446-7017
..

BreadEt~

Fish Sticks ...:.. .. .. . ~k':

$1

Chicken Pnttlac ... .. .. .... .. . .. t;;;~· 49
.2:.~~- $239

.

�•

Times-Sentinel

198:!

W.Va.

.124, 1983

-Calendar
SUNDAY
EUREKA - Providence Mls·
slonary Baptist Church, Teens
Run Road, wiU have · a guest
speaker, Kevin Johnson, Sunday night at 7 p.m .

SlORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

POMEROY - The Sunday
school of the Salvation Anny In
Pomeroy will be Sunday at
A\hens . Those planning to go to
the Athens s~sslon are to meet at
the quarters, 115 Butternut Ave.,
at 9:55a. m . for transportation.
EAGLE RIDGE - The Rev.
Ed Mingus and the Buchtel
Choir will be at the Eagle Ridge
Community Church Sunday,
May 1, at 7:30 p.m. The Rev.
Carl Hicks, pastor. Invites the
publc to attend.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm .

298 SECOND St

POMEROY, 0.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quonities.

.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU APRIL 30, 1983

MONDAY

TIMEX~

JUST

~LICED ~-11 CHO~S

GALLIPOLIS - A reviva l
will begin at Morgan Center
Wesleyan Church Monday with
services at 7:30 p.m. The Rev.
James_Lee will be the speaker.
Singing w!ll be by the Ambassadors Q11artet. Pastor John Hersma n Invites the public .

--

POMEROY - The"e wlll be a
special meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 80. Royal Arch Masons
Monday at 7: W p.m . The royal
arch degree will be conler.red.
All companions are urged to
attend.
-RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club Monday, 7:30 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Marvin
Wilson .

TIJESDAY
HARRI SONVJLLE - Senior
citizens of Harrisonville will
meet at the hall at 7 p.m .
Tuesday. All me mbers are to
take cookies, sandwiches or
snack food to be served followIng the meeting.

.

ATCHES

.

$

Round Steak ....L!~ ••

99

WILSON'S SAVORY

Bacon ................ ;~-.
SUPERIOR'S FRANKIE
.
'
·
Wleners•••••••••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

OFF

LONG HANDLE
ROUND POINT

MFGR'S.

SHOVEL

Ho111e owners s ho~el w1th 47" ash han dle
roLtnd poml , af]d tur ne d nep .

REG . 7,99

FFYerS................~ ....

HARPWA~f o~l&gt;t.

¢

.... .-.·.·.·

JELL-0

GELATIN

¢

DOUGLAS®

WEED WHIP

C•rl s htlilvv qrils '

dil t!r l"'n '

•

~ hil ptd

ta st Sr. rrat cd

wooden

h&lt;l nr111~

d outt l~ •:~y r.

L1ylll

c a ~v

tu:.dP

1:11l~.

nl •loth

to SW! IIl/

R£G . 7 .99

FOOD DEPT

·.·.

CALIFORNIA NAVEL

0ranges .....~~G

Aprtl 29.

.--::;;

SPO RT S DEPT .

••

FLAVORITE

.

$

·:·:.

'

59
M
.I
k
2 I ···~·····2~~~~.·~··
01
10

utum Is no)IIW~:~~~:~n~
String In
lnstruc·
lion to Include
and/or
guitar;
lnstrue·
tlon to Include
pertainIng to poetry for
and
screenplay and
script
writing for adults;
painting, Instruction
ad·

.

1 GAL JUG

¢

4LB.

The French Art Colony, located at 530 First Avenue In
Gallipolis, Is
appllcaduring their
tlons for
spring and
class schedules. The

GALLJPOLIS - The French
Art Colony Is nowoffeling Youth
Basic Drawing Classes that will
begin Saturday, April 30, be·
tween 10 a .m . and noon . The
cl~tsses, taqght by SuSiln Clarke
of GaU!polls, will Introduce the
bade technics Involved In drawIng to youths ttom ages eight to
16 years. Enrollment tee for
these classes Is $25 for nonmembers and $22 for French Art
Colony mem'b ers . The eight
week course continues once a
week until June 18. All drawing
materials may , be purchased
dur!Jig first class session for
approxlma tely SIO.
Last date for enrollment Is .

,·, •

IGLOO

Instructors needed

FAC classes

'''

3 oz.

Happenings

lev~!:~·~•;1~~~:

PRICE

.5.88

CHESHIRE Ches hire
Chapter OES wlll m eet Tuesday, April 26, a t 7:30 p.m. a t
Masonic Hall for Initiation. It Is
Important that all officers and
members be present.

vancedconcept
adult a nd
color,
and basketry,,.
Include technics In both split
and wild vine construction.

CLOWN
ROMPER
PAJAMAS
-.\NO
DORM
51 EFP SIIRTS

0°/o

WHOLE

USDA CHOIC

TIMEX

GARDENING!

Fryer Parts ......~;.

Room

ALL

· FOR

MIXED

GA LLIPOLIS - The Gallla
Soli and Water Conservation
District to host Fa rm City Field
Day will have a planning
meeting at 7:30 p.m., In ' the
office at 529 Jackson Pike,
Jffi-C, Spring Valley Pl(lZll.
GALLIPQLJS _;_There wu1 be
a revival at the F irst Chun:h of
God Monday through May 1.
Sunday services a t 9:30a.m. and
7 p.m. Monday to Frtday
services at 7 p.m . with the Rev .
Richard Bradley who wUJ be
speaking on the "Revelation
Message."

IN TIME

$ 39
-V4 Pork Lo1n ... ~~- ....

EASTERN - Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet Mon·
day at 7:30 p.m . at the high
school.

GIRLS'

PLASTIC

.

GAS GRILL

FLAVORITE

09

Trash Bags.....~o.~~... . · . . ...
WAGNER'S
JENO S FROZEN
oz.
Pizza-.. ~ ............... :~-!~~Ora- o ·-- k54•••••••
BTL

GOLD MEDAL

Flou·r

·89¢

¢

REPLACEMENT BRIQUETTES

fhe ntwesl •noo•aliOn '"the arl and sc•ence ol Amer•n s tavoll!e outd()O t
act•vity coo•rng oul Made ol retrac tor¥ conuett iltHt de signed •n the
shape ol a dlilrT!Orld The pedect hr•q•u!ne

!01

any ga::. 9"11

REG. rz.99

SPINNING REEL

Stamleu steel ball bea~mgs

S• • elemen t rnulll d1SC drag
Pudt hullon F1 tler~lau Oel11n
sk uled Super SJ)OOI · NI
Co11vert~ lo r leh r11 rtghl hind
relr leve

WHITE

PARISIAN
FLOWER
CART

Use th11 ..,-DIJ9hi110n pllnter to
hll !hill emptr come•. ot to
iltcent the W100ow Strled to

HEINZ

COTTONELLE

Catsup -

_$} 09

Bathroom Tissue
3 lb.

can

· 4 Ron

Pq.

99¢

lUl l IVIFbOdy' S IIIII

10.88
' RIG. U ...
HOUSIWAif O,r,

TUff STUff OR
SIUCOIIE

SPIIAY WIE

1.77u

1

aJII'-

.·.·.·

�.,
Page-B-6-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

Smith, Hawk
trade vows

Oh;.-Paint

Pleasant,

April 24, 1983

W. Va .

RGCCC publication ·
available to puhlic ;

·Bookmobile in. Meigs
POMEROY - Bookmobile ser·
VIce In Meigs County 1s broughi to
you bY the Meigs County Public
Ubniry under ~tract with the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries.

GALLIPOLIS - Tameron Lee
Smith and Kevin Ray Hawk were
married Ju ly 3L 1982, In a cjouble
ring ceremony at the First Church
of the Nazarene, with the Rev. Bob
Ma dison officia ting .over the vow's
the couple w rote themselves.
Music was provlcled by soloists
Beth Swartz, Chicago, Ill. , and Jim
J ustice, Springfield. Dan Harris,
Weslf'rvllle, was pianist and Andy
'/anco, cous in of the bride from
Gallipolis played guitar .
Given In marriage by her fa ther,
the br ide's dress was a gEtWn of
chiffon organza, fea turing a bodice
of silk venlse lace, accented by seed
pearls and sequins, a wedding band
neckline of schlffle embroidery a nd
bishop sleeves.
The m atron of honor was Mrs.
Carol Hyden, cous in of the bride
from Dayton, who wore a gown of
light green organza, flocked with
daisies over sa1inesse.
Br idesma ids were Patti Pa trick,
Huntington, W. Va.; Susan Petrie,
Gallipolis; Melissa Bennett , Colum ·
bu s; Jill McNeil. Greenfield; and
Ta mmy Ha wk , sister of the groom .
Their dresses were identi cal. to the
mat ron of honor's.
Bes t m an was Brad Abtes fe
Gallipolis, a nd groomsmen were
Bill Barr. Mark Sm ith, brot h~.r ...of
,. .
the br ide. both !rom Ga llipolis;· Pete
Groth, Dallas. Texas; and .Jim
Justice, Springfield .
F lower girl was Am ber Smit h.
ne ice of the bride, and ring hearer ·
was Nathan Smith, the br ide's
nephew.
Taper ,lighters were Jennifer
Hawk, sister of the groom , and
Deanna Ev ans. cousin oft he groom .
Attending the guest register was
Debby Smith, slste r· in ·law of the
bd de, from Gallipolis . Pl'ogram s
wer e passed by Krlsty an1 Mary
· Ellen G ibson ; both cousins of -the
·
· br ide from Zan()Svlllc .
Wedding coordina lor was Ma r·
sha Smitl1 , si.ster·in ·law of th~ IJr lcl ~.
Hosting th f' reception wer e

NGHS alumni
pkln banquet
for May 7

· Mn Kevin Ray Hawk
Mrs. Hawk isas ubstltute teacher
in the Clermon t County Element ary
Schools.
He Is a graduate s tude nt at Xavier
University in Cincinnati. study ing

hospital administra tion.
The couple honeymooned in
Pipestem State Park In West
Virginia, and now res ide at 1210
Queens Road, Miiford.

Dulcimer contest at Nelsonville

..,{'

NELSONV ILL E - Thr win nt'r
of the dulcime r contest at the
Appa lachia n Food Festival on thr 1
campus of HaeRing Techn ica l ·
College will this year be na med the
19KI Ohio Stale Dul cimer Cha m·
plan. F irst place for eac h category
on the Satu rda y, May 7 cont est wil l
de1ermine the sta le cha mpion in

that ca tegory, according to J im
McGaw, contest c hairma n. T he
w nlest begi ns a t 10 a .m ., and the
Pntry fee is $S.
Competit ive c" trgories will IJe
instr~rnerital, ..vQcal,

hamm~n;:'CI

a nd rl uct Or courting. P rizes wi ll. be
$1110 cash for firs t place in each
f'i i iPgory

w ith pt11ques for

fi r~t.

second a nd third place In each
ca tegory .
McGaw said no Judges or contes t
officials will be permitted to
com pete in any ca tegory , and
contesta nts will be a nnounced by
num ber only for judging purposes.
Thej udges will be sequestered
from competitors a nd contestants
will d ra w numbers and perform in
numerica l seq ue nce.
__
.. Contestants will play one warm. up tune a nd compete with two
Appa lachian traditional tunes of
cont rasting te mp. There will e.il slX
m lnu t~. tiine Umlt. wit~ selec(loijs
judged in a r eas Of sty le, r hythm
a nd techniq ue. In case of tie scores,
:Play-offs will take place.

The North Gallla Alumni Assocl'atlon will hold Its annual banquet at
North Gallla High School on
Saturday, May 28, at 7 p.m.
The price of the dinner Is $6 per
plate. food service cannot be
guaranteed for those without reservations. All reservations musi be in
by May 24.
Bidwell· Porter gradua tes shGuld
mall reserva !Ions to Donna
Broyles, 85 Locusi St., Gallipolis
45631, phone 44&amp;-f071.
Vinton graduates should mail
reservations to Laura Brown Cozart, Box 293, Racine 457'71.
North GaUta graduates (19581970) should mall reserva!tons to
Wanda Waugh Fellure, Rt. 1,
Cheshire 45620, phone 367-7866.
North Gallla graduates 11981·
1983) should mall reserva tions to
Kathy EU!ott, Rt. 1, Box 81,
Thurman 45685, phone 245-9500.
The classes 011923, '33, '43and '53
from Bidwell-P orter a nd Vinton
are working on reunions, and W.Duld
like to hear from members of those
classes for a list of names and
addresses .
If you know of gradua tes from
these schools that live out of state
and would like to hear of the ·
banquet please cont{lct one of the
secretaries.
·
The North Gallia class of 1958 Is
working on its 25th reunion and Is
trying . to locate class members. u
you' wo~l.d like ' fi&gt; help or. know Qf.
·any.one out Of siafe' please cOntact
· the North Gailla secretary lor thai

· Bookmobile schedule for MOll·
day, Apr1125- Ca!penter (Laura's
Store), 3: 10-3: 40 p .m .; Dexter
(Olurch), 4: 1(}4: 40p,m .; Danville
(Olurch), 5:2().5: 45 p .m.; Rutland
(Civic Center) , 6:
p,m., short
!lim will be shown 15 inlnulf's alter
bookmobile ;ll'rlves..
tuesday, April 26 - Portland
(Post Office), 2: 10.2: 40 p:m.; letart
Falls (Effie's Restaur;mt), 3:!&amp;
3: 50p.m.; Racine (Bank),4::J:&gt;.6: (!)
p.in., short ttiin Win be shown 15
minutes after bookmo.bUe arrives;
Syracuse (Pool) , 6: 2f).7; 50 p.m. ,
short film will be shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives.
Wednesday, April 27- Tuppers
Plains (Arbaugh ), 7: 25-7: 55 p.m. ;
Riggscrest Addition, 8: 10-8: 40 p.m.

m

(.

-lllllttj~

....

.

y

C conveRss~-..

.We'll put you

in Chris Evert's

Engagements

shoes!

Co nve rse Ch n s Evert' Caprice·· Styl rs h
uppe r with toeca o for co mf o rt.
Supoo rt and dcrabliity are
~ '.,
bu ilt II Qh t '" · Bro -tlex
~ .
fore loo t fea tur e pro·
.()-... • '•, • ,
'/
vrd es r. u shr onrng ~ ' ,/'•
•.,~)
and lie &lt;~b r li t y ~~-if•

·Fulks - Halley

Personal_s

. .
George Freeland, Syracuse,

.

&gt;&gt;,
.

ColllfN'fitivt•

286-3786

.

·Arched
cathedral
doors in
knQtty alder.

. ~:l

cabinetS
by Riviera.

Ph ~as ant

·.5 0%
OFF LIST PRIQ

'

. iRoof- Bable

All WOOD
13 STYLES
5 STAINS
.

:.-...

.'

"

'

'

.

PRICES
ON ALL

~n

. POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
: ,rerry Roof of Columbus ane
: announcing the engagement and
· .Opproaehlitg maniage of their
da!lghter, Joan Ann, to James .
.' 'Christopher Bable,' son of Mr. and
: Mrs. Larry R. Laudermilt, Racine,
·.and the late James M. Babie. The
: open-church wedding will lake .
; place 5ilturday, May 7, at the
: tvtount Moriah Church of God,
·Route 2, Racine. The Rev. James ",
Satterfield will officiate.
. A reception and shower honoring
· ~be ·couple will take place lmme. dlately following !he wedding at the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Savings and Loan Co. In Pome roy.

~~

l

1

'&gt;~_;;/
-

--- ~ ---- w~

Reg.

7ro . £o (&lt;)_/. Sh
~
La fayette Mall
POM E ROY - Mr. a nd Mr·s .
J Itt iDIWt~
oe Ca.te
GalliJIOiis, 0 .
Gilbert
spenrrr,
Tupjl('rs of
Plains.
armounce
the C'ngagpffirnl
th C'ir l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
da ughter, Ta mmy , to T homu s
Slone, Minneapolis. Minn .. son of
Mr. a nd Mrs. VIctor S l on ~. San
.Jose, Calif.
Wedding plans arf' incomptf'tc .
Thf' bride·elrc t Is a gmdu(ttt• of
Eastern Hig h School a mi attf'ndcd
Chr ist for the Nation's lns llt uh• In
Dallas, Texas.
Slone a ttended .Jesus Proples
Bible Institute In Minnea polis,
Minn ., a nd Is a gradua te of the
Chr ist for Ihe Nation's Institut e.

1735

:Russ - Donley

5 PC. GROUP

\

.'

"

,
•
:
•:
,
•
·•
..
,

'!octt dinrtertncludes· two golden brown ~sh lllleb, crlsp lrench lflei, cteomv cole
slOw Ond 2 southern style hush puppies

Evelyn Sears
.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd James Sears of Rt. 3,
Galllolis, are announcing the en·
gagement . and approaching mar rlage of their daughter, Eve lyn
Darlene, to Sgt. Ray mond Lloyd
Rupe, son of Mr. a nd Mte. Lloyd
Rupe, Bidwell.
·
The open-churc h wedding wUI
fi\ke place at 2 p .m ., May 7 a t the
First Church of God, 109 Garfield

=
t: Ave.

•
The bride Is a stude nt at Buc keye
' Hills Career Center.
The groom Is employed by the
United States Army.

. seafoOd~
• • • • • ctlplhlscoupoo

I
•

.$1.00 off Thrift Pack or Value Pack
YALUf PACK includes:121ish fillets,crisp wench tries. creomycolestowond 8hush
puppies. ~flieS 4 Or more.
r
.
,
THIIIFT PACK includes:Blish lillets. crisp wench fries. creamy cote slow and 8hush
pupp~

SorY.S J.l.

1 ,....,...""~~
.._ . .eap~o~no'
;:. , iii""
:, .217 River Road
~
Captain D's.

•

. -(1--

·

Upper

• • • • one co uponpor customt&lt; •

ot11t · -

•

•

~

•

=Jn •FREE D;·LIVERY
l~ •FREE PARKING

1 FU A N I T U A E
'

...

M•y 7, 1983 .
•

·. , ·~IL
1 5

I

lB.

COUNTRY STYLE
'

SHOULDER STEAK

SPARE RIBS

Budget
..

B

Budget

t

Pleaser
..
Spedat

Pleaser ·
Special

Please_r
Special

KAHN'S
BOLOGNA

HIUSHIRE
POLSKA KlaBASA

SUPERIOR
BON6.ESS

99

SMOKED
SAUSAGE

Budget

LB.

TAVERN
HAM

59

WHOLE$
HAM

lB.

99¢

SUPERIOR

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Sp~cial ·
RED or

GOLDEt;L .

¢

DELICIOUS "3 LB.·
PP~ES

BAG

CAUFORNIA

NAVAL ORANGES

Budget

Pleaser
Special

U.S. NO. 1
IDAHO

BAKING
POTATOES ~~~B.

$

FRESH

59

CALIFORNIA

STRAWBERRIES

QUART

EMPEROR

4LB.$129
BAG

RED GRAPES

Budget

Budget

Pleaser

Pleaser

.Special

Special
SUPERMAN

~

i.,

..

OPEN DAILYTO 5 P.M ,
MON. &amp; FRI TO 8 P.M.

••

.•

Personals

' 'Mr. and Mrs. Dave Weber.
' '

.

' Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith of
·'Akron vlallJ!d with Mr. and Mrs,
: Ernest Rutb and Mrs. R. E .
Williams · and
receatly.

,•,

'·

JAR

TOILET
SSUE

other relatives

4 RULL
PAK

JOHNSoN'S PlEDGE

oz.$149
BOX

.Budget
Pleaser
·special
SWANSON .
ENTRIES

14 oz.i$199

FURNITURE POLISH

CAN

Budget

Pleaser
Special

Spe
ROYAL CREST

Fish &amp; Chips, 5 oz.
Fried Chicken, 8 oz.
'&amp;

$

40 OZ.

8.5 oz.

$

VrTAWINDD

.LK
. MI .

RC COLA 8 PACK
RC 100

DIET RITE 16 OZ. BTL.

GALLON

RC DECAFFEINATED

PLASTIC

ROYAL CREST

COTTAGE CHE

24 oz.

CTN.

.S}29

PleMer Special

Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan Taylor o!
: DaytOn were weekend guests of

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISfA_CTION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN

'PEANUT
BUTTER

aouD

23

BROWNIE MIX
~\

WHITE

I 'Crea,mv ar CNnchy

OUI\Ic:':JlN HINES

KJO GRANDE
Announceme)lt is being
of the
approaching marria ge
Melissa
Russ, to Scott A.
· Miss Russ Is daughter
a nd
Mrs . Delbert Russ of Rio Gf;,~~
: Donley Is the son of E
Donley and the tate EI ~Jlnor
Donley .
· A May 21 wedding Is
'p lanned .
· She Is a graduate of
'Academy High $chOQI, and
e mplOyed at McDonald's.
: Donley Is a graduate of Southw·
..l!stem High School and Buckeye
Hills Career Center. He is em·
'p!oyed at Done!ll's Restaurant.

For Patio Dining and entertaining - why not awrought iron umbrella table with four
wrap-arm chairs available in three summer shades that are bound to please Mom. ·

I ••••

PORK LOIN

RIB PORK CHOPS

Melissa Rim

-

hambu11en

.

\

$399

Captain D's.

''

·~!'

REG. $505
NOW

2 CHIPPER DINNERS $3,.69

\

POUND
PKG.

FRESH PORK

.'

59

QUARTER

LB.

BTL

5 PC. GROUP

MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY

•

SLICED

$ 99. SLICED
BACON

24 OZ.

MOTHER'S DAY JUST AROUND THE CORNER, WHY.
NOT CONSIDER A Bf.AUTIFUL VET PRACTICAL GIFT

117 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

•
'

LOIN
PORK CHOPS

VEGETABLE

nchi1les 3-seat
. spring ·chair, easy chair, coffee~ble and end table made in the weather-durable wrought
iron by Lyon-Shaw- ~utiful gift for Mother's Day for
the one who certainly deserves it -

Quality Patio Furniture by Lyon-Shaw

•

SAVORY BRAND

CENTER CUT

PURE

• Boneleu llsh ltlet • A generous pon10n or golelen lrted $COIIops
• Hot. cnsp lrencn tne~ • hesll creamy cole slow • 2 deliciou'
hush pupp1es •. !he Captain'sown COG ktatlsauce

Pleaser
Special

NOW

Fish a'

~ Sears -: Rupe

Pleaser
Special

12 OZ.

•vl!lnS PRODUCT$ comPRnY

:IIHI SHand Ave.

Budget

PKG.

\,[;-. ____ .....--..
' . ._
. . . _----- - ___.. ---n - --~--- - · - -

__

Special

Budget

KAHN'S

·t!&lt; '· ~ ~_;;:)

~-i"i -~~ T-he

•

REG. or THICK
SLICED

CA·BINETS .
BUY NOW!
,RJV/ERR HITCHEns

NO DOUBLE COUPONS
ON WEEKLY
ADVERTISED
SPECIALS

THURSDAY, APRIL 28

Budget
Pleaser

,.

CLOSE-ouT

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

.\

CENTER CUT

/ )

/'

'

; : ; ~OWN CITY - Mr . and Mrs.
: ~ Fulks, route 1, Crown City,
. are announcing the engagement of
:daughte~. Alison Lynn Fulks,
: tO~erry AUen Halley , son of Mr.
• $d Mrs. Carl Hailey , Eureka Stqr
: ROute, Gaillpolls, and the la te
; ·J uan! ta Gay Halley.
i Thf' April' 30 open-church wed·
; ding •.• ll be at Good Hope Baptist
, Church, Crown City , at 7: ~ p.m .
f Miss Fulks Is a stude nt at
i Hannan Trace High ·School.

Pnces ·

Po111t

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
AND MARK' V

Alison Lynn Fulks

675 -2318

Jacl&lt;son, Ohio

Authorized To
Accept WJC

DoUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC·
TURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

I&lt;ITCHEN CENTER
UOuiilitv At

Is Now

COUPONS

~

mains In serious condition at Holzer
Medical Center follo'Nirig s~ey.
Freeland ls in 11M! Intensive c~

DALE'S

year.

SYRACUSE, OH.
PHONE 992·5776
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASON
Complete litie of voptablo and beddittt!
plants, foliap plants and haneing
baskets. Also a Ialit seftction of
Sbrubbery and dward fruit trees.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5
SUNDAY I to 5

Engagements

RIO GRANDE ~ The ,sprlng
Issue of the Rio Grande College a!ld
Community College Uberal Arts
Department literary pubUcatlop
''The Ship of Fools" Is avallable'tp
the public.
_ ;~
. The 24-page publication contalJ¥
poetry a,nd short stories by student~
ar.d members o1 the faculty fJCill
!he Liberal Arts Department..€osl,
for the publlcation Is 35 cents. . ~
For .a copy ol the publlc~tl~l!,
contact !he Uberal Arts Depa.i1·
men! at (~4) 245-53113.
' ·

unit.
.

Teresa Houck, Cinc inna ti . cousin o f

the groom ; Ruth Co&lt;'kerham,
Akron; Lucy Emwood, Madge Nml
and Dot Madison of Ga llipolis. The
ca ke was made by Cindy Fa ulkson
of Gallipolis, cousin of the br ide.
The Ha wks are both gradua tes of
Gallia Academy High Schoo l and
Mount Vernon Nazarene CollegP.

24, 1983

LANDMARK
GRADE A ·

.PAPER
TOWELS
.Jumbo RQII

. 69¢

~!::;::~=~=

CORNED BEEF
DAWN

TIDE

DISHWASHING
LIQUID
Btl.

·. \

\

$}39

Uudgt•l PI(':L"'t'r Sp4't·iul

' 320z.

·

12 oz.
CAN

Budget Pleaser Special

SCOTT

EX-LARGE
EGGS
llozen

UBBY'S

$179

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
49 oz.
Box

.$199

�Page

The Sunday Times--Sentinel

8-8

Pomen!y-MiddlepOJt-Gallipolis,

Arrington-Dayton vows

Ohio Point Plea~t, W. Va.

April 24, 1983

Seniors' 'activities-~ Senior citizen art
displayed ~t RGCCC .
r-----.,.-- Gallia wunty-·--.---.--4
.

• GALLIPOLIS- Activities for
·the week of· AprU 25-29 at the
Senior Citizens Center located at
220 Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, AprU 25- Chorus
1·3 p.m.; Volunteer Recognition:
noon.
·
. Tuesday, AprU 26 :- S.T.O.P .
Class, 10: ~ a .m.; PhysiCal
Fitness, 11:15 a.m.; Volunteer
Recognition, noon.
Wednesday, AprU Tl- VInton
' Bible Study; Card Games, 1·3
p.m.; American Literature
Class, 1 p.m .; Volunteer Reoog·
nltlon, noon.
Thursday, Aprtl 28 - Bible
Study, 11 a.m.·noon; VInton
Blood Pressure Check; Bingo
Garnes, 1 p.m .; Volunteer Re·
cognition, noon.
Friday, Aprtl 29 - Art Class.
1·3 p.m.; Craft Mlni·Course, 1·3
p.m.; Volunteer Recognition,
noon; Social Hour, 7 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Dayton
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas · Arrington announce the
wedding or their daughter, Juanita .
to Timothy Dayton on Feb. 12. He Is
the son or Mr. a nd Mrs . Robert
Dayton.
.
Mrs. Dayton is a graduate of
Ga Ul a Academy High School. She is
also a gr~uate of the Holw r School
of Nursing. She ts employed as
registered nurse at P leasa nt Valley

a

Hospital, Point P leasa nt , W. Va.
Dayton ts a graduate of Gallta
Academy High School. He attended
Rio Grande Coltege.
The wedding took place at
Racine United .Methodist Church,
pcriormed by the groom's brother ·
tn· law , Preache r James Clark .
The couple resides o~ BulavUie
· ·
fload .

East-Bobo
wed in Athens
.

.

.

.

.....

Tuesday - Scalloped potatoes/ham, green beans, pickled
beets, pineapple sllce;s bread,
butter, mUk.
Wednesday - Spaghetti·
/ meat sauce and cheese, tossed
salad, Italtan bread, pudding,
butter, mUk.
Thursday - Roast beef·
/ gravy, mashed potatoes, corn,
apple crtsp or ple, bread, butter,
mUk.
Friday - Chicken /dum ·
plings, spinach, caJTOt pennies,
vanilla tee cream, butter, bread,
mUk.

Choice of beverage served
with each meal.

r - - - - Meigs
POMEROY - Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeory, Invites aU el·
derly of the county to take part in
activities at the center. The center
Is open Monday through Frtday
!rom 8: ~ a.m. to 4: :ll p.m.
Schedule of activities lor the week
of Aprtl 25-29 Is as loUows:
Monday - Physical Fimess,
11: 30 a.m .; Square Dance, 1·3 p.m .

Inc.
Robert Horrocks, director of the
agency, said the siJow would run
through May 6, an&lt;) will be open
da1ly trom 1-3 p.m. There Is no
charge for admission.
Paintings to be exhibited were aU
produced after the artist had
reached their 60th birthday. Only

*~­
SINGER.
SEWING
MACHINES ON SALE
Our Mothers
Day Gift to

County____,,...-----1
musproom soup and onion gravy,
mashed potatoes, slaw with car·
rots, vantna pudding over banana
tn graham cracker crust.
Frtday - Wiener, sauerkraut,
mashed potatoes, mtxed 'frutt,
cookie.
Choice of milk, tea, coffee
avaUable datly.

lr============:i

Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
ll:.lO a .m .
Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
11: 30.a.m.; Bingo, 1·2 p.m.
Thursday - CeramiC Instruc·
tton, 10 a .m .·noon; Physical Fit·
ness, .11: ~ a:m:
_
Friday. "- PhystcB.I l:'ttiu~ss. U : 30
a .m .; BOwlllig, 1·3 p.m.
·
The Senior Nutrition Program
serves a hot meal at noon each day.
Ca tl 9\12·2161 to make a reservaton
lor a meal no later than 9 a.m. the
day or the reservaton . The follow·
lng menu Is planned lor the week of
Aprtl 25·29:
· Monday Macaroni/ cheese
peas/ caJTOts, blushing pears, bra~
mutttn, Boston Cream pte.
Tuesday - Chtcken·rtce casserole, green beans, orangelbana·
nas, biscuit, apple pie with cheese:
Wednesday - New England
boiled dinner (ham with cabbage,
carrots, potatoes) , applesauce,
jello cake.
Thursday Roast heel In ·

Life'
Insurance
.For
· E~eryone
you love
'

Mom(andtoyou.J

ofll ciatlng.
\\-Irs. Bobo Is a graduate of Meigs
High School and will graduate from
Hocking Technical College In June.
The groom Is a gradua te ol
Athens High School . a nd atte nded
Ohio University a nd. Hocking Tech·
nlca l College. He Is e mployed by
the Athens Pollee De pa11ment.
The couple will reside tn Athe ns.

A Timely Offer

For
.Mbther's Day

GIRLS' JI&amp;';ULTS

EllDISCUS- Buck. Point P!casanl; Kinzer,
Grem.fteld; SwE&gt;en~r. Marlena; Fuller.
FElirland; Preston. Marlctta, and OsOOroe,
Mtntord. 91'8".
SHat'PUr - OstxJrne, M inford; Swaney,
Marietta; Prestoo, Marlerta: and Buc k.
Point Plessant. 32'2" .
LONG JUMP- Moody, Marietta; Wolff'.
GAHS; • Cook, Fairland and Amsbary .

fltpa.Sew·
Machine Model 290

t9 built·in stitches~ Push·button
bobbin winds thread directly from

needle· BuiH·In bultonholer

s~~El75oo.

F,...Arm
Machine Model 5528

.~g~ s2sgoo

INENT s: THE FABRIC.·SHOP

GAllS. t67 '.
HJGH . ~ -Davis, Fairland; l yons.
Mirti:&gt;n:l; M~:Danlels , Che5apeake; Rannells.
Greenfield. 4'10''.
~ - Chesapeake; Marietta ; Minford,
and f.IJpn. IO.:Il.5.
100 I..Jf- Wolfe, GAHS: Amsbary , I.AHS:
Dernon, Falrland. and McDanlel,.'i, Chesa·
peake. 15.2.
100 .DASH - Edwcu:ds. Ghes;;lPeake:
Kingery, Fairland; Moody . Mflr irlta . 8nd
Wolfe, GAHS. 12.7.
..
MlLE. RUN-- Wlijls .~_Cheapea,ke: . Cady,

.1

SINGER 115 w. 2nd

·. · .· Pomeroy, ilH.
Servi11 Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.

PRO&lt;JUC;TS

·A T"dom••• oiTht .,,.. ,Compo"'

..... ,... .t - ..... ,t.. '"
r.l""_,..,p _.. .
-

51·

RippE'} . KC; Pt&gt;nlck. NG; and CIQS('. GAHS.
10.8.
LONG JUMP - CarbE&gt;r. GAriS: Pt&gt;nlck.
NC; Clbion, Chesapeake and Hesson. Point
Pleasant 18'10"
Mll.. E RUN Haskins. Gr['('nfi eld:
Donaribe. Chesapeake: Ranegar. KC: and
Adkins, GAHS. 4: 4.1.R.
440 RELAY - Point Plrosant: GAHS:
Greenlield and Nor th lia ll!a. 47.8.
440 - Patterson. PP: Rife. PP: King,
Greenfield. and Karnes, Grccn tleld. 52.4.

..

LEADS POINT VICI'ORY- FourmcmherS of the Point pleasant
track team were Instrumental in the team's vtctory Saturday afternoon
In the Rotary Relays at Rio Grande College. They includ&lt;.'d, left to right.
'

3.l) LH - Beavcr. GAHS; Poole. Gremneld: Wedge. Point Pleasant: and Barton,
Point Pleasant. 40.3.
ECKl - Bennetl. GAHS: Sowards , Green-

field; Roush, KC and O lck, PP. 2; 15.1 .
Zl) - Patersoo., PP; Rile, PP; Rip!X'Y. KC,
and Penick, NG. 23.0.

Adkins, GAHS. 10:25.1.
M U...E RELAY - POint Pleasant GAHS;
Greenf(f'l~d· and Ch esapeake. .'l:·.W.~.

This compact ~· a local ooe owner. Silver exterior with gray custom
Compare anywhere. Priced to Sell.

n (l\\'t'l'\ tll .l l

rt:.d

("II ·

~it11J'l~· ,rt.'llll\\1,.' lilt,: t"Jur~ll !,'llnl:lilllT ,!lid fiji' lljl till
h.u1dlt· (II ~rort· thl' rnirntr fl.11 . A quick f.tll to our ,!Jup ,c.:nd .. , 1, 11 r
,L:.ift '111 ih w.1~ . But Llll t';1rly~ Wc:'ll hand!&lt;: rht rt~st.
·
'l1.Tt.'t.lrit.·, (.Ill

PerfeCI

y .. . r
Kremenrz " Hose Bar
f• shioned in 14 Kr.
(;o ld Overlay. A rradir i '$ tQO~u;~: Y by Kre mentz.
t. LIMITED TI M E ONLY

STORE

Send the Make-lJp Mirror Bouquet
POMEROY
FLOWER· SHOP

---.

Red, 4 spd., w/overdrive Sla~t Six. long wide bed and only 14.000 low mies.

We Are Ready To Deal!
Bill G- John1011 - Terry Hemilton

Car.Co.

·l

113 Court St.
Po"'eroy

"The Way Allll'rica Sends Love!"

106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, OH.

Ph. 992-2039
Or 992·5721
AndW.Winl

1640 Eastern Awe., Gallipolis
~9

446-0691

River Downs' 58th
CINCINNATI (AP) thOr&lt;JUahbred racing season opened this weekend, and
track o!flclals say its success could go a long way
towllftl determining tbe future of horse racing In Ohio.
They already are working behind thE! scenes lor
chtlJIII!II In state regulations that would put Ohio
ractn, on a competitive footing wtth Kentucky. .
Among changes they seek are a lower ~tate takeout,
night racing and relaxation q,f medication rules.
General Manager Larry Kollglan says aU three are
necesary If the once-prominent Ohio racing industry
.• ~to survive.
.
"Haw can we have great racing here? Of course, the
tiest WI)' Is the old philosophy - better purses bring
better horses, better horses bring more of the public
oUt," Kollglan said.
·
"Lei's talk about night racing," Kollglan said. "I
think !hat's one major part of racing for River Downs
that could really show a drastic Improvement
Immediately.
"I tltlnk If River Downs ever got summer nlgllt
raclni, I tblnk on Fridays Y&lt;J!I'd see $7.10,00) handles.
Yourwedtdayswoold be much better; tt'smuchmore
cOnvenient for the public to come out. Night racing for
tile sla~of Ohio Is something River I&gt;oWns wants;"
0111o l'fllll)atlonl allow tboJ.'OIIIIIIred racing only
ftitWn lltXIII to 7 p.m.
Thatplla River Downs otncla)s, wttoare helples$ to
',do tlll)'thlng 111 I..almla Race Course. across the Ohio
RIYII' llllmthel'il Ke!ltucky' drew 1'ecord crowda with

___

___

....__

\.

'•

•
'•

~.....

GETS TWO FlltSTS GAllS' Don Gurher captu..,.~l
two llNs In Saturday's GI•UI/&gt;oll• notary Rcla.vs a1 Rio Grtmd&lt;·.
He won lh&lt;' long jump 1md high
jump events with leaps of tM.IO
!eel and 6 I1.'CI 1'\.'Spcctlve~v .

a

to Leon Durham lx•forP e nd ing 1hr
inning by re tiri ng Keith Mor rl and
on a fly to right. Ryne Sandberg
s ingled In lit&lt;' nin th lor Chicago's
other hit.
In a nother NL ga me. pine h hiltt•r
.loSl' Morales doubled In thcwlnning
run in the seventh innl.tg a nd Pedm
Guerrer o cont r ibuted a two-n.m

home run Sa tunlay as the Los
Angeles Dodgers defrated the
Pitt sbu rgh P ira tes 3·2.
Bill Russell opened the seventh
wtth a walk off 1luser John
Candela ria. 2·1, a nrJ Steve Yeager

l i.
'._...,

\

'I'OP SCOIIEit - Corn Wolfe of Gallii&gt;Oil• siHtwn jumpln~: thr• low
hurdlt.." ' took top sw1·tng honors SatuNtay tn lht• girl• ' t·omtwtttton ul tlw
Galltpoll• IWtary ltl'lays. She ..t.CJ ~• a new sdttNii m •orclln th•• ttMl
mctt!r nm with a tbne of : 12. 9 and tit'tl Kim J ;uwy fnr n•t·unlln lh••tuow
200 nu-t ··r nu~(· with a tbne of : 21.:1 !'oi('( 'Ortcl'i .

vietorie~

laid down a sacriflcf' hunt to m ove

Russell to second Mora les 1ho&gt;n
st m ked a double lo lcft ·ccnte r fie ld
to break the 2·2 tiP.
In the ju nior circuit , L~ rry He rndon
knocked in thr('(• runs wtth a
first·inning t riplc to l•Jrk 1he slx ·hll
pit ching of Dan Petry as thd)('tro lt
Tigers blanked theSeatUcMarin!'rs
4·0 Sa turday .
Petry ..'\.0. lrnpmwd his life Iim&lt;'
record against Seattle to 6-2. In hL'
last 40 Innings against the Mariners.
P&lt;?try has a llowed just two runs.
Petry st ruck out four a nd wa lked

two as I"J( ~ tm i t t:x •atlht' M oll'irH ·rs IJ_v
a -t-0 sc·or"f' for the SN 'ond sf ra lght

da.v.
Lou Wh itakt•r and ll owanJ .luhn
son hit suceessivP !-lilll-!ll's in tllP

IJ(Itroit firs t nnd Marlnt •rs ~o; ; t ; n ·t er
Mike Moor&lt;'. t~:l . htt Kirk (;ibson
wilh a pit cit to loacllht' baS&lt;' s be fore
Herndon Irip!('(! them a ll homl'lor "
JO Oet miti&lt;',lli.

Thr TlgPt'S sco n '(l aj..!ain in lhl'
thh'd w hC'n I..anr-f' Panish hlt a

two-out' I rip lc and truttrd hOmC'
whrn Moor(• un\'O I'k&lt;'-1 a wild pitc h
while fa c ing t·!ci·ntttHi .

:River Downs opens 58th . racing season this weekend

1982 DODGE RAM MISER

..,j.jt'd mirror. Tl~t· rt: .., .1
~ t .tnd - up h.t ndiL· !lw ht 1ld .. ,t
' J"l'litiJy .fitf&lt;.'ti L'tlf"lt.litl&lt;.:f. S!1
"ht·n tht· llo\\ tr'\ .m~ co nl'

d!
-

'

~f i rror HoULjllt:l. )'tll l. ll

,I

&gt;

TAKES SHOTPUf - With a toss o1 31 feet eight and one-hall
lnchM, North Gallla's strongman, Matt Kamper, won the shotput
CCllllpEtttton Saturday aftemoon In the Galllpolfi Rotary Relays at Rio
G.-de College. Lynn Sheets of Gallipolis llnLshed second.

't.: t h 1 .1 U ll(l l" flll i".ltKjiiL'{

tth

I

'

...:...•::C

"Nin· Work ~ "
W ith " "' M.ok&lt;··l'p

l 'tl l l l l' ' \\

d'

... '· ·'

f

CHICAGO (API -Allee Ham ·
maker pitched a three·hitter lor his
scrond stra ight shutou i and Chilt
Davis drove In three runs wtth a
homer and a sacriftC!' fly Saturday
to lead the San Francisco Gia nts to a
5-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Hammaker, 2·1, who had a
two-hit ter In his last start , did not
allow a hit for live innings until
Larry Bowa led off the s ixth with a
bloop single to cen te r. He a lso gave
up two-out single to Ron Cey in the
seventh and then Issued his first
walk this season alte r 212·3 1nnings

'

..,, 1 y~ .

ln: ... h

·r·

...........

M:tke·lip Mirror lhKJuer.
A .; ~· !i s h . usc::.•fu l .~-lift th~H

tit

..

...

'

Secretaries' ueek
Aoril25·29

'. ~

Giants, Dodgers, Tigers collect

equipped with cruise, tilt,
and much more.

• •

Show)Our

.' ·.

CLEVELAND (AP I Pa t
Tabler drove J1 fi ve runs with a
hases·loaded triple and a bases·
loaded s ingle while Len Barker and
Ed Glynn combined on a six· hiller
Saturday as the Cleve la nd Indians
downed the Chicago Whit e Sox 6-3
Barker. 3·1." gave up four hits,
struck out e ight a nd walked two In 7
1·3 innings before Gly nn came on to
finish up.
Cleveland took a 3·0 lead against
Dennis Lamp. 2·2, in the bottom of
the fourth. With one out , Mike
Hargrove singled and moved to
second when third baseman Lorenzo Gray mis played Andre
Thornton's grounder. George Vuko·
vtch was int entionally walked to
load the bases .
Tabler, who was acquired by the
Indians from lh&lt;' 'v\'hite Sox in
exchange lor infie lder Jerry Dybzinski on Aprtl1. then sin gled home
two runs. Rick Ma nning was
tntenttonal ly walked to reload the
bases hefore Rln Hassey singled in
another run .

Office Hours by Appointment Only

1979 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE

Greg Barton, hurdles; Craig Hesson, long jtunp, 440-N•Iay memher and
mOe relay; Mike Patterson, sprints and das hes, 1utd .Jeff 1111&lt;•, 100, 200,
400 dashes and mOe run. Keith WUson photo.

.Indians
:defeat
ChiSox

lWO MILE RUN - Haskins, Grrenfield;
Donahoe, Che.apeakc; . Ran~ar . KC , an d

RocK Island . Illinois

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

:V

·-·.

Fraternal Life lnaurance

This sharp coupe has only 47,012 ·low
AM/FM/Stereo, 6().4() seat landau top, Rallye

I

',...... H"'"~"lof;

~tG I 014

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
•

.

&amp;-.;1- .. Ql.!"' ...

We've ·Got 'Em!!

Home Office

;.,.p '

· -fOtl:
·•''

•-(

As Your Singer Approved Dealer

your sec.TUa f)' t ht

342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

· RIO G!L\NDE - Chesapea ke
Marl~ta: ~hultz. l.Dgan. and Wheeler.
•
M;nlord. e: 25.
a nd Pol n t PIeasan t re igned Sa.,ur· ...___ WOO- GAHS.Chesapooke: Fairland and
day afternoon as winners of the
Maclena. ~,.2.
'Gallipolis Rotary Relays held on
IXl - , Sc hultz. LOgan: Modlin. l.Dgan:
Jan~. CAHS. and Thoml))oo. GrecnOeld,
·the au.weather track at Rto Grande
l :lll.6.
CQU~.' · ·
1.a!J - GAllS; Marlena: Greentleld. and
Fa~land. t:54.9.
In girls • competl•tton, Ch esa8JJ.- Walls, Chesapeake: Cody, Marlena:
peake edged Gatllpolts by one
Wheel!!'. Minford, and Miller. Greenlield.
2
point, !J9.88. Finishing third was
' ~· _ Edwards , Chesapl'Qk€\ Wo~P.
Marietta with 83~ points. Green·
GAllS; King"')', · Fairland: and Schultz .
'-"•""·
27.4.
fleld McClain, 34; Logan, Tl'h· and
4.1(400 - GAHS. Ch~ peake; Martella and
P oint P leasant with 20 points .
Gr..e!\field. tk&lt;l: Potno Pleosant. U!.
For GAllS, Kim Janey set a
IIOVS' JI&amp;';IJLTS
record with r tlrne of 63 seconds in
. E .....
HIGH JUMP - Garber. GAHS: Smith.
the 400 meters; Janey and Cora
Poinl Pleasant : Ba'H,an. Point Pleasant. a nd
Wolfe had a new .200 meter record
Marnming, Chesapeake. fi;.
with times · of T/.3 seconds and
SHCYrPLIT Kemper . Nort h Ca ll1a:
S~ s. GAHS:. Head. Gr{'('nfie!d. and Swift,
Wolfe established a new mark of
Gremneld. 51 :8 ~",
12.9 seconds In the 100 meter rijce.
POLE VAU'LT WUf', CrC'f.'nfleld;
Woodyard. Point Pleasanl : Theiss. GAHS.
Wolfe was the high point scorer In
and Gra nt, GAHS. w·.
the girls' meet.
DlSCUS - Swift, Greentleld; Karl"E'S ,
In the boys' competition . Point
Creentleld: Colml an . Chf'Sapeake.·and Da ·
vis, GAHS. 121'.
Pleasant won the meet with 132
nYO MILE ftEL.A Y- Greenfield. CAHS;
· total points. Greenfield finished
Polnt Pleasant. and North GaUia. 9:03.
119 tHGH HURDLES - Bartoo. Pt
second with 123 points; GallipoliS
Pleasant: Beaver, GAHS; Poole, Greenfield
bad 113; Chesapeake, ~5; North and
Jacksoo, Green riel d. 15.9.
Gants 40, and Kyger Creek, 36.
100 DASH - J:»a tterson. Point Plea5anl ;

You Want

H ere's rhc perhr wo~y . St·nd

H1R

Chesapeake, PPHS capture Rotary Relays

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Mr. and Mn Brent Allen &amp;bo
announcing lhf' marri age of their

mUk.

the works of artists~ In' one
of the 10 Counties served l!Y
Horrocks' Agency will be
displayed.
Au paintings will be on sale. .W
money from the sale of paliltings Is
returned tn the artist.
.Horrocks. said artists displaying
theb' works wUJ be honored with a
tea on the final day of the show. He
$Q Invites the public to attend the
tea and meet tbe senior artists.
The area agency, with ofllces at
Rlo Grande College, serves the
elderly ·ln Adams, Brown, Gallla,
Hlg,!tland, Jackson, Lawrence,
Pike, Ross, Scioto, · and VInton
counties. ·

VETERANS M.EMORIAL HOSPITAL

'" ..

daughte r, Tina . Ma rte East , to
Brent Alle n Bobo. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richa rd Bobo of Athens.
The wedding took place Wednes·
day . Marchi3Q, at 4:45 p.m .. tn lhc
Free Mctholllst Church In At he ns
with the ~ev . R. Rob in son

The Senior NutritiOn Program
will serve the following menus:
Monday - liot or cold tuna,
tomato SOI!P· crackers, lrutt
cock~coo'ktes, hun, butter,

.

.. RIO GRANDE - .The tiiJrd
annual senior citizens art' shQw will
open tn the jlubllc at 1 p.m. Monday
In the ~;~t!'lum of the Fine and
Pmonnlng Arts Center at Rio
Grande College.
The exhibit Is sponsored by the
Area Agency on Aging District 7,

JOHN A. WADE, M..D., INC.

..

ATHENS - Mr . and Mrs. Larry
(Pal) Conner ol Columbus arc

orts

r---

nighttime racing IIi a Decemher·to-AprU season.
Kentucky also aUows certain medications
notably lastx, used to control bleeding- to be given to
horses and allows tracks to keep a larger percent of
money wagered on a race.
"The state of Kentucky takes I ')4 percent lrom
tracks that average less than $900,00l (handle) ,"
Kollglan said. "Ohio takes approximately 6 percent ."
The total amount of wagered money not returned to
bettors Is about the same. But In Kentucky, more
money can be returned to horsemen as bigger purses.
which means owners wOl race better stock. ·
"It's very dt!IICUit to compete with the ldn~ olpurse
structure they have over there," Kollgtan said .'
Kollglan hopes UXI,OOl in track Improvements
during River Downs' of!·season will promote goodwill
among horsemen and the public.
I
"Bringing better purses here and having better
horses ... It's all relevant - .It's aU related, aU
together," Kollglan said. "And providing a facUlty for
the pubUc- because whether the hOrsemen say they
put on the shoW or ri'lanagement say they put on the
~how, It's thatlan who walks In who puts on the show.
And we 1111 know that."
OhiO doesn't have a big· league thoroughbred track
In the lleiiSe 11 an Aqueduct or HoUywood Park, but
there II one lneachofltstbreeblggestcltles. Cleveland
has Thlatledo\\ln, Columbus has Beulah Park lll)d
Cincinnati has .River Downs, a scento, old-style track

_ __ __

...;.'

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

_;_

.;.,_

-'-·

where patrons can sit back, a nd watch barge tra ffic on
the Ohio River lapping at 'the shorel ine a few Yards
behind the backstretch.
Rtvt r Downs typifies the many U.S. tracks th a t fat!
between the "leaky· roof' ' c lrcuit a nd the upper
I
echelons ol r acing.
"I think we're unique in ha vilig a turlcourseforthe
size track we are. " Kollgian said. "It 's the only turi
course In this part of the country. We hope to build a
new grandsta nd someday ... lfwe get some helptrom
the state of Ohio."
This year , River Downs will compe\e wtthChurchlll
Downs In LoutsvUie the e nt ire summer, rather than
untU mld·June, as IIi past years. Although Koltgtan
expects that toallect the amount ofmoney hethere. he
reasons that there wiU be more good horses brought In
troni Loulsvtlle to race.
River Downs offers 117 days of racing, through
Labor Day, and some days doesn 't break even. But
Koltglan said track owners, prtmarily a group of West
CoaSt physicians who paid $7 mtlllon for the trllck In
1975, have reinvested aU of River DownS' unspeclfled
profits to Improve tbe track.
$tnce last season, Kollgtan has put $45,00l lrlto
rebuilding the racing strip, sro,OOJ for a clubhouse.
roof, $100,00! for paving tn the barn area and $100,00)
tor. new mutuel machtries, which will speed up
wagering.
.
K"tlglari llnows he cannot rely solely on Ctnctnnatt, ...

where the Rros or Nat tonal Lcagur· basc•t&gt;a II lamr are
the No.1 summer sportsattractlon.so hepromotrs the
track throughout southe rn Ohio, nor thern Ke nt ucky
and much ol Indiana, whe rr there Is no racing .
He stages lots ol promotions - T shlrt, cap anr l
totebag giveaways - a nd broadcasts lh&lt;' ca ll ul th&lt;•
final race every day on a Clnclnnali·arca radlos ta tlon.
This year, those broadcasts havr bc&lt;'n expanded to
stations tn Dayton, Middle town. Wilmington , P orts·
mouth. Chtlllcotheand Huntington. W.Va .
"We try to turn everything hack to the fans and give
them something. and I think lhat c reates some
goodwtll,' · Kollgtan said .
"You ' re racing 117 days. stx days a week , and you
don't want to hun the publtc. You don't want loo muc h
money taken out.
"You want more people winning than los ing , so
that's why we're always rooting lor a favorite to win
therace.
'
.
"The public understands that it 's bettl,ng against
eactt other - the track takes a percentage off the
dollars handled rather· than who won the race; that
makes no dltference to the racetrack.
"It's great when a trilecta pays $32,00l'a nd you have
one winner. but you would rather see tt pay $:lXI and
have many winners.
"That's Just our feeUng as management; more
winners leaving happy wlll return and have more
. money In their pocket and want to play the horst&gt;s ."

···-----~-----·-~:---------·

�I

I

April24, 1913

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio . 'Point PleaiiCHit, W. Va.

24, ' 1983

11,000 watc,h _ Buc~~yes'
first
scrimmage
up
wm

CANTON. Ohio (AP)- The Ohio for the Scarlet squad, and came
State Buckeyes received an "okay"
short on a 47,yard attempt._
rating from Coach E;arle Bruce
followlng a :ID-14 Scarlet victory
over the Gray In the season's first
coUege football scrlmmage.
Nearly U,IXXl tans watched the
performance Friday night In Paul
Brown Tiger Stadium here.
"Overall, I thought the defenses ·
looked good," Bruce said. ''The
defensive line looked very good. The
defensive linemen looked very
quick, they were getting off their
l)locks fast and ge(ting to the ball.
And I liked the fact we had five
NOW THRU MAY 21
lnterceptloJis, •· he said.
Tailback Kelvin Lindsey, the
192-pounder from Sandusky, and
224-pound linebacker Rowland Tatum from Inglewood, Callf.. both
juniors, were .Voted the top performerS In the game.
"! thought Tatum played a fine
t111e
crf
game, and so did Curt Curti$ on
Your hO!Jit will ktep Itt good loob il it'•
defense," Bruce said. "Lindsay
P••nled with Great Lilt. Qreatllta holdt ill
COIOf lor _years and resists btilltrlng, pethr'lg,
certainly ran well, and overall, I
cna•t•ng aM mildew. II you Wllnllhe besl
ouldoor pa int we sell. atk lor Great Lilt.
think we looked okay."
Lindsey, who gained 129 yards on
• colors
W•oe rang~ ell l:htrlblt ...~......-~...
31 carries, was named theoflenslve
• F lat or 11110~ hn••n
• Ptf fecl lor e~ltr•m
most valuable player of the game.
wood. m~nry 1na
m•l• l
. Tatum, with an Interception, a
• Eu~ IO llQDIY. on t
coat
som&lt;11r
fumble recovery, a quarteback
COIO!S
• Ou ts In &lt;'· • I!O~fS
sack and a half-dozen tackles, was
• So•p aM ,..,,,,
named the MVP.
• F111 ol leaa nau•os
Gray quarterback Tim Stephens
had the best night of any of.the four
quarterbacks who played. He
passed for 1Z7 yards, Including
tosses of 13 and 31yards, completing
eight of 19 throws with one
GREAT LIFE
Interception.
FLAT LATEX
The other Gray quarterback,
SAVE 14.81
Massillon High graduate Brent
Offenbecher, completed six of 15
SALE.
passes with two Interceptions for 62
yards. Of!enbecher played the first
GREAT LIFE
a nd third periods, Stephens the
SATIN GLASS
second and fourth.
SAVE '5.14
Stephe ns' touchdown tosses were
to Thad Jemison In the · second
SALE
q~arter and to Jay, Hoilan(l. In !he .
1 fourth perl()d. j_.ast y~ar's firstst- '
GREATLfFE
ring quarterback, Mike Tomczak,
GLOSS
directing the Scarlet ln the ftrst and
15.53
SAVE
third periods, completed ftve of 15
passes for 45 yards and threw one of ,
SALE
the Interceptions.
Scott Neff, a fres hman from
Spring Valley High near Dayton,
of25and 27

MARTIN SENOUR
EXTERIOR
PAINT SALE

are ibelf.

1t'H

The next two~

at the

be

FootbaU HanofFame

Scoreboard

•

. NATIONA.L lb.QtJil
IWn' 111\'MJN
W L Pot. Gil

''
·• '

..,_,...

Phil..........

!it Loulo

NewY«k
Allan!&amp;

NOW

T

H
L
E

Lyne Center ScheduiP .
Wet.&gt;k of A.prtl 24, 191C

Oak - GymlliUOium
-Apr.·24 _14 (l,m.!Ofi'n, fte.r

Pool
. 14 p.m , QpenSwlm
. 7-9 p.m./College Ret .
t~. l() p . m .( Co l ~c :sWim
Ck&gt;«&lt;&lt;

NOW$2340

7-9 p . m ./Col )~£' fl.('('.

A:pr . 25 8-10 p . m ./Co li~ RN:'
~pr . 2ii B-10 p.m ./CoiiP.J(f' IW
Apr. 'nl p.m./Baseb&lt;11l v.~ . C(d arvi iiC'

8-10 p.m ./Collf'gf• Rec.
Apr. 28 B-10 p.m.:C'..olleJw Rf.c.
1\pr. 29 7-9 p.m.!Opf&gt;n ft('(' _
I Apr . 30 2-4 p.m.JOp!'n lh'C

H-10 p.m./College Swlm
R-lfl p.m ./Co llege Swi m
7-9 p.m ./Open Swim

2-4 p.m.JOpen Swim
1-4 p.m.(roiOpen Swim
7-9 p . m .rCo ~l ege Swim

May 11 -4 p.m .IOJ)f'n HPc .

7-4 p.m.irollf'J(P IW

ALi&lt;

$19 62

CENTRAL
SUPPLY CO.

Islanders
take series

17 Court St.
Gallipolis. Oh.

SAVE $205

11
12

:1151
.2!(1

7¥.:

...,

2\1

7

PhiladL&gt;Iphla 6. Houston 3

'

s..,_.•GameB

Los Anteles at Plttsb..n-xh
~ York at Atlanta

MomretlJ It Cincinnati

T
I

. San Dk!gD at 51. l...olll.s
San F'rancbro at Chicago
Phil~hla at HoosWfl

Racing Flat.

KT·26 ~·

c

.

Detroit
""''""

6

7
1
7
68

6
6

T_.o
CII.'Yeland

Rea. To 136.00

New York

6

8

WEST DIVIOO!Iro'
Kansas City
7
4

$2880

Callllrnla

10
9
'

Tex8.'l
Daltland

6
li
7

s

~

R
7

6

Chicago
Seattle

6

12

·~
11,2
1¥.!

.462

.4m

.462
.\1292
.&lt;&amp;29 2 ..
.G.li

'At

.62'l
.IDJ

'"h

.563

.462

2
2Y.t

.333

5

FiHer

une·U

lbslon 3. Oakland I
Sunda)o'1 GM!het
seank.&gt; at [)(&gt;trott
MlrllJl'SCta at NlW York

Chicago .a1

1.59
Ace

Cl~el an~

Toronto at KM.Sa.5 Ct l")·
MllwauJ&lt;re at TC'xas
Baltlmon? at Calll&lt;lrnia
Ebston at Oakland
~~~~ Leape s.an..p
ln&amp;emationali£ape

sp
E
C '

Syracuse"

I

. liZi-

-~
. 5561-.z

~

Roe~ter

5

3 4
3 !i

.'1114

-..429
-~

·.

Frtda,y·,o~ ..
- Richmond J..:l, C(l~mb.Js 5 ·
Tokldo 5, PawTUClcf't 2 •
'T'I~waler at Rocfle!!ler. ppd
Sy racWlf' G-4 . Charle!iit011 5-7
Sunday'aGUTlftt
Pa\\'tuckel at Cotumb.ls
Rlchrriond at Toledo

Mn IWII'EII LOW

89C.Your·Choice

1)')

' I Y:
2,

CastroiGTX
10W40 or
20W50

O.arkoston &lt;1 ! Roch£:oster

Transactions

s

rt'S i!Plallon

liON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 P.M.
TUES., WED .. THURS. &amp; SAT 8:30 Til 5 P.M.

or De l Harris head

CHI CAGO BEAR8-S!gned Dan Ra ins.
llnl'backer; Brooks Williams, llghl end,

North American Soccer Leaauc

SEATTLE SOUNDE:RS-Sigru&gt;d Croff
Wall, mldf!eldl'r .
-

BA'i

ROWDIES-

EdunrdO Bo nva ll cl, dcfPndt'r, an d Jan
Va n Der Vff' n, mldJif'ldN .

PLE

·-••

· Local bowling

"\

Skyllnenl Leque

::-•
,.

Aprtl H. 1983
Standings

i}~~·s Amb........... .......

.. ... :-

f£en tr,!ll 'l'rust .................

~a::j~~~:

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

_,.Jiob Evaru; Farm
; .Gavin Elec

ln.t erest
And
Add-On

After Rebate

. .... 64

~

Simoniz ·

.. :::::: ~

~

SOCIV'Glar~d

.. .. .... ti8 52

.: ;central Supply . .. .....

.. ............ SO ;,)
.. .W 7fi

1 fMcDonald'!L ........................... .42
U'ICh.aPI &amp; F'rlc&gt;nds .......... _.......... .. . 3R

3.99

s.,.,

.1:.22.. Rebate
2.99 Your cost .1 ller
mtnut. rebate

7H
fr.l

His \ls.
.... ,.,'

·~·'-•

.Team

98C
Armor All
Protectant
~ t!q

5.44

, lossom Bas kel Flor\sl .................... 94 146
: Individual high li!:31Tl(' and hlgn sertes:
.-1 Tim 's Bocly Shop - NICE Smith 160-437;

..re&lt;teral M~ - Pam See tn-438: Johnson's
~arket - Bev Caslo 188439: Fetty's Tree
;:l;YC. - Shirley Morrow lll6, Polly Swisher
Delphlne Starling

tJ81-483, Debby BarcU!l483: Jordan's Gas Svc.
H'"': Peg Ferguson ISUbl 1004~: Ro~lns &amp;
Hazel Holley lf6.4f:B: Convenie nt

i'm ple!

,.... Pat Hunt('r 195496: Blol!lsom Basket ulh Miller 166, Garnet EIUott 454 ; Bryan 's
vc. - Mary Plants 184-466; J's FOOd eni na Smith 191-5C3.
·
tw: Splits convertc&gt;d by Karen Chattin the .1-10
~7: Marilynn Justus t-~7: H~J Holley
t-5-7: Nelltc Jackson the &amp;7·10: Shirley
orrow ttwJ 2-7: Allee SmUll t~ 2-7.
..
Pomeroy BowU., ' -

~

•

f.

'lua '4 . ~0 Savings whh Couponton Fttd . Savings Booll G ivtn with
Each ch1ck Order.

We will fill only orders' placed wit~-! ut prior to May' · All·chich wlll
be Heawy Breed, Straight Run .

:;,

I

ill&lt;

Ohiof!J!~y\!~;#

"

'l'bHda1 Tripllcale
1\prll ~ tl83

'

SiMclnp

~Construction ........... .'....... .. ........ ...~
\

\

j

•

,

1

:Sfei~ Inn , ......................................... .. 62
JCugar Run AMUand ................. ........ ." ..... &amp;l
':lltue Tartan .................... ,.. ,,,,, ........ .., .. 5f
:t;ald a- • Soro ............... .... ...... ....... 50
, Lart')l's Grocery ............ ...... ................... 47
"'
t/jHigh Individual (!:arne - Marlene Wlllon
• 11Ju11ee R-1186, !Ill.
... ~ "'ries- Marl""" Wlllton !1113; i Haztleo
_.bel !II; Carol)'ll Bachner·tH.
'T.am high gamo - JBL Construction 5'1:5,
- JBL O&gt;llllniCton 1496.
· Team fdtlh II

\

Nationwise
Batteries

32 88
•

~· · g 1 4\:1

pl .t ~ t• r.

Cit

r::Save40 month

Superchargers
SO's, 60's, &amp; 70's

S49

SIZE
M50• 14
N50•15
B60xl3
E50xl4
G60xt4
l50• 14
G60xt5
lEiO• 15
A70xtJ
EIO&lt;t4
F70x t4
(l70x14
G70 xl5

Regular 154
B50•t3

AU IMll r ru"'• wt th rx r l l.trl!J!' .tt&lt;lrl&lt;~ hlf' l or
111051 C o li ~ d rH1 h ~lhl lr\t C k s Never n CClb
W&lt;II CI Url (lf'r nQ rlfl ,.ll CO !\dl l!011~i

REG.
S/400
.
$16 00
$46.00
.. ... .
$51.00
...... .
$56.00
$64.00
. ...............
$57.00
$66.00
$40.00
$47.00
$49.00
.................
$51.00
.................
$53.00
F.E.T.I.19'4.0

SAlE
171 .00
$73.00
$43.00
148.00
153.00
181.00
$54.00
183.00
135.00
,1 44.00
$48.00

S IZE
P235
P235
P275
P t85

P205
P205
P225
P235

New Fuel
Pumps
Wllh u •lmohl ''" 11 t"' '"" '• ' &lt;l r1rro • •, lu ~ " " I""'

EKample:

t;

40987 '69- '79s mall

44 95

6.95

block Chevy Motor

•
? l:liJl f! (H/ '&gt;''&lt;I'&gt;

Monroe Matics
.
llf'rl 1]9!.

I U " nM, GUA AAt~ tff

23.88

E-Z Ride Ultra
Shocks

AlitO [Quill Co fl r•o :ZIPI'1

Superchargers
60 &amp; 70 Radials
.

r.-"':,11'-'Crt

10.88

!1•9 1060

S49

v&amp;., • .,

42.88

60 month
Reg . 47 .88

Kar Rite
Jack
Stands
~-0

$3oFF

to-::-I
S5

3.88

s tandings~

:foods - Jan Howr&gt;ll l7H73: Sue's Ceramics

Ours Is

for 6 cyl. GM

2 9tl

twin oack

1 lor S -.11VI IC,IH ICI

Bowlin&amp; Le~tpe

L
95
' '"'"'"'!'Supply ................ .... .......... !~ 100
4£onvenJt'llt Food Mar1 .. , , . ,.. , ...... ,.... 134 100
"'J's Food Mart ........... ,, .................. l:Jl IJO
)wbbins &amp; M yel"!! ........ .. ................. 1~ U2
~Bryan 's Serv1ceCt.&gt;nter ................... l~ U2
:1.-.rat MoguL. ......... .... .... ........... 117 123
~ordan ' s Gas Serv1ce .... ... .... ... ........ ll6 U4
~m's Body Shop ............. .... .......... 110 130
!'ll
~ohnson's Market ........................... HI! 138
etty's Tree Serv1ce ... .. ................... 96 144

Hflyers -

7.86 Cobra Wire Sets

1.88 ~u0~p spray

&gt;--itll'eWll
W.
~~~ Q&gt;ramlcs ............ ........... ....... l45

·"' • • ' ' ,.,.

for 6 cyl. GM

4 0/ DU(TIIl ~9 I 95

April "· 11183

tllttl : Rodney Supply -

3.19 Distributor Caps

2 95

Trust . High bowler for Headquarters

BowHns Belles

ow-

&lt;

•···~,,L ••••"'"··•'\-•·-~~

555 Reg

from Centra l
~upply. High bOwle-r for Village Ins. was C.
rbona~UE' with 491. H ~h bowler for Ce ntral
~upply was B. Shaw with 477.
"- Heatkjuarters Bar won six p:.!lnl~ trom

r Banker
"' ''" -""'

01

r~n~ae;~~- w~~s;;~ pllnts

:f,
~

Tune Up Kits
for 6 cYI. Chryslers

Westleys
Bleche
ite

.., SnydPr's Amb. won six poin ts from Ga\o1n
~lee . High bowler for Snyder 's Am b. was B.
;;litump with 604 . High howler for Cav1 n E lec.

\L OA s
DAY
IS
THURSDAY
MAY 19th

3.71

~ - High bowlf&gt;r for llt;jP.CI.'io was C. Conley

•Bar was H . NelsOn wi th 476. High bowler for
:Central Trusl was D. Petrie with 553.
r.' Bob Evan s Farm wonslx points trom Baird
~ Fuller Realty. H!Jth bowler tor Bob Evans
':Farm was R. Sencewlth 514. High OOwler for
"-:S a!rd &amp; Fuller Realty was J. Lane with 500.
~ Michal'! &amp; Friends won s ix IXllnts from
~~Donald' s. High bowler for Michal'! 1:.
ifrtends was J . Woodall with !524 , High bowler
!,.for McDona ld' s was R. Stoul with :W3.

•

DELCO, MOPAR,
MOTORCRAFT, COBRA
Standard Examples:

::i-lth 5.10.

•,

25°/ooFF

Ignitions

"· ThP E l k.~ won f"lghl polnls fro m RejE'C'IS.
w-f!gh bowk-r for The Elk.&lt;J wsa D. Mahan with

..,_~entra l

Air Filters

For most dom es ti c and
1mpo rt cars Reg. 3.44

2.29

~

.. ... 78 -·"42

Bar ......

. L1mil 16 a·n sai l'.! plu gs

Reg. 4.39

~r~:SF~ii~ ' R(;~i).':·::.::. :::::::· . :::: ;; ~
~eadquart ers

·· ·

Nationwise
10W40
5
qt.
LESS THAN 72C PER QT

Ciullo Rernardl, forward .

TAMPA.

S.par~~g -·

Re g . 1.09

A.merlc.-n Soccer Lequr
PENNYSLVAN I A
STONERS Signed
.

Stgn&lt;'d

1.99.'
·Ace

ESa.sg

coach.

National Football ~ape

Do You Know
The Difference Between

;SAc or C

Engineered for smaller cars

~

HJ\SKEI'Br\LL
l'lro'atlonaJ Ba~~ke-thall AMocllllkln
HOU STON ROCKETS-Annouoce-d th&lt;'

U7II'WIT£R K1

ggc

For m ost dome stic and
Import cars Reg. 2.44

J J!Dll
"4 5 .+14 llh

IU&lt;hmo""

~~

A
L

l

J

5~

Coi.lmb.Js

tidewater
Pawluc::ket

~

5

Slandard

Oil Filters

_W.L..Pct.GB

~

•'

GAlliPOLIS, OH

1

.m

Mlnnescla 5, New York 3.
Kan\as City 6, Tororuo 5
Texas l. MUwaukee 2
CaUilrnla li. Bal tlm:Jre ~ . 11 Innings

BIG DEALS ON CHICKS'N FEED

THE STORE WI_TH " All KINDS OF STUFF" - FOR ,ITS, STA·
BUS, lARGE &amp; SMAU ANIMAlS , LAWNS AND OAR DINS .

PHONE 446-4741

. 1, BULAVILLE RD.

·CHESTER

985-3301

Clf"Vel.and 5, Ollcago I
Detroit 4, Srattlfo 0

$69500
LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.

..
MODERN
SUPPLY
399 W. Main
992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio

JOHNSON &amp;SON ALUMINUM CO.

BAUM LUMBER

~IIGIU"Ilelll

SPECIAL

25 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + 500 Purina
Chick Starter Med.
'19.50-Save ·'11.35
50 s.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + 5011 Purina
Chick Starter Med. ·
'31.00.:...Save '15.80
100 S.R.1ieavy Breed chickes + Purina
Chick Starter Med.
'50.00-Save '8.80-

We are Trim WOitt Specialists
- ,Wlnc!owa, Doors, All Overhengl. Gutters, Spout1. We
can completely -1 your
home froni all weather.
AU. TIIS WITH OUARANTIB) WORK AND AT A lOWER OOST THAN YOU CAN GET FROM
ANYONE
Com.. re Our Price and Abilily by C.llina or Contactifll. ...

8
6 ."i1] 77.!0)1

and Walt Wllllams , rorne rba&lt;'k.

ORDER TODAY!!

ORATING YOUR HOME.

W LPct. GB

BaltimcJno

•Interest Rates are Down.
•Materials Are Down.
•Labor Costs Are Down.

•
VINYL OR ALUMINUM SIDING IS ONE WAY OF REDEC-

EAST DIVIYON

MUWaukee

NOW

I

AMEIUCAN LFAGUE

SAN DIEGO CIIARCERS-Sent two
sero nd ·round dra ft cholceg to San Fran • ctsro lor lh&lt;' f!lers " flrst -rou nd sclocUon.

NEW YORK (AP)- All of the
Islanders understand it, accept it
and respond to it.
But nobody Is better In pressure
situations than the Islander tr1o of
Butch Goring, John Tonelli and Bob
Nystrom.
That line catapulted the threetime National Hoclley League
.champions pas t the Ra ngers In the
"Battle of New York" and Into the
Wales Conference finals. The IsOPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT
landers clinched the Pa trick DivIsion series four games to two with a
5-2 decision over the Ra ngers
Friday night as Goring scored two
goals a nd added an ~ assist and ·
Tonelli had a goal and two assists.
VINTON, OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
Tonelli tied the!(amea t 4: 02of the
JAMES 0 . BUSH , Mgr.
LEO VAUGHAN, Mgr.
second period with a wrist shot past
PH . 388-8603
PH. 992-2588
Rangers goalie Ed Mia. Sixty-dne
seconds later, Tonelli fed Goring for·
aJO.footdr lveoverMio'ss houlder to t-----------------'~---------1
make it 2-1.
Mlkko Leinonen tied It a t9 :31 on a
long, bouncing slapshot that
skipped by goalie BUiy Smith .
But the thi rd p&lt;'rlod belonged to
the Islanders, with Goring provld·
lng . the key goal at 5:21. Nystrom
sent a pass to the veteran center lh
front of the net and Goring pushed II
into the unguarded cage with Mlo
out of position.
Brent SuMer and Ken Morrow
scored six minutes apart later in the
period for the Isles, who now awall
the winner of Sunday's seventh
game of the Adams DiviSion final
between the Buffalo Sabres and the
Bruins at Boston. TheSabresstayed
alive with a 5-3 victory In the only
other playpff game Friday nig ht. .
The Campbell Conference final
-between the Oilers and Chicago
Black Hawks opensSuriday night in
EdmOnton.
The Ra ngers tired at theend ofthe
sixth game, partly because they
were without four injured regu lars
- defensemen RDn Greschner and
Dave Maloney, centers Mlke RDg·
ers and Mlke AUison - and dldn 't
have the depth to cope with the
balanced attack of the Islanders.
Sabre8~. Brulns3
Spunky Buffalo continued to give
the Bruins. who had the best record
In the NHL during the season, all
kinds of problems. Phil Housley
scored twice and the Sabres rallied
!rom a 2.0 deficit for their victory to
Ioree the seventh game In Bo~ton.
After Brad Park and Tom Fergus
beat Sabres goaUe Bob Sauve 32
seconds apa,rt . In the first nPrtnd.
Buffalo railled, Housley, a 19-:l'eal',
' old rookie, cutthe Boston
with only 26 seconds left In the
opening , period . Then another
rookie de!enseman, ~year-old
Hannu Vlrta, Ued.lt only 85 seconds
into the middle period.

•
•

.
\!

.7H
...

Marna!!, New York 4
San Diego 4. St . i...ollls l

m

SJ8Zl

•7

."1ffl -:

F'ltdQ's Gtlmcti

C l un - ~p

$17° 4

7'

FEATURE&amp;:·
• 12 horsepower cast-Iron
Kohler engine
• 8-speed transmission
• Steel frame and cast-Iron
front axle
• Tach-a-matlc 11
hitch syslem
• Optional 36", 42" and
48" mowers
• Tills, mows, removes
snow and more
• Service and parts
availability

OticMgo 7, San Ftanctsro 2
l...i:l!. An.l!'l"'es 4.. PlttsbwJh 2
Montreal 4. Qnclnnatl 0

co ~ers

SELECTS RIO GRANDE -Darlene Sherer, a :1-8 guard on X~nla
ffigh School's state runner-up girls' basketball learn, has signed a
letter-of-Intent to a ttend Rio Grande College. Sherer l• the second
stellar recrult to sign with head coooh Jamie Ianni. Earller,Usa Jones
of FrankUn Fumace, Ohio, Inked a ~women letter-of-Intent.
"Dilrlene Is a good shooter and passer," Ianni said. "'She has the
potential to be an outstanding coUege player." Sherer averaged 10
points, 4,7 assists and 3.2 steals per game In 1982-83 as Xenia advanced
to the finals of the state tournament with a steUar 25-2 record . She
missed several games because of a leg Injury. Sherer Is shown above
with CollCh Ianni .

•'

5811
Hwota\

$2500

To 126.00

til
10

1m

C 125 a.apeed

I
7
•
3 lO
WEST DIVIiloN

"""'""
"""""'
""""""'
. ,.,
""'Fran"""
""""

Rec. To 138.00

.··ONTHE WHEELHO~E C-125

.
' '

..,,......

•

A

DO YOUR ••••.

·Majol'll

tnMasCnaweekfromSaturdayalld
at Ohlo Stadium on May 7.

The

Ohio !'Dint Pl.aiCII'It, W. Va.

Aog utor $55
P2QS Rt3
RE G.

RIO .......
163.00
Rt5 ........... 168.00
Rl5 ..
178.00
Rt3 ..
151.00
R13... .......... ...$56.00
Rl4 ., .............. 159.00
R tS... ................ 167.00
Rt5 ................. 170.00
. 1.95-3.38

SAlE
$57.00
$62.00
572.00
$45.00
$50.00
153.00
161.00
$64.00

3.96

IAPCO
Spark Plugs
, hatr~Pit

VW Cl45, Honda C.aoo2
Sold i11 • pa.c;ks only
,~ .e~

Jl

[ i

I

\

REMANUFACl'UREF

.._,;:.,

Water Pumps

f 011110~ 1 (l p mt! ~ lil' ,11\i! Oltlll tl il t;.u ·,
(;hcv ~ "fi'J II I)UI 1'&gt;01 S ~U lll!fl~!

.ou

J IIIII

Vn

�Page--C-4- The

Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

TimeS-Sentinel

April 24, 1.983 ·

24, 1983

•

(:arter, Rogers too much for Reds
Fortur)ately, I kept my hands back
rand waited). That's the key thing."
P.d.Store, 2-2, wouldn 't secondguesshis ill-fatedpltchtotheExpos'
one-man offense.
"It was a curve, on the outside
ccrner,'' Pastore said. "I have no
rep ·ets·. If I throw It 10 times, nine
times he'll make an out or take it."
Carter, who got off to a slow start
this season, added another unusuai
twist when he belted his two- run
homer in the sixth. This one went to
the opposite field, and proved him a
better slugger than statistician .
Asked how many right-field
homers he's hit during his career,
Carter laughed and said, " I could
probably count them on my right

; . CINCINNATI tAP)- Cincinnati
Reds pitcher Frank Pastore found
out it's not always nice to fool
Montreal 'sGary Carter.
' : Pastore crossed up Carter with a
i&lt;lurth-inning c urveball, but the
c~tcher still rapped it hard enough
(or a two- run homer that started the
~son their way to a 4-0 victory
~iday night.
&gt;As an encore. Carter launched
qlie of Pastore's fastballs over the
Plllht-field wall for another two-run
liqmer in the sixth, giving him tour
~omers in his last three games.
:···on the first home run. I was
fopled on the pitch, " said Carter,
who now has four homers for the
$lKISon. " It was a slow cuJVe.

MOC baseball statistics
MID-01110 CONFt: llF..NCE
HA."'EH,U.L S'f,\Tl"Tit:.~
·: MO&lt; OVt:Ht\U .
1'folun
'• OhiO [)o m ..
• Mal onr .
Hi o Cranrk'

w L
......... .. 4

w

...... 1
.. 2
.. 2

: Moum Vrr11on .
; · Tiffi n ..... .
• Ccd&lt;H'VIIIi •..
Walsh

'

1'lay~&gt;r- l•os .

:

G.Arncy iMI, D H .

...2

'&lt;)

15&lt;1

AR H II

.41

A'··
10 1R .4.'E

..... :VI

Hi .421

. ..... .. ............... . .. ... • . . . . . ... I . ..

11
. .. . .40 ~
.44 11
.. ... . .. . . ...
. .. 47 12
. ... .. ..... . .. .... 5.'i
7
24 6

T. Cunnlnl!ham rMVI. SS ..
R. Carr i ODr. OF
H. l\ ll1 •n IMr, s.o;.;
S. Anr l~&gt;r ~ 1001, C

5fi

D l'hcllf'r IM I, :!JL
L. S!Pptwns rOD!. IF .

Play1&gt;r
D. j)(JU~ ];If:,

'

:!

1\.VI'ntl{f'N

, • C. Carnphf•l l I M I. ID ....
• J j ..('('lt1 I HCr, HF ..
,' 13. Cu nt f' r rMVI , llF.

•'
.
'.
•

OR

1011

.f

. ... .
Ht\IUng

II
7 1()4
4 1&lt;1

'
'"
,'" 10H 72'ill llB
!!2
'2 .21 Illli 121i fO
' 14 Z'il"
I
f

:!

4

•

L

II

\\'· 1 ~

K. 0 '13rlpn !WI .
G . i\rnpy IMJ

T. 0.'1!&gt;S IMVJ .. ..
J . Ku lmon rRGJ
Bill Hlf'SN !ODJ .

.17~

H 17 17(1

17 1&lt;1 1'19

II'

SO

W mtA
II S O.lfl

!'!
'2
I· I 2:1·2/ :1 '1:1.
................ ,'\-{) 21·'2 1.'1 12
. .... .. . .. . J.Il 17
~~
...... .2 1 If}.! :1 14
.......... ..... :1·1 ~
21'1

J. Ruff I M I ..

21

.1~1

."1. U 12
... 1· 1 11
. ... J.() ~J

G. (;ulll l;tm" 100 1.

9

.... 4fi

.......
I'H(' hlnJ;:" ~ ·co rd-;

....

Hi .4(J)
17 .:Ri
IR .:Rl
21 :R2
9 .m

4

n.m

H 1.00

1!) 1.52

7 2. 49
J!) 2.{).')
7 2.7fl
II 'l.tfl

Douhlt-s
&amp;·on 1\ml (•rs 10D1 ..

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

.. 9

l&lt;clth . J u drol~'sky r r · ........... .. .
, TO:I!I Hock n-v ~ ·..
............. ... .
Chuf·k· f am phf·ll
Don I{Qtll"r ·(ll""l

~

•

1M~

.G
.. t'i

...-.. .- s

.. .
........ __ .... ,... .

.
Ek&gt;n" Pn(ll&gt;.1rl,... f( Jf) l
l..arrv ~ T•·p/11·n ~ 101&gt;1
Tim (" unnlngh&lt;HTI I MV I ... ,
Rrlan C tHIIPr Hvf \'1
Jim CilVP~ I MV I

4

l'riplf ~

.1

'2

.2

.........

2

llonw Hun...
G r('g r; tl ll ll; l m!-. l fl[J t

11tck l'tlltllps 1\-\'1 .
Scoll i\ lld&lt;'!"S 101) ) .
Oti\"1' l.o-; I W I ..
(;rPI.! ,\rnf'Y I M I ....

'

1
. :\

.1

IUU's
Gf('J..: Cu l llla m s 10D1 ....
Jl'ITV rll n ~('J' IMVI .

........ lli
... Hi
... 12
.. 12

CrC'.Q ArnPV I M I ..
Rick Phlllli&gt;s t\\' 1
' , Don F lsCih'' ( M 1 ............... . .
; Do n Kol lr r tT l ..
• D&lt;.l vt' I HsiWI ..

ll

.. .. 11
. ...... 11

Slolen Ha..,.os
Urrv SIPphrns 100 1 .
~ l f'Vf' Plnkll'v W1 ...
H.ustv l'nrr 1UDI ..

Dan

.... J:\, 1:&gt;
.llltl
. •· 8t1J
.. 6/t\

Knnsl 1RC 1...

Mark

l~l ru!

I W I ..

. ....... . ....... ........ .... (i16

Da ve- Dc•tman 1W t .••

······ ......... lil7

Junior high
track records
J\uy.'i

f"lmd .""- ·IJn'

: MNg!&gt;

-"l' '"l·

( ; n lli ptlll~

:a:lr 'J.

Ev•·nt Whu11 •no
~h ut -

If~ .

H 11h.TIM1 &lt;109, i)al li'V IM I, flVf ' l"!&gt;i

.
.
J·:. td .... 1M 1; Dai ii'V
I ~1 1.
.
. t ong .lum p - 1·:, ,...., 11 I M 1 17 ti ; .'1 - Cassa d ~
If~) rr..:.l . II• •War·tl f( ;j
' HI ~b .lump l lai h•y 11;1 .lmll·:ouls 1M1
-1:.1 0: Sh•1rtmlgt• II;,
. Pul•• \ 'aull - ll uwar rl 1r; 1 )(li, Moon • 1M 1;
01.&lt;;~.·

- Hid.., 1M'

11 ~1./i ;

I IVSPII !MI ;1Hil l\or·.1 h I(; I

'llurrlh ..., - fl,urh"rllf; l 17 li; ~·; u pon lt ;l ;

KrM·ab tL I
. 110 - Klldit•n 1M 1 1 1~ 1 ; Tawnc•v 1r :r :
H:,~n 1M1 .
.
' M\IP - C:l &lt;llll f( ; l ~-.:: ~1:'1 ; l l :~g~y 1M1 :
Mllll'r 1C1 .

, 440 llPiav -

Md~~ ~~~

PROCTORVILLE- The Gallipolis junior high boY$' track squad
· placed third In Jasi Week's annual
Fairland Invtlatlonal track and •
field meet.
Fafrlanp won · the meet. Coal
Grove was second.
Joh n Byers was. first In shot and
third in discus.
Chris Tawney was first In 220 and ·
on the 440 relay team (second i.
The mlle relay team was first
(Shaun Grant, Tom Cassady, Gary
Harrison and Tim Shortridge).
Chris Howard ws second In the
pole vault.
·
The 440 rei&lt;&gt;Y team was second '
(Grant, Tawney, Settle, Jackson).
Tom Cassady was thltd in the
B!ll, long jump, and 'on mile (elay
(first).
Girls
The Gallla Academy Junior High
Girls received second place out of a
field of eight teams. Fairland was
first and Rock Hill finished In third
PROMISING PROSPECT -

place.
Jllghllghls
.
· Jolalne Bartimus was first in 440, .
mile, and anchor of the first place
mile relay team .- She received a
trophy for being high point person
tor the meet.
Usa HauWren was first in high
jump, second In 440, and a member
of the first place mOe relay team.
Teresa Combs was second in the
1001 :r.!l, and 440 relay team.
The 440 relay team was second
(Teresa)l\.Comb. Mandy Pope,
Heath e'r"\ m a br y and Dori
WilliamS).
The mile relay team was first
(Lisa HaUidren, Kelly Notter : Tina
Cui-tis, and Jolalne Barttmus) .
The .B&amp;l relay team was second
(Holly Carmen, Cindy Jlyrd,
Hea ther Mabry and Kr!sty
Berliich).
Cindy Byrd was second In the
diseus and Holly Carmen was
second In the mile.

Jolalne Bartbnus, eighth grader
at G allla Academy, recel.v ed top
honors at the Fafrlan~ Invitational JWiior tugli Track Meet.
She was first In mOe, 440, and
anchor of first place mile relay
team. She has eslabllsiJed her
junior high track reeords at
GaDia Academy lor the mOe
(6:01) and the Wf(I:05.8) .

II,
two.;.hits ChiSox

If .You're Looki'n g For A
New Mobile Home Stop In To
K&amp;K Mobile Homes And See The
nn•lwood Homes Built By Skyline.
FEATURING
•2 OR 3 BEDROOMS •'A INCH PANELING •TOTAL
ELECTRIC •FOME CORE IN CEILING •UPGRADED
FURNITURE •FRONT &amp; REAR BAY.WINDOWS

fastball , and It was very tough to see
out there because of those shadows," said White Sox slugger Greg
Luzinski. "You know he's gotaglXid
curve ball, anqwhen hegetsltover it
.makes
faS tball thai rriuch more
efiect.Jve." ·
·
"
Bly leven , who und e rwent
surgery to repair his elbow last May
5, picked up his first complete game
since Sept. 5, 1981, and his first
victory since last April 20.
His 11 strikeouts Friday against only one walk - represented the 41st time Blyleven has"
fanned at least 10 batters in a game.
"Before today, I had wa lked 11
men in 15 innings, and that's not
m e," he sa id. " I threw good during
the spring. But l have had a little hip
problem and I think it made me
open up in· my motion a Utile too
quick."

me

1c;,

l.u yn 1M 1

..

SAVE
TIMEI . .
.·
SAVE MO.NEYJ
Now, save S130 when you purchase

an Ariens Riding Mowat with Rear
Grass Bagger.
'
You ·tt save time and money• Ariens
Grass Bagger virtually eliminates raking
after mowing.

CHESTER

985·3308

"We had problems with the
Spanish-speaking referee on that
oecaslon and we refused an
Argentine referee for this fight,"
said Lockridge's manager Lou
Duva.
Pedraza, 30, wUI be staging his
16th title def€11se. He has been
training in San Remo for two weeks
and said he was prepared to win the
fight within slx rounds.
''I'm better trained than in the
first fight against Lockridge, when I
faced some problems in overcom·
lng him," Pedroza said.

int~oducing our

terrific new teller.
Tellerific, the terrific 24-hour teller.

••

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES

' Ca lllpoll~ lf'&lt;Un n•r•onl H :1.

Point Pleasant

: N('XI nm '! - 1\prl1 'lti. 0 :1k III II
Olrls
Fi na l S! ·oN•
• J1'1rl~~ ~{1l 1 , (:all lpolls •Uo .1 ·
'.
l•:vr·nl \\'lnnt• f'N
' !lhot - Siruthwo11h IMI 2Rti; l l.VI'C] (l ;) ;

,

MODERN-DAY
WORK
RSES

s) fi"'I:.H'£' t M J

. Disc - Byrd 1C: r 7&lt;1' : StJuthwOI"Ih f M I:
Dlslek tMr .
· ~ .Jump - Swm"ts tMI \•I.IO'h ":
lt'l·fpc h 1G1; .Wrl~ ht 1M1 .
·
. High .J ump - lh1 ulttn•n tGI •1"!!": Miller
t t.1. H Drununoml 1G 1.
' fJunlll's - f.lt•r kil'h tC :\ IK~; Mlllf'r IMI :
1-'ope tG) .
110- [n ~ lls h tMI (.1.7; Com tt; tC\ : ShN'ts

~I
•

This is Tellerific.
L__g;=;~CJ.r~ELJ
The fast, most convenient way to bank in town. It lets you get cash, make
deposits, even transfer money from one account to another.
Anytime. Day or night. Seven days a week. And, on top of' all
this, you'll.find Tellerific is very eas~ to use.
try Telle~ific.
It's like having your own personal teller at your service 24
\
hours a day.

&lt;CJ .

· ~Uc - BHrt l mus 1G 1!i: O!U : Cnrrn cn 1G1:
SJiltC'Iil('ld IM 1.
Ht•l:l ~'- i\1i•lg), !'~ i li.
.440 - Bal"lllliUS I (; ·I 1: fr1 .!i; t\ndr rson I M I;

:+tP

.Jonnson (M

1

'1§K&gt; R('lii.V - MPig~ 1· n:l .7.

,

H ) - .'l·f': unwn 11:1 :.!:4 '1 .~: 111fflc tMI :

,\1m1i&lt;'Y tM I.
Engll s ~1 (M I ~1 . 2; Comb "&gt; IG I: M abt'V

2'.!0 -

1 G~ .

So

.

,MUt• I:Wiuy- ML•]J.l"s •I:J&lt;J.·I.
)tcmarks : X·llldiC'IIIt'S III 'W ~·hOO t I"N'Oifl .
t:U~h polm fll.' l'son: Jolalnl:' B..'l t11mu" IHl

po IS) ,

ttU!pol ls

t~am

IY'('Ord 9·2· 1.

NCxt m('('l - 1\pr ll 2ti, Ouk Hill.

.
.9hor1
orders fast
' I

\

•

•

'

I

·SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) An)y Alcott, one of the s tars of the
LPGA Tour, recently found out how
t~ other half lives. For a ccuple of
days a Wl'Ck for two months she
'
worked as a sho11-order cook at an
e~tery here.
"l l~arned a lot, " Alcott said . "l
usro to think pressure was standing
over a four-foot putt tt~at I had to
mJlke to win. But I found out that
f€!11pn:ssure was 65 people waiting
for their food with only 30 flllnutes
left of their o ne-hour IUitch break."
•

.

...
LONG 4•WHEEL DRIVE TRACTORS AT
2·WHEEL DRIVE PRICES. UP TO 40%
MORE TRACTION. SAVES FUEL, TIRES,
.·
'ANOTIME.

Tellerific Is Available
At Our
Silver Bridge

"HEAVYWEIGHTS AT
LIGHTWEIGHT PRICES''

STOP BY FOR FREE DEt\10!'1S1"R.

Jividen's Farm E$1uipment will be running a sale on
Long Tractors and Implements thru the remainder of
April and all of May!

C&amp;S Bank

CHECK OUR PRICES AND COMPAREII '

The Commercial &amp; Savings Bank

Jividen's Farm Equipment
Gallipolis,

oH.

Rt. 2 Box 248

614-446-1675

•

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"
~,

Other C
26 Court Street

2

.......,.PUftiRA
-11011 - -

1 5580 R13
P lus $ 1 . 53 FET

~,.

Whitewall
low Price fET
___!_5 !i__!l_D_fl_1 3_ $42 00 $ 1 53
18580R 13 52 .00 1~..!!.£
19 575 R14
- _._5g_ooT 2 .1s
?05 7 5 R 14 __§2___Q_Q 2 .34

GREAT SELECTION IN STOCK, NOW!
BUT HURRY - THEY'LL BE GONE SOON.
SEE: GEORGE HARRIS, MAX MILLER
O.R PAT HILL

1

205..2.?_~~~!:&gt;

2 1575 R15

00 2c'!l_
69 .00 r 2 .59

22575R 1 5 ~ oo i 2 . 7B-

WE WANT
YOUR BUSINESS

STREAK

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.

II

PH. 992-2196

461 S. Third Ave .

Middleport, OH.

FREE
DELIVERY

Free Gardening or Mowing Attachm~nt With Purchase

6 S Bank Location•

. '.

Spring Volley

I

CHICAGO (APl -Doctors feel
t erry Cummings' heart disorder
can be controlled by medication,
enabling the star rookie to continue
his Nat~nal Basketball Association
career with the San plego Clippers,
a team spokesman says.
C\immlngs underwent his first
day of testing for a heart. problem
Friday and will remain hospltallzed
ovhursday for tests to determine the
cause of irregular heart rhythms.
After the first round of cardiac
testblg, Cummings' physician, Dr.
Richard Kehoe. transferred him to
the intermediate coronary careunft
to allow continuous monitoring of
hiscondlt~n. teamspokesmanCurt
Thompson said.
·
The transfer was " planned as
part of his testing and was not of an
emergency nature," Thompson
said.
· Kehoe said Cummings rontblued
to be In good condition.
Cumm!ngs underwent a heart
catheterization, In which a tube Is
inserted Into a grobl artery and
threaded through the aortic valve
into the heart. The coronary
arteries are X-rayed with dye, the
heart's electronic . Impulses are
studied by tiny electrodes on the
.catheter, and a piece ot ·.heart
muscle is extracted to determine If
It is diseased. .
Cummlngs' heart irregularity
was found two weeks ago atter a
portable mqnitor was used to gauge
his heartratedurlng an NBA game.
Cummingll, whO starred with
DePaul before tumlni pro alter hla
junior yl!!II', tainted during a game
in Salt Lake aty on Dec. 15 and has
s~ complained of fatigue, short·
ness of breath and dizziness atter
stmn,IWa activity.

.------------------, r------------------,
R:B

of Any New Gravely Two Wheel Convertible Tractor.

Cummings to ·
continue NBA
cage career

K&amp;K NOW HAS MOBILE 'HOME SPACE FOR
RENT FOR LATE MODEL HOMES.

Jackson Ave. · 675 "3000

Lockridge
now
seeks
.

CUSTOM
POLVSTEEL

G'ET A SUPER DEAL d A
NEW-1983 T-BIRD
OR FAIRMONT FUTURA

pectroza.

"See K&amp;K For All Mobile Home Needs"

J(}int S"t .

s
.
a n

YOUR ONLY AUTHORIZED
GOODYEAR DEALER

SPRING
lAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER ...

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Nl i.

' Milt• llflla v - I :allfpolls ·1: J.l I
, Rema r ks ·' lmli«·.tll's nl'w ),C' hr.kll rn'Or"d
llf ~ h point f.l ' on• t · ~ "l "lllll Cassad v 1J:l\.'llln! s):
Sth tUn Cr:nl! t lil p i)( Ill ).. I. Ca ry Harrison 11! 1

a: n:

amo•gthem
.
h I a1
bl
Sh '
·•
.
mec an c pro ems. e sreturnUSACsaldFurst lacksthedriving
ing again this year, but Guthrie has
experience to race at Indianapolis.
not been in the race since 19'79, when
It saki her driving experience was
she qualified for a third time.
limited to sports car events at the
USAC said five rookies will be
Portlarld Internat~nal Raceway
required to take a full test, which
and other tracks m the Pac ific
consists Qf 20 laps , around the
Nortljwest area.
· 2¥.,-mll~ oval at 170 mph and 20 at
USAC had rejected Furst' s ear- speeds In excess of 180 mph .
Iter attempt to participate In rookie
Members of the group are Mark
testing earlier this month at the
Alderson, Chuck Ciprich. Teo Fabl,
Speedway, saying she should get
MaekMcCiellanandTeddyPJlette.
more e&gt;eperlence in an Indy-style
Derek Daly, DougHeveron,Chris
Kn If 1 J hn p 1 J
K
car.
. e e,
o
au
r.,
en
Guthrlelstheonlywomantoever
Schrader and Al Unser Jr. must
qualify for the race. Wilson pracpassthefinalphaseofthetestbefore
ttced here last year, but was unable
being permitted to pract ice In May,
to qualify her car, mainly due to
USAC said
·

"The postponements troubled me t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
mentally. But I was in peak 1
condition for the original date, for
the second date (on March 5) and
I'm still at my best now,'' Lockridge
sald in a telephone interview with
the Associated Press.
,
Lockridge lost a ccntroversial
decision in his i900 fight with

. 220 - Kltl"l11 •n 1M 1:w
. .:,: T:m·npv rt : 1: f :acl&lt;&gt;

I

INDIANAPOL!S(API-Amber
Furst, one of two women entered In
the 198J Indlanapolls 500-rnile .
has had her hopes of u !~a~,
the utorace thlsM . q a
g or
U saAutJJ Club
aydashed by the
'FI,rst, hophtg to join Janet
Guthrie and ·Desire WUso
th
peten
ni women to
~ana Us Mot co;
a t
po
or peedway, appar:tiy w!II have to walt at least
an~SA~y~~tlonln body f
' e
ch
g
ed 0 r
the Ma y 29 race, as approv
21
drfV rswith t
.
lndJ
e
ou preVJ~s
~apolis experience 10 parttclpate m the
traditiOnal pre-race rookie testing
program. Furst, entered as the
driver of a car owned by Rose Pedal
Racing of Portland, Ore., is not

SAN REMO, Italy tAP) -After
Winning the battlef6r a new referee,
American challenger Rocky Lockridge thinks he's ready to score
another success In the ring.
The 24-year-old boxer from Tacoma, Wash., fights Panamian
titleholder Eusebio Pedraza for the
World Boxing Association •(WBA)
featherweight crown In this Italian
riviera resort Sunday night.
It w!II be Lockridge's third try at
the world title - the second against
Pedraza - and he says this is an
opportunity he can't miss .
· -''I've ·l;ieen training hard
· months for this fight, ;md ai lasttlle
time to walk into the ring and punch
him Is drawing near," Lockridge
said Friday, as he completed
training for the bout schedUled ln a
tent-theater close to the sea.
The Pedroza-Lockridge fight ,
originally scheduled for Feb. 17,
was [XIstponed twice by Pedraza,
who blamed a foot injury.
·

Bl~rleven fans

CLEVELAND (AP)- His surgically repaired right arm might be
·erra tic for a whllc, but Bert
Blyleveil says it's far from pseless.
Blyleven,.who missed most o[last
.· season !&gt;ecause of an elbow injU ry,
fired a two- hit tei· and s iruc~ out il
ba tters for his first victory in more
tha n a year Friday afternoon as the
Cleveland Indians defeated the
Chicago White Sox 5-1.
Bly Ieven entered the game with a
record of 0-3.
"
"When you haven't pitc hed for a
year. you've got to figure there's
going to be times when you go out
and you don't have your best stuff,"
sa id B!yleven, who had a llowed six
runs In four innings his last timeout.
"So you go back to your basics.''
The basiCs, for Blyleven, Include
one of the major leagues' most
respected curveba Us a nd a solid
fastball.
" He kept us o!f stride.. got the
breaking ball over with a good

U.S. Auto Club won't allow
Furst·ent~r Indy 500 trials

•
•
nng
_victory

1

)!l 'lirl rl ck 1M1 1 : 10 . ~ 1 , l luwa rd 1M1 ;
S hortrld ~r· 11;1 .
Cas)o.ad.v
"1. : :.!:1'1 . ~• : Sloan" 1r ;r :

•&lt;JIIO -

:m -

hand. I don't hit many to right field.
l.'d say at most 10."
The biologically ~ inconsistent
statem€111 was Carter's only faux
pas on a night that gave him i)nd
Expo starter Steve Rogers a boost of
confidence.
Whlle Carter buried memories of
his season-opening Hor-23 streak,
Rogers tossed a five-hitter for his
second shutout and complete game.
Rogers, 2-1, threw an opening day
shutout at the Chicago Cubs, then
gave up nine earned runs in his next
two starts- a loss and a no-decision
- before recovering Friday night
aga inst the Reds.
"I've thrown bookends - goose
eggs on both ends and two games In
the middle when the wheels fell off
· after th!' fifth Inning,'' Rogers said.
7 he right-hander said he wasn't
particularly sharp at the outset
F riday night, his first start In a
week. He fin ished w ith five strikeouts In his 34th career s hutout.
" I had flashes of free and easv ,"
he sa id . "I was throwing the ball
well. It's been seven days s ince I
was out there. The first three
(innings ) were sort of on instinct. "
Rogers surrendered a pair of
~ingles In the third, then settled
down and didn't give up m ore than
one hltper lnnfngthe restoftheway.
Cincinnati got just three runners in
scoring position.

·Junior high track results ...

WRANGLER
RADIAL

HI -MILER

FREE

Size

Price

DELIVERY

700-15
750 t 6

$56.00

-

74.00

FET
$2.61
3.54

L------------------J L------------------~

BUT.
Free 40", 50" or 60" Mower with Purchase of Any N
Gravely Four Wheel Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor.

FREE DELIVERY

• •

Tires aren't all we are!

America's
most powerful
car battery.

Brake
ServkeYourChoke
·
2-WHEEL FRONT DISC : Install new
lront brall:e pads and grease seals •
Resur1ace front rOtors • Aepa c ll ·front
wheel bea rings • Inspect calipers and
hydrauli c system • Add tlu l d (does n ol
In clude rea r wheel s)

THE
EXIDE EDGE

S3995 Installed

4~ WHEEL

Group 2·24
Exchange

DRUM : Install ne..w bra·ko

lfnlng , all lo ur whee ls • Ne w fron t
ore·ase seats • Resurface drums • Ae·
pack Iron! bearrngs • lnap ec l h"Jdr nu
li e system • AOa lfuld

The newest member
of the Gravely Family.
Gravely Model 1138
LaWn &amp; Garden Tl11C·
tor comp_lete withdeck.

$219500

ONLY
\

NOW SERVING MEIGS. MASON &amp; GALUA COUNTIES

GRAVELY TRACTOR
· SALES .AND SERVICE
MANNING ROUSH-oWNER

~THE

.
GRAVELY

EM

.\

.PH. 992-2975
210 CONDOR ST.
POMEROY, OH.

·426 Viand Street
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

..!

,.

�•
........

Ohi-Point

~~~~~·~. ;c~~6~~~~Su~n~~~y~T~im~~~·~~~n~H~M~I~~~~~~~~~~~om~~:~:~v~~~·~-~P~~~~;·~Ga~lli~po~I~~~,Oh~i~~~~~·~nt~~~~--~n~t~,~VV~.~~~a~.~~~====~~~~~~~~~==~A~pn~·l~2~4~,~1~~~-~

~ccomplishm~nt ·for troubled

23 victories big
RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - Never has a National
Basketball Association team with a ~ant 23 victories
had more reason to be proud.
'Ibat the J982.83 Cleveland Cavaliers were able to
wtn any games at ali should be deemed cause for
celebration.
"The 23 games we won ts like 50 games for this
team,'' said World B. Free-agent, who led thls motley
crew In scoring and who may or may not be back for
more next season.
"With ali the controversy we've been through - I
worked as hard thls one year as ali the eight ye$1"5
I've been In the league," Free said. "And I'll be real
with you. I didn't like II. But I'm In the best shape now
I've ever been In."
As much as Free, with hls 24.2 points per game.
meant to thls team, Coach Tom Nlssalke meant
more. Ntssalke and General Manager Harry

Atlanta, ·
Portland
•
postwms
By Assoclaled Press
Only five times In 30 National
Basketball Association mini-series
has the team that lost the first game
come back to win the next two. On
Sunday, Atlanta and Denver have a
chance to make It six and seven.
The Hawks evened thetr best-of-3
series with the Boston Celtlcs with a
95-93 victory Friday night . Those
two team s return to Bos.ton for the
deciding game Sunday .
In Friday night' s other game,
Portland completed a two-game
sweep ofSeattlewltha 1Q5.96vlctory
to advance to the second round
against the defending NBA cham-.
plot\ Lakers, starting Sunday In Los
Angeles.
. Meanwhile, the Denver Nuggets .
will be In P hoenix·Sunday iti play the
SUns, ·who won the opener on.
Tuesday and then lost the second
game Thursday night.
For the Nuggets. It' san opportun·
lty to turn the tables on the Suns, who
lost to Denver In their first playoff
game In 1982 and came back to win
the last two meetings. They became
the fttth team to come back from a
1-0 deficit to win a best-of-3 playoff
since the NBA Instituted the
first-round mlnl-serles · system In
1975.
Johnny Davis scored eight of his
18 points down the stretch and also
had 14 assists as Atlanta loreed a
third game against Boston.
· "It's now a one-game series and
anything can happen In Boston, "
Hawks Coach Kevin Loughery said.
"We've got to play our best game of
the series to win on Sunday."
"We still feel we've got the best
team and we're still In control," said
Larry Bird, whose 4-for-18 shooting
contributed to the Celtlcs' defeat.
''They've got to CO!Y\e up to Boston
and beatus. lftheycando that, then
they've got the better team ."
"We just didn't start well tonight
and I don't care If we play the next
game In Boston Garden or on the
moon," Celtlcs Coach Bill Fitch
said. "We'll have to play much
better on Sunday."
The Hawks led by as many as 17
points before taking a 5!&gt;42 lead a t
hal!tlme. They Had a 1:;.potnt
margin al65-50 midway In the third
period before Boston cam e back
and took the lead early In the fourth
quarter.
. "We didn 't panic and we just did
what we had done earlier to get the
lead," said Davis, a 6-foot-1 guard.
"The so-called experts picked us to
lose tv.io straight. Well, I guess that It
shows we are capable of beating the
good teams."
"That really picked us up and we
rode It In from there," he said.
The Hawks' balanced scoring
was led by Danny Roundfleld with
19 points, while Davis, Dominique
Wilkins a nd Rudy Macklin added 1.8
apiece and Mike Glenn had 13.
Jim Paxson scored 26 points,
Including two crucial baskets In the
last two minutes, to lead Portland
over Seattle, giving the Trail
Blazers their first playoff series
triumph since they won the NBA
· Utle six years ago.
1 "It's been a long time s ince '77,"
1 forward Mychal Thompson said.
\"It's been long overdue. I hope we
~an get back that '77 spirit . It felt
good to hear the place rocktn'
'aln ..
..
ag,
.
The Trail Blazers had their usua l
ho~e sellout of12,666. .
Tile SuperSonics led 1JI.4 after the
first five minutes, but Portland had
narrowed the deficit to 28-23 by the
end of the opening qilarter.
Then the Blazers, behind Kenny
carr's 13 jJotnis, outscored Seattle
31-15 In the second quarter to bulld a
~3 hal1tlme advantage.
They st~hed the margin to
72-51 on Paxson' s20-footer with 5: 51
left In the thlfod quarter befo~
Seattle ralltect to Within three points
on two occasions, the second time at
98-95 wlth 1:41 to PlaY·
Then Paxson's layUp at 1: 28 and
h1s lS.tooter with 55 seconds
~ put Portland ahead

102-96.
Gus Wllltarns led all scorers with
· 31 points for Seattle.

'. I

'.

v

.

Gund.
If the Gunds don't exercise their option to pull out of
the sale, Stepien, who av~raged a lawsuit per year
during hts tenure, wW be history.
"I feel good . and bad about . It," Stepien said.
"There's definitely an emotional tie to the players
and the coach, but I just couldn 't afford ·the
(financial) losses any more. And you hate to leave
without making the playoffs."
The "good," Stepien safe~, Is the organization he Is
leaving behind.
"It's certainly on an upbeat now," he said. "I feel
good I was able to bring In guys like Nlssalke, Free,

Cavaliers

Ert

Ina Ape~, f.H

614-992-2181

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD

POMEROY

GALLIPOIJS -

said.
The team Nlssalice took over last October was a!\. l
overpaid_,· undertalented group In the midst of an !
NBA·record 24-game losing streak.
MW16elman had rilanaged to irrltate some . of
Stepien's higber·pald employees , suspending •
$350,!roa·Yl!ar guard Bobby Wltkerson because
WDkenon ran slow· wind sprints. M~ .
.complained about James Silas' sore back, which has
kept SIJas on the disabled list all year.
'
'il!e starting five Ntssalke Inherited . Included .
James Edwards at center, Clift Robinson~ Scott ·
Wedman at lorward and Geotf Huston and Ron
Brewer at guard. And Robinson, the only potential
star among the five, saki at the outset he had no desire
to be a Cavalier.

..... .

614-992-2181

WEED VEX

o 1.. H.P
• Will

Buying,a compa(:f tractor.

fUdd. _, -eft ...

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

• U..wlllh ... wl"-tt+. ..." .... -~

.

Getting dependable Jcx:obsen
performance for lawn
·
or garden work.

SPECIAL PRICIES
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD

,_ $)54900

ONLY
'

(

lawn l&lt;.mg mowers
hove Jacobsen
dependability bu ilt in.
And they're bui ll on o
s!eel -deck. rnok~. tke!J"I

W~LKtNO ROT~RY

MOW!RI .

.very riHordo~j . , ,

$}999

25 LB. :' .

·

ONLY

.

$525

Get the best for yourself.

'""""

..JACOSSEN ·

Jo&lt; o b sc r1l o wn Tro(! Qr

HOME UTE

..........~

.

County Junior Fair must join a 4-H
club and select a project before

• • •

US"'

·

To Learn To Bowl.... on ...
FREE FREE
Se •
·Beginning Bowlers · mmar

1
May ·
Members who are not on the
enrollment sheet turned 1n to the
~ty extension otfjce by May 1,
w111 not be able to participate in the

.• • • •

:: Soa;~: v~un::~t':
r:ihc~u~:'\~tH::~~:;

.

~\ftlGS oftl

.

BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 25
l·o·oo
A•M'
•

innmedlatety. Since May 1 Is on a
Sunday. enrollment sheets w1ll be
accepted on Monday, May 2.
Enrollment sheets that have been
turned In as of AprU 20 Include:
A Team, Border ltners, Cadmus
Rectsktns, centervme Young
Farmers. Country Cousins, E.T.C.,
EarlyB!rds,EnoSallOn,Ewington
WUdcats. Fancy Farmers, Gallla
Co. Judging Club, Gold Diggers,

(03SS

tO

t~-t"P.

run 3 COnSecUtive Mondays)

G\lp.\.\1~

s9t.c\J\\.sll ~,oflS

ot~ttfP.S

"'
FINAL WEEK!
.

LEARN:
Basic Bowling Technique
•
ts
Equipment requlremen
•
thod.
Computerized sconn.g.me
.
How to organize or JOin a league
OPEN TO All AGES 0 ASS SIZE UMITED
CALL 446-3362 TO PRE-REGISTER

..

This Is The Final Week You Can Purchn e A
3 Piece Living Room Suite And Get A 13" Zenith
Color T.V. Free~ Many Other Bargains Throughout
The Store.
·sALE ENDS SATURDAY APRIL 30th.

eori,plete Pro Shop
Visa/ Mastercard Accej.~ted
GAWPOLIS, OHIO

UPPER RIVER RD.

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~!!!!!!!

Flttln&amp; and Showing

PLANT PEP

·,!'

faS~youthlnterestedlnjolnlng4-H
woo wtsh to exhibit at the Gallla

ai'Ure
Down. Rising, Triangle, Upside

331/3 LB.

Eastern Ave., Gallipolis 45631,
pbone 446-7007.

SKYLINE LANES
(Wants YOU. )

to

deadline
ferturned
...H Club
sheetS be
Into enrollment
the County.
ExtensiOn Office Is approaching

Valley Boys', Uttle Rascals, Mercerv111e Marauders, Mercervtlle
WUdcats, Morgan Center, Morgan
Rllklers, Ohio River Ranchers,
Rainbow, Ridge Runner's Telve,
Rio IUdge Runners, Rio Silver
Tlilmbtes, Sundance Kids, Temper-

ADVANCBJ DUIGN
GAJIDIN TIACTOIIS

Cllfli.i&gt;

Sunday Time5-SentiMI-Page-C.7

r~._.__._._._._._._._._._.

The May 1

:=~~ Tr.:'!.is~~s:"~a H.ro~~
~~:C~~rs~~\:ea ~~:~

POMEROY

POMEROY LANDMARK - SOUTHEASTERN OHIO &amp; . WEST VIRGINIA'S MOST
COMPLETE FARM &amp; HOME SUPPLY CENTER - COME - BROWSE AROUND
COME IN AND SEE US AT POMEROY, OHIO

S219

contest shoul&lt;! contact the GaU!a
County Extensloo Office· at 1502

· By FRED.d. DEEL

often Intel lei ed with "'y·tOOay operation of tile chlb,
'"Ted's been no problem for me at ali," Nlssallw•,.•

Ntssalke, lor h1s part, only wishes It had been be,
and not BUI Musseln)an, who was hired rocoach the
Cavalters when Stepien first took over.
"I wish I had met Ted three years earner,"
Nlssalke said. ''Then, I think we would be playing for
the NBA chan'lpionshlp right now. Not Just me - It
could have been any competent NBA coach woo
would give good advice."
Musselman, when he resigned under pressure just
before the start of thiS season, Indicated that Stepien

The

W. Va .

~H enrollment sheet deadline near
G._~

CUff Robln!on, Jeff Cook, a good.No. 1 draft ~·In
John Bagley. I think the team we' re leaving for the
Gunds wUI be able to malle the playoffs In three
years."
So Steplf!n, who promlsed when he arrtved that he
would have tl)ls club In the playo!ls In lJI81, Is leaving
behind a team he now predicts might make the
playoffs by 1.986.

Weltman represented the best rno\ies - perhaps the
only real good moves - made by Ted Stepien In h1s
thrre years as the Cavaliers' owner.
Mercltully, Stepien ts WN trytngtobowout, having
sold the team to Collsewn owners George and Gordon

~sant,

Demonstration
Thursday, May 5 there will be a
beef fitting and showing demon. stratton held InconjW1CUon with the
e,.nta Cpunt:Y, ~f . Queen_ and
PrincesS : Contest -at ·the · ·oama CoUnt);- Junior ,F alrgrounds.
Thls actlvlty wtll begin at 6 p.m .
· with a practice judging session to
provide people In attendance with
an opportunity to !earn more ahout
judttlng livestock. .
·
'l'lie llee! queen ana pnncess
contest ts designed for 4-H girls,
nine to 18 years of age, who are
enrolled In beef project or have a
beef fann background. Anyone
who wants more lnfonna lion on the
fitting or showing demonstration or
about ihe beef queen and princess

Eliminate'the.· ''hard
work" from your

TRADE-INS
INVITED

"Yard work" ...

a

VAWEPWS

Healthy soil
rich in nutrients
meons healthy
plants. This
ORGANIC
unique
ORGANIC soil
activator
.
·~·•
provides the
chemical free
nutrient your
plants require.
Incorporated
in the soil this
product feeds
__::.... - .• I your plants up
~o a full yeor.

GARID EIIRGY
BUll liS

.-

HOTPOINT

SOIL ACTIVAmR
JWI.PI , IIR~

IIIIPlUI!Al5

~-..

.t

j~!

..........
,d

oColor

;

;ll Large capacity washer 0 Hea't'Y·duly trans ·
· mission 0 No· kink d/8111 hose 0 TllliCd dryer
with seleclrons CJ4 Ven11n9 oplrons 0 Sepa rarc

W.sl'lfl

~OOCIWI.Wl0006

OUR LOW PRICE ..
Otytrl,jc«&lt; DlDl~

&amp;rarr control.

OUR LOW PRICE ..

Mt~~or

l!11tllldJnll cclof ptCiurt !It·

I()I! rw ~ ~ •Prorrtm1111blt Sm l)uJIIt [let·
lrDI'IC lu•n15rittlltnclltln5 clllrtntb •I ll·
Clllnttl C l~lly tPfrlorlll ~t II ICfld llllt
dlautl

S40479

1£1. IIIC£ 'Ill

128590

NOW ONLY

j~~. . s545 ~~PAIR

$444
WATER HEATERS
DOG FOOD

42 GAL. ONLY

25 POUND BAG

$12995

FREEZERS ,

$389

25 CU. FT.

COUPON WORTH 50'

ROOFING

ALL lENGTHS IN STOCK

CAT FOOD
liJ large 1.-4 Cl.l . ft.
Top 'N Bottom mlcrowa'lf!
sy1tem designed l or O\lenl y
cooked foods • 25 Minute tlmer
• Handsome simulated wood
creln. cabi net • Bl ack glasa

19.95 14 FT.
112.20
114.45

25 POUND BAG

27g

Mod1l AE9110

jDit $

$780

116.70
118.90
120:90
122.95

16 FT.
18 FT.
20n.

front

STAtiTUSA VAlUI:
, .. STAYU VAlUE I

GAS CANS ONLY $J65
HOMELITE ST 20
STRING TRiMMER IJ495

INSECTAWAY
BUG KILLING PAINT

WHEELBARROwS 3 cu. tt. 12265
ONION ,.., I"'
KENNEBEC SEED

REG. 12814

SPECIAL

I._________.I

TOES

BARB WIRE

2 LITER COKE OR 'SPRITE
ONLY

89"' EA CH

S2495

-

PRO-MIX
NOW IN

BALER lWINE
ONLY $2195
10 BALES OR MORE

.

S24

95

STRAWBERRY

CALL FOR OUR
SPECI~L ON BULK
BAGGED 0~ LIQUID
• FERnUZER

FRONT END ·
ALIGNMENT
SPECIAL •
ONLJ S}495

ONION
CAULIFLOWER
BROCCOLI

....

NAitSPECIAL
- 7d Common, 50 lb. 119'5
6d Common, 50 lb. 11995

1

. 61

FREE MOWER ON
MODELS •••

By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - When Gallla
Academy High School's family
living class put on a mld-AprU
mock wedding, the students had a
raft of help from their elders
outside the school.
·

• 1400 • 1700G
• 1600H • QT 17
•HT23

French City Florists supplied -the
nuptial arch, the kneeling bench,
fi&lt;JWers , and ca ndelabra, Amyl's
Florists furnished flowers for par·
tlclpants . St. Peter's Episcopal
Church lent a choir robe, presuma·
bly for the preacher presiding,
Kevin Hollingshead . Benita Sager
brought the bridal gown, veil, and
cake top; and the music - guess
whom! Anne Fischer.

RIDING MOWER

.

.

A GRADUATE OF Ohio University In 1983- yep! this year I -she
Is a natM! of CaldWeD, Ohio. Julie
Brienza did IOCiety's upper crust in
GaJua County, and she also filled in
~er she wu needed, taklna
the plact! r#. regular staff people on
vacallon. By tbe way, the datellne
under her April
byllne was

81

WE WILL
BE UNE,ERSiOLb

JULIE BRIENZA, ScrippsHoward News Service writer, was
a reportortallntern at theGaiUpolts
Dally Tribune last summer, and
now her name reappears In
GaWpollii! It's a byline f~Ver the ·
April 19 Columbus ctttzen.Joumal
Paae 'J story headlined, "U.
brass get bargain vacations from
Outer Banks to Grand Tetons."

s.

Llmltod Supply

614-992-218 1
WE WILL NOT ,
BE UNDERSOLD

mock wedding

ON SELECTED MODELS

$1199.00
MODEL83 I 8 H .P. ELEC. START

$1349.00
MODEL 1134 II H.P. ELEC. START

$1499.00

Eliminator Plus
Bagging and Mulching Mower

.

·'

$1699.00.
MODEL 20 16 G M
16 H.P. w/42' Mower

. $2499.00
.,,

.;\.·
,. ;'·.

$199.00

8352 Eliminator Plu• NOW ON LY

$319~00

8362 Eliminator Plu• NOW ONLY

$399.00

8623 Mul t hing Mower NOW ONLY

$229 ~,00

8643 MukhingM ower NOW ONLY

•329.00

.

·.. ( J

CHUCK COWER SERVICE
\

\

OR
.

2(»2 THIRD AVENUE- GALLIPOUS·- PH ~\446-33 4

WUhlneton.

\

MODEL lOll GM
II H .P, w/38' Mower

8610 Side Di•chorge NOW ON LY

\

v

LAWN TRACTOR

MOWER SALE

lp

I'

\

MODEL 830 8 H.P. RE&lt;;Oil START

TillS FAMILY living class Is one
· which prepares the teenagers for
the realttles of life "outside,"
shoWing them preparation skills
and providing them with the
opportunity of planning a wedding.

CABBAGE

SALE ON
WHITE MARBL
CHIPS

STOCK
\

P

LIVE

GAHS stages

$530-$7·5 0

BESIDES THE presiding
preacher and musician the partlclpants were Laurel Henson, the
bride; Bob Jarrell, the bridegroom: Tammy Patrick, the maid
of hOnor; Kelly Galllan, the best
man: two Angles: Betz and
Russell, bridesmaids; Kevi n
Isaacs and Art Casey, ushers;
Debbie Whitely, mother of the
bride; GUbert Henry , father of the
bride; Jason Hogan, father of the
brtdegfoom; and the soloist was
Scott Slone. Mother of the bridegroom was not Invited.

$51895

"'"wMI~UM

A Gallipolis Diary

FREE MOWER
DECK ••• SAVE

.'•

'

�Page

C8=-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, a-tio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

-~

-•"

Meigs County' agent's comer

Agriculture and our community

Spring conference slated

Tobacco plant beds suffer from angular leaf spot disease

By JOHN C. RICE
Extemlon Agent
Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - Turn Out Good :_
Approximately 90 people turned
out for the no ttl c;orn and forage
day at the Roy Holter Farm.
Planiers were demonstrated along
with sprayer calibration. We wish
to thank the Holter family and all
who participated.
Spring Conference - The Home
Economics Agent and I will be gone
on Wednesday and Thursday of this
week for our annual sprin g
conterence.
Uvestock Manure - What Is It
Worth' - Many times we ask
ourselves what is livestock manure
worth? Is It something that is a pain
In the neck to get rid of or doos It
provide something the soil needs?
You may recall about 10 or 15
years. ago there was a general
feeling that livestock manure was
nothing much more than a neces·
sary eviL You have probably alSo
heard many testimonials about
how much manure hasdone.l think
we can all agree that manure
seems toenhanceweedgrowth and
I suppose on the humorous side we
can always say that the manure

;state/ ational

'

slum fO)Jnd In livestock manure.
By BRYSON R. CARTER
· However, too many spread manure
Extenolorl Ageat
Agrlcalture A CNRD
lndlscrlmtnately on fields, not
taking Into account Information
G..W. County ·
from manure and soli test analyses
GAll.IPOLIS - Angular leaf
and the nutrient levels for desired spot ~as heen on the Increase 1n
yields.
· Hurley tobaCco In recent years,
Once thrown Into Imbalance, soU causing significant loss In plant
nutrient levels can have tong-term
beds In 1981 and several major field
negative effects on crops and the outbreaks In 1981 apd 1982.
livestock gra~ng on that land. -"f"':~\nark tobaccos appear more
One of the more common
resistant to the disease. Control of
mistakes is testing soU bfltore this disease is aimed at the plant
manure application, therefore dis·
bed, since a major source of this
counting the value of the additional disease In the field comes from
nutrients contained In the manure. · Infected transplants. Timely appliBy applying commercial tertii- cation of either sb'!!ptomycln or
lzer at recommended levels before bluestone-Ume to the bed w111
manure application you are not control the disease. However,
taking maximum advantage of this evidence is Increasing that streptocheaper form of fertilizer.
mycln tolerant strains of the causal
Another mistake made by some agent develop quickly, so the
farmers Is applying manure to bluestone-llme mixture appears to
meet the nitrogen needs of the crop be. a better preventative route.
whlle Ignoring the phosphorous and
Guidelines for proper mixing and
potassium level In the manure. use of bluestone lime are as
Phosphorous and potassium tend to follows: Dissolve three pounds of
bulld up In the soli with over- bluestone (copper sulfate) In a
applied manure while nitrogen bucket of water. Mix four pounds of
levels remain rela~vely low.
hydrated lime Into a thin paste with
You should attempt to meet
water In another bucket, and pour it
either the phosphorous or the Into the water In a barrel or other
potassium nutrient levels with the container holding about 46 gallons
manure application, not the nitro- of water. Then, whue stirring

sulfate solution. Tne bordeaux may
be prepared In a wooden barrel or
GO-gallon oU barrel and may hoi
app1led to the bed with an ordinary
sprinkling can. It Is beSt towash'out
the containers before· use, so that
the sprinkler wiU not become
clogged. The mixture should be
stirred every time a portion ·1s
removed from tile barrel.
In summary the major points
are :
(1) Follow the mixing directions
carefully;
(2) Use fresh hydrate!! lime;
(3) Make two applications as a
soll drench through the cover
starting when the plants are
producing the llrst true leaf and a
second about 10 days later;
(4 ) Use one quart of solution per
square yard of bed;
(5) Clean equipment quickly,
because the material Is caustic.
Bluestone lime may damage certain type roller pumps.

---

.

.

.

'

SPECTACULAR SAVINGS ON
TANK SETS .
e Can Set1A Doxol Prepane Tank, H.oklt Up To YIIUr
Home And FillltWith400GallensOfDexoiPtepane,_

•.

ONLY
•

Call us Now for More

By KEVIN KELLY
. Times S...lloel Stall
1 · ATiiENS- The dean o! Ohio University's Colll!gle
of Osteopathtc Medicine is confident the school will
stW exist, In spite of a recorruJielldatlon to phase It
out ·
"I am confident that will not CO!Jle about," noted
Dr. Frank Myers. "We wiU be here In the forseeable
future. ··
Myers responded to one of the · alternatives
suggested by the state board of regents to reduce
what ~ board vieWs as a physician glut In Ohio.
The alternative, to be examined In more detall by
regents this S'!flllTler, calls for phasing out medical
schools at OU and Northeastern and Wright State
universities, In addition to eliminating a contract with

.

Details

I

985-3307
CHESTER, OH.
spreader
one piece of
equipment
that the Is
machinery
dealer
won't r~ge=n:..::le~v=el=·----------v~l=go=r~o=us=l~y,~po=u=r-=ln~t:he:...:c:op~pe=-r-~f~ru=l~t~tr~ee=s,~s=o~fe:rtt.::::llze:a:nn:u:a:U~y~.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Case Western Reserve University.
Enrollments wiU then be adjusted to Ohio State,
University of Cincinnati and the Medical College of
Ohio at Toledo, and limited to 500 students per year.
In Its elj:ht years of existence, the COM has
established satelllte clinics In NelsonvUJe, McArthur
and CoolvWe, has an afflllation with a clinic In
Ch~peake and handles approximately 60,00J
pattents there, on Its campus facUlties and at
O'Bieness Memorial H6spltal In Athens .
" When the school was established, the General
Assembly expressed Its judgment that we need
physicians In Ohio," Myers said. "I see no evidence
that's ~anged."
Myers referred to the central thesis of the regents'

'I ~ .., 983

contention . - that since 1970, Ohio has taken
significant steps In ~uclr!g Its physician shortage.
Nevertbeless, regents do recognize that some
sections of the state; Including the southeastern part,
are underserved.
Regents feel a "focused strategy wUl produce
better success for considerably fewer dollars than
wiU overproducing physicians," according to a
statement Issued last week. The board ts calling for
creation of programs to attract and retain physiCians
In underserved parts of Ohio.
"On the evidence of a projected glut, I'm. not
persuaded," Myers explained, adding that much has
changed In health care In 13 years. With those •
changes have come corresponding specialties.

Myers ~ld the complexity of new technology
requires physicians specially trained to operate the
equipment inv\)lVed.
"Unless we're prepared to control the demand for
health care, then we have to define health care," he
said. "The ch'ancellor's report says the law of supply
and demand doesn't function In health care. It does."
Since the end of Wol'ld War II. there has been an
Increase In demand for hea lth rare. but the supply
·
has never been adequate, Myers continued.
Regents predicted there will be 1.010 medical
school graduates- In Ohio by 1986. OU, which
graduated Us first class of osteopaths in l!«l, has
steadily increased Its class size from an original 24 to
100.

ANNOUNCES EXECtmON - 1\labama
Prison Commissioner Fred Smith addn.osses medlu
representatives after learning that the U.S. Supreme
Court denied the request for stay of •·xecullon lor
convicted murdered ,John Louis Evans UJ . Evans

was ex.ecutt..'€1 ln the eledrk chair at llulmanJ'lrl_,on
'In Atmore, Aht., at R: :10 p . nr. ('S1' Frldn.v. ~:"u" w&lt;c'
tht• flrst death row htnullt' to IH' t'\:t '('litt•d in t\lalunna
sln&lt;:l' 1965. (AI' LIL"&lt;Crpholo).

.

'
cotton prison uniform.
ATMORE, Ala. (AP) - Three jolts of electricity
He appeared calm as he was stra pped to the chair,
over 14 minutes killed John Louis Evans Ill, a
nicknamed "Yellow Mama." and the death warrant
conviCted murderer who calmly walked to his
was read. A skull cap !!Ued with electrodes was
execution and said he felt "no malice toward
placed on his head, his chin was strapped tight,and his
anyone."
Ev~, sentenced for the 1977 robbery-murder of
face covered with a black mask.
MobUe pawnbroker Edward Nassar, was proWhen the first jolt of electricity hit his body a t 8:30
nounceddeadat8:44p.m . Frlday,lessthantwohours
p.m., Evans tensed and the electrode on his left leg
afier the U.S. Supreme Court refused to halt his . burst off. When he was hit with the second jolt at 8: 33
electrocution. It 1\'as t&amp; United States' seventh
p.m .. he did not move, but a puff of smoke and burst of
execution since the high court reinstated the death .. flames came from his left temple and more smoke
.
. came .lrom his left calf. Doctors.sald he stW was not
.penally tn-1976.
Because of a temporary stay by a U.S. district dead. · ·
JU(Ige, Evans died almost 21 hours later than
After the second shoe]&lt;, Canan, who was one of the
ortglnally ~hedUJed, A . 7'2 ruling by .the U.S. · wlt11esses, asked Prison Commissioner F~ Smith to
Supreme COurt at aoou(7 p.m.-Friday gave siate · request clemency from Gov. George w.,uace. Canaii
·
said the P.,nalty was "cruel imd unusual" strice·
prison officials permission to proceed.
It took three :JO.second charges of 1,900 volts of
Evans was not dead after the second charge.
electricity to kill the 33-year-old Evans, who said In
Smith was on the telephone to the governor's office
his final statement, "I have nomallcetowar1l'anyone.
at the time, and conveyed Canan's plea to press
I have no hatred toward anyone."
secretary BUly Joe Camp. Camp said he relayed II to
His mother, Betty Evans Dickson, remained In her Wallace aide Elvin Stanton, who spoke with Wallace.
"Elvin signaled back immediately, " said Camp.
hotel room and said afierward, "!was proud of him.
He left this life as a true Christian."
"The governor just said he was not going to
Evans' attorney, Russell F . Canan, called the Intervene."
execution "a barbaric ritual," and said Evans "was
The third jolt of electricity was administered, and
tortured In the name of vengeance and the disguise of Evans W&lt;jS pronounced dead at 8: 44 p.m. An inmate
justice."
somewhere In the maximum-security prison played
Evans' head was shaved and he was taken to the "Taps" on a trumpet.
death chamber at Holman Prison dressed In a white
/

'

•

Tru e, rnariure enhances weed
growth because It provides a n Ideal

o·

After· three jolts over
14 minutes, Evans dies
in electric chair

II';
GAS SEKYICf.

stand behind.
On a more seriou s note l would
like to express my views on manure ·
based upon wha t data I have. First,
let's talk about manure that Is more
of a solid type with bedding mixed
ln. One ton of this manure,
nutrient-wise, contains about 100
pounds of 5-IIHO. You could say
then It Is not worth the effort to haul
to the field but this Is only a very
small part of the value of manure.

Sundci '

I

Dean
feels
college
of
medicine
will
survive
.

SPRING FLING ·"83-"
.

RI DEN 0uRr s TV .&amp; APPLIANC'£

FeriDizers
FertUize fruit trees and other
fruit plants with a fertUizersuch as
:;.10-10· or 1~ such as you might
have for use on the lawn. Do not use
fertilizer that has herbicides mixed
In it. A slightly acid soU Is best for

.

-·

'•'

DOXOL PROPANI*S

~imttt· ientittd Section

.

• I

I

envtronr'nent .for seeds or any other
crop for ·that matter, to grow: but'
the real value of ma nure Is Its
organic matter. An Idea l soli could
1
be _likened to a sponge. As you
· know, a dry sponge Is very porous
and when water hits a dry sponge It
Is Immediately absorbed and retained within IL&lt;ell. Also, within this
upper lour to six Inches of soil Is a
living community of micro organisms. Again, as the sponge has
ma ny porous places, air rtlters
down and provides oxygen for these
micro orga·ntsms. Manure, through
Its organic matter, helps to make
this soil more like a sponge to
absorb and retain water and to
provide im excellent environment
for these micro organisms to work.
Liquid manure Is more potent
than solid manure. The liquid
manure, In general, will contain at
least twice as much nllrogen.
However. phosphorous and potash
will be about the same. Remember
that liquid manure has all the water
In It and on a tonnage basis would
contain about. the same phosphorus
and potash as a ton of solid manu re.
Dairymen can really take advan ·
tage of the fertilizer value of
nitrogen, phosphorus and potas-

Reagan lifts
16-month ban .

'

the

•

to put
old home.

Home owners have clout at BANK ONE. If you
need a loan to add a room, put on a new roof, add
new siding or insulation or make any other home
improvement, give us a call. You'll get our best rate
and affordable monthly payments because you've
got equity in your home.
BANK ONE lenders at any office will be happy to
give you complete details. Stop by or call and we'll tell
you how a loan can help you make improvements.
plus add value to your home. The chart below will be
helpful, but call for an accurate picture of your
particular payment schedule.

TERMS'

S1.000

S2.500

SS.OOO

2Years

48.24

120.62

241 .24

4 Years

68.94

137.88

5 Years

5882

t 17.64

Billy ·Milligan calls court decision "progress~
By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - William S. Milligan,
once diagnosed as having 24 separate personalities,
says a court order allowing him slightly more
freedOm at the Athens Mental Health Center is
"progress."
Milligan has been hospitalized since 1978, wben he
was found Innocent by reason of Insanity on charges
of raping, robbing and kidnapping three Ohio State
University-area women. A year ago, Milligan was
transferred from the maximum-security forensic
unit of the Central Ohio P sychlaliic Hospital In
Columbus to the less-restrictive Athens center.
On Friday, Franklin County Common Pleas Judge
Jay Flowers ruled that the center's treatment team .

be allowed to deterinlne who can accompany the
28-year-old Milligan on trips outside the center.
CUrrently, Milligan must be accompanied by
someone approved by the court or a hosplta~ staff
member when he leaves the center.
Flowers also dropped the requirement that local
law enforcement authoritieS be notified when
MUJigan leaves the center. The new order calls for the
authorities to be notified only if there are violat ions
during Milligan 's leave.
Milligan's attorney, L. Alan Goldsberry of Athens.
had been asking the court to give the treatment team
the authority to allow Mtulgan unsupervised
overnight trips and weekend furloughs from the
center.
But Friday's court order requires Milligan's trips
1

to be supervised 'and taken only dwing th&lt;• day.
" It' s pt'!lgress." Milligan sa ld . " It's a situation. and
it's hard to say how it'll ever be remedied . I can 51'&lt;'
Judge Flowers' position bcca uSP. hPre, a menta l
patient rwhol has eomittPd crimes and thing&gt; Ilk&lt;•
this Is as king this man to put his I'Pputatlon an&lt;l
everything e!Sf' on the line to trust me. And the years
have gone by, and he's been rml apprehensive."
Dr. David Cau l. psychotherapy mnsullant to th1•
cent er who has treated Milligan for· the pa st year.
sa id Milligan 's personalities ha ve lx-cn fused l'or

his knowlrdgl' wllf'n Mi ll igan In" lf' fllht • t'('ll lt'l'. Ami
hP said HlP f'('nl('l' llf'f'([s 1t1•· authorlt .v rn grnnt
Milligan ;Jdclit iona l fn '&lt;xlnms as part nf lilt• t rPa lntPn!
pt"()('f'S S.

"AI SOITll' point Wl''Vt' all go t h l dP&lt;'id(' Whf'l ht•r OJ'
not wt ~ ·r,. going to turn hlrn looSl' ... Caul sa id .
Dav id Malawi&lt;.; fa. din'(·tor of psychology at tllP
ct•nt cr , sa id Milliga n t'ou\d possibly !l'gn•ss if lu • is
continually th•n itxl j.!radua\ f n'i'ilt ml ~ .
"Somt'ti ml'. \'Vt' will PSst•ntially h • ... tallf'd,"
Malaw-lo,;f ;r said o f ttu • f l'(\t lmt ·nl IP;mt.
Mill i~; tn ;tppcil n 'fl i 1t ·sh..,'llt•d I o I ht • t'&lt;JIIrl 's th'&lt; 'i slon.
''I 'vp got It ) pmvt• myst·lf fi (JW , •• Millig;,n "; •i&lt;l . ·· 1'vt •
got to llvP d own .John 1\inck\('y. I' ve go! to I.M· l ht•
m&lt;XIPI of rPfon rl, plu s lhl' mn&lt;ld ol I! Jt•nt ;tl ht •itllh

some li.rne.
"Billy has llf'(•n stablf' for perhaps s ix to clglll

months," Caul said. "Billy's multiplici ty is staiJiiling
not ic('ably. l-Ie' s not splltt ing. He's not fragment in g."
Caul sa id no significant probirms havr U&lt;'r um~llo

For loan Information call any
BANK ONE office.

rlll\\'. ''

;Negotiations without
PLO may be sought

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Under
mounting pressure !rom st ruggling
farmers and thelr congressmen,
President Reagan Is lifting his
1&amp;-month ban on negotiations toward a new tong-term grain
agreement with the Sevier Union. ,
"We are taking this step to
reaffirm our reliability as a supplier
of grain," Reagan said In announcIng the decision Friday. "Negotla·
lion of a new tong, term agreement
is consistent with United States
agricultural export policy .... "
U.S. Trade Hepresentative William Brock said there had been no
Immediate response from Moscow
to Reagan 's offer to resume the
talks the president suspended In late
1981 because of the Scvlet Union's
crackdown In Poland.
1

WASHINGTON (API Preside nt Reagan:
seeking to save his Mideas t peace plan , may try to get
, AraD-Ismell negotiations started without theconS&lt;'nt
' of the Pales tine Liberation Organization.
"The negotiations don't have to hinge on the PLO
being prr:sent. " Reagan said Friday as he questioned
Its right to represent the 1.2 million Pa lest lnlan Arabs
who tlve under Israeli rule.
' focused his fire "on "radical elements" within
He
Yas~r Arafat' s organizat ion. accusing them of
blocking King HusS&lt;'In of Jordan fmm peace talks
with Israel.
"Maybe we' re making the PLO more important
than they are," Reagan said .
His remarks a t an Informal White House news
conference could mean a s hift In U.S . strategy . While
not recognizing the PLO. the admi nistration has
hoped It would cooperate with Hussein.
However, the klng's talks with Ararat on forming a
mixed delega lion broke down two weeks aRO and the
United States may now encourage Hussein to go it

1

Brock also said officials have not
determined what provisions the
United States will seek In any new
long-term pact that may be
negotiated to replace the one
scheduled to expire Sept. 30.
Mark Palmer, a.ctlng assistant
secretary of state for European
affairs, said the o!fer to resume the
talks was not connected to any
change In the Polish situation,
which Reagan spokesmen as recentlyastwoweeksagosaldhadnot
Improved significantly.
Palmer said the decision was
made In the context o! U.S~ grain
trade, not In response to "Soviet
political conduct."
Members of Congress from both
parties, having repeatedly tried to
pressure Reagan Into resuming
neaotlatlons through overwhelm·
lng votes on non-binding resolu·
tlons, endorsed the president's
declsJQil, and expres$ed hope that
the Soviets would ·respond
postttvely.

\I

alone.
MAKING A POINT - Prnltlent Reqtut
""""res darlnfl a - • conference In the WliMe
House brtellnfl room Friday The president voiced
hope thai, In next week's visit to the Middle EM&amp;,
I

Secretary of !Male Geoi'pl Shultz can "brtllj 10 a
su~

conclusion" Jlefl')tlalons for the withdra·
wal of lorelp Jorces !rom Lebanon. (AP
La.oerphoto ).

-----------'-~----~----- -·----~""~~--~-~~

.

BANK ONE,.
Member FDIC

&lt;

--

EPA failed to monitor federal
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Environmental
Protection Agency under former chief Anne McGW
Burlon:l !ailed to properly monitor the environmental
Impact ct. federal goverM1ent actMtle9, according to
an. Internal report l1Y the agency. ·
The report, prepared by the acting EPA lrtspector
gmenal, said the EPA's Otllce of Federal Activities
suffered !rom ·•a lack of direction and llliiJUI&amp;elllenl.
Established procedures were ~. matters

were not coordinated. and

~nsLstent and uniform
pollcy not adopted."
The Internal management audit noted .tlult EPA
review o! govff!UTient . actlvltles Is designed "to
ensure that such actions do not pose a threat to publiC
health and the environment."
"However," the report said, "because OFA has not
met this responslbutly, \here. has been limited
1,15sunmce that Important federal actions have been

I

.

~

But State D&lt;•lx u~ t ment offldal s sa id Shult z may
ex pand his schedu le to Include .fordan . !lis plans now
call for talks In F:gypt, tsr·ael and Lebanon.
Reagan's proposals l'o r a -&lt;&lt;'tttemcnt would gra nt
the Palestinians somr-. sor1 of Sl'lf-1ule "In
association" with .Jordan. 13ut hr ha " nor r~lll&lt;.'&lt;i for an
imkopendent SWIP.

In his session with reporlc' rs. til&lt;• prcs lci&lt;•nt
criticized thl' Senatf' for pa.&lt;S ing IPg lslalion that
postponl'S wllhholding on Interest and dividends . He
sa id II wou ld "allow pt'Ople tu go on cheating un their
in('Ome tax." And he s tood fas t agai ns t rcpm l of th is
year's tax cut, sayin g " this is no tim I' to s:~IJot uge tilt,
recovery ."
'111Ursday's ~I -to-~ S&lt;.•nall' vof(' to dfr"f'tivC'Iy l't'JWa l

the schedul&lt;'&lt;i tux withhold ing uf 10
dividend and !nten-st in(.'Oillr ' '\v;p.,

reviewed .... "

t~ · rcenl

ol

IJ lll ll' ; 1 t riumph

for the people who arc not p:~ ying 1111 · 1&lt;1.\t ·s lill'.V fairly

( owe," Reagan sa id.

Secretary ol State George P. Shultz, wbo leaves for
the Middle East on Sunday, has already urged tlae
Arab governments to strip the PLOof Its authority to
represent the Palestinians.

•
"Annual pe(tentage rille 11 ~~;:~j~";:~,J payments do no! include crtdlt
llf1 Of accident and health In:
11!1 available.
·

His main purpos&lt;.• on thP trip is !r1 wrap up
negotiations for !ht' r (•mova l of l sradi, ~vrian .1 nd
Pa lestinian forN•s from l.1•banon .
·

He declined to say whether hP wou trt vpto the repeal
measure, but Indica ted hr has high hopes the
measure won't clear the House.

goyern~ent
abdicating Its r&lt;,;ponslbllltles t.o help pr~tl&gt;ct . the.
public health ."
"Docum ents were lost and misptacc'&lt;i, and agency
comments· on the environmental c!fc&gt;cts of major
government projects. were halted shot1 of Issuance
because the reder;ll activities office managers were
either 'too busy or chose not to review reports," he
said,
•

•

The report was released Friday by Rep. Mike
Synar, D.Qkla., chairman of the House Government
Operations subcommittee on the envirOnment, who
sald.lt "reveals a story of gross mismanagement at
EPA ... " ·
He said the Inspector general's report "reveals that
at the same time some managerS of the otflce were
complllng political hit lists of EPi\ employ~. It was

,,
\

••

�Page-[).2-The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

April 24, 1983

l'orM!of Middleport-Gallipolis, .Ohiq Point Plea-t. W. Va.

Pleasant, W.

18 Wanted to Do

Trilule - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - .675-1333

..........
l•·M-· --· __

..
,... ..._
,......••.. ..,_.,,,
1 c~

. ,, __

·-~

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

l l·CI . f"W&amp;If!-IEca .. _.,o
I J.A.,._....

'

,_,_,_J_

-·-. . .

1-"Uool_
,_
...__l,..... • ...,

..

. . .J .... . . _ .. , , _

/ulluu · i,. ~ lo ·lo•tolullw ' ' n ·h~tii JIO ' .•

wo

' ' " " -· "' .. C:l . _

llW.,IIoltotl11-l - liof tl.,.

•t·h·•-111...
............

41-A-- t luo 11...1

..

II-W•II4hDo

··-·
...-·
:!::=.:·::
....._.,_
7&amp;

IU - ~-t •

..._.

tr-w.,tN t• l"'

n-.,.&amp;Hoooo..,

... __..

112 ...........

l l·L-1-

It-...,. (l,ol ,

no.-•"-..
I I ·IIIIH .....,

15-lleN6f•o ~o ..-

Yllo_jiOIOO

, .. tl.. c.o...

·-

.. ...
•, .,.. a..,
....-.o...
~

,.,

''

..

... ....,_,

, . -~
c-t•­
~ 41

~
L.,.,.,
....

,,_ ....-c . ..
I l l ,.........."••-•~

IK

L.-1..,

lt..oiiNI

U l

UtM

3U

..

,., "lU

•• , C&lt;ool••

Shop. Middleport.
3476 .

•M

L-

1 1J

........

Nice home and

11 Uphol ......

u.,.,,_., ,...,.....,__
s. ••,..,__
O.Oo.., .,. _, _

4 Familr Yard Sale 10-6 .
April 23-24, Sat . &amp; Sun.
8&amp;Jide Holiday Inn in
Gallipo:lis .

u oo

S700

W1tkln1 Products for sale.

~·-- · -·· ... ""'•1

814·742 ·2068 .

Public Notice

Public Notice

Mey 20 to Cherokee, N .C ..

Public Notice

es~ . per person . 614 -992-

3377 or 614-992 -6007 for
NOTICE TO
8100ERS

NEW LOCATION - Betz Honda Sales Is planning
a move IAl a new location when construction of this
buDding along Ohio 71n Kanauga Is oomplete. Owner

Sealed proposals l or the
follow1ng eqUipmem
25 Mic rocompu ters Apple
lie w1th 80 column card.
moMor stand 3nd d1sk dnve
w•th mterf ace
25 Amdek Color I M on11ors
1 Apple 01 sk. Onve
1 DOT Matnll Pn nter Wi th
•nterlace and cable
2 DOS 3 2 to 3 3 update
promo ~1 1 s . Instal led
lncludmg 1 year wa rranty on
parts and labor With on S1 te p1ck
up and delivery and loaner
when necessary Opt1onal An- GALLI POLIS CITY
nual Ma.n tenance Contract
BOARD OF
wdl be rece1ved by the Board of EDUCATION
Educa110n of th e Gall•ol1s C• ty Ellen M Barry
School D1 stnct at the adm1n1S- Treasurer
tra t1ve olftce. 61 State S1ree1.
Gall1pOI1s. Oh10 until 12 00 April 24 . M ay 1 8 1 5
noon EST. M ay 16. 1983
where satd b tds will at thal li me
and place be publ 1cl y opened
and read aloud . tabula ted. and
a report thereof made to the
Board at lhe ·next regular
mee1 1ng
Public Notice
"A b•d secu11ry 1n th e form of
~ cert1f1ed check. Cash1er 's
NOTICE TO
Checl&lt;.. or IP.tt er ot Cred 1J
CONTRACTORS
puraJant to Chapter 1305 of
. STATE OF OHIO
tho Ohio Aovil8d Code in tho
·: OEPI\RTM£NT OF
amount ··o f 10 percent of the

localion for his sa.les and repair service. Constructioll
lo bela« handled by Charles Martin, Rt. 1, Cbe8ldre,
and Bet. aallclpates moving In Juzy.

Sieve Betz said the new buDding provides a bet(er

Murphy notes record sales
•

lD

lst quarter fiscal study
~

McKEE SPORT, Pa. - G. C. · shrinkage, he said.
Murphy Co. today reported record
Lytle said the company' s profit
net Income for the 52 weeks ended
improvement resulted chiefly from
Jan. 'II of $11,744,000 or $2.97 per
Improved merchandise margins,
share, compar ed with $4.878,!XXl. or. with additional Improvement at·
$1.24 per share for the !\2 weeks
t ributable to a decline In Inventory
ended Jan. 28, 1982.
shrinkage losses and a lower
Inflation rate used In the LIFO
Net Income for the 13-weeks
ended Jan. 27 was $6.931.!XXl. ·or
! la st -In , rtrst -out) Inventory
$1.7.1 per sh_re, compared to a net
valuations.
Fourth quarter results In partlculoss of $4ffi,OOO or 12 cents per share
Jar were favorably affeeted by a
for the-fourth quart er a year ago.
Sales for the 52 weeks ended Jan.
reduction In cost of goods sold,
·27 were $822,282,()00, cqmpared
.Including occupancy costs resultwith $817,823,000 the previous year ,: ·- log from rf!lu.ctlon to the UFO and
F o urth ' qu art er . :sa l es -w ere - Inve nto r y . shrinkage reserves
$247,097,000. down from $260,191 .000
accrued during the first three

a year earlier.

total bid shall accompany each
b1d Bonds or checks shall be
made payable to the Board of
Educat10n
Gall iPOlis C1 ty
Schools ..
No b•d may be \Mthdrawn tor
a pe11od at s1xty !60) days after
l~e schedul ed clos.ng t1me for
the rece• pt of b1ds
Th e Board ol Educatton
reserves the ngh t to re 1ect any
or all b1ds not respon sive 10 the
spec1 f1cat10ns and accept ay
b1d deemed most favo rable ro
Gall1pOI1s C1 ty Schools and to
wa1ve lnformal1t1es

yea:r considerable ef!ort had been 1\
expanded upon ··analyzing and
Improving existing stores. 1An
upgraded Interior destg(l approach
emphasizing fashion apparel pres·
entatlons was utlltzed In Murphy's
Marts. In the company's conventional stores, emphasis has been
placed upon tailoring design con·
cepts, operating philosophy and
merchandise selectlon to customer
preferences and needs. Ef!orts to
Improve · pr6ducttvlty of existing
stores are continuing, he said.

TRANSIIORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
April 8. 1983
Contract ~ Legal
Copy No. 83·362
UNIT PAICE
CONTRACT
FRG-OOORI99)
SRG-OOORI80J
Sealed proposals will be
rece1ved at the off1ce of the
D1rector o f the Oh10 Depa rt ment of Transportat1on Columbu s. Oh•o. unt1l 10 00 AM..
Oh10 Standard T1me. Tuesday.
M ay 10 1983. 101 Imp rovements 1n
Ath ens. Belmon t. Carrol!. Columbiana. Gall1a . Ham son .
Hock.1ng. Jeffer.;on . Me•gs.
Monroe M organ. Noble. Tuscarawas. V•nton and Washington Counnes Oh1o. on vanous
rou res and sec t10ns. by furn1 sh1ng and 1nsralling ra1sed pavement markers and replac1ng
pr ISf'nat1c refl ec tors
The Oh10 Department o f
Tran sporTatiOn hereby not•l• es
all b•dder s that 1t will aflurna llv ely 1nsure tha1..1n any cont ract
en tered tn!O pur suant to th1 S
adverttsemP.nt m•nor•ty business enterp,. ses will be al for ded fu ll o ppo n unltY tO sub
mu h1ds 1n response to thts
-lllViliiiiOn and wdl not - be

re1ervationa .

d1SCflm1nated aga.nst on the
grounds of race. Color . or
nat1onal ongm 1n cons1derat1on
tor an award
"M 1n1mum wa ge rates for ·thiS
protect have been p redster -·
m1ned as reqUired bv lavv and
are set forth 10 the b1d
proposal :
"The date set for completiOn
of th1 s m rk shall be set fo rth 1n
the b1dd1ng proposal ..
Each b•dder shall be requ•red
to file w 11h h1 s b1d a ce rt 1l1ed
check or cas h1er's check for an
amount equal to five per cant
of his bid, but 1n no event more
than f1fty thousand do llars. or a
bond for ten per cent of hil bid,
payable lo the 01rector
81d ders mus t aoply. on the
proper form s. for qua l1 f1C8t10ns
at least ten days pnor to the
date set f01 open1ng b1ds 1n
accordaoce w1t h Ch apter 5525
Ohro Rev1s ed Code
Pl ans and speof1C8t10ns are
on Ide 1n the Oepan men t of
Tr ansporta110n and the oH•ce ot
the 01Str1ct Deputy Derector
The D1rector reserves th e
r~ght to reJeCt any and all b1ds
WARREN J SMITH

Rev817 -73
April 17

4

h\tense competitive condition s,
high unemploym ent In the com ·
pany·s primary mar keting area s
and the economic·recession prevalent durtng 1982.
Noting the company's strong
pi-oflt Improvem ent came from
only a mod est annual sa les ·Increase, he said favorable result s
reflect efforts m ade during the
year to empha size sound funda11lentals and operational discipline.
During 19R2. emphasis w as
p)aced upon Improving stor e prodllctlvit y , company-wide cost containment and control
of Inventory
'
.

.

Giveaway

ANY PERSON

who haa

lillorweign

e•hound to a

good home. Call 614 -388 9802.

TWO men would like work,
odd joba, lawn work. farm
work, brush cutting, etc.

992·

304-896-3313 .

5 to 20 acrea

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night. Community Building.
Henderson. Consigners wel come. Auct. lonnie Neal.

4 month old puppy to home
in country . Call448 -7283 .

Call 614-367-7101 .

2 yr. old female Elkhound.

Call 614-256-1911.

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Communitr
Pert Collie B. pan Border
Collie pyppios . Call 6t4- Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
268-6772 .
Consigments of new and
· usftd merchandise always
Puppies, 6 weeks old , Call
welcome . Richard Revnolds
4411-3897.
Auctioneer . 275 -3069 .

DIRECTOR

5

week old leopard curi'

puppi••· 614 -992-3246 .

24

Agents~aks

During 1982, working capital
incr eased to $105,486,&lt;XXJ, Its highest
·level In the history of the company,
compa red to $100,65J,&lt;XXJ a year
earlier . Capital expenditures tncrea sed to $11,401,000 from
$9.925.000 and shareholders' equity
Increased to $133,546,000, or $33.74
per share compared to $126,829,000
or $.12.11 per share.
· L y tle mentioned that during the

9

Wanted To Buy

Umpires needed for sUmmer
programs . ' Need people for
A .S .A . Men's league, vouth
programs 6 - 16 years old.
Salary $3-$8 per game
depending on league. Adults
and college student• en couragflld to apply . Fill out
applic•tion at City Manag er' s Office. Gallipolis Municipal Building, 618 Second
Ave . Gallipolis •• soon ••
possible.

-;,;;===:;:==::;

--:

22 Money to Loan

1•

HOME LOANS 12% fixad
rete . leader Mortgage. 77 E.
State, Athena, Ohio . 1 -614 -

692 -3061 . or 1-800-341 8664 in Ohio.

I =====~====
23

SALES:NO EXPERIENCE

Professional
Services

NECESSARY to Mil Avon .
We'll show you how. Good
earnings I Call 614 · 388 - I --'--C
- I!o
_ L_B_o_o_
kk-.-.-p-in_g__
9046 or 614-992-3690 .
Tax Returns &amp; bookkeeping
for Individuals &amp; businesses .

GOVERNMENT Joba·

Short forms $6 .00

Thousands of Vacancies
must be filled immediately .
Up to date directory lists

Long forms $20 .00 and up
Carol Neal
446 -3862

jobo

from

$17.634 to

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

PIANO TUNING $6 off plus

$60,112 . Call 716 - 842 ~
6000, including Sunday,
Ext. 4438

Banander wanted . Apply In
person. No Phone calls.
Meigs Inn., Pomf!lroy , Oh .

M

I d

.
I

eture a y to 1ve in with
older woman . 304 - 67~ 1197 aftar 6 p .m .

discounts to senior citizenschurches -schools . Call Bill
Ward Ward's Keyboard ,

446 -4372 .

_ _ _ __.::__ _ _ __
1

Will open &amp; clean swimming
pools . Call 446-4895 after

6:00PM .

I1 PWW~miNi:l.L:A;;[QA.
NE DA -

Sl d
bl
U ge pro em
under control

WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) - Offl·
clals say they've solved the problem s caused by 650,000 pounds of
dough, spices. meat and other
leftovers from a pizza operation.
The semi-solid waste from Jeno's
frazen pizza factory was clogging
the sewage treatment plant.
So officials brought In a portable
mobile press unit from FUteratlon
Technology Inc. of Denver last
month to squeeze moisture from the
wastes . This firmed upthewasteso
It could be dumped Into a landfUI.

puppies. 304-896-3816 .

12

TO good home, part Cocker,
male puppy. Small long
haired, spayed female dog,

Will do housecleaning or

6

614-367-7491 .

offices. $3 .00 per hour . Call

Lost and Found

'
LOST
Fiberglass Wabqsh
Yelley canoe Surlday in
Canoe Race, Reward . Call

We pay cash for late model
clean u&amp;ed cars .
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

J(lngley Myers. 814-246 5306 .

Purchase a·Cub Cadet
Lawn Tractor
Get a FREE
36" Lawn
Sweeper*

446-0059

l-OST: Female black &amp; tan
dog. Tattoos in both ears .
l:.olt in Cheshire area . S100 .
reward . no questions asked .

NIGHT CRAWLERS l!o RED
WORMS highest prices
paid, Lake Jackson Bate 8t
Tackle, Oak Hill . Call 614 -

614-446-9780 or 614446-1462 . .

682-7448 .
L &amp; L Scrap Metals. Now
buying alum. cans &amp; glass .
Scrap metals . Top prices
paid . Call 446-7300.

'-OST, ferret , cat like animal,
rn vicinity of 1813 Jeffer,on. please do not harm.

304-676-1730 .

~

'$369 Suggeated AetaH

Card of Thanks

2

We wish lo express our heartfelt

Board to meet

O'DELL TRUE VALUE

EASTERN AVE.

our friends , relatives
11111 any one who helped in any
1111 during the iillless and deatli
ol our beloved husband, father
ond 1J1ndfather - Hlnl Smtih.
W.oppraciate·the food. beautiful
nowers. cards: also the singers
1nd tht consoli~ words of Rev.
Lemley.

Across from K-Mart

Cvme ln ••• t=l?t:l:f71ft wiUt ()emunstratlun

•

April comes with sad regret
The day.the month .
We never forget.
For in our hearts you w111
always stay.
loved and remembered every day.

ftlen he toudles the weary eyel ids
•nd 1ives his dur ones sleep.
Jhrpret Smith, Children

CLASS PRODUCT - Lois Pauley displays a palnl..g of orle!UI
popple!, one · of two projects to 1)\1 completed at the Saturda_y

•

CASH-N-CARRY'

Offer w~kend tole,
decorative painting

'

8'

3

Announcements

THE DAILY SENTINEL IS LOOKING FOR
YOUTHS INTERESTED IN WALK ROUTES IN
THE MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY AREA.
YOU CAN WIN PRIZES, EARN MONEY AND
BE PART OF OUR TEAM . .

CALL US AT 992-2156 TO APPLY.

MAKE
A VACA
SPOT
WITH PROJECf'S
BUIL.T TO L.AST
FROM CAROI.INA L.UMBER

THE DAILY SENTINEL

10'

12'

14' .

Riverview Nursing Care
Home . Now open for ambu lAtory patients . 24 hour
care . Room , board 8t:

laundry. 304 -773-5882 .
Have room and board in my
home for elderly. 614 -992 -

6748 .
13

Insurance

SANDY ANO BEAVER ln sur.ance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage lh Gallia County
for almost a centurr. Farm,
homf' and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs . Con tact Ray Wedemeyer. agent .
Phone 388-8249 .
Are you paying to much for
your hoapital -heahh insurance . Call Carroll
Snowden , 446 -4290.

18 Wanted to Do
General Hauling and Trash
remove! Service . Reli able
and dependable . Call 446 3169 between 9 and 6 .
Lawn Mowing no yard 10 big
or small. Reliable and dependable . For estimate call
446 -3159 between 9 and 5 .
Lemley Drilling . Watar
wells, shallow gas, end core

drilling . Call 614 - 388 ·
8643 . Vinton. Oh .
3

Announcements
CROWN ClTY

Kinas Chapel Church will be
start in_&amp;a revi~1l Sunday, April

will be Raw. Orville Carrico.
Spec ial sinprs nicht,-. Rev.
John Jeffrey in~ites the pub·
Iit:.
.

Mqbe VOtive Bean

Thinki~
... about the special status you once enjoyed in
the armed forces. If your prior service classificatio'n is on our Critic al Skills list, you maybe
eligible to returh at your former rank to the
base ol your cho ic e.

16'

We need Prior Service personnel for re-enlist·
ment In many areas, some of which include the
following critical skills:
e Ajrcralt Maintenance
• Systems
e Avionics
e Weapons
e Amunltions Specialities
Maybe this Is JUSt what. you've been thinking
aboul Call today to find out it your classification
code lain an area ol critical need by the Air Force.

614·448·8500

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

By owner. 3 bedroom home
in Rio Grande. Oh . Call
614 - 246 -5274 or 614 245 -9517 for appointment .
Reasonably priced .
Racine, 2 'h acra mini farm .
remodeled . 3 -4 bdr., 2 story
alum . sided home . City
water. gas. sewer. base ment &amp; 2 car garage . Across
from Southern HS\ Call

614 -379 -2424 or 614 ·
949 -2864 .
House for sale 4 lxtr., 2 full
batha, finished basement, 2
car garage In the back , Seen
by appointment only . 203
Kineon Dr .. Gallipolis . Call

446 -1223.
bdr. home in Addison
small lot. newly remodeled ,
new electric plumbing, etc .
Furnance &amp; woodburner .
fully insulated, exc . cond ..
Mid S20's. Call 614-692 3

4369 .
In Middleport. newly remo deled home with fireplace .
po ssible woodbumer, clos e
to scho ols and sh opping .

Can 614 -992 -6941 .
Mod ern home, t1 rm . 8a 2
bath . on 2 aero lot . Rt . 325 ,
5 m i. S . of Rio Gran de. Call

614-379 -2683
lovely, 6 rooms . Double
garage. beautifully landsc aped area lot . Ato p Rose
Hill , Porn . 40 ' s , 614 -986 -

4257 .
For sale by owner -4 bed room , 1 'h story aluminum
aiding house . 2 '14 acrea level
groun-d. Urge kitchen , din Ing room , forced air heat .
Separate large garage. 2
miles from Southern High
Scho ol. Shown by app oint ment only . $23, 500 . 614 -

949 -2023 or 614 -949 2777 .
3

Announcements

Call deyt 614-367-0480 or
eve. 614 -446 -3426 .

USED MOBILE
676-2711.

8616 weekdays. or 304 ·
458 - 1092 on weekends, or
304 -676 - 1838 anytime .

THREE bedr oom house for
sale, 2 lots, possi ble finan c·
ing by FHA , well insulated .

304-773 -9116 .
3 bedroom . t

vl

bath. gar age, full basem ent,· low
down payments. assumabl e
fixed loan, qu iat nfllghbor-·
hoo d. one mile from hospi tal . Call 446 -1162 after

4:00PM .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

HOME .

MOBILE home. with 24x12
addition. well. Y2 acre on
Crab Creek Road. 85 ,800 .

304 -675 -1323. 304-676 2372.
79 Mobile home, 2 bed room . unfumished. 1!1 ac re
with chainlink fence, county
water. , loc ated in Ohio .
616 ,600 . Call after 6 p .m .

304-676-2792 .
1976

ELCONA

house

tn1iler, 14x66. good condi tion. 304 -675 -6870 .
1980 Mobil e Home, 2 bed room 12x45. ex c. cond .
furnished w ith' undftrpenning . 3 04 -6 7 5 - 38G9 or

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES USEO · CAR S.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CAU 446 · 7572 .
CLEAN USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL··
ITY MOBILE·HOME SALES .
' 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .

2 lo ts &amp; a mobile hom e
12x60. 2 bedroo m , wi t h
rural water, gas heat . Has
som e furnitur e, pr ic e
$12 .600 . Or 4 lots &amp; mo bile
S14 ,BOO . CAII446 -1240
12x60 in good shape, make

otlar. can 446 -0978 .
Reduced to St9 ,500. late
1980 Windsor 14~e70 with
7x22 expando. 3 bedroo m .
2 bath, air, stero, micro wav e, storage building and
more . Excellent buy on a
quality home. Rodney - Cora
12x60 m o bile home, 2 bdr .

Can614 -246-6830 .
1982 Governor 141170, slid ing glass door s from porch ,
top quality underpinning .
St5 .000 . Call 614 -367 -

7644 .

1- - - - - - -- - Trailer &amp; lot on Rac coon
Craak . Small down pay ment . as sumabe loan , &amp;182
per. mo . Call 614-266 1446 eve' s.

1- - - - - -- - - -

12x65 V i ndale mobile hom e
with 6 ft . eKpand o living
roo m . w oo d burn er . _Sit uate d on 2 plus ac re incl uding
rem o dele d 1 room sc hoo l
building &amp; storage shed .
Nice garden spot . Som o
small fruit trees . 614 -99 2 7164 after 5 or 614 -992 -

6035 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

91 ACRE farm , 2 tracts. 40
acres plu s 5 1 acre s. will self
sep arat e or tog ethe r . All
utilities available , 304 -675 2286 aft er 6 p .m .
76 Ac res. barn 8t out build ing s, all min eral rights , to ba cc o ba se. remo de led farm
house, loc ated Crab Creek
ar ea, 3 0 4 -6 75 - 3 0 3 0 or

---;
•
\

7 room country hoMe, garage and garden spice, i4eel
for middle-aged couple . Cell

614 -949-2674.
TWO b8droom housa, 2nd
St .. New Haven. 304-882 -

2606 .
TWO bedroom brick all
electric home. 4 .4 miles out

Sandhill Rood . Roody

Small , modern , co untry
home. Available May 15 .
Write P.O . Box. 10, Gallipo lis, Oh 4563, . Refarences .

304 -489 -1134.

Modern 3 bdr. n1nc h, gar age. carpet • .Rodney area .
O&amp;J)oslt &amp; refarencea re quired . $285 per mo . Black burn Realty . Call446 -0008 .
2 bedroom house . Large
living r oom . kitchen &amp; bath.
Fu r nished . Overl o oking
Ohto River. Adults only .
Brown ' s Trailer Park . 614 -

992 ·3324 .

HOME on Ohio St ., re11on• ·
bly, priced, ava ilable on May
1 . Cell after 5 :00 p:m .

304 -675 -5711 .
42 Mobile Homes
for R.e nt
2 bedroo m s, air cond ., fur n ished and unfurnished .
beautiful Riverview in Ka nauga . Foster' s Mobile
Homes. Call -146 - ,602.

-HOME FOR SALE - REDUCED IN PRICE
Was 150.000
NOW 144.900
II you want a home to be proud ot. ih1 s IS 11. Sol1d bnck Wllh
shutters. 2 large po1ches. old wolid charm . dutch doors. 3
bed rooms. 217 baths, 11v1 nRroom , dmmg room. stu dy, plenty
ot closets. ce nt ra l hee~ l and a1r condr tron. ga rage. The Cltne
Hou se on a larg e co rn e1lol m Mrddleport. Owne 1w1ll hel p 11nance . Call l o1 appom tment.

R.C.S. Real Estate Co.

35 Lot s &amp; A c reage

8
5 -20 A cres wo ods, overloo king Ohio Riv er , ci ty
school s. 446 -35 54 o r 1 -

5 1 3 - 4 23 - 8 92 8 .
Own er / Agent

171 'x 80 ' K162 ' 1i 82 ' lot
CitV. w ater &amp; w ell wot m . 2
o utbuilding s. fen Cftd in ba ck
yard , septic tank , in Gallipoli s Fa rry . N ea r sc h oo l ,

S12. 500 .00
5355 .
36

304 -6 7 5 -

Reel Estate
Wanted

HI;~DERSON ,

54 M:::i~
sc-.-:M:::e-r-c-:-h-and-;-;;

AUTHORIZED
. fACTORY SERVICE
GtNERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

*

W . VA .

EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
7:00P.M.

2- 5 speed ·! rill press. lois t oois. u&gt;ed push ·tawn mower·.'
se veral small household app liance s. Olympic paint &amp;
stain . -¥4, 1/, , 1/,, •;, soc ket sets. bench grinder , 'h in ch air
tmpa ct wren ch. pa 1nt bru she s, other items too numerous

to mention .
Auctioneer -

Lonnie

E. Neal

614-367 -7101

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY. APRIL 30. 1983- 10:00 A.M.
l ocated at Jackson Production Credit lot. Upper Route 7
1n front of the Airpo rt.
Ford 200 D•esel l uu.:t01 w1lil 1-ionl End t oader . For(\ 530
S que~t• BaiPr. l oHI 3 pi S1cklp Ba~ Muwet. Fo"l 503 3 pt
Hav Hake. t 01cl 207 t I It l• ansport D•sc. New Holland Fltu!
lypr MariU if' S pr ~'t1dt'r . Bush Ho~ 3 111 , il II cut. 3' p1.
2- 14 .. Plow &gt;. 3 pt 3 Row Cu liiValors. AI C !111 4 Ro w Plan let
F~:unc , Ol •ve1 83 NH 2 Row Cor n P1de1
JACKSON PAODUCTION CAEDIT ASSOCIA110N
Term s: Cash - Check w/ Posilive ID
Not Responsible for Accidents
Lee Johnson - Auctioneer

Buying houses and apaJt ments. Need prop erti es with
favorable price and ' t orms .
Box 1109 Gall ipoli s, Oh .

45631 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION

*

1.4 acre l ot in Bradbury
Go od loc atio n , trail er hoo k up. All utiliti es . septic tank .

Ca 11614-99 2-260 2.

PUBLIC AUCTION
10:00 A .M. SAT . . MORN ., APRIL 30 1983
AI North Gallia High School located on St . Rt. 1~0 on letthand side .
1974 Torino Ford car, 35 1 motor ; old pickup hay rake.
drag type d1 sk. CB radro and antenna . bottle jas 6eatina
st_ove , sw ivet rocker . _AC engine analizer. 19.. B&amp;W TV:
wrngback padded cha ir. many . many more items to be
picked up lor the sal e. Thi s is a dona l ed sale sponsored by
the North Ga lila Athl etiC Club to 13ise money. This is the
thtrd year and best sale . Come support your school and
entOJ the auctron. l ot s ol good used merchandise : ll rarn lng 11 wt ll be rn s1de. Dinner servied .
Not re spon sible for acc iden) s.
Au ctiOn eer- lonn ie E. Neal - 614 -367 -7101

WE ALSO WORK ON
ALL OTHER APPLIANCES

TOOL AUCTION

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614-992-2181

~

SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1983
7:00P.M.

....~··· ··

Loc~ted at the Junior Hrgh School in Racine, Ohio

.. TOOLS ..
Wrell(:hes. o.; Cf(!Wd iiV er s com a long, P•Pt! wr enches, v1 ces,
grmdrr s. sod .et "&gt;ets ol all s12es. !arp str aps, troubl e hghts.
mctr1c wrf'nciH"i, ilnrl loi s rnorP
"' MI Sc .··
Clock s. lamp&gt;. banks. w.sh bowl &amp; p1!c her. ash I ray s. liower
pot s. lllld ba th . dtshcs &amp; lots more pl us l augh - a - hca~ s

ALUMINUM ROOFING
All LENGTHS IN STOCK-

S FT ............................................ ' 9 .95
10FT .... . .... ...............................
12 FT . ......... .. .,..... ..... .. ..............
14FT .... . ... . ................ .... . .. ........
16FT.... . . , ............... .......... . .....
18 FT .......................................
20 FT .......................................
AOOITIONAL5 % DI SC OUNT IN APRIL

1 12 .20
' 14.45
1 16 .70
1 18 .90
'20 .90
' 22 .95

Sponsored By Racine P.T.O.
Eats

C ASH &amp; CARRY

Cash

OAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER
949-2033 OR 992-7301
" Not responsibl~ for accidents or loss of property ...

POMEROY LANDMARK
614 -992 -2t81 &gt;

An e!tablishtd uowin&amp; publsher
of educational m1tefills hu edi-

PUBLIC AUCTION

torial trainee positions available
in elementary and SKondary
mathematics. Requires subject

SATURDAY APRIL 30, 1983
1:00 P.M.

knowlei:lj and teaching skills in
school mathemat~s . Recent

classroom tu::hil'll expefience
essential.

Stmn&amp; career I/OWfh opportunity

in publishirl for c.~cidltts who

lo cated 5 miles north of Point Pleasant on US 62 .
the auction will be conducted al the Saddle Broojt
Inn's parking lot. The following will be offered :

poS$0$$ t!IC!Iiant matl-.matk.
&amp;ramniar ond ilncull• arts ski lb.
Posittons involwl resurchi~
copy editirw ond proohlldin&amp;
laxts and SllliPilment• mato-

Severa l telev,srans. high c h a~rs. plath servm g tra ys, hOI
plate. se veral cha11s. silverware. dn 11k 1ng glasses. plate
warmer, lloor l1ie. car pet shampooer. 2 pa per towel dispen ser s (new). coat ra ck, brotler-oven co mb10at1on. deep lreeze.
2 large grills wit h ovens. re stau ra nt type elec tric stove
Scotsman icemaker., 2 starni ess steer smks. sl31nless steei
coun te r cab tnet. bar stool s, vacuum clea ner ,.drink drsp ense r
with cold ta ble. salad bar. small bar. si nk with counter. and
other miscell aneous ilel]ls of re staurant natu re .
TERMS: Cash or cheek with positive ID

rials.

Tha!f pos~ions "' '" IIIII~ at
our Alum Creel Dri'lll ottice but
will be rtlocatld in wly nmmer
to our now buiidin&amp; in Wllflr·
villt.
'
b:eltent btnelrts propn includirw rlontat p~n and turtion
11sistance. Apf)iy in person Monday- Friday. 9m.·3 p.m. or utld
rasunW to:

~-,\

Personnel Department

• J

CHARLES E: IIERRILL"·

PUBliSHING

Sale by onter·of: Saddle Brook Inn

~~7
.,_...

'ft-:1

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER

dH

)

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

• , \;.;-;
1

. ~I

..

.

U..J

Not Responsible for Accidents or loss of Property

\

\

'

~.

May 111. Contact Rev.
James W. Mon-iaon. phone

Bill Childs - Branch Mgr.
Phone : 991 -6311
Evenings : 992 · 244 9

An (qual Oppottll•tt, ~mplojtr

I

quired. 614 ·992-3090 .

Real Estate General

Rd . Cell 614-246 -9229.

1- - - - - - - - - -

2 bedroom, •II new paint,
some carpeting . Deposit re-

446 -0968 .

33 Farms for Sale

A Btl! ( Howoil Co.
P.O. Bo• 501
1300 Alum CrHk Or.
Columbus. OH 4nl6

I

basement, carpeted , gas fur nance. adults. no pe11 . C@.ll

Houses for Rent

30 4-675 -5685 .

1 acre l ot 6 i-ni. from Holle r
hospital . Just off R1 . 160
out Floyd -Clark. Rd . 7PO ft .
: ·1_ 4~e7 ~ Bayview. t.otal
_Call446 -0 390 .
fl £, ·3 bdr :, .$7-.4'.0 0 . ··~··--·'- • -~--,...:.--'---­
liberty g'ood crihl:i . ."
2 t o 5 acres. flai. $2 .7 60 per
Ca11446 -0175 .
ac n~ .
ex
neighborhoo d .
Gr et~ n Elem entary , midway
1978 S c hultz 14 x70 2
between Spring Vall ey Plezu
bdrm ., 2 baths . central air .
&amp; 0 .0 . M c intyre Park . No
good co nd., on rental lot,
trttiler e. will con sider tinanc ·
near Goodyear Plant . assu ing . Also beAutiful 6 acre
mable lo an . Frenc h Cily
hillt op buil ding site not
8rok ering Ser ving . 446 restri ct ed. $ 12 .000 or best
9340 .
otter. Cn ll 614 -3 79 -2 196

THINKING OF
LEAVING TEACHING?
MATHEMATICS

2 bdr . house in city, full

675 -3431.

54 Misc . Merchandise

24. 7:30 P.M. Gu111 speaker

I

_TREATED YELLOW PINE

·

Sadly missed by Wife lola

&amp; Son. larry &amp; Familly.

and Grandchildren

In Point Pleasant

. For All Your
Outdoor Projects

used.

In Memoriam

IN LOVING MEMORY of My
Husband, Robert N. Clark
who passed away 3 years
ago, April 24 1980.

thin~ to

Come To
Carolina Lumber

POMEROY - Lois Pauley of Craft Ladles Handicraft of
Pomeroy wUI otfer a class In tole ana decorative painting Saturday
at the food booth on the GaUia County Junior Fairgrounds.
The class wUI be conducted from 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . Those enrotltng
must complete two paint tngs during the day' one an arrangement or• .
oriental poppies, and t he second, a furry animal.
f«ogtstratlon for -the cla•s Is to be made with Mrs. Pauley at
992-2298 or 446-2134 before Thurso;lay. The cost Is $10 plus supplies.
Mrs .. Pauley said those laking t)W class (!o not have to be able to
draw, as lhe sketch will already be outlined on tbematerlal
A
step-by-step Instruction procedure Is used by M.S. Pauley, who
received her training In tole and decorative painting tmm Sue
Scheewe, a national teacher for Grumbacher Paint Co.

IJteal lctate
31 Homes for Sale

304-675-1696.

Offer explrot May 31, 1983

'

Situations
Wanted

baths , completely fur ·
nlshed . ocean front , daily
Tim. After 6 p.m call 882- ri-laid service. 24 hr. securitv
3692.
.guard, has 2 pools &amp; tennia
courts. The Myrtle Be~h
Unfumishad-36.11.8 . Suitable Ae1ort, Myrtle Beac h, SC .
tor 1 or 2 peo ple. $1896 .

1 0 year olds, good condi tion, 4 bedrooms. living,
eat-in kitchen, full dry basement. N rei water on 49
acres, pretty and private.

farmhouse , smokehouse
with cellar . Call 304 -776 -

Houses tor Rent

8 a.m . to 6 p .m . and ask for

614-985 -4464 .

brick &amp; alumilllfm ranctw
house , separate dining
room , family room with
fireplace . 2 baths, l&amp;rge
deck . Alao includes old

41

1 97~ 1 4x66 mobile home.
3 bedrooms. g11 heat. very Condominium 2 bdr.. 2
clean. 614 -992-2166 from

814-367-0811 .

4 bedroom , all electric.
basement. garage. alum.
siding , new thermo-u ah
windows. 302 7th St. New

$40 Thounod . 992 -6177 .

TWO male &amp; 1 female. part
Collif!l &amp; German Shepherd

The t3r-eat·

hlltha. 8 , room, 2 baths. 2
mobile home lots, 21A acres.
6 renu:la. Ma1on 3 bedroom
ganga. 2 bedroom rental 2
ecr'ea . 3 'h miles South Middleport, Rt, . 7 , JohA Sheets.

614-992 -7082.

304-676-2991 .
MIDDLEPORT - Sam Crali\ford, area extension agent from
Jackson, was In charge of the
program at Friday night's
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
meeting at Heath United Methodist
Church.
.crawford, who supervises an
llkounty area, spoke on communIty resource development.
Crawford gave a slide presenta·
Uon On· retention and expansion of
existing firms In the county.
Crawford said retention and
expansion should be given to
existing firms since !hey employe a
larger number of persons.
Guests Included Karl Kraurter;
Brian Nitz, state Golden Gloves
champion; and Roger Stewar1,
Meigs County Boxing Club
Instructor.
Introduced as a newmemberwas
James Diehl . Dr: R.R. Pickens,
president presided. Dinner was
served by the ladles of the church.

good ohopo. 20' LR .. 1 child
lccepted, no pets. drunkl or
dope. Solo. 11 room brick, 3

that you do businus with
·people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi gated the offering .

Golden Retriever, 4 months

old. Call 614-388-8655 .

Mobile home, aele or rent. In

m Racine. Typewriter, wrin ger wa1her, ga1 range. guitar, tools. collectibtes. much
more.

8

sl•p

•

676-1966 or 875· 5208.

41

for Sale·

Huge yard sale -Frider
29th end Sat. 30th . Blon -

YARD sala. 2218 Jefferson.
Pt. Pleasant, April 22. 23,
24. Adults &amp; children clo thing, 12 pair name brand
i~ans, 35 dolls. low prices.
too much to list all .

God sus when the footsteps II IIer
When the p1thw1~ has grown too

,.

preachool to kindergar~n .
low rates. pleue call 304-

TO give away· free' to goOd
home with acreilge, pu·rebred Alaskan _Malim·ute .
•paved female , ·S:hotS . .gOOd
naturf!ld, at apprO~~:-. ·1 00 lba.

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Board of Education will meet at 7
p.m . Monday In special session to
discuss persormel.

workshop.

WILL bll by• it in my home,

The

32 Mobile Homes

Haven, WV . 304 -88 2INOTICEI
2937
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8'. 1- - -· - - -- - . , - LISHING ..CO. recommends TWO plus acres. 3 bedroom

YARD sale, Five family .
Friday &amp; Saturdar . April. 22
&amp;23 . 2 Burdette Addition in
ba ck .

anything to give away and
doe• not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may place an ad in this
colUmn. There will be no'
charge to the advertiser.

qua rters.

AI year end, the company was
operating 42l stor es , of which 111
were Murphy 's M arts, compa red
with 43!\ stores. including lffi
Murphy 's M ari lns a year earlier.
Murphy's M arts generated 65
percent of tota l sales volume In
fiscal 1982. compared with 61
percent In fiscal 1981.
Murphy's president and chief
e~ecutl ve officer, Charles H. Lytle,
said he w as pleased with these
r esults, particularl y in view of

only. Cell

446· 2300.

April~I:~~~~~~~~~~~·
da~o movod to Tyree Blvd. , 11 Help Wanted

B_lngo trip from Pomerov.

Public Notice

area

Eeay atcess. woods pn,ferrabley, Mid priced S 20 to

$JOO

~ o ol 5- _ .,

•• , .. l ....

Gallipolis

Mid~leport - Cheahire area.

f-- - - - - - - - - - - - --1
Up ooll_.,

4411 · 2~14 .

Gorden• plowed 1o tHiod,

Gold, lilver. .terling, ;..
w,lry, rings, old coins It
curreney. Ed Burkett Barber

3 . Announcements

IU~C ...• lO-t

ll!o

3275 or

M.O. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Oh . Or 992-7780 .

- 1;· .-

li"J a-two

__
•

l'J ........ . ...

Remodeling. new conetruction of any type. Call 875 -

1 row com

~_:!~~ BEOS.-IAON, 8AASS, old
~
furniturw, gold. litver clotlara. wood ice box••· atone
jere, antiquea, etC., Complete . household&amp;. Write:
.

(J auij i.•ol l'"lt''" o·un·,. lho·

l-

...,
.,11-iteoo••'"""
.._,_.._,_.._
.,.
,..... ,......

11-tt

.......

17-A-11.....
11 C - t E....,._.,.

11-Ju.oio • v....,._..,

,,_..,,,.._.., .,.
,,_
1,.........
)--·-·r._,.

··-

11.-

a

picker. Cell 448-7732_.

.'

~

:~::=~-

1

.,.•.-... ...
,..
.,..
... . _.......
........._._

___ ..
a-..

Com pl•nter

31 Homes for Sale

Va.

�•

Page

42 Mobile Homes

44

for Rent
-

1 bdr. turn . apt., 6 mo . leate
required plus 8 50 dep.,
t176 per mo ., no children,

no petJ .•Call446-3667 after
6.

Apartment
for Rent

29 % Neil Ave ., Gallipolis .

Call446 -4416 alte&lt; 7PM .

2 bdr. unfurnished 12x60

1 bdr . tur n . 6 mos . lease,

860 dep., utilities paid, no

446 ·4229.

children , no pets, 81 7 6mo .

Call 446 -3667 altar 6.

2 bdr. unfurnished 12x60
mobile home in Cheshire.

Call 446-4229.

area , nice lawn , 8226 per

Call 614 -3 67-0690.

mo . unfurni shed. Call 446 -

1167 days. 614 -367-721a
after 6PM .

NOW LEASING : Now du-

Camper Trail er lots : for
summer. secluded wooded
area . OverlooMing Ohio
river . V ic Brown, Minersville, Oh . Call 614 -992 -

3324.

- - - - - - -lc -

2 bedroom• in Ra cine. 614 367-0288 .

•

2 bedroom furnished mobile
home . Adults only. Paid
utilitiea. de_posit and refflre;n ·
cas required . No pets . 614 -

992-3647 .

2 bedroom house trailer.
Ashland - Upiand Road .
8'150. month plu s utilities .

304-675 -4088.
SMALL 2 bedroom fur nished trailer . Burdette addi ·
tion . $125 .00 per month
plus utilities. deposit re quired. call Rosalie at 304 -

676 -4600 , 9 a.m. to 4 p.m..
Monday through Friday .
TWO b e droom mobile
home, 304 -676-4046 .

pleM apts . 2 bedroom, 1 fl oor
plan. air cond .. attached
garage , refrig ., range &amp;
dishwasher . all deluxe, 2 v,

1- -- - - - - - - -

Furnished Apt .. a rooms .
8176 , Utilities pd . Adult s,
701 4th Ave., Gallipolis,
share bath . 446 -4416 aft er
7 p .m .

Apt . for ren1. Half double -2
bd .room Apt . AduiUI pre ferred . No pets . 614 -99 2 -

2749 .
1 bed room Apt . S19 fi . mo .
including utiliti es . Equal
housing oppo rtunity . Con tact Village Manor Apts .

614-992 ·7787.
3 and 4 roo m furn ished apt s.

614 -992 -5434 or 614 992 -5914 or 304 -882 2566 .
Apar t ment s . 304 - 675 -

8221 .

676-7786 .
Firit floor furinsh&amp;d apt .
utilities paid , depos•t &amp; lease
required . Ad,qlts, no peU .
Call e.1 631 · Fourth .Av.fl .,
Ga'llipolis.
·
Furnished apt . S226 , utili ·
ties pd .. 1 bdr .. adults. Call
446 -4416 after 7PM .
Smell furnished house in
city. adulta only . Call 446 -

UNFU RNISHEO apartment
for rent , 2 bedroom ,
8210 .00 Call Automotive

Supply, 8-6 . 304 -676 2218, 676 -6763.
ONE beQroom Bpartmenh
for the elderly . All utililies
paid. Tenants pay 30 percent of their adju sted income in this HUO,subsicf!:,:e,d
11partn'ldnt building .' -Twin
"ivei-i TOwer, phOne 3"04 676 .6679 . Equal opportun ity housing.
FURNISHED one bedroom
apartment in Pt Plea sant .
E•tra nice, adults only, no

0336 .

pets, phone 304 -675 -1386.

Furn . upsta"irs . 3 rooms &amp;
bath, washer-dryer, clean ,
no pets. ref . req . Call 446 -

46 Furn.ished Rooms

1619.
Furnished 3 rm . apartment
with privete bath st 846
Second Ave ., Gallipolis .
Rat. prefared . Call 446 -

For rent Sleeping Room s
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

Call 446 -0756.
Furnished apt . adults. N o

2216.

Pets. 304-675 -1463.

1 bedroom apartment for

Furnished apt . ad.ult s. No

rent . Coli 446 -0390.

992 -7479 .

that

- - - ·-- - - -

OFFICE 1pace available. Will
remodel for right tennlint .
Saddlabrook Inn, Pt . Plea·

Pets. 304-876 -1463.

4-11-IJ

NOH T il

. K
wt:.. ; r

...

47 Wanted to R;ent
'

t:AST

tJ UU~ J

Wanted to rant 2 room •pt .
u nfurnished or trailer in
Middleport . Will P8Y re sona·
bl e rent 1 lady only . 6 14·

... .

. QIOUU
• (111 12

\'1 0 4

+ 1o f!:1

...

SO liT H

• !1 1 z
\' K .J O
4 A .J !I ti 2

742-2363.

Vu lnerable· Ncitljer ,

·

Dc &amp;~l c r

Wt•1il

51 Household Goods

Pa~&gt;.~

!'ass
l'uss

So ulh

,.

.

Notlh

tiNT

Soulh

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
So fa . chair, rocker, otto man, 3 table s, (ex tra heavy
by Frontier). 9685 . Sofa.
c hair and lovesflllt . S275 .
Sofa s and chairs pri oed from
6 285 . t o 9895 . Tables, &amp;45
and up to $125. Hide·a·
beds , $440 . and up to
952'5 .. Recliners, $176 . to
S350 .. Lampl from $28 . to
975 . 5 p c . dinette s from

his

.showed 15-17 points rather

carded tho eight of spades.

South took dummy's king
, and queen of clubs. He

Pass

Pass

still make the
hand if West held the spade
ace. He decided that West

heart queen was not
going to drop, but he saw
that he could

did

hold that card, since with

the spade ace East would

By Oswald Jac oby
aud James Jacoby
Th e

Bnl 1sh

lnlcrn.ati ona l

magazi ne

Popul.n

Ced•r wardrobe. antlciue
trunk. 3 tier glau table •
concrete picnic table with

Antique OJ~ Reproducti on
furniture, full line in stoek .
lito Antiques. Paul Conkel•
Amiquea. Tuppers Pla ins.

Boarding all breeda. AKC
Reg . Doberman• pups afd
Doberman Stud Service.
Call446-7796 .

25"' colorTVA-1. $126 .40

POODLE GROOMING. Call

..

bencheo . Call 614-258 1768.
New 6 UNd Troy Built
Tillera . Swishers lmple ·
ment, St . Rt. 7 , North of

almost surely have over~
called. So he led a heart lo
dummy 's ace and ran h1s
cl ubs to come dQwn to a
foUr-card ending.
West had to come down to
lhe singleton ace of spades
lo hold three diamonds. Thr
rour of diamonds was. led.
West pl ayed the nine and
dummy the· queen. The king
of spades threw West in and
he had to give dummy the
1
last two tricks.
1

Rridgc fea tures a regular
series or humorous articles
by IJavid Bi rd who concoc ts
som e ex tra ordinary hands
for th em.
The bidding on lhe hand
(NJoO:WSJ•APER ENTERPRISE A.S$N_)
can .bc.explained..bv. the fact ..

HILLCREST KENNEL -

1

614-949-2994 '

Watt~~r well drilling rig . Call ·

814-388-8643.

Fiah Hook Lake Now Open
Daily 8 . a.m . to 9 p.m .
Fishing, camping . arcade
room , snacks. Under new
management. 12 miles from
Pt. Pleasant on At. 87.

1 yr. old male Seal Point

HANDMADE &amp; decorated

Himalayan toves children.
makes·-ni ce house cat , Call

304-675-3886 .

Small r!dlng lawn mower. 1
yr. old. mint cond ., $400 .

AKC registered Dachshund
pups. male &amp; female . " red " .
large square bales hay.

Call 614-256· 1379.

304·896-3968 . •

Metal building. Call 446-

3281 .

BROWNING E•plorer II
compound bow. with acces·
soriaa &amp; Y3 dozen custom
arrows, 8140 . 304 -675-

9 ' model A South Bend
bencli lathe, 1 1 6 volt or -3
face motor $1.600 . Call

4668.

614-245 -6671 .

BRAND n'ew Sanvo kero-

Baby bed. mattrHs, ahee11

sene heatar. 12.000 aTu.
S100. Bearcat, 8 crystal,
like new, 9100 . 7 lite
jackets, skis &amp; anchor.
· j.....~-100 . Boat cover . $16.00 .
I Air -c:onditioner . 18 , 000
BTU, like new. 8260 . Small
car trailer tilts, S500 . 304 676 -7773.
- -- - - - - - - WEDDING gown . size 6 ,
with headpiec e end veil, will
sell reasonable , 304 -773 -

Spring Special Lawn Mowers &amp; Ro1otiller tune up, oil
change, new spark plug.
~---------..,.-----------ledjust
or replace brel!lker
999 .. to $435 . 7pc ., $189.
points, service air eleanor,
and up. Wood tab lo with six
sharpen mower blade , saf ·
chaors $425 . to S745. Desk
51 Household Goods 54 Mise , Merchandise tey check, 913.96 plus 18.1t .
Free pickup and deliver in
$110 up to S2 2 5. Hutch es,
6550 . and up , m aple or pine
SWAIN
Gallipolis-Eureka area. Nel finish . Bunk bed comple(e
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 1
.coffee
table son &amp; Sons Service Center,
with mattresses. $250 . and
62 Olive St ., Galt1ipolis. 6 47V1 1t18 V3X16h in . and 1 Eurek&amp;. Oh 614-266 -1643 .
up to &amp;395 . Baby bods,
piece wood living room suite end table 26x 18%Jt20 %
&amp;110. Mettreue1 or box
with 6 inch flat arms 8399 . with light walnut finish $30, Bear Compound bow fully
sprin gs. full o r twin, 958 ., bUnk b•ds compltt1e with 32x53· 174 pieces brown aquiped. $250 . Call 614 ·
firm , $68 . and $78 . Queen
bunkies t199 , 2 piece an · underpinning for a mobile 388 -9611 efta• 4.
se ts, S195 . 4 dr. c hests, lronlivingroomsuitos$199, home used jutt 1 year came
antron recliners $99, ·other off a 1 4x70 mobile home,
842 . 5 dr. chests. $54. Bad
Bleached oak dining table, 4
frames , S20 .an d S25 ., 10 recliners $80 , maple dinette long pieces measure 32",
leg• . 53x46. 3 - 16' leaves. 6
gun - Gun ca binets , 8360 ., s~ts $179, love seats S70, short pieces 21 " and 10 chairs . 6150. Call 446 ·
dinette chairs S20. and 9 25 . htde ~ a ·. bed 8250 , bPK inches across. entertock in a
1227.
G as Or Qlectri c ra ngos. $ 32 5 spri ngs &amp; mattreu twin or metal frame . Wood grain
up to $375 . Baby ma ·
fuli 8100 · sat .regular-firm finish . ·Call after 5PM . 446 ·" Nice· b8d.r 0om suite, ch8st of
tresses. $ 25 &amp; 9 35 . b.e d. 9120, maple dinene chairs 306.5.
drawers . like new box
.
h tuyul s &amp;2.P , 92: 5. S. $30, . 936,. ·.wash •tends 63-' .·
springs (1. m ,attre~s and
!dng f{am~ S60. Good sel ec · map,le rOckers .$69. 7 piece Firewood .split .
Cut 1o other h0us8holct items, c vu·
tion - of b8droom suites. · chrome dinette set 8149, 5 ' lenght. Pick Oi delivered. We ·44.6 -3224 . .
ce dar chest s. rockers . m etal piece dinette set 889, used honor HEAP Vouc hers. Call
c abin et9 , swivel rockers .
bedro om s1.,1ites, rofltgera - 614-266-6246 .
4 · 16x35 Gumbo motors 8t
Used Furniture .. book case, t o ri , ranges . chest.
wheels . Cell 614 -388 ·
ranges , chairs, end tables. dressers. wringer 'NIIhers,
8159.
6 prom drassea lizel7· 13.
w ashers , dryers. refri ge ra · TV's, dryerea, &amp; shoes. Call
like new . Worn only once .
tors and TV ' s 3 milu out 446- 3159 .
. Call 446-9769 o• 446 - Amana 28 ' cu.ft . freezer
Bulaville Rd . Op en 9 a m to l- - - - - - - - -15200, 5 hoi'se power riding
3694
6pm , Mon . thru Fri., 9a m to White Whirlpool alec . range ,
lawn mower 5160 .. good
5pm, Set .
used only taw months.
For sale metal culvert 8 inch · cond . Call '\46-8608.
446-0322
brand naw. Call 614 -266 - thru 60 inch in stock . State
For sale good cond . girls
1711 after 6PM .
approved 16 gauge 12 inch
COUNTY APPLIANC ES,
white queen size bed. met86 .35 per ft ., 24 inch
INC . Good usod applianc es. USED FURNITURE Sofa, $10.10 per ft. 36 inch
tress. boM sp,ingS, dresser
washer . dryer&amp; , refrig ., TV love se11t. 16 cu .ft . refrigera - 816 .60 per ft . Also plastic
with mirrow .·First $76 . Call
sots . 6 27 V1 3 rd . Av e .. G alli · tor. Corbin &amp; Snyder Furni · culvert in stock . 6 inch thru
446-4831 altar 5.
polis. Call 446 -1699.
ture. Ce11446 - 1171 .
18 inch , 8 inch 91 .80perft.,
lazarus 17 cu .ft . host free
12 inch 153.60 per tt. Ron
Color floor m od ol TV $150 . 5 mo . old recliner black
refrig .. almond color. used 6
Evans Enterprises. 4 mi.
in good condition . Inqui re at \linyl. Sears weight bench South of Jackson on ST . AT.
months, with new ice
421 Cypres s Ct ., Pt . Pl ea· 110 lb . of weigh.~s . sao 93 , 614 -286 -6930.
maker, $460 . Call 446 sant , WV .
.·
749'7 .
ea c h . Call 614 -25·6 · 6215 .

------ - - - -- 1-- - - - - -- ---

·s._

SURPLUS climouflage army
clothing, packs, boots, li-en tal surplus clothing 65 .
· dozen). 14 oz . denim pants
S10
SAm Somerville 's ,
New Era , East Ravenswood ,
Junc.tion ·· lndependanc·e
· Roid'- Aot~te ~.1 . Open 9.rl1v
"frida Y, Saturday. Sunday.

1:00 -7:30 p.m. 304 -675 3334 .

WEDDING gown &amp; veil , of
chantillv lace. never worn ,
sire 8 . Gave 8360 ., will sell

for $260 . 304 -675·3628 .

0 . Call614-246 -5121 .

motor. . g · row

r;:htckseveilablewithdaposit

Dodge. Cott AT vinyl

alter May 26th _ 614·986·
.
4345.
·

newly painted. oxcel· gaa mU&amp;oge. Excellent

Registered polled hereford eonditio, . CaU 814 -388·
9 80 9
bull Vi ndicator &amp;.
heifers . __ _ _ _ · - ' - - - - - - -

e

614"985 -4107·

1

1982 EXP . Excellent cond.

Herd Reduction Reg ., Take over PIIYmentl. 446·
4580.
Rec .. G,., TDGGENBURG 1----~-..;.,
_ _ _
Dairy Goet1, milkers, bucks.
wethers · reaaonabty pric.d .
reduced for 4 - H 'ers, FFA,

ate . 304 -a86-3328 _ Aloo

For Sale or Trade : 1977
Camero, 305 engine. auto.,

~!ii ;;; 2'!;;~·.

3

4 •000

601 Ford mowing machine.
diac. 1 &amp;xe utllltv 1failer. 8

676-2443 &amp;Iter 5:00.

379-2726.

64

'79 Chevy Suburban. exc.
cond., V-8, auto . trans., • i r

'-;;::::;;::::::;;:::;:::::;:==

HP Massey Fer(Juson riding 1~
lawn ,nower !needs work} .

446-9416.

Hay &amp; Grain

1979 Dulle• and 1965 1- - - - -- - - - Chevv )needs work). Call
446-7604 .
Good mixed hay. First &amp;

1-4 yBar old gelding cheat·
nut with dark mane and tall .
1-ilppy Filty, very gentle. 4
yeara old . 614 -985-3891 .

sec: ond cutting. $1 .60 per

bale . 614-992 -6036.

1973 Mauey - Fergu son

j=~~~~i=i~;;~~~

150.3 cyl.
gos, .$3,600.
Cal l
614-386
-9370
.

Registered Belgin stud ser·
vice. GradQ mares $60.
Registered Belgin Mares

66 Seed &amp;

Mec:hanic:al tobacco trans· 1 ---~-----­
planter. Planted "'h acre gave
$800 will sell for $500 . WANT to lease tobacco
Also. Belaaw planer 12 " quota. Mason . Putnam, Ca brand new still in c:arton . bell . Call Morgan Woodlawn
Tung-groove attachments, Farm , Pliny . 304 -675 -

$100. 614-949 -2455.

HORSES &amp; ponys , 304676-6110 .

$750. Firm on all. See at 2276. 304-523 -5a43.

AKC registered Poodle puppies, phone 614 -882· 3447 .

sawmill north of Racine ,

4769mill none Carmel Rd ..

l-- - -- -- - - -

1977 C&amp;maro AC. AM -FM
Speck. &amp;uto .. 82 ,300. Call ·
614-388 -9611 after4.
76 V · 8 Vega , 360 engine,
Holley, Elderbrock. Accel.
black -blac:k interior. ex c .
cond. Will trade . Call 676·

3614

AC no till corn planter, 4
row. Air -plateless. monitor
insecticide. big discs. excel ·
lent condition. 614-985 ·

1968 VW, rebuilt engine.
new paint , runs good . $876 .

614-985-4454.

61

Real Estate General
9.9o/o INTEREST - and low,
lowmonthly payments C~ BE
YOURS by investing in this
comlortable 3 bedroom, 2
s1ory home. localed on pa ved
rQads. conveninl to the mines.
·shopping and ~h ools. Affordab~ pr~e. interest rate and
terms. DO NO TMISS THIS

N.H - 845 Round baler. 850

'~
II

lbs. bales. limited use .
Baled approx . 400 bales .

Farm Equipment

NEW &amp; · Used Hervestore
Structures. Automated li vestock feeding -computer
feeders. Call coll.e ct 614 -

$6,000. 614-949-2631 .

Bush hog in good shape
$325 &amp; older model Internati onal tractor (needs work)

686 -2260. John L. Betts.

s 1.200. Call 446 -0a65

FOUR 16" plows, 304-676 2443 aft•• 5:00 .

days &amp; 446-4257 evan .

NEW. EQUIPMENT 2· pt.
tillers 40 ' to 88 ·, 3 pt.
seed ers. King Kutter rotary
mowers 4 ', 5' ,6' ~- 7' lift 8t
pul). 3 pt ,~·~i·sc . ~w~~ · &amp;:
potato~ plows , boom Poles.
rear'bla"des 6 ' &amp; 1 ·. plowa1
&amp; 2 bottom . cultivators 1 &amp;
2 row, post hole diggers,
woven wire· 20 rod rolls

63

ay,,

Livestock

..

•.

-

11th Annual · Bentley Pig

Sale. Apdl 27th, 7:30 PM .
Fayett Co. Fairgrounds, Washington C . H .. Ohio . Selling
150 head of Duroc s &amp;
Hamp-Durocs cross breeds
and Regi&amp;tered Duroc'guilts ,

S75. USED EQUIPMENT
plows -1 . 2.3.4. &amp; 5 bottom .
hay rake. manure spreaders.
hay bindes. wheel disc 8 &amp;
10, rotary mowers. TRAC ·

Roger s,nlley, 3112 Reeds
Rd .. Sabmo. Oh 46619. Call
613-684 -2398.
For sale Young ,pure bred

Charloiao bull. Call 614 266- 8665 after 8 o'clock .
7 yr. old gray Reg . Quarter
horse stallion . Also 2 yr . old
gelding sir~d by Super Chix.

backhoe. Case 680C backhoe, Case 11508 do.zer.
Many other items . Jim' s
Farm Equipment, Rt . 36
West, Gallipolis . . Oh Call

Call 446 -3413.

S. Hobstetlet. Jr.
B"k"
Offico: 992-S739
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- Two story, bnck. 3 bedroom
home. leatures a large living
room w1th lireplace. spoc~us
dming room and equipped
k~c he n.
Lovely woodwork
th roughou t Private pat~ . cenlra l heat and air. Garage with
storage bldi&gt;. Excelenl corner
lol with in wal kmg d ~ta nce lo
town. Call lor appl. .
Geo~te

.ONE'
PRICE REDUCED - This
contemporary 4 bedrOQm bitevel IS beggng to be purcha sed. Save thousands and
thousands of doda m now&lt; Oak
cabinetry, vau~ed ceiling&gt;
finished lamily room and
attached garage:- Owner ·is
seeking offers. Invest now and
. sa ve.!

•

NEW.LISTING - EXCELLENT
BUY - IN TOWN - NICe
remodeled two story, 7 room. 3
bRdroom home. Basement. 2
car carport and mce fronl
porch lor view ol river. Only
$22.000.

CAU

RCS REALTORS

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171

ITUFACE
() I I ()

Prlnfanswerhere: "(

(........... Mond.y)

.
Jumbloo: MUST\' BRAWL EIG~TV GI GGLE
5
Yesterday 1 Answer: What they c"alled those c lgare~,te
.
•muoglera - "BUTT-LEGGERS

trailer.
NEW LISTING - 2 bedroom
mol&gt;le home. Oimng, lront
porch. ca rport and 2 &lt;lis on Rt
124 m Syracuse lor $23, 500.

BMR 398 - PRI CE CREAn¥ REDUCED' Owner transferred and
must sell !his 3 BR ranch. Close to town iocludes deluxe 1Bx36
inground pool. Redueed to $44,500 - PLU S Owners will pay
f.HA -VA - poinls and c~sin ~ costs. .

POMEROY
#I Very nice modem. eve')'t hlng vou'd want home.
#2 Two older homes lor
$10.500.00 each.
#3 Clder home and 2 lois lor
$8.500.

BMR 429 - All electric tx-level rn Kyger Creek School 01slrict
srtuated on 1.21 acreswith assumable 91\'11 loan Call lor complete

MIDDLEPORT

CENTRAL REALTV

#I Sw1111 pool 8 roo m home
w1th 2 lots.
#2 River lronL 8 room mce
older home.

MOBILE HOME - with large add-on buld1ng, a sp ha~ dri veway.
Located on qu~t street out of high water in Racin e. The i1V1ngroom
isextra large. There is a cement walk andlarge covered porch. also
a·~eta I storage building. You can be in lh ~ one rn two weeks tor
o~y $16,900.

.... ,. .._
COUNTRY LIVING - Nice remodeled home w~h 4 bedroom~
bath w~h shower. carpeted. 3 beaub lul acres wilh shed. you'll like
lhis one.
#1479

RACINE - Good modern bed ·
room home and large level lol
Only $14.500.
SALEM CENTER - New
ranch, 3 bedroom home w1th
4.8 ac res.

h~p linance.

FAMILY ENITRPRI SE - Work
RENTALS: . .
.
· leta rt"'-"$220 plus dejlosil
Racine-$150 ~us de po ~t.
~ us ether occa s1on~l renta !s.

.as..a )earn and enjoy sell em. p ~ymenl .
LIST TO SEll, BUY FORFIX IN '
AT 992-3876.

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843-5175
Or 992-2751 To leave A Message.

•

.

.'

"'•l&lt;.

JtudhP~- Co11odoy 446 -g6?6
COia11o cpra/lgoll 6 7S-400g
CReaQto!rg
[B @
~~

PRICE' REDUCE TO $42.900 - Look at th1s house today at 354
Third Ave. Lovely 2 sto ry Colonial w1th bea ut1lul entrance toyer,
lormal dining, l 'h baths. 2tar~e bed rooms lm med~ate possession,
out ol state owner wants to sell now.
#ll49
NEW LISTING - Very nice Secbonal Home. 3 bedrooms, 2 .bath~ ·
fully carpted w1le approved k!dchen. din1ng room and mce loL
.
#1345
GLOSE TO HOSPITAL - Goo:1 home, remodeled inside, 2
bedrooms, krtchen with range &amp; relrigerator. new workshop
building &amp; g;~ra ge.
#1562
JOHNSON'S RIDGE - Ranch home wrth 3 bedrooms, natural gas
heat. woodburning stove, I ace lol, good buy al $19.500.

IAIIlE COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Has 4.000 sq. It Excel~nt
lor grocery, ~rdware or any small business. Addrton' l space lor
storage overhead. Uv1n~ quarte,; 111 back has 2 bedrooms. bath,
kitchen • dining and livmg room. Call for more deta1~. #
_
2255

aose to Rio Grande, hall wood s. $12,500.
_ Good blilding site, 811 acres. Graham SchOO
Ul*l

be j;,s,bl e on lh' 3 BR.

8 ROOM HOME

1

ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
horses' See the lenced·m pasture with 4 ac res more or less
inciludir1g a three bedroom home, jusl a lew miles lromGallipoh&amp;
1txceuen1 land lor la~m~n g as well asnewhome construcbon.large
two storage buildi ngs, poro slocked wrth catfish. bass
~~~,~~~g,llls large concrete dr~ ve Call lor a show1ng and be

l

'

2·STORY BRICK HOME overlook1ng the Ohro Rill€r, l si Ave.
Property e&gt;tends to Ohio RIVer· lronl. Bea ul1lul, ornale Vic lo r~a n
stairway w1ll g~eet you as you er~le1 lhiS comlorlable home You will
be amazed wrth the natural w ood wor~ and the character oll h1s
home and the v1ew hom the "widow's Milk" on tt1c rool IS
breathtakmg Many ooss•M IICS Has tworental apis along alley rn

FIX UP! PAINT UP• an d save abundle. 31Jedroom. 11h bath hame
ranch. Corn bmahon lamdy
~ hools $40,000.

room ·

kttchen. 2 car garage C1ty

NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL - Plenty tor your mnney .. splilluyer
home has 4 bedrooms. ) lull halh plus 2 hall bat hs famrly •oom,
equipped kitchen. cen " ' cond All carpeted excepl k1lcher1and
baths. 2 car g" age. Amust see' $59.900 Just l1sled1

11437

'

#43~

10'h.%B iend may

OWNERS MOVING - MUST SELL - 31lR. I ~ ba th ~anc h. bw~
by 011e ol the a ~ea's lop builders. l1ne quahly thro u~ho ut. Co mb.
Jam1ly room . k1lchen w1th range, drshwashe1&amp; rloposal. ~lac hod
garage w1lh sl orage, automatiCope ner. cu ul ral a1r cord Now 1s lh~
hme to get a super deal on thi s fme hornr Poss1ble mortl{age
assumption C1l', schools

WALK TO SPRING VALLEY PLAZA - S pac~us 4 bed room. 111
baths tam1ly •oom has bea u11lul !~replac e. 16x32 pool w1lh new
11ne1, 'anached garage. New on the m"ket. Call soon' $65.000
QUALITY PlUS! 3 BR bnck ra nch. 11h balhs plus shower '"
ba·sement. Ha~d wood lloors. m os~y carpeled. full basemen! w1lh
large lam1ly room. Eq u1 pped eat ·lll ~!chen . formal d1n10g room
Gas forced au furnace has atr cleaner, hum1d1f1er Cen 1m cond
Near Spnng Valley ~ aza. Just l1sted 1

family room with woodbu rner, two car garage w1th auto.
Style, beauty, charm and comlort - ol descnbes thiS
Priced $74,900.
' m2

•

446-3636

WESTERN RED CEDAR IUDOR - Mag111lrc.nl counl1y home. ·
bwltlor a lrl et1me at good llvmg. 3.370 • 1 II liVIng area plus lufl
basemen!. l,.ng 1oo m " 19'1()'x25'5". bay • rndows on e1ther
end. luep!ace . Forma( dmmg and lamtly 100m w1 th easy access
hom cu~o m des•gned. tullyequ1pped k1lchen Spaoous ~udy and
central foyer Un the sec Ond floor there il/ e lour large sleepmg
rooms 21ull balhs. plus 1h. bat h on fi.slllom Abundant sloragt! and
cl oset~ 3 acres has walnut grove Shown by appomtment only

DUTCH STYLE COUNTRY HOME

ROAMING ROOM
Rd.

Canaday
Realty
m uo•

bed room~ 2 ~ balhs. tully equipped eat·in kitchen, lor mal dmmg

10 ACRES -

BMR 431 - NEW LISTING - Brick ranch mcludes 3 BRs. LR.
OR. tam1ly room. 2\\ balhs, •tualed on 38 acres. Ca ll to see lh1sone
loday 1

Housing
Headquarters

IN GAlLIPOLIS- WALK TO SHOI' DOWNTOWN
rooms 3 BR lull basement. nice large lroot iJO'Ch No upkeep
siding. Natural gas lurnace. Nice large shade lrees. low!axe&gt;
you should check on .
#530

·-

MIDDLEPORT - High Sl. - Excellenl cond~ion'This
3 bedroom home has I I'/ baths. hardwood ffOO&lt; s. sun
fireplace. FA gas heat, lull basement. large lol,
.':..~!~•ges,. "lh one rental unit and workshop.

0 \lC

Real Estate General

340 ACRES - Will sell one 101
$2.500.00 or all 101 $300 00
per acre.

3 BEDROOM BRICKHOME - WBJP. hardwood lklors. l 'h
baths, needs very l1ttle Ia make th~ home a "Doll House". Ask1ng
$25.000.

#573

•

BMR 430 - NEW LISTING - Ewr•11•1t buy-at $38,500. Lovely
Ira me ra nch wilh 3 BP'R
· i:
'f.{) lhcarpeted d1mngarea. 2
b ath~ Better see thiS L -""" vwner anx10us lo sell'

RUTLAND - 2 older homes
w1th large lots.

SACRIFICE - QUICK SALE - 2 bed rooms, balh, hYing room, &amp;
eal-in kitchen on first lloor. Basell)enl has 3rd bed room. laundry
area &amp; extra room. Concrete lloor wilh shed althe end ol drive
Con ~~e ntiona l and fmHA finand ng poss ib~ Asking $27.500. Make
your &lt;tter. owners loss can be your gain

3 AC.RES - Racine. owner wjl

dela~l~

BMR 432 - NEW LISTING - 3 BRb1-level. mRodney V1lage II
Includes family room, fireplace and more. S11uated on lenced
corner lot Call lor details.

BURLINGHAM - 3 acres and
a 2 bedroom trailer l an d. Only
$7,500.

NEW LISTING·- 3 or 4bed rooms poss1 ~e on th1sone. Tra~ ~r w1th
large add-on on nea rly an acre lot. Includes stora ge bujdin&amp; Lot
can have second lrai~r as extra 1ncome . Askin g $12.000.

BIIR 424 - 2 pl us acres w~h alltlrYnK:e 3 bedroom ranch sty~
home. You will ~ve the country almosphere. Possible -loan
assumption.
BMR 426 - Pr~a1 righl at $37,500. It has an assumable loan
wilh only 9\\'11 1n1erest. We arn talking about a very clean. 3.BR
home situated on nice fla t lot 1n a tam ly onenled nelghborhood.
C~l lor complele detai s.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

ISSUE MONEY!

LETART - Approximately 11 acres wilh 3
LONG BOTTOM - Remodeled house, 3 bedrooms.
home. new 2 car garage, several camps~es with
new 2 car
approximalely 5ecres, rei. &amp; range,
-·h-ookups - pri vale waler inlet $68,500.00....,--1.:~~
$35,000.00.

I I I I ]"

.

Gallipolis
()lySchool.
School
N1ce remodeled~j~
Gra de
N1ceSystem.
bnds- insulatio
n, 2 h;o:~me~r·n ~~~~i~
yard Large back porch. chicken house. i ·
liVIng room wilh cathedral Township. New
2 baths, s1orm doors and chen.
w:,~:~~. City waler . Storage
bL
. Must see to a p prec~ate.

I

NEW LISTING - 61el'l!l acres
at Dorcas on Rt 124 with all
uti l~~ s and se pt~ tank lor your

*Willis T . Leadingham , Realtor. Ph . Hom e 446 ·9519
'*Phyllis Lov eday, Phone 446· 2230
'*Joan Boggs. Phone 44,· 32'4

NICE LIKE-NEW HOME
3 BR- 1 ACRE M/ L

-~\· J~:.;.:'" do

WHAT TH05E FEL.If&gt;JS:
60:5S IP.:!i WERE .

BMR 389 - Th1s fine horne has 4 bed roomsand IS located cklse
In !own. You will have a orge lot with a county almosp/lere and
have all the city conveniences. Ca ll now'

A GREAT DEAL -

·~

!

NEW USTING - 9 roomhome
with ~ew of the Ohio River. All
utilitiesoo Rt 124 in upper Po
meroy. Just $1 0,0(().

BMR 4V - $30s, ma1ntenance·tree sidin&amp; fenced back yard,
lamily oriented neighborhood. This~ a very clean 3 8R home.Cal
lor appointment ·
·

lll ~ k ra nch. KCscl10ol d1St;1cl $48.000

, ,.

BOND

I

Crail Swenson
1-614 -593-5571
Bill Childs
992-63

Real Estate General

ALL OF THESE PROPERTIES WILL QUALIFY.FOR THE NEW LOW INTEREST
NOW IS THE .TIME TO BUY, YOUR NEW· HOME!
~--------------~

I I K l

Beth Null 24~9507

ACREAGE - On Route 7, II
acres m/ less. Utilrties availa·
ble. Asking $10.000.00.

286-1787.

REALTY

..

MOBILE HOME 1971
freedom 12'x65', !Viabed room
lurnished. tolal electric. A1r
cond., storm windows. Asking
$7 .000.00.

Angus bulls 1 to 3 yrs . old.
excellent blood line, Slate
Run Farms. Jackson, Oh .
Call 61 4-2a6-5396 pr 614-

446-9777 or 446 -2484.

I

Real Estate General

3831 .

-

I·=a..'-:="'K)

Call 440.0552 Anytime

NEW LISTING - Very privale
18 acres 1n Lebanon Township.
14x70 H~ ly ·Park with lull
~ngth covered patKJ. Standby
power unit and large storage
building. In deer country.
$38,500.

.

79 Mustang 3 dr, Sedan. 4
cyl. , ~uto . SeeorcaiiWendal
Thomas. 446· 1731 .

UFE
INSURANCE

Phon e .
1-(614 )-992-3325

cond . 446 -3637 after 5
p.m.

Rt. 1 . Rac:ine. Oh .

59 For Sale or Trade

VI RG IL B. SR.
2h £ . 1nd St.

'1'1·

freah egg1. Bauers, Longhol· l- - -- - - - - - low Rd ., letart , WV
For Sale or Trade: 1979
gordon blade, $10,500. Call '-:::2:-:6:"
26_3______ _ __ __
Cemaro. 61 .000 mi. New
4411·2971 I
EIGHT waek old pigs, 304- tirea, 306 engine. auto . Cell

20 " COLOR Zanith TV set.
TORS MF 135 gas. MF 136
$60. 304-895-3388.
dsl., MF 150 gao. MF .36
gas. MF 36 dsl., Ford 4000
gas. Ford 5000 dol., JD LA
55 Building Supplies
w-cult., JD 50, JD CD30
dsl. INDUSTRIAL Ford 636
Building materiel s
block, brick . sewer pipes ,
windows , lint e,ls , etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande .

73 Oldo 98 45,000 mi .. PS,
PI, tilt wheel, l ir. cruiH, 4
446 741 4
Eggo ovollable with notlco dr.. HT. Coli
_ __
_ n_3__
&amp;B_P_M
__:- - alter May l ot . Doy Old l-be

son end loader, plow, diac.
cultivator. tln8a. buah hog ,

LI"VIlVVII

•ugs, $75. Phone 304 -675 6829 .

Broker-Auctioneer

~·

1979 20·c Maoooy Fe•gu-

Purebred ' Chihuahua 2 yr .
old, male . Call 446,8289.

6409.
DOUBLE mattress &amp; box
springs, 835 . loveseat &amp;:
chair, S76 .Two ov11l braided

Autos for

a ...... 1 Ull arm . • ·
ture quail now being aokt.

Rt. 124 &amp; Mayhew Rd.
Jockoon. Oh . Call &amp;1 4-2865944.

Cocker Spaniel male puppy,
8 wks. old Thuraday, e&amp;o.

Livestock

--Q --M
-, F
loa

a.

Call 446-3844 altar 4PM. ·

7826.
potato &amp; onion bins. also
many other it,ms. phone.

your home .

&amp; padding, $25 . Call 4681997.

bal8:r~~wlth

pies. CFA Himalayan. Persi•n end Siamese kittens.

Call aft•• 5, 61 4-256 · 1361 .

63

bo.o m sprayer on trailer. Cub
Cadet tractor, mower deck.
disc. ·plow cultiavtor1. AC
WD 45 t.-.ctor &amp;: plowa,
Wood1 corn picker, gravity
wagona, uaed PU &amp;. pull
rotary ""'owers. Mver~ cut
conditioner. manure spreaders S. fertilizer apreadera .
Howe' s Farm Machinery,

ORAGONWYND cATIERY.
- KENNEL . AKC Chow pup·

Rawleigh products, Shaklee
organic products. Black Dill·
mod linement, vanilla. spi c:es. ointment. · medicated
vapor . spray . 614 - 992 -

Farm
Equipment
. '
.
.

For ule new &amp; rebult farm
mach i nery. John Deere

channel ca . base st~tion Judy Taylor at 614· 387·
with beams· S. accessOries . _7_
20_·-- - - --.-- 2_

Gollipolio. Call 448-0475.

machine fr9e . arm model
wi1h built-In stretch stich .
zig zag patterna. make•
button hqles, monogram• .
much more . We are over stocked with this model, w,
must dec,.ase our inven tory. Factory 20 yr. guaran tee., Reg . price Qver tlOO ,
you ~ coat only IIJO . ((all
614- 385· 8918 out of town
call collect . F,.e delivery to

Jhe

li 1

Pets for Sale

64 Miac: MerchandiS&amp;

maHer how many tricks he
went down, so he led a heart
and finessed his jack. lt held,
and he now had his slam if

••I NT

66

64 Misc. MarchandiM

N8w 1983 White sewing

only hearts would break 3· 3,
so be cashc" his king of
hear ts.
When West dropped the 10
South paused for a moment
since 11 now appeared that

April 24, 1983

April 24, 1983

decided that it didn't really

P ;t s..'i

G OOD USED AP PLIANC ES
. washers . dryers, refrigera ·
t o rs, ranges Skagg s Ap·
pliances, Upper River Rd .,
be side Stone C re st Motel .
446-7398 .

1- - - -- - - - - -

th ought

West made his -normal
lead of lhe · diamond to
South's king whlJe East dis· •

• K I,J 7

+ A .J :I

North

Va.

partner's one n~trump rebid
than tbe actuall2.

9 A !l 5 :1
t A. lJ H7 2

san t . 304 -676 -6276 .

eve s.

APARTMENTS . mob i l e
homes. houses. Pt ...Pieasant
and GelliP9Jis. 614 -446 -

2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart ments $200 per mo. or if
Income is 810.000 or less
HUO available. A-One Real
Estates, Carol Vuger. Real ·
tor. Call 304 -676 -6104 or

Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

mi . Rt . 588 . $300.00 mo
446 -3045 day, 446 -2l!02

5648 .
Apartment
for Rent

Fun and games

T,.,o bedroom apartment At.
218 a t MercervUie. Quiet

3 bedroom modular located
on Riwar lot in Cheahire.
C· A. dishwasher. 2 baths .

BRIDGE

46 Space lor Rent

Garage ept . furnished, 1 COUNTRY MOBILE Home
bdr .. $225 . ut ilities paid. ' Park: Route 3 3, N orth of

mobile home on At . 36 . Call

44

Pomeroy Middleport-Galljpoli$, Oh~Point Pleasant, W.

D 4 The Sundat Ti!l11!S-Sentinel

.

- .. --·- -.......

GRACIOUS LIVING IN A COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE . ·
Trul y gracKJus lamily ~ving can be yours . 1n lh1s beautilul 4
bedroom home approx. 8 mi. from Gallipolis. The. k~chen 1s a
goormet's delight. Unbellmb)e d1n1ngroomand lam1ly room. Bwn
lor the most d 1~n m1 nating home own er. 20 acres. Pasture land.
Horse sta ~e. Another 73 acres ava i able. Many. ma ny
amenities.
#542

'

~-- ·~

\

\

WHAT A DEAU! $27 ,000
see 101 yoursen. Cozy 6 rooms and bath. washe1. dryer,

dlsnwasher, •e~nge rator. woodburner, and all like new. Storage
building and L car carport Kyger Creek Schools.
#552

THE ENTERTAINER: Pool. lam1ly rm. w/IH eplace ,lormal dlmng &amp;
hvng 1m .. 4 or 5 BRs. 21ull baths. 2 Cal g a~age Alun place to hv~

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. n~e ~ze building lots wiUt all util~ there. Lot size
101.8 by 1712 Better get 'urn now.
11456
COUNTRY HOME &amp; 40 ACRES II. or l.
8 rm. country home - 5 bedrooms. baih, shower. some carpe\
drilled weft w~h pump. Nice tobacco barn. Two corncnbs: Garage.
All mineral rights go. Several natural spring~ SOOie lru1t Jree&amp;
Located on Stale Highway. Priced only $30.000.
#543
6.95 ACRES VACANT lAND OFF Rl. 35
.
Rolling land - beside ()d U. S. Highway 35. In a.n area that ~
develop;,, g fasl" Rt. 35, short. distance west ol Ga llipolis. Ge~
now.

8 ACRES
Within 10 minute driveto downtown Gall ipol ~. City School System
Has hoollup lor mobile home. Gall a Rural W~ter, electnc aoo
septic t.!nk Night light on pole. 200 lllront.age on Graham School
Rd. Timber. Building slb5. Cal now.
11477

RIO GRAN DE - Nice 2 BR
frame. formal dimng. Wood
burner. Garden spoL $27,000.

FIVE ACRES - Newly redeco- l54 SECOND AVE. - 3 BR
rated 3 BR ~ame home. 24136 . Jrame, den. large kichen and
barn. other outbldg. Kyger uW1ly room. Pallo 1n rear.
Creek area . $34,900.
Excel ~nl localKJn. $31 ,900.
CIRCLE THIS ADI Owners hM just redueed this beautiful
~oantry home $4,000. Now asking a low, low $44.000 lor appro •
22 acres mostly wooded. Moder.n 3 )ledroom home has formal
dining room, large lamiy room Deck lor ~ppi ng· morning coffee
aoo wlrtching lhe squi rrel~ Better hurry!
154 AC'RES, North Gallia area , rolling laoos.. e&gt;eellenl producing
larm. Modern tri·level hom~ good buildings, lences. One ol Gall10
County's be.,tter larms

2 OR 3 BEDRM. HOME located along Locusl St. across lromnew
cou rt house. Good location lo1 ~! he r r~dence or proleSSWJnal
offi ces. Detached g;~ rage, rear entrance aoo extra parkmg1n rear.
3 BEDRM. CARPETED HOME 111 Rodney II S.O. House in exce.llent
coodrtion, woodborner, ceiling tan. uooerground ut1htie&amp;
$32.90000
JUST WAITING FOR your mag~ touch to convert lhis ~racious
home to ~ngle family residence. La~ge lot, on-street parking. Can
be used "as is" for two apls.
1972 SHULTZ 12'x65'

mobile home with 6 acres, Mor

,,
:.

I H• 111,
I
'i

I!

l1 1

{ " " 1•

,

~

\

..
,..

I

I

BULAVILLE RD. - F~a~ne 2
story home. tllly carpled 3
BRs. ~ us balh $38.000.

~

II IJ

121 ACRES - Walnut Twp., so me mce t1llable. timber, mineral
rights incl. Goctt house.
\

25 ~ocush~~neetJ QoQQtpoQH'. ©I, to

•
\

-....
.- ...
. ..

--. :-•.
...

-·-.

..'
'·

•

.'•..

'•
'
•
•
"'•

�•

Oh~Paint

Times-Sentinel
71

Autos for Sale

1968 Mu at ilng 60,000 mi ..
1 owner, new pei nt , rad1al
ti res. 8 cyl. C all 614 -3888828 .

71

Autos f or Sale

1973
4

C ~ EVROLET

d oor.

V -8

Impala,

automat ic,

powe r steenng . powe r
b rak es.

a1 r

cond it ionin g ,

5600 304-675 -6628 .
1976 Chevy Impala exc
cond, w ill consider trade in .
Coli 614·388 -8797 .

74 PLYMOUTH. 9200 . 3046 76- 2786

72

Trucks for Sale '

77 CHEVY , ton pickup,
52800 . f ir m . 304 -6753 62 8 .

1971 Yomoho 660 twin 4
stroke. fajr cond, e&amp;&amp;O.
Call 614-246-6892 .

7 6 C HEVY luv tru ck , stand·
a rd s h i ft , o n e o w ne r ,
$1 ,700 .00 . low mileage,

11981 Su1uki 860 GL,
$ 2 ,.995 . full dress. shaft
drive. very low mileage. Call
after 5 , 614-2611· 114t .

7 2 FORE'I Mustang, Gra nde,

1976 Ford Tori no good
co nd .. $650, auto ., PS . Call
446-1622 .

76 GRAND Prix, $2800 .
firm . 304 -676 -3628

30 4 -67 5 -4671

1 96 8 CHEVY Impa la, 2 8 3 2
barrel. 2 door. automa tic .

73

1977 Uncoln

Town Car.

42 . 0 0 0 m1les. Excellent
c ondition
$5 ,700. John
Lyon o. 614-992 -346 3
1974 Chevy Station Wag on

8300. Runs good D epo t
St ., Rutland Iva Crem ea n s
1979 Granada 302 V -8 , 4
doo r, p .s .. p.b, a.c ., am -fm
st ereo, excellent co ndition .

53.800 . 614 -992 -6085 .
1977 Trans Am , bl ack,
T· top. PS , PB , A C , auto metic, AM -FM B t nck ,
49 .000 miles. $4 ,000 304 882 -3128

72

MONTE

&lt;:arlo ,

350

aut o matic, po wer stee rin g,
tilt wheel , cru ise co ntro l,
vmyl top , new paint, $ 1 500 .

304-675 -4181 .
7 2 DODGE Da rt Swin ger,
304-675 -51 2 3 .

ca ll even ings afte r 7 , 304 ·

675- 1248

1- - - - - - - -- -

Vans &amp; 4 W . O.

1974 D odge Ram Charger
2 18 engine , 69 ,000 mi.,
rusty b ody, S1,400 or best
off er. Ca ll 614 -246 -6 892 .

1966 NOVA Chevy II Super
Spo rt , 3 50 en gin e , 4 barrel,
4 a pe ed, 210 tra nsmission ,
304 -773-9147 .

qu adrat rac. ha rd top , co m-

72

plete ly ca m aflage d , will s a crifi ce
$2 ,700 . 304-773 9 111 .

Trucks fo r Sal e

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

19 80 Yamaha YZ -80 dirt
bike, excl. cond ., $ 425 . Call
614-245-5892 .

197 0 FORD pickup , 351 3
speed. sl'l ort wide bed . Call
evenings after 7. 304-6761248 .

· 1975 Fiat X-19, excellent
co ndit ion . Call 446 . 6 59 5 .

$650 304-67 5 -3 182 .

Motorcycles

1978 CJ -7 Jeep, V -8. au to .•

1977 Harley Davidson low
rider. Call 446 -7016 weakdays after &amp;PM ;
176 Kawasaki street or dirt

bike. 5300 . Call 446 -4823.

1979 Harley Davidson
Sportster. 7 1 000 plus m1les.
$3, 1 DO . 614-949- 2455 .

74

Plea1m1t, W. Va.

Motorcycles

WISEMAN

197 8 Ford 160 . 4 -WD .' with
Ford ca mpe r top . $3 ,800
Cal l 614 · 388 · 96 11 after 4 .

••

1 972 Ford PU good co nd.
ru st. new paint, new
tires. new batte ry. 302 V · B
engine . Call 44 6 - 1 52 2

1- - - - - - - - --

1 979 Chevr olet PU truck,
exc . co nd ., V - 8 , auto ., PS ,

42 ,0 00 ac tu a l m 11es,
$4,300 Call 446 -4063

Boatl 1nd
Motors for Sale

..12 ft. •luminum Jon bo•t
With elltctrlc· motor . Swivel

;..ts. o•n. tniler. e450 .
-~14-812·2388.

~..,.

:'76

* ...

79 Motors Homes

'

81

&amp; Campers

16 ft . Yenowttone·campe'r.

self-contained. good cond .•
$900. Coli 367-0632.
1971 camping trailer. h•rd
top. Coll614· 258· 1189.

Auto.Parts
• Accessories

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1980 15 ft. Boytinar witl1 50
HP Mercury motor
Tenne11ee trailer, all acces·
oorleo Included . Coli 448·
8385 after 6 .

78
.....'

carpet

in &amp;hlp

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
I nsured , tree estimates.
Phone 614-387 -0636 , coli

81

Home
Improvements

•

HI Pres.aure C le•ni ng. Alum · Water Welle. COm"'frclal
inum tiding, 1110bHe homea, and Domeitlc. THt holee.
wood; brick ,
Pump1 Sale1 and Service.
building end homoo.
304-895 -3802.
hoovy equipment. Fully inourod. Free eotimateo. 614- PAIN'I'ING • Interior and
849-2686.
ltiXttlrfor, plumbing, roofing,
aome remodeling . 20 vr~..
RON 'S Television Service. exp . Colll14-388-91!2.
Spec i ~iling in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazu, and Marcum Roofing • Spcut ·
house colla . Coli 676-2398 Irig. 30 · yeora ..porience,
specializing In built up rOof.
or 446-2464.
Coli B14· 38e· 9857.

' ing. A -1 cond .- 614-9923787 .

STUCCO PLASTERING
ta•turt~td ceilings commer·
c iel and residential. free
eatlmotn. Coli 614-2561182 .
-

83

WORK
ponds.

Yard Fencing Sale

614-669-5933.

84

Assoc -

D~ ­
count~ All saes and woiillt
availa~e. Call for frtt estimates. Call 61~69-3711 or

Electrical
• Refrigeration

0.:-~)MPROVEMEN'I'S

DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guaranteed work . Call anytime
614 - 256- 8820 or 814268-1207.

f

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

MAKING HOMES AFFORDABLE MADE US NUMBER I, CENTURY-21;
, ~~

- ~-:~

windows
Storm windows&amp;: doors
Aluminum &amp; 11 inyl

siding
How met Patio Cove r s
Howmet screen room s
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utilitY

Oissolu1ions or Uncon·
tested Divolr:i!s $350.00
(Costs included).
Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

446-0855
511 Se&lt;ond A"' , Gtli lpolo
Servma Gallia &amp; Meiis

buildings

ED ' S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE call City Furniture
304 -676 -2 608 or 446 0631 .

691 Miller Dnve

Counties

446· 2642

Free Estimates

SOLUTION

General Hauling

85

HAMLIN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

j

Bill's

Nu· Pr ime replacement

SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp;. Service Sharpen
Scinors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 992-2284 .

379-2748

Buici Pontiac
Gtllipolis
44&amp;-2282

By Tad
ditches ,

lonnie· Boggs Excavating.
Dozer. backhoe . dump truck. Work by hour or job.
Coli 446-7903 .

.

SMITH

or 614-669- 8441

Excavating

ROOFING, siding. spouting,
insured . Cell
304-676-5165.

446-6610

Reasonable Rate

e1 4 -669-37t 1

Transportation .

remodeling ,

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

Fertilizer, Seed Corn.Pio·
neer, DeKalb-Pfizer. Ken worthy.

6344 or 446 -9325 .

Cathy Pope -

446-0008

ROLLING HILLS
FARM SUPPLY

JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT IPIIG. Fomerly Dewitt••
Plumbing . Coli 114·387 ·
0576 .

Special Early Season

CHAROlAIS
- Very attrac:live 2 siDry
home situated on 311 acres off Rt. 160. ThiS fine
home offer; 4 bedrooms, deluxe kitchen, formal
dining room. famiy room with fireplace and Buck
stove. 21\ baths. full basement 2 car garage plus
20x40 ood and exceplionallandscapng. Call Ike
Wiseman.

PRICED TO SEUNearly new 3 bedroom ~.e situated ron
'" a wooded area. Has
·nice step saver
kttchen. din;ng room. the
basement could
eagly be made into a nice lamdy room &amp; IS
plumbed for another bath. Has an attached garage
and landsca ped yard. Only $49,900, Call Jim .
Cochran

Services Offered

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446 4477

4907.

estimates. Call 676 -

Judy DeWitt - Realtor - 388-8156
Becky Lone - Assoc. - 446-0468
Becky Elliott - ·A$0C. - 446-0886

REALTY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

basements. etc . C1ll 446 ·
Ca.rter &amp;. Ewan ~

Painting interior or e.~e terior.
free

1977 Terry Travel Treler. 28

BLACKBURN

your

ohopo. Water removal. FREE
ESTII\'IATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-441-2107.

Home
I mprovements

DOZER
Hanna .

Camping
Eqjlipment

· ft . Self contlllnad. air, awn-

- $5.000 DOWN
mu~ :;ell. If you are looking
home w~h lots of characler
~n you must see 'this one. Owner; have
redecorated mast of inlerOl!. lr..:ludes 4 bed room~
walk-in closets. formal dining lbuit-in hutchl,
family room w/fireplace modem eQUipped
kttchen. old fashioned 6ath,· full basement
woodburner ;)us fully Insulated. S1tuated on
1 acre in Bidwell. $43,500. Call Jim

Get

81

Home
Improvements

after 5 .

,fORD truckbed. UOO. lito
-1972 and beck. good condi'1ion. _St!lf) •bumper. 860 .
:304·8711 ·2199.

Estate General

1 9 7 6 D ats un pic k up .
$ 1495 , 304 · 675 -2 159

..

..... 3796 ....
.1m Coctwon. AllodGte, ~7111 1M.
I. J. ........ ........
240 .... .
• Cyde Wf:/AM, '--"· J45-J276

1- - - - -- - - -no

_.

PHONE 446-3643

1981 YAMAHA 860
Maxim, ah1ft drive, new tire.
2 helmeta, excellent c:ondl·
tion. 11700 . 304- 882 3331 .

61ol-388-9938.

614-992 -3303 .

!75 .

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

17~ HP Mercury Outbo•rd
motor, with low hours,
1977 Kawasaki 900. Nice. 1tainle.. 1te'el prop, all •c -'
Mornings or weekend1 . ce•sories, •2.600 firm . Call

The 'Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page--0.7

Ohio-.-Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

1171 HONDA 360, only
9.000 milea. good condition. •500. coli 304· 773·
5361 after 5 .

76

•

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE . Call 614 -367 -7471
or 614 -3 67 -0 591
Need someth in g hauled
away or soma1hing moved ?

We'll do it . Coil 446 -3 1 5 9
between 9 and 6 .

'

START-ER HOME
living room. .
modern kitchen, laundry room, mce lam1lyroom With
a woOObu rner
storage area or work shop, ma1ntenance free.
N;ce lot '" oty
I d;stncl.

PRICE REDUCED - OWNER SAID
new . round
home IS surrounded by one ace more or less of wood land. Lot&gt; of
glass and a lovely VIew. All wooden beamed ceilings 3 or 4
bedrooms, krtchen - living 100m. 2 baths. lamily room, 1.660sq.ll
living space, plus a lull basement. Over 1600 sq ft of rustiC
wrap-around deckmg. The only round home m tl11s a1ea. Pr1ced m
!he 6as

CHILDREN GROW - HOUSES DON1 - Th ~ 5 GREEN ACRES - like new Cedar Home offers 3
bedroom beauty is ;ust nght lor your growing Brs.. large LR &amp; kitchen.- 2 car garage, carpeled
fam1ly. You'll ! nd !hiS home s;tualed on almost 3 patio, wrap-around deck, cent a1r &amp; Ill lots. Be the
acres w1lh lots of lrees, pond &amp;circular drive. The · first to see 'this one. •
2300 sq. ft ol I1V1ng area 1ncludes an equ1pped RACCOON ROAD - BUILDERS SPECIAL - 3.3
k1tchen. LR. lam1ly rm . laundry, 2 balhs. 2 WB wes m/1, frontage qn Raccoon Creek, water .tap,
fireplaces &amp; cent ~" C.ll lor appointment
aerotiiC septic tank and 28x44 basement 8uild to
. - ..
·surt
yourself.
BEST BUY IN TOWN - StyliSh 2 story home was
bu;lt 1n 1894 and must be seen to apprw ale GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP - 15.5 acres m/ 1,
Large open loye1 and sla~IWay LR. d1ning rm .. nc~y remodeled 2 story farm home. 7 rms., bath,
parlor, completely equipped modern kitchen, 4 basement, 4 f~rep~ces, barn &amp; tobacco base.
Brs.. 2\h balhs new sidin&amp; garage, near schools, Askmg $38,900
shopp;ng. etc
CREMEENS ROAD - 53 acres mil. approx.IOA.
NEAR NORTH GALLIA HIGH SCHOOL - 5.29 tillable, balance woods, remodeled home. 11\
m-1, approx 2 acres cleared, balance stor~s. 7 rms &amp; bath, new sid1ng. new well,
wooded , 3 BR l4x70 mob;le home '" good excellent 24x40 steel buildin~ several old
cond;ton, carpeled lhroughoul, stove &amp; refrig. slay. bUildings $37.500.
Barga;n pnced al $25.000. Cal for appomtment
HOLIDAY PARK - 2 camping loll\ furn~hed 26
PRICE REDUCED TO $56,900! Excellent canle ft. Tntwood travel tra~er. sheler hrus ~ Ltiity
larm. 132 wesm-1,mos~ y c~a n h;ll pasture. good
bui&lt;lng, county wal!r. sewer. access to Rac0011
fences. 1'h slO!J home, 5 rms &amp; bath, large barn,
Crook, Pnred lor qui:k sale.
.
lob. base. lronls on 3 roads 1n Walnut Twp.
FHA • VA SPECIAL.- 3 bedroom. ma~ntenance
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF AND SAVE MONEY free home. !Veterans - No downpayment) !FHA
- Approx 10 acres, mostly flatland near R,odney, b uye~ - approx $1.250 down). located 1n Rodney
28x60 unliniShed house with full·basemenl Lot&gt; of Vil~ge II
potent~a l
FARMER·s FARM - Approx 50 acres near
Vinton.
All clean crop &amp; pasture ~nd. remode~ 3
GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY LOCATED 112 acre larm has froolage on Slate Route 588. BR home. 60x80 barn, 2 slosllormer dairy farm),
Fa1rt1eld Cenlenary Road &amp; Vanco Fa ;rfield Rd. front&gt; oo 2 rds., ~rge pond. SEE THIS ONE
Excellenl for farmmg or development Older 5 rm. BEFORE PlOWING TIME. $49,900.
&amp; bath, also Included. Owne~ w;ll co nsider selling IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - You owe 11 to
smaller tracts of short term financing. Call for more yourself and our famiy to see !his one. 3 BR's. 2
tnformatton
baths. large LR &amp; d1ning rm , g~ley krtchen with
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 82x80 all steel COt, relng , OW. range &amp; disp., den, family rm., gash~l
struction w~h fireproof insulat~n Ooierhead crane, &amp; cent air. covered patio &amp; full basement Allh~
has offi ce &amp; baths Formedy used for boal sales&amp; on a well landscaped I~ at the edge oftown. FHA
repair Located across fromSilver Bndge Plaza w1th - VA - CONVENTIONAL
access lo !he Oh ~ River Polenlial unl1m1ted. C.ll
l -0-C-A-T-1-0-N- 620 4th Ave., 4 B1, 211 baths,
~anny Blackburn
GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE- 131 ~f ront on State large LR. formal dining rm . completekitchen with
Route 554, co1ner lot. over 3100sq «. 5 llaJ&gt; diSp., OW. compactor, refrigerator and range. 6
p1esenlly used !01 aulo,lraclor &amp; larm eqUipmenl fi rep~ces, garage, new alum;num sidingand storm
wmdows. Shown by appOintment only.
re pai rs part1al financmg avillla ble
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should descnbe lho
lovely J BR brd ra nch Spec;al features are a
large LR &amp; d1n1ng rm . eqUipped kitchen. 1'&gt;1 bath ~
~und ry, quality carpel, cent a1r &amp; an oversiZed 2
car garage Localed on US 35 Wesl &amp; shown by
appo;nlment.
PEACEFUL COUNTRY-LIKE SETTING. Excellent
buy at $45,900. Owners have been transferred &amp;
are anXIous to sell !hiS lovely bnck &amp; kame ranch
w;th 3 BRs, large kitchen. LR w1lh WB f11e~ace
mce ca;pel lhroughoul. attached ga~ age &amp; 1 ac re
p1ne-studded kJI Poss1b~ blended mortgage lor
qualil1ed buvm. •
NEW LISTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
appro&gt; . 4 n11 north of HMC on old route 160.
Moclern tri-level has bnck &amp; v111yl construcboo, 3
BRs, 2 balhs. eq01pped kitchen, dimng area,
laundry &amp; 2 car garage Can be bought wrth or
w1thout acreage.
NEAT AND CLEAN - CONVENIENT IN TOWN
LOCATION - 2 BRs. 12&gt; 18 LR,.Iar8! klchen &amp;
diningarea w1lh range, refng. &amp; d1sp. launtl'y w~h
washer &amp; dtjer. new carpel, expensive drapes,
carport, gas he;i, hum 1d1l ~r . dehumidifier. a1r
c~a1e1 , central air Watch till Blue Devil footban
g1111 es fro mtie large rear sun dec&lt; $50.00011 NO.
$37.500.

GUVAN TOWNSHIP - 18 acres m/ 1, localed
south of Mercerv;lle Approx . 20 A tillable, balance
woods. lob. base. Owne~ will help finance
SECLUDED COUNTRY SETIING. LOOKING FOR
SOMETHING SPECIAL? let us show you lh~ new
3 BR. 2 bath dou~e garage home W1th over 1700
sq It of living area Just right for the large lamily
thai needs am~e s'paie. Other features •re natural
wood sidm~ heat pump, range. rellig., DW &amp; disp.
Can be purchased Wllh 2 acres or 40. located in
Green Townsh;p.
HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a hunting lodge,
vacation home. etc. Rustic log home is built from
hand hewn beams and has a sleep;ng loft, modern
bath. large stone (;replace and approx. 14 acres of
woods 111 the Wayne National Forest Extra land
available. Easy Terrro.

oil 10 RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - located 3 miles

belo~ E~reka Dam Ideal for campmg, bull&lt;lngor

mobile h(llles. Call Ranny Blackburn.
NEW LISTING - $39,500 - Be the f1rs1 to see
th ~ bargain priced raoch w;th 3 BR's, bath. large
kttchen, 12xl8 LR, lOx lB fam1ly rm. &amp; laundry.
Located on a flat kll ;n Centenary.

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef. hay &amp; grain la.. n
80 acres, m/ 1, approx. 35 A. ~ c ropland . 10 A.
wood~ balance paslure, ~ lences. 9 rm. &amp; bath
"·home was built 1n 1812 &amp; has been partally
remodeled. 50x50 cattle barn with concrete floor
~rge silo with auto. unloader. several sheds, larg,i
pond, spnngs. sland1ng crops go to new owner.

lAND CONTRACT - NO POINTS - NO CLOSING
COST - 10%DOWN PAYMENT will let you move
your fam;ly into this beauty. This 1360 SQ. fl of
living space includes 3 Brs., Ill baths, k~c hen.
d;nette,laundry, large l Rw;th WB fireplace PlUSa
2 car garage. $49,900.
NEW LISTING $49,500- Owners have moved &amp;'
ONE OF VINTON'S FINEST ~ l ovely IIi story •have their kWely 3 BR !:lick ranch priced 111 sell
~ric k includes 5 BR's, 11\ baths, LR w~h fire~ace, Specialleatures are I~ baths, family rm. with W8
krtchen &amp; d10ette. full basement &amp; a ~ fireplace, carpet tllroUihou~ f~ basement, ~a~
landscaped corner lot Call for appointment
covered rear pon:h &amp;large lot on the I!Wavile Rd.
'

PRICE'TAGI Prict s-J.I'S·h-f·d. New 12xl6
range. microwave '!Yen, dishwasher &amp; disposal
bath, 2 other bedrooms, gas heat. Washingtoo
MoDERN RANCH HOME - 3 or 4 bedrooms, n~e living room.
eat&lt;n ~!chen. familv room. full basement This home has been
very well kept 2 car garage. Poced only In' the
'

'HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH OPTiON TO
BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO AND THREE
BEDROOM STARTING AT '200 PER.MONTH:

built brick ranch in
Crown·City.
and well mamta1ned 3
. bedroom home with over-1 ~0 "!l· ft of liv_
ingarea.
lni:ludes ,0n· equipped kichen W11h d;nmg area, 2
full baths, lamily room. 2 mce ·covered poiches
plus a large landsca ped yard. Call J1m Cochra~. ·

$1l% FINANCING :- .$4.000 DOWiil - OwnerS
must sell t111s 4 bedroom home on lower River Rd.
Has. a new furnace, fireplace, eat-;n kitchen, fu!
basement and -garage. An excelent opportunity
bu)'· a h'ome and have low monthly paymelils;
$34,!KJO . '

w

TilE FEEUNG OF FREEDOM! 39 Acres. Harrison
Township. f(aoch sty~ home with 3 bedroom~ lormal
dining, latge .liv111g room, bath. Barn. Private settin~
Well. Good garden area. $34,200.
#298

FAMILY SIZE remodeled home with 48.75 acres and
own gas well w;th free gas, 4 or 5 bedrooms. IN;ng
room wnh fireplace. mce ~!chen . balh. Iam ay room
and ubl1ty. Outside workshop and shed. N1ce b~ lawn
l ocated in Addison Towns;p.
#319

JUST LISTED! FREE GAS provided from the
located on thiS 64 acre larm in Addison Township.
Older HI story home In need _of repair. large barn.
corn crib, tobacco base. Tillable ac1eage Owner
fmancmg.
. #318

..

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim La nier. 304 -676 7397

Upholstery

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. A111e., Gallipolis
446-7833 or 446- 1833.

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt
1 Box 124, Pt Pleasant ,
304-676 -4164 .

NtiN LISTING -

I bedroom
home situated on a flat 'h acre
deck
landscaped yard Has 2 baths, n;ce
• &amp; more. Only 5 mmutes to
on Rl. 160.
I Priced to sel at $46.900. Call Oyde Walker.
LISTED - $44.900 - This
an
I JUST
e&gt;ceptional buy that jOU can't afford to m1ss
ocated off Rt. 35 1n l good neighborhood thiS
I Lhome
has 3 bedrooms, 2-full bath~ family room,
II cove
equipped kitchen, nat gas. central air, large
red pat10 and ga rage. 1Year Buyer Protection.
k~chen.

hosp~al

IS

'NEW LISTING IN RIO GRANDE - urge
• redecorated 4 bedroom home near campus. Over
2200 SQ. fl ol h~ ng area ;ncludes a huge famil1
room with hrepljce. diningroom, 3 balhs. enclosed
porch, deck, garage and workshop. ~nyl siding
new wallpaper, paint, etc. Sluated on a pnvale lot
Pnced to sell at $59,900. Call J;m Cochran
JUST LISTED - OWNERS TRANSFERRED OUT
OF STATE - And must sell this attractive bnck
b1-level 1 mmed ~ately. Your lam1iy Will enjoy the
room1neS&gt; ins;de and out. lfs sparklirtg ~lean . 1n a
good locatiOn and 1ncludes 4 bedroomj, 3 baths,
loads of kitchen cabincls. din1ng area. sundeck.
fam1l y room and 2 ca r garage. 9%assumable loa~
for qualified buyer
JUST LISTED·- $34 ,900 - AttractNe b1-ieve1
1650 sq ft ol hvmg space includes a very nice
krtchen unl1n1Shed lam1ly room, woodburning
stove that w1ll cut your olher fuel bills to almost
zero. Located on aqu1el street on large lot inV1nton
Room for a garden
PICTURESQUE smiNG - BRICK HOME &amp;
ACREAGE - This ;sa fine bnck home ~tualed oo
2 acres more or less on Rooney Cora Road '" city
schmJ dist. Includes 3 bed rms., 2 baths, lovely•
hardwood floo~ !some carpet!, large k1tchen. ulll
room, ca nmng room . 2 ca 1 garage, woodburner.
plus ma ny e1tras. Call J1m Cochra n
INTERIOR LOOKS LIKE APICTURE FROM HOUSE
• BEAUTIFUL - D;ann &amp;Jack have spent the last 3
yea ~ making this house over, and believe me she
has a talent Take your timewhile you're ookingSil
you can see every little exciting delall It features a
large new lam1ly room wilh Buck stove and
overhead fan, 2 ~ baths. a library with skyligh~ 3
large bedrooms. \formal dining w~h. crystal
chandel~r . newly IWiod~ed kitchen. new roof
and a very·n~e setting on ~rge Spring Valley lot
You should k&gt;ok althis·onebefore bu~ng anythi ng
else. Owner transfe rre~ . mu ~ sell. Possible 917%
assumption $59,!Kltl. ,
NEW LISTING - WITH l~TS OF CHARM - Most
attractive 4 bedroom bnck and fra me leaturmg
large Early Amencan famlli,room wtth a big loot
warming· li rep~ce and indOor barbecue Pretty
formal dining room w1tnanolher old brick fireplac~
~rge bow window '" liVing room affords you ·a
birdseye VIew ot the rive1 There are 2 full baths,
modern kttchen wtth lots ol cabinets.
BEST BUY ON MARKET - You can't beat the
price ol this 2100 sq. ft. bnck ranch¥ated in town
a very good neighbOrhood. Has· 3 bedrooms
il6x22 master surte), 3 baths, 24' 'l, ~ng room,
firep~ce. 25' famiy room,formal dining.room. very
nice equipped kttchen, nat gas heat ceqt 811and
large landscaped yard. Call Oyde Walket.
OVERLOOKING TilE OHIO RIVER NEAR ADDISON
- Attractive 4 bedroom Iii-level on Upper R;ver
Road 1n Kyger Creek Schootllist Srtuated on over
3 acres th~ home iocludes a fully equipped
kitchen, family room , 11\ baths, carport plus a
!1m! assumption. $53.000. Call Jim Cochran. 1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I '"
I
I
I
I
I
I

JUST LISTED -HOME &amp;3.2 ACRES - This is a
totaly remodeled 3 bedroom home mthe GalliPQf~
City Scllool Dist on Neighborhood Road .lncludes a
family room, dm;ng room, util. room, new krtchen,
carpe~ nat gas heat plus 2 ca r garage &amp;
green_
house. Exce~ent garden and c~lar house.
Call J1m c.Cochran. $51,000.
·
'

I

~~ASSUMPTION

•

- Allactive 3 bedroom !:lick
home located just CAt Rt. 3~ Over lll(lisq· It d
ivi~ area llcludes a large bath with ~lilen tub.
equipped kitchen, utility room, ~rHe ooVPred porcll
and allnctively decorated. Good loan aswrnption
$55.000. CaH Jim Coch11n.

......

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROPEm Brick and frame home with fin~hed basement gara ge,
large deck in back of house, formal li~ng room, 2
~rep~. Commercial bu1ldmg 40'x60', mobile home
court w~h 11 hook-ups and 9 mobile homes. central
sewage, sidewalks, 2.53 acres.
#316

BIG PRICE REDUCTION - SAVE THOUSANDS
- Owners in a fl'nch - have moved into a new
home in Florida and must sell immediat~y.
Beautiful 5 bedroom home features large IIVIilllo
and loimal dtmng, 30 feet of attractive !lark oak
kitchen cabmets w~h al the buift-;ns mcluding
desk, 2 woodburning fireplaces, one of wf1ich
makes the family room a cozy ;lace to hide awa9
With the kids, 3 lull baths. large utirty room and 2
car garage. Oh. you'll love thiS place - master
bedroom has pallo door leedil'€ onto a sun deck
that overlooks a large spar~;ng pool wh1ch ~
surrounded by an attracive law~ ·wei
shrubbery and a pnvacy leiU. IN~
seen in the entire area). Price has been rorlrrr..Otn
$129,900 Extra land available District, Green Elem.
HOllE &amp; 10 ACRES - This b a 5 year ~ 3
bedroom home that has a large kitchen ful
basement family room. woodbum1ng furnace: new
18x24 garage &amp; storage 'building The 10 acres
iocludes a new 38x50 bam alii some wood&amp;
Owne~ an11ous to sell. $39,500. Cal Jiin Cochran.

I:c:oli~ilfiY COMIFORT -

NEW LISTING - 2story 3 bedroom homeatl068
2nd Ave. Has vmyl siding, new.rool, 2 •ncr1ens,
baths, family room. basement, nat. gas heat. 1&gt;0111e.•
furmlure and appliances mcluded and 1 car
garage. Could be used as a double or s;ngle family
home $4 2.900
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Bnck bu1ld1ng with
over 1200 sq. fl div1ded into 2 sections. Has 200
A• 3 phase eleclnc. SOrnt new WlnOR, nat 03S
furnace 60'x 173' City lot on Upper 2nd Ave. •
Pr~ed at $30.000. C.l Jim Cochran.

I

BUILDING LOT - Nearly ~ ac~ flat lot located • .
between town and hosptal City waler &amp; sewer
available. Corner lot Washington Elem. No motile
homes. $7.500.

I
I
I

JUST LISTED - 5 year old 1160 SJ. ranch in a
good locat1on and Rt 160 1n Evergreen. Has 3
bedrooms. equ;pped k~chen &amp;dining area &amp;2 car
garage. Situated on a n;ce 3'A ac set11ng. $33,500. •
Call Oyde Walker.
PRICE REDUCED TO $59,900 - Newly
redecorated 4 bedroom home in tow~ Just atxllit ·
everything is new in thiS anracllve home including
vm~ sidKlg rod, carpe~ wal~aper, _
.,nnllo .
insulation . etc. Has 21i baths, eqUipped kitchen,
lam1IY room basement, nat gas heat 21\ car .
garage plus feoced pnvale yard . Call Jim Cochran.

1
1
I.

INVESTII£NT OPPORTUNITY - 7 RENTALS - • •
and located at the junction of Rt 7- Rt. 141.6
:
residential rentals and !last lood rental. Overlooks
boat club. Your ;nvestment should pay for ilseH.
$§5,000
REDUCED TO $27,900 - 1982 14x54 molile
home klcaled on 2.4 acresmR1o Grande just out of
corporation llm~s on Rt 325 Has city waler &amp;
sewage !could put another mornle home or 2 ~
lot) . Call Jim Cochran for more 1nfo.

1:

$29.900 - Owners anXIous lo sell this n~e 2
bedroom home oo Upper RM!r Road Has vin~
siding, nat gas heat eat-rn kttchen, nice s~ed living
room plus large carport and palfling area. Horne IS
in very ~ coodition. Call Jim Cochran.
164 AC. - SR 141 - Located on Raccoon Cree~
this farm offers tobacco base, appro•. 60 ac,
pasture, 50 trup, balance in wooo:land, 40x60
bam and 16x60 shed lot tobacco &amp;kvestock. Wei
· &amp; rural water availa~e lor oome site. Less than
$450 ac. Call Oyde Wllkef.

115 AC. FARII -

Possible land cootract II

qualified buyer. Good beef &amp;tobacco farm,appro~
50 ac. crop, balance 1n pestue &amp; woods. Llrge
tobacco base, 60x90 wam. 24•38bam,1~65sio,
concrete floor 10 barn with appr~ . 4,000 ~ - ft
loafing area. Highway frontage oo Rt. 75 Also
includes an attractive 4 bedroom home with pool.
Call Ojde Walker lor info.

Escape to peace, quiet and
in lhis fantastic contemporary home
Beautiful
made cabinet&gt; in kitchen, sunken
living room with fireplace and cathedral ce;hn~ Forjllal
dimng, 3 or 4 bedrooms, den, 21l baths. lamdy room.
basemen~ 30'x60' garage. ApproXImlely 1 acres
Owner w;Pconsider finaocing City sch ool~
#241

MIDDLEPORT LOCATION -and reduced lo$35,000.
Nice older remod~ed . 2 story home with 3 bedrooms.
bath, dining room. kik:hen. hvmg room Garage. There
~a garden s ~ fruit treesand gra pe arbor. HomeIS 1n
excellent con d~on .
#287
SMALL FARM - 25'h acres, house, barn. bush hog.
tractor and wagon. 2 story home has 2 bedrooms
upstais. iving room, d;ning room . k;tchen· and bath
down. Land mostly pasture, some Ulable and a n ~ee
SIZe tobacco base Property ~ klcated at Fr&lt;nd ~ R1dge.

#266

NEW LISTING- NICE LOT - .63 o~a n acre. located
011 old State Roule 160 at Porter Good Site for homeor
mobile home. Rural.
IIOBIL£ HOME ~ 1978 Bayvll!w Del u•e 14'x70' wtth
8·x24' pullout. 3 bedroom~ 2 baths, fully equ;pped
kitchen w~h lots of cabinets. Gas heat and centra l a11
C~t for more ljetai~
#320
WINTER BWES? - Chase them away and get ready
!:Jr spring in thiS Cheerful, well-kept home 3bedrooms,
•bath, 2 car garage, I ~ acres. more or ~- Mobi~
home hook·up W!hin wal kin~ distance of schools.
church, grocery store. $42,500.
H215
•RIO GRANDE VIllAGE - tit back and enjoy the
:comfort of Ill~ wei maintained brick and frame
bi~evel. 3 bedrooms, I ll baths, k~. complele w~h
disposal. range, refrigerator, dishwasher. l ow healing
bills. WoodbiJ'fler. Garage. Large deck Attic fan.,
·Assumable 100rtgage.
#220

'
•SIIAll 2 BEDROOM HOME localed just inSide city
. limits. Presenly used as rental property. Home has
livng room, dining room. kitchen. bath and ubl!y room.
'Priced at $14,900.
H269
;VICTORIAN Sill£ WlTIILOTS Of ClASS - Home
has been partly restored. Could be a beautiful home.
New llilc~n. new bath, form;~l dm;ng room, fam1ly
,room, living room, 3 bedrooms. Basement and attiC.
•Approx. 1 acre. Priced in the 20s
·
;
H189

:... 8~ Acres, moie or~ Huntington
Electric and telephone
Partially wooded. .

_,_····-~-·-··-~-·-··--

w•.

H294

'

SUNDAY PUZZLER

TENDER LOVING CARE shows throughout the
Immaculate 3 bedroom ranch. BUift·ln k~ch en .
Enclosed breezeway Garage. V in ~ ~d; ng . N;celawn.
S1tualed al the edge of town
#293

#304
ACROSS

NEW USTING - MEIGS COUNTY - You'll be
pleasantly surprised when you see lh1s 3 bedroom
ranch Patio door. V~nyl Siding. Cel lar and c~lar house
plus 2'h acres. more or less $21.000 Shown by
appointment.
#308

NEW LISTING - FRAME RANCH - 3 bedroom bath.
attached garage, nrce kitchen, hv;ng roomand a klvely
' landscaped lawn.. Back lawn IS fenced for pnvacy with
a gazebo, Children's ;lay area. pen lor your favontepet.
Garden SJXJI.
#301

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - 35'x35' ga rage. 2 bay .
stora ge room. Bu"' accord mg to safety reg~aMns .
Incl udin g most equipment. FurniShed 2 bedroom
Coventry mob1le home. Appro1. 'h acre. Rural water
Call formore in lormation.
#289

BEAT THE P.RICEI 4~ Acres, moreor less w1th 5 room
house and olher oulbuldings. Most all wooded , some
limber Morgan Twp Unbelievable pnce at $21,000
Possible land contract 25% down. 10 year; AP.R.,
$208 15 monthly
#242

BARGAIN OF THE YEAR - Subu rban 3 bedroom
raoch. Fam1ly ro om wnh fi~e ;lace plus wood burn1ng
stove Fully carpeted 217 car attached garage, 'h ace
lot. Fenced m backyard. Priced for QUICk sale.
#264

LOVELY MODERN HOME located ;n llie c1ty school
d1stlict Home has 4 bedrooms. 1\\ baths. lamdyroom
knctum With dllling 1.. ThiS home IS pnced Ill the50·s
Possible loan assump!Kln
#262
PRESTIGE LOCATION - Oeveoped lor ca1ehee hvmg
and entertalnment 3 bedrooms, 2 full balhs. I shower
stal . TOil grade appliances. Home ;n 1mmaculale
cond11Dn Porch, deck1n&amp; 30'x36' - 3 bay garage. Two
boat docks avaaable. Approx. 4 acres lo enjoy.
#288

FARM - 11 4 Acres. 3 bedrooms. 1~ story frame
house. 2 barns, S100ke house and other outbUIIdmgs
Tobacco base. 92 Acres pasture and woods. 23 Acres
bilable. Minera l nghts All th1s and more for $ll0,500
Farm equ ipme nt optiona l

MIDDLEPORT - Solid older home 1n excel~nl
cond1ton. 2 story w1th 3bedrooms and large bath. up.
Ma~ n llvel foyer,I1V1n groom. all modern k1tchen and a
bea ut1fu l diOI IJ&amp; room. This home has a lull basement
3 ca r ga rage and n1ce big lot
#247

*285
COMMERCIAL BUIWING PLUS ADDITIONAL
INCOME - Ideal location lor your bu ~ ness. plus 3
mob1le homes. an renled lor eila ir..:ome Twolots Off
street parkin~ Formeny a fl oral shop. Owners anxious
to 'sell. Call for more 1nformatioo.
#233

NEW LISTING - Spring • here and 1l's l1me lo slart
coostruction on that new home you have been
warl1ng. 2 Acres Oeared. Bulavile Rd. Rural waler.
Kyger Creek Schools
#317

mo

COMMERCIAL RETAIL BUILDING located downlown
bu~ness distrk:l 3. story, over 6.000 sq. ft. 81Jilding
di1ided for extra income. Use part. lease lhe'rest. Ca ll
for more detail~
#253

'
lll:il-•r-..

© 1082 Century 21 "-- EICI:e COrporMton ISiru•lft lot tM NAF. ®
C.r.rury 21

articles
8 2 Mend
8&lt;1 Ren t

65 Roden ts
813 Light 1811l
86 Soi l
8 9 M ak es lAce
90 Str!kes
9 2 Par am ours
94 Owne r
96 Covers
99 Horse's
neck hmr
orn \n dlnn
102

10 3 Capuchrn
m o nKey
104 NumtJor
105 Musical
106 Fluid

dr essrng

45 Also

49 Limbs
~0

Pa rce l of

land
51 Saw s
54 Fac t s
55 Everg reen
tree
·

56 Re l un d
59 Arid
60 We lenng
place
62 Gla ss
containers
64 Rampan1
65 Babylonian
deity

66 Faeroe

Is lands

106 Weaken

\09 A contmenl
Abbr

tell er
I 1 I Pro m rse

I 12 Tapers
Possessed
116 Meta l

laslener
t17 All

119 Float
120

Landed

122 Most recent
124 Exist
125

Reveal

126 Oecet~ed
128 Seine
t29 Heap

7 1 Con tatner

138 Writing flu id

69 Tabtetand s

70 Temporerv

46 King ot
Bas hu n
48 1\ny pmtl clr•
49 Fal sehoods

ISO AI no trrne
I 52 Choice purl

5 0 D rrOCIIOll
5 I Sun -drie d

\ 54 Wi nged

\ 56 M oh nm medfln

bnck
5 2 ronr

noble
158 Moun lain
nym ph
159 Lassos
HlO Brshop' s
hoaddro ss

1131

Cut s ol
· moat

s\one

2 Candle
3 Devoured
4 Sym bol fo r
Iron
5 Cook m

10 Manno
l l Brngs
, 1J Angr'!'
o utbu rst

! &lt;1 Ooco vs
75 Mortmr
tnorodlont
77 City In
Vermon t
76 Ap porti on
00 Hils !lghUy
8 I Compns s
p o rn\

6 S!umb errng

7 Ak.lrl
B Abs trac t

being
9 Nega tive
10 Part ol
circle
1 I Fortune t ell ·
\ng card
12 Mo ns\er

83 Fru 11 sood
84 Dll n

13 At\ompt
! 4 Diphthong

87 On f:l wh o
shirk s du ly
69 Surgrcal

\ 5 CitrUS

lrull. pl.

sow

16 Marries

Ia

19
20

105 U nlnt or oS I ·
rng pe rson

10U Socuro
' \0 7 Lfl rn proys

111 Motnl
Sllllnd

11 2 Pas teboard
1 13 Dcposll ol
se cl lm o n t

! 15 Duprn!l.sro n
11G Fo ndle s
1 1fl Spooch

126 M ud

· 90 lnc l rn e
91 Ki nd of
latmc

eggs

Fir\]11nea

92 Al rg hl
9 3 Ornam enltll

27

knob
95 Chlol god

'

127 Muru
tJU iovod
129 Musrce l

Instrument
130 Bury
1J 1 Prepost!lon

132 Jo urn eys
IOrlll

SrlOIIS

hot tal

~7

s
produ ct

12 I f l ymn insect
I ?3 P 10110U il
125 Bou n dar y

61\ H rne1 pn r l
68 Precr ous

tab le\

h or se
101 Bnk.cr

119 An oo

63 Forrnur n ussmn rulu r

l Wfl l illQ

99 Femal e

57 R rver (li rc.k c,
58 Krnq o l
bird s

6 1 Orr o

DOWN

9 7 I fl li Qhlng

53 Lan cn s
55 Fr oh ckNJ
56 Sk111 o f lru rt

UIJ IJOSL'll

114

shelter

whirlwlnc:J

144 No b lemon
145 More
unusual
!&lt;1 7 Conttogro .
t!o ns
149 Meadow

110 Hobre"oV

131 Affecl!onate
132 Eve rgreen
Ire&lt;&gt;
133 Hand le
135 Secret
age nt

67 Goal

SC OIO

organi zn tro n

glAS S

4 7 Kmd ol rrre crac k.er

Go i n

In dosert

au er ldn nt

37 Greek lell ur
30 Remarn
40 Pertorrns
' 4 1 Plo rcc
42 Talke d n11'1'
43 Write s
4&lt;1 Pari ol unr

143 Noor

100 Sou \hwesl·

o l Momphls
9 fl For11111 sp 01

134 A!l irmnt lve
VO!O

136 Srn oo tt 1 th e
lool her s ol
13 7 Porrod s

ol tlm e
! 30 38 th
P•osrden l

I 40
144
145
146
1&gt;17
!48

Partnor

MeAd ow
Te£lr
Mnte sheep
Obes*'
Sodium
chloride
149 Hawmla n
wreath
15 1 Br ot her
ol Odin

I 53 8ot10ld
155 Chinese
dist ance

measure
! 57 A s lat e

Abbr

COUNTRY LIVING at the edge ot town with !hiS 3
bedroom remodeled raoch with 1 acres. Small barn.
Mobile home inciOOed for exlr;l ;ncome. Prced 1n ~
40'~

#254

3 ACRES - Located alongiower Route 7.Nice land for
building a home. lind ~ys f~l and overlooks the liver.
'
H~2

#302
nu-1-onunD.

limo
77 Wi re nAil
78 Gunman 's
g irl f riend
19 New1pape1

3 1 Poom
36 eo.,

139 S lro n~ho l d
t 40 Oe l rtce
141 A mon th
142 Note 01

d~uxe

BUILD YOUR OWN HOME on 12 aGres, more or les~
Graham Sc hool Road: Rural waler available. GalliJXJiis
City Schoof Distrd Several feel of road fr ontage.

S\1 ACRES - tkl as you please. No restriction. Home
site Wooded. Road frontage. $4,000.
#244

72 Flyi ng
momfll ol
7 4 Propor1 1on
76 Peri od or

26,000 SQ. FT., 4 bedroom b•level, large liv111g room.
kitchen. di01ngarea , fami y room. fireplace. 2'h
balhs, heal pump, ce~tal air, 2 ca 1 ga~a ge. concrete
dnve. Swimm1ng pooll 8.x36'. Lots ol living on lA acre
corner lot
H259
40 ACRES, moreor less. Bi-level home. 4 year; old w1th
3 bedrooms a~d 2 f~l baths. urge separale garage.
coal shed. Tobacco base. Approx. 5 acres cleared. Th~
property is mostly wooded and located in Perry
TownshiP.
#237

RENTAL PROPEID - Needs some fiXIng but would
be a good rental investment Small 2 bedroom horte
with h~ng room, kitchen. atta ck, basement and nice
•ze lawn. Located in c1ty
#265

·

1 BOd\1 01
assi stan t s
6 Place tor
com b OI
11 Su m
16 Pen t.
21 In the fut ur e
22 Spamsh 11t1 e
23 Concur
24 Red dye
25 !mllate
26 Shouts
2 8 Bear
30 Fashion
32 PnW noh ce
33 Symbol l or
tell urium
34 Edible seed
35 Fish eggs
36 Seed
con tai ners
37 A n ger
36 Blltor ve 1 c~1
40 Food
program s
42 Fruit seed
43 Shee l o r
44 Bu rden

COUNTRY CASUAL - EnJOY the comlorts of th;s
cha rmmg home. 3·bedroom ra nch wrth liVIng room
bath , kitchen &amp; d1nmg combmabon, lam1iy room.
fireplace. Storage. I 1\ acres. more or less l 1Sied al
$24,900.
#303

JUST LISTED - Buil(h"S lot located at the ,edge ol
Cenlenary. Green Township. No restrictions. Ideal for
house or mobile home.

I

SOUTIIWlSTEifl SCHOOl-S"- Nee 3 bedflllln •
home thlt his 11\ blths. lUI biSIIment, ll*llen,
uti. mom pluS lafl! doulile Clipllrt pluS 111er 1
acre on Rt nS..$34.900. Cal a,de
~.

serv~e

NEW LISTING - THE DEAUVILLE - French
provincial style home w1th over 2,000 sq H. ol hv1ng
space on the mBin, level. This home is all bnck with
doubleenlry doors and so many amemt;esI ca n't wrrte
them all Access to thegrounds, club house and pool al
Tara Esiates. Call lor complete details.

I

NEW LISTING, NICE WT- .63 Acre. more or~.
located on okl Stale Rllllle 160 at Porter. ~od srte 10r
home or mobi e home. $4.000
·
•
#315
LOCATED IN THE CITY school district F~ame home,
excellent cond~on. 3 bedroms, bath. nice lize kitchen.
Unattached garatie. Home ~ neal and clean. prioed in

the 1ow

3a~

.

§21&amp;

and TM - trtdt,....,lls of

Attl EM• Cofpof•IOn . E.Q~.MI HouM~ Opporrunttv11t

\--

......

\

\.

�•
Pase-:-D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Point Plea~~mt, W. Va. .

Pomeray..;-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

April 24, 1983

;;

0

•

Bombing not linked to 'elecJion
TOLEDO, Olllo (AP) - Fire
oftidals say they have. no ri)Otlve
and no~ In thebomtmtg of a
van parked next to the Teamsters
union hall bere.
Harold Leu, prestlent of Teamsters Joint Counc!J 44, said Friday he
had no Idea why Sl)mebody would ·
want to bomb a van awned l1y the
union. He added that he doubted the
.·

Two injured
Two persons

GALLIPOLIS -

were injured In a single-car wreck

on Ohio 218F'fk:lay, theGallla·Melgs
post of the Ohio Highway Patrol

elecilkitl

tnctdent was related .to the
of Jackie Presser of~ il
presilent of the Internal~
. Arsm investigators ~
tile remains of the van
~ eli!'
destroyed In the blast .a bout U: fl
a.m. Thul'llday, hours before
Presser was voted Into the top union
job during 11 meeting in Scottsdale,

wu-

an4

Ariz. ·
Fire investigators said they have
tracked the cause·or the blast to an
incendiary device that w.as proba·
bly placed in the van· s gasoUne

tank.
"I can't figure out what SQm~body

would be doing planting a bonib In a

reports.

TilE RIVER RACERS- The Carleton School and
Meigs Industries team participating Saturday In the
Regional Special Olympics games at 1\Jexander lligh
School are going In their new outfits,' with shorts and
socks donated by Southern IDgh School's Athletic
Boosters. Several team members wW lake parlin the
slate olympic games In June and need sponsors. The
cost of sponsorship is $25, and anyone Interested
should contact Laura Frederiksen, the coach, at
Carleton School. Team members pictured, inim left,

front, are Chris Lee, &amp;rmle Blevins, 8al'ah Hannon,
Mary Jane Curry, Mary JOIIEII and Tina Bauer;
middle, Ben Skinner, Maw1ce Smith, Hugh Roush,
Tom Harris, Laura Clark, Andy Boggeoslllld Unda
Walsiln; baek, DUly Neutl.ilng, Don Btdlington,
David Might; Breent Larkins, Mark Weber, BID
Lehew, Scoit Browning, Bill White, David Karr, Bill
Justice, Brenda EUis and Dee Brown, represet~tlng
Southern's boosters.

Sokolov, a form er faculty
member at the University of
Cincinnati , sa id he felt the worst
aspect of such a proposal was Its
rloquirement that people convicted
under the plea would be treated first
a t state mental hospitals, and then
serve the balance of their sentences
In prison.

Mason man cited in accident
GALLIPOLIS- City police cited
a West Virginia m an as the result of
.a two-car wreck on Upper River
Road Friday afternoon .
Carl E. Crump, 68, Henderson,
was cited for fai ling to f&lt;ee~ 'ISsurect·
c.lear distance .
Patrolmen say Crump was Ira·
vellng south at 2:02 p.m . when he
struck tne rear of a car driven by
Betty J. Weaver. 58, New Have n.
Weaver was stopped in traffic when
t.hcaccidcnl occurred.
Crump's car sustained modera te

Olive St., was delivered a warrant
on a traffic citation a nd Albert W.
Williams, 75, St. Paris, was cited for
no openltor' s license.

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-1

I

LocaJ:n
·
· Leu said a regular monthly

meeting or union stewilfds was held
hours before the bomb went ott.
About :.m people attended the ,

session.
But no problems arooe In the
meeting that would hqve led to the
tnddent, he said. Leu said he
supported Presser's candidacy.
"Igotacallabout91nthemomlng
the day before, from Scottsdale
(Ariz.) and was told thatJacklewas
going to be elected ." Leu said. "He
had thevotes, therewasnoquestlon
about it."
'

van here," Leu said. The car that
The Injured were identtfled as
Elizabeth Fife, 17, Gallipolis, and , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Randy L. Daniels, 19, Rt. 2, Crown
City.
Both were treated at Pleasant
VaUey Hoopltal in Point Pleasant
and released, a nursing supetvtsor
said.
·
According to Jhe patrol, Fife, whO
was driving, was north bound at 8: 04
p.m. when she lost controlofthe car
In a cutve, went of! the left sldeofthe
road and struck a tree.
Her car received moderate
damage.
A pickup truck driven by Don A.
Lewis, 'fl, Jackson, was sUghtly
You'll never be at a
damaged in a mishap on Ohio 325 at
loss for partners on the
8:20p.m. Friday.
tennis courl wi th th is
Troopers say Lewis stooped in the
w1nning combination!
The Playoff s li ne
southbound lane when he saw
g uarantees you'll look
several deer In the roadway. One or
like a pro in the
the deer then reportedly ran Into the
polyester/colt
on short
front of his vehicle.
sleeve engineered
stri pe jerse y pullover
'with fashion collar .
Tennis shorts of
polyester/cotto n stret ch
twill were designed for

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·

Opposes insanity plea proposals
CINCINNATI !API - Ohio's
mental health director says he's
gl ad interest seem s to have waned
In creating another category of the
Insanity plea.
Dr. Howard Sokolov told the
Woman's City Club Friday he
oppossed a move to create a plea of
"guilty but menta lly ilL "

was desl;myed belonged to his son,
Gary, a member of Teamstets

"It would . reoqulre them to
undergo the most Intense, most
expensive trea tment modality first,
which would be economically
wasteful," he said. "The misleading
part Is that moot of the patients
would not receive substantial treat·
ment before being transferred to
correctional Institutions."

TAKE A TOUR -WITH .

8

action and comfort.

MEXICO ·

HAWAII

J.UNE 25-JMLY 1

DEPARTIN(UU.LY !5 .·

Th e striped-elastic
wa istband and side

1

1

vents p r ovi¢le freedom1- - --· \: ·~ · :;
and eas. e · of,_ ino~em
. en·t :. ·

- ·to make 'you a standout on the cou r ts.

\ .. .,K \

.

A guide to local .
Televisio·n programming ·
··.·April ~24 thru ..Ap,r il 30:

I. '. ,f'
r=·

,;

I

CANADIAN ROCKIES
AND PACIFIC'COAST

ALASKA
AUGUST 12-19

JULY 30-AUGUT 13 ,

COCA-COLA

8

$139

16 oz.
BTLS.
Plus lax &amp; Deposit

ALPINE WONDERLAND

5 DAYS/4 NGHTS

GERMANY. AUSTRIA
ITALY &amp; SWITZERLAND
SEPT. 29-0CT. 12

LAS VEGAS
MAY 15-19

Men's and Boys Dept.

1st Floor

'l'rawel Agency
360 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

PH. 446-0699

2 LITER BT.

Includes complete

Be sure to see ni l the
o!her men's Wrang ler
shi rrs and rops.

damage and Weaver's car was

slightly damaged .
Pollee also c ited the following
Frtday and early Saturday:
Failure lo obey traffic signa l:
William E . Garwood, 64, Patrtot
Star Route: Sharon K. Smith:J8, RI.
2, Patriot: A1thur R. Cenna mo, 31,
Rt. 1, Cheshire.
Speeding: James A. Gilmore, 34.
725Third Ave.: Lisa M. Smilh, l9,37
Evans Height s.
Disorderly conduct: Ron ald V.
Morr is. 3.1, Bidwell ; Kenneth D.
Morrison, 27, R.12"Third Ave.
Barbara A. Smilh-Grimcs. :!7. 46

Shirt S -XL
Shorts 28 -40

~

listings

24 CANS-CASE LOT

ONLY

Taken to HMC

$5

Hollywood
Pages 3, 4

79

ICE HOUSE

Robert Wood , seriously inj ured
recenllv ln a car -motorcycle acc l·
denl , 'tias been transferred from
Veterans Memorial Hospita l to th0
Holzer Medica l Center.

DRIVE THRU

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

709 1st Ave .. Gallipolis

-

SPEECH &amp; HEARING

Show beat
.Page 4

412 Vinton Pike
Gallipolis. OH. 45631
446-5500

9.9°/o .
A. P.R.

HEARING SERVICES

0

Financing
on
Buick Skylark
Buick Skyhawk
Pontiac 1000 ·
Pontiac J2000

Hearing Evaluations
Testing, Evaluation, Selection and Fitting of
Hearing Aids
Follow-Up ·and Annual Checks

***
Professional Audiologist
Liee.nsed Hearing Aid Fitter &amp; Dealer
Hearing Aids-Medicaid &amp; UMW Approved

· . SPE~CH &amp;
LANGUAGE, SERVICES
•.

Speech and language Evaluations and
Therapy ...

For Children, Adults, The Elderly '

\

11.5o/o
A. P.R.

The Private Eye
Pages 5, 6

Financing
Available
o·n-All
Other
Models

Late Model
Used Cars

Discount
Priced

60

New Buicks and ·Pontiacs.
In Stoc~. Ready._Jn _GoL __

All At Terriffic Discounts!!

RA

CATCRING 'qiE
VS - Actor Roy Scllelder
at the pool ol tile Bevertry Hils Hotel
chlrltil recent IIMiervtew. Scbelder, wlm played policemen Ia "'lbe French Conllectlon" and
"J.._• .apln d - a · uniform ~ "Blue 'l'llupder," playlnJ a Los Angeles Pollee Depaltmetlt
helle z' r piJM. a V~ vete~ 111111
by war nlptmares. (AI' ..._rpho&amp;o)
.

ha•.,...

,

Yrs. of Service
To The People
Of Masan. Gallia
and Meigs

Counties

Filmeter
Pages 7, 8

\

Serving G,allia, Meigs and Mason Counties
\

UP TO 48 MONTHS

65

..
re.,;,.81

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="138">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2719">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43043">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43042">
              <text>April 24, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7237">
      <name>miser</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="589">
      <name>rowley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
