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Page

Unique truck will be at '82 fair
"Bigfoot" will be a feature of the
1982Meln•CountyFair.
No -..,.. not the reported huge
creature . which allegedly roams ,
around wooded areas eveR in Ohiobut a giant truck. ·
BigfQlli is al974 Ford pickup truck
which I!Qb Chandler of St. Louis, .
Mo., has built Into a 9,200 pound
giant. Bigfoot isn't the average
pickup truck that one sees on ·the
streets.
Bigfoot stands tall- eight feel, six
i11ches - on enonnous mudchurning, gravel-grlnding tires that
measure four feet high, 25 inches
wide, weigh 320 pounds and cost
Sl.300each.
The enalne, similar to a no!Till!l

but larger ~
•Mohar ~--~~- out 600 " - - e r

....
tru""

ono!no,

..._- • ., ......,
•M~...-"
and gets about seven miles to the
gallon on the road.
Chandler removed ·the truck's
original front and rear axles and installed super beavy-duty ones from
a two and one-lull! ton military
cargo truck. . .
A unique feature of,tbe truck is ils
rear steering which O&gt;andler rigged
by lnstalliPg another front axle ln
the rear and connectlng the two
axles to a hydraulically assisted
steering lever. This makes driving
Bigfoot a challenge to rookies.
The shiny blue vehicle was used in
the movie, "Shove It" and saw considerable action m the mud race

.scene and ln the closing footage
·
·which feal1111"1 the truck p1-.1M m11m
rd
shack.
••
a
result
of
10 8
e ca
""
the tough role two tires had to be
replaced, several dents smoothed
out several shocks replaced and the
~eld was cracked.
The vehicle is f~tured at a~totruck shows in major cities of the
try
co~is ~ing brought to Meigs County for the final two days of the fair Friday and Saturday. It will be on
the grounds at noon each day and
will be used especially in conjunction with the evening ~ents on
those two nights_ track pulling contest on Friday and a tractor pulling
contest on Saturday.

Counties, townships would
b~nefit from · legis~ation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Counties and townships fiooded by seas
or red Ink would be eligible lor tbe
same aid now available to cities If a
bill pending ln the Senate becomes
law.
The measure, already passed by
the House, would expand coverage
of the state's !!seal emergency law
which now applies only to
municipalities.
•
"It's ·a bW I want to pass but that I
hope is never used," said its spon'sor, Rep. Thomas P. Gilmartin, DYoungstown. " (But) we must lace
up to our responsibilities to provide
some kind of mechanism."
Current law provides lor the
state auditor to declare fiscal emergencies in municipalities meeting
certain conditions, such as defaultIng on bonds, lalllng to meet payrolls or recording excessive
general fund deficits.
Locally contmlled financial planning. and supervisory cornv.ussions
then are created to put a city's fiscal house In order. Certified public
accountants are hired to act as 11. nanclal superviSOrs with the state
: paying t~ blll.
Sen. Gary· C. Suhadolnik, vice
chairman of the local government,
urban affairs and smatl business
-

UWP ...

By ROBERT E. MilLER
AIIIIOCiated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's budget crisis will
be addressed In part this week In a series of bllls to be
Introduced by the Republican majority ln.the Senate.
Fout-day work weeks and a delayed pay hike for
state employees, and postponing a scheduled benefit
Increase for welfare recipients are among at least
eight measures on tap.
But Gov. James A. Rhodes' proposed penny hike In
the sales tax - to erase about half ol a projected Sl
bUUon deficit by June 30, 1983 - ts not part of the
paCkage.
Leaders 111 both houses have said that there simply
ts not enough support to pass the politically-sensitive
proposal, especially ln an election year with all ol the

eating comstalkS and snow, PenHe said the sows body beat apPERRY, Iowa (AP) - You've . nlngton said.
·
parently made a cavern ln the sno':"
· heard the story about the three Utile
Dr Harlyn McGuire, a Perry with enough air so that they dldn t
pigs. Well, Jack Pennington of ruveterlnarlan,
said he had hemil sto- smother. Also, he said, hogS a::;
ral Perry bas his own story about
rtes mostly !room pioneer days, sulatedfromcoldbythelrOWD kes
the two big sows.
aOO:.t hogs sUrvtvlng lor several fat and packed snow also rna
Pennington_said that when Iowa
weeks arter
burled in snow.
· insulation against cold.
was hit by the first of three ~ucces­
sive weekend January blizzards, a
numll"r of hogs were bedded down
near ·a pile of cornstalks.
·
The stalks and the hogs, IncludIng lour sows, were burled under a
huge snowdrift 6 feet deep.
Pennington said he and his son,
Dennis, dug out som~ ol the hogs.
But they round one or the sows dead
Candy
and gave lhe other three up lor lost.
Then, one day last week - nearly
. three' weeks alter the bUzzard Plates &amp; Cups
they saw two of tbe sows walldng
around the yard. They had burrowed out of the drift
ht FLOOR. N.OTIONS DEPT.
"Denny and I couldn't beUeve It,"
Pennington said. "But we round the
ELBIRFELDS IN
hole they came out ol. They burrowed through a good 6 feet of

'DON'T
VALENTINE'S DAY! .I

Arrives for duty

An action for partition ol real estate has been filed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
John M. Grueser and Angle
Grueser, Reedsvtlle, against E. R.
Hoffman, Rose Hoffman, and R. D.
Harper, along with other heirs of E.
R. Hoffman.

Spec. 4 Je!!rey Lewis, son of Allie
and Mary L. Lewis, Mason, W.Va.,
has arrived for duty at a post in
Glessen, West Germany, in conjunction with his service in the U.S.
Air Force.
Lewis, a personnel action specialist, was prevlou~y assigned to Fort
Jackson, S.C. He Is a 1981 graduate
of Rio Grande College.

Special meeting set
A special meeting of Rutland Village Council will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Rutland Gymnasium, Mayor John Muter announces. All residents having Input on
the uses of the gymnasium people
are asked to present them at this
meeting.

Two Pomeroy students at the

University of Cincinnati have been
named to the dean's list lor the autumn quarter. They are Ellzabeth
Perrin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Perrin, and Laura Rupe,
daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rupe. Both are 1981 graduates ol
Meigs High School.

Property trarifers

Our Wihon collection of pans will inspirt' you
10 baM&gt; a.nd decorate the best v.trntine h't'at
e.orl A lo~ por&lt;olaon-handled'caloe sorvor
ct.n bo youn for just $4.95 whon you mail
proof of pur&lt;hase from o.ny foaturod Wokon
Vaientine pw~ or kK to .Wikon. IIi a $9.99
reed value. Stop in today for coupon and
derails.

ANN'S CAKE

Veterans Memorial
Admitted --Opal Cummins,
Pomeroy; Lois Cornell, Pomeroy.
Discharged--John Wheeler, Jr.

.DECORATING SUPPUES

Demand deposit: of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . ..... ...... •... . . - .•. . .. .. -.. --. .. . . · .. $3,632,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . ... ... ....... . . .. .. . ..... .. . . .. . .. . -. .. 28,816,000.00
Deposits of United Stales Government . ... . . . .. . ... . .. . ..... .. .. -. . -- . .. . -. . .. 4,000.00
Deposib; ~f Stales and political subdivisions
Ill
in the United States . . .. ... ... . .. ....... . . ... - . - . . .... -... . -· · · · · · · · · · · · · 1,786,1m.OO
! : Certified and officers' checks ... . . . . .. . . . . .. ... . . . . . -. ... -. .. -· · · · · · · · · · · · · 308,1m.OO
Total Deposit~! ..... .. .... ... .. ..... ... . . .... .. . . .. .. .... --... -. · · · . · · · · 35,546,1m.OO
Total deniand deposits .. . .. . .. .. . ..... ....... . . . . .. ... - . -. 4,687,000.00
ID
Total time and savings deposits . . . .... . . . . ... . . .. - ... •..... 29,859,000.00
cC
•:::; Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase . . .. . . .... . . . .. . . ...... ..... .. . .. --. -. - I ,166,000.00
other liabilities ... .. ...... . . ... . .. . . . ... . . . ... ... . .... ...... . . - -. - ·.- --- - 1,207,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES Iexcluding subordinated notes
1'11-.,.--1- and debentures ). ....... . ...... .. ... ... . .. . .. ... . ... ... . . ........ . . ·. .. $36,919,1m.OO

"'...-

fjiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiii~;~~~r;.~~;~~~~~~~,,

Phyllis E. Baker nee Phyllis E.
Harris, Ernest F. Baker to Ernest F.
Baker. Phyllis E. Baker, Parcel,
Salisbury- Sutton.
Flossie B. Story, Carol E. Rhodes,
attorney lnfact, F. J. Story, dec. , Affidavit, Bedford.
Mary Haning to Herald Oil and
Gas Company, Right of Way, Scipio.
Amanda Mae Hawk, William WHawk to Herald Oil and Gas Company RightoiWay,Salisbury.
Ev~ G. Seidenabel to Herald Oil
and Gas Company. Right of Way,
Salisbury.
Lena .B. Bargeloh, Charles W.
Bargeloh, dec., Affidavit, Olive.
Edgar Van Inwagen, dec. to
Phyllis L. Vanlnwagen, Cert of
trans., Pomeroy.
James H. Lawrence Estate by
Howard M. and Clarence Lawrence,
Joint Administrators, to J9an ·
Lawrence, 40acres, Lebanon.
Charles H. Bartels to Carolyn M.
Bartels, Parcels, Pomeroy.
Phyllis E. Baker aka Phyllie E.
Harris, Ernest F. Baker to Ernest F.
Baker, Phyllis E. Baker, 2.029 acres,
SuttonSadie E. TrusseD, stanley E.
Trussell, deed., Affidavit, Chester. 1
Lewis W. Harper, Linda· M. Harper to Harold D. Graham, 7/8 acre,
. ScipiO.

1-+-

LAST OF THE 'Sl's'1981 CADIL~AC E'-J;:,ORADO
COUPE
(DEALERS DEMO.)
-6 Way power seat. Cabrialet roof. defogger. opera lamps. vanity
mirror. cruise. V-8 d1esei. tilt and telescope wheeL AM/FM/Stereo/Tape. real leather seating.

Amounts outstanding as of report date:
.
Time certHicales of deposit in denominations
of $100,000 or more .. .. ... .. . . ... . .. . . . . .... . .. . .. .. ... . . - . - - ------· - l,553.000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar morith) ending with report date:
Cash and due from depository institutions ..... . . ....... ..... ... . .... . .. .. - 9,002,1m.OO
Federaifunds sold and securities
.
,
purchased under agreements to resell . . .... .. .. .... .. ... ... ... . . . . ..... . . 459,1m.OO
Totalloans . .. . .. .. . . ... .. -- ... . . .. ..... . .. .. . . . ......... .. .. .. . . .. .. . 20,848,000.00
Time certificates of.deposits in denominations of $100,000 or more . . . . ... . .. .. 1,535,000.00
Total deposits . ........... .. ...... .. .. ... . ..... .-. . ... . . .. . .. - .. · -... . · 34,839,1m.OO
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
'
under agreemenb to repurchase . .. ........ ...... .. .. . - . . . . . -- - . .. -.... ... : 23,1m.OO
Total assets ..... _. . .. . ...... .. .. .. . .. . . . .. .. .. .. . .. .... . . . .... .. .... $40,474,000.00
I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this
-

'17 190000
SIM.MON$
ONLY .

I

.

'
· See one of our CGUriiiOUe ..... )IIOple: Bll Haas. Mlka Ander1011, J. R. Bibbee, or a-ge Harrll.

lis-Point Pleasant

- ~

" I've spoken to the governor and
the governor has sent the proposal
over to Miles Dean in tbe Office of
Economic and Coinrnunity DeVll!OP:
ment," Staton said Friday. "They
will be studying it and looking at all
the possibilities."
Staton added that Kaiser has not
responded to the "economics" of his

great
and small
page B-1
, n '"'"

ADDRESSES KAISER ISSUE- Rep. Mlck Slaton (fi..W.-Va.j said
Friday It wiU lake some time for the Ravellllwood KaiJer Aluminum
plant's productivity problems to work out. So far, his plallll to provide

Hostage holder
killed, page D-1

JoanWolfe
January 26, 1982

'
we, the Wldersigned directors attest the cqrrectness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. we declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
'
I

PAULA. BARNET!'
EDISON HOBSTE'M'ER- DIRECI'ORS
WARREN PICKENS
~

subsidy funding of students In special education programs.sponsored by county boards of mental retarda tion. The savings: $4.5 million.
GUimor said another part of the package calls for a
10 percent surcha rge on the various state rotary
funds- non-tax money collected, usually In the !ann
of fees, for state services. This would brtng In about
$60 million In the liscai year starting July I, he said .
Finally, the GOP pian calls lor some paper shuffling th.a t could reduce the $356.3 deficit for the current fiscal year by about $27 million.
This would be done by pushing $17 million In Medicaid obligations Into fiscal 1983 and claiming about
$10 million In unencumbered agency balances when
the current fiscal year ends Jijne 30.

ecooomlc lncenUve for lhe bUsiness bave been pasoed on to the Office of
Ecol!omlc and Community Development In Charleston for review. The
representative said he hopes to further diii&lt;UIIIIIon with Kaiser offlciaiJ
thiJ week. (Photo b)' Lee Kampmeyerl.

10 Sections. J8 Pages JS Cents

sunday, Feb. 7, 1982

Rep. Staton proposes
'economic' restoration
for Kaiser Aluminum
proposal to restore hundreds of jobs
at the Ravenswood plant.
At a brief press conference Friday
morning at Kanawha Airport,
Charleston, Staton said the productivity problem needed to be worked
out at Kaiser and mentioned he
would not be involved in labor l.alks.
"Many people in Mason County
are directly affected by this," Staton
said. " It will take a long time to
· work it out," he said.
During questioning by news reporters, he said he planned to meet with
Kaiswer officials next week for further discussion.
·
Staton's plan would require action
from all of the parties concerned
with the future of the plant Kaiser, the · United Steelworkers
Union, Jackson Cowoty, the state,
and utilities that provide power for
the plant.
Slate Sen. Bob Wise, D-Kanawha,
meanwhile, issued a statement
Friday saying he had sent a letter to
Staton cautioning that the plall may
not be practical.
"In these . trawnatic economic
times it is extremely important to
avoid raising false hopes with
questionable prGpQsals," Wise said.
Staton's plan calls for business
and occupational tax breaks and the
placement of power bill paymenb;
'into an interest-bearing escrow account for lwo years, as pennitted by
Appalachian ·Po,.Oer Company and
the Public Service Commission. He
says this would generate enough
money to allow Kaiser to recall up to
750 workers.
The plan further includes iackson
. County to forego property taxes on
the reduction plant for two years and
for negotiations to continue between
United Steelworkers District 5668
(Continued on A-4)

A Multimedia In(':' Newspaper

News briefs •••

,,;; .....

\ow

~ f.....
•
·~~-

ON THE DERBY TRAIL - Members of local boy scout troops are
oeen on: Po-..outh Road In GaDipolla Saturday morning participating
In the annual Kloadlke Derby, a acoul activity which pits scouts ond
their 8ldlls aplnot the elements. A freoh dWitlng of snow overnight
added the right touch tO the event. (Larry Ewing photo).

Jennings OSU's lOth president
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio State University installed Edward
H. Jennings as Its lOth president Friday In a brtel ceremoni' which took
the place of a lormallnauguratlon.
Chester Devenow, chairman ol the university's Board of Trustees,
said Jennings had requested the shorter swearing-in
because of reductions in state support to the university. A more formal ceremony had been scheduled
lor March 9.
\ Devenow said Jennings' decision to forego the
I more traditional inaugural was "typical'of the leadership style and concern" shown by Jennings since he
assumed Ohio State's presidency Sept. 1.
The actual Installation traditionally Is scheduled
about six months after a president tak~ over, Devenow said.
In a brief speech following his Installation, Jennings said he recognizes the university's budget problems "are Indeed enormous."
"These problems present extra challenges lor each of us," he added.
But the !14-year-old president said he believed the state would not finan cially cripple Its universities despite lis financial situation.

Out of work: joining
the January jobless:
By MARIANNE McGOWAN
Auoclated PreM Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ronald
Thomas doesn't place too much
faith in statistics. January's unemployment rate dropped - both nationally and In Ohio -but Thomas
lost his factory job Jan. 29.
The 24-year-oid worker joined his
!ather on the unemployment line.
His brother and sister are also without jobs.
"I knew It would catch up w;lth
me sooner or later," Thomas said.
He has yet to start job-hunting.
There,was a more pressing concern
Thursday. the day·Thomas rode a
bus to the state linempioyment orflee to lill out his first claim lor
benefits.
"I don't know how much the unemployment check .wiD be, " said
Thomas. Wearing a red woolen cap
and a heavy sweater beneath his
coat, the bearded worker leaned on
a windowsill, studying a !arm.
Thomas' father, Percy, laid off
Jan. 16 from his job mananging an
apartment building, W!" walling In
line. But the elder Thomas said be
was In. relatively good shape becallll! he hadothetworkon !beside~
"It's not so bad for me," he said.
"But there are some fel1aa around
here who~ much wone ott."
Hill - . for one.
·
'nle Impact of belli&amp;.out of~
with II wife, a f-yeaNld ~ I
and a ~tack of bUll at home Jiiilja•t

G
tie for SEO cagev
title, pa~e C4

I

.

OLDS-CAD.-CHEV., INC.

.

hour, whichever Is greater.
Recipients of Aid to Dependent Children are scheduled to gel a 5 percent hicrease in benefits July l,
whlle grants to general relief recipients are slated to
go up 10 percent. Under another GOP proposal to be
discussed, the boosts would be delayed until July I,
1983, saving $25.9 mtltlon.
The GOP majority also will consider continuing lor
one year some new corporate·and utlllty tal&lt;ell which
are expecled to trigger under an economic downturn
fonnWa this spring but eXpire June 30.
Those taxes are expected to produce $44.7 mllUon
this fiscal year. The extension would provide another
$59.5 million, Glllmor said.
Also ln the package ts a plan under which the state
would delay until July 1, 1983, an increase to full

Conunon stock :
No. shares authorized 16,1m
No. shares outstanding 16,000
(par value) . ... . . . . . .. . . . . .... . --· · · · · . S400,!m,OO
Surplus . .. . ... ... ... ... . ·.... .. ..... .... . .. . . . . . ... . . . _. . . .. .... . . . . . .. . 1,520,000.00
Undivided prolits . ....... . .......... .. .. .. . ... . . . -. .. .. . . . . . -- .. --·; · · · 1.604,000.00
Reserve for contingencies and
other capital reserves . .. . .. . . .. . ... . .. . . .... .. . . . .. . - . ... . . . . ---. ... . · . . 10,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .. . . .. . . .. . . ... . . ......... . . .. . . .... -.. -· · -- $3.534,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .. . . . _. .. . . ........ - • . . -. --· ~~0,453,000.00

I---'-- Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.

EXCELLENT VALUE

Middleport- Pomeroy-Ga 1

Statement of Resources and Liabilitiell

Rt. 7, Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
Call: 667-6485

'

tmes

and AP Reports
PT. PLEASANT - Congressman Mlck Staton, R-W.Va., says
he's getting feedback to his plan to
.help restore hundreds of jobs at
·Kaiser Aluminum's Ravenswood
plant but .hasn't discussed detalls
With&gt;tlle' company.

•----,- Cash and due from depository institutions . .. ... . .. -.. . -. . . -- . . . --. . . - - · · · $10,605,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . ..... .. . ... .. .. . . ... . - • . .. --.-. 2,000,000.00
Obligations of other U.S._Government
agenc1esand corporatiOns .. .. .. .. . ..... ... . .. . ... .. . . ... . . -. . - .. --- -. - 1,761,1m.00
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions in the United Stales ... . ... ....... ..... .. . . .. .. . . - . . .. - . . -.- 3,474,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures . . ... . ...... ... . ... . ... . ... -.... · · · · · · · · · - 2,1m-:
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . .. .. . . -... -.. . ... . .. . . . . .. . . · -· · . 58,000.
Loans Total (excluding unearned income) . . .. ... .. ... . .. . 21,098,000.00
.Less: Allowance for possible loan losses . . . : . .. . . ... . ... . .. . 264,000.00
Loans, Net . ... . . . . . .. . .. • . .. .. .. . ...... . ... ..... . .. . ..... .. .. .... ... 20,834,000.00
Lease financing receivables . ... ... .. . ... .. . ---.- ·- · · · · · · · · ··· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 534,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures. and
.
other assets representing bank premises .. .. ....... . .. ... . .. . .... -. ----- · --589,000.00
&lt;&gt;ther assets .. . ..... . . .. . .. ..... . .. .. .. . .... ••. , .. .. • . •• .. . . . .. . . .. .... .. §96.000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .. . ....... . ... . ...... . ... . .. .. ... . ... . · - · · .. -- · · · · · · · · $40.453,00Q,OO

On dean's list

-··

•

From OVP Staff

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiii~;..;;.;;;;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,

Partition suit filed

toPhyllis
Terry L.E.Smith,
Baker,Parcels,
Ernest Sutton.
F. Baker

Today's T-S ·

Stuffed Animals - Gift Wrap.

Meigs County happenings

First Federal Savings and Loan
Association to Larry D. Cutlip,
Donald G. Mel:!, 60.3 acres, Orange.
Raymond E. Hensler, Doris L.
Hensler to James C. Hensler, II&gt;
acres, Lebanon.
Raymond E. Hensler, Doris L.
Hensler to Daniel C. Hensler, David
A. Hensler, Parcel, Sutton.

Vol. 15 No. 52
Copyrighted 1982

Halhnark Cards· Boxed Valentine
Children's Valentines- Valenrwe Napkins

r:===========::J

.

.

99 House seats and 17 of the 33 In the Senate at stake.
However, Rhodes is expected to renew his appeal to
Legislative leaders.
Senate President Paul E. Glllmor, R-Pon Clinton.
said the proposals ol his IS-member caucus are not
written in stOne and none Is assured of being approved, "These are just some things llhlnk we should
look at, and throw in lor consideration," he said.
Putting state employees on a four-day work week
- except lor Institutional workers who would contlnue full time - would save $:Jl mWion this fiscal
year and $70 mliUon In the fiscal year starting .July 1.
he said.
Glllmor suggested $11.8 mUllan could be saved by
delaying a scheduled state employee pay raise from
July 1 to Dec. I . The boost is 5 percent or 40 cents an

unba

committee which has opened hear- pay an increasing share of the costs
Ings on GUmartin's measure, en- of their financial supervisors. But
that Is not expected tO significantly
dorsed the concept.
"I guess practically I don't see reduce the state's Investment beanything wrong with that," said the cause commission operations are
Parma Heights Republican. moot costly during the first six
"Hopefully we're never going to months.
"I think we've structured this In
use it."
such
a way that I don't think you
Suhadoinlk said the measure
could
come up with a plan that
could act as incentive for local gowould
be leSs costly," Gilmartin
vernments to solve their problems
said.
before they-reach a critical stage.
A Legislative Budget Office analIt would tell them, In effect, "H
ysis
said it Is Impossible to figure
you can't handle your own affairs,
how
much extra money the bill
we're going to handle them lor
would
cost the state ·since no one snow.''
you," he said.
Apparently the sows survived by
GUmartin said the bill had been knows how many counties or townstreamlined In an attempt to keep a
emergencies.
tld on costs In view ol the state's ships
might run iota llnancial
"Four counties (Mahonlng, Richbudget crunch.
Townships with fewer than 5,1m land, Summit and Tfumbulll In
people would not be required Ia hire particular may be close to such a
special accountants. Those servi- situation, but the situation may
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
ces, usually the most expensive change so that no detenninatlon
be
made
at
this
time,"
the
anacan
Item lor a commission, would be
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
performed by the state auditor's · lysts said.
Commissions are operating In
office.
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA
Cleveland, Niles, Norwood, Ashtab-·
The measure also would extend
the time during which creation of a ula, Ironton, Lincoln Heights and
commission could be postponed to the Richland County village of Plyin the slate of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 1981 published in response to
mouth. A fl.scal emergency has also
give local governments another opcall made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Se~bon 161.
been declared in the vlllage of
portunity to remedy the condition.
Freeport.
It would require, alter six
National Bank Region Nwnber 4
Chariecnumher 1980
months, that local governments

" ·-

Ohio lawmake:rs study budget crisis

.Sows survive six foot snow drift
BIGFOOr - This 197t pickup truck bas beeo eogioeered ioto a super vehicle, "Bigfoot" and will be
a feature of the 1982 Meigs County Fair.

-

Friday,_februa'Y 5' 1982

Pomeroy Middlepolt, Ohio .

12-The Daily Sentinel

. ..........

~

Area d~tbs .. .... ... A~

Business . ... .... • · · • E-1
Classified ..... . · .. D-3-7
Editorial .. .. . .. .. • A·Z..3
F8rm •..• , ... · · · · • E-8-9
I.AJcal •• ••• • • • • • • • • A-4-1
Lifestyle . . ........ B-1-8

.State-National ••.•• IJ.l·Z
Sporta
C:.l-8
Take-Ooe · ... . .... ID.Iert
0

1

o 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I .0 0

JOBI.DI - Tile fKl * I Je

.,_.,- ..-11 fll Clev '

IJ'I

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rate !let II Mid
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llet IIIII
lb.!ld

factary

JeiiJu. •· no-.,.,.. •u•lda tllfte-,.,_ald allllter Sllii'NII.

, _ 1111 !IIIIer, blotller ud ilater oa !be -mploJL!IIt llae. lAP Lalel'
pilate~ •

quite hit Thomas. A paycheck had
come last Friday, and their refrigerator was tun lor now. One more .
week's pay was due next Friday.
"They were laying off a lot or people. I was expecting It, so I wasn't
too disappointed. But any layoff Is
bad," Thomas said.
Thomas had worked since June
1979 at the Sherwood Refractories,
·a division of TRW Inc. that makes
alrcralt components such as ceramic cores used In casting engine
blades. He earned $250 a week.
On Jan. 21, Thomas was among
40 employees laid o!! because of
dwindling orders due to the e!!ect of
the recession on airlines.
Thomas said he and some coworkers wwere o!!ered slmllar
jobs in a plant In Mentor, about 20
mJies away. "I couldn't take that
job because I didn't have any way
of getting out there," he said.
Ohio's seasonally adJusted jobless rate was 10.7 percent in January, down from 12.2 percent in
December. Natinnally, the rate
dropped to 8.5 percent from 8.8
percent.
Thole ligures aren't '!5 compellIng to Thomas as his $1110 a month
rent, h1l SlliO In utllltles and hls
$3,00lln debta.
"It worries me a little bit, but
·you've aot to IIII'Yive- I've gOt a
fl!mlb'.lra
to be hard. 'lblniB
aJOe Fl!bc I'I1IIIIIL Everybody's getllllllald ott:• he uld.

"I just !eell'm going to do what I
have to do to keep a roof over our
heads and something to eat," he
said. "I will survive II ."
"To me money is still money," he
said. "You're going to have to pay
what you have to pay, whether it
(unemployment rate ) goes up or
down . I don't get too deeply into 11.
Hall of It I don't understand."

RISING

auma

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..

Commentary and perspective

Page-A·2
Feb. 7, 1982

Curbing the. court'=======W=il==lia;;;;;m==F=.B=uc=k=ley~]r.
ADivl•lon of

.... ~

~m~
q;jV
1125 'Iblrd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(&amp;lt) 44C-2342

lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 99Z.2156

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor
A MEMBER ofT~ AnoclMkd Pre~Js,
NtW11JM1per Publl»htn A~~t~oelallon.

lnl~tnd

Daily Pre-u AnocW IIun aDd lite

Amtria~o

LE'JTERS OF OPINION •r.- wt!lcnmed. They t~hould hr I~ th111n 300 wordii lcuti. All
W!kn. 11re ~~oubjert W edlti.Dg 11nd mu11 br t~Jglled wilb name, addrtlll IIDd k!lephuDi!
nuq:aber. NnuJWil{lled ldten will bt: pubU~hed. Ldlel"li t~hoold bt&gt; In Rood taHlt', llddret&gt;llng
l11suet, aol penonalllle~~.

The 'Not Ready for
·Prime Time Players'
The Senate's debate over televising ltsell Is not ready for prime· time.
The script hasn't been bad, but It's a play without much of an audience.
A capacity crowd would be 581, but the galleries are seldom full. That•,,
fair enough since a capacity crowd of senators Is 100 and that seldom
happens either.
There are not many momentous moments In a chamber frequented and
observed by people who sardonically describe It as the cave of the winds.
The TV debate was not among the momentous moments, although it has
been a decent enough show.
It offers Sen. Russell B. Long, D·La., a political dramatist of the old
Southern school, arguing that II television got ·Into the place, senators
would make a lot of long speeehes. He has been doing exactly that, for
years.
Leading man In the cast of TV advocates Is Senate Majority Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr. o! Tennessee, who observed that anyone concerned
that senators could use In-house television to run for president should think
again.
Which Is not to say that senators with an eye on the WhiteHouse wouldn't
try out their stuff In the Senate, with or without televised coverage.
The Issue before the Senate Is whether to let television cameras Into a
chamber that always has resiSted electronic gimmicks, prefeinng an
Image buUt around quill pens and Inkwells. It would cost up to $3 million to
put the cameras In, and about nx&gt;,OOO a year to run them. According to
Baker, that annual expense equals 600 pages ol the Congressional Record.
By the time the 'Senate gets around to a debate on a major Issue,
everybody - or almost e~rybody- who Is going to vote on the matter at
hand has decided what that vote will be. The debate Is a matterofexplanatlon, seldom of persuasion that Is going to change any minds.
The House has been ~n television since 1979, although most people don't
know II. The same arguments were made there before the cameras were
Installed. But at Baker pointed out, House sessions have been shorter since
television than before.
But the rules are dllferent. House debates are conducted under strict
time limits. There are none In the Senate.
Indeed, Long said television might doom tbe timeless refuge of the
. determined minority, the Senate filibuster. He may yet wage one against
television. But It seems more likely people would turn off the TV set than
_ . raise a cry lor the Senate to get rid of the rules that allow filibusters.
·: · ; · : That's the fiaw In the whole debate. It presupposes that II television does
: : ; : . get Into the Senate, viewers will tune In and stare at the proceedings all
•: &lt;.day. Baker says otherwise, and the House experience supports his
; : : : argument.

... . .

~ '

\{Equating the economy
..

. .

How do we equate the theory of suppply side economics- which has as a
with repeated.assuran; · : · .ces that big budget deficits can be tolerated?
·: : ; : Unless the past has no lesson to o!!er, budget deficits have forced up
: : : &gt;Interest rates, fueled Inflation, crowded out Industry from Its share of
. : ' : funds, and In general reduced the private sector's potential growth.
: · ; . With deficits destined to reach historic highs, the administration con;: ; : tends there will be enough funds for the private sector to embark on

·:· :.goat the transfer of power to the private sector -

· :. : "roaring" recovery.

:: ; ; After examining the earlier contentions of the administration, It Is hard
; • ; . to find a defense having been made that deficits, huge ones, might be
·: · : tolerable under some economic conditions, such as exist now.
:; :. An Important question also exists about those savings. The savings rate
; ·; · Is Inching up to around 6 percent, one reason being the popularity ol
:; : ; Individual Retirement Accounls, which permit savers to salt away up to
·; . : $2,!XXI a year without any current tAXes on the Interest earnPd.
: · ; · The concept has been widely acclaimed, but can the same be said about
;; ; : the execution. There Is no scarcity of ads, for example, urging young
;; • ; Jli)Ople to become rnllllonalres through the simple expedient of saving a
. ; : : couple of thousand dollars a year. Tbe adveridsers know that while It Is
·· : . conceivable, It Is concelvabe only II Interest rates remain very high. And
; ; · : very high Interest rates, of course, mean high Inflation too.
As a result, any $2,QOO.a-year mllllonalre will Inevitably find In his older
years that prices will have risen accordingly, and that In terms of buying
power he Is right back there among the struggling masses.
That point has been made, but there's another factor that needs to be
considered: Why should a young person unable even to save enough
money to satsfactorily house his famUy, freeze funds for 30 years or more?
wouldn't these funds be better Invested In a home, which at least has the
potential for keeping pace with ln!latlon? Isn't It as Important to exist
Intelligently as a 35-year-old as It Is as a 65-year-otdr
Homes, however, are not currently part of the supply-side agenda. In
fact, a popular argument exlsls that money that goes Into housing does so
at the expense ollndustty. Industry first, Is the rationale, and then Industry
can provide jobs to pay wages to be used In buying bomes.
But that brings up a question that never manages to get answered. With
more than 40 mUllan Americans In this decade reaching lamlly-bulldlng
age - mid 20s to mid 30s - and with housing production In a depression
and not likely to rise up from It soon, how are Americans to be housed?

•

Today In history·
'

.I

Today Is Sunday, Feb. 7, the 38th day of 1982. There are 327 days left In
" the year.
Today's highlight In history: .
.On Feb. 7, 1944, German forces launched assaults on the Allies' Anzlo
bridge-head In Italy .
•
On this date:
In 1982, a coal mine explosion In Saarbruecken, Germany, took the Uves
• of 298 miners.
in 1969, Nigerian planes bombed and strafed a crowded market In
rebellious Blafra, kllllng more than 200 people.
In 1970, Israeli planes bombed and sank an Egyptian mine-layer In tile
Red Sea after the sinking o! an Israeli naval vessel by Egyptian !rogmen at
• Elath (Ee'-lath), Israel.
r
,'
And In 1974, Britain granted lndepend~ ,to the small Cartbbean Island
'

•·
•

:

of Grenada.

Ten years &amp;fill, President Richard I'Jixon signed a federal e~tlor. refonn blllllmltlng a candidate's penon81 campaign spending.
Five yearj
black natlonalJst guei'I'IIas In Rhodesls, raided a Ca-

aao.

: ' thollc rnlsslgD.etatloii, killing four nUJI8, two priests and a lay brother.

,,

What two things happened on Sept.
25, 1789? Give up?
President George Washington
sjgned the Judiciary Act. And the
Senate approved the Bill of Rights.
And why is this lmporlant? Because
it has got into the head of people who
should know better, most conspicuously Mr. David Brink, the new
president of the American Bar
Association, that it Is both unAmerlcan and unconstitutional to
propose that Congress look into the
merits of redefining the Supreme
Court's jurisdiction.
,
What is significant about the coincidence is that the two principal
drafters of the Judiciary Bill (in·
deed, the original of the bill sur· ·
vives, in their handwriting), Sens.
Oliver Ellsworth and William. Paterson were altogether ·Clear about
what Congress' rights would continue to be. The Constitution had
only recently been adopted. Article
II, Section 2, provides: "Tbe
Supreme Court shaD have appellate
jurisdiction,s both as to law and fact,
with such exceptions and under such
regulations as the Congress shall
make." Just what did the framers
mean by those words, asked a
guerulous delegate during the
debate over ratification ira !he
Virginia Assembly. He was set right
as to their meaning by no less than
John Marshall, whom custom
acknowledges as a supreme interpreter of the Constitution. Said
Marshall:
"What is the meaning of the term
exceptions? ... CongrellS is empowered to make exceptions to the
appellate jurisdiction, as to law and
facl, of the Supreme Court. These
exceptioos. certainly go as far as the
legislature rruiy thing proper for the
interest and liberty of the people." II
is not known whether Mr. Marshall,

sotto voce, added: "What do you
think it meant, you ass?" - but certainly the entire government of the
United States proceeded with exactly that understanding in mind.
The Bill of Rights, pfter all, Is to a
•ubl.1antial extent a recitaiton of the
rights of American citizens up
against criminal charges. Yet the
same Congress that passed the
Judiciary Act passed the BiD of
Rights. "The Fourth Amendment,"
C. Dickerman Williams, the legal
scholar, swrunarizes in an essay on
"CongrellS and the Supreme Court"
in the current issue of National
Review" protects against
unreasonable searchers and
seizures; the Fifth protects against

Soviets at ·. bay in
WASHINGTON - While the
Soviets have kept up their remorseless pressures from Afghanistan
to Latin America, they have also not
been idle in the vast reaches of the
South Pacific. Fortunately, the free
world's flank in this strategic region
is protected by one of the United
States' staunchest and quietest
allies- N'ew Zealand.
The Russians have done their best
to gain a ~oothold in the tiny, defenseles island nations that have won
their indejlendence in recent years.
The New Zealanders have made it
their business to keep the Soviets
out, and so far they have succeeded
- no small feat for a nation of three
million lJOlated from Its powerful
allies.
My a~JSociate Dale Van Alta went
to New Zealand to get the story. He
interviewed the outspoken prime
. minister, Robert D. Muldoon, and
the chief of the Security Intelligence
Service, Richard Mollneaux. I have
also had a~ss to top-secret U. S. in·
telllgence reports on the low-key
power struggle between New
Zealand and the Soviet Union in the

compulsory seH-incrimination; the pellate jurisdiction in criminal cases
sixth ,assures the right of counsel; . and that this had "for too long been
and the Eighth .protects against acquesced in as sound expositions of
cruel and unusual punislunent." the Judiciary Act to be changed
Now what is significant here is that without an act of Congress."
the Judiciary Act did not give to the
Nor Is this only ancient lore.
Supreme Court appellate jurisdic- Professor Herbert Wechsler, Harlan
lion in any criminal case. This was .Fiske Stone professor of connot done until1891.
stitutional law at Columbia, adOver and over again, ~ Supreme dressed the issue back when there
Court decUned to hear an appeal on was aU the lighting about limitation
the basis of its having been denied in the '60s, and he concluded ruefully
jurisdication in the 1789 act. For in- (as a political liberal ): "I see no
stance poor Mr. Plwner, sentenced basis for the view &lt;tl!&amp;t the exto hang In 1859, attempted to break ceptions clause has o narrow
through to Ute court by charging a meaning, not including cases of conwrit of error by the trial couri, but o1itutional dimension) and think it
the court ruled nothing doing, antithetical to the plan of the Conreiteraing that there was no ap- stitution lor the courts."

South Pacific.
Muldoon explaine&lt;l that New
Zealand, because of the necessary
limitations imposed by its size,
works most effectively through the
13-member South Pacific Forum.
This covers the vast expanse from
the Equator to the South Pole and
Papua New Guinea on the west to
the Cook Islands on the east.
"It's mostly wafer," he said dri·
ly, "but It's of. very strategic im·

portance."
II New Zealand has one primary

aim, "It's to see that the Soviet
Union doesn't get a land-based
presenee in that area through some
kind of association with one of the in·
dependent states."
New Zealand targets 70 percent of
its foreign aid to the Independent
island groups. "As iong as we keep
the Forwn cohesive,'' he said, ''then
none of these Independent states is
likely to become a satellite of the
Soviet Union."
Several years ago, Muldoon said,
the Soviets made a major effort to
"get alongside one of the governments in the South Pacific, but

without success." At the moment, he territory. The Soviet ambassador to
said, two new governments - in the ·Australia, for example, must handle
Solomon Islands and Vanuatu (for- his country's diplomatic represenmerly the New Hebrides) - "there tation to Fiji, and may soon have to
are a little bit tentative about whom expand his jurisdiction to Vanuatu
as well. The Soviet ambassador to
they're going to get close to."
New
Zealand wa~ also accredited to
But Muldoon added confidently :
Tonga
and Western Samoa, while
"I'm not greatly concerned about it,
t)le
Soviet
presdence in Papua New
because the Forum now has a
Guinea
if any - will be handled
cohesiveness of its own." The members have close trade and political by the embassy in Jakarta, Inties, and so far have seen no ad· donesia.
There was at least one emvantage in responding to overtures
barrassing backfire In the Kremlin's
from the Kremlin.
In fact, the Russians suffered heavyhanded attempts at subsome embarrassing rebuffs in the version. The last Soviet ambassadir
region when they proffered develop- was kicked out of New Zealand two
ment aid to some of the island years ago when he was caught
groups. Western Samoa and Tonga making an illegal $30,000 ~sh
rejected a Soviet offer of public payment to one of his hirelings m the
works projects in return for port Socialist Unity Party.
SlS Chief Molineaux shrugged off
facilities for Russian trawlers. Some
of the tiny nations even spumed a this intelligence coup with -the obSoviet offer to provide a scientific servation that "wehave a little ar·
my, a little police Ioree and a little
ship for an ocean resources survey.
..Most humiliating of all for the security service."
He was being too modest. CIA
Kremlin, though, has been the
sources
said the New Zealand in·
refusal by tlie II independent island
groups to allow the Soviets to teUigence service is e&lt;tremely
establish resident embassies in their capable for its size.

We got shortchangeud======Ar=tB==uc=hwa=l=d
"And what happens to them
much oil and gas you hope to take
then?"
out of the ground?"
"LoOk, when we signed your lease, . "The home office decides how
you put us on the 'honor system' and much we should report to the
made each of us responsible for our government.''
"That seems a fair way to do it.
own reporilng. When we know how
much oil and gas we took out, we'll Are we allowed to audit your
figures?"
tell you."
"Sure you are, but that would
"Don't get mad. We're not
questioning your figures. But mean you didn't trust liS, and then
Congress says we're supposed to the whole honor system would break
keep tabs on you people, and any down. Is that what you people
figure you could give us is ac- want?"
" Of course not. yYe wouldn't be
ceptable."
doing
businellS with you guys if we
"I should hope so. The honor
didn't
think
you were honest. "
system is as sacred to the oil In·
"You
got
any other questions you
dustry as It Is to West Point."
want
to
ask?"
"Just for my own information,
rock."
" No, you've satisfied me. Is there
"The Secretary was wondering if how,do you know how much oil and
I can do for you?"
anything
you could give him any Idea how gas you take out of a well?"
"
Yeh
,
you could. Get the
" It's a very complicated
much royalties we can expect from
your operation thisi)'ear?"
procedure. We have. a guy who sits American Indians off our backs.
"You mean to tell me with all the on a stool next to the well and he They think they're not getting their
government has to do, you're counts hoW,. much oil or gas comes fair share of royalties, and they
bugging ll)e for a f.'ll!' lo1W'~"=YY'I!!l. out, wiUt a pticket calculator. Then want to do away with the honor
·
bucks? We'll lel!' you tit the Mll' fill _ . lhotle II.._ OYer to the ,ystem."
the year. The way things are going foreman who subtracts any oil that · "That's unforgivable. I'U talk to
spllled into the ground. The foreman the head of the Bureau of Indian Af.
iVOU could owe us money."
"Don't you have. any idea how sends these figures to the home of. fairs right away.''
lice for verification."

worked. Every once in a while when
someone at the Interior Department
had nothing better to do, he would
call up one of the oil companies
which had a.lease on public land and
say, ''What's up?"
The oil company executive would
say angrily, "What are you doing,
checking up on us?"
"Of course not. I was just curious
bow much oil and gas you were
taking out of the ground?"
"We're lucky to get three cups a
day," the oil company executive
would reply. "It's really tough
drilling on public land. You never
know when you are going to hit a

Pa!!e-A-3

federalism.L-----~---L_ow_e_u_w_i_ng_e_u Berry's World

Sbows on ABC TV last · week written 20 or 3tJ years from now. No ·
illustrated the vast difference in the two men could he more different in
philosophies of our two major their backgrounds and philosophies
. political parties. They were the than Reagail and FDR. Roosevell
State of the Union message to a joint was born to riches and privilege and
session of Congress by President became, to tbe wealthy, a "traitor ta
Ronald Reagan and FDR, the story his class.'' Reagan was born. to a
of the years when Franklin Delano middle class family which be has
Roosevelt was president. I hope you described as " not~far- from the
railroad tracks" and has become' a
watched both.
"traitor to his generation." Those
I particularly hope that everyone are his own quotes and how they will
under the age of 50 saw the FDR be judged in history only future
show. Anyone younger could not generations will know. FDR goes
know the grinding poverty of the last down in history for his compassion
years of the Hoover administration to people far less fortunate than he.
or the next decade while the country Reagan, so far, has shown an utter
was struggling out. ~ the Great lack of compassion for anyone.
There is no question that Reagan
Depression. As I grow older I am increasingly proud that I cast my first is personally popular. As an actor ,
vote lor President of the United he knows how to act like a president.
States for FDR. I had the pleasure of He is magnificent on television \vhen
voting for lilm three more times and he has had an opportunity to rehear·
have never regretted a single vote. se his act but has been a dismal
In fact, I linnly believe he saved our failure at national press conference.
country twice, once from the Even his rehearsed speeches have
depression and again by his leader- been long on promises but short on
ship in World War II. 'There is no substance. His admirers may be
reason to expand more fully here on justly proud of the acting and high
the accomplishments of the ratings of the president but there Is
Roosevelt administration. They are more to being a good president than
showmanship and personal
history.
I am afraid that history will not be popularity.
There is no job in the world that
so kind to Ronald Reagan when it is

will show the strength or weakness
of an official than to be elected

President of the United States.
Before he was elected president in
1928 Herbert Hoover was one of the
country's most popular men. He was
known as the "Great Organizer" for
his suCcess as administrator of relief
efforts in Belgium and other countries during and alter World War I.
He had amassed a fortune as a
mining engineer and was well and
favorably known around the entire
world. When he promised "Two
chickens in every pot, two cars in
every garage," people believed him.
He was elected president In 1928 by a
landslide over his Catholic opponent,
AI Smith, in an election marred by
bigotry and the lath Amendment. ·
Hoover took office in March 1929
and that fall the stock market collapsed. It would be no more lair to
blame Hoover for the "Hoover
Depression'/ than to blame Ronald
Reagan completely lor tins one. The
blame In the Hoover years rested on
the shoulders of his predecessors for
allowing the wild extravagance and
speculation o( the early '20s. What
they blamed Hoover for was the utter lack of any program to relieve
the effects of the depression. He was
also accused of callous disregard for

s..Pacifi~l..::====Ja=ck=A=nd=e=rso==n

'

Did you j&lt;now as an American
citizen you own some of the most
valuable oil and gas properides in the
United State's? They are located on
public lands and are held In trust for
you by the Departm_ent of Interior.
Did you also know that the oil companies you leased the lands to, shaf·
ted you out of an estimated $650
million dollars In oil royalties for
1981, and probably billions of dollars
in previous years by underreporting
how much of your oil they took out of
the ground?
Were you also aware that
anywh~re from two to six percent of
all your gas and oil was juststolen ·
from the oil fields and tank lanns,
and' no one has done a thing about It?
I didn't know about it until! read a
recent report by a Reagan Commission which investigated fraud
and mismanagement of the country's oil and gas reserves.
"What happened. to' my
royam~?" you may be asking.
No one lightly knows, and If he or
she does they're not making a big
deal oflt.
This.apparently Is how the systan'

New

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Feb. 7, 1982

the widespread suffering. Instead he
offered promises that " prosperity is
just around the corner" and pursued
the same old trickle-down politics.
Ronald Reagan must accept a fair
share · &lt;i the blame for this
depression. He tried to· do the impossible too last. H~ ramroded his
tax cut and budget bills through
Congress, rnade promises right and
left to get congressional votes and
generally acted with aU the wisdom
of a bull in a china shop.
He, and President Carter before
him, asked too much. for defense but
at least Carter didn't ask for .a tax
cut to benefit Ute rich. Out expenses
for the cold war are as preposterous
as our plans for more ships, more
bombers and more troops. The next
war WiD be over before the rapid
deployment force can get Its planes
off the ground.
The State of the Union address
went approximiltely as I predicted
two weeks ago. The president took
the credit for lowering inflation and
Interest rates and blamed everyone
but himself for his failures.
However, he did spend some time on
his newest kick, "New Federalism.''
New federalism is not new but was
considered briefly by the Nixon ad·
ministration and discarded as
unreaiilltic and unworkable. The
heart of the program is to transfer 45
federal programs to the states to ad·
minister with the money to pay for
them to come from a trust lund of
federal wlndfa)l profits and excise
taxes. The trust would expire in 10
years or so, preswnably, would the
programs. The government would
transfer programs costing $48 billion
yearly. The states would get $28
billion from the trust fund.
As I told you last week, I thought
the brunt of new federalism would
be on our children. I was right! Of
the 45 programs which the president
proposed transferring to the states,
~I affect our children either directly
or indirectly. This is certainly a
Uisproportionment share of
problems to dump on the shoulders
of thooe who had no share in creating
them In the first place. State gover·
nors have greeted the plan with
reserved skepticism, some with
downright hostility. Governor Bob
Graham of Florida, in a speech at
Lake City, told his audience the tran·
sfer would co5t Florida f$00 million
a year in new taxes. I think Congress
has learned Its lesaon acting in
haste. This is one program which
won't be passed quickly.
As usual, I will keep you informed.

l

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"I'm here to point the way out of this economic mesal"

.old fed eraliSDlL--~Ja:.:..:.;.m.;;_:_es..::....J._:.;K..:..:.~ilpa~tric~k
reserved to the states respectively, .
WASHINGTON - President federal taxes on alcohol, tobacco or to the people."
Reagan's proposed flight back to and telephones, plus two cents of the
This was the grand design. The
federalism is so sound In principle gasoline tax and a portion of the tax
states
were to function as
that it seems a pity to venture a on windfall profits of. the oU com- laboratories of political experiment.
melancholy prediction : It won't get panies. In 10 years the fund would go They were to fill their own potholes,
out of existence, and It would then be
off the ground.
run their own schools, finance their
In order to pull off his bold plan, up to the states - If they wanted to own sewer systems, tend to their
the president ,would have to per· continue the programs - to Impose
own social programs. None of these
suade Congress to repeal scores of these same taxes or equivalent taxes functions was seen as a natiOnal
statutes and to rescind hundreds of on their own.
There's the rub. For the past 20 or · responsibility. The idea was to enrules and regulations. Bu't
courage diversity and to keep local
provisions of the United States Cnde 30 years, as a general prop(llltion,
programs In local funds.
and the Federal Register are the the states have had all the pleasure
Utile by little this good clean
least of his problems. Mr. Reagan of spending the money without the
structure
began to faU apart. By
will have to rescind some of the laws pain of ra.islng ' II. Hwnan nature
treating
the
Constitution's general
of human nature, and these lie well dearly loves a free lunch. Hwnan
welfare
clause
as an opeJWnded
beyond the reach of parliamentary nature has a way of saytng, Let
grant
of
unfettered
authority,
George do it. Only an Incurable opyeas and nays.
Congress
gradually
reduced
the loth
The president's Idea, to be phased timist can envision the 50 states
Amendment
to
a
nuWty.
The
states
into operatiop over the next decade, rising to meet the prospective
agreeably
went
along.
they
fretted
has two main elements. The first responsibilities.
at the red tape and they clamored
Yet when that has been said, it
calls for a $20 blllion swap: The
for
more "decl.llon-making power,"
federal government would take over remains to be said that the
but
It was wonderfully pleasant to
· the entire cost of Medicaid, and the president's plan Is fundamentally
see
the
money ro111ng in. More than
slates would take over tlie entire sound. He calls it the "new
500
~rant-in-aid programs are now In
cost of food stamps and Aid to federalism," but In fact It echoes the
operation.
Families with Dependent Children. oldest political traditions of our
These programs demand a vast
The second element proposes to tum republic. The Constitution of 1787 enbureaucracy;
they support an Imback to the states 40 major grant-in- visioned a national government with
mense
conatituency;
and they Imextensive powers but net unlimited
aid programs.
pose
manageable
bunlena
on the
The big difficulty lies in the turn- powers. The key to the boule of our
Congress.
They
positively
Invite ·
back plan. Mr. Reagan would create fathers lies In the loth Amendment.
waste
·
and
f~ud.
They
make
a
a Federalism Trust Fund of roughly "The powen not delegated to the
mockery
of
such
old
Ideas
as
diver$28 billion a year. The fund would be United States by the Conatllutlon,
sity and local responsibility.
·
financed by revenues from existing 1 nor prohlblted by it to the states, are '

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WHEN OPENING A i~~EW PAl-BY-PHONE/
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Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Rep. Staton•..

f~meroy-Middlepori-Gallipolls,

Feb. 7,1982

steps thai would save an additional
$20 bllllon.
Sources said the ('nanagement
savings inc)ude $8.4 bllllon in accelerated sale of offshore oU leases;
$5.5 billion In strengthened, tax collection by the Internal Revenue
Service; $4 b111lon in strengt!lened
debt collection and Improved management lnitlatives; $1.4 bllllon in
federal pay restraint; and $1 billion

By CLIFF HAAS

Asooclated l'resll Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, expecting a record
$98.6 billion budget deficit in 1982,
wlll ask Congress next week to approve $27 billion in new domestic
spending cuts to help hold the 1983
shortfall to $91.5 bllllon, according
to congressional sources.
The sources, who Insisted on remaining anonymous, also said Fri!rom
disposal of surplus federal
property.
day th at the president's
Sources said Reagan would rerecommendations for the 1983 fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1, caU
commend pay raises of 5 percent
for federal employees in the comfor an 18 percent increase in defense spending.
Ing year and call for abolltiop of the
Energy · a nd Education
In all, Reagan will call for spenddepartments.
Ing of $757.6 billion for 1983 and foreThe sources said .Reagan also
cast revenues of $666.1 bllllon.
would request:
Sources said the president would
-Cuts or $14.2 bllllon in domestic ·
tell Congress thal'lhe economy will
programs with education, Impact
begin recovering from the current
aid to schools, aid to handlcappoo,
recession later this year, but unemvocational education and student
ployment would average 8.9 perloans among the programs ~f­
cent in 1982. For 1983, the
Moscow, Ohio, lac111ty.
leeted. The only new publlc housing
admln1stratlon will forecast joThe hearings, which ended Fri- blessness at 7.9 percent and ecostarted would be 10,00) units for the
day, centered on emergency plans nomic growth at 5.2 percent.
elderly.
,
for schools in the 10-mlle emer-Cuts of $12.8 l!llllon in benefit
But in advance of the president's
gency zone around the nuclear budget message, congressional
programs, including $2 bllllon from
plant. Under the Interim plan, S\1· economists forecast that there Is a
Medicaid and $2.5 bllllon from Medperlntendents are to telephone prin- "significant risk" the economy will
icare; $1.2 bllllon from the governcipals with evacuation Instructions fall to emerge completely from the
ment's main welfare program, Aid ·
before parents panic and jam the current recession and that the roto Familles with Dependent Childlines as well as the roads around the bust upturn the president is hoping
ren; $2.4 gllllon from food stamps;
schools.
·
for may not occur.
$300 milllon from child nutrition,
Educators and emergency
$300 ml111on !rom aid for the bllnd,
Tbe Congressional Budget Office
planners agreed that overloads on also said unemployment is exelderly and handicapped; $2.7 biltelephone lines Into the schools and pected to remain at "very high levlion from retirement programs;
administrative offices are common els" over the next few months and
and $800 million from guaranteed
and, subsequently, would make out- decllne only gradually during the
student loans. A cap would be
going calls dltflcult or impossible.
placed on civtllan and mU!tary reanticipated recovery.
tirement programs.
Sources also said Reagan pre-Eliminating money lor the Ledicted the budget deficit would fall
gal
Services Corp., cutting back on
only sllghtly in future years - to
energy
assistance lor the poor,
about $83 bllllon in 1984 and $72 bllllon in 1985.
highway programs, mass transit
and Amtrak.
The lai-gest budget deficit to date
chairman, who wUI be succeeding Is $06.4 bllllon, posted in 1976.
Some of the recommendatlons .
Earl T. Barnes.
and their details have been reThe budget message Reagan will
The Cuyahoga County endorse- submit to Congress on Monday will
vealed previously by various
ment as well as tbe support of lead- seek $221 bllllon for defense as part
sources.
ing Republlcans, including Gov. of the president's program to
Reagan also Intends to pro!x&gt;se
James Rhodes, Robert Tall Jr., "rearm America," sources said.
• raising $2.5 billion in user lees In the
William Saxbe and Cleveland
aviation, nuclear and marltljne l.nIn addition, the sources said that
Mayor George Volnovlch, may although Reagan has rejected madustrles. The president will seek an
have assured Colley the victory.
jor tax Increases as a method to
trtm budget deficits, be would pro. "We ha\fe a third of the votes pose ellmlna.ting $7.2 billion worth
need to elect a state chairman," of tax "lnopholes" while recomHughes pointed out
mending uflspeclfled management
A total of 24 voters are needed to r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iil
win.

Teenager gets life sentence

'

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9

A Prudential
Act now to set
up your own Individual
Retirement Annuity w~h
tax--deferred dollars.

: CINCINNATI (AP) -Jammed
telephone lines could compllcate
P)!lns for protecting school children
from radiation released by the
Zimmer nuclear power station, accOrding to emergency planners.
·Testimony !rom Federal Emer~ncy Mal)llgement Agency witnesses Friday confirmed the
complaints by educators and
Zimmer crttlcs that have been expressed during a two-week hearing
lrl Cincinnati by the Atomic Safety
8( Licensing Board.
· lntertm plans call lor school oUl·'
clals
to learn about evacuation
plans before sirens alert the general public to an accident at the

l./nder federal tax laws, you may be eigible Ill
contribute up to $2,000 per year* (or 100% of your
compensation, whicnever is 11!$5) to a perscJnal
retirement prowam ilnd
ededuct the contribution on
yoor income tai return.

$2,250 for certain married

individua~

Ptudent1al

· PEKING (AP) - A major U.S.industrlal exhibit opened Saturday with
U.S. otflclals saying bilateral trade would·reach $7 bllllon this year.
Lawre!1ce Brady, assistant U.S. secretary for trade who opened the $4
inllllon saies eXhibit, said the United States is slashing red tape and
~nnlttlng China to Import computers with high level technology.
·
Tbe United Slates has "dramatically shortened" the time required for
processing export licenses lor Cblna of items not on the expert control list,
Brady said.
· The United States is China's third largest trading partner, after Japan
and Hong Kong. Total two-way trade was more than $5.5 billion In 1981 and
$4.8 bllllon in 191ll.
"The Chinese want higher technology from the United States," Brady
Said, "and lf we're prepared to llcense them, they'lt buy them and that's
precisely why this admlntstratlon has undertaken this pollcy."
Tbe United Slates has agreed to consider China's requests lor lethal
weapons and to sell certain mllltary-related technology. It no longer considers China in the ,arne category as such Communist countries as the
Soviet Union, which require lengthy approval for technology transfers.
· The exhibit includes 52 companies selllng computers and computerized
equipment, sboe machinery, analytical ins\iUJnents and machines for
making textlles, pac~_glng, food processing and other equipment.

lt!e'Healtfl Auto ;iJme

Even mascara
STOW, Ohto (APJ - Carbon
blacks produced by the Phillips oilfurnace process are. used to reinforce and i mp rove the
performance of many products.
Major users are tire manufacturers and makers of mechanical
rubber goods such as hoses and
belts. Others include plastlc plpe,
printing Inks, and even mascara.

Healthy hair
NEW YORK (f\P) - Hair· ls
simply an outgrowth of the skin and
scalp, so the most Important consideration for healthy hair is to eat
right, says Patrtk Moreton, a hair
styllst.
When hair is healthy, the outer
layer of the strand, or cuticle, Is.
smooth. A damaged cuticle will be
rough or broken.

MEDINA, Ohio (AP) - James gi&gt;ry W. Happ presented as evi- .357-caHber Magnum pistol.
Mcllvalne, who served as Teresa dence a tape-recorded confession
Miss Bickerstaff also described
Bickerstaff's lawyer dl!l'lng the 1!1- Miss Blckerstat! made shortly af- ber experiences with drugs and
year-old's trtal, has been named to ter her arrest.
prostitution. She toid the jury her
represent her during an appeal of
On the stand, she said sbe had father had begun to sexually abuse
her convictions In the kllUng of her confessed to protect Davis. Under her when she was in the sixth
mother and two brothers.
oath, she said Davis had fired the grade.
Medina County Common Pleas
J udge Phllllp Baird appointed [I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Mcnvalne to the job Friday, after
sentencing Miss Bickerstaff to llfp
In prison on seven of 10 COlivic!Ions.
As was the .case wben the jury
re~d a guilty verdict last Saturday,
Miss Bickerstaff d~played no emotion as the sentences were levied.
She was convicted of the Aug, 29,
191ll, handgun slaying of Donna
Bickerstaff, 38; Fred Jr., 14; and
Kenneth, 13, In their rural Medina
Couniy borne.
·
Her boyfriend, Ertc "Scooter"
Davis, 22, of Cleveland, was convicted in the same court last May in
the slaylngs and the subsequent fire
that destroyed the family home.
Under Baird's order, Miss Bickerstaff could spend the rest of her
llfe In prtspn for one count of aggravated murder- thatofhermother.
The teen-ager also was given an lndeflnlte sentence or 15 years to llfe
on two counts of murder - those of
her brothers. He also sentenced her
to five to 25 years on each ·0t three
counts of aggravated robbery and
two to five years on one count of
grand theft.
Tbe judge said she might be eligi•
ble for parole in 10 to 12 years, but
39 LTD Emergency 2·Way CB
lawyers Indicated it CO\IId be 15 ye•40 channel portable hide-away CB radio
ars. The 491 days she hjts spent In
•Self-contained storage case holds radio, plugjall would count toward the tlme
in power cord, magnetic mount telescoping
seiVed, Baird said.
,
antenna, and 'bright red S.O.S. flag.
Miss Bickerstaff, currently being
beid In Medina County Jail, could be
transferred to Marysville Reformatory for Women depending on
GAUl POLIS
UPPER RT. 7
the appeal to the Ninth Ohio Court
Across
from
the
Silver
B1idae
Piau
of Appeals In Akron.
During the trial, Prosecutor Gre-

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

$10R£ HOORS:

Mon.-ThiiiS. 9 am Iii 9:30 pm

The Prudtntitllnsurance Comp•ny of Allltrica

COI'poratt Office. Ntwtrk. New Jerser
~ - -~-

PhlUip BBlrd sentenced her to life In prison for kUling
her molber and two brothers 17 months ago. (AP
Wirepboto).

'

RICK BOWERSOX
Phone 446-7067

!..---- - -

-

Major U.S. industrial
~xhibit now open

A ntfinnnent income later with o tax deduction now. Sound good?
For more infannatlon, talk to someone from the Rack. Talk to:

Colley new boss?

"I wanted to get our gmup together today (Saturday) So we'd
know who we were hacking when
we got to the meeting,", Hughes
said.
The vacancy was created when
Barnes announced Jan. 21 that be
decided to resign his post as bead or
the organization.
·

RICKERSTAFF SENTENCED - Defense at.~y James McDv.me comforts Teresa Bickerstaff,
II, Friday after Medina County Commoa Pleas Judge

eaccumulate your contributionS
on a tax-deferred ba~~
0

Fri.-Sat. 9 am

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!lOSED SUNDAYS

hi 1~\mn Quantitie s~-..;··:......_ _ _ _....&amp;.

BE THE FIRST TO
HAVE THE NEW •• •

Jlunb•• 'limn· Jfolllinol
USPS 525-800
A Multhn~a NeW!! pa~r
· Published eacl'l Sunday, 82::1 Third

Aw nue , by the Ohio Valley PubllshinM
Company- Mulllmed.ia, Inc. Secnl--.1 clt~ss
Gall ipoli ~ ,

postage paid at

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

.•

8 percent iax ~n passenger alrllne revenues by $7.2 billion, including.
tickets in an ~Uempt to rebuild the .· $2.3 bllllon from a revised minair traffic control system.
lmurn tax on corporations.
.
SourceS said the president would
The budget office, in Its an annual
recommend establishing new block report to the Ho11$e and Sena~
grants for programs to help the budget committees, forecast a
handicapped and the remaining job "substantial Mse" in economic actralning programs.
tivlty afler the next installment ol
On taxes, sources said the pres!- Reagan's tax-cut package takes efr
dent would recommend increasing feet in July.

Officials plan
for disaster

; CLEVELAND (AP) - Members
of the Cuyahoga County delegation
to the state Republican central
committee met Saturday and decJded to back Michael F. Colley in
next week's election of a state GOP
chairma n.
: Colley Is chairman of the Franklin County Republican party.
· The other candidates !o•11he post
Include State ReP- Dave Johnson,
. R-North Canton and Lucas County
GOP Chairman James Brennan.
; "All three candidates are outstanding," said Robert Hughes,
cllalrman of the Cuyahoga County
Republican parties.
· "But we think, at this tlme, Colley would do the best job as state
cl!alrman."
· The 4&amp;-member Republican Cen~al and Executive Commltiee of
dhio is to meet Wedn.esday in ColUmbus to elect the party 's new

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

Feb. 7, 1982

Reagan expects $98.6 billion deficit

(Continued from A·1)

we're working on it from a very
genera.lized approach," Slaton said.
"Butl'm optimJslic that we've made
some progress. Jl's a novel ideal, an
unusual approach."
Wise said in his statement that the
state may not be able to afford the
tax cuts proposed by Slaton. He added that relaxing property taxes for
a single corporatjon or an individual
wOuld violate the state Constitution.
Discussing the problems at the
Ravenswood plant, Wise said, "The
primary reason ... is a lack of
demand for its alwninuJn producti on
' " Again, let me emphasize that (coupled with high energy costs) ... "

and Kaiser officials.
Kaiser recently closed the
alwninwn reduction operations at
the plant. Company officials said the
decision was necessary because of
poor economic conditions.
The closing of the last of the reduction lines came after members of the
Steelworkers voted not to
renegotiate part of their labor cooti"acts.
: Slaton said slate Senator Michael
Shaw, R-Mason, has indicated that
tie will seek legislative approval of
tjle plan.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Ohio, 45631.

Enkred as set•ond clap mailing matter
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Member : The

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992-9917

·

Each dinner includes 4 whitemeat
Chicken Planks~ golden fryes and
fresh cole slaw.
Offer expires: February 20, 1982

sps

SOUP-OF-THE-DAY

$2 •69

LETTUCE·

HEAD ·.
4

69

~.

M"axwell House '

,INSTANT COFFEE
' 10oz.

$369

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

I

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..

.

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.

.....

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P om e roy ~ Middl e port- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W .Va .

Page-A -6- The sunday Times-sentinel

U. _S. may assume
Poland's liabilities
WASHINGTON (AP) - The United Slates may have to pay American banks nearly $2 biUlon over the
next three years to make good on
federally guaranteed loans to Poland, U.S. olllclals say.
That total would dwarf the $71
mllllon paid earlle r this week to
make up P oland's a rrears and the
$340 mllUon that was paid In 1981.
The U.S. lla b!Uty lor potEntially
bad Polish debts may total $500 million to $700 million In 1982 and could
reach $1.9 million over the next 36
months unless Poland repays Its
de bts, one U.S. ol!lclal said Friday.
But the total does not Include the
potEntial cost to taxpayers I! the
banks cannot collect the $1.3 mllllon
due them directly and write It olton
their lederalincome !axes as business Joss, according to the oltlclal,
wtlo briefed reporters at the SlatE
Department on the condition he not
be ldentltted.
Marc Leland, assistant secrelary
of the Treasury lor International a!. lairs, said President Reagan belleves that "maxlmum pressure

Secretary of Defense Caspar W.
can be put on Poland by Insisting on
We inberger let It be known that he
repayment" rathe r than by declardisagrees with the Reagan policy
Ing Pola nd In defa ult, a step wlllch
a nd Intends to keep p ressing to
would send shockwaves through
have Pola nd decla red In default.
t he Inte rnation a l eco no m ic
The Conservative Cauc us la unched
community.
a national carnpalgn to force Po" A declaration of defa ult might
land Into bankruptcy.
be used by the Pol1sh government
And Sen. Daniel Pa trick Moynias an excuse to rel1eve Itself of obl1ha n, D-N. Y., said he will Introduce
gatlons to make repayments, " Lelegisla tion on Monday declaring
land salp.
Poland In delault.
"The only difference now Is that
" WhUe numerous oltlclals of the
Polan!! owes the money to the U.S.
administration, Including the presigove rnment Inste ad of U.S.
dent himself a nd the secretary of
banks, " he said, "and we will do
state,
spent last weeke nd making
everything possible to collect it."
speeches about
tougtl-soundlng
"When you are the gua ra ntorof a
commitment
to Solidarity and
their
loan you don't have any choice of
the
Polish
people.
the ve ry same
whetne r you wa nt to.pay It or don't
administration
was
putting Into
want to pay .It," the U.S. official
place,
In
secret,
a
policy
requiring
said . "It Is the U.S .. government's
American
taxpayers
to
pay the
6bllgation to pay the banks every
):lllls
of
the
Polish
junla,"
overdue
bit as mucn as It Is Poland's."
Moynihan
said.
The loans were guaranteed by
Poland owes Western governthe Commodity Credit Corp. to 11me
nts and banks a total of $26 bllnance tile sale ol grain and ottler
. Jlon, according to the U.S. ofllclal
U.S. agricultural commodities.
who' briefed reporters. The money
Criticism ol Reagan's decision to
Is spread out over 450 flnanclallnrepay the debt mounted In conserstltutlons worldwide.
vative circles and In Colllm!ss.

treasurer's race.
Neither Mrs. Donahey nor state
Democratic Parly Chairman Paul
Tipps could be reached lor comment Friday.
But Mrs. Donahey, 73, ~ld The
Journal Herald that she had not decided whether to run again for the

:I .

post she first won In 1970.
"I haven't decided what I'm goIng to do," she said. "I don't know
where all this scuttlebutt Is coming

plans.
"I don't know exactly wha t Gertrude's going to do yet," he said.
But Leahy added that a request

from.''

byMrs. Donaheytoname asuccessor would have to be made to the
party's Executive Committee,
which would thendeclde whetherto
honor it.
Leahy .said Mrs. Dona hey had

Tipps denied knowledge of any
such olter by the treasurer, the
newspaper said .

Mrs. Donahey's poUticallortunes
have been clouded by an Investigation ln!D $1.3 million missing !rom
her otllce .. A Franklin County
grand jury Is tnvestlgatlug the mattEr, and a private accounting firm
has Issued a report on a separate
probe.
Pat Leahy, executive director of
the slate party, said Mrs. Donahey
had not spoken with him a!x&gt;ut her

!allure to schedule an appearance
does not necessarlly mean she has
decided not to run or to forego party
backing If she does run.
Leahy explained that a 'number
of people considered candidates for
sta te oltlces have not yet appeared
of Sho.1111ndoah, and Mrs. Nancy
before the committee.
Painter of Stanley; five sisters,
Leahy said at least one mo.:..
Mrs. WUIIe Weethee and Mrs . .
meeting of the screening commit·
Janyce Scott of Winter Haven, Fla.;
tee will occur before the committee
Mra. Myrtle Carter and Mrs. Nina
makes Its report to the Executive
Lewis of Haines City, Fla. and Mrs.
Committee March 5. nui ExecuJaney Thabet of Point Pleasant;
tive Commit~ actually makes enand five brothers, Arnold and John
dorsements, Leahy said.
of Wluter Haven, Fla. , Morris and
Robert of Point Pleasant, and
Ralph of Madison.
He Is Interred In the , National
Memorial Park, Falls Church, Va.
GALLIPOLIS - The following
people filed for marriage Jlcenses
this past week in Ga!lla County Probate Court.
~s.
J effrey R. P owers , 22, Rio
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. Mary Grande, student, and Loretta D.
Jones, 73, 1411 Ohio St. , was dead on !'Iavis, 22, Point Pleasant, caslller .
arrival at Pleasa~t Valley Hospilal
Car l W. Curnutte , 24, Ri.l, GalliFriday at !0:30a.m.
polis, stock clerk, and Becky F .
Funeral arrangements wlJJ he MIUer, 18, Galllpo11s, secrelary.
announced by the Crow-Hussell
Jennings L. Reynolds, 20, Kerr,
Funeral Home of Point Pleasant. Iarmer, and Patricia Cains, 18,
Kerr, waitress.
D.R. Gtlllsple, Hunting ton,
Evelyn Ohlinger
W.Va., security worker, and O.K.
Ramey, restuarant employee.
CLIF'I'ON--Graveslde memorial
Ausbert Santa Ana , 20, Ga lliPQlls,
services for Evelyn Ohlinger,
student, and NUda M. Manguba, 26,
former Clifton resident who died
Rt. 1, Bidwell, medical asslslant
Jan. U at Tampa, Fla., will be held
technlclan.
at 2 p.m. today at the Graham
Cemetery In New Haven.

•

PT. PLEASANT Harry
Franklin Bragg Sr., 64, of Stanley,
Va., formerly of Gallipol1s Ferry,
dledJan. 27.
Born Jan. 2, 1918 in Glen Alwn,
Mingo County, he was the son of the
late Abraham L. and Laura Smith
Bragg. In addition to his parents,
he was preceded In cteath by his
first wife, VIrginia Hopkins Bragg.
He spent mo.rt of his adult life In
Arlington, Va. and worked lor the
Chesapeake
and
Potomac
Telephone Company of Washington,
D.C. as an electronic equipment
maintenance technician.
He was a veteran of World War II
and served with the U.S. Anny Air
Corps In the Southern Pacific area .
He was awarded the Distinguished
Flying Cross, Philippine Lll)eratlon
Ribbon, WWll VIctory Ribbon, and
the Good Conduct Medal.
He Is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Joyce Richards of Manassas;
one son, Harry Jr. of Falls Church,
Va.; live grandchildren; his wife,
Stella Short Bragg of Stanley, Va.;
four step-clllldren, Thomas Short of
Masassas, Roy Short Jr . of
Haymarket, Mrs. Louise McAllister

Jerry Moore, Middleport, was
given a one to 10 year sentence In a
penal tnstltutlon Friday afternoon
1n the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
11 ts reported that Moore al·
Jegedly broke luto Dan's Bootery on
Jan. 28. Mercnandlse taken was
recovered, pollee salll.

POMEROY--The Middleport
and Rutland Emergency Units answered a call to Route 325 at 1: 48
a.m. Saturday lor Mark Slater and .
Tim Hysell who were Injured In a
hlgllway accident. They were taken
' to Veterans Memorial Hoepltal.

,,

miscellaneous housetlold shower
for Mr.and Mrs. Rupeat 7p.m. Frlday at the fellowship room ol the
Langsville Church . The public Is
Invited.

Lay-OH and JQb Abolishment
Free Consultation As To Your Legal Rights
Under Ohio Civil Service Law

SIGALL &amp; ZINGARELLI .
AnORNEYS AT LAW

Meets Wednesday

POMEROY T
--, he Pomeroy Middleport Rolary Club will meet
In regular session at noon We(!nes.day at the Meigs Inn.

2101 S•.tmllton load, Suite 106
·c .um b ua, Ohl o 432 27
614/166 1701

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1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 • • 1 1 1 1

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1

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THIS WffK'S :
SPfCfAI.

e

1

CRUSH •
ORBAANRGREELHEAD :=
ROOTBEER
.

'

DR . .GEORGE

e
e

•••
$}29 •

INT.ACii'S AND THE
NATIJRAL WOK
Millions of people wear conlact ·
lenses today. Contact lenses
correct vision problems, in most
cases better than glasses do. But
they nave the advantage of giving
your face a 11 Datural" look.
Unless you telJ them, others
would never know you' re wearing
corrective lenses.
They do require more care than
gi;LSSes. And, like glasses, they
should be prescribed and fitted
by a professionaL Because they
float on the tears over the eye ,
however. extra care must be
taken in keeping them clean and
genn-free.
Your eye specialist will show
you how contact lenses should be
applied and removed. This must
be done carefully and

••

PIUS •
•• 8--16 oz . .
•
Deposit •
·• 'Btls.
••
•••
•• ICE CO~D' BEER, •
•• WINE &amp; POP
•••
•

••
•••
•• Gallipolis Ice Co.
H RU
• DRIVET'
CARRYOUT
•• 709
First Ave .

HOURS
Monday thru Saturday
8 A. M. tilll P.M.

w. DAVIS

OPTOM ET R I S T - - - -

•••

••
••
••
•
•
• •••••••••••••••

hygienically. Both your eyes and
your conlact lenses should be
checked periodically by your optometrist.
If you . follow these rules, contad lenses will serve your cor~
reclivc vision needs even bt!tter
than glasses. Contact lenses give~
mOI't' natural vision f espe d~U :y

peripheral) because they are
closer to the eye (in fact, in "contact" with the cornea) wtlile
glasses must he worn about a hall
inch away from it.

*******

In th e in te res t o f be ,er visio n
I r o m th e&gt; office o f

Clark C. Hill, a fanner resident,
needs a bit of encouragement and
you can help even though you don't
know Mr. Hill.
He. is 53, has leukemia and is a
pstient at Mt. Cannel Hospilal in
· Columbus. This time, he has been
there since Dec. 26 and will remain
there for several more weeks. Last

George W. Davis, O.D.
458Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Phone 446-2236

This week send our FTD

l}enr~ ~ flow~,.

• A Great Way to
Leam Prog111mmlng
• Attachea tc) Any TV

ftad1e /haek

.

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

.

The affordable way to enter
the exciting world ot color
computing! Uee It for thrill·
•mlnutegemes the whole
f1111lly can enjoy, to kHp a
houeeh91d Inventory, aet up
a budget, or aa a teaching
ald. Eaelly expandible.

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

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

"

receive local Input on the need for
emp!QYment, training ,nd related
services. Region 1 encompasses
Hocking,_Highland,
Pike, Vinton,
Clinton,
Brown,Jackson,
Adams,
Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs and Athens
counties.
This council will actively participate in the development of em·
ployment and tralnmg related
programs in the 12-cOunty region.
Others named to tbe RBTC are
Max Adkins, Nelsonville ; Doug
Franklin, Hillsboro; Don Fulton,
We11ston ; Ed Grant, South

Bloomingville; Dr. Lucill~ Laganke,
Wllmlngton; Craig Morgan, South
Point; Alvin Norris, Decatur; Ms .

Lin!lsey Ratcliff, Piketon; John
Ryan, Nelsonville, and Elean&lt;r
Thomas, Pomeory.

r-r======================.
Gallia-Mason Performing Arts
BALLET AND TAP
GYMNASTICS
BATON TWIRLING
LADIES EXERCISE
ADULT BALLET AND JAZZ

You get to . hold on to your real
estate tax money awhile longer.
Treasurer George Colllns reports
the deadline lor paying taxes has
been extended from Feb. 8 to March
5 - almost a whole month's
reprieve. With a few dollars In your
jeans for a bit longer you should he
able to keep smiling.

MIDDLEPORT--A demonstratlon and Instruction In CPR were
presented Friday night when the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
met at Heath United Methodist
Church.
Ladles night was observed and
wives will be present again next
Friday night when the CPR pro- :
gram, planned by Dr. R. R.
Pickens, Is continued.
Eskew

Volentine's Day
is Sunday.
· February 14.

&lt;

Jlin Sheets presided over the

•

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FOR THE

•
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•

LOOK YOU.'LLLOVE·

•

ee

OFFERING THE LATEST IN PEROFESSIONAL
HAIRSTYLING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY.-

•

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446-9510
600 Third Avenue
Gallipolis

•
•
•
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•

•
•

... -""""~
:"""-­
~-

""""-"

...

ONE EIIENING SHOW AT I PM
SUN. MAT. ONE SHOW 3 PM

Sweetheart Specials
I

FOR VA LENTINE'S DAY, FEB. 14th

AVE! 20% SAVE! 20%
OFF
0
ALL 14K

SAVE! 20%

/o

·'250

..... 1122
The

,,...lOT\,stretch Jtllch

5522 with UniYerMI'
_._
oyllom wNch holpo

-

you-""-"' '-vyflbrlca

-~-

sAVE 5189"
NEW SPRING

TilEY HAVE IN STOCK
GAlAXY Of CRAfT lltiiS
' •·

· THE FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd

Pnti"J, 011.

Slni"'lllip I 51111 Co.
As Y•r S111111
Dullr

DEALERS

''

.'

EAR PIE·RCING DONE

FREE
WITH THE PURCHASE DF A$3.95

NECKLACES
BRACELETS
EARRINGS
I

;. .
"""'\

l}elpibg you ~v it right.

COMPLETE SELECTION
I

FABRICS

'Meigs county's oidest Florist
1
352 E. Main St.
Ph. 992·2644
Pomeroy, OH.
"OFTEN IMITATED-NEVER DUPLI .C ATEP." .

$5.00 I SAVE .

Gold Prices are still at a 2 Year Low. So we have reduced the
prices on all 14K Chains, Bracelets, Charms, 14K Gold Add A
llelds and Chamt Holders.

OF .
HEART SHAPED

JustArrlv.d

Atltrrtu4 • III.ORte,. ~

'I

Hair Design

•

--·...---·
"- "' ---------- ·-···,.

and Bryne Vaughan, was on nand
Friday evening to present aspects
of CPR to . Rotarians and their
wives. A fllm was shown and tlJe
two demonstrated using "Resuslla·
tlon Annie" with club members and
wives also working with the demonstrastion flgute . Leaflets dealing
with CPR were also dlsbtrlbuted.

Clearance
Sale Continues
•

ee

14K FLOATING
HEARTS

It's romantic.
And says all the
things you've
been meaning
to soy 5o call or
visit us today Bec0use
every Volentine
deserves flowers.

Limited Supply of Roses
(No increase over 1981 Valentine prices expected)
• Silk &amp; Dried Arrangements e PoHed Plants 1 Dish Gardens

•

.

••e

CPR program seen by Rotarians

Bouquet.

COMPLETE SELECTION OF CUT FLOWERS
• UMalnltlnt-Loadlng
Prog111m Paka
• Dazzling Entertainment

ByBOBHOEFUCH
year, he was alSo hospilalized from
Jean Kifer was a Meigs County
,Aug. 18unti1Nov. 4.
girl whose future appeared rosy.
He's very ill and very
Then ·- misfortune!
· our
discouraged. His lamlly has asked
readers has writthat you pray for lllm and perhaps,
ten a eulogy to
send along a card or note of ensponsor
Jean and it
cotiragement.
follows :
Hill Is the son of Mattie Beaver
"The frnal piece
iliU and the late Hennan L. Hill forhas been Inserted.
merly of Rjlcine and the Nease Set•
The picture has
tlement area. He attended the first
been completed.
four or five years of school at the
It
portrays
Forest Run School which, of course,
smiling eyes,
~B
.
is now noo-elistent.
beautiful sandy ~lr, peaches and
The address is Clark C. Hill, Room
• cream cornplelion, and sparkling
F ·20, Mt. Cannel Hospilal, West, 793
· ·personality. It brings pleasure to
West State St., Columbus, Olllo
43222.
. : everyone who views It
: "What the picture does not por- · Now - you won't forget to do that,
will ya ?
• ·· tray is a wheel chair a nd a person
. · psralyzed from the neck down.
I don't know how welfare paymen• .; "Je~n grew up as an . average
ts are these days but in 1938, they
Amencan girl - graduating from
were low. 01 course, in '38 the dollar
· · high school, furthering her
did
go copsiderably further.
education with a secrelarlal course,
A
resident showed us a 1938
obtaining employment in a city in
welfare
card which noted total exthe Southwestern pari' of the state.
penditures
of $80.75 lor nine months
Her life was happy. She was
of 1938. Coal was $3.50 a ton; two
healthy; accomplishing her life's
pairs of shoes were purchased for
ambition and planning to be married
$3.90 and the food allowance for each
in the near future.
month totaled $9.60.
"Then, one weekend coming home
I have a feeling welfare has come
to Meigs County with her fiance and
a long way; on the other hand, so
brother to attend a friend's wedding
have prices.
- bang - an automobile accident.
Jean spent many months in
A new 'organization to he known as
hospitals after which she returned
"
Meigs
Citizens for Better
home to live with her mother . After
Athletics" is being formed and the
her mother expired she was placed
first meeting will be at 7:30 p.m.
in a convalescent home .as stle
Monday in the Rutland gymnasium.
required extensive professional
The public is invited to the Initial
care, having no use of her body.
seSIIion
and those having any
" She made many frien!ls during
on the new group may call
questions
her incapacity · of 12 years and
Joe
Loftis
at 742-2570.
Applications sought
became an inspiration to all who
knew her. Her pleasant smile,
for federal ·pf08J'8m
welcoming -,- greeting - and her
Whatever happened to George and
great faith, 'In the future medical
hiPOMEROY- A representative of
science woulq be capable of per- Pauline Vaughan, fonner residents?
forming surgery to correct a comWell- they're in Clllllicothe and
0 ·o Green Thwnb, a federally subpound fracture of the spine' touched going strong. Recently Mr. and Mrs.
sidizeed program funded through
everyone wno knew her.
Vaughan were pictured In the
the Department of labor, on
"So to all of us who had the good Cllllllcothe . newspaper as George
Tuesday, :G'~b. 9, will be acej!pting
fortune to know Jean, let her reflect took his official oath which switched
applications tor jobs.
the beautiful picture whictihas just -him from a councilman to president
The program lllres aging workers
been completed. Let us he ihankful. of the city council.
over 50 and 125 percent below the
The memory of her should make
Also recently, Chris, 1&amp;-year-old
poverty Income guidelines.
each of us a better person.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan,
Appllcatlons Will be taken at the
"What better contribution can
received the highest honor In Boy
Gallia Council on Aging beginning at
anyone leave to society?"
'
Scouting, the Eagle Award.
,
9 a.m. and at the Meigs Council on
Chris has held all leadership Aging, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
E .A. Wlngett - and everyone
positions in his troop and this year
beginning at I p.m.
knows he is Democrat through and
will
be
attending
the
National
Order
Green Thumb Is an equal Oj)through - says he agrees with Gov.
portunlty employer &amp;lid all aging
James Rhodes on one point. That of the Arrow Conference in Texas.
people are encouraged to apply.
point,. .of course, Is very non- He also attended the national jamAnyone with questlons may call Penpolitical. It deals with the establish- boree In Virginia . He has been counny Wolverton at614-593-5349.
ment of many vegetable gardens in selor-in-trainlng at Clllef Logan
Reservation for two years and ser· ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _..;__ _ _,
Ohio.
Wingett says he is in agreement ved on the 1981 camp staff in the
crafts area. He Is active in coaching
and haS three acres of land l&lt;ll!ated behind the new Racine youth basketball and soccer
United Methodsit Church - which programs at the Ross County YMCA
be wlll divide into garden plots for and Is a member of the marching,
any interested persons. Best of all, concert a net stage bands at
TONIGHT TH R U
the plots wilJ probSb)y be free of Cllllllcothe High School. He Is a
THUR., FEB. 11
charge .
member of the Walnut St. United
••~•
...a
So - there's your chance to beat Methodist Church. A busy one, eh?!
, . ..-18
inflation.

11111

•

You're sure to
capture her
heart with • t--~G!
the romantic
fresh flowers,
Heart Stick Pin, and
exclusive FTD Gloss
Heart Dish that make
up our FTD HEARTS &amp;
FLOWERS'" !3ouquet.

In Color and Sound

· Emergency runs

The Post Ill providing lumber and other ~terlals
needed to renovate the shelter with the stools, their
leaders and other volunteers donatlug their labor. Heal
wlU be provided from ll wood burner. WorkiDg on the
shelter Friday afternoon were Albert Roush, left, and
Laooy Tyree, both legionnaires.

Plan· household shower r;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
LANGSVILLE- Friends of Larry
MENTAL HEALTH &amp;
and Beverly Rupe, who recently
MENTAL RETARDATION WORKERS
lost their home by fire, wm host a

~~--~~~~~

Given prison term

COLUMBUS - Emelyn Scarberry
of Gallipolis has been named chairperson of tlJe Region 1 Regional Employment and Training Council
(RETC) by Govemor James A.
Rhodes. Announcement of the appointment by Albert G. Giles, Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
(OBES) administrator.
Ms. Scarberry is job service
manager of the &lt;Ga1llpol1s OBES Office.
As the prime
for the Ohio
Balance of State, Governor Rhodes
has established tlJe RETCs to

,•working together'

SHI~Ll'EK HOUSE ENCLOSED - Tbe shelter
house at the Middleport Legion Park on Mlll Street lll
being enclo•ed lor use by Middleport Scout TJ:oop 245.
Feeney-Bennett Post128, American Legion, sponson
the troop whlch has been given permlsslon to use tile
shelter as a meetlug place once U has been enclosed.

Mary Jones

COLUMBUS - Secretary of State
Anthony J . Celebrezze, Jr. reports
articles of Incorporation have been
filed with his ofllce.in Columbus by
United Equities, Inc., Pomeroy.
Incorporator Is H. D. Brown.
Other articles were filed by
Boothe Mining Inc., Pomeroy. Incorporators are DeMis I. Boothe
and Steven L. Story.

The Sunda

theme for session

Marriage licenses

Articles filed

w. Va .

Gallipolis manager heads job committee

Reader eulogizes
former resident
.,

I

Area deaths

H. F. Bragg Sr.

lore ~ party screening committee
not scheduled an appearance bethat meets Monday. Candidates
seeking the endorsement of the
statE party a re requlrecl to appear
before thecommltteeatsomellme,
Leahy said .
· But Leahy said Mrs. Donahey's

Pleasant,

floeflich's Beat of the Bend

. ..-

Donahey offers to withdraw
COLUMBUS, Olllo (AP) -State
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey has
offered to withdraw as a candidate
for re-election If she Is allowed to
name her successbr, according to
publlshed reports.
The (Dayton) Journal Herald,
quoting unldentllled party sources,
· reported Thursday that Mrs. Donahey wants the party io support a
candidatE ol her choosing In return
for her withdrawal from the state

Feb.

EARRING
•SAFE
··FAST

•FREE
•HURRY IN TODAy
BV PARENT

WHAT A LOVELY
'WAY TO
SAY'
I LOVE YOU!

342 Stcond Ave.
Gallipolis. on. 446-2691
113 Court St.
PlltiiiRIJ, on. 992-2054

PRICES WILL
NEVER BE
BETTER

STOP TODAY
WE DEAL IN
AFULL LINE

OF

*KRUGGERANDS
*MAPLE LEAFS
*SILVER COINS

*SILVER BARS
*OLD GOLD
*POCKET WATCHES
STOP IN TODAY

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,JP~a~g~e~~A~"B~~T~he~S~un~d~a~y~T~im~e~s-~S~egnt~igne~I~==~==========~P~o~m~.e~r~o~y~M~id~d~-~~egpo~r~t~G~a~ll~ip~o~li~s~,O~h~i~s·~P~oi~n~t~P~Ie~a~s~a~n~t,~W~-~V~a~·========================================F~e~b-=7=·;1;98=2

theri er

-Property tax revolt being .pushed
CORTLAND, Ohio (AP) · · Former Trumbull County Commissioner John McOoskey doesn't
plan to pay his 1!111 property taxes
and he Is urging others to do the

same.

,

McCloskey, selt-styled tax activist, Is promoting a countywide tax
revolt. He has been traveling
throughout the county recently
holding meetings with property
owners to explain his proposal to do
away wtth all taxes except tor an
across-the-board Income tax ot 10
percent.
'
"Forget the state tax, the lottery,
the property tax," he said. "If you
work, you pay 10 percent ot your
Income. I!youdon'twork,youdon't
pay. "
McCloskey's goal Is to attract
more than half ot the county's taxpayers to his protest drive.
"If we can get 50 percent of the

DWI cases head
Municipal docket

taxpayers to refuse to pay their
biDs, believe me, the legislators In
Columbus wW take notice, •• he !Did
a group o! Cortland residents during a meeting last week .
McCloskey, a professional real
estate appraiser, claims he has not
paid any taxes on his Howland
Township property In six years.
"I don't even bother to open my
tax biD anymore.
"I wall! to pay my taxes, but I
don't appreciate a system that allows loopholes for the multlrnllllonalres ... I -don't care about myself;
I can afford to pay my taxes.
"But I do care about the people"
who can't pay·, he said.
County Treasurer Harold Willi·
ams conllrmed that McOoskey has
paid no taxes In more than five years - but only because the Issue.Is
In court where the tax activist Is
challenging the valuation o! his
property.
"McCloskey wW have to pay his
back taxes - win or lose," Willi·
ams said.
.McCloskey denies that his tax re-

volt has anything to do with his desire to return tD the board of
commissioners.
"I have my petitions completely
filled , but I have not yet flied with
the board o! elections. I don't want
people to think that his (tax protest)
Is ·polltlcally !J10tlvatro," he said,
dismissing the contention.
"However, people must know
that the deadlirie tor tWng a com.
pll!int about 1helr tax bill with the
county auditor's office Is 4 p.m.,
Feb. 16."
County residents are just beginning to receive thetr tax biDs tor the
ftrst half of 1981. The biDs renect
last year's property tax reevaluation, which Increased the
taxes of most homeowners.
Although McOoskey has no organized support for his tax revolt,
he said It won't stop his tight
against Trumbull County's system
of property appraisal and taxation.
"f'll meet with 9ny group, anywhere," he said. "''ll even hold
open air meetings It that's what It
takes."

BUSINESS - Stlffier's Store on the "T"
In MlcldlePort Is going IIIII of business with the &lt;losing
probably come sometime bi April. Of five stores on

the "T", Stlffier's t.s the tliird to cloae 1111 doon ·slaee
the first of lbe year. Others cl01ed leaving vacant
buildings on tbe "T" InClude The Sewing Center aDd
the Sport About Shop.

For as little as.
'

0

$10 per we¢k
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Syracuse council
appoints member
SYRACUSE - John Philson was
appointed to fill a vacancy on
Syracuse Village Council Thursday
night.
Philson was appointed lo fill the
term of Carl Hubbard who had been
elected last fall, but chose not to ser·
ve.
Philson was given his 011th of of.
lice Thursday night by Mayor Eber
Pickens.
Council gave the first reading of
the !982 appropriations ordinance
and a second reading of an or·
dinance which will change the name
Or John St. to Carleton St.
: It was reported that upgrading of
~eel lights In the town has been
eompleted by The Ohio Power Co.
: Applications are now being
received for the position of pool
manager and lifeguards for next
summer. The deadline for applications is March 4. They are to be
sent to Janice Lawson, Syracuse.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Pickens, Mrs. Lawson, clerk;
George Holman, treasurer; Police
Chief Milton Varian and Council
members Jack WiUiams, Philson,
Mlck Ash, William Guinther and
John Bentley.

will give you

S647,248
•

for your rett·r ement
at age 6S

· Retail
sugar
0.
.
pnces gomg
up this year

1

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WASffiNGTON (AP) - Retail
sugar prices are going up from recent levels but probably wW aver- .
age less than they did In 1981, says
the Agriculture Department.
Depressed by record world .production, retail sugar prices In December declined for the 12th
straight month, averaging 32.5
cents a pound. A year earlier they
were 56.5 cents a pound.
But the administration raised Import duties and tees on. foreign
sugar Dec. 23 to protect prices paid
to U.S. producers. That wW mean
some Increase In retail prices.
"Based on the sugar program,
retail prices could average 36 to 37
cents In 1982, compared with 40
cents In 1!111," the department said
Thursday. "The average retail
price could go hlgher If world prices
for raw sugar exceed U.S. support
levels."
World production ot raw sugar In
1981-82 Is estimated at a record
95.8mllllon metric tons, the same as
Indicated earlier. Global use this
season continues to be projected at
92 million tons, meaning sugar
• stockpiles wlll!ncrea~.
A metric ton Is about 2.~
pound$.
"World prOduction could be
lower, given the drastically . reduced estimate tor the Soviet sugarbeet crop," the J'ellOrl said.
"But, hlgher output In the European Con:unun!cy. _Cub8, AraerJlln&amp;
.and the United States could partly
!-'offset this."

,.

ABOVE--Much
of -Da·n Notter's
veterinary practice
focuses on keeping
puppies healthy.
Notter listens to
the heortondlungs
o{ t~is Springer
SJX:Imel puppy that
belongs to Marion
Ross during its reg·
ulor check up.
RIGHT--Part of
Nolter's policy u
having the, owners
of his clients in the
examination room.
, Mr. and Mrs. Ver·
non Hoot, Bidwell,
watch os Notter examines their dotr:
Dick. UPPER
RIGHT-Notter in
hi.s office.

Through participation in our Individual Retirement Ac·
count (IRA).

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Example shown based on working individual, age 25,
depositing $10.00 per ·week each year until age ·65,
assuming · 13.5% annual interest rate. Oer)osits are
deducted from your income and tax deferred, su~ject
'
to Federal regulations and penalties for prematur~
withdrawal.

.

Equally

alhactive

tax:..heltered IRA programs .

availa~le for all age groups 9nd income levels.

•

Exp~ct

more from

.

I

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hioValley Bank
four locations to ser¥e you better.
Member: FDIC

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Section~

Feb. 7, 1982

By DEB FOX
1lme8-Sentinel SWI
GALLIPOLIS-Although he's treated a boa constrictor, skunks and
gerbils, veterinarian Dan Notter's most typical patients are cats. and
dogs.
Most of the work done at his office at 143 Jackson Pike, GalUpolls, Is
"for the general health of puppies. We b:Y to promote vaclnatlons and a
woi'mlng program to keep them healthy." he said.
A Gallla County native, Notter's Interest In animals began on the
Scottown fanl) of his parents, Mrs. and the Iatl! Dan Notter, where he
was reared.
For more than 21 years he has worke!l In Gall!a County and haS
always had his own veterinary practice.
During those years as a vet, Notter has "never been bitten bad. Just
pinch wounds mostly.
,
,
"I usually get bitten two or three times In a row and then not-at aU.
Maybe I get more cautious alter being bitten a few times.
.
"Small dogs are more likely to bite because they are harder to hold
and I use anesthetic on larger dogs - I don't take chances with them.
"But monkeys are the worst biters."
NOttj!r's profession has been kept In his tamlly. His twin brother, ·
Donny, Is a veterinarian In Kentucky and the local vet's wife, Jean
Carroll Notter, a registered nurse, worked with him unWabout a month
ago. His daughter, Kimberly Ann, 21, Is a ~nior In pre-veterinary
medicine at Ohio State University, Notter's alma mater.
He also has two twin daughters. Kelly and Kerry, age 11.
Assisting Notter wilh his practice are Teresa Roach, ot Rio Grande, a
senior In Buckeye HWs Career Center's diversified health occupations
program who plans to be a veterinarian, and Amy Scarberry, at Gallipolis, who graduated from Gall!a Academy High School last year. Both
are veterinary assistants.
He saki having his own practice causes some "worries," Including
"the expense of keeping the practice going, keeping everybody sailsfled, being a purchasing agent and minding the bUSiness. I could take a
year's vacation If everyone would pay the biDs they owe."
But said, "There are a lot bf things that get done that no one really
sees. There Is a lot ot tree work, but that d_oesn't happejl evel')'\lay."
The "tree work" has Included treating a dog found and sWlllvlng at
0.0. Mcintyre Park and delivering pets he has treated to older perSons,
ot whom he said, "Most make an effort ."
.
Until about eight years ago, Notter also treated larger animals such
as horses and cattle, but stopped for health reasons. Although he no
longer treats large animals In his practice, he has 140 acres o! land Iii
!he Bidwell area where he keeps 29 quarter horses and raises beef
cattle.
Notter first worked out at a house across from the Gall!a-Melgs Past
of the State Highway Patrol building on State Route35. About two years
later, he moved his business to a house adjacent to the stockya'rds. In
1971, his office was In a white building next door to the present site on
&lt;State Route 160.
He became a vet because, he said, "I enjoy working wilh animals and
enjoy the job. It's something you've got to enjoy doing or It could get
very frustrating - it does get frustrating at times.
" I've got to enjoy It or I wouldn't do a good job probably. It 1 didn't
like my job, the public would probably know It alter a while."

GALLIPOLIS-Nineca~swere ~------------------------------------------------------~~~----------------------------------------------------------

terminated Friday In Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
Each charged with OWl, tined
$300, sentenced to tour days In jail,
driver's llcen~ suspended tor six
months and placed on six months
probation were Marlin K. Kuhn, 26,
Rt. 3, Oak Hill; Ralph N. Sands, 31,
Rt. 1, G~Upolls; and Terry B. Stephens, 26, Itt. 1, Patriot.
John J. Martin, 72, Wellston,
charged with assured clear distance, !ortelted $40 bond.
·
Charged with !allure to display
valid registration and !orteltlng $35
bond was James N. Clinton, 23,
Henderson.
Forteltlng bond for speeding
•
were:
Michael J . Foley, 22, Newark,
$46; Donald A. Gabrttsch. 24, Point
Pleasant, $26; Michael R. DeiWe,
23, Rt. 2, Bidwell, $40; Everett Jenkins, 58, Kanawha, W.Va., $40.

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The S

Tim es-Sentinel- Pa

Plans Valentine party in Point Pleasant
GAU.IPOU$- A. Valentine party
wtll be held Sunday, Feb. )4, at the
Krodel Park Club House in Point
Pleasant beginning at 6 p.m. for all
former members of the Gallipolis
Par e nt s With out Parner s
organization.

All singles who are divorced or
widowed are invited to attend .
Women are to take snacks and men
are to take soft drinks. Ann Borders
and Tootie Ellcesso( will be party
hostesses.

Love That Lasts.

Send. The
Lovebird Bouquet.
Valentine's Day,
.Feb.14.

l
Mr. and Mrs. Shuster, 50th

Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey
OAK fiLL- Julie Henderson and

Anthony Lindsey were married Jan.
30 in a double-wedding in Oak Hill
with the groom's sister, Lena
Delong, and Jerry Woods.
The ceremony was performed by
Rev . Peter E. McCain at his home.

Mr. and Mrs.
GALUPOLIS - Chapel Hill Chur·
ch of Christ was the selling for the
Oct. 24 wedding of TamJ Lou Bush
and Noel Arthur Lilly. The can·
dlelight~ double-ring ceremony was
performed by the minister, William
B.Kughn.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert L. Bush of
Gallipolis and the groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Meier of Clearwater, Fla.
A'Capella music was provided by
the choir of Ohio Valley College,
Parkersburg, W. Va., directed · by
Daryl Mount. Preceding the
ceremony, they sang "Let It Be
Me," ~~ A Time For Us," "Endless
Love," "If," ~~sunris e, Sunset,
"The· Lord's Prayer," "Wedding
Song ,' ' ' ' Sometime,'' the
processional, "Bridal Chorus" and
recessional, "Wedding March."
Other selections were ~~we've Only
Just Begun" and "Longer."-During
thC lighting of the unity candle,
soloist Mount sang ''Whither Thou
Goest."
The bride, given in marrjage by ·
. her parents and escorted to tile altar
by her father, wore a formal gown of
white chantilly lace and orgama.
Fashioning the gown was a wedding
band neckline trimmed in chantilly
.lace and sheer yoke, adorned with
·seed pearls. The lace from the
neckline extended over to the
· shoulders forming a small cape
sleeve to which w33 attached full
. bishop sleeves of sheer organza that
extended to the wrist and was joined
:by wide cuff of chantilly lace.
: .Her walking length. veil of silk
"illusion, bordered with chantilly lace
"and the attached blusher fell from a
• ht!ad piece of chantilly lace and seed
· J)l!arls.
• 'She carried a cascade
arrangement of burgundy, pink and
white roses, stephanotis, centered
With a white orchid, accented with
"ferns and a mist of baby's breath.
: White, pink and burgundy long satin
: streamers with lovers' knots completed the arrangement. Her only
j~welry
was pearl earrings
borrowed from her mother and for
something old, she carried a lace
luindkerlhief that belonged to the
groom's grandmother.
As the couple were leaving the
church, the groom presented the
btide's mother with a pink long
stemmed rose and the bride presented the groom's molher with the
same.
' The bride's sister, Brenda Bush,
. was maid of honor. She wore a long
gown of pink qiana with fitted
bodice, spaghetti strap, empire
waistline and 'crystal pleated skirt.
A sheer georgette butterfly cape
with jewel neckline covered her
11

s~oulders.

Mary Moriarty, Patrice Burford,
Pam McMahon and Kelly Bush,
niece of the bride.
Their gowns were identical to the
maid of honor's except in alter·
naling colors of pink and burgundy
and each carried a nosegay of pink
and white carnations with burgundy
roses and baby's breath, tied with
satin ribbon streamers in the opposite color of the gowns.
The flower girl was Paula Kernper, CQusin of the bride. She wore a

POMEROY - Arrangements of
yellow mums and gladioli with
greenery flanked by two sevenbranch candelabra decorated the
altar of The Father's House In Hartford, W. Va., for the wedding of Donna Denise Roush, Route 2, Pomeroy,
and Philip Franklin Oldaker, Hartford, W. Va.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
Reta Roush, Route 2, Pomeroy, and
the groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Oldaker, Hartford, W.Va.

They were attired in gowns of rose,
yellow and blue, and carried
bouquets in the pastel colors. Brian
Ross was the ring bearer and wore a
blue suit, with his sister, April Ross,
in a cream colored dress as the
flower girl. She carrieu a natural
wicker basket of rose petals.
Cecil Day Duncan, Jr., New
Haven, W . Va. was the best man,
and the ushers were Dave Roush,
Route 2, Pomeroy, and Jim Webster,
Pomeroy.

long pink
with an aoverlay
of
white
·lace,dress
resembling
pinaford
·and carried a white basket with rose
petals. She wore a pink carnation In
her hair.
The groom wore a silver grey
avalon updated classic tailcoat, with
double pleated center vest worn with
groom's sash, with a white ruffled
shirt with black etching and a
boutonniere of pink roses and baby's
breath.
The best man was Aldred Meier,
father of the groom. He and the
bride's father wore silver grey
tuxedos and a pink rose boutonniere
with baby's breath.
The groomsmen were Cleon
Fowler, John Joseph, Dick Simmons, Barry Johnson, Kim Bush,
brother of the bride, and Jimmy
Bush, nephew of the bride. Their
tuxedos were identical to the best
man and father of the bride. They

Thep.m.
wedding
place
Dec.Fields
19 at
2:30
withtook
Rev.
Clyde
performing the double-ring
ceremony. MitzieOidakerpresented
several wedding selections. Yellow
satin bows marked the family pews
and were used on the candelabra.
The bride was escortE!d to the altar
by her father-in-law, .and given in
marriage by her mother. She wore a
formal gown of bridal satin with an
overlay of chiffon. The sheer bodice
was fashioned with a high neckline
and long full sheer sleeves accented
with lace. The A-line skirt featured a
ruffle around the bottom with bands
of lace. The bride's chapel-length
veil and blwher of illwion fell from
a band of lace and satin. She carried
a bouquet of yellow and pink
rosebuds with baby's breath and
greenery tied with yellow satin.
The bride's maid of honor was
Terri Roush, and her bridesmaids

For her
daughter's
wedding,
Roush
wore
a light green
gown Mrs.
with
matching accessories and had a
yellow carnation· corsage. Mrs.
Oldaker was in a light blue gown
with matching accessories and also
had a yellow carnation corsage.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the Hartford Community
Building. The bride's table featured
a three-tiered cake trimmed in
yellow and white and topped with the
traditional miniature bride and
groom. Yellow tapers in crystal
holders completed the table decor.
Carol McDougal presided at the
table and Hila Wilson registered the
guests.
The couple will reside in Hartford.
The bride is a senior at Meigs High
School and is employed by Adolph's
Dairy Queen. The groom graduated
from Waharna High School in 1981
and served in lhe National Guard at

The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Henderson Jr.,
Gallipolis. The groom is the son of
Mrs. Ali~e Pelong of Oak Hill. The
bride graduated from Buckeye Hills
Career Center.
The couple wiU reside in Oak Hill.

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;w

BANKRUPTCY/CHAPTER 13
(Wage Earner Plan)

No fee for Information:
1-221-5379
Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N. Maggied
Attorneys·AI·Law
88 E. Broad St.

~!:::::::·c:o:l:u:m:b:u:s:·:O:H:·:4:3:21:5:::::::~

each
boutonniere
nationwore
withababy's
breath.of pink car· r~w;e;re;;T;e;re;sa;;W;a;lk;e;ra;n;;;d;Lo;n;';R;;oits;;h;.;;;F;o;rt;D;ix;·;N:.;J
Ring bearer was Mark McCoy,
coitsin of the bride. He was dressed
in a suit identical to the groom and
his boutonniere was a miniature
pink carnation. He carried the rings
on a white satin pillow decorated
with pink satin streamers and
flowers.
Registering the guesbi was Brenda White and distributing programs
and rice bags were Alicia and Mallse
Mutigll, nieces of the bride.
Following the ceremony, a buffet
dinner reception was held in the
cafeteria of the Buckeye Hills
. Career Center. The bridal table was
Arrangements of
decorated with white linen
live roses apd
tablecloth centered with fresh ivy
and hurricane lamps.
carnations for
Serving at the reception were
that Special
Susan Brandeberry, Becky Goodwin, Lou Ann Shawver, Patty
Patrick, Nancy Vaughn, Jean Clark
and Alvera Robinson. Dinner Music
was provided by Mary Lucas.
.
We in•ite
~
-~~
Following u•e reception, the
our new Flower .
couple left for a short honeymoon.
Department and ~Let's
The bride is a 1981 graduate !run
Talk Flowers!'
Marshall University with a bachelor
336 Set:ond Ave., Galli""'is 446-9332
of science in social work and the L=~~~~~~~~~~~~~,...~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~
groom is also a gradwte from Marshall University with a bachelor's
degree in adult fitness and sports
medicine.
·
The couple reside in Huntington,

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

POMEROY - Customers or the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Ellec·
tric Company are advised that there
will be a 10 minute outage by the
company beginning at II :30 a .m.
Tuesday. Transmission work at the
Bashan, Meigs and Coolville sul&gt;stations will be done durin g the
outage. In the · event of rain, the •
outag•,willlake place on Wednesday
at the s..me lime for the same
period .

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

CALL (614)-992-2104

The Gallia County Health Department announces the
opening of an Ambulatory Health Care Clinic ·with
Physician, Nursing, Laboratory and EKG services
available.

GALUPOUS ....: Mr. and Mrs.
Garrett Watson, Lower River Road,
Gallipolis, will celebrate their 46th
; wedding anniversary Feb. 8.
They were married Feb. 8, 1936 in
Rappsburg, Ohio.
· Their five children, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Watson of Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton (Patsy) Stanley, Bidwell;
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Watson (Dan),
Northup; Mr. and Mrs, Eddie (Bar-

CHINA DOLL KITS
HAVE ARRIVED!
LIVE PLANTS, SOME ARE
Ill CERAMIC PUNTERS.

Gallia County
Health Department

ad Crafta Nied.."
:· UJJJaea.An.
Pt.PieuUt

lounge &amp; Carryout

THE
GAZEBO.
"FerAnv-..vt~

300 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

c

Now% Price

ON ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE'
I

(SELECTED GROUP UP TO 75% OFF)

NOW!

... --etc. o

1

or ..2-SP21

DIAMONDS

We Accept All Major Credil Cards, and We Wire Flowers Evti)Wfttre.

CANDY'S CLASSIC
COLLECTIONS ·

INGELS FURN ..&amp; JEWELRY
Middleport, Ohio

Box 95, Rt. 1, Crown City, Ohio 45623.

- - - -;:;;;;~;;;:-:;;-:;::-;;lt

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ce'"~

; GgetWIItllpadlonDigaldon - - . . .
• Cllltp,llal-- . . . . Ciaplaln'l_..,. _ _
. . . . . . . . . . 2 ...... ,.,,

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

Captain,D'&amp;
...w.,...w.ttt

217 Upper

River Road

•••••••••••••••••••

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. . . . 0 • •,_ . . . .

lunclayllllll ~

2 Fllh Dlnne11 10.. $4.99
Each Fish Dinner Includes 3 golden fish

filets~

cre•my

Including a Nire Selectioo of Co-ordinates ·

cole slaw, rrench fries, anc12 dollcious hush puppies.
Offlr ExpiNo

11. 1882

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PEAK

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H.P.

'

=-~o () 0 I

t

't

-&lt;

Rea. To '105.00

HALF-PRICE SALE

WITH

614-256·1570

.0 ol\'t~ .. ~~ t
DRESSES
~·
t
t
~~
t

Women's Dingo Boots 14()00 to '7()1!1

'76.00

PH.tt2.203.

POMEROY, OH;

It interested in this service call after 5:00

:~

Rea. To ••9.00

Re~ To

14 KT. GOLD RING

58.00 Per Month
Plus 520 Deposit for Decoder Box

I

Women's Sport Shoes 5100" to 120

'4200 to '55"

"The Way Am•rlca S.ncll Lov•"
to•luttemut Ave.

We will be operating early this fall.

A

This is the Sale....
YouJve Been Waiting For

Rea. To '100.00

S]995

Now accepling applicalions tor deposit - Station will open lhis Fall. Deposil
on Decoder Box Is S20 - $8 per month includes HBO, ShOV!Iime, WTBS
Allanta, WXlS Channell9 at Cincinnati, 2-24-Hour Movie Channels Out of New
Yor• &amp; Chicago, PTL Ciub, plus local programming.

· ~gm.a.~~~~t

'
Pomeror,

' It's herel

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

SCTV PAID TV

Our license to sell beer and wine to
10 until 2!30 A.M. costs ten times
more thin an ordinary carryout per·
mit. But we leel the convenience to
JOU of edended shoppin&amp; houn is
well worlh it. And JOU pay no
premium, because even in the wee
houn you buy at our re111lar slale
minimum prices.

FRENCH
QUARTER

..
Phone 446-4612 ·extension 40

bara) Cline, Crown City, and Mr. ·
and Mrs. Roger Wabion, Gallipolis,
will help them celebrate.
The couple retired from Hannan
Trace High School in 1979 as
custodians.· T~y attend Kings
Chapel Church, Crown City.

Reduced To '4.00

412 Second Avenue

Each for I Month Membership
it you arid a friend rqister toaethlf.

•

e

WXIT TV 5

Mr. and Mrs. Watson, 46th

'

MEN'S WESTERN IIC)OTS by Aline

•ROSES •CARNATIONS •TERRARIUMS •MUMS
•TULIPS •AZALEAS •DISH GARDENS eCUT FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS •SILK &amp; PERMANENT ARRANGEMENTS

NOTICE ·

or (304)-675-1244

•

"Body Wraps By Appointm,nt.

This Vak"fl liiY'' Duy, K" no.l J 14lft of f k~·t·rs in ~
1:1 fr 11f ltl\'t' Tilt' IJJvebi,rd l~ lllqllt"l.
h's ubcJuiiful flm~I LHrll nJ.l'l'mt'nt rh~• rtl n'lh in
:m ~·x qwsitl' ,~:lass ho. 1x lrilllllll.'ll in bmis. Th i~ ck!~;~ m
kc.'t' p!i.•kt· IS ,k.\·••r:ltt\.1 with , ~•r l"ll\" &gt;111·- ·.:kSi,llnt.J ~ webi rd~
So ,o;,rn..l J v~k- lll illt' rlw W lll n l w . l~' ~ bt c·heri ~l'ol.•t 1lw ] JIVt•birJ II.! ~ II.Jt~l
Ju.~ l l'U II 'If YISil p,IITII:riJY n IWl'r Sho.lp Ji llI ~~IU C:tn !W'Il&lt;l u ~nyw hcre )'I "' l il,ce I\('1.11U!II.' th~:r6 flo •bt•fl cr
w.ty to s&lt;:ntl .1 kwc thai las 1 ~ t h r~ Valem int•'s DJ)'·

Office Hours by Appointment Only

;· ;;;;;;;;;==i

STOP BY SOON I

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles L. Eskew, 415 West Main
St., Pomeory, celebrated their 40th
wedding anniversary at Sheraton
Inn in Newark Jan. 31.
A surprise party given by their
children, included a fonnal dinner, a
two-tiered anniversary cake arid an
overnight stay in the honeymoon
suite at the hotel. Flower
arrangements were done in pastel.
Charles L. Eskew and Frances J.
Burnside were married Jan. 31, 1942,
in Pome~oy by Justice of the Peace
McCullough. They are the parents of
Charles D. Eskew and Janice A.
SchUster of Newark, and Barbara L.
Fields of Pomeroy. Their grand·
children are Kandice, Beth and Amy
Eskew of Newark; Jerry and Terry
Fields of Pomeroy, and Sean
Schuster of Jacksonville, N.C.

Announcement

SPECIAL ON MEMBERSHIPS
TOP OF THE STAIRS FITNESS STUDIO
PH. 992-6720

Mr. and Mrs. Eskew, 40th

POMEROY - The 50th wedding , married on Feb. 14, 132, at Rutland
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
by the Rev. Harley Bolton. Mr.
E. ·Shuster, Lincoln Heights,
Shuster is a retired steamfitter.
· Pomeroy, will be observed on SunThe anniversary observance is
'day, Feb. 14, with an open reception
being hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Bob
·from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Riverboat Hoeflich and daughter, Jayne.
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Friends and relatives of the couple
Loan Co., West Main St., Pomeroy.
are invited to attend the open recepGerald Eugene Shuster and
tion.
Frances
·

t
t
t

'------~

All Co-ordinates-t
"Blazers, Slacks,
Skirts
.

All DressesGroup of Longs

Entire Coat
Selection..;_
Including Aigner,
London Fog
Forecasrer,
and leathers

All Swearers
&amp; Blouses

In the Lafayette Mall
300 Second Ave., Gallipolu

t
A
'

One of the most powerful mini-cioanoro everl Groat when
you have to get things in 1hape fast. It's got the power
you'd expect from a full size canister. Goes with you
everypla&lt;:e you clean. Loads of other featuret: 3-way air
filter sy1tem ... easy to change dust bag... ute it at 1 blower
...extra·l!)ng power cord ... ultra·compact and porllble,

t

t

Regular '84.95

't
'
A

'

I
,.

�..
The

Times-sentinel
Pomerov

Jaycees offer
classes in CPR
POMEROY··Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation classes Will bt. of·
fel'E(! Feb. 22.ano 25 at the Middleport First Baptist Church by the
Meigs County Jaycees in conjunction with the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service.
Jaycees acr&lt;IS$ the nation are
continuing their efforts to save
lives. Cardiopulmonary Resusctta·
tton training Is being emphasized in
order to save more than 3,500,00 vlc·
tims of heart attack who die each
year before ever reac bing a
hospital.
Those enrolled tor the CPR train·
lng wil be taught how to assist vlc·
Urns of heart attack, drowning,
electrocution, choking and accl·
dents. They wiU practice actual
rescue techniques on llfe·like manikins Including an Infant manikin.
Theclasses wtucoversuchtoptcs
as how the heart and lungs work,
why the heart stops, how to recog·
nlze a heart attack, how to contact
the emergency medical services
and the risk factors for coronary
dlsease. The primary emphasis,
however, wlll be on Instruction in
thetechnique .andpractlceonama·
nlkin with close lndlvidl,lial gul·
dance by the Instructor. The
classes are offered to assist the
Ainerican Heart Association and
tlle American Red Cross who cer·
t11y people completing the training.
The goal Is to have one member
of every farrdly In the community
quallfled to administer CPR. It was
noted that when emergency action
Is required time Is critical because
irreversible brain damage wlll oc·
cur in 4-6 minutes If beat!ng stops
tor any reason.
The classes will be held from 7 to
9:30p.m. on Feb. 22 and 25. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting Brian Conde at 9920-5197
or 992·7271.

Shane~Wagoner

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Galtipolis, Ohio · Phone 446-9593
'We Reserve the =-:to:...=Um:;;it~;;;;.;.;;~---t
· PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, FEB.l3, 1982

r-------- COUPON
! MAXWELL HOUSE .
! MASTER BLEND COFFEE

------~-.,

l

',·

Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, 25th

SALE e SALE e SALE e SALE e SALE e

~ALEe

• Great Selection of Sale Shoes

iiJ
..J

.,
.q

~

r-

• 40%-50% .OFF' :;
~• . . . . ShOeThe
'"'"""' '' "· ~I
Ca£
. .1e
w~~----------------------~..:._--------~~

~

·i f

~-··· 3· 1'1'~

Lafayette Mall

Ga llipolis. 0. .

I
I
1I
I_

PRODUCE
U.S. No.1

!.)
!I·.

I

.REGULAR • ADC • ELECTRIC PERK

~:3l. .

!

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mr~ .
Pomeroy ; and Gene, at home, and
Patrick Johnson. Middleport.
fi ve grandchildren.
celebrated their 25th wedding anThe couple's children and their
niversary Feb. 1.
familie~ had a ~u rpris" dinner in
Mrs. Johnson i~ the fo rmer
honor of Mr. and Mr~. J ohnson.
Patricia Ball , daughter of Marjorie Others attending incl ude Sharon
Ball, Middleport. Mr. Johnson i ~ the
Jes~ie . Brian Friend, Glenn Arnold,
o~n of Mable Johnson , Clifton, W.
Marjorie Ball, and Mable Johnson.
Va .
A tiered anniver.;ary cake wa~ ser·
The couple ha~ fou r children, Pen·
ved wi!h other refre~hments . Gilts
ny Stewart of Dexter: Debbie friend
and card~ were pre~en ted to the
,:":..f..:.p..:."':::"::.:"r..:.oy:..:;....:..:.A:..:rn::.o::ld_:_Jo::.h:..:ns::.'o:.;_no:.:..f_c:..:'o,;:;up::.:l.:..e'b:.:&gt;..:.'f::.:at.:..ni:..:IY..:."::..nd.:..l:.:..ri..:.e'....:'d::.~_.- - j

..

ss·99

SAVE$1.M

--

r·'
I.
I
I

________ J1 :

COUPON
----MEAT SPECIALS

MAINE

POTATOES

• 31'1'5 • 31'1'5 e 31'1'5 e _31'1'5 e 31115 • m

1o.;,$ 29

BAG

CALIFORNIA

ORANGES
4-LB. BAG

$149

CENTER CUT

RIB
PORK$
OPS

FARM GOLD

CONSOLES(Not Pictured)
•MODEL GFR 658 S(Pecanl

RCA
XL-100

-

•Electronic Varactor Tuning
•20 Po si tion Single Knob V HF / UHF"
Channel Selector

25"

•Unitized Xtended life Chilssis

WAS_$790
NOW$649

•MODEL GFR 654 H(Pine)

RCA REMOTE

• XL -100 Auto . Color Control
•Eiectro·ni~ Varactor Tuning
•20 Position. Single Knob VHF -UHF

.•MODEL GFR 685 HR (Pine)

Channel Selector
•Unitiled X tended Life Cha ss is

•)( L-100 Auto. Color Control
•Electronic Varactor Tuning
•LEO Chilnnel Numbers
•Unitized &gt;&lt;tended Life Chassis

MARGARINE
2-LB. BOWL

NOW

•699

00

See Many Styles Of
RCA All Wood Cabinets

6.91-

...

'629

GRAPE JELLY

•MODEL GFR 630 T(Oakl

3-LB • .

•&gt;&lt; L-100 Auto. Color con trol
• Elec tron ic Varactor Tuning
•20 Position Single K nob VHF -UHF
Channel Selector

•Uniti••dx::~~;~~ssis

JAR

$1· 69

Now •619

24 oz.
CTN.

$129
c

-

22 oz.
JAR

RCA
17"
diagonai
COLORTRAK

19"

WAS$450

EFR 398 WR .
REM OT E
17" Diagonal
•COLORTRAI\ RE MOTE SCAN
•LED CHANNEL NUMBERS
•AUTO. CONTRAST/ COLOR
•UNITIZED XTENDED LIF E
CHASSIS
•AUTO. FLESHTONE CORREC ·
TION

WAS$550

NOW$389

NOW$459

Young, Duncan
POMEROY - Mr. and Mr~. Lake
Richard Dw)can of Point Pleasant
announce the forthcoming marriage
of their daughter, Eva Malea, to Edward Allen Young of Pomeroy, son
of the . late Mr. and M~. George
Richard Young.
The custom of ope,n church will be
observed on Saturday, Feb. 13. at
6:30 p.m. at Good Shepherd United
Methodist Church, Route 2,
Flatrock, Point Pleasant.
Duncan is emplo~ed with AEP
Civil Engineering Laboratory in
N~w Haven, W. Va.· Her fiance is
eJllployed with the Ohio Power Co.,
Gavin Plant Construction, Civil
Division in Cheshire.

29

$

POMEROY - Deborah Lee
Taylor, daughter of Donna Taylor
and the late James Taylor, Mid·
dleport, and Terry Lee Ferguson,
son of Marjorie Stewart, West
CoJumbia, W. Va., will be married in
an open-ch\lfch ceremony on Satur·
day, Feb. 13, at 3:30 p.m. at the
S&amp;lem Church, West Columbia.
·llev. George Hoschar will perform
the ceremony following a half-hour
of · music beginning at 3 p.m. by
pianist Gail Imboden.
paul Eichinger, Middleport, will
be the bridesmaid. James Stewart
Jr~ , West Columbia, will be best
miln. A closed reception wil'be held
following the ceremony at the home
o(the groom.
l'aylor is a 1977 graduate of Meigs
fflgh School and a 19'/9 graduate of
Rio Grande College. She is employed
bi Holzer Clinic as a Ia boratory
technician, Her fiance is a 19'/6
graduate of Wahama Htgh School
aJ!d is employed at the Meigs Mines.
Foll~ng their wedding, they will
reside in Middleport.
·

'
4J

Other pieces to be included In the
program ~re Carnival Overture,
Opus 92, by Antonio Dvorak, and

RIO GRANDE - Black History
Day wlll be held on the Rio Grande
College and Copununity College
campus on Saturday, Feb. 13, as
part of National Black Awareness
Month.
Theme for February, 1982, is
"Black Hi~tory - Blueprint for Sur·
vival." The program will begin al9
a.m . in the Student Center on the

There will also be student presentations as well as films, music and
eJ&lt;hibits..
Individuals attending the event
may eat ,lunch or supper in the
college cafeteria.
For f\lfther information, contact
Thomas at Davis Library or call
(614) 24:;.5353, extension 323.

Camp~ Ministry in Athens will be a

WHOLESALE ·, RET I

SUPER
SALE!

STOREWIDE SALE
ALL WINTER MERCHANDSIF

camp~.
r~~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~
Rev . Dorsey Blake of the United
,
Al

00

SWIMM ING
.

PO"QLS

OFF

PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM
For Your Winter Need
Ca II 304-429·4788

•UNIFORMS •MATERNITIES •SLEEPWEAR
•FULL FIGURE FASHIONS

H()LIDA
. Y POOLS
. INC.

~------·---------------Ope n Daily 10·9, Sunday 1-6

Th~

Sunday
Thru
Tuesday

SALE

Saving Place ,...

FREEl

Gallipolis,
Ph. 446-1235
Home Ph. 388-96?1

3DOZEN
CRACKERS

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
Fr4ltrM1tl Lift lnummu

'

Home Offke - RO&lt;k l1land, lllinoi1

LB.

49(
89(

SCOT TOWELS

\

;

VALENTINE SPECIAL
25% OFF ALL PERMANENT WAVES

Full Figure Size•
31·40 D; •OI·.UC

If you btllll fllend, JOU both
receive this discount.

1422N

..
.

GIFT CUTIFICAT£5 FOR VALINTlHE'S DAY

TOP OF THE STAIRS BEAUTY STUDIO
POMEROY, Ott.

. PH.992-6720

Our Reg. 2.96

15.97~~~Ice

Eveninp by Appointment.

(503)

I

2.22

Easy·care lras
Variety or styles and
fabrics. White. Save.

•·slice Toaster, Iron Or Hair D,tyer
Toaster has Bread Brain'" control. Light·
weight steam iron is selr-c leaning . 1400·
waH dryer includes 5 aMachments. Save .

When you buy

Featured at

Keebler

1.07

Town House
Bonus Pack

.••'

- - .:: ::-

JUMBO

2 .51

.
•

VALLEY

WHOLE KERNEL CORN
SWEET PEAS
CUT ·
BEANS

..

•_,;.;.;_.,._1111111!'1"'_~luy Any Four Of These Items
And Receive

our Reg . 1.27

15.5 OZ.,
CAN

97~

(504)

$.2

Panti-AII

MAIL· IN

711, l·gal.
llze
1.51

Glad®Plastic Food
Storage Products ,

Food Wrap .. ..... (505&gt;. 1.18
freezer Wrap......(506) 97e
·
Sand101lch Iaiii • •• ( 507) 88c
L..:'•::;•:.•::•:or~•;,:D;;:t::•P;;:la:;y~F:;;;oiil.riiDii•ta;;;:ll;.•_ . Fo!)CI storagelagl( 508 )1.!18

REBATE

Nylon with cotton
pane ls.

From Union Carbld~

Sale Price

1.67

(509)

Johnaon•s• Powder
14-oz.' baby powder
John•on'•" laby Sham·
16· oz.· • Size, 2.58

0)lold In lporflng
Goods DePt.

ACiuH1'
• Super Atcufilter
Picture Tube

• Au to. Con trast/ Color
•Unlfi111d Xte ndl'd Lif~
Ch.ISSIS
•100'!-t. Sollrl s t,lt~ Tuners
•Auto. Fine Tun •n!{
Plnpotnls co rrec r S i gn&lt;~ I

2% MILK

79

' -

WA$$350
NOW
$299

8-1601.

BTLS
MORTON

(511)

FROZEN [UNNERS :

IVORY
32 OZ. BOlTLE

$149

Kmorl
Price
Trode.ln
Allowance
Nel Cost
Atier

49.97
·5.00

13.97

..
(514)

600 SuJ;J• Film·
High-speed colo r
Land film. Gel perfect
Save.

lun.·Tu••· Only
lold In 4·, 6 · Or 8·paCkl
Sale

TIDE DETERGENT
15' OFF lABEL

49 OZ. BOX.

I . Repack lronl wheel bearings
2. Replace front Qteose sealS
3. Computer balance atl4

Rernem.ber.... ~
if you don"! - u. OIH ~
We •JHlCial ortkr boola, rerord. tlnd lapel.

$189

The AlCove

wlleelo

4. Align kant end

,

42 Cmm St., IA/qeeu_ M4JJ GaJiipoui
Open-Daily 9:30 til 8:00
CJosed s-.J·.,_ _,
!'

640 Sun' " Camera

Our 10.97
Hooded Sweat Shirl
CoMon/ acryliC pullover.

11 OZ. BOX

LIQUID

/I

A World prt!llller of Karl Ahren- Symphony No. 3 F Major, Op\lS 90,
The concert is free and open to the
dt's Concert Piece for Trwnpel and
by Johannes Bra hams.
public.
Strings is scheduled with Ernie , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Bastin oo trumpet. Bast!n is
associate professor ol. brass instrwnents at 0 . U.'s School of Music.

College plans Black History Day

gu~t ~peaker and Beulah Johnson
of Gallipolis will speak on local
black history. Jack Hart of the Rio
Grande English Department will
give a presentation on the 19thcentury black poet rrom Gallipolis,
James Madison Bell.
Barbara Thomas of the Davis
Library ~taff at Rio Grande will
present a discussiqp paper on
" Images of Africa and Cultural
Bias" and show slides of North
Mrica.

ROYAL
CREST

..--..

,~
non -'""Oil

•SUPER ACCUFIL TER PICTURE
TUBE
•AUTOMATIC CONTRAST/ COLOR
•UNITIZED
XTENOEO
LIFE
CHASSIS
•I DO% SOLID STATE TUNERS
•AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING
Pinpoints Corr~~t Signal

·~ Iw

~,.

The Ohio Unive~ily 'Symphony
Orchestra, under the direction of Dr.
Joseph Henry, will perform their fir· '
st program of the winter quarter,
Tuesday, Feb. 9 at 8 p.m. in
Memorial Auditorium.
The program will be comprised of
works being played by Ohio Univer·
sity's Symphony Orchest.'8 for the
firsttime in Athens
.

ROLL

COFFEE CREAMER.
XL-100

SUPERIOR

COTTAGE CHEESE

COLOR PORT ABLES
. RCA

LB.

BOLOGNA

LB. ·

'

KRAFT

'

The 5undav Times·Sentinei-Page-8·7

LB.

MI::CED

FRYER PARTS

79

$189. .

LOIN PORK CHOPS

SALTINES
POUND
BOX

1

CENTER CUT

99

WAS $750

WAS $850

'N OW

·Soft Spread

•)(L· lOO AUto. Color Control

,,

w. Va.

OU ·Symphony to perform Tuesday

taylor~Ferguson ..---Sh_a_ne;..;..,_w_a..::::.go_n_er_____,

•.

~

."
.

GAWPOUS - Mr:;. Anna Kay
Shane, Burnette Rd., has a1mounero
the engagement of her daughter ,
Lisa Annette, daughter of the late
Bill Wolfe, to Randolph McKinley
Wagoner, son of Mrs. Juanita J.
Wagoner and the late Kenneth
Wagoner, Central Ave.
Shane attends Gallia Academy
High .School and will graduate in
May. She plans to attend Gallipolis
B~iness College in the falL
Wagoner is a 1981 grad\late of
Gallia Academy High School and at·
tends Nashville Aut&lt;&gt;-Diesel College
in Nashville, Tenn. He will graduate
in July 1982.
The bride-elect is the grand·
daughter of Margaret Wolfe and Mr:
and Mrs. Audray Smith, both of
Gallipolis. Wagoner is the grandson
of the late Mr. and Mr~. George
Haws, Point Pleasant, W. Va .. and
Mr. and M~. John Wagoner, Sugar
Grove, Va.

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Poil!t Pteasan,,

"

'

.,
(

35.88

lave On front

lndSpeclal
For manv u.s. cars.
Disc brakes $10
more. Shop now.

Sale Price

79e ea.

•

•&gt;

Champion Spark Plugs
Plug Savings
For many U.S. c a rs.
,
Re1l1tor Spark Plug1, Ea. 990 •

�Page-8·8-The Sunday Times· Sentinel

Feb.

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

Calendar

SUNDAY
MORGAN CENTER - Rev.
Jack Finnicum will preach at the
Gospel Mission Sunday evening.
Services will start at 7:30. The
public iB invited.
RUTLAND - All Rutland area
residents having input . on
possible usage for the Rutland
Gymnasium are invited to attend
a special meeting of the Rutland
Village Council scheduled for 2
p.m. Sunday at the gymnasium.
ROUND UP FOR new youth
program at Racine First BaptiBt
Church starts at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the church. Special
programs for children grades
three through six and those in
grades seven through 12. New
topics _wjll be introduced each
month.

POMEROY ·-Revival services
will be held at Wesleyan Hallness Church,, State Route 143,
HarrisonvUe Road, P.omeroy,
Sunday through Feb. 14. Rev.
Marsl)all Smart of Greenfield,
Ind. will be the speaker at the
services to he held at 7: 30 p.m.
each evening. There w!ill be singIng nightlv.

I

June. The event will begin at 7
p.m . and last from 30-45 minutes.

PUBUC MEETING for . aU
Racine residents interested in the
new gas rate ordinance "7 p.m.
Monday at Racine ViUage Hall ;
Bob Gibson of the gas company
will be present to answer
questions.

GALLIPOLIS - Washington
Elementary SchQOI's P.T.A. will
hold an annual Founders' Day
meeting Monday at 7 ·p.m. in the
sc!Jool's auditorium. · Past
presidents have been invited and
.will receive certificates of appreciation. GAHS Madrigals will
perform. Refrestunents will be
served following the meeting.

. MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Mark Abell
will hold a program concerning
financial aid for Gallia Academy
High School upperclassmfi,n and
their parents Monday at 7 p.m. at
GAHS Library.

EASTERN
ATHLETIC
Boosters, 7 :JO p.m. at the high
school.
RACINE - Twin City Shrine
Club, Monday, at the club house
in Racine. A chili dinner will Pe
served at 7 p.m. All area Shriners
are invited to attend.

MIDDLEPORT - A revival
will begin Monday evening at Ash
Street FreewiU Baptist Church in
Middleport with Clovis Vanover
of Columbus as the speaker.
There will be singing each night
at the 7:30 p.m. services. Leslie
Hayman, pastor, invites the
public.
·

Bossard
GALLIPOLIS Library will begin a series of a
storytelling series for school age
children Monday and will con.
tinue the program each second
Monday of each month until

UNITED METHODIST Church
women, 7:30 Monday night at
Heath United Methodist Church.

TUESDAY

GaUery Hours - Tuesday · and
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, I to5p.m.
Exhibit for February - Pen and
ink works by Randy Rose of
Newark, Ohio.
Feb. 8 - Money in to Judi Sheet.
for Ballet Metropolitan outing at Rio
Grande.
Feb. 9, 8 p.m . Interdepartmental meeting;' deadline
for committee reports.
Feb. 11, 8 p.m. ·- Trustees
meeting.
Feb. 14 - Ballet Meiropolitan at
Rio Grande at 2:30 p.m. Meet at
Riverby at I p.m.,
Feb. 18, noon - Deadline for
reservations to the annual dinner.
Feb. 25,6:30 p.m. - Annual dinner
at the Down Under with Gregg Goldston.

ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes will
begin on Thursday, Feb. 18, for
couples whose expected date
delivery is prior to April15.
Class participants will learn
breathing and relaxation techniques
for first stage labor. effective expulsion technique for second stage
labor, physical and emotional aspects of the birth process, and bodyconditioning exercises to promote
comfort during P!egnancy and postpartum.
.
The fee for the series is $6o.
Scholarships are available. To preregister contact Pamela, Collier,
ASPO-Certifled Childbirth
Educator, I Ransom Road, Athens
' 45701, or call593-5049.

'

I

Michigan in surprise
•
victory over Illinois

GALuPOLIS- There wiD be a
meeting and sign-up session for
persons 55 years or allier for the
Green Thumb Program at the
Senior Citizens Center Tuesday
at9p.m.

· GALLIPOLiS - Riverside
Study Club wiD meet at I p.m.
Tuesday at the M. T. Epling Sr .
residence.

MEIGS High Vocal Music .
Boosters wiD meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m. in the music room at the
high school.
RACINE - A regular meeting
of Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, will
be held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday with
work in the Master Mason
degree. All Master Masons ·are
invited.

HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. The office of
Ruth will be .honored with aU who
have served in the office to be
recognized. Members are asked
to lake candy and baked goo&amp;
for a sale, the proceeds from
which wiU be used for the
matron's project.

'

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITES ...............STARTING AT $4".00
3 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITES ...............STARTING AT $7".00
8 PIECE FAMILY ROOM SUITES............... STARTING AT $894).00

PRICES ARE THE
LOWEST THAT SEEING
IS BELIEVING

WITH .THE PURCHASE OF ANY 2' or 3 PIECE LIVING
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5500 00 OR MORE OFF.
SPECIAL BONUS (Optional I

DON'T BUY UNTIL
· YOU CHECK FIRST
AT RUTLAND FURNITURE

, ....l . Ur
! . . ..- ' .
I

I

_,.

'

'·'..~

.

STAYING EVEN - George Bllrll8 bites bls lip as
bll puH ml,.es to give blm par on the lllh bole at

'

WITH THE PURCHASE OF A LIVING RQOI\l SUITE YOU
CAN RECEIVE ASET OF END TABlES
AT

Spygla,. Hill during lblnl round action In the Bing
Crosby Nalioul Pro-Am Saturday; Bums leads after
two rounds. (AP Laserpholo).

Shoving
r,ncr,uent
no big deal

. I

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.......

•

MAPLE DINING
ROOM SUITES

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Includes Hutch, Table
and Six Chairs

..

o

ANN ARBOR, Mlch. (AP) Thad Garner scored 10 point.&gt;, in·
eluding a perfect 11-lor-11 from the
free throw line, to lead Michigan to
a 58-53 Big Ten basketball victory
. over llllnols Saturday.
After each team traded baskets
In till!' early going, freshman guard
Eric Turner converted a steal Into
an easy layup to cap a 5: 00 stretch
In which the Wolverines outscored
Ollnols 16-6, and Michigan led 22·14
with 9: 00 remaining In the first hall.
Michigan extended Its lead to Jl.
18 when Garner hit four consecu·
live free throws in the final two
minutes of the half. However, Dllnl
baskets by Anthony Welch and
Craig Tucker In the final seconds ot
the halt cut Michigan's lead to 31-22
at intermission.
Turner opened the second halt by
scoring a short jumper and dishing
oft an assist to teammate Dean
Hopkins to make Michigan's margin 13, at J5.22. However. Illinois
James Gr!f!In hit lour successive
baskets to cut the Wolverines' lead
to J5.30.
·
Michigan managed to hold a :;.
point margin but could not stop
Griffin, who scored 10 of hls 12
points In the second halt, or the sophomore Tucker who pumped In 14
points In the second halt.
IIUnols, closed to within one at 5453 with ): 12 left to play on an inside
basket by Grtt1!n. But Garner and
Turner, who l!nlshed with 13 points,
each scored twice on cruclal1"and·
I foul sbols In the final seconds to

preseiVe the Michigan victory.
The Wolverines, who have won
three of their las_t four games after
suffering through an 11-game losIng streak, raised their record to
4·14 overall and a.7 in the Big Ten.
Tucker paced the Dllnols atlack
with a game-high 23 points as the
llllnl feU to 1~ for the year and 6-4
in the conference.
BOSTON (AP) - Jay Twyman
btl a 15-foot jump shot !rom the
baseline with one second left in
overtime Saturday to help Boston
University to a 52-50 victory over
the Cincinnati Bearcats In non·
conference college basketball.
Twyman, a junior and native or
Cincinnati, scarred the winning
basket on a feed from John Teague
after the Terriers kept the baD
away !rom Cincinnati lor three
minul!&gt;s In a 50-50 tle,
The victory lifts Boston or the·
Eastern Collegiate Athletic Confer·
ence to a 13-6 overall record. The
loss dropped the overall record or
Cincinnati of the Metro Conference
to 11·9.

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Guards
Eric Harris and Brad Leal com·
blned lor 32 points Saturday as
EvansvUie bull! a large lead and
held on to defeat Xavier 16-73 In a
Midwestern &lt;:tty Conference col·
lege basketbaU game .
EvansvlUe led 39-22 at tl1
and drew away to a 23-polnt 1c .d
with 16: 25to play In the game. But

guard Anthony Hicks scored 21 of
his game·high 27 points In the seeond half and center Eddie Johnson
chipped In 14 points after the Inter·
mission to pull Xavier close.
The Musketeers cut the lead to
three points with just under eight
mln~tes to play, but Leal hit a lay·
up to put Evansville ahead 57·62.
Xavier never got closer than three
points. Harris led Evansville with
17 points and Leaf had 15.
EvansvlUe Improved to 17-3 and
6-1 tn the conference. Xavier fell to
5·15 and 0·7 In the conference .
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
Sam Perkins scored 22 points and
freshman Michael Jordan added 2.1
as second·ranked North Carolina
romped past Furman 96-69 In the
nightcap of the North-South college
basketball double-header Friday
night.
Sidney Lowe scored 16 points and
Scott Parzych 14 as North Carolina
State defeated The Citadel 54-44 In
the .opener.
North Carolina St,ote plays Fur·
man at 7 p.m. EST Saturday, with
North Carolina meeting The Cit·
adei al9. ·
The Tar Heels, 17·2,Ieaped out to
an early lead and led by as much as
40-22 with lour minutes left In· the
first halt. Junior guard Jim Brad·
dock hit five straight shots from
outside and only the hot-shooting
hand of guard Mel Daniel kept the
Paladins going. North Carolina
ended the first halt with a 40-30 lead.

Beating vague in Witte's memory

1

OVER TllElR HEADS Purdue forward Mike~ (23) and
Wlocoalln cenier Keith MltcheU (41) lunge lor the haD under the WJ5.
COIIIIIa blllket during a pme Salunlay In ~. W18. Purdue won,
(AP Laaerphoto).

ALLIANCE, Ohio tAP) - Ten
years after that ugly nlght In Min·
neapolis, Luke Witte says he sUD
doesn't remember anything about
the severe beating he look In a col·
lege basketbaU game between Min:
nesota and Ohio State.
But the reminders are persistent
- It's what the former Ohio State
player is remembered lor.
"I don't believe a day goes without somebody asking me about II,"
he said In an Interview with Tom
Melody of the Akron Beacon Jour·
nal. "And I can assure you that a
day never passes without my becoming more appalled by what
happened that night."
Witte, who played professional
basketball lor a while here and In
Europe, operates sporting goods
stores In Alliance and Fairlawn.
· He plays a little basketbaU with
friends on a court tn the barn behind his rural home and does com·
mentary on radio broadcasts of
University or Akron games.
While most people lamUlar with
his name are likely to associate It
with the Incident at Minnesota that
he can't remember, Witte has
many happier recoll~t!ons or his
sports career - high school star·
dam, the Big 1.0, the National Bas·
ketball Association. a year In
Europe.
"So many good things happened
to me - and so last, day after day,_

week after week. I've lived my life
backwards. The things others
strive lor when they are my age,
I've already had," said the 31-yearold Witte. ''l've been to Europe,
I've been so many places: Heck, I
remember when I thought nothing
of going to Europe, thought nothing
of coming home lor a couple days.
I'd stick a few th_Ings In a gym bag,
and oftrd go."
The Incident al Minnesota, In
January 1972, sent Witte to the has·
pita!, badly hurt. After It happened,
there were accusations that Witte

Gregg gets honor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- Fo,..
refit Greo has been named the National Football League's AFC
Coach of the Year by the Committee of 101, comprlaed of Kansas City
Chiefs boostel'll, for leading the Cincinnati Bengals lo the Super Bowl.
After complllDg a 1.24 regular-

season record, the Bengals reached
the Super Bowl butlosllo the San
Franclaco 49en, 26-21.
Grell will be hoaored at a Feb.
19.banquet, along with 49en Coach
BW Walah, named earlier by the
pmtp aa NFC Coach of the Year.

touched oH the disturbance by spit·
ting on a Minnesota player.
'"My last recollection Is or the in·
termisslon," he said. "I reme mber

that It was a low-scoring game, remember that! still felt strong, was
anxious lor the game to continue,
but that's the extent of what I remember. Doctors have told me that
I suffered what Is called retroamnesla. I did see the films though, and I
am convinced I didn't spit on anybody. My head was down , I had my
chin against my jersey. Then It
h!lppened."
Witte said he could not believe
what he saw In those films .
"I grew up In a sheltered world,"
he said. "My world was a world or
good people, a world where you
helped the guy down the road bale
his hay bec!luse he needed your
help and you never expected a dime
lor lt. A world where people drove
by and waved, where everybody
was friendly, helpful. '"
"! just didn 't know there were
people out" there who were deter·
mined 10 better themselves, to succeed. at any and all costs. I suppose
I would have found out about such
people sooner or later, but 1 sure
wish it would have been later."
Witte said that as time passes, he
Is less Inclined f.o blame the players
who attacked him. "When you 're
young, you're easily lnfiuenced, tor
better or worse," he said.

I

...a.

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•

Mets, Foster's agent
negotiating major deal

$4999 ~
ON
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STYLES

ANYWHERE,
BEAT THIS BUY.

NEW YORK (AP) - OOlclals of
the New York Mets and Cincinnati
Reds Saturdaywerepatimtlywalt·
Ina word on a possible agreemmt
between George Foster's agent and
the Mets who met durmg the day to
dlacuss.il contract that would allow
a trade bl Which the slugger would
come to the Big Apple.
.
It was learned late Friday that
Cincinnati would receive catcher
Alex Trevino and pitchers Jim.
Kern and Greg Harris.
Foster's agent, Tom Reich, said
negotiating meetings w.ere scheduled this weekend in Sarasota,
Fla.. where Retch had plaJmed tO
work on arbitration hearlniS for
other cllmts. He said he would put
aatde that work to expedite con·
tract tallcs lor Foster.
Several New York-area newspapers repol'le!l Friday that Mets
General Mana&amp;er Frank Caahen
aDd Reds President Dick W&amp;gne~:
..,.eecS 011 the 3-for-1 trade after
several days r1 neaotlalions. But If
the swap 18 to be completed, the

I

Mets will have to negotiate the richest contract In the franchise's 21year history.
According to reports, Reich Is
seeking a five-year extenSion to
Foster's current conlract, ·which
pays him about $750,001 per year
and expires after the 1982 season.
1be extension, the reports say.
would Include an average annual
salary of from $1 miUlon to $1.5 mtlllon, plus a $1-miUlon Interest-free

'

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~

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loan.
Other reports said allY contract
would be lor at least $1 mllllon
·
.
annually.
"We're working hard," Mets
Board Chairman Nelson Doubleday said. "I'd be very surprised
and disappointed It we dldll't get .
him. We don't want to come up
empty after getl!ng this tar."
Doubleday said the ligures being
. discussed "are not frightening. I
I thlnk Georae Foster Is an lrnpor·
.tant enough pei'IIOD that the Mets
·\QIId stretch their rubber band a
little bit further to convince him to
'play here."
~-.......

I

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ray
Grtt1!n says a shovinljllncldent in
the Cincinnati Bengals' locker
room before Super Bowl XVI
had nothing to do · with the
team's state of mind before the
game.
The defensive back also
charged that the Incident has
been oyerplayed.
Griffin. wide receiver Don
Bass and defensive lineman Ed·
die Edwards were Involved In
the disagreement. Griffin said It
·had no bearing on the way the
team played In a 26-2lloss to the
San Francisco 49ers.
"I wish I could clear things
up," Gr!fltn said. "This Is em·
barrasslng. I don't Uke the way It
makes me look. Or Don. Or Ed·
dle Edwards.
"Everybody's trying to find
an excuse as to why we lost. We
just got beat."
"Grtffln and Edwards said the
inCident occurred as the players
were wattl~~g to get their ankles
taped before the Jan. 24 game at
the Sllvt•rdome In Pontiac,
Mich.
Bass reportedly got his ankles
taped. walked away from the
trainer's table, returned and attempted to cut In front of Griffin
In line.

BUY ANY BEDROOM SUITE
STARTING AT '699.95 AND GET THE

STARTING AT

Headache fighter
NEW YORK (AP) -Americans
swallow more than 90 ninllon doses
of aspirin dally to relleve their
headaches, according to Dr. Joseph White, president or the newly
formed · Aspirin Foundation of
America.
Aspirin, a mainstay In the na. tlon's medicine cabinets tor the
past 82 years, traces its ortgtn to 11\e
dawn of clvUlzaUon. Prtm!Uve man
chewed the leaves and bark of the
wtllow tree to reduce h1s fever. The
tree contains a substance called sa- .
llcln, closely related to acetylsali· ·
cyllc acid or aspirin.
The Aspirin Foundation Is planning a ·medlcal sympoetwn at the
TUlane Unfvenlty School of Medl, cine April 21-23 to dfscusa the drug.

•
7 1982

WHY
. . PAY MORE THIS SPRING iilnu SUMMER WHEN YOU CAN SAVE
HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS NOW AT RUTLAND FURNITURE

I

Offers Lamaze
birth classes

~imes .. ientiud Sectigneb.

•

Artists Council
plans exhibit
POMEROY ··A traveling exhibit
of paintings and sculptures is being ·
planned by the Bend 0' the. River
Artists Councll.
Meeting Thursday night at
McClure's barn studio, the
members discussed the exhibit to
be held In AprU with cooperating
business places. Plans are for the
exhibit to be moved from one busl·
ness location to another and from
011e community to another so that
many people will be able to view the
work of local artists.
During the meeting It was also
voted to make portable frame dis·
play racks lor use In displaying
paintings alongwitha two-tiered ta·
ble suitable lor sculptures. A work
session on the racks wiD be held
later this month.
Members are reminded that
from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Middleport
Library there are painting sessions
every Monday. The publlc Is invited to participate in the Informal
art program. .
A slide show on water color tech·
niques was presented by Leo Hill.

ports

MIDDLEPORT - The Grubb
Family Singers will perforin at
the revival at Ash Street Freewill
BaptiBt Church Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. All are welcome.

HARRISONVILLE·:A free
blood pressure clinic will be held
at Han1sonvUJe towDhall Tuesday from 10 a:m. to 1 p.m. Fern·
dora Story, R.N., will be the
nurse In charge. The publlc Is
invited to attend the clinic.

Riverby
Calendar

7, 1982

·-- - . '"'""''"'--·

'

RIDDEN DOWN - N--l.evellle Cltl fl lhe s.toa Bndill, ricin
Tmy RaAowllll Ill tile Cldeal{e Blod: IU.U dCIWII to tile I~ I• tint

•

-

I

period aellaa of lhe NIH.. pme Ia the 8olloD Garden Saturday. (AP
Luerpbolo).

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Page-C-2-!he Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Feb. 7, 1982

.. Southern
remains
unbeaten
..
•
)with
75-67 WID over HTHS
...
•

-.
,_.
.• .

: '
By SCOTl' WOLFE
··: RACINE talented Southern
:·:tornadoes, behind another team el: ;fort that placed 11 men in the scoring
: ·&lt;:olwnn, rolled to a 7~ -~VAC vic: :tory over the husUing Hannan Trace
..;~ildcats at Southern High School
; ·Friday evening.
unbeaten Tornadoes are now
•:16-G and 8.(} in the league. Hannan
:;trace drops to 7-9 overall. and 3-5
; -1fithin the league. .
··: • Leading the Tornadoes with 20
: )ioints was guard Kent Wolfe,
: fllllowed by another southpaw
; .guard, Zane Beegle with 18. Scott
·Frederick came through . with his
:. :tiest performance with 10.
: · : Leading Hannan Trace was Greg
• :Webb with 22 points, while Kelly
: Jletrie and Mike Waugh added 12
: i'llch, and Toby Sheets 10.
;: : Initially, Senior forward
: ~ederick put the Tornadoes on top
. pG at the 7:29 mark after Hannan
: )))ace controlled the opening tip.
· : ~nt Wolfe then laced a long jwnper
, fJOm the top of the. key for a 4-1llead

The

:::The

..

before HT notched its first' score on a
Jeff Barnes field goal.
From the opening moment,
Southern substituted freely , but
established a comiortable lead of 2112 at the buzzer.
Kent Wolre had 10 points in the first frame, while Richard Wolle and
Frederick netted four . Kelly Petrie
swished six for the Wildcats.
Coach Carl Wolle emptied his bency early in the second round, while
tuning up for Saturday's tough contest at Nelsonville.
Despite gOOd play from the
younger Tornadoes the fighting
Wildcats of Coach Mike Jenkins
clawed their way to a 4:1-32 halftime
score.
Southern coasted through the third
round a.rid built up a 62-42 advantage
at the bilzzer. In the fourth round a
great Hannan Trace bid fell short
and SHS claimed the 7f&gt;&lt;&gt;7 win.
Southern canned 31 of 50 field
goals for 52 percent, while netting 13
of 25 from the line. The hosts had 43
rebOunds led by Brown's 10, while

'· •· .· •~
',•.
.

committing 21 fouls, 16 turnovers,
and II steals.
Hannan Trace hit 24 of 64 from the
field for 38 percent, hit 19 of 25 from
lhe line, had 31 re~ds. 19 fouls,
and 14\umovers.
Southern won the reserve game
with a 52·36 score, as Coach Howie
Caldwell's boys now own a 13-3
record. Three men hit clouble figures
led by Tony Deem with 15, Paul
Harris with 13 and Dennis Teaford
with 10. R. Brwnfield led the little
Wildcats with 10 points.
Southem played at NelsonvilleYork Saturday evening.
Box score:

STOPPED AT PASS - Hanuao Trace's Mike ..oa lo Friday's SVAC eaeOUDter at Racloe. Seullera •
Rmlslter (15• beads off Tom Rmleberry (10• daring ae- jiolled Its 11th alralgbt victory, 75-17. Tim Tucker
pllo!p.

Southern C7Sl - R. Wolfe 3·1·) ;
Frederick 5·0-10; Rees 1·0-2; N.
Bostick 2-0-4; Brown 1-2-4; ·c.

Bostick 1·0.2; Roseberry 0-1-1;
Beegle 11·6· 18; K. Wolfe 10·0·20;
'Tyrone 0 ·3-3; Pape 0-0-0; cummins
2·0·4. Totals lHJ-75.
Hannan Trace (67) - Pe1rie 4-4·
12; Webb 8·6·22; Waugh 5·1 · 12;
Sheets .4·2-10; Barnes 2·4-9; Rossiter
0·0·0; Bays 0·0·0: Campbell 0·2-2;
Bailey 1·0·2. Totals 24·19-67.

Score by quarters:
Southern
Hanhan Trace

21 21 20 13- 75
12 20 10 25-67

,.

'..
·'·
•' ·
.'·'·
I' •

·YES!

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH IS
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OFFER EttDS FEB. 28, 1982
CHRYSLER PAYS THE ENTIR~ AMOUNT .TO YOU OR
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CASH BACK on 19B1 -1982 Plymouth TC3 an d Dodge 024.

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•••

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heads for a two pointer agalo.st Ha11D80 Trace Friday
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1 6

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See: Garland Parsons or Pat HIII·Gen. Mgr •
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PH. 992·2196
Middleport, OH.

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~· -· ··· - ---

---- ··-

�Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohi[}-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

Feb. 7, 1982

Feb. 7,1982

•
.WID

Sheets sparks Gallipolis
over Ir~nton Fighting Tigers

'

'

~

:'I
, •••

GIVE AND GO - Gallipolis guards Marty Gleoo
':;'Ill) and Phil King, (21) pass off to each other during

I

Friday nJght's litle-cUnchlng victory over host Ironton.
Tiger defenders are Jay Wolle (20) and Jim Morris
(31). - Keith Wllllim photos.

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek ripped the nets lor 24 points in the first
quarter here Friday night enroute to
a 65-62 SVAC victory over Southwestern. The win, Kyger's lOth flf
the season, kept the Bobcats' hopes
alive in the SV AC race. It also
avenged an earlier 5!-50 loss at
Patriot.
During the "hot-s~ooting" first
perind, sophomore J . D. Bradbury
had his best quarter this year with 10
points, senior forward Tim Price
canned six and David Sands had
four.
Paul McNeal, junior center, canned 'four of Southwestern's 10 points.

The Blue Devils led 8-6 after one
period and 22-12 during the halftime
intermission.
After Ironton fought back to cui
the deficit to five points, 25-20, with
3:11 left in the third canto, GARS
scored eight straight points to take a
33-20 advantage into the final period.
·
Free '!'brows Cllucb Win
Ironton pulled within nine, 35-28,
with 3: 03 left, but GAHS went into a ·
passing game. Lane, Glenn and
Sheets hit seven charity shots in the
final minutes of play to ' ice the vi&lt;'
tory.
GaUipolis played 17th ranked Portsmouth at Portsmouth last night.
IroniOn played at Boyd County in a
makeup game.
Ironton will host Logan Friday
and play at Athens Saturday in
another makeup game.
Box score:
GALLIPOLIS (48) - Sheets 4-4·

ball on Ironton's press, ani! was
credited with two rebounds.
Junior forward Tim Madison had
four points, three rebounds and
three assists while Senior Tim
Lanier came off the bench to score
seven points, pick off two rebounds
and dish out two assists.
Rick Fritz, ~ senior center, Jed
Ironton's attack with seven points.
Dennis Bacon picked off live rebounds for Coach Phil Rice's Tigers, now
8-7 overall and 6-0 inside the league.
Eighth SEOAL Crowa
The victory assured GAHS at least
a tie for its first cage crown in nine
years, and eighth in the sehool's
history. It was also Gallia's first win
at Ironton in five years, and snapped
the Tigers' six·game home court
winning streak. Tlie loss eliminated
IHS from this year's title race.
Gallipolis connected on 17 of 34
field goal attempts for 50 percent.
GAHS was 14 of 17at the foul line for
62 percent. Gallipolis had 'n rebounds, 15 turnovers and 12 assists.
Ironton hit II of 38 from the field
for 28 percent. l'he Tigers were
seven of 10 at the foul line for 70 per·
cent. Ironton had 14 rebounds and 15

In the second stanza, the Bobcats
outscored Southwestern, 14-10, to
take a 38-21 advantage into the
lockerroom at the baH.
Both played on even terms during
the third period with 10 point efforts.
Southwestern won the fourth quarter
with 21 points to the Bobcats' 17.
Paci ng the fourth quarter
comeback effort for Coach Uoyd
Myers' Highlanders were Roger
Wells with nine points while McNeal
and Randy Layton had four points
apiece. Sands kept the Bobcats
moving with 10 p&lt;iints.
According to the charts, Kyger
Creek connected on 23 of 41 floor at·

3·0·6; Baker 3·2·8; Price 2·0·4i Wells

6;

5 · 0~ 1 0 ;

Layton 5 · 1 ~ 11.

KYGER CREEK (6Sl - Clark 3 ~ 0 ~

Sands 6·6·18; Mar tiri 0-2·2; Moles
2·3·7; Pr ice 6-5·17; Barr O·H and
BradbUry, 6·2·1-4. Total s 23· 19·65.
By quarters :
10 11 10 21- 52
Southwestern
t&lt; yger Creek
24 14 10 17-65

3·1-7; King 5·2·12; Skidmore 0·0-0;
Lanier 2·3·7; Edelmann 0-0·0; Isaacs

Allen 0·0·0: Clark
TOTALS 11·14~4 8 .
IRONTON (29) - Fields

tempts and 19 of 26 at the foul lines.
Southwestern hit 24 of 56 attempts
from the field and four of 11 at the
foul lines. The winners held a 2&amp;-21
rebounding edge.·
The· loss left Southwestern with a
2·13 overall mark, Hi in the SV AC.
Kyger Creek, 10-4 OVerall and &amp;-2
in the league, played New Boslon
Saturday night, travels to New
Boston Tuesday and Eastern,
Friday.
Southweste rn hosts Symmes
Valley Tuesday then Southern on
Friday.
Kyger Creek won the reserve
game, 48-40 behind a seonc half
comeback.
Chuck Vogel and Steve Waugh led
the Bobkittens with 12 and II points
respectively. Ron Carr had 10 poi nts
for the Little Highlanders.
SOUTHWESTERN IS2) - Lewis
6· 1· 13; McNeal
Total524·4-52.

12; M adison 2-0·4; Lane 0·4·4; Glenn
oo~ o :

The sunday Times-sentinei- Page-(:·S

Big first quarter lifts KC
Bobcats to 65-52. loop victory

Blue Devils clinch tie for crown

IRONTON - Visiting Gallipolis,
sparked by the all-around play of 511 junior guard Lynn Sheets,
defeated Ironton, 43-29, here Friday
night to clinch at least a tie for the
1981-82 Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League basketball championship.
· Sheets, making his first varsity
start (he replaced Russ Bergdoll in
the·GAHS lineup - Bergdoll was ill
.and did not make the trip) tallied 12
points, picked off four rebounds and
was credited with three assists as
Coach Jim Osborne's Blue Devils
recorded their 12th win in 16~tarts .
The triumph left GAHS with an 11·
I conference record with two league
games remaining.
Gallipolis will host Meigs Friday
and play at LOgan Feb. 19. A victory
over Meigs Feb. 12 will give the Blue
Devils the undisputed loop crown.
King Has Good Night
'Gallipolis' veteran sparkplug, 5-6
senior guard Phil King, shared
game-high scoring honors with
12 points. King had six rebounds and
was credited with three assists.
Although Ironton held Gallipolis
center James Lane scoreless from
the field, .the 6-4 junior picked off
nine rebounds and played an outsta nding defensive game.
Senior guard Marty Glenn chipped
in with seven points, controlled the

Pomeroy- Middleport-Ga llipolis. Ohi[}-Point Pleasant, W.va .

1 · 0~ 2 .

J-4 ~ 6;

DRIBBLES 11IROUGH ..:. Kyger Creell's David
dribbles his way up the Door durlog Friday's
SVAC encounter against Southwestern. Highlander

i Sands

players hi thl• Kevin Kelly action •hot are ScoU Lewis
(32) and Gary Baker (10~ . Sand• had 18 polnllllo help
KC win Its lOth victory of the season, 65-52.

Morris 2·0·4; Bac:on 2-0-4; Fritz 2·3·
7; wolfe 2·0·4; Steed 1·0·2; Rawlins
0·0·0; Snyder 0-0-0;

Th omas

turnovers.

0-0-0;

TOTALS 11-7·29.

Di c~ess

Malon e

1·0·2:

0·0·0.

By quarters:

GAHS trailed only once in the .
game; 4-2, on Dennis Bacon's layup
early in the first period.

Gallipolis
1ron ton

We're

8 14 11 15--48
6 6 a 9-29

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• S hou ld er gr1pp1ng edg es l or ex tr a brle
tn lo c urves
.
fET

SPARKS WIN - Gallipolis' 511 junlor guard, Lyoo Sbeelli,

scored 12 points to help lead
GARS to a 48-29 victory over Ironton Friday night.

" WE'RE NUMBER ONE ... "- That's what these
young men were shouting In Ironton's Sports Center
following Gallipolis' litle-cllo~hing victory over the

Fighting Tigers. GARS claimed at least a share oltbe
1981-82 Southeastern Ohio League basketball crown. A
victory over visiting Meiga Friday will give the Blue ·
Devils the uodlsputed cbamploll!lhip.

DOUBLE TEAMED - Kyger Creek's J. D. Bradbury and Tim Price
provides a blanket over the attempted jump shot of Southwestern's Roger
: Wells (34). Kyger Creek woo the SVAC contest, 65-52, to remain In the
; league title picture. Kevin Kelly photo.

Board control, pressure defense key to win-- Oz
, ~ 'BOTI'LED UP - Ironton defeadero Dennis Bacon (54~ and Marli
:: ; };'Jeld8 (30) did a good defensive job on leading GARS scor~r James Lane
·: · 133) Friday night, holding the junior center to four free throws. Lane,
:: : jtowever, controlled the boards with nine rebounds . .

~~Cubs rally, nip Blue l~ps, 36-35
: •: IRONTON - Guard Bill Thomas
::§&lt;Ink two free throws with 21 seconds
::~,en to give Coach Paul Fugett's
&lt; Ironton Cubs a 36-35 come-from!•6ehind reserve basketball victory
: :qver visiting Gallipolis in Friday

GARS stole the ball agai n with
eight seconds left but missed two
shots under the hoop just before the
buzzer sounded.
GARS dropped to 8-4 in league
play. Ironton is now 12·3 overall and
11-3 inside the league .
Ellcessor led the Blue Imps with
14 points. Ryan Ainesworth led the
Cubs with 12 points.

.. :night's preliminary gahle.

: ; : Coach Jack Payton's Blue Imps,
: •liow 12-4 on the year, led 1!1-16 during

.:!tile

halftime intennission

after

•:trailing 11·7 following one quarter of
•.. :ac
• t'aon.
:•: The Blue Imps led 23-22 going into
·:the final period, and had a 29-26 ad: :vantage with 3:Wleft in the game.
: •: Ironton held a 34-29Jead with 1:35
;~bowi ng on 'the clock. A couple of
•:~;ti\HS steals and buckets by Chris
: •tllcessor and Tommy Duncan cut it
' :back to one before Thomas' two free

Box score :
GALLIPOLIS RESI!RVES

l

W

14
12
12
11

' ..:"Portsmouth

: •J't. Pleasant

L

P

1 1111
4 a7s
4 1080
4 11 23

Ironton

OP
859

• . ironton

8

7 819

808

8 8 891
8 8 1139
a a 1029
5 9 718
5 13 1032
0 16 854

842
1096
993

. • Jackson

"; We ll s ton
~ ..., washin g to n

1• Logan

TEAM

804
882
938

: ' Waverly

CH

~: Meigs

· ~ · ~ Wheelersburg

Gallipoli s
Waverly
Wellston
Logan

Meigs

TOTALS

7/iJ

11 32

Ath ens 56 Meigs 23

•, Athens

8

.

6 5

, •Jackson
•: Meigs
Z•JOTALS

~ · ..

Friday's resUlts:

601

5 7 745
4 6 652
0 1t 588
. 45 45 5331

805
635
802
5331

!

,. : "- Gallipolis 481ronron 29
...... Athens96Meigs54
: .. :~waverly ~1 Logt~n 38

..-..,.
i

mm
630

=~L.;'g~c:ly
: • 5\'ellston

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Saturday's games:
W,ahama at Meigs

$17 90000

SIMMONS

Parkersburg at Pt. Pleasant

Lucasvi lle at Wheelersburg

Marion· Frank at Portsmouth

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played the drums In the Crtsp
County Marching Band while a
schoolboy In Cordele, Ga.
How good was he? "You can say
I was the best seven-foot drummer
In the entire country," Rollins
Iaugl\ed. He stUI has hls original set

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(DEALERS DEMO.)

Ja ckson at Athens
Waver/ y at Wellston

1 674 579
3 746 611

YOUR FAIR
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W L P OP

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tance of steel cord belts

BEST BUY OF THE WEEK

Fridily's games:

SEOAl VARSITY

: ~ ~on1on

'5PfCIAL SA VING$1

Ja ckson 60 Wellston 48
Tuesday's games : ·
Pt. Pleasant at Hurrica ne
Hillsboro at Por1smouth

•••

II

Feb. 116 p.m./Redwo men vs. Xavier
Feb. 12 H p.m./Open Rec .
Feb. 13 7:30 p.m ./Redmen vs . Malone
Feb. 14 1· .4 p.m ./Open Rec .
" ·10 p.m ./College Rec .

Waverly 55 Logan 52

: .. ; .. Pt. Pleasant 38 ~at1ama 31
111 • . M1. v ernon .a Chillicothe 34

, ; Gallipolis

45 4S 3706 37()6

Friday's results :
lron1on 36 Gallipolis 35

1169

59 Minford 53

,•Y EAM

8 3 533 435
8 4 486 424
6 s 427 444
3 9 508 572
2 10 40S ' 529
1.10 359 528

Iron ton

ATLANTA (AP) -

"Tree" Rollins, the seven-loot-one

1·4 p .m ./Ope n Swim

B· IO pm ./ Coll ege Swim
a-10 p.m./Coll ege Sw im
8· 10 p.m ./Co ll ege Swim
8· 10 p.m ./Coll ege Swim
Closed
7·9 p .m ./Open Sw im
Closed
1·4 p .m ./Open Swi m
8· 10 p.m./Coll ege Sw im

Feb. 9 8· 10 p.m ./College Rec .
Feb. tO 8· 10 p.m ./College Rec .

W L P OP
9 2 531 · 420
B 2 457 354

Ja ckson

ABILENE. Texas (AP~ - The
ball seemed to have wings at the
LaJet GoH Classic here last fall.
Dan Pohl hit one olf the tee which
soared 359 yards. It was the longest
drive of the pro tour. And Jtm
Thorpe recorded the only double ea~
gle of the 1981 tour. Thorpe reached
the green of a 562·yard hole with a
driver and four wood, the latter goIng Into the cup.

·

POOL

Feb. 8 8 ~ 10 p.m./College Rec .

SEOAL RESERVES

Athens

•,.• Non· SE04L scores :
: "' : W ashington CH 46 Miami Tr ace 40

::· '

7 12 4 12- 35
11 7 4 14- 36

Tall Drummer

Ball goes far

took the good sbots. (GAHS was 17
34 for 50 percent).
In closing, Osborne, said, "Afte1
the Pt. Pleasant loss, the kids wero
willing to pick each other up. The)
never doubted themselv~s. TheJ,
came back.
"It's nice to win a championshi(l
and it's a little sweeter winning 1.
piece of it at Ironton."

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Week of Feb. 7, 1982

DAT E - GYMNASIUM
Feb . 7 1·.4 p.m./Open Rec.
8·10 p.m ./College Rec .

Score by quar ters :
Ga llipoli s

7 3 562 526
9 8 774 756

• : chillicothe

Asked about Lynn Sheets' effort in
his first varsity start, Osborne said,
" He came in and played as good or
better than we could expect and his
spark seemed to make the others
play better."
Osborne added, " We had a super
crowd here tonight. We're proud of

our fans and hope to win it all at
home Friday night. "
Continued Osborne, "We were
able to play our llrand of basketball
against Ironton twice this year.
That's unusual for us. We forced
Ironton to shoot outside and they
weren't hitting.
" We turned it around tonight. We
were aggressive defensively, and

LYNECENTER SC HEDUL E

wor th 4·4· 12. TOTALS 13· 10·l6.

ALLG:~a cage 8~?.~~~ton68

"'··: rE AM
ot:: Wheel ersburg
· ·j:;alli polis
ot. : A,thens

second or third shots at the bucket."

2-4; Thomas 0·2·2; West 4+9 ; A ins·

••

•~.throws:
•

(]S) -

Wolfe 3·0·6 ; Dunca n 3·0·6; Smith 1· 1·
3; Carter 2 · 0- ~ ; E llcessor 7·0· 14;
Gar ber 1 ~ 0 · 2 . TOTALS 17-1-13.
IRONTON RESE RVES (36) Shope 1· 1·3; Russell 3·0·6; Snyder 1·

IRONTON The key · to
Gallipolis' title clinching victory
over host Ironton Friday night, at'
cording to Coach Jim Osborne, was
good position under both boards and
constant pressure on defense .
" Our last three games out, we
failed to box out properly. Tonight,
our kids did a super job on their big
people. We didn 't give them any

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�Feb. 7, 1982

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times· Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Feb. 7, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Point Pleasant slips past
neighboring Falcons; 38-3.1

Waverly edges Logan five
41-38 in defensive encounter
LOGAN - Defense was the name
or the game at Logan Friday nlght
where the Waverly Tigers scratched
a 41-38 SEOAL triumph over the
Chieftains.
The contest had been close for 30
minutes with neither team able to
gain more than a six point advantsge. · •
·
Following a first period deadlock
at 10-10, the Tigers took an 18-16 halftinie lead, and held a 32-30 lead
heading into the final period.
A goal by Logan's Jeff Morgan
with 6:30 remaining lifted the Chiefs
to their final lead of the contest, at
33-32.
·
Eric Breitenbach's goal at the5 : 25
mark put Waverly ahead for keeps
at 34-33 and with just over one
minute remaining the Tigers had
built a 4G-34 cushion.

.

By Gary Clark
MASON - Senior forward John
David scored eight or his team's 10
third quarter points Friday night in
. lifting the visiting Point Pleasant
Big Blacks to a 38-31 cagt win over
the neighboring Wahama While
Falcons. •
David, a 6'4" senior, had an excellent night shooting by connecting
on five or six field goal attempts and
two of two charily tosses in leading
the 17th ranked Big Blacks to their
seventh cage trtumph or the season.
Point Pleasant bas dropped three
decisions on the year.
Wahama, in using a stall orientCd
offense which accounted for the low
scoring game went down to defeat
for the loth time this season (twice
to the Big Blacks). The Bend area
team bas won five.
Point Pleasant enjoyed a 13 point
lead in the first half and a 16 point
advantage at one juncture during
the second half but still bad to choke
off a mild f!IUY by the White Falcons

ding 12 while Jeff Morgan and Jim
Angle topped Logan with 15 and 12
respectively.
Waverly connected on 18 of 42
from the floor for 42.9 percent, made
give or 11 at the Hne, ~d snared 33
rebounds, Branum getting·11.
The Chiefs were 16 or 51 for 31.4
percent, six of 11 free throws, and 28
rebounds with Angle claiming 10.
Bo;o~ score :

In rapid succession Logan's
Morgan drilled a layup shot and Jim
Angle converted a pair or free
throws to reduce the spread to 4().38.
The ··tigers' Jerry Miller was
fouled with 11 seconds showing, and
he missed the free throw, but a
Logan player violated the lane, and
Miller shot again, and missed.
Chip Patterson raced down the
floor with the rebound and put up an
eight-footer that bounced off with
Brietenbach grabbing the rebound,
and drawing a foul.
The lanky senior canned the first
or the one-plus-&lt;&gt;ne for the final
score. •
The victory lifted Waverly into a
tie with Ironton for third place in the
standings, at 6-5 while Logan is !&gt;-7 . .
Breitenbach's 15 points led the
Tiger offense with Jerry Miller ad-

WAVERLY (41) - J oe Branum 4·
2·10; Eric Breitenbach 7· 1· 15 ; To m
Thompson 0·0·0; Jerry Mi ller 5· 2· 12 ;
Jeff Allen 2·0·4. TOTALS 18· HL
•
LOGAN (38 ) - Don McDan 1el O·D0; Jim Gill 3· 1·7; Jim Angle 4-4· 12 ;
Dave Moore 1-0-2; J e ff Morgan 7-115; Chip Patterson 1-0·2. TOTALS 16·
6·38.

Score by quarters :

10 B 14 9- 41
10 6 14 8- 38
Reserve score: Waverly 55, Logan
52 .
wa,erly
Logan

Rio".Grande on road Tues~ay
RlO GRANDE - Rio Grande's
Redmen will play the second game
in a four contest road trip Tuesday
night when they travel to Columbus
to battle Ohio Dominican College.
The Mid-Ohio Conference bout is
slated to begin at 7:30p.m.
The Redmen had a 21-6 record
heading into Saturday night's game
with ·Mt. Vernon Nazarene. Ohio
Dominican went into Saturday
night's action with a 1-3 league mark

TIGtrr DEFENSE - Meigs' Raady Munay (32)
bas both bando In the face of AtheDil' Jim Scbanzenbaeb during Friday's gnme at AtheDil. Seban-

· JACKSON- Five free throws and
a field goal in the last minute or play
· Friday night carried Jackson to a 7368 SEOAL triumph over visiting
Wellston.
With the score deadlocked at~
with just I :35 reamining, Allen
Collins hit a charity toss, Todd Davis
made a pair, and Jon Clay drilled a
field goal to preserve the victory.
The Ironrnen never trailed in the
contest as they led by quarter scores
or 111·11, 35-26, and 54-42 but the scorl
. was tied at 64HiO and 66-86.
The clock showed under two
minutes remaining and JHS clinging
to a 66-631oad, but John Derrow canned a pair of free throws, and
followed with a technical foul free
. throw to knotthe score at 66-86.
The victory snapped a Wellston I fl.
game winning streak over Ja~kson .
Collins and Davis each scored 16
pointl! for the winners while
Derrow's 20 points led the Rocket at·
tack. ·

Jackson hit 45 percent from the
field on 'n or 60, converted 19 or 37
gratis shots, and grabbed 42 rebounds.
Wellston finished with 40 percent
on 26 of 65 from the floor, 16 Of'29 at
the line, and picked off 38 rebounds.
The officials were busy as they
called 55 personal fouls resulting in
the loss of three Wellston starters
and two from Jackson.

.99~

3·2-8. TOTALS 27· 19-73.
Score by quarters:
Wellston
11 15 16 2~8
Jackson
18 11 19 19- 73
Reserve score : Jackson 60,
We lls ton 48.

X

....um~

Cash -N-Carry

lf2"

'6''

Cash -N-Carry

.
TRAPPED? - Todd Glbooo of Point Pleali8Dt with tile ball In lhl8
: ' ·Tim DavlsacUoo photo, appeal'!! to be trapped by Wabama'a Donnie Van: : Meter (No.lO) and Travis Gray. Gibson paased the ball to Red littlefield

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Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill Closed at 5:00P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gitllia and Mason Counties.

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EASTERN (62) -Cole 2·0·4; Rit
chi e 1+6 ; Buck le y 0·2·2; Riff e 4 2
10; Bissell

~ - 2 · 10 ;

Spragu e J· 1·7; Dill

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NORTH GALL!A. (41) Hollingshead 1-0·2; Bl ackburn 4·4·
12 ; Kemper 2·1·5; Dee l 2·0·4; May s
J·H ; Holle 3·3·9; Nea l 1·0·2. Tota ls
16·9·41.
Score by quarters :
Eastern
20 10 12 2Q-62
NorthGall ia
9 B 15 9- 41

r--;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.:;::::;;The best person to see about ·
your LIFE INSURANCE may be
your car, home and health agent!
See or call:
CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Av e.
G .lll ipoli s, Oh.

Phon e 446· 4290
STAll PAlM

.

STATE FARlll LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

INIUIANCI

Ho. . Offtc•: Bloolll.lngton, llllnol•

15f~H;ow;;ev;e;r;·;the~;E;a;g;~;•;be;g;a;n;a;pp;l;y-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.

lith FRAME

POINT PLEASANT (31)- David
5·2, 12; Legge 4·0·8 ; Simpkins 1·0·2;
Littlefield 2·3· 7; Gibson 2·2-lo; Wallis
1-1 ·3; Smith 0·0·0; Rutherford 0·0·0.
Totals 15-8-31.
.
WAHAMA (31) - Weaver 0·3·3;
Gray 0· 1-1; Lavender 3· 2·8; Paugh O·
0·0; VanMeter 3-5·11 ; Roush 1-2·4;
Machir 1·0·2; Powell 1·0· 2. Totals 9·
13-31 .
Score by qut1rters:
Point Pleasant
7 10 3 4--38
Wahama
4 10 2 15-31

NIGHTLY
ENTERTAINMENT
CROSSOVER
Mon.-SAT.

ONHOTPOINT

GAS
.HOT WATER
HEATERS

'

w:

14 turnovers, while the Pirates col·
lected 30 rebounds and had 2.1
turnovers,

Love to bowl but hate to
keep score?

NO-WE DON'T CHARGE FOR DELIVERY
YES- WE DO SERVICE WHAT WE SELl.

I

The Eagles outdistanced the
North GaWa on Cteld goals, sinking
25 out of 66 tries at the basket for 39
percent .. North Gallla was 16 ol49
for 33 percent. However, the teams
were both even, percentage-wise,
shooting 45 percent on the freethrows. Eastern sank 14 of 31 tries
and North GaUia nine of
The Eagles had 45 rebounds and

312, Sixth Street
675-1160
Point Pleasant, W. V.
Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. To 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

SERVING MEIGS, GALLIA &amp; MASON COUNTIES

t.AIIDMARK ~

Dill, whO scored 17 points for East·
ern, led all scorers In the game with
10 points each contributed by team·
mates P.G. Riffe and Mike Bissell.
High scorers Cor North GaUia
were Bob Blackburn with 12 and
Ertc Holle withy nine.
By the end of the first canto, the
Eagles had jumped off to a 20-9advantage, and continued their push .
by racking up another 10 points by
the hall. North GalUa fought on to
bring the.score up tD 13, and scored
two quick buckets roward the end of
the hall to brtng the total to 30-17.
The Pirates experienced a comeback In the third quarter and
slowed the Eastern advance to a
42-32 score by the end or the canto.

lng pressure and outscored the Gal·
llans by W points.

•

POMEROY LANDMARK
•

,.outrageous."

VINTON - Despite an early lead
and stubborn defense by North GalUa, visiting Eastern rallied to a 62·
41league wln over the Pirates here
Friday night.
The win left the Eagles ..at ~
overaU and 4·3 In the SVAC. North
Gallla Is now 2-lllor all games and
1-5 In loop play this season.
The Pirates jumped to a 5-Q lead
at the opening, but Eastern
bounced back to score a quick four
points, narrowing the deficit. Tim

'•

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Company

,

LANDMARK ..

Eastern thumps North Gallia

FEBRUARY
SPECIAL
....

4 Roll
Pack

dlllcUOll a game •itoaUoo with their players during the
second ball of the WHs.PPHS basketball game Friday
!llghL Point Pleasant defeated Wahama 38-31. (Photo
by Tim Davis.)

DOING mEIR TiliNG- Lew Hall, left, and Lennie Barnett, right, head basketball coaches at Wahama
and ·Point Pleai8Dt reopecUvely are shown •• they

points the
respectivelywithwhile
paced
18andRon
Bradley notched 16 and Greg Herrin
15 for Wabama.
Varslty box :

AND GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES AND TELEVISIONS

Prosecutor Edward McDonald
decHned comment on the sentence
as did Kuhn, who rell].81ned free 0~
ball pending appeal of the conviction. But Kuhn's lawyer called. the
length ot the prison term

i

8ft.

1

·SAVE $2500 TO $15000

the surrest sentence ever given to a
college player convicted of fixing
basketball games.
The judge noted Kuhn's central
role In the scheme and said that
during the four-week trial nobody
ever testified that Kuhn entered the
scheme reluctanUy or ever tried to
get out of it.
. "Rather, he emerges as somewhat of a greedy Individual," more
cohcerned with making money
than with winning games, Bram·
well said.

Kuhn's 10-year sentence was for
his Nov. 23 conviction of conspiracy
to commit racketeering, conspiracy to commit sports bribery and
luterst.ate travel to COmmit a ,
crlgle. He could have received 20
years on the racketeering- .
conspiracy chanre alone.

X

C.D. Sheathing

Cash-N·Carry

I
Effective 2/8/82 Thru 2/13/82
I
Q % DISCOUNT ON ANY II
VANITY CABINET OR I
BATHROOM CABINET
WITH !!I!S_~O~!'!_N_____ _j

Box score :

11 ; Mark Fenik ht·6; Todd Dav is6·
4·16; Allen Collins 7-2 ·16; Jon Clay 5·
41·14; Tim Dobbins 1·0·2: Matt Bonzo

4 ft.

2x4x96" Econ. Grade

2 3 39 54
23 45 62 96

WELLSTON (681 - Roger Trace
1·0·2; Charlie L indauer 4-0·8; Chris
De rrow 0·2· 2; Bub Norris 1·0·2; Scott
Massie 6·0· 12; John Derrow 4·12·20 ;
Barry Peters 1·0·2; P. J . Perkins9·2·
20. TOTALS 26-16-68.
JACKSON (73)- Doug Morrl sO·

Cash-N-Carry

Now Only $128

Reg. 1144 . 00

4

Athens

- $12· 08 Per Roll
.
00

for Point Pleasant with four baskets
sandwiched around one by Ed Legge
for a 27-16leatl at the quarter's end.
Once again Wahama trted their stall
offense only to lose the basketbaU as
a result or some errant passes.
Baskets by Joe Wallis and Todcl
Simpkins to open the fourth stanza
gave Point Pleasant its biggest lead
of the night at 32-16. Once again the
White Falcons, behind Donnie VanMeter and Estel Lavender reeled off
10 unanswered points to close the
gap to six at 32-26. Ed Legge broke
the Falcons' momentum with a
breakaway dunk shot with I :51
remaining to make it 34-~. The·two
Ma.son County rivals then traded
buckets throughout the remainder of
the contest before the Big Blacks
claimed the. victory by a :llh'll
margin.
Wahama, for the second time in
succession, outrebounded its ljiller
opponents, 1~15, but failed to shoot
with the red hot Big Blacks.
As a team Point Pleasant con. nected on 15 or 28 field goal tries for
54 percent while converting a
blistering eight or 10 free throws for
110 percent.
The White Falcons managed to
sink but nine of 32 from the floor for
a poor 211 percent due mainly to the
intimidation of the Big Blacks' 6-8
center Ed Legge. From the charity
stripe the bend area team made 13 of
21 attepts for a respectable 61 percent.
Wahama committed 14 turnovers
in the contest while Point Pleasant
ended the game with nine. ln.
cidentaUy, the Big Blacks committedonlyonetumoverthroughthe
fll'!lt three quarten while giving up
the ball eight times in the final eight
minutes alone to account for the
White · Falcons' mild rally in the
waning stages of the game.
In the preUmlnary game Coach
Larry Markham's UtUe Blacks outscored the UtUe Falcons in every
quarter enroute to a 113-M win.
The victory increases the UtUe
Black se~.' ,record to 8-4 on the
year while Coach Tom Cull~ ' Uttie Falcons feU to 7-6 after having
their w1nnlng streak halted atfour.
Randy McDonald and John Oshel

R-11

52 GAL. ELECTRIC WATER H

1J-96,

By quarters :
Meigs

88.12 Sq. Ft. Per Roll .

Reg. 114. 98

MEIGS (54) - Mur ray 3·0·6;
Chancey 3·0·6; Ash ley 6·6·18; Rig gs
3·0·6; E dwards 5-4·16 ; Whal e y 0· 2-2;
Edwards0·2-2 . Totals 20· 14· 54 .
ATHENS (94) - Bruning 8·4·20 ;
Mayle 6·0-12; Downe y .t-0-8; He nry 1·
0·2; Ce rci 6-0-12; Sc ha nze nb ach 6-012; Stenson .t·0-8; Ba l&lt;er 0-3·3;
Williams l -0-2; Geige r 1-0· 2; Hollon
1·0-2 and Schwarze! 3-5· 11. Totals 41 ·

Kuhn sentenced to I 0 years on charge
NEW YOffi&lt; (AP) - Calling the
defendant a somewhat "greedy In·
divtdual," a federal judge sent·
enced former Boston College ·
basketbaU player Rick Kuhn to 10
years In prison Cor conspiring with ,
gamblers to fix games during the
team's 1978-1979 season.
0 .S. Dlstrtct Judge Henry Bramwell, sitting In Brooklyn, rejected a
plea for leniency from Kuhn's law: yer, Gary Zlnunerman, and de• cllned to consider a request lor an
alternative sentence such as public
service work rather than jail lor
Kuhn, 26, of Swissvale, Pa.
"Unforlunately, I don't give alternaUve sentences," j:lramweu
said. "I don't beUeve In them."
BramweU said that In the future
other college athletes who are
tempted to participate In schemes
to fbc' games will think twice when
they remember what happened to
Kuhn.
"On Jlnal analysis, deterrence
emerges as the moet lmporiant
sentencing objective," the Judge
said.
The prtson term is beHeved to be

3 "x15" KRAFT FACE

had 12 turnovers and 21 fouls while
with ll.
Meigs
had 16 turnovers and W
Leading Meigs was Bob Ashley
fouls
.
with 18, foUowed by Rick Edwards
Athens outre bounded the visitors
with ll.
by
a whopping 57·24, led by Brun·
Athens jumped Meigs 23-4 In a
nlng
and Mayle with 10 each, while
devastating first quarter, then
Ashley
had 17 Qf Meigs' total.
ripped the nets for a 45-23 score at
Brunnlng
broke· the all-ti me .
the halt.
Athens
high
school
scortng record,
Atter the artillery ceased fire In
formerly
owned
by
Ralph Nuzum
the third round, the score rode at
at
992.
Bru~lng's
W
points pushed
62·39, setting the stage for the tina!
his career total to iOOS. He cur·
explosion that netted Athens 34
rently leads the league with m
points, and a 96-54 win.
points In 10 games, a 22.7 average.
Athens hit 42 or 80 for 50 percent
Ashley, before Friday's game
and canned 12 of 19 from the line.
Meigs zipped Wof 66 from the field · was seventh In league scoring with ·
a 15.2 average and led league reand 14 of 21 from the line. Athens
bounding with 12.7 rebounds per
game. His 17 or 23 rebounds Frtday
should keep him above the ranks In
that category.
Athens claimed the reserve tilt
56-2.11ed by Leon Allen with 13. John
Smith had 11 Cor Meigs.
Meigs played Jackson last night,
while Athens played Lancaster.

Late effort gives
·Jackson 73-68 win
over Wellston team

with respective averages of 22.7 and
12.8. He is also ranked third in the
league in field goal percentage at
58.7.
The only other Redmen averaging
in double figils is Pen·rod, who is con·
necting at a rate or 14.6 points per
outing. Penrod hit for a career-high
30 points against Urbana Wednesday
night connecting on 13 of 19 shots
from the floor and adding four !ree
throws.

Wahama controlled the opening
tip and inunedlalely went into a stall
before losing the ball on a turnover.
The Big Blacks Rod Littlefield
quickly put Point Pleasan.t in front
at the 3:17 mark or the first quarter.
The White Falcons continued to try
and hold the ball but lost possession
three more times in the stanza via
turnovers. Littlefield added another
basket and a free throw alo!lg with a
two pointer by John David as a
result or the Falcons' errant· ball
handling to give the visitors a 7-4
lead after eight minutes.
Point Pleasant scored the first 10
points or the second cantb to take a
17-14 advantage which forced the
Bend area Falcons out or their stan.
Surprisingly enough though the
White Falcons scored the final 10
points of the half to cut the Big
Blacks' edge back to three at 17·14
by intermission.
David took over in the third period

CASH-N-CARRY
SPECIALS

zenbaeh managed to score 12 poinlll In the BuUdogs'
lopt~lded 96-54 victory over Meigs. At left Is Meigs' Rick
Chancey Ut) and at righlls the Bulldogs' Tom Downey
(32) . Dave Harris photo.

Athens .bombs Meigs, 96-54
ATiiENS.The Athens Bulldogs
placed (lve men In double figures,
enroute to a lopslcle&lt;l 96-54 win over
the Meigs Marauders here, Frtday
1n SEOAL basketball actio•. While
connecting on an awesome 41 field
goals, the Bulldogs depended on a
strong beginning and even stronger
finish to shread the Mara\lllers
hopes.
Athens Is now 12-4 overall
and 8-3 In the league whUe Meigs Is
winless at !H6 and 0-U.
Steve Bruning led the winners
with 20, while Woody Mayle, Mike
Croci and 'Jlm Schanzenbach each
added 12. Rounding out double figure scoring was .Kevtn Schwarze!

and4-240verall.
Rio Grande defeated Ohio
Dominican by' an 81-59 score at Lyne
CenterJan. l6.
Redman head coach John
Lawhorn has tabbed 6-6 Watson MeDonald, 8-7 Dan Curry, and 6-6 Tom
Jutzefor duty on the front line and!&gt;-·
8 Jerry Werry arid 6-0 Rick Penrod
asstartersinthebackcourt.
McDonald is leading the team and
league in scoring and rebounding

in the final minutes of the game.

'•

UJGAN MONUMENT CO.
Pomeroy or Vinton, Ohio
o Kindly bave au autllorlztd Logan MoDDment Co. representative call at my bome .
o Pieue oend · me FREE booklets sbowlog
memorlall printed iD full color with sizes
and prices Dated.
.
o Pieale aend me details about Mall801eums
wltbout obUgaUon.
Name •.•.••••••••••••.• • •.•••.•• . .••.. •.

Street or ~te ....................... .. . .
Cltyor Town ............ ........ · · · · · · .. ·
Phone ............................ • .•..•.

cScor·e

SAVE
'155
SPECIAL
PRICE

BOWLING ·
. Sunday Early Bird

$645

9:30 A.M. til 12:30 P.M.

Ovr 75 Other Specials
All At Reduced Prices
10% Depoalt and Balance
In Convenient Law
Monthly Paymanta,

.,

~-------------------OPEN EVENINGS and SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, Inc.
POMEORY, OHIO-MEIGS CO.
1
Display Yard Near

Pomeroy.Mason liidge
, Leo L Vauaflln, Mp.
Phone 992-2588

·VINTON, OHIO-GAUIA CO.
James 0. Bush

'

NO LIMIT ON THE
NUMBER OF BOWLERS
.
SHOES FREE
LfAIIN TO BOWL- EXPm IIISIURII-IM£ IIIIIIMY
MiliCH FlllllY, 1 PJL 11.5 PA

Mr?pr
Phone 318 8603

C:OMPII II
PRO SHOP

I,

�Page- C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

_

lloo1on

31

Plilla.......

wu,....,.

Pd.

l2

"

"'

l3

"' "

New York
New Jerwy

"
Centr..21IMvtaun

MllwalliU:!e

31

GB

....

1J

.467

ll ~

.&lt;16

" Detrdl

I""""
Clolcaoo

·"''

18

Cleveland
10 31
.m
WESTERN CONJI'ERENCE
Som Antoolo

""'"'

""'""'
"""'
""'Jtle
"" ........
State

-"'""""
" "

" "'" ·"'
"'
"" ...

23

Kansu Cl ry

!loU..

-

.667

Ji

14
13
Padlk:;DIW!Ion
31 ll
ll 14

.51f

.l'l6
J18

Hanford

-

Portland

14

" ·"

San """"'

Frk'lay•a uamea
Boaton H5; Oenvt'T' 1+1
PI!JWielpllla 116, New J «.&gt;l'"!ley l l2
Lea Angeles 90, Washl~~~~:ton B7
Detroit 110, Chlcllgl; 100
KIMU City tO!!, san Arlton1o lfrl
Milwaukee U1. Dallas !t'l

Toronto

U'n

Del roll

131\

Ecknonton
Cal p ry

.. 2.1 II

II ~

33 JJ 10 »l
-~~~211

"

College scores

.

2.ll 51

..

"' ""
,."
""""""" f'rictQ'•" " • "' ""
I.J» A~Iel

-

II

210

II

'"

Games
WlnniiEI{ 6, Calgary 4

1

"~
l~ ih

HarUord 4, Colorado 4, t~

11

Miflni:'IOUI at ChJcago
NY lJiandel'l at Butfalo

Jl
II

-

SOOJ1t
F1ol1da AAM 79, Delaware St. 7f
North Carotma 96. Furman m

N.Carollna St

Toronto a r Calgary

NY Rancel'l al E&lt;!montoo
Monlrt!a l "' l.of; Angeles
~'•Game.

No scarre~ schalulerd

.........

....mw.
..._

Saturday.

N.tloaal Foott.ll 1.-pe
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Named J.D.

Helm offeulve

bec~kl

coach.
HOa&lt;EV

N~~t~oa~~

M1..1111'1 Uamt'!ll
No g11mes scheduled

ST.LOUIS

Hoc.,. Leaaae

BLLTrn-R«aUed

BOOby

Crawford, right 141ng, and fUck Heinz,
goalie, !rom Salt Lake of tt.&gt; Centr•l
Hockey Lelii.!I1Jl!.

Nadonal Hockey !.ape
Waifs Confermoe
P&amp;lrlck DlvWon

WLTGFGAP\11
J'J lJ62'1.8167 'ro
28 19 5 210 IV/ 61

SAM

8196204~

HOUSTON

Broolclyn 68, lnclependenc. 56
Buckeye Central 71, Elcln &amp;:1
Buc~ Val. 49. Jonathan Alder iJ

ca nal Fllltoo NW !16, SaDdy Val. 56
Canal Winchester S9, Ftsh:!r Cath. 56
CanUeld Ell, W. Brandl !!0

CentervWe !H, Day. wayne 52
Qlacrtn Falls 75, AW'Ora 50

IVWe '73-M, played Plain City A&amp;dcr Satur·
day
4, Radne Soutllem, 16-0, beat Hannan
Ttace Thll. played at Nel10nvtUe-York

an. AMenM ~. an. Oak HJUt u
Cln. Colerain st, NorWood 60
Cin. Dftef- park M. Indian HID 53
Cln. Eldf!r !!8, Cln. Bacm 53
Ctn. GreenhillJ &amp;l. an. Flnnt')1oWn 50
ctn. LaSall&amp; Ill, Cln. P\l""ell S5
ctn. St. Xavier 57, CIJL Moeller J6
an. Swnmlt !!0, Ripley 49
Cin. Tan 73, Cln. HLflhes 70' •
Ctn. Tw-ptn 66. Forest Park ~
Cln. Western Hills iS, C1n. Wopclwit~ ~
Cl.rdevtlle 63. MadiiJOO Plains 55
Clew. Adilms !10, O.W. Soottt 511
Cleve. Brush 64, Maple Htl. 59
Cl.~. Collinwood 79, CiE'I.'t'. Glenvtlle ~
aeve. Ha)' ID, Cll!ve. Hayes 52
Cleve. Ora• ~- Twlnshurr !14
Clew. 1'rirdty 511, Gtlmour M
Clevelarwt Hla. 45, Panna Valley Forge

Saturday.

Centra!, 15.o. beet Marlori Elr!n n -ro. played Bucyrus
~. New W.ulllngton Buckeye

~turday . ,

6, K..udil. lH heat Pandora-Gilboa ,.._
44 , played 'at Bluffton SaTUrday.
7, AMa,llf.l , beat Jackaon Center 57·

49, plllyl"d at DRJr..U"Rlven:kle Saturday.
8, Fayette Gorham-Fayette, · 15-1 , beat
Edol1 75-!e,

9. O&amp;d Washington

Buckeye Trail , t5-l,

beat Beolilvllle n-46, !Mred at Caldwell
Setunlay.
10, Wa ~.rrlord, lf.2. beat SaraMvtlle
Shenandoah ~1-:15, Jail to ~ Matamoras
~tier 4 ~-:B.

""

Local bowling _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Pom~ruy BuwllDc

Laoe11
Morning GlorM!ti
Jao. 21, 1982

T~am

Ptll.

G . &amp;J . ~~ ~ ~

~

•s
Two's Company

m
78

Slnunona Okt:J, Cu tl illuc, l

and Cht!v.
Max'slnt!.

62

m.

SpJ itscon\lerted: Pat Hunter8-7-10, Vonda Jor·
dan 2-7, UIHan WiLson 3-10 l twi ~ ) . and Karen
Thel!IH2-7.

SllyUoen LaiiUe
Jan. ZB,Iti:Z
Stalldlap

Team
Warehlme'!IFuneraiHome
BalrdandFuUerRealty ·

W. L
Z2
2
20 4

Central Sui'l'ty

ta

McDooald II
River Elec.
TheHalrCI.Ippen

Si.}Uae Luet

HeadquartersBar

Teo Pia Honor Roll
MeD'MZZI

C. DeWitt 218, U$, Z.15, 226 ; 8 . Kno.: 289, 225 ; B.
Roll!ih 237, 228. 225; D. Haner 248, 225; R. Snlon
240; S. Turner :W; ~- Mowrey 234 ; J . Bryan 2.'12;
H. BlaMetUhip 231 ; K. Kenyon 225.

Wumea'tJW

·

P. Ferguson 227, 2tl0; A. 1...oog 219; D. Slarung
215; B. MeiT)I 214; S. Holley 212; J . Fowler 212;
D. Russe112ll , 210, 202; C. Jone:s 210; 0 . Ca!lto
210; V. Grover 208; D. Swain 204, 203; F . HilDe
MeD 1MIII

8. Kno:.: 71Yl, ~2; B. Roush 8119; D. Haner 639;
J . Bryan 839; C. DeWitl637, 609,001 ; H. Bbmkenshlp 836; R. Serlon 615; D. Some n~lll e 6H ; R.
PeM610.

Womeo'•550
D. Swain 588, 542; P. ferguson 581 ; D. RW~&amp;ell

577; 0. Casto568 ; D. Starun!(rliR.

Thur!lday Sw\nijer.s standings ror Jan . 23, 1982
arc :
Team
W. L,
WhtlllngtonSohlo
Woodrow Burnett Co.

104 4R

101 51

Hockenberry Pharmacy
Village Pb:t.a Inn
The Pll.s
Pt. Pleasant Euon

89 83

83 69
82 70
Tl 'IS
72 80
Gllll~hamDruy
61 91
Electnc Motor Service
53 99
The Hair Clipper
38 llf
High game and :rer!Cli : Sohi(l, Ca rla Stump 179-tt.e. Burnett Co., Karen Theiss 157-436. Stingers,
Bertha Stover 160-4~ . Hockenberry's, Toni

s

16
8
u 10
IZ 12
12 12

~ew

Stlnl!ers

George'!IGrocery
Beaver's Garage
Galllpolis Food Inc.
Kemper Salvase
Convenient Food Market
Modern Woodmen of America
Team, player, hiHh game and hillh series are
Jiated ,
Jack Roush, Sue Reynold¥ 157,403.
Dobblna and Sons Con., RObin Cremeena 155,
362.
Bombers, Ann Maynard 158, 398.
Crown City Mlnln11, D. Swain 193, 507.
Four Rosu, B. Hawley 117,493.
Don'• Tlroa. D.!WIIday 172. ~9 .
Geort~e'! droeerj; B. Burril 187, .WO.
Beaver':!! Garage, N. ae.ver 163, 108.
GalllpoliA Food Inc., L. Booten 170, 431.
Kemper Salvage, D. Kemper 136, B. Meade

44

High ind. ij&amp;me - Betty Whltlatch 19J; June
Lambert 190; Sue Grucser 184.
High Ind. three-games - Betty Wt;Uatch 534 ;
l..ouiseEads470 ; JuneLombert462. ,
Hi)lhteam game - G. &amp; J. Auto P1:1rb 837, 123 ;
SinvnonB Olds, CAdillac and Chev. nv.
High team lhree-game11 - G. &amp; J . Au~ Parts
2410; Mn 's Inc. 'JZII ; Two'l!l Company 2:218.

388.
33t.

NEW YORK (AP) -

Beth Daniel won the money-earnings championship of the LPGA In 1981 by
finishing second In the Mazda Japan Oasslc In Tokyo.
Beth had flown across the Pacific, tralling JoAnne Carner by
$19,271. Slllce Carner was not play·
lng In the Mazda, the final event of
the season for feminine golfers, Daniel kMw she needed a first or
second-place to (:Orne out on top.
She flnlshed · second, earning
$19,600. That gave her the money
title by $329 over Carner.

won eiJdrt. p!Mnb from

NtwcomentowD qr, 8erUn Hiland

DENTON, Texas (AP) -It was
a bit bizarre but North Texas State
basket~ coach Blll Blakeley decided to try lt anyway In the hope it
would bring his team luck.
At the start or the season he decided to wear a special outtlt tor all
home games. It was a tuxedo with a
white shlrt, pale green ruffles and
yellow and green cowboy boots.
The charm Worked for two
garnes. But In the third hoine contest, North Texas State lost to
Texas Christian, 78-73. That broke
the charm but Blakeiey took it well.
"I won't have to wear that multicolored monkey suit again," he
said. ~

N. Olntlted 50, Rocky RIV't'r :B
N. Royalton 61. Berea !l'l
Norwa~ !!!!. Dalm 5I

Oak Harbor 72, K&amp;nau l..akotA 34

Oberiln 72. Amhent 66
CltfttalliY 86, Grandview 6f

fiR

'l:l to July 2 session. Girls' camp is
slated for July 4-9.
Awards will be given in seven different categories.
Cost for the camp is $110 for boarding students and $110 for non;
boardin~ students. A special group

Peebles n : Sllrdl!Ua Eutem M
PeterabUlJ Sprln1. 66, JIICkDI·MUICifl
C

Philo 63, W. Muil:lnawn ~ .
Plqua111, Day. Ncrtl\mont 66
Poland, Sernlaary 62, Girard 51
Port Cllnton 76, ntftn calvert 74, OT
PotU. Clay &amp;9, S. Weblter U

Porta. Eut 7'2. New Bolton 1M
Poru. West~. LllcuYWe Val 51
Prtble Shawnee M, 'l'wtJl Valleys. C
Pyrnalunlng Val. 77, L«&lt;jemont t8
Racine ·SOUthern 75, HanDar Trace 67
Ravtnna SE 72. w~ 70, err
ReedMUe Eastern 62, N. CallJa 41
Revere 56, Akroa Coventry ro
Richmond Dale SE 19, P!Utllrl 15
Ridgedale~ Rlverda&amp;e ~
fUdgewood 64, L.akl!tand 63
River M, &amp;ackeye S. 47
RMr VIew 17, Tri·Valley lM
Routord 58, Maumee'-'!
Ruuta ~7. Fort Loramie 52
St. Hl'IU)' M, CovingtOn 'lT
Salldultcy St. Mary 63. Sandu•ky Per·
k1ns 61
Shenandoah !16, CaklweiJ 2.1
Sidney &amp;7, Trolw(!Od.MadliOn 62
Sidney Lehman !H, Indian 1.aJte 64
SoiOfl 73, ~liM lfl
S. Amherst !ICI, AYQI'1 36
S. Central 66, Black River 4J

S. Rlln~ 56, Berlin W. ftewrve 55
Southirliton 71, Fairport Hardlna: ~7
Speooervtllt! &amp;1, Bluffton ~

F11lrftekl Union 50. Amand.a·Ciea«:reek

Spr!ni. CathOlic 56, VeraaWes 4G
Sprtna. North 73, Fairmont W. 61

47

Stanron t66, ~m

F'lrelancb 83, CoiLunbla 57
FrankUn Fumace Green 48, Ports.

i..ocat ~

SteuberlviUe st, Wetiavllle 82

NotrE' Dame 3'1

Steubenville Catb . 60, Mingo 6f
Stow 63, AkrOn Sprlna.'S5

Fnmtler 41. WaterfOrd 38
Gahanna 68, Col. Westland 50

Stf'OilgSVlUe 78. BI'I!Ciulvtlle n
Te('\UYUt'l'l 93, W. CarroLlton 10
Tol. Bowsher 53. Tol. Woodward 47
Tol. D!ntral Cath . 65, 1'01. star1 :11
Tol. Macombtr 70, Tol. Ubbey 58
To!. RDge~ £6, Tol . Sroct !II)
Tol. St JotLn'a 48, Strltch 46
Tol. Wall~ 75, Tol. DeVUbl.u 1!8
TrWU!.ft' 6!1, Twin Valley N. !If!

GallljDll5 48, lrmton ~

Garaway, 43, strUhufl Cl

Geortelown 70, Manchll'sU&gt;r 67
GreenVIew 10, Day, Northl1dge :r1

Gn:we Oty 42, WestervUie S. 40
Groveport ~ - W orthington 51
Hamilton Roas 54, Lockland 47
Hlclm1lle 57. Edgerton ~

'f'r1mble 79, Federal HockJna M
~

1'1ucarawu VaJ. 78, AJuon Manche!!fl"

Double beater bar brush
adjusts to 4 pile height
settings. 7-piece attach ment set. 3.5 HP peak.
1.20 HP IVCMA). Overload Protector helps prevent motor burnout.

Kenmore
al.drlc range

•Must be seen to be appreciated
•New ()J8111ium tires
*Locally owned
•Low miles "HOM.EOF SHARPEST PRE-OWNED CARS IN THE VALLEY''

RENCHTOWN C·AR

BiU Gene Johnson

1640 EASTERN; ~l;llllOUS

·co.

446 0069·

~~:
r

$567

hammer of the plstol, Jackson said.
The otflcers began creating a diversion In the false
attic above the rbom. Goulet climbed atop a table to
Investigate and Bowman wrestled hlm to the ground, ·
Jackson said.
"A woman- we don't knowwhlch one at this point
- screamed. She was concerned about the doctor
and was trying to help him."
"The scream occurred just as we went through the
door." Jackson said.
The women hostages were returned to St. Jude In
wheelchairs after being examined . Miss Cox was sobbing as she was wheeled up the hospltal ramp, escorted by two tactical squad otflcers armed with
automatic weapons.
Goulet's body was removed from the hospital about
two hours after he was killed.
The ordeal began shortly before noon Thursday
when Goulet took Miss Cummins hostage In her small
office Ill the east wing of the hospital. The gunman
had the three others summoned to the room.
Pollee an1ved about 1:30 p.m., opened a telephone
lllle to the o!flce and began negotiations. to tree the
four hostages. Goulet , speaking. most o! the time
through one of the hostages, told pollee he was upset
oVe r the death of his son.
Robert Mtchael Goulet died at St. Jude Dec. T!,
1980, nearly 2~ years after he began leukemia treatment at the famous research hospital, founded 20
years ago by entertainer Danny Tboma.r. Bowman,
chlef of the hospital's leukemla service, was the boy's
favorite doctor, according to Goulet's ex-wife,
Phyllis.
She described Goulet as a "very sad, very lonely
man" who was unable to cope with his son's qeath.
Pollee said Goulet and hls former wife were llvlng
In Lima, Ohio when Robert, the eldest o! their three
chlldren. was diagnosed as having leukemia In June
1978.

'66549-

..,..

EKh of these laV"ertlaed Items Ia readily available lor sale as advertised.

S.Cisfoctlon O...Wonteed or Your Money h&lt;k
Most merchandise available
for pick-up within a few da}'l

ISearsl
SEAlS. ROBUCK AND CO.

,
.

'.

··~

.. ~.

~--~

--

- - -·--

. ..----lalllll!.J

~

....
PLAYING mE WAITING GAME- Reporters
and ""'bnJclans walt In free.iog temperature outside
St. Jude Cblldrea's Research H011pital Thursday In
Memphis, Tenn., while pollee pollee negotiated the
release of tllree hospital employee• being beld by an

armed man. Tbe gunman, Jl\lln Claude Goolet of
LaPlace, La., told pollee he wants to tell the world
about a drug he believes contributed to the death of hili
eight-year-old oon In 1980. The child died of leukemia.
( AP Laserphoto l.

Witnesss says victim's death came before bridge incident

eNow in aur "V," "l" and "X'' Catalog SuppJements eMany ~enmore
models are available in colors at extra charge • Kenmore dryers r~uire
connectors not Included in price shown • Ask about Sears Credit Pla11s 1 Shipping incluped

.S ilver Bridge Plciza

•

By JERRY GRAY
"-&gt;lated PreM Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)- A renownedcancerspeclaUst held hostage a day and a half by the bereaved
father of a leukemia victim wrestled hls captor to the
ftoor before pollee burst In and shot the gunman to
death, o!flclals sald.
The pollee assault on the hospital examining room
Frlday night freed tile doctor and two women hostages who had been helq with hlm.
Dr. Paul Bowman suffered a disloca ted shoulder
during the struggle at St. Jude Chlldren's Hospital
with Jean Claude Goulet, 40, of LaPlace, La.
"The doctor attacked Goulet on the table, tackling
him and wrestling him to the ground," sald pollee
Inspector S.O. Jackson.
Three officers battered down the door of the room
where Goulet was holding Bowman and two others
hostage. Patrolman Jay Thurman fired four shots
from his M·16 rifle, striking Goulet twice In the head
and twice In the chest, said Pollee Director F .W.
Chapman.
·
Bowman, who had· treated Goulet's 6-year-old son
Robert unW the child died a year ago, was held at
gunpoint along with psychologist Jo Cummins and
nurse Jean Marte Cox. After they were releaSEd, all
three were taken on stretchers to the emergency
room at nearby St. Joseph Hospital where a trauma
team had been on standby duty since the ordeal began Thursday.
Goulet released a fourth hostage, Dr. George
Marten, unhanned about 5 p.m. Thursday In exchange for a hamburger, potato chips and soda pop.
Jackson said the decision to move In on Goulet was
made32hours after he walked llltothe hospital with a
.357-callber Magnum and took hls first hostage.
Pollee negotiators, who had an open telephone .line
to the room where the hostages were being held, were
able to hear the clicking of the gunman cocking the

17.7·cu•ft~

CUT
180

-------

Bereaved father who held
hostapes killed by poltce

refrlger..or.....llet

49

US VOTES "NO" at UN - U. S. Amba11ador
Jeane Kirkpatrick speakl! to reporters Friday after
casting a "no" lo the General Assembly oo the recommendation to stop aid, trade aod diplomatic ties wltll
brael81i punlsbmeot for lbe annexation of tile Syrian
Golan Heights. The resolution passed 118-ZI with 34 abstenllotlll. A General Assembly reoolution Is only a
recommeodiltlon to the 157 U.N. members. (AP Laserphoto I.

n.

Applications available for summer camp at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE- Applications are
18 or June 2G-25 sessions, while boys rate of .100 will be given
now available for the Rio Grande
in grades 6-10 may attend the June
College Boys' and Girls' Basketball
School slated for this summer at
Lyne Center.
According to John Lawhorn, director of the .c amp, the schools will ·be
broken into four sessions. Boys in
grades 9-12 may attend the June 13-

Jill'

Pann.t Norman(~}' 74, Panna 57
Lakewood St. Edward

Parma PadUII

Elyria Cath. Ia I.Llraln hthvltow 411
Elyria Ctlr. 68, CVCA 54
Euclid 72. Eastlake N. S3

H11llard 83, Delaware M
Hllllboro 6ft, Greenliekl 58
Houton ~- Botldna 59

• t

Park Hills 79. Fatrixrn Baker 62

Saltm ·lilt, C.fflllbeli·Memorial 63

Edl500 60, New LooOOn 56
Etyrta 53, Marton Hardtng 52, OT

course not. A restorat!on of the occupied ten1torles?
Of course. not. Peace In the Middle East? Of course
not. "
Foreign Mllllster Abdul Hallm Khaddam of Syria
called the vote " a great victory for the movement.of
peace and freedom," but he accused "59me U.S. o!fl·
clals" of using threats and blackmail to oppose the
resolution.

PainesVIlle Harvey 15, Jefferson :10

Cuyahoga Falls 61, Nordonla ~
DanVIlle f!l, Lucas 46, OT
Day. Dunbar 80, Day. Jefter.DJ 70
Day. Mealtow~ 8.1, Day. Rotb 78
Day. Pattci'IOII70, Dey. Belmonl 62
Day. SteliltiU 87, Falnnon1 E . 70
Day. White 51, O.y. Kbl!r42
Day. Wrtaahl 61. Day. Fairview !'6
Delphos Sl:. Jotva 88, EUda 4!1
Di.ldf' 58, Day. OakY(OOd 56

49

Friday's vqte passed 86-ZI wllb 34 abtiteniiODB. The
United States voted "no." A General Auembly
resolution Is only a recommendation to the 157 U.N.
memben . (AP Laserphoto).

By WILLIAM N. OATIS
As80clated P"""' Writer
UNITED NATIONS (Af') - U.S. Ambassador
J eane J .-Ktrkpatrlck says the U.N. General Assembly's passage of a n "obnoxious" resolutlon urging nations to sever ties with Israel will do nothing to return
the Golan Heights to Syria or achieve peace In the
Mlddle East.
The General Assembly passed the resolution Friday night by a vote of BG-21 with 34 abstentions.
The non-binding document urges the 157 members
or the United ~allons to halt trade, aldand diplomatic
relations with Israel In punishment for Its annexatlon
of the OCC!Jpied Syrian Golan Heights.
The United States voted "no," as did mosi other
pro-Western Industrialized nations. Supporters In·
eluded 46 Communist and non-allgned ciluntrles and
20 members ·or the Arab League: Abstentions ciune
mainly from Latin America, the Caribbean and a lew
African states.
Because of a u.s. diplomatic campaign, the votes
In favor fell short ot the number usually accorded
General Assembly resolutions against Israel.
Asked at a news conference about the llkely e!fects
of the resolution, Mrs. Klrkpa!Mck sald most of the countries that supported it do .not "provide Israel
mllltary or economic aid -or technological ald. So I
wouldn't think that's very meaningful, frankly."
Most or the nations that ~eked the resolution do not
have diplomatic relations with Israel.
"What wlll this exercise have achleved? " she
asked. "An Israeli withdrawal from ·the Golan
Heights? Of course not. An embargo of economic,
technological, milltary goods destined for Israel? Of

Ol1ovtJ1e 61, ContinPntal 56

Cory-Rawsor150, Ul:letlY Benton 41

E . Clevell.nd Shllw 41. Garfield Hts. ~7
E. Cilnton ~1. S. Charteston SE 47
E . Uverpool 65, AIUarn 61
E. U\~rpool C'llr. 50, Canton Herttage

GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION- Members of lbe General Assembly at tile United Nations
watcb lbe tabplatlon on the board of a reaolution.to stop
aid, trade and dlplomailc lies witll Israel as punishment for the aDDexatlon of tile Syrian Golan Heights.

Orrville 59, Triway Sl
Ottawa·Giaadorf 61, Kenton u
onawa Hilb: WI, Erie lMJch. i Mason 10

Collhocton 57, Wooaler 53
Crestline 65, Plymoutb !16
CrooksvWe 61, Sheridan 58. or

each
student that is part of a school
dlstrlct group of more than seven.
For further information or an applicatlon, contact John Lawhorn
head basketball coach, Rio Grand~
College, Rio Grande, Ohio, 45674, or
call (614) 245-5353, extension 294.

58

Nlleri McKinley W, Yot,mg. UrsUIIJie 62
N. CoiJege HW 116, Cln. Wyomjna: 62
N. Bend Taylor 62, an. ReadiJtS ~

Copley 61 , Norton 59, O'I'

Oey.le!itown !M, SmtthvtUe 55
E . Canton 49, Oaymont 44

Local ~

New Kmxvllle 51., Fon RecoYery 52
New l..eldllftOD. Tl, John Glenn 70
New Pllllai»&gt;ph1a 58, Dowr ~1
Newark 78, lAncaster «1

Col. West Ill, Col. Ea.stmoor 12
Columbus Grove 51. Cridersville Perry
49, 401'
Conotton Val. 86, Buckeye W. f9

Bizarre costume

JlmallelWa. High bowler tor tfeadquarters Bar
Te1m
W.L
JMck Rouah
22
2
wu H. Nelaoillrilh$81, High bowler for Jlmane~
U'l was D. Morrl.! wilhSZ.
Bombers
11 6
16 I
Baird and Fuller Realty won e~ht polnta from · Dan'a Tires
Dobblnlli&amp;Son.sCon.
18 8
Bob Evana Farm. HJgh bowler for Baird and
Crown City Minln ~
12 )2
Fuller Realty wu B. Holley with ~70. High
bowler for Bob Evana Fann was R. Spence with
Four Roses
12 12
6:JI.
Beaver'aGarll@:e
12 12
McOooald 'a won ail .polnta from The Hair ClipGeorge'sGrocery
JO If
Galllpoll! Food Inc.
10 tl
pers. H~h bowler for McDonald's wa1 J. Warren
Kemper Salv1ge
.
6 Ill
with 831. High bowler tor The Hair Clippers W88
F. Krautterwllh567.
Convenient FOOd Market
8 J8
Modem Woodmen Of America
4 20
wa~hime' l! won Iii points from The Elks.
High bowler for Warehfme•a waa C. Meadowa
Team, player, hillh 11ame and hl~t:b series are
ll!Jted
,
wllh MI . HIMh bowlen for The-Elks was R.
Feri!IUSOn wllh 493.
Jack Roush, S. Reynolds 164, 383.
lk&gt;mber1, M. Jenklnllll, 'i3.
New River Elec. and Gavin Elec. tied with four
pointl each. Hlyh bowler for New River Elec.
Dan'• nre.s, D. Halllday 213, .a..
Dobbl111&amp; Solll C&lt;iol., D. Dobbillll92, 19$.
wu K. ~ with 560. High bowler for Gavin
Elec. was Alk i ~ with !MI.
Crown City Mining, B. Queen 173, D.SwBin47I .
Four ROSH, B. Hawley 155, G .
Beaver's Garage, P. Ablhire 110, 500.
George'111Grocery, M. Judis 174,4f6.
Gallipolis Food, .lne., Bob Oxyer 136,349.
Tbunday Mon!q S&amp;an
Ke~~~p&lt;r'o Salvqe, D. KempeT 134, 339.
Jaauary 14, 111Z
Convenient Food Market, K. Triplett 161,396.
Team
W. L
Modem Woodmen of America , L. McCoy 136
Jack Roush
33S.
•
16 0
Dobbln.s andSoM Con.
14 2
Splits converted - N. CAidwell+7-9, M. Justus
Bombers
12 4. :1-9-10.

NelsonvUJe..York rl, Warren

Cloverleaf M, ~k 54
ColdwaU!r r;s, Partway M

Col. Central 00, Q)l. lndependEmce :18
Col. DeSaiet 76, :::ot. Wattet'IOI\ 71
Col. East &amp;;, Col. Unden-McKI.nley 71
Cot. Hamilton twp. 58, Bkxln·Carrou e
. Col. Hartley 56, Cot Wehrte 5t
Cot. Marlon~fi'rllnldin !'il, Col. South 44 ·
Col. Northland 56, Col. Mttrun 47
Col. St. &lt;'harles ~7 . Col. RE-ady -ifi, err

.

111......yM....... SIOt1
Jaa.U,lta

Mt. Veri,ori f7, C11111cothe :H
Napoleon S7, Fostor1a :II
Nauoaal TraU n, Arca~~o~m 611

Collins w. Relerve 6&amp;. Mcmoevwe 54
Columbiana ~. Mineral Rktae t5
Col. ~a~y 73, Mal;-'tvtlk! !M.
Col. Centennial Ia, Cot Whetlkllt 41

Japan

Convenient Food market, A. Gill Ill, 411.
Modem WOOdmen Of America. S. Ward 127,

GavinElec.
10 u
VIllage lnJ.
10 14
Jlmanetti 'l!l
a 18
BobEvllllliFanns
f 20
TheEIU
4 20
Central Supply won eJghl points from Village
Ins, High bowler for Central Supply was 8. Shaw
wiUUl37. High bowler for Village In¥. waa D. Herdman with519.
He.adqLJarters Bar

10 B
10 8
10 6
8 8
8 10
6 10
2 14
2 14
D 16

Dan's nres

57

C.&amp;D. Pennzoil

:llO.

Crown City Mining
Four ROHs

CUllen 118, Lucllle HicluTl.lln J48-f2:1 . VIllage Pit·
za, Opal Casto 220441. Pits, Pat Hunl.er 181-460.
Exxon, Carol Reynolds 148-360. Glllingham'!J ,
Odella MBL&gt;k 183-4.27. Electric Motor, Delcl~ Butchtlr 157-390. Hair Clipper, Jacque Fowler l.t2.

Mad~ in

~

Middletown 56. Cla. PrtncetGII ~
MhMew 63, Lorain Brooklldt .a
MWer S. Ali!!X&amp;IIdrr S.
Mllton·UniOn &amp;:1, BtookvWe 56
Mlucer 75. Mendon Union 60
~ 92, C:n!&amp;twood t8
Montpelier !15. Patrk:k Henry ~
Mt. He.altby &amp;1. Cln. NorthYt"Ht 51

Canton nmkerl ""· C'aJlton s . 39 .
Cardtnrton 49, SpaJja Hietiand 42
Ca riWe 62, Valiey VLtow ~

42, ptayed T&lt;Meclo Start Saturday.
3, Columbus Academy. ts.l, heat Mary·

/(irpatrick says anti-Israeli
resolution 'obnoxious'

.htffenuJ Union 45, Toron10 41
Keftton ffidat 57, Spfina. Sha~ M
Ky~ Clftk 115, PatJiol SW 52
Lakew&lt;xxl 90, Sbaker Hts. till
Lebanon 67, MWJetown Fenwick 62
~Monroe f6. 'l"r@nton-EdpwOod 51
Ube!1)' Ulllm 7'2, Mi.Uersporl 6f,
UcidJw Hu . 63. Newark Catll. 56
U ma 'If, Falrflekl ~
Uma SNwnee 61, Sytvanl.a Nortltvie-w

MlamllburJ 50, Vin4alla Butler 47

Canton GlenOak 60, Marllnatoo 50

2, Delpbo&amp; St John, LJ.2, ~at E Uda 111-

4, Newark. 15-2, bf.al Lancaster 7841.
played Colwnbu!l Walnut Rklge Satlli'Clay.

STATE - Named

.

L.ake 96-44, ptayed WH1 LltJerty·saJem Sat·

3, ColumbWI Nortllland. llt· l, beat Columbus-Linden McKinley 11·56, Dea.t ColumbUs MlfDin 564.7.

BPtlevue ~. NOtW.alk 50
Belpre 58, V~ton Coonty 53
Bt-rgiDlz Sping. ~ . Unlttod Lou J DT
Berne uruon ~. Log:an Elm 40

Btg Walnut 69. New Alteny ~
Bla:nchf.&gt;!.t8' IW, M.dblon-&amp;tUer 62 ...
Elkxm.Gekt 71, Fli.nnlngton 7'7 , or
Boardman .C7. Wamn HrN.tlam 40

.....,.

saruntay.

COLLEG.
MORAVIAN- Narrlf!d fWllro CAlvo head
fOO'Ibllll roach. Announced the tesiP~.Uon
ot Tom WoodesbJdt, runnltl&amp;" bi;lck roach.

Northwestern

Bethel 51, F'rankll.n Monroe 46

CLI8S.
I. S6dnPy Lehman, 17.0, bea.t lrn!11n

COI..UMBUS, Ohltl !AP) - How the lq)r.anked teams In 'The Asaoclated Pres&amp;'
Ohio boys prep buketball poD f.et«&lt;:
O..AAA
1, l&lt;f'tter111&amp;' Alter, 14·1, played at.clevel.ilnd St lgn.atha !!oittunilly.
2, Wamn Western Reserve , 14·1, beat
Austlntown F'ltch 57·4!1. played Brookfield

Sp~ .

IJda.n Valley N. "- 'I'ulcatawu Cath.

Loratr. CaUl. U, Elyria W, l6
Laraln Kin~ C5. Ft..U.y 36
LordlitoWn 68, Bru10I ;E
LoulavWe t&amp;. Maaa1llon Perry .n
Lufhtoran w. 50, Mfd!na Buc ~ &amp;B
Madeira 56, Mlllord 50
Mans. Madl!iM 46,. Aahland &amp;3, OT
Mus. Ma.labar m, Mansftekl M
Mariemont Ell. Lowland fi2
Mai'J&amp;n-tta 86, Oyde 64
Marion Cath, t!l, LoladonvUie &amp;1
Mar1on Ural tf7, New BMnm n
Muauton Jacltton 115, N, Cantoo 66
Ma)ilekl 59, Mentor ~7. OT
Ma,yi\/Ule 57, "Morpn f6
McComb 67, Madia t6
McDonald M. l..owellvttJe 58, ar
Meadowtlrook 116, Fort F~ 47
Mech.lnklburg at, W. Uhmy-Salem
Medina 75, FaiiVIeW Park ~

S.xley 81, N. UniOn 52

day

How they fared

roorBAJ.L

Beuetontalne 52,
'7

10, Mmer;va, 12·2, kist to Uniontown
Lake SS-58, played Ma!a!lloll'T'uslaw Satur·

W.New Mmco 117, N. Mex.Highlands 7l

46

Beavert"reek f£. Spring. Sooth .63

53. pl.ayeo:l Rock Hlll Satunlay.

SOX-Anno\11\Ced
BaM , o.Jtticlde-r, had

~ Clt&gt;vel&amp;nd, pllcher.

Barberton 82, Ck-ve. Eut 68
Blly 68. AliOO Lillie 63
Beaver Eastern 81 , McDermott NW n

9, ~ . 14-1, heat Minford 59-

that Haro&amp;cl
agreed to terms on a one-year contract.
MI L WAUKE E
BR E WE R S-

f&gt;hcMtnix at Mllwallkt'e
Houstoo at Kallla~ City
San AniONo at Golden State
New Jmey a1Oevela nd
San Diego a1 Seattle
NEW York al Portland

r

8, Hammon RoM . 13-1, oeat anct nnatJ
~kland 5U1,· played Oxford Talawanda

WHITE

Wa ived

1\rllngtoo liS. Van Bunon 53
A.llhtabWa 70, Conneaut S1
Athenl 9&amp;. Melp 5ft
Ayersvtlle :». Antwerp 40

pl.llyed at Du b lin

tionaI

lndlan vaaey s. 7'l, WoodsDeld 66
Jacklon 73, We!Jstoll &amp;I

Ansonia 72, Newton 60

eutern 73-.rr.

UCLA 68, Soulht&gt;rn Ca l 66
Utah 67, Colorado St. 57

~

Archbok! 59, WaUJeOn 47

6, Col4water, l.H, beat Rockford Park·
way ~53.
7, um.na, lf.l, beat Spr!ngftcld North·

S.UUI I'I 75, Regis~
St.tntord 1'9. OJ'l.o(on 76, OT

Transactions

8J . ~.

I rl " -

Ada 49. Pauldln&amp;: 39
Akron ~· Houle" 8':1, 4kron Carnekl 50
Akron Ellet. !16, Akron ~h\lel 52
Akron F1testonf' 82, Akron E. 515
Akroll Hoban 62, CIP.Ie. Benedlct1ne 56
Akron Kenrrore 54, Akron N. ~

Valley ,)7-36.

&amp;ol

MIDWEST
Buena Vl.!!ra 73, Wm.Penn TI
Butlftor 7U, St.UNb 61
N.Dakola St. 61 , Morningside 5t1
N.low11 68, Wls.-Green Bay 61
P'A&amp; WEST
E.Montana !11. Carou, Mor!t 62
ldllho 72, N.Arbon.a fll
Montana 61. WOOer St. 50
Mofltana St. Ill, Idaho St. 67
Ncv.· Rt&gt;Do ~. BoiM&gt; Bt. 61
N.ColorBdo il. S.DakOta Si. 47

Quebec at Wuhtngtoo

CHI CAGO

~ . a lad(-J

By,_ t

3. Na~. 13-J. beat F'ostorta G7..1!.
&amp;, Da)1on Roth, IU, lorn to Daytllrl
Meadowdale 81-18, played at Clnctnnati
Wi throw Satun:lay.
5, Wa ruw Riw r VIew, 1~ 1 . hea t New
Coocord Glenn 8}.~ beat Oreaden Tr1·

YalE&gt; 84, Dartmouth G6

St .Loub at Dt&gt;trolt
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia

1
18

wood North Union
Satwnday .

State/

~-~~
SC~E~~-,
u
,. . .,......

1. WU!ard , 15-tl, beat Sbtlby 79-tJ. pla}'('d
at l..eldrvton Saturday.
2, Colwnbwi Bexley, I.H bea t A.lcll-

Tufts 83, Upsala 81, {1f

Sunday'•(.....

:1, I.J::nJn f&lt;inl, 1~1 . beat Loraln Senior
liU7, ~ I FWLiy 6-36.
6, Daytlln ~. 17·1. be.J.I Da.y·
lOft Roth IJ.'/11
7, Alllarn. 14-2, beat Akron East 78-«S,
bt to Eut i.Jve'rpool ~8. I...Qdl Clover1erd, 1&amp;0. beat Bruaswiek
5:).4.5, pla,'yed Cmton Norwayne Siltwtlll.y.
9, w uu eraVWt, 16-0, beat Bellalre &amp;J.~ •
beat Mcf.indMIJe {W, Va .l Marshall 5Ui.
10. Akron Central · ~ . ll-2. bftl Ak·
ron
Galfleld ~.
played
Akron

c.......

AlltocWe4 P'reM

EAST
Bro.t.·n M, Harvard 61
liCM'ard U. 79, BeUlune-Cooknu.n 61
Pt.•nn 52, Cl:&gt;lumbt;l 47. OT
Princeton ~. ComeU 50
Towson St. 7li. VI'Tmonl 68

2&gt;1 76

High school

Spr1nlfleld Saturday.

Collrp BuMawl Sc:c1r8
By 'J1w.

14 "
1B
II 1.86 1$

Va/1COU\Ier

I'Aonver at Wul!tngton

~~

STANI'ORD-AniiOllncEd thf reaipatkl!l
ol Dietl DI.Buo, he6d baNett.ll cmdL
UR.~NUS-.Na mpd Stmlng Brown Mad
lootbaU coact\ ,

.,

16 1.12

1B ,. 10
13
10 1..

u

l...ol: Anples at Bolton
Chk:aao at Philadelphia

PtllLadelphla
NY Rallifrt

9 2111

Run

Ranc11ema n head football COIK:h and ath·
letk dlreclcr.
.

10

1'1 24

Chkaa:o

HOUlton l~, PhoenOI l!H
Portland 121, Uta.l'l 100
New Yon. !rJ,, SiJn ~ rr.
Sea.ttle lOB, Golden S\411! 99
S.U..U,'a Gamt'!ll

NY Islanders

-

16

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16
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116
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13 118 121
Campbd1 .,.,.,._

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....
""..
.
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Golden

•

St. Loub

.fJIH·

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

Atlant.t

2~

12 241
7 7n

l1

Buff alO
~

12

88 ""'
1!8

u

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.•
....

14

21 14
If 31

Montreal

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II

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Pln.b.lf"'l'l

Wu -

.....,.,.... OONFI!IIENCI!

W L

Feb. 7, 1.982

Scoreboard•.•

p~~~~!!gs
..._

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Olti cr.- Point Pleasant, W. va .

WJLUAMS' DBFBNBE 1ft BAT • Wayae ~ - · Ullca, N.Y.,
lie fouad no evldelloeGffoul
- · 111tt1n1ey AMa n ._ (left&gt; op
:t 111e tlehwe , pia)' In the cleatM of two yGUIIC 4tJaeta blacb WIJH.
c* Prlda,r. One Jr.q wll
Dr.p..del Stow· amsls _...... of llllll'llerla&amp;· CAP I e a$ bltu)

By DAVID PACE
A8110Cla&amp;ed Pres8 Writer
ATLANTA (AP) -Oneo!twoyoungblacksWayne
B. Wllltams is accused or killing was dead at least five
days before prosecutors contend Wllllams murdered
him and dumped his body Into the Chattahoochee
River, a pathologist has testified.
Dr. Darnel Stowens, chief fit the pathology labora·
lory at St. Luke's Hospital In Utica, N.Y., testified for
the defense Frlday as Williams' lawyers bl!gan trying
to discredit the circumstantial case prosecutors buUt
during 19 days of testimony. ·
Stowens said the condition of Nathaniel Cater's
body when It was pulled from the Chattahoochee
River on May24tndlcated he had been dead ''atleast
a week, and probably longer."
When he was told three witnesses had testified they
saw Cater alive May 21, Stowens said "either the
eyewitnesses are mistaken or this Is not the body of
Nathaniel Cater."
Judge Clarence Cooper recessed the trial for the
weekend Friday before StoweM had finished tesilfy.
tng. He wlll be questioned by prosecutors when the
trial resuines Monday.
Williams ts charged With murder In the deaths of
Cater, 'II, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, twoof28young
blacks whose deaths during a 22-month perlod were
Investigated by a specta1 pollee task force. No aJTeSts
have been made In the 26 other slaytngs.
WIUiams, 23, a black free-lance JlllotoKr8pher and
asptr'~1g talent scout, ftnt came to pollee attention In
the priHiawn hours o! May 22 when he wu atopped

near a Chatrahoochee River bridge about a mile upstream from the spot where Cater's body was found .
A pollee stakeout ream was at the bridge that mornIng, and one o!flcer, Robert Campbell, testified he
heard a loud splash In the rive r moments before he
saw Wllllarns' car lights on the bridge .
Prosecutors contend the splash was made by Cater's body and that Williams kUied him between 9 p.m .
May 21. when a wt_tness saki he saw the two together ,
and the time Wllllams was slopped on the bridge.
Fullnn County Medical Examiner Robert Stivers tes·
tilled that Cater had been .dead from two to !lve days
when the body was found .
The testimony of those stakeOut officers was dls·
puted Friday by a former policeman who said Campbell told him he and another stakeout officer were
sleeping together In the early morning hours of May
22 because "they were scared abQ)It bel~g alone In the

..

•
woodS.''
Ken Lawson, who was on a bridge stakeout team .
May 22 downstream from the bridge where WIUiam.
was spotted, also testified that Campbell said hl!i stakeout team drank alcoholic beverages while on duty . .
And he said be frequently heard another member of •
Campbell's team, Freddie .Jacobs, talk on pollee ra·
dios about seeing ghosts.
Under questioning by Assistant Dtstricl Attorney
Gordon Miller, Lawson COIICeded he was forced to
resign
an Atlanta pollde recruit after suburban
pollee were called to his liome following a dispute
'
between him andhls wife.

..

as

'

•

�" '

Page-0·2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Ga llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Feb. 7, 1982

'

'

'

~
\

,U

t.

LONDON (AP) - Britons
pledged over $500,00) Saturday In a
touching expression of hope that
cheap-fare pioneer Sir Freddie
Laker would somehow get his fl·
nanclaUy wrecked airline flying
across the Atlantic again.
The DaDy Express caned him "a
hero of our time," and said he " put
the world Into Ordinary people 's
hands .... For a lot of little people
who looked up to him, and whose
wings he spread, this morl\lng's
skies will be very empty:•·

I

I

',j•
'

' '

GIANT FALL - A giant fodder silo, more than 105
feet long and 89 feet high, situated close to the railway
station at nearby H""kenhelm, falls over Thursday af·
ter demolition experts triggered about fiv e pollllds of

explosives. The giant building had lo give way for the
new blg!H;peed railway line leg Mannhelm-Stuttgart.
Removal of the debris takes about two weelui. (AP
Laserphoto) .

Laker announced the demise at
Laker Airways on Friday after glv·
lng up trying to obtain a reschedulIng of his $359 million In debts,
much of which came from o~rs
for new aircraft.
But a group of hotel owners In
Shoreham, England, said they had
raised $463,1XKJ In pledges by mid·
day Saturday. A London business·
man said he hact drummed up
$93,000 In pledges.
"Freddie has given so wuch to
the British public, they should now

come and support him In his hour of
need," said the London business·
man, CoUn Rayworth.
A Laker Airways spol&lt;esman
said a 76-year-old woman had refused to leave the ticket counter at
Gatwlck airport until her check for
$1,850 had been accepted.
"It Is hard to believe," said the
spokesman. "It Is difficult to think
that the firm could go under with
the amount of support being
shown."
Laker said In a TV Interview, "I
am overhwelmed by the public
reaction and the public support.
The telephone Unes are blocked by
people ringing up to ask, 'Where
can we send money to and what can
we do to help?"
Laker also met with bank·
a ppointed accountants charged
with trying to salvage Laker
Airways.
A statement saW they were seek·
lng Laker's "VIews of the best method of preserving those parts of the
business which are vlable ... We will
assess the financial condition of the

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-O·l

Recovers four bodies from crash

Britons rally to save Laker line·

•

•••

Feb. 7, 1982

w. Va.

FANCY GAP, Va. (AP) - A
plane carrying two handc.ufted prl·
soners, one an Ohioan, a guard and
a pilot had not filed a filght plan and
was flying un~r VISual flight rules
when It smashed Into a fog.
shrouded mountain , killing all four
aboard, authorities say.
The dense fog had cut VISiblllty to
15 to 20 feet Friday a,fternoon when
the single-engine Piper PA·32Ralr·
craft hit 3,000.foot-hlgh Sugar Loaf
Ridge In Carroll County, three
miles north of the North Carolina
state line.
The Olgfit had originated In
Winston-Salem, N.C., and was
bound for Knoxville. Tenn., accord·
lng to a spokeswoman for the owner
of the plane, Air Security Inc . of
Titusville, Fla.
The bodies of the four men were
burned almost beyond recognition.
The two prisoners were wearing
handculJs and were also hand·
culJed to the plane's filght otflcer,
who was serving as a guard.
Nai\CY Gerard, a dispatcher for
Air Security, ldentltled the occu·

company ana see what can be done
to preseiVe the business and the
jobs of (2,500) Laker employ~."
The accountaniJi handlliJil:; the ·
Laker crisis, Bill Mackey and N'-1
Hamilton of the ftnn Ernest ·and
Whlnney. said Pan Am, British Air·
ways, Air Florida and British Caledonian had agreed to hoiiOr the ·
return half of Laker tickets In the
Unlted States, subject to seating
avallablllty on their flights.
Since Its founding as a scheduled
carrier In l'.m, Laker Airways rose
to capture 25 percent of the pas·
senger tratflc betWeen Britain apd
the Unlted Sta~. The New York·
to-London tare aboard Laker's S!&lt;y·
train service began at $1.li one way
at a time when the other major car·
rlers ~ British Airways, Pan Am
and TWA ~ werechargtng twlceas
much.
But last fall, the other carriers
cut their fares tocompetewlthhlm,
and as overall passenger tratflc decOned because of the recession and
fuel prices continued ·to rise, Lak'
er 's profit margin began to drop.

pants of the plane as pUot James D.
~n. 36, of Indianapolis, Ind.;
filght officer Donald Brown, 45, of
Titusville; Charles B. Parker. 28, of
Panama City, Fla., and Eric N.
Pierce, 20, of Cleveland, Ohio. She
5ald Parker and Pierce were both
prisoners, although It could not be
Immediately determined on what ·
charges the two were tJelng held.
Bill McCraw, captain of theCana
Rescue Squad, called It the "most
hopeless task we've ever had to go
·out on." He said visibility was II·
mlted to 15 to 20 feet.
Several people near the crash
stte heard the plane go over shortly
after 2 p.m. One resident, Larry
Jones, reported seeing the plane fly
out of the fog bank, circle and head
back In, McCraw said.
"They heard two explosions." he
said. "They knew he was going to
crash. He was too low."
"From what I ca n determine, It
was under fuU power when It hit,"
McCraw said. "It exploded; no
question .. . pari of the windshield
was 100. 150 feet up the mouptaln."

This week's _legislative highlights
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here
are highlights of this week's actlv·
lty In the 114th Ohio General
Assembly.
No Senate voting sessions are
scheduled this week.

TUE'!DAY
House session 11 a.m.
House Committees: State Government (liquor option elections,
lottery sales agents , Informed
consent-abortions); Civil and Commercial Law (drug abuse, drug pa·
ra phenalla); Ways and Means
(delinquent taxes, sheriff districts,
homestead exemptions-house trall·
ers); Agriculture and Natural Resources (concession fees, livestock
sales, watercraft laws); Aging and
Housing (landiords·tenants, con·
domlnlums, multi-purpose senior
centers); Small Business a nd Eco-

nomic Devlllopment (Imitation Ice
cream, technology and en~rprlse
programs) ; Education (problem
students, employee talf annuities);
Local Government (water-sewer
district bids, land conveyances, loca l bonds) .
Senate Committees: Elections,
Financial Institutions and Insu·
ranee (congf!!sslonal redistricting,
auto Insurance); Health and Hu·
man Resources (emergency medl·
cal service levies, state medical

!Ions (county treasurers, petition·
ers); Financial Institutions
(Income tax exclusions, securities
regulation, branch banks); Health
and Retirement (pollce·Cire retirement systems); Energy and Envlr·
onment (hazardous waste boards);
Judiciary and Crtmtoal Justice
(juvenile suspects-fingerprints,
probation-community service).
Senate Committees: None
scheduled.

board) .

No House floor session.
House Committees: None
scheduled.
Sehate Cornm!~: Local Government, Urban Affairs and
Small Business (public records·
copies, city land reutlll2atlon programs, airport annexation, transit
boards, trailer park operators,
small business ombudsman ).

WEDNE'!DAY
House session 1: ll p.m.
House Committees: Finance (vi·
siort test-driver's license, wildlife
preseiVes); Transportation and
Urban Affairs (Welfare
department-security) ; Highways
and Highway Safety (autos-child
restraints, illegal park!ng) ; Elec-.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Here
Is the status of major legislation
pepdlng In the 114th Ohio General
Assembly:
PRISONS - A $599 mllllon program f()r constrUction and renova·
tlon of prisons throughout the state.
Different versions passed by House
and Senate; joint conference com·
mlttee meets Tuesday.
REDISTRICTING- Draws new
boundary lines tor Ohio's congressional districts, reduced from 23 to
21 this year due to popula tlon shifts.
Passed the House; hearing Tuesday In Senate Elections, Financial
Inst ituti ons and Insur a nce
Committee.

HIGH-SPEED RAIL - Proposed constitutional amendment
Increasing sales tax to finance con·
structlon of a high-speed rail sys·
tem !Inking Ohio's biggest cities.
Passed House; awaiting Senate
fioor vote.
ORGANIZED CRIME - Pack·
age of bills reinstating an organized
crime statute struck down by the
Ohio Supreme Court, expanding
powers of attorney general to con·
duct Investigations and authoriZing
court-ordered wiretapping. Pend·
lng In Senate Judiciary Committee.
SCHOOL FUNDING - Proposed constitutional amendment
and school aid bill which would shift

local funding of schools from sole
reliance on property taxes to a mixture of property and personal In·
come levies. Awaiting vote In
Senate.
MANDATORY SENTENCING
- Imposes mandatory prison
terms without chanCe of parole or
probation tor .people convicted of
using firearms to commit felonies.
Passed Senate; pending In House
Judiciary Committee.
ABORTION - Requires certain
Information to be given to women
before they consent to abortions.
Passed the Senate; hearing Tuesday In House State Government
Committee.

'

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"'

OPEN WIDE - Deaver dentist Peter Emily works
on one of Sophie's teeth at the Denver Zoo on Friday.

LANCASTER, Ohio (AP )
Damages amounting to $300,000
were awarded Friday by a Fair·
field County Common Pleas jury to·
Jerry Lee Tolliver, whose wife and
daughter were killed ln a 1918 car·
train crash.
Tolliver, 29, was permanently Injured when the car he was driving,
collided with a Conrail train at a
crossing in Baltimore, Ohio, where
he then lived .
His 25-year old wife Susan and
daughter, Robin, 5, were killed In
the accident.
Tolliver, In a $750,00) suit he flled
against the railroad, alleged that
the crossing was unsa fe because
weeds obscured the view and that
the train was moving at excessive
speed.

if

,,..

Sopble, a 21:year-old polar bear, was kn..,ked out forthe operation which Involved a double root canal. (AP
Laserphoto).

Interest growing in Ohio ice fishing
announced Saturday that his Laker Airways is going
out of business. The Airline said Clydesdale Bank was
asked to appoint a receiver and manager to take over
the Airlines' financial affairs. (AP Wirephoto).

LAKER AIRWAYS' LAST FLIGHT- Against a
backdrop of other grounded Laker aircraft, Laker Airways' last flight (from the Portuguese resort of Faro)
comes In to land at Gatwlck airport Saturday. Sir Freddle Laker, pioneer of low-cosl traus-Atlantlc flights,

Officer changes hanging report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
homicide officer sa id he Incorrectly
assumed the body of an apparent
suicide victim was left ha nging
from a basement beam for three
hours Thursday while detectives
and crime lab personnel changed
shifts.
"I was going by the knowledge of
verbal transactions between myself and my otflcers since I wasn't
at the scene," Sgt . .John Shawkcy
said Friday'.
The body of Samuel A. Perkins,

28, of Columbus, was discovered
abolut 12: 30 p.m. In a laundry room
at his apartment by two cleaning
women.
Shaw key told The Columbus Dis·
patch that the body was not cut
down until after 4 p.m. because of a
new pollee policy that restricts
overtime and also because of the
time Involved In changing shifts.
The officer said there was no In·
tent on his part to provide inaccu·

Ponder joint

•

(,

Awarded damages

THURSDAY

Present $latus of main legislation

A Federal Aviation Admlnlstra·
tlon spokesman In Hickory, N.C.,
said the plane had not flled a flight
plan and was operating under visual flight rules, which allow It to
operate almost Independently of ra·
dlo control.
A pilot famlllar with the area said
planes operating under visual flight
rules frequently bypass a partlcu·
Iarly rugged portion of the Appal· ·
achian Mountains where .the crash
occurred and follow Interstate T7
north and then tum south toward
Bristol, following Interstate 81 be· ·
tween mountain ridges.
McCraw said the wreckage was
scattered over a JOO.foot area near
the top of the mountain . The fuselage was mostly Intact, but the
wings and taU section had been
sheered otf by the Impact, he said.
McCraw said about a hall-acre of
wooded land was burned around
the crash.
. "It cut a swath of 20 teet wide (In
the poplar trees) ...He hit a solid
rock," McCraw said. "One of the
bodies was stlll burning when we
got the bodies out," he said.
Sgt M.A. Spivey of the VIrginia
State Pollee said three of the bodlfS
were linked by handculJs, and
other cutfs were aboard the plane.

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) Defense Secretary Caspar Weln·
berger, arriving here Saturday for
a four-day visit, said lie will raise
the possibility of the United States
and Saudi Arabia co-producing
U.S.-deslgned weapons.
"Co-production might be a possl·
blllty, a very real posslbtllty,"
Weinberger told reporters a t
Riyadh airport. Hedld not say what
weapons he had ln mind .
He said that his discussions with
Saudi Arabia's defense and aviation minister, Prince Sultan Ibn
Abdel·Azlz, wlll concentrate on
"mutual basic coordinated security
assistance" to a number of other
Persian Gulf countries.

ar~s

rate Information as a way to
publicize pollee frustrations over a
new overllme policy,
"I stand behind everything I
said," Shawkey said. "I gave the
· best Information I could based ·on
the best ·Information I had at the
time."
Shawkey told The Columbus Dis;
patch that he assumed that when
the · first shift homicide detectives
left the scene about 2:30p.m .. offlc·
ers of the first shift crime scene
search unit did the same.

agreement

"But first we want to find out the
Warning and Control System radar
wishes of tile klngdom and see the
planes to the Saudis, and Sultan had
ways Saudi Arabia and the United
red carpets rolled out for the
States can most etflciently help
secretary.
countries In the gulf, which can add
After Sultan shook hands with
to our mutual security."
Weinberger, a military band
In recent weeks, the Saudis have
played the U.S. national anthem
championed the concept of estaband the Saudi royal anthem. The
two men reviewed an honor guard,
lishing a collective security system
by the Persian Gulf states, lnclud·
then proceeded to the guest lounge
lng a mllltary Industries complex,
where Weinberger sipped two cups
of green Arab cotfee.
an air defense umbrella based on
AWACS planes, ·and a joint rapid
The otflclal Saudi Press Agency
quoted Weinberger as saying that
deployment force .
.
Weinberger is the first high·
his talks with Sultan wtllln general
ranking official of the Reagan ad· - deal with the "future of Saudi·U.S.
ministration to visit the kingdom
relations and means of Improving
and consolidating our
since the Senate approved the con·
troverslal sale of five .Airborne cooperation."

netic po:"y spot for tourists a nd
OFF RATTLESNAKE jSLAND, perch, for whlcll there Is no limit.
But Lenny Isn't giving away any
boaters, Its marina filled with
Ohio (AP) -Lurching adoss Lake
Inside
Information
not
even
his
yachts that cruise the Great Lakes.
Erie at 40 mph, fishing guide Pat
Publ ic Notice
name and especially not how he
In winter, Ice fishing Is the main
Chrysler swerves his pickup truck
LEGAL NO T IC E
attraction.
catches fish . " Don't talk about It,"
sharply to avoid a crack In the froTO BIDDERS
Noti ce is hereby given
Lenny says. "Flshln's secret."
"It's hard work, and It's difficult
zen swface.
that sea led b ids wilt be
A brief truck rtde away, John
to predict where the fish will he,
The maneuver brings fear the
r ecei ved by the City
Manager of the City of
Moren of Ashland, Ky., and Don
and when," said Chrysler, who
truck will overturn, but he skllllully
Gal lipoli s, Ohio at h is OfCaudl!l
of
Newburgh,
Ind.,
look
out
runs a charter fishing boat In
rlghiJi It and gets back on course,
fi ce in th e Muni c i pa l
t or
Summ er
Bu i l di ng
summer.
the window of their shanty.
racing toward the hot1zon.
Pol ice Uni form s.
,
"Fish?
What
do
you
mean,
fish?
" And the Ice is a dangerous place
"Sorry about that," he tells a
Bi ds w i l l be r eceived at
the a bove na med ofli ce unSomebody tell you there were fish
for people who aren 't fa milia r with
companion startng at a jagged rip
t il 12: 00 Noon, loc al time on
In thiS take, boy?" Moren drawls.
It, who don't know what they're doIn the lake's 16-!nch·thick manlle of
Thursday , February 11.
1982 and publicly opened
Caudill laughs, adding: " U there
Ing. It 's perfe&lt;:tly sale to drive a
Ice. "But you gotta watch out for
and r ead a t that hour and
are any fish In this lake, they're
truck ontO 16 Inches of ke. but you
THffiTY YEARS A QUEEN - Britain's Que~n Elizabeth II with her
the cracks. You could take a dip In
p lace. Bi d f orm s m Ft y be
obtained in 1h0 Offi ce of t11c
hidln' pretty good.''
have to know where the currents
husband the Duke of Edinburgh pose at Sandringham House In Norfolk,
the water like that."
Ci ty Ma naqe r, 518 Second
The two hired Chrysler as their
cause weak spots and big cracks In
England on Feb. 4 to mark the 30th annJversary of her a c~esslon to lhe
Tire chains grinding, the tattered
Avenue, Ga lli pol is, Ohi o.
it. ..
throne on Feb. 8. lAP Laserphoto).
truck halts at a small hut called an guide, sturred themselves Into six
Jnn. 31. Feb . 7
layers of clothing, braved the cold,
Chrysler Is phllosophlcal about
" Ice shanty." a home-made wood
the lack of fish . "That Lenny," he
framed structure covered with wind and the ride across the lake.
mutters. "I can't figure out why
They have nothing to show for It but
Naugabyde and canvas.
Veterans Memorial
Lenny has fish and nobody else has
. n Is !Ike hundreds of other huts some empty beer cans.
fish. That Lenny." ·
Told of Lenny's success nearby,
dotting the trozen surface. They
Admitted --Jeffrey McKinney,
By 3 p.m. Moren and Caudill are
the nien are Indignant. The min·
shelter Ice fishermen from winds
Middleport;
F loyd Reltmire, New
ready for a ride back to P ut·In-Bay
that whislle across the lake, slicing nows have been drugged, Moren
Haven;
Ruth
Ann Mulford,
and a wann seat at the Skyway
through layers of clothing atllto40 yells. Lenny's probably Chrysler's
1010
Pomeroy.
Bar, one at three open in winter.
brother, Caudlll yells. Let's go talk
mph.
Discharged--Jennie Williamson.
FIRST AVE.
"Why did we do this?" Moren re·
Inside the shanty, a small coal· tO Lenny, both men yell.
sponds to a question. "Why? Jle.
Moren and Caudill say II' s the
fired stove warms the ieet .
cause we're big macho
Chrysler equipS his customers with first time they have gone lee fish·
lng.
"And
It
will
probably
be
the
ouldoorsmen, that's why. We'·re
2-foot-Iong ~ 10ds and reels,
also nuts.''
already balled with arllflclal min· last," Moren adds. ·
Chrysler
takes
the
ribbing
with
a
They hop Into the · back of
nows. In a coffee can, dozens of Uve
Chrysler's
truck. "What I want to
6
a.m.
he
was
out
on
the
smile.
At
minnows swim ,In circles - soon to
Ice,
setting
up
the
shanties,
cutting
know,
fellas,
Is why dldn'l we go to
be adjunct bait for whatever a ft.
Florida?"
Moren
asks. " Why didn't
holes
In
the
Ice.
piling
coal
In
the
sherman dreams of.
we
go
to
Florida?"
custostoves
and
getting
ready
for
"What ,you do," Chrysler ex·
plains, "Is hook one of the minnows mers. After the fishermen leave In .. "Because," Ca udill answers,
through the Ups with the lure, drop mid-afternoon, be will be back on · "they couldn't otfer us this kind of
weather. "
It down to a few feet above the sur· the lake, preparing the shanties for
the
next
day.
face of the water and just raise the
Chrysler has been an Ice guide
rod tip up and down."
for
two years, since pollution deExperienced fishermen recog·
cOned
and walleye began returning
n1ze the technique as "Jigging" a
.to
Lake
Erie.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Four
lure, simulating thesamemotlonof
Ucensed
tug boat and conuner· men were .arrested as Qeveland
DOUG ANDERSON
A
a Uve bait fish. They hope.
clal
vessel
captain,
Chrysler
was
Loaimlle, Kr.
pollee shut down a drug operation
The minnow goes down through a
at
Lorafu,
Ohio,
on
the
maloborn
run out of a east side delicatessan
square hole In the Ice, dr!Jtlng :JO.
Will Be Our Guest Speaker for
which pollee said was responsible
.; r
odd feet to the bottom and Into the .land. But he now Uves at Put·In·
February. Join with us for lhese
VALLEY BELL
COKE
for $2,00) a day In Illegal drug sales.
.~ ,~~.·1
waiting, open mouth of a tat and Bay on South Bass Island, a dot of
special
services:
land
five
miles
ort
the
Ohio
shore
.
I
Sgt. Wllllam Tell of the vice unit
. soon-to·be·frled walleye. They
HOMOGINIZED
TAB
'
__.
Airplanes ferry Ice fishermen from
said the raid Friday at Hines Dell·
hope.
, (,, I "
7:30p.m.
the mainland to Put·In·Bay.
Fri., Feb. 12
SPRITE
catessen followed a two-month·sur·
The walleye keep you waiting a
......
-~
GAL.
10:00 a.m.
In summer, Put·ln·Bay Is a IreSat., Feb. 13
velllijnce of the store.
hall-hour. The minnow that had
MR.
PIBBS
10:00
a.m.
Sun., feb. 14
been frantically flipplr!g back and
forth on the')100k has flol'!)ed. It Is .------------~----------;
replaced·, and the lure again
VALLEY BELL
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
. 8-16 oz.
plunges to the botlom.
383 N. 2nd Ave.
5 9
· lJttlng the rod tip up and down,
· PlusJax
GAL
Middleport, Otlio
up and down, you peer outside
'Dfposit
thi'ough a small plastic window.
Winds sweep snow across the
barren surlace like chalk dust on a
blackboard, making a pattern,
changing It, and wiping the slate
clean, only to start over. The white
Let our professional stylists introduce
of the snow blends with the gray
you to QUANTUM, the one-formu la, one
horizon, a mirage broken only by
processing 11me perm . Get In on our in·
troduclorv speciol .
·
bulges of Inky Ice. A hundred Yards
QUANTUM
away, Green Island disappears In a .
swirl of snow.
(Rea. $35)
The walleye
stiU waiting. Or
Now $20
jHiirc~•t ftal indlllled)
Is It the fishermen wboarewaltlni?
Now through Febwary 20. 1982 w•th cop~ ollh•s ad .
Lake Erie's tamedperchareout to
LLT IOIJI GOOO lOOKS GO ro IOIJI HEAD
luncll. Chrysler looks net'VQUS.
"Gee, I don' t know. They haven't
As
T.V.
been biting for a coupla days. But .
let's go check on Lenny. He's proba·
bly got 10rne ftsh," Chrysler said.
Lenny 1s huddled nearby In a ·
green shanty r:l. his own, like a her· ·
Phone 446 4841 ·
mtt hibernating un!ll the spring ·
JICbon ,..
.
thaw. Lenny also has fish - his •
limit of six walleye and a pile of

NOW OPEN
SUPERM
!Formerly Pennzoil Service Stationl

GAS AND GROCERIES
OPEN MON.-SAT. 6 A.M. TIL MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY 9 AM. TIL 9 P.M.

.---SELF SERVE GAS.· --.
Unleaded

Regular
$}22. !f

Arrest four men

$}28.9

SPECIAL

-

MILK

SEALED CONTAINER ~ An unidentified
television cameraman takes a closeup of a health
department seal pla~ed on a huge metal container
believed to he· holding more than 500 human fetuses
weighing up to (our pounds each, thai was discovered

by workers at a Wilmington, Calif. container company
Thnrsday. The Loll Angeles County coroner's and
bealth department officla!Jo lnvtllltlgated the scene
Friday, It Is ezpected lbe container will be opened and
Investigated over the weekend. ( AP Laoerpholo).

WE NOW

.

care?"
High-ranking State Department
officials went before Congress last
week to make their case, arguing
bluntly that U.S. national. security
: Interests "are being Incontestably
: challenged In Central America."
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. on Tuesday depleted the
administration's deepening mil·
, ltary support for the Salvadoran go.
vernment as a reaction to "tile..

by a violent minority, who In Cenexport of subversion and armed In·
tral America would not Uve In fear?
teiVentlon" IJy Cuba through "Its
How long would It be before major
newfound allY, Nicaragua."
strategic U.S. lnteresiJi - the
Haig also said that communist
cal!lll, sea lanes, ou supplies arms lntlltratlon Into El Salvador
was again Increasing, close to the
would be at risk?
levels of the guerrllla.s' January
1
1981' general offensive. The State
"For most of Its lite as a nation, ·
Department, however, later
our country has faced no threat
fused to document Halg 's
from Its neighbors. But unless we
assertion.
. act deciSively now, the future could
In congressional testimony, Tho-, · well bring moreCUbas: totalitarian
regimes so linked to the Soviet Un·
mas 0. Enders, assistant secretary
of state for Inter· American affairs,
ton that they become factors In the
mllltary balance.' '
also depleted the Salvadoran civil
war In dire, geopolitical tenns.
"The decisive battle tor Central
The admlnlstratlon has long
Aluerica Is under way In El Salva·
claimed that the Salvadoran rebels
Enders declared. "UatterNI·
are supplleci and directed by Cuba
caragua, El Salvador Is captured
and the Soviet Union.

.. .

~%

Btls.

MILK

"PERM-PROBLEM" SOLVER

~

K . Ne

are

re.

do!·:'·

All

$129 -'

MODELS ,

.El Salvador: Cuban challenge?
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration Is vowing
to do "whatever Is necessary" to
stop a leftist victory In El Salvador,
even leaving open the posslblllty of
: sending U.S. lroops. But to many
: Affil'rlcans, the 'more Immediate
· qui!Stlon Is: "Why should we

H~E

.,..

HEATERS
Adwrtised on

FAMILY AWAITS WORD - Members ol the
family of Lydia Vashchenko, a PenlecGitallat who wa1
bt~~pltaUzed after ber health began falllDg doe to a
hunger llrlke, awail word Ia lhe buement room at the
U.S. Embassy compound In M01~ow Saturday.. Shown
l

.

'

from left are LUJa, Lubuv ud ~UIIa VubtbeWrq.
Aagutlna Vaobebtuo, mother of Lydia, bu ce~t­
lbmed lbe fut In protest over wlaat IIIey uy It lhe
fallare ol U. S. offlclU to btlp.them leave the Sovid
Unl011. (AP Laserplloto).

''

..

' SMELTZERS

.s3

GlliPGii, Ohio .

'·

'I

F

�..
T1mes-s

.

..

Pom

.....

,--...-~

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

'Qrimts:- i"entintl
That's right! When you use a column inch
or more in newspaper advertising be it
display or classified ~ou reach thousands
of potential buyers that are eager
to receive your money-saving
message

Gallia Co Area Code
614
446-Galllpolts
367-Cheshtre
388-Vmton
245-R •o Grande

Metgs Co. Area Code
614
992-Mtddleport

Pomeroy
985- Chester
343- Portland

247-Letart Falls

256-Guyan Di st.

949- Racme

• ·U-Ara bta Otst

742-RuHand
667-Coolvtlle

Mason Co., W. Va
Area Code 304
675-P t Pleasant

458- Leon
S76- Apple Grove
773-Mason
·
882 - N ew Haven
895- L eta rt
937-Bulfalo

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Metgs County

In Galli a County

446-2342

s

NOTIC E OF
PUBLIC SA LE
The follow .ng descr,bed
11em w1ll be altered lor
public sate to the hi ghest
b•dder on the 17Th day of
Febr uary 1982 at ten
o'clock am
1978 Cava l(:ade travel
trader model 290 cenler
bath ser 1a! no TT 2423 78
Sa le ot the secunty l1sted
above will be he ld on the
prem1ses of The C1fy Loan
&amp; Savmgs Company , 125 E
Ma1n Street, Porneroy
Oh•o 45769
Terms of Sale Cash
Sel ler r eserv es the r iQht
to b•d and the ngh t to
rerec t any and all b•d s
Pr1or to the date of sale,
arran gements may be
made to 1nspec t th1s mer
chand• se by ca11 1ng 99'12 171
beween the hours of 9 00
am and 5 00 p m

' Eat Your Head Out' Send
your love a g 1ant heart
snaped chocolate ch1p
cook•e. custom decorat1ng
Order now tor Vatent.ne's
Day or any spec•al day 1
$9 00 del•very ancl uded,
Ca ll Mora's .446·3675

675-1333
----

Pubhc Notic e

LEGAL NOTIC E
BLUE CROSS
RATE HEARING
The Ohto De partme nt of

lnsur a nee wil l ho ld a publtc
beg •nn rng
on

h ea rm ~

February 9, 1982 to con

rate

rn
creases whtch Blue Cr oss
of Central Ohto has ftl ed

wtth the Department The

- - -Pubhc No1ice

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
The fotl ow1ng •t ern Will
be off er ed for publ•c sa le to
th e h•ghes t b1dder on the
17th da y of February, 1982,
a t 10 · 00 o'c lock a m
1976 Plymouth 2 dr H T
Fury sen at no R L 23G8A
214341
Sale of the secunty 11sted
above will be held on the
prem1ses of The C1ty Loan
&amp; Sav.ngs Com pany , 125 E .
Mam St. Pomeroy , Ohio
45769
Term s of Sa te Cash
Se tt er reserves th e r, ght
to b1d and the nght to
re tec t any and all b1ds
Pn or to the date of sa l e,
ar rangements may be
made to inspec t th• s mer
cnand1se by ca llmg 992·2171
between the hou rs of 9·00
ama nd500pm

J

Announc e me~n!!t!.s__

SWEEPER and sewmg
machme repa1r, parts, and
suppl•es
Prc k up and
delivery, Dav•s Vacuum
Cleaner, one ha lf mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
416 0294
Complete l1ne of Muzzl e
Load ing Guns and Sup
pl•es
Spnng
V alley
Tr ad1ng Co , Spnng Valley
Plaza, 446·8025

proposed rate ad justm ents
wnulrl rtf f Pd th e fnl!nwma
ROSENBERG RECYCLI
non grou p md• v •dua l sub
NG
Open•ng
soon
SCriber pOli CieS M ed1 F lit '
s pe cia liZing
1n
Contrac t ,
l:tO Day
ALVMINUM
CANS.
Preferred and Co·Care
alum•num Siding, sheet &amp;
Group Convers1on Con
cas t a lum , copper wire,
tract , and
120 Day
brass, rad1 ators, auto bat
Preferred and Co Care
D1rect Purc hase Contract
terles &amp; IBM cards Wath
Blue Cross of Cen tr al Ohm
th• s paper for locst10n and
has r eques ted an effec tiv e
gra nd open.ng Rosenberg
date of April 1. 1982 for
Recycling, 140 Columbus
th ese proposed rate 1n
Rd., Athens, Oh "'5701 Call
creases
1·614 7477.
The publ •c hean ng will
be conducted pursuant to 121 7. ltc
Sec t 1on 17 39 0 5 1, Oh 10
Will prov1de answering ser·
Rev1sed Code 11 will ha ve
v•ce or wake up ca ll 304·
three purposes· t o r ev 1ew
Pubhc NOtiCe
I67S 3734
t he actuana l soundness of
Blue Cross of Centra l
Oh1o's proposed rate tn
NOTICE OF
creases on 1ts 1ndP11dual
PUBLIC SALE
For bulk del1v ery of
con tr acts, to review Blue
The follow. ng 1tems w111
Cross of Cen tra l Oh1o's cost be offered for publ1c sale to gasol•ne, hea ling oil and
co nt a1nment ac ti 'oll t• es, the h1 ghest b1dder on the d1ese l fuel, ca ll La ndmark,
and to receive testi m ony 17th day of F eb ru e~ r y 1982 992 2181, Pomeroy, Oh
fro m Blue Cross of Central at ten o'c lock a m
Oh• o's subscribers and
1 color telev•s •on
Gun Shoot Rac1ne Gun
otner 1nter estcd m em bers
1 4 p•ece bed r oom su1 te
of the public . A !I Interested
Sa le ot the sec unty l1 sted ,C lub E very Sun stert.ng
member s of the publ•c are above Will be he ld on the et 1 p m Factory choke
.nv1ted to test•f y ,
prcm •ses of The C1ty Loan guns only,
The public heannQ will &amp; Savmgs Company, 125 E
beg_1n at 9 00 a m
on Mam St r eet , Pomeroy,
Rac1ne F1re Dept 'sponsors
Febru ary 9, 1982 It will be Oh 10 45769
a Gun Shoot. Sa t n1ghts
he ld at the State Off1ce
Terms of Sale: Cash
Tower , 30 East Broad
I t ems may be sold m 6 30 p m , Bashan Fac tory
Street, Columbus. Oh10 un•ts or 1n parcels · Seller choke 12 gauge sho tgun.
43215
For fu rt her In reserves the n ght to b1d
for mat1on rega rding thiS and the r•ght to retec t any
Mar ket
Ne w
public hea r ln_g, vou may and all b1ds Pnor t o the Flea
cont act the Oh10 Depart date of sale, q,rran gem ents Openmg 7 days a week .
ment of Insurance at (614) may be made to 1nspect The Heart of Middlepor t 20
466 6197 at extens1on 18
lh 1s
me r cha ndise
by
N 2nd St form er ly Mart.n
Robert L ca llin g 992 2171 between General Store. 992·6370
Hatch f or d, Jr the hours of 9 00 a m. and
D•rec tor of Insura nce 5 OOp m
State of Oh•o
Hoof Hollow. Reg1 stered
Feb 3, 7, 9
(2 ) 7, ltc
M org ans &amp; Arab1ans . Also
Gr ade horse5 Sa ddles, etc
698·3290

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, FEB. 13, 1982-10:30 A.M.
LOCATION : 3 m1les eas t of Jackson, Ohio on U. S. 35
or 12 m1l es north of Rio Grande. Watch for S1gn.
ANTIQUES
n em s lo Se ll Old k1tchen ca btnct . m antel clock
w/brass feel, mantel cl ock w/llon heads, sever al
mce w 1cker baske ts, large r ound oak table w/claw
fee l and l eaf. 6 oak press ba ck c h a~rs, oak wash
slfand , ceda r 11 ned wardrobe. lg oak wa ll phone,
Farr Telephone Co, Ch1 cago, oak secr etary
w/ double rrurrors, old B•rdse.,..e maple bed and
dresser made 1n Boston, Oenrwood •ce cream parlor
cha1rs, organ sto ol w/brass fee t. old oak V1ctor
talking m ac h me, walnut desk ch air, r ecord cabmet ,
3 so lid brass bar stools. sever al old oak cab.net s. 3
old tread le sew1ng mac h•nes, old wood med1C 1ne
ca b•nef, Queen A nne buffet , severa l Old dressers
and chest of drawers, old wood doug~l bowl very
unu sua l. old powder horn , sever al small stands,
wicker f lower basket. smal l unu sual w 1cker
baskets, old alarm clocks, severa l Curner lves
ongmal prm t s, Gobe clock, old bass scales, Weeder
steam engine, lg Dazey churn, old wood dasher
chur n, over 12 old Oil lamps a ll d1tfc r ent, stone C1der
1ar , very n1cc old c 1der press, Sec1rs &amp; Roebuck
ca talogues 20's &amp; 30's, several carb•de lights and
stone tars, 1ug s and crocks of a ll shapes and s•zes
Some w / wr 1t1ng. Coca Cola 5c fan , old •ron floor
tamps, old beveled m~rrors old glass coffee, tea and
sp 1ce sets, child's cane bottom c h a ~r , old wood buck
board sea t , old wheat reapers, feed sacks, wood
pulleys, drawmg kntves. n•cks. hammers, axes.
shovels etc . O ld horse plows, old oak f r ame H•de a
bed sofa, old cherry sate, someotd silver co1ns, old
marbles, l aney wood f r amed oil pa.nt1ng, walnut
v 1ctonan m~rro r , chma oloset, ~ro n pots, old wood
rug hboks, plus old advert1sements.
MOD E RN FURNITURE
Color T v , coff ee stands, bed w/ new box spnngs
and mattress, Curno ca bmet, lamp s, rugs, cloc ks,
playpm, h 1gh cha1r, k •tchen app l1ances some hand
tools, gas heater, st ereo, sma ll record player,
potbelly stove, plus much more
OLD GLASSWARE
Handpa1nted N 1ppon celery d1Sh, Ia Franca•se meat
pla tter, hen on the nest. severa l se t s of cr ystal w1ne
glasses. se t of cryst al gobl ets, Old M ason1 c shavinQ
mug, j f oo ted cake plate~, Sh •r ley Temple p1tcher,2
double g lass cand lehOider s, carn 1va t basket, tooted
carn 1vat candy d1sh, pearl g l azed vase, set of
salter s, g lass baske t, berry d•sh , cruet , lg ca ke
pla te, sev p1eces of Norftake, 1709 M ason 1c com
memorat•ve Syn a w•ne glass, carn•val ce lery d1Sh,
severa l hand pa1nted teacups, large chma set,
depress1on glass, plus over 20 more pieces of very
old and fancy glassware.
All CE ADAMS, OWNER
Sale w•ll be held •ndoors 1f ttle weather Is bad!
Terms: Cash or certified check. local check
w/ proper 1. 0. No out of state personal checks!
MUSTARD'S COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
Preston Mustard, Auctioneer,
Terry lloyd, Apt. AUd1oneer
. 61H86-1229
Bud McGhee, Auchoneer- 614·446·0!'52

6

12

Happy Ads

Modern
Manufactunng
facility
located in Gallipolis, Ohio has an im '
med 1i!te
opening
for
a
Registered
Nurse
Industrial and/or Emergency
Room 'experience required. Duties in ad·
dilion to
Nursing will
include ad minislratlve/c lencal activities to administer and
maintain
records
for
Group 1nsurance plans and Workers
Compensation files.
we offer a competitive salary and
an attractive benefit package. We provide an oppportunity to advance in the
mdustrial environment.
For consideration, please submit
resume including salary requirements
and history to :
Personal Manager

Lost and Found

LOST 2 walker dogs, 70
lbs , male, black. white &amp;
tan 55 lb s b l ack ~ &amp; wh•te,
spotted Reward offered
366·6194
Reward for 2 dogs lost Sun
day m Bedford Town sh1 p
Blonde short ha1red female
Bull Ter ner Le~rge black
ma le w1th brown mark1ngs
and a bob tall 992 3964

PERMAN E NT
HAIR REMOVAL
Profess1onal
E lec trolySIS
Center A M A approved,
Doc tor referals, by ap
pomt ment only
304 675
623 4

------

JIMS Water Ser VICe Call
JIm Lan.er, 304·675·7397
Camp Conley

SHARP HOMEMAKER
PARTY PLAN PEOPLE
Superv•sor t o hrre,
tram people from home
6 months of yea r .
Teachmg, bu smess or
party plan background
helpful. No sel ling, no
•nvestment. Trammg
pro v•ded Call collect
for Barbara 816·7637272
TOYS &amp; GIFT S
HOU SE OF LLOYD
Eleven 'neavy w h1te hens,
good shape. Not ab le to
take ca te of them Phone
256 6853, Berkley M yer s

Federal Mogul Corporation

Lost · 1 Ca th ol1 c medal l m
macula te concept1 on Blue
on sliver ch a1n 992 5070
Reward

a

Pubhc Sate
&amp; Auct1on

Feb I I. 1962 at 10 am the
Ra c•ne Home Nat •ona l
Bank will offer for sa le at
Publ iC
Auct 1on
t he
following 1976 Chevorlet
M a libu Class ic, 1974 Buick
2 door hardtop, 1979 Honda
XL500S motorcycle The
Racme Home Nati onal
Bank reserves the r.ght to
re jec t any or all b•ds and
may remove any or all
1t ern s fro m t he sale at any
ti m e
A UCfiOn Sale 19 75 Case 450
dozer, 6 way blade, new
eng ine, new tr acks. MF
255, MF 135, MF 40. 860
Ford, two 20·10 John Deere
trac tors 6561 H d•esel, 250
I H diesel. Long 465 di e5el,
Long 310 d 1eset, MMU
16001H dump tr uck 4x4
Good sec t1on of corner
planters , plows, d1sc ,
spr eaders, and hay equip
ment Sa turd ay Feb. 13th,
11 .00
Several hundred
more items expected .
Siders Equ1pment Co, US
hignw ay 35, 1 mde South at
Pt P leasant 304-6/S·/42 1
Large Fa rm &amp; Indust ria l
Auchon Feb. 20th, 1982 at
Ravenwood, WV Sa11e yard
toa cted tour miles east of I ·
77 at Ravenswood ex1 t 146.
take Rt 56 to the '"
ter sec t. on of Rt 21 Ta k1ng
cons •gnme nts starting Feb
15 Farm tractors. trucks,
trail er, dozers, bac khoe,
et c
McCauley · T r actor
Sa les, 304·273·2611 or 273
3700
9

2160 Eastern Avenue
Ga lliPOliS, OH 4S631
161 41446-9211
All r eplies conf•dent1al
EOE m/ 1/ h

Wanted to Buy __

WANT TO BUY Old f ur·
n•ture and A nt1ques of a ll
k1nds, ca ll K enneth Swa •n.
256 1967 •n the evenmgs
CAS H PA l D for clean, l ate
m odel used cars Sm1 th
Bu1ck· Pont iac, GA lli pOli S,
OhiO Ca ll 446 2282
Buy.ng
Go l d,
Silver ,
Platmum , old co •ns, scrap
rings &amp; si lverware. Dally
quotes available
Also
coins &amp; co •n supplies for
sa l e.
Spr1ng
Valley
Tr ad1 ng, Spnng Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446 8026
We pay cas h tor tate m odel
c lean used ca r s
Frenchtown Car Co
B•ll Gene Johnson,
446·0069
TOP PRIC E Scrap M etal,
auto bodies, and cars. Ba t
terles, a lumium. brass &amp;
cooper
Ga i11pol•s Block
Co . 123 1/2 Pine S t .• 446
2763

9

Wanted to Buy

Last day I will buy fur for
this season is Saturday,
Feb 13, Geor ge Buckley,
664-&gt;1761

BEDS IRON , BRASS, old
furniture, go ld , silver
dollars, wood 1Ce boxes.
stone tars, ant•ques, etc.,
Comp lete
households.
Write . MD . M1tler, Rr 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992 7760
CH I P WOOD _ Poles max
d•amet er 10" on largest
e nd. $12.50 per ton . Bund led
sla b
$10 50 per t on
Del rverd to Oh10 Pallet Co,
Ro c k
S pr~ngs
Rd.
Pomeroy 992 2689
Gol d , s11ver, s t erling,
tewe lry , nngs, old co1ns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop. Middleport 992
3476

BUYING D EER AND
BEEF H ID ES Gene H1nes
Rl 1, A meSVI ll e, Oh 448
6747 Buymg raw fur after
Dec 12 Dally 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sundays
OLD FURNITURE, beds,
iron, brass, or wood. K1t
chen cu bba rds of a II types
Tables, round or square
Wood Ice boxes Old desks
and bookc ases Will buy
co mpl e t~ household Gold,
Si lver , old money, pocke t
watches, cha ms, r1ngs, and
etc tnd• an Art,facts of all
types A lso buymg baseba ll
card s Osby Mart1n 9926370
I

- - - - - -- -

J UN KED ca rs , scrap
metals, alummum ca ns,
tr ansm• 5SIOns, motors, bat
tenes, r ad1ators, 0 11 well
dn ll1ng b1ts, tungsten car·
b•de, h1gh speed ste~ l.
waste paper , cardboard,
raw furs. h1des, · gmsmg
and yellow root Harper
Halstea d Salvage Co 300
Eleventh St, Pt Pl easa nt ,
304 ·675 5866
Also flea
mark et open
M onda y
through Fnday . 1·5 p m

Two ca ts, one neutered
male, one fema le, good
mousers 304·576·2861

4

Gi..,eawa v

A NY PER SO N who has
anyth•ng to 91ve awav and
does not offer or attempt to
offer an y other fh•ng for
sale m ay pl ace an ad '" this
column There W1l1 be no
cha rge to the advert1ser,
Bnttany Span1~1 2 vr. old,
male, f ull stock . Call 256·
6750 alter 6

11
L- a rn

Help, Wanted
20

per
cen t
on $2,000 00
w• ·olesa le inst ead of 3 per
cen t
ret~rement
Qn
$7.500PV 614·675 9749 or
4 477-1414
n t• rement

Someone to care for goats.
Milk
and
f eed
Ex
per.cnced 256 6642

INTRODUCING

Old Hotpolnt washer Call
.W.·10t0
German Shepherd female
pup. Call446·3261 .
2 Blue Tick puppies and
German Shepherd 3 yr Old,
good watch dog . Call 446·
6310.

2 month old puppies. Call
367·0567

AtlEGROAND
MALLARD
-

R N poslt1on available for
RN SuperVISOr for 11 ·7
shift Exc start1ng sa lary
plus a complete benef1 t
package. For a personal In
terv•ew ca ll Mrs Judy
Holley, D ~rec tor of Nur·
sfng, Pinecrest Care Cen·
ter , 446 711 2 E 0 E
Bookkeepe r
Only ex penenced need apply Send
r es ume to Box 507 1n care
Ga llipoliS Dally Tribune.
825 3rd Ave, Ga llipOli S, Oh
45631
GE T VALUABLE tra.n•ng
as a young bus1ness person
and ea rn good money plus
some great g1tts as a Sen·
hnel r oute carrier Phone
us nght away anti get on
the ellg•bli•ty li st at 992·
2156 oi 992 ·2157
Occasional weekend and
day babysitter for 6 month
old baby, must be marned
and w•thout children or
w•th older children 9927739

MANA GE MENT
OP
PORTUNITY We ar e ex
panding our Sales Staff into
lh1 s area. We are look •ng
for a per son who -a fter two
years sal es training ca n
manage th 1s area Full
comm ISS1on plus salar y
and full fr.nge bene fit
package . Please se nd
resume to · Woodmen Ac
c• dent and
L •f e Co,
Charles E . Hughes Sr.,
Agency Manager , 536 4th
Sf. M an etta , Oh10 45750

MOTOR
HOMES

TRAVEL
TRAILERS

STOP BY AND SEE JERRY AND JOY
AT BURDffiE'S CAMPERS.

estate

Homes for Sale

31

Income tax serv1ce Prom
pt accurate. Martha Fry,
Pomeroy 992·34 1.4.

2 bedroom bn ck house,
large pat1o, slld .ng door,
full basement, ga ,..age, 1
acre lot on sta te Rt . 35. Low
SO's Call .W.-0755

Need to ra de r ides to 0 U
any week day Ca II 992·6013
after 5

1972 Concord M obJie Home,
12x65. Call 446 7015 a fte ,
5 30p m

Organ•zat•ons &amp; clubs ear n
30 pet. profit on •terns used
m most homes lnqulre992
2066 alter 6 p m

Fnend ly R1dge
Double
w1de. )1 .5 acres, 3 bdr , 2
baths, tamtlv r oom, shed
$29,500 Call256· 1668

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co. has offered
serv1ces for f1re 1nsurance
cover age m Gall1a County
for almost a cer:~tury
Farm, home and personal
property cover ages are
available tO meet in·
div idual needs. Contact
L ew1 s Hu ghes, agent
Phone 446· 3316

IS

Schools Instruct1on

D1's Craft Supply , Spnng
Valley Plaza, 446·2134. X·
stitch headquarters, ALL
colors OMC Free lessons
G'-utar lessons, .nd1V1dual
classes, personal attent1on.
Modest prices Call 304 67S·
3734

Wanted to Do

18

Will babys1 t 1n my home
Mon . Fri . Any hours Must
be potty trained Call 367
0136

Comfortable 3 bedroom
home, 8 '12 pe r ce nt
assumable Joan, and IS
near PPH S, large fenced 1n
yard, k1fchen appliances
and
more.
We
are
r elocat.ng and ca n share
r ea ltor's fees b-y sellmg
now Call after 6 pm 675·
1625
THREE bedroom house,
Haven Heights, fireplace
w1th heato lat or, hardwood
floors, fam 1ly room with
slldmg glass door, forced
a.r fuel 011 heat 8_ %
assumable loan Fm·HA
Call 304-695·3610 or 304 675
4380 ask for Bever ly
For sale or r ent . 2 bdr
mob1le home . Ca ll 675 4154

t Inane I a I
Business
Opportun1ty

SALES ASS OCI ATE
Ground floor opportun itY m
M ason Co !!~ rea Tr am1ng
at our expense. Stock
bonus Yearly convent1ons
for quat 1f1ers Protected
accounts .
$20 $25.000 .
poss1ble f~rs t year I f you
have sales exper 1ence or a
strong de s~re to make a
car eer m sa les, for per ·
sonal 1nterv1 ew, send bnef
resume
to .
Regional
Manager, P 0. Box 3271,
Parkersburg, WV 26101
22

Money to loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home 30 year f1xed
rate wva . &amp;' Oh1o Leader
Mortgage, 77 E State St •
Athens, Oh 592·30S1
Protess1onal
Serv•ces

13

P1ano Tun lng · Be kmd to
your ears Call Bill Ward
for appomtment, 446 4372
C &amp; L Bookkeepmg Com ·
plet e bookkeep ing and tax
serv ice for business and in ·
diVI dUaiS .
Carol Neal 446·3862

By owner, close to schools,
hosp1tal and pharmacies
675 S466.
HOUSE 1n New Haven,
sma ll down payment,
assumable loan, 304 882·
275-4.

Prices
Ever

On

New 14' Wide.

32 - - -Mobile HomeS -for Sal~

TRI · S T ATE
MOBILE
HOMES Gall ipOlis Pnce
red uced, used mobile
homes CALL446·7572.
CLEA N USED MOBI LE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
Q UALITY
MOBIL E
HOME SALES. • Ml
WEST, GA LLIPOLI S, RT
35 PHONE .W.·3666
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up w1th 2
or 4 lots, gas neat. rural
water, close to town, finan ·
c1ng available. Phone 4461294
1970 2 bdr . extra n•ce, new
carpet &amp; hot water tank,
natural gas, set up ready to
move ~nto C1ty llm•ts, a
barga•n, $3,650 Call 4468252, alter 5 ca ll .W. 2491
For sale 10x35, 1 bdr house
trailer Cal1388·9684

USED MOBILE
576 2711.

HOME

1982 Nashua 14 x 70, 7 x 21
expando, factory fireplace,
2 l&gt;aths, $3000 down and
assume bal ance
Phone
576 2706

41

2 bedroom family rm , $300
per mo plus ut•ht•es, $300
dep requ,red Call 446·

4554
RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
decorated .un
furnished, 3 rm . house
SUitable for Single person
or retired coupl e Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
requ1red. Cal l 446 0450 or
.w. 1291
House 2 bedroo m , 733 3rd
Ave, Gall•pol•s Depos.t
required. Ca ll 446·3870 or
446 1340

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, ~ciate 446-3408

With 2 locations
Rt. 93 North
Jack1011 , Ohio

675·3000

HOME FOR SALE
MODERN LOG HOME
J BR , 1'h baths, Lg,
fir eplac e
w / F1sher
woodburner, beamed
cathedral ceiling, full
basem ent
Wood·coatOII furnace 10.8 acres
mostly wooded . Near
M ercer'o'lll e
139,000
2S6· t S79

HERE ' S AN OFFER YOU
REFUSE!.I!
owner w•ll rent, ot sell , this property . W1th
satisfactory down payment owner Will finance
balance for 10% 1ntere st 3 bedrooms: dimng room,
11v 1ng rm , family rm • basement, c1 tv water and
sewer (located outs1de city limits) L a rge 2·car
garge. Let us show you th•s one today 1! 1 Pm:e
$52,000 00
BEAUTIFUL l BEDROOM Earl')l Amencan home
s• tuated w1th1n 2 m11 es from c1ty Owner wdl sell or
r ent Also tw o add1 t1onal lots adtacen1 to property
Call for more mform al•on
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
in downtown
Ga llipolis, Approx 4,000 sq ft of f loo r space, good
1ocal10n owner will lease or sell F1nanc1ng
available.

42

2 bdr. trailer furn •sned,
adults only, Brown Tra•ler
Park, 992·332•

Mob11e home, 2 bdr , adults
only , no pets, 322 3rd Ave,
Galhpolls. Call 446·3748 or
256· 1903

I

torR

--------

---

N1ce 1 bedroom turn1shed
mobile home 9 m!le from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Phone
tor appolntment992 7419

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr and 3 b(Jr mobile
homes Ca ll &lt;46·0175
2 Bedroom Trailer par·
f1ally furn•shed On rl'ver,
responsible adults 256·6002
after 6

-----

C!!ntenary, 2 bdr., private
lot, ret . &amp; dep , St60 mo ,
adults Call6U 6.43 26«

-

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY
l~::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::~==~~
41

Houses for Rent

House
near
park
1n
GallipoliS Call 446 7265 or
44·60644
For ren t 3 bedr hOme, 5
m1les from town on Rt 218
Ca ll 446 1156

Reel Estate Generat

I;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~:~~
II
HOUSE

OFFICE 446-7013
YOU R PRIVATE FARM - 43 aqcres, attract1ve
wooded countr y sett1ng for th1 s b1g bea ut•fu l 4 BR
Colonial home, onl y 3 years old N 1ce v1ew
II 0528
MAKE US AN OFFER - Fram e home w1t11 n1ce
k• l che-n, basement and garage tn town, owner wo n
ts sold now Pr.ce r educe d
II 0185
INV ESTME NT PROPERTY - 2 n1ce lots W1tn 4
r ental mobile home pads, all are rented, each pad
has concrete runner s and pat• o. loca ted m Rodney
121SS

REDUCED
BY OWNER
3 bedroom b nck ranch,
deluxe fea1ures, 10112%
mteres t, pr 1ced m m•d
S60s 45141 Baum Ad·
d1hon Road in Ches ter,
OH.

Ph. 1· 687-6 429
614 -992 -2571

CENTRAL REALTY
LOV E LY 3 BR bnck home, has wood burnn)g
1n l1v1ng room 111-:~ bath, well constructed
&amp; Insulated One floor pla n Ask1ng S35,000
f~replace

OWNER SAYS SELL - We have reduced th1 s home
from $17,000 to $12,900 and Wil l work term s 2 or 3
BR home w 1th equ 1pped k• tchen •nclud •n g break fast
bar, stove, &amp; refr•gerator Lar ge liv.ng room has
f•replace, also cellar and laundry r oom
UNUSUAL HOM E - Ca ll &amp; get deta il s on fh1s
lovel y 3 B R 2'12 baths, A fram e, on 6 plus acres
Large work garage, root cellar, located close to
Forked Run State Park Asking $73,000

VACANT LOTS - Large tra ct conS1Sf1ng of 3 full
tots and 5 part1 al lot s. 1n c•ty on Chestnut St. 520,000
2' 2 AC RES - Good budd•ng s1te or mobile home
s• te, Blazer Road, Add 1son Twp
fl $6,000

142 ACRES - Good home w 1th 4 bedrooms , bath
Wlfh snower, fully ca r peted, 2 ldrge bdrn ~. tobac:cv
base, 12 ac res bottom tand
N 1009

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367.0228
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
Darvin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor, 446-4327

RENTALS AVAILABLE - N1ce br 1c k home 1n
Le tar t, OH $250 a month plus $150 depos• l &amp;
references

CALLUSTOBUYORSELL
Nancy Jasper s- AssOCia t e
PH. 843·2075

ASSUMABLE LOAN ONL Y $J.OOO down .
91 '4% lnt ra te Payment s $353 71 mc luding
taxes and •ns Modern 3 bedroom r anch, large
liv•ng room and k1tchen and dming area Onl y
I V~ years old $33.700
6 ACRES more or l ess wou ld make a good

home s•te. good well and some timber on the
property , Appro~e, 800 lb fobacco base

ASSUMABLE LOAN - ONLY 52.000 DOWN 9% Int.
rate, 27 yrs Ask•ng only $54,000. Want peace ful
sec lus•on? See th1s lo\Jelv 3 bedroom brick nome
surr ounded by 3 acres of pr1vacy , cozy living room
w ith w b f•rep lace, kitchen and breakfast bar
Reat Estate General
EASY CARE ra nch Bnck and v.nyl sl d1ng mak e

CAN.A DAY
REALTY

f/1e cxlen or of th1 s home a breeze to ma1nta1n 3 BR,

eq u1pped ki tchen, cen tr al air cond Attacned 2 ca r
garge Natural gas heat C•f Y sc hools S-49,900
NO HEAT I NG PROBLEMS H E~E ' Immacul ate
and beaull tull y dec orated 3 year old L shaped r an
ch Mass•ve sfone f •replace •n I1V1ng room plus wood
burn ing stove m lilmlly room 3 BR, Jlh baths
Equ 1pped kit chen fenced ba ck yard w1th pat1o
Nca r c1ty S54,500

!S~~

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 Locust St, ~P~

VERY NICE - Th1s home has 3 n1ce SI ZC BR's,
closets, ea t·.n ki tchen, DR or FR, &amp; an extra L R
Lot rs 3 plus acres. garage, several other n• ce
buildings, fr u1t lrees, sever al vanet•es of be rry
bushes, curfa•ns, wood burner . diShwasher, al l st ay
G•ve us your offer 1n the S50's
LAND FOR SALE - Close toRt 7 20 acres Ask1 ng
$13,000 Owner will la nd con tract 10% dd'Wn &amp; work
together on balance

•

ON SSS VI
- Off State Route 35 - close to
Holzer Medical Center Doctor moved out of th e
area needs to sell t h1 s lovely new rustic L·
shaped ranCh This very plush home features 3
large bed r ooms, formal entry and liv ing room
Built 10 k1tchen, 2 f ull ba th s, tull basement J tar
garage S•tt•n g on 3 2 acres Be one of the Best Ad·
dressed Peop le 1n Town! Pnced In the 80's 1

Real Eatate General

NEW LISTING - 2 BR tra11e on very n1ce lot on
quiet stree t K •Ichen has stove, retr,g erator, d, nette
set, corner d1sh di Splay cab•ne l &amp; easy view 1nto
spac 1ous L R Th •s place could be very n• ce 11V1na
for you or 1us1 as mvestmen t property Now rents
for $175 Ask•ng $12,000

JU ST LIST E D - New doll t ype 3 BR home , cozy IS
the key word here K 1tchen comes complete w1th I
year old se lf c tea nmg oven, rcf ngerator &amp; 6 cha1r
wOOden d1nette set Th1s home 1s abou t 1 5 miles out
of miles out of Middleport on 2 plus acres, 11 has out
building s for store Rental mcome from a trailer
$175 All th1s for only $35,000

ESTATES, INC.

~-·

42 - -MOb,leHi:mle s-·
_ _ _ torRent

--------------~R-.~
.,~E~.~.~.••
~~a~.-.~.~,.~,---------

HOUSE , unfurnished, 5
rooms, bath, basement,
27 14 L 1ncoin, $250 . small
depos•t 1nqu~re next door.

D&amp;W

Real E1tate General

- --

2 bedroom house, un
furn iS hed on Lower Rt 7
Depos•t required Call 256
1413

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

Houses for Rent

Mob1 le HomeS
lor Rent

Tim es- sentinei-Pa

TheS

2 bdr mobile home Cit
Evergreen. Call446 7932.

9 r oom house 1n R1o Gran
de. Oh. Ca ll446 3465

Real Estate General

41

42

THREE bedroom home for
re nt, n•ce 1ocat1on, must
give good references, 304
675 1090 .

2 bedroom house on Lmcoln
Hts io Pomerov New floor
cover •ngs, gas heat . Adults
preferred No pets . Ref
e~nd Dep
requ~red
992·
3054

..

-~"

WHITE frame, 7 room, 3
bedroom, electric heat. kit·
che n not furn •shed with
stove &amp; rE&gt;frigerator, utility
room with washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 Acre yard &amp; gar
den area Mailbox address,
Gall•pohs Ferrv Deposit &amp;
lease reQu•red Ownersh•P
management. 304 522-1990

Houses for Rent

From
$9,295 00

or
341 1 Jackton Ave.
Pt. Pl.. sant, W . Va.
!Formerly K&amp;.K Mobole
Homel)

by Larry Wright

1977 SKYL INE , all elec triC ,
central a.r, two bedroom ,
$14,000,304 675-6966

MOBILE
HOMES

2863752

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

......

Ohio-Point P

N1 ce level homes1te 1n
Sandhdl and Oshel Road
Clearv1ew River Estates
Th1s IS a .47 acre plot
Sewer·Water·Eiec $.500 00
Beautiful rolling and leve l . down Phone 256·1216
land Has a 2 story house
with garage. Small wOOds
Large tract of land located
All m ineral nghts Just a
1n Pomeroy, Oh1o Can be
few minutes drive from
f•nanced at 12 percent. 992
town . Somerville Rea lty
5766
•• 1
675 3030 or 675·.t232 Jean
Casto 67S·3431
Tra1ler sties 10 percent
down 992 257 1 or 992 3830
32
Mobile Homes
tor Sate

NOTICE
Lowest

21

Home5 for Sale

Mob•le Homes
for Sate

W1ll
do sewtng
and
alterat1ons Call446 2524

'

Pom

House meadowbrook Ad
d1t1on J bedroom , fa m•ly
room with f1repla ce, cen
tral air, basemen t , 304·675·
IS42
32

...... . . ........ ,. .. .- . .

TW E NTY SEVE N ACRES - Mostl y level, good
produc•nq land 3 bed room home ha s two sun por
ch cs, wood and coa l bru.tn mg sto'Yc, new furnac e,
ba th and wa ter sysfcm A lu m1num sld.ng Barn
plus other outb ldg Rural wc1 tcr Loca ted just off Rt
160 $5,,000
T H E SMALL FARM you've a lways wanted. On ly 8
miles from town , K'l" ger Cr eek Schools
2
bedroomhome, I yr old furna ce, storm windows
Bam, other out bldg Pr• ce $32,000

COZY COMFOI?T - for s1ngres, tou ng m11rr1ed or
rct •red coup le 2 bedroom, drn 1ng room, k1tchcn and
parlor A 111tle work and •mag1na t•on can make thiS
home your "C ,1 S11£'" O~ e p lot QOCS 10 the wa ter's
Pd CIC In Cit Y $ 10 000
BEAUTIFUL Ll NES! And lns1de
genu.ne
del!ghts L1ke a 14'x24' llvmg room wil h trad•t•on al
f •replace Enormous master 5u 1te For easy llvmg.
an efl •c •ent k1tchen w 1th lots of counter space, bu1tt
,n oven, sta .ntess steel counter top range and d1sh
washer 3 be th s Cen a1r 2 car att ached qaraqc
plus 14' x26 ' storag e budd •ng Shown by appo•n tmenf
on ly $96.000 00

A VERY SPEC I AL coz y hom e w1t11 lots of n1 ce
!ouches Fam•IY room t1 as f 1replace Wl tll sla te hear
1h soft plus h carpe t , custom pl ant window Eat· In
ki tchen w1H1 range and diSh wa sher Full basement,
gas hea t C c n~ a1r cond C1 t y sc hools Owner w ill
f1nance on land conlracl w1th $6,000 down peyment
20 yr term at 12% 1nerest rate Monthly payment
$363 36 $39.000

WE HAVE OTHER rental properties and propert1es
w•1 h owner f •nanc•ng You can save valuable •n
t erest money when chec kin g w •th Wood Realty

we
12

Situations Wanted

Wanted · Per son to share 2
bdr . apt Ca ll 24S 5220
Have r oom and board and
laund ry for elder ly per·
sons. 992 6022.

3 Cocker Spamels 985 .4168
7 male 6 wk old PUP'lles.
304 67S 6145 or 304 576 2.490

Why would 2 D1amond s, 6
Emeralds, over 40 pearls
and 500 D1rects 'switch? 20
per cent retirement on
$2,00.00 wholesale Calf 614·
.W.-4273 or 614-446·9332 or
S G ASSOCia tes, 336
Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631

neal

Situations wanted

W1tl care -tor elderly 1n our
home Women and men
Tra•ned and exper1enced
992 7314.

R N

Red Pomeranron •n Racme
area Answers to Red
Name on co ll ar Call 949
259 1

121 7. lt,

992-2156
In Mason County

s1der proposed

NOtiCe
- - -Pubhc
-----

,

7' 1982
31

~unbalJ

•

Be your boss If vou have
as many as 10 friend s th1s
bJ.Jsmess will work for you
1nqu1re 992·2088 after 6
pm

Adver,1s.ng spec •ah t•es .
Book matches, ca lenders,
pen • &amp; ' pencils, d1 count
coupon books. D 1smuke's
405 2nd Ave. Ga ll•pol•s,
.W.·0474.
Pi ano' s tuned ard ser·
v oced. Call Bob Grul&gt;b, .W.·
4525
Reel Estate General

Real Estate Gener•l

HOBSTffiER REALTY
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker
OFFIC E 7&lt;2 · 2003

NEW LISTING 48
acres
M; L
w1th
m1nerals, and 5 yr old
spllt·level
h o m e·
featuring 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, fam1ly room
w /s tone
f i rep 13ce,
14'X20' hVIMg room, kit
chen has built· m cor·
ning
range,
self
c tean1no oven, dish·
washer and N u tone
food center, dining room
wtth ' sliding doors to
patio Central vacuum
and intercom Large 3
story barn and 3 tractor
equ1pment
shed
$66,000. 00.
CONVENIENT LOCATION - Eight room two
story home situated on
corner lot in Middleport.
Possibl-e owner f.nan
clng to qualified buyer
$35,000.00.
GOOD LOCATION SPACIOUS , and m mint
condition
Three
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
kitchen and family
room
w/flreplace
Reduc ed to $22,500 .00.
Owner will help with
financing.
COUNTRY SECLUSIO·
N - Privacy vet close to
town. Jlf2 acres With
four bedroom, 2 bath
home, full basement, 1
car iJarage. S45,000.00.
Velma Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
,Ch&amp;ryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3111

VIRGILB SR .
216 E . 2nd St.

Phone
H614)·992· 332S
JUST LISTED - Lo ve
ly Country home on
large level lot Has 3
n• ce s1ze bedrooms,
modern bath, modern
kitchen W1th range and
refrigerator
Lots of
c losets and mce ca r pettng Garage fo r 2
ca rs, one w1th storage
$-49,900.
JUST LISTED 3'h
acres, more or less,
good garden, lots of
tre es, 3 bedrooms ,
house be1ng overhauled
Bath, good woodburn er
ch1mney, ga rage and
other bu1ld1ngs Only
$19.500.
BUILDING LOT - Ex·
ceptlonat v•ew from on
top of Pomeroy. Has a II
utilities. and 2 car
QC~rage

POMEROY - One acre
lot with a 2 bedroom
reasonable home Bath,
all utilities, front porch,
and full basement with
garage Only $16,500,
12 ACRES - Southern
School
D1strlct
3
bedrooms, b!th, !II
utilities, storage and on
hard road
I
FOR RENT Fur·
nished 1 bedroom apart·
mentoutof town. S125.00
month.
Deposit
required.

Hnus·nq
Headquarters

Real Estate General

HAVE ON E downsta~rs 2 bedroom apartment
near golf course . Adults only No pets Can e1ther
house res1dent1a I or business off1ces
wood Realty, Inc .
32 Locust St., Gallipoli s
446· 1066
Real Eat1te General

F.

POMEROY,
992-2259

0.

NE W LISTING - 18•t,
Acres of nice la y.ng
wooded ground, w1th an
older hOme A ll uf11it,es,
septi c etc Nea r Meigs
Hogh School. $22.200 00
NEW LI STING - Da1ry
F a rm ,
170
acres ,
se ver al barns. etc , milk
house, 80 head ot ca ttle,
all equipment. Cal• for
more mfo
MOBILE HOME AND
LOT - A n1ce 3 Bd rm
mobil e home with o\Jer ,
11h acre lot , porches,
storage bldg , most fu r
niture Near Mine 1
$17,900 00
POMEROY - On e story
ranch
with
full
basement, WBF P, cen
t ral
a1r,
garage
Reducedto$17,500 DO
ST· ATELY
OLDER
home 1n M•ddteport , thrs
9 room home and up to 5
bdr ms., for m a l d1n1ng.
fa m •fY room, trrepta ces, ·
thr ee r oom garage
apar tment $35,000 00
FIVE
POINTS
Almost new r anch sty le
home
w1th
ful l
ba sement, A C unit,
n•ce k•tchen , 1 acre of
yard . $44,900.00
REDUCED - Beauhful
newer sp ilt entry home,
garage, n1ce lot near
E stern H 1gh School
Must be seen, now only
$S4,000 .00 . F •nanc.ng
available, call today
REALTO.RS
Henry E. Cleland Jr. ,
GRI •
Dott1e Turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell
949·2660
Offtce
992 2259

s ro ~er - A uchoneer

LIF E
IN SURANC E
428 second Av e
Call446·0552 Anytime
BMR 411 - New Listing - 3 bedroom home 3 miles
from c• tv Owner will cons1der f1nanc mg S1 tu ated
on large f l at lot Vmvl S1d1ng &amp; natur al gas hea t
carport w1th stor age ar ea Ca ll for details'
BMR 139 - Two story home on Second Ave , 3 or 4
bedrooms REDUCED to $22,500 Better see th• s
one

BMR 388- OWNER FINANCING! Three BR.Iarge
family room w1th f1replace Natural gas heat avg
b1!1 $32 .00 month la st year Ca ll now•
BMR 400 - BARGAIN - For only $8,500 you can
buy a two BR w/ rural water and bath School
d•strict

NEW LISTING - MUCH MORE THAN
MEETS THE EYE 1n th1S enchant.ng 3
bedroom b• level Lg k1tchen comple te
with
d•snwa s her , range
and
refr 1gerator. 21h baths Fam•IY room
w 1tfl f•
100x300 lot Assumabl e
FHA

LEASE W1th opt •on to buy 3 to6 months
tease Lovely new b• level home with 3
bedrooms 2 baths, large IIVIOQ r oom,
dln1ng room, k1 tinen. full basemen t and
gara9e 1 acre lot and pnced 1n the
SSO's. Call for details
N 912

COUNTRY PLEASURE - 2 bedroom
frame home and 37 + acres. Home all
electric, la rge k• t chen, lots of cabme ts
Add·on room I bath and new basement
La nd has approx 12 acres tillable, re st
1S woods &amp; tobacco base
"914

MIDD LE PORT - Lovely older home
wdh a littl e bit of the pas t, but modern
In every way 2 story stone and full
basement Specllll fea ture is a beautiful
d1n1 ng room w i th Cht1ndcl •er Large l ot
w1th n1 cc garden ilrCA Also 2 c c1r
garaqe
193$

STA

Ml DOLE PORT - R1ght downtown A
1· bedroom apar tment budding wi th a 1
car garage 10 'tower level Convcn•ent
~no a good rental for Add ed •ncomC'
Pnced so low . Ca ll for compiPte detail ~

MUST SELL IMMEDIATELYII 1 A
small down payment and a good credit
rat1ng, we' re In bt:JS1ness 5 room house,
bath, Oil furna ce. illumi num SldinQ,
county water. Cl ose to Rou t e 1
Bloc k lop r oad and good lol $ 18 , 000 . ~ t91

BMR 402F - CHECK ON THIS ONE - 37 ac r es
with 1401 tobacco base, 30x30 barn Call tad a )I,!
BMR 404 - LOW 30's - C•ty scnools, newly car·
peted and pa 1nted . Th1s 3 BR home 1S a great buy on
today's market
BMR 409 - OWNER FINANCI NGI ThiS spht f oyer
home .nc ludes 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den
w1tn fireplace , hea t pump for year round comfort
See th1 s fully carpeted home now!
BMR 391 - REDUCED TO $8.000 1 Owner wants 11
sold now! Mobile home situated on r1ver front lot
BMR 389 - Thi s fine home has 4 bedrooms and •S
located 1n rhe city school system You will have a
large lot with a country atmosphere and have all t ne
ci ty conveniences Call now•

BMR 399 - OWNER FINANCING - Two SfOry
hom e rpresently being used as duplex, could be
eas 1ly converted to si ngle fam ll v C~o:ce 1ocat1on
near wa sh•ngton Sc hool Call for details
BMR :J98 - owner transferred and mu st sell this 3
BR ranch . Close to t own Includes detached 26x26
garage plus18:x36 inground pool
• •
BMR 407· F - Camp·site Potent1al! 32 acres m/1
w •th fronta ge on Raccoon Cr , as well as f r on taqe
on blacktop h1qhwav
8MR •10 - New LISting - A Frame situated in a
beautiful wooded sett•ng, vou w1ll lOve the at
mospner e Owner flnancmg for qualif ied ~uy ers
· ~ow 30's.

&amp; PEACEFUL COUNTRY Th•s nome ca n be bought with 1 1o 6
acres, has 4 BR, 2 baths, family room.
ba-sement, stud y, large covered pat1o, 2
car ga ra ge Lots of beaut•ful shade
trees Owner f1nanc1 ng makes th1s one
even more attract •ve.
N943

l ,h story ,
bedroom, pl enty of
storage, newly remodeled, garage Lots
of trees Po~sib l e specia l financ.ng
II
9
4
8

'

MOBILE HOMES
INFLATION BEATER I For $9,000 you
can own your own home Mobile home
w 1th appro:x . 1h acre . Completely fur
nished. Storage building. UnderA•nned
Rural water City schools
11918
1973 12d0 Penthouse mobile home in
good condition, L iving l"oom, kitchen. 2
bedrooms. 1 bath and util i tv area Some
furniture 1h acr e tot a.nd located on
Blue Lake , Possi bility of land contract.
,
913

COMMERCIAL

LOTS

BUSINE SS OR INVESTMENT? One of
our most mOdern commercia l buildings
1n downtown Galli polis 5400 sQ ft Now
do1ng business Will sell complete w•th
merchandise or e1ther one separate
F lnanc• no 1S a\Ja!lab le with gOOd cre dit
r at1ng
11929
COMMERCIAl LOTS - R10 Grande
Village. 2 level lots Close to Rt. 35,
churches. and Rio Grande College . A ll
utillt•es available Just 11sted. Ca ll

today

f"

HI

9 36

FOR

SALE

1 ACR E LOT - Located on slate h1gh
way, has dri lled well, and 1S ready f or
the home of your choiCe. PriCed at
$3,500
1876
S. 4 ACR ES OR 5 ACRES - Arc you
looking for a tract of tand for the home
of your dreams? S 4 ac r es par t •ally
cleared and partially wooded or 5 ac res
of most ly woods Make your own
choice
N877·11 878

LOTS

FOR

SALE

2 ACRI;S - l de.!ll tor log home F&gt;er·
t 1a11y wooded
Water and electr ic
ava ilab le City school dis tr ic t .
N895
ACREAGE - 3 ac r es total A lovetv
buddmg spot Sits high and over looks
the nverwlthabeau t1fulvlcw
# 934

ToP SBLER, CEiiiURY 21~lf

�'

T1
42

44

Mobile Hom es
for Rent

61067·7811

2 bedroom tra iler close to
school, stores, and pa rk
Deposit required
Mid
dleport. ~2 - 591 4 .
MOBILE home for rent
w1th opt ron to buy. 304 576
2711

- - - ---TWO bedroom, turntshed,
home,large

references

lot,

and

deposit

required
Camp
30H75·32 19.

Con ley,

TWO bedroom, furnished ,
New Haven, 304 882·2466

44

Apartmemt

Apartmeml
for Rent

3 room s &amp; bath, ground
floor, pnvate entrance, k tt ·
c hen
fur n tshed,
a l so
wash er, dryer, &amp; dtsh

washer. 1 or 2 persons
tdeal $150 month, $100
deposit Call 446·0830 F r; &amp;
Sat. 614 ·533 3884 Sunday

- - ---Apartment for r en t Call

446·0390
Furni shed
a pt
$230
utlltfies pd .• 1 bdr , adults,
near HMC Ca ll446·4416 af
fe r 7PM

Furntshed
room $85 ,
ut•llttes pd , stngle male.
range, refrtg share bath .
446 4416 after 7PM.
Furntshed apartment for
rent Ca ll446·3937
Delu xe furn•sned apart
ment. excellent locatton, 1
or 2 adults, only $275, ref &amp;
dep

requtred

Call

-446

0338

3 bedroom unfurn• shed
apartment 992·5434 or 992·

5914 or 304·882 2566
3 rooms and bath furnt shed
upsta •rs apa r tm en t 1n
Pomeroy . 992 5621 after 6
p.m .
2

bedroom unfurnished
part1ally fur nished . Oep. r equired, $165
without uhltftes 992-2288
after 6 p m .
K ttchen

Apartments 675 5548

3 bdr apt. also 2 bdr
tra tler. Call675-4045
3 room furn ished apt 304
675 2482

hght

housekeepmg

St

Park Central Hotel.
"

--~

-"

----

46-- -=._spaCe tOr-fitnt --

Tratler

space

at

pd ,

eerY II le
County water,
la rge lot. Cal l 446 1157 or

367 7218 .
COUNTRY MOBIL E Home
Pa rk , Route 33, North of
~omeroy La rge lots t:a II

excellent

location _ Ca ll 675·5104 or
675 7284

2 bdr completely turn ., ~II
e tec tr•c , car peted, adults.
no pets, 458 2nd. Ave.,
Galltpolis, $225 per mo
plus deposit Call 446·2236
or 446 258 1
Apartments

1

and

2

bedrooms Rent star ts at , 1
bedroom $152 , 2 bedroo m
$188 , deposrt $200 Cal l 446·
2745
Furmshed apartment, up·
statrs, 4 room s and bath
One or two adults, referen
ces and securttY depos1t
r equired Call .446·044.4 af·
ter 5P M

-------

Furn•shed eff• cency $135
mo, 1 person, ut tll t tes
pard Call 446·4416 after
7PM
Furntshed apt, J room s.
electrt ct ty &amp; water patd,
$200 m o Call 446 4416 after
7PM.
Ve ry
ntce
apf ,
un
furntshed, ground rl oor ,
convt ent tn t own, Qutte
neighborh ood, 4 roomr...plu s
bath, all car pe ted,'11as
range and refngerator,
l arge ki t chen, covere d
pati o and yard, tw o ca r
r eserved parktng, $210 mo
Call Earl Tope 446 0690
bus iness hours and 446 0161
tngs &amp; Sundays

APARTMENTS, mobole
ho m es.
hous es ,
Pt
Pleasa nt and Gallipolis
614 446-8221 or 6 f4 ·245 948.4
Eff•ciency rooms by t he
w ee k on Mam Stree t ,
Mason, WV 773 5651

51

Household Goods

LAY NE'S FURNITURE

Sofa, chatr,

rocker, at

taman , J tables,

ssoo

Sof a,

cha• r a nd loveseat, $275,

Sofa s and chatrs pnced
from 1285 to $795 . Tabl es,
$38 a nd up to $109 Htde·a ·
beds,$340 , queen stze, S380
Reclrners, $175 lo $295 .•
La mps from $18 to $65 5
pc dtfettes from $79 , to
$385. 7 pc .. 1189. and up
Wood tabl e wtth 4 chatrs,
$219 up to $495 Desk $110
Hutc hes. 1300. and $375 .
map le

or

pme

or

Sea r s E lec trote Sensor
dryer , S60 Ca ll446 4048
Pa•r of velvet clu b cha •rs,
blue a nd gr een st npe,
newly unhol st ered, ex
cellent condttton $350 pat r ,
675 6692 day s, 675·2128 afte r
5PM

v111~~
HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.

20% DOWN, 10%

INTEREST, 3 BR, BATH, LR, FAMILY RM . WITH
CHIMNEY FOR WOODBURNER, KITCHEN, LAUN ·
DRY, LARGE BACK PORCH, NATURAL GAS HEAT
&amp; A LARGE FLAT LOT LOCATED ON BULAVILLE
RD.

RODNEY CORA ROAD - 1\pprox: 24
acres woodland, located 3 mi f r om
Rodney , county water availabl e.
$.12,000.

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN·
CHER plus 78 ACRES of la nd tn
Cheshtre Township offer s lots of good
ltvtng for yourgrowmg f amtiY . Home 1S
1ust hke new with 1438 SQ tt of living
area plus an attached garage 2
spac rous BR ' s, 2 ba ths, 8x27 LR. IO x24
k tfchen with refng , dlsp , OW , double
oven &amp; range, wa sher &amp; d rye r stays in
laundry . Land' ts mostl y rolling pasture
land wtth approx 25 ac r es wooded Call
for appo int m ent
MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5
yr old split·level features 4 or 5 BRs, 3
baths, 30 It LR , 2 family rm s, 2 wood·
burntng ftreplaces, large k itChen and
dining area, 2 ca r garage, one of th e
county ' s nicest pools (20x50) and a truly
professtonalla ndscaped lot Loca ted on
Debby Dnve Owner says sell . so call
Rannv Blac~burn for a personal
showing l'ou' lf be pleased you d id

OHIO RIVER VIEW - Approx 8 acres
wooded land, nice butlding SJ te, county
water. located on Route 7 approx 5 m1
south of town 56.500.

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588
~ Remodeled home includes 6 rm s.,
and bath, carport, stove. refng ,
dtshwasher , a:lmost 2 acres of land and
priced for qui Ck sale

OWN YOUR OWN ~~MP5 ,1JE - tn the
'Wildei--ness of tht! 'Wavne Nattonal
Forest S or 9 acre t rac ts of wood land
now available, ~djolning thousands of
acres of government land Pu blic hun
tlng fishing and camptng perm •tted.
• Prl~es · start tat $3500 with fin anctng
available

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef, nay &amp;
grain farm 80 acr es, m/1, approx 35 A
gOOd cropl and, 10 A. woods. balance
pasture, good fences, 9 rm ./bath, home
was bu;rt In 1872 &amp; has bee n partially
remodele d. 50x50 cattle barn with concrete floor, Iaroe silo with auto.
unloader, several sheds, large pond,
springs, standing crops go to new

GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm h as Iron·
t8ge on State Route 588 , Fairf ield Ct&gt;,n ·
tenary Road &amp; Vanco Fatrfteld Rd EXcellent for farmtng or development .
Older S rm. &amp; bath f arm hom e, barn &amp;
silo included Owners will consider
selling s maller tracts of s hort term
financmg Call for more Information
j

R~staurant
equipment ·
recondit ioned by RADCO .~ •.
Ca lf 304·523·1378
Hgtn., , ,
WVA

CustDf!' kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
8 20·tfc

I King wood and coal bur
ner . 1 stero JVC turr1table
w tth 1120 Luxman rec1ever
and 2 Bose speakers. Call

Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Avatlable
Or YOU PICk UD

Utility tra iler 8'xS', 1 year
old Ask;ng $575 00. Call
446 9627 .
For sale freezer beef. Call
'

Also Wood Splitter
For Rl!nt

446 4053

SETTING
Untque thr¥ or four
bedroom.brtck home 1n
m•nt condtflon La rge
ll vt ng room and family
room ,
both
Wtth
baths F rant porch and
back pat10 K•tchen 1S
eq u• pped with built in
stove,
r efrt ge rator,
fr eezer, dtshwasher and
food ce nter
Master
bedroom has a pnvate
dress mg room wt th
slt dt ng doors leadtn g to
patto
a nd
p oo l
Bea uttf uiiY decorated.
Ca ll today f or mor e
detail s
II 521

GOODTASTEA NDGOODBUY
Crouse-Beck Ar ea
Beau t tfu l 3 To 4 bedrooms, rwo and one halt baths, 2
car garage, ex tra larqe kttchen lead mg to a sun
deck, fam•IY room wt th ftr epl ace, exira l ot, plus
more Superb cond1t1on and tn c•t v schoo ls Ltsted tn
the m td sevent1es
;, 514
LIKE NEW BRICK HOME - KINEON OR.
PRIC ED RED UCED - OWNER WILL HEL P
FINAN CE 6 r oom, 3 bed room , ga rag e, tmm edtate
possess •o n, natu ra l gas fu rn ace, _~:e ntral ai r All
closets are ceda r It ned Tttts 1S one well built bnck
t1ome. You can see tile qual tty 1n tt1 1S ttom e Ca ll for
an appotn l ment
N51S
IN CROWN CITY
Ntce 4 room fr ame houscw• th a ba th Eat m kitchen
with metal cabine ts and double smk Fuel otl
hea ttng stove Locate d on ntce city lot nea r church
and grocery Prt ced to sc 111 !
!IS11

owner.

OWNER WILl. FINANCE - Grea t
family home w1th 3 Brs , 2 baths, 15x27
LR with gas fl r eplace, large modern
kttchen wtth r ange, self-clea ning oven,
OW and d1sp , laundry w ith washer an
dryer, part basement and over 6 acres
of land at th e edge of town . Call Rannv
Blackburn, 446 0008

J9 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tt llable pastureland, some t tmber , pl enty of spnng
water, 1/:z m ile frontage on Prospec t Church Road
N497
Phone f or det atls
WHAT A BEA UTIFUL BRICK HOME
Loca ted tn c• ty of Ga llt polt s, cl ose to super markets
and busmess sect ton . 10 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
modern k •tchen w 1th lots of cabmets, dishwasher,
garbage d•sposal, elec tn c ta bl e t op ra nge Forml!l l
dtntng room, fam tl y, recreatt on room . Just lots of
room . Centr al atr, natura l gas F A furnace, central
P A system, fi re pl ace •. planter 1n home Young ap·
pie and peach t rees. flowers and sh rub s and a lal
m ore. MU ST SEE THI S CITY HOME .
'
H391
Remode l ed
locate d on
pond , barn,
thts for th e
detatl s

C·O· U· N· T· R· Y
4 5 bedroom home wtth t• r epl ace
53 acres ol tt l lable and pasture land,
largf' metal butld•ng, toba cco base All
low. low pncc of $42,900 Call for m ore
11 479

6 ACRES, 7 ROOM HOME - BARN
3 or 4 bedr ooms, tobacco base, elec t r ic rang e, built•n wood bu rner, fu el oil F A furnace , lot s of fruit
trees, grape harbor, strawberry patch, 3 acres
ttl\ able, assumable loan Phone for more detail s.
1503
. J BEDROOMS - 3ACR ES M. OR L.
Mobtle hom e 14'x70' 1976 Fr eedom , 1111 baths, un·
derptnn tn g, lots of bu•lt m cab•ne ts, range,
r efrigerator , dt nette se t A tr cond•tt oner and other·
furnttu re Ru r al water, ntce land for gard" n A ll this
tor on ly S22.500
K 42S
DRIVE A LITTE , SAVE A LOl
3 BR , full basemen I, wh 1te alumi num S1d1 ng, fu el ot l
F A turna ce, 30'x40' barn,s hingled roof, lots of
young peac h and apple trees. All tht S r educed to on·
ly $14 ,900
H452
CHARMINGTRI·LEVEL
1800 SQ. FT . PLUS REOUCED
Large ln11ng room with fireplace, d ining room wtth
sltdi ng doors to concrete patiO, modern ea t in k•t·
chen, large recrea ti on room on first level Uttllty
room, 3 _bedrooms with plenty of closet space. 2'12
ba ths, a•r condtttoned, storm doors and windows. 2
car finished garage, level lot 100'X300', lots more.
Ca ll for rnfo
N465
KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT
Modern 3 BR ranch home approx . 4'h yrs , old. Ther
mopane wmdows. storm door s, FA furnace, with
central at r , kt tchen has butlt '" cabinets, stainless
steel db I stnk and dtmng area. Full basement w•th
pat to doors
Rur al water system , garage
Call now.
#379
BUY THIS,HOME
FROM OWNER WITH $2, 500 DOWN
And low Inter est rate on bal ance with owner, 2
bedroom cottage wi thin 5 minutes of Silver Bridge
Shopprng Plaza
N 260
ZONE BUSINESS GALLI POLIS
Can be a Beauttful Home or Home and/or
Bustness Off.ces, Apartments. Lots of uses Lots
of off street parktng 12 rooms plus .c ' roomsin
base~en t . Nat gas FA furna ce, centra) atr Close
to bus mess s.ecton 3 ca r garge Must see this one
t
s
2
2

TRENDUNG
SERVICE·
Wa ter-sewer·E lectric
Gas L1ne-o 1rcttes
Water Line Hook-ups
SepticT'Bnks
County Cert1hed
Roush Lane
Cheshtre. Oh.
Ph . 367-7560

1
Sat .. FeD. 27
Reg. no Now $17.50
Reg. $25 Now $22.50
Reg. $30 Now S27.SO
$35 wave Length
For Longer Hair
NowS2UO
Kay's Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd

David Price .
(614) 992-3516
1-13 1 mo pd

PUUINS
EXCAVATING

B J Ha•rston, AUCH: . «•·4:140 EYe
Clyde Walker , Assoc . 245·52,.

MNhiiPDrt
Call 992-2726
2- 1· 1 rna

BEVERLY WICKLINE
NOW~T

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks
Lo-Boy
e Trencher
e Water • Sewer
eGas L1nes
,septic
Systems
louge or Small Jobs
PH . 992· 2478
1·21 1 mo pd

B-A BEAUTY
IN RACINE

CALL 949·2320

I'

111 ACRES - Slep rn &amp; start to work .
OWNERS ANX-IOUS FO.R OFFER
G0 0 0
F 1 NAN c 1 N G
T e R: M s Approx. 40 ac crop balance in pasture
AVAILABLE You can have tm· &amp; woods 2 lar ge barns, well fenced,
•
th
e 3 2400 lb to bacco base, 4' s · coa4't•rn
medtate pos~eSSIOO 0 1
IS OIC
reported (Includes all mmerals)
bedroom home located near Green
Grade Sdtool Has sunken family r oom, ~~~~~~~d 3 bedroom home Call for
ea t-in kttchen. uti I rm, 11 M g~:; he n• &amp;
part fenced yard . Pnced •r. low 40's
9'•% ASSUMPITON - One of the pre!
WOODED ACRES- ATTRACTIVE tt est &amp; pnvate loca1•ons 10 the area
2 STORV HOME Remodeled 4 Located •n Nor thup thts charming
bedroom home off Lower Rt 7 Tht S home has vm.,.-1 Stdtng, fireplace, full
spac 1ous home has famt iY room , 2 basement, new carpet, detached 2 car
woodburners, fireplace, 2 baths, garage plus 2 acres wtth lots of trees.
remodeled kttchen, 2 ca r garage $43,500
Several trutt trees &amp; ntce large lawn
•
'
$61,900.
3.81 ACRES NEW LISTING - .
M oderntzed Old ttme 2 story home
11% tASSUMPTION - FHA - OWners loca ted .4 mtles from town tn Green
must sell thiS 5 vr. old brick ranch on School D• st House has 3 bedrooms
Rt 160. 4 bedrooms, 1112 bath, deluxe f•reptace. dtning room , glass enclosed
kitchen, formal dtntng, full basement, porct• &amp; batt• Very scentc locl! tion with
large family &amp; rec room, 21h car lots of shade trees 1 mtle ott Rt 7 Low
garage &amp; 1 acre yard. Must see to 40's
belteve tt's only $62,000 N~d Olle r
SS, SOO DOWN - 10% INTER EST - ·
MAKE US AN OFFER- REDUCED 27 000
You can't beat frgures r;ke
TO $49,900 - Nice well kept 2 story th esewhenyouarebuytngahome. This
home on Rt 588 between Gal hpolts &amp; could be an excellent starter home or
Rodney , Has 3 bedrooms, 1112 bath, rental located in RIO Grande.
famtiV room, equipped kitchen, d lnmg, ~~~g~ remodeled home m Qood
basement, deck &amp; 1 l ac flat yard
Owners transf erred, anxious to sell 513 2ND AVE . - Very attract 1ve and
fa st.
~pactous 2112 sto~v 4 or s bedroom home
10 town Has 2 ftreplaces famtly room
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - CN/ne rs den, forma t d•n•ng, ··~~ batt1s full
moved to another state, must sell fast . basement, nat gas. cen t. atr , etc 'Ex·
Attract•ve tudor ranch located 1n Rod- cellent consfructton and care Cold
ney 1n a very good netghborhood 3 eas tiV be adap table to profess io.na t of·
bedroom 'l bath - family room , wood f tces Call f or •nform at1on.
burner, large l~ster suite, garage p i!:~ NEW HOME AND 2.5 ACRES ac. yard Low SO s
Modern cedar home wtth 3 bedrooms,
loft, woodburner and nt ce k•tchen.
PRICE REDUCTION - was $52,000, Rural water Located off Rl. 554
Now $38,500 9 rooms, 2 story on 1.7 ac. S32•600
on teh bank Of 1 the Ohio Rtver . At CITY SCHOOLS - RT . 211 - Modern J
tract•ve older home. Owner must sell bedroom ranch s1 tuated on ' over
13
now to settle estate. Would consider ,acres Has large ltv.ng room, kitc ~• en,
helping w / flnan clng.
bath, basement, woodburning furn ace
carport &amp; mobile home hookup. pn ced
101 ACRES - Owner will finance at at $32,000. Assumable 11% mgt.
very reasonable rates to qualifted
buyer. Excellent land for hunting, hor· WHAT YOU WANT, AND WHAT YOU
ses or a few cattle. Mostly woodland. CAN AFFORD - are 2 different th 1ngs
Also older 2 story home in livable con- UNTIL NOW 1 The house and locat 1 o~
dltion . 40's
are Ideal. Owners hate to sel l but have
to Need the money to buy home out of
OWNER WILL FINANCE - With less state. Wil l sell at a very r easonable
then 20% down payment and 11% .n- 1, pr ice (assume low interest mtg )
terest 168 acre farm off Rt. 55-4 Ap House In move-in condtttOn and has
•
prox. 20·25 ac. crop balance in pasture evervthing that r ea lly matters 3
and woods Lots of pine (red &amp; white), bedrooms, 2 baths, ~fam i ly room
"barn. P!US modernized 3 bedroom firepla ce, 2 ca r garage, patto, over
Mme. 60 •
•
sq. ft . Much more Only $61.000.
4
512 4TH AVE . - •1:1 block from Washint
ONE OF THE FINEST - Absolutely ton Ele m Newly redone throughout 3
.;
one of the best homes In the ,area. bedrooms 1 equtpped kitchen, fireplace.
~
Superb loeatlon, o;&lt;lge of town on 2 12 ac . ~at . gas treat, garage Lot goes to foot·
~
grounds. 2 story . ~ bedr«?om home has ball field. A 1 storY ttome p · d 1
lovely cherry trtm, 2 f•replaces. fur 40's
· r,1ce
n
• nished basement, glass enc , porch, 2
full and 2 half baths, den, family room, 22 VINTON AVE . - It' s hard to Hnd
2 car garage and workshop. Has had home In town in as gOOd condition ~
,_nly o!'e owner. would consider some th1s 3 bedroom home Equipped . k it·
ftnancmg .
chen, dtntnQ room, gas heat. J a.r t:ond
~
patio plus 2 lots Can buy with one lot af
.I
DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME IN S39 900 Won'/ lost long so call today •
i
TOWN? - Then this """ is perfect
'
·'
·
1
cozy and modern 2 bedroom, 1 floor WASHINGTON ELEM. - Cozy . 2 ' J
plan Hs brand new kitchen, dining bedroom home located in c ;ty school
'

II

1\iJI

118

I
JI
I

I
I
I
I
I

WELDING SHOP
: REPAIR WORK
eGas &amp; Electric
tCulling
• Brazing
•20 Yrs. Exp.
,Reasonable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport, Ohio
' PH. 992- 5663

1

I

I

I
21I

1
1
J
1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
1I

1
1
1

I
I
1

I
I
II

.:
1100 1 t
I
I
I
.,
1
I '

1I
I
I

II

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I

------------- ----and nice flat ya r,d Make us an offer,

30's.

~.

I

r

!

kitchen, ,,., ac yard 9'12'!~ a ..umptlon.
20'•·
I

.

IMJGGS
:SALES &amp; SERVICE
• u.s. Rt. so East
· ' Guysvltte, Olllo ·
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
"', Farm Equipment
Deater

Sues start from J0)C24"

Utitity Buildings
S1zes from 4 To" and all
wood bU1Id1ngs 24)CJ6.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For aH your wtnng
needs; furnaces repair

Call 742-3195

PARTS AND SE:RVICE
ALL. MAt~: ES

And Home Ma1ntenance
1 Roofing of all types
eS•ding
• Remodeling
1 Free est1mates
120 Yrs upenence

Yesterday 5

I

-·.•

TOM HOSKINS
Ph 949-2160 or949 -2482

• Oilhwuhers
IHOIWelerT ' n.. ,

J.5 tfc

9.S it c

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSEll
SIDING CO.
"8eau1itul, Custom
Butlt Garages"
call for free s1d1ng
estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calfs

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes ' - extensive
remodel·
ing .
• Electncal work
• Roofing work
14 Years Expenence

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

SERVICE
NOW
OPEN

- Addonl end remodel lnt

Wild Color TV Sets for
Safe.
; SIILE PHONE NO.

992-6259
• · 276Sycamore St.
: Ml-dleport, Ohio
•'
9-21 tfc

- Rootlnt.and gutte .. wo,. ..
- COftcrete work
- P(umblnl and

elec:lrlut war..
(Free Estimates)
V . C. YOUNG Ill ,
992-621! or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-tfc

'-M.~n

.

CUSTOM
WELD_ING
30 Year s E)( penence

54

(Anl-.-yl

-

-

-------

Mtsc Merchandice

-----~-

20 f1 telephone poles for
sale 304 675 6918
W•ll babvstf •n my home
1980 Harley Da vt dson SL T
1977 Ford D•vtng outftt,
304 675·5870.

ss

Butldtng Supplies

Buildi ng materiels block,
brtck, sewer ptpes, wm·
dows, li ntels , etc . Claude
Wmters, Rio Grande, 0
Call245 5121

56·-

- Pei's for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220
D RAGONW YND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow
pupptes,
CFA
Him alayan . Per sia n and
Stamese ktttens. Ca ll 446 ·
3844 afte r 4 p.m
HILLCR EST KENNEL
Boa rdtng all breeds, clean
tndoor outdoor fac•llfJes
Dober
Also AKC Reg
m ans Ca ll 446 7795 .

71

Auto for Sale

Gospel Group wants to sell
traveling bus, 36 ft . GM
Coac h, sleeps 6 Ca ll 379
2261,$2,000.
For sale 1971 Ford stl!fJon
wagon, V -8, auto t ra ns
Driveable, $175 00 Call256
1919

1974 Dodge Dart. P.S ,
P.B , air, new ra dials Exc
con&lt;). $1,000 Larry Hill .
Pvrtla nd , 8A3·21 71
HART S Used Cars, New
Haven West V1rg1nta . Over
20 less expenstve cars in
stock .
1978 Chevette, automatic,

41.000 miles, will accept
older car as lrade 10 . See at
2316 •1:1 Mt Vernon Avenue,
PI PI
197 1 PINTO 2000 CC ,
automobH e, 304-458 1679
1975' Mustang II 4 cyl.,
ask;ng S2 ,000 Call 304·675·
5124 afte r 5: 00
72

BR IA RPATCH KENNELS
Boardtng and groomtng
AKc
Gordon
setters,
l=ng llsh Cocker Spanie ls
c'o 388 9790

For sale or t rade Purple
nbbon regt ster ed red bone
coonhound pups
Thr ee
mon1h old and wormed
992 7577

'72 Ford 'h Ton Ptckup, v
8, auto , TS, PB, good con·
dition 446 064fl after 5

1979 Oodge 1/2 ton, 6 c yl , 3
spd, exc cond Call 388·
8769

J. R. PARSONS

Reb01 It Mavtag automaTtc
washer . $85 742· 2352 .

WOO 0 304 458 1833

USED gas cook stove, 30•·
615· 1090

CALL:

POMEROY ,
LANDMARK
614· 992· 2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
vas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

1968 FORD pickup, runs
good, needs clu tch, 675
7617

AKC Registe red Golden
Retnever pupptes Shots
and wormed Pri ced to sell
614 742 2957 .

1978 CJ5 Jeep Very good
cond Wtll consider small
ca r on trade-tn. For more
.nformatton ca ll992-6512.

FARM
JIVIDEN' S
EQUIPMENT
446· 1675
Spec1al Sa le on NEW
TRACTOR!
Pnce
HP
Mode l
26(}24
$4924 00
26(}24
5295 00
26(}24 4924.00
24 5295.00
26(}31Q28 ' 31D28
JIQ-4x4-28

5594.00
5983 .00
7072 00

360360-

6555 .00
6945 00

35
35

46041 946041 946041 9460-4x4-41. 9-

7353 00
7995 00
6857 00
9619.00

;Jo-

48 s51Q-4x4-48 .s51Q48 .5--

7778 00
9886.00
8450 00

61Q-

~314

64

61Q-4x~4

73

Vans&amp;4W. D.

14

CAll TODAY!

1?72 Ford F 250 4 Wheel
Drive. 985-4339
1979 FOUR Wheel dnve,
Chevy, lf" ton, .c speed,
$4.500. 304-675·1578. After
3 30675· 1320
78 Jeep CJ·S, 6 cyl, 3 s pd ,
$4,000 30A·77J.5684
1979 Jeep Wa goner quadra
tra ck , AC , PS , PB , rear
defros t, cruise, tflt wheel.
aluminum wheels , luggage
ra ck, AM·FM stero, 2,.,000
miles, wdl tl!ke older 4
wheel drtve automatic on
trade . Caii30H75·4327 .
74

Matorc cles

For sale Honda XR -80, 1980
model good cond . Call 245·
9277 after A. 30.
75

Boats and
Motors tor Sale

u

ft John boat, 7 1/2 HP ,
outboard motor. Call 338
8801.

JACK S REFRI GE RATIO
N. atr condition servic e,
com mer c1al. tndustnal
Phone 882·2079
85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SE RVICE Cal l 367·7471 or
367·0591
87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ave , Gl!lhpolis
446 7833 or 446 1833.
MOWREYS Uph olst er y Rf
1 Bo)( 124, Pt Pl easant, 304
675 4154

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Part of chair

8 Brllllh
ltreetCirl
11 Plan of
IC!Ion
t8Rowt
Ul Morocco'•
capilli
20 Alevlata

21 Apprehend
23 Animation
24 SmaM

change In
260the&lt;wiM
27 Thallium

l!&amp;Htckltl

30 Clue

31 Eulem
European
32 Pub offering

33 Exctlmltlon
3410111ndiC
writing
35 Shorpen
:MliAikocl
through
:18 TriJ)ptd
40 Stalemate
4tTimogono

by ,
42Sp.,.
43 Short oloop

45 Will&lt; on
oymbol
47 ()aaplo&lt;
br..th
48 Ropoot
48 80111
alpper's
neocl

51 Port52 Lotln
con;unctlon
53 COYer
54 Flllll

55 Domoflolt
57 yVIIght ot

00
- 11,304 00
Plus Freight

Indio

SliP-

Cher okee 2 horse trailer,
9ood tires. perfect shape,
$1,100 See Gary Johnson 3
mi. out Bula\/tlle Rd.

STUCCO PLASTERING
teJCtured ceil ings com mercial and restdential ,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182

Home
Improvements

eo TrfOI

et~

-

82Fothtn
84 Delhi COinl
Abbr
85 Article

88 COIIogll gp
87 Brtltle
eGNarrow
bOII'dl
71 Poueu
73 Aemunera~
lion
74 Soucy

78 Saga
78Sm ..test
number

81 ~hrough
82 Away
U Burdened

85 Ntgtlocl
87 Set of card•
to Uanufactur·
lng plont
82 Time pet'lod
D3Micow
95 U&lt;gt
onward

97 Portlfnlng
to tne dawn
88 Exist
H Current, for

ohOI'!
tOt Sting
t03Compau
pt.
104 Flock
105 Awaltl
Httltmenl
108 Soft food
flO Peroplrocl
112 Burgundy
ondciWol
fl3 Footllkt
port

$}00

MOTORS............ ~~~.~~.~~~= .. .

*2.00 Each

Also Buyers of Radiators and Copper
"Wt Atso Sell Uscrd Auto Ptrts"
Located on Rocksprings Rd.
'POMEROY, OHIO
west of
PH.

1980 Chevette 4 SPd .• AM
radio, 8.600 miles. U.OOO.
Phone 446·4818.

&amp;BOX
SPRINGS

AT
CORBIN &amp;
SNYDER FURN.
S..llt.
-46Wl

1972 VW runs good, $950.
Call388·8769.

st~mp removal. 075 1331.

1978 Z-28 350, • barreu, 4
t lop, fflf Wheel,
PS, PB, AC, AM· FM I ·
track, $4,700. 367·0262.

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic Test hOles.
Pumps Sales and Service
30-4-195-3802.

spd ,, With

F

a.

2 t Encouraged

tat Rodent•
132 Algonquian
Indian
133 Summer: Fr
1~ Lampnry

22 IIIUI from I

138 Prevll'lcat ~
OCI
137 Medicine

carrlagct

t17Donudt
fi800Mnt
118 Fount-'n
order
120 Ptld nolleo
121M-..,.

DcJmlng
123Trlrlagrtll
t24 Shut up

K Tree Trimming,

,.

lhadowr ••

hub
23 Blue oorge
ault problem
25 Talk, mod

alyle
27 Pl1yhouse
28CIImblng
dovlcn

portion
133 Motel
139K's follOW·

30 Vut throng
31 Ornamental
stamp

Ill

t40 unemployed
141 Orilllk letter
142 Aooomplloh·

33 Regions
35Workman
ae eo on

mont

usher' s job
37 Pub game

Wl-

39 Limb
41 Couple
42 For lur thai
44 City on the

143 PWsot

144 Pltll

t4e Goeoby
Wlll!lf

148 Rea, blue

and

Seine
47 Scheme

150 LOIIIl·
loQgod bl&lt;d

48 L•rned
•8 Judgment
150 UniWKM

1St lmllatn

54 Jumped

149 Frocks

DOWN

1 Long 11ep
21Aichel·
angelo
....I«J))tce
3 Smotler

4SkiH
5Roctpe
abbr.

e ThrHtOid
7 Float

8PTAmem·

Call 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estlmates,sBill Thomas.

Call388·8769.

1975 Super Beelto sunrOOf,

50,000 miles, good cond.

129 Shouted

deity
115 Brftlttl baby

PAINTING
interior and
exte r io r , plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling
20 yrs exp. Call388 9652.

RON'S Television Service
Specralizlng In Zenlftl and
Motorola, Quatar, and
house calfs. Phone 576·2398
or 446-2454.

18 Hall!
17 " - and my

8 Man '~ nick·

For sale ear corn Call 61,.·
384·4514

1979 Chevy Monza V·6,
auto, PS, new radial tires,
37,000 miles, ex. cond. call
446· 1569.

125Expen•
12e Sea eoare
127 Oocoyed

tt4 Bllbylonfon

Hay &amp; Grain

Auto for Sole

Nu· Prlme replacement
windows
Storm windows&amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmtt Pallo Covers
Howmet screen roam•
Mobilt home ownlngs
Aluminum utility
DcJIIdlnes
691 Miller Drive
44t·l642
Free Estimates

SEWING Machtne r epairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; Serv tcel Sharpen
Sc•ssors
Fabrtc Shop,
Pomeroy 992·2274 .

46 Tantlh.lm

11

11

r

Electrical
•&amp; Refrigeration

Oslo

Sale Date Marc h 13, 1982
CALLNOWI

'4

3S Court 51.
Galnrons. Ohto
Cal 446·3896
or 446· 3080

Bill's

===:o========

oymbol
Farm Equlpmen1

r:

LOCKSMITH
Se rvr ce . j:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
Residential , automotive
Emergency service Call
PARTS
882·2079.
Sbrters $15, Alternolon $15,
0111. C.ps lrtl · eltt.l
Wandhng Electncal Ser·
$2 110-$5 00, 811h Shoes $6.00,
fin Belts Sl 00, W1ter Pumps
vice Old work and new
work, small appltances, 24
$10.00, fuel Pumps SIO.OO, Ttm·
hr. serv tc e Ph l0,.·675·
tnr Ch11m $10.00 Just 1 few
ADVANCED
P~rts we hnt
6663
CLEANING SE~VICE
PORl!R,
446·391 s
=
367-0236 Ot
No Answer 446·2062
82
Plumbtng
Modern steam tleanlng
&amp; Heating
for carpet &amp; upholstery
CARTER ' S P LU MBING
(Insurance work) .
AND HEATING
Frank
Rose
Const.
Co.
eScotchguard·JM
Cor Fourth and Pine
eWalls, floors,
Remodeling repair, new
windows
Phone 446·3888 or 446 4417
construct•on, all tv pes.
Water &amp;
1
Free es1imates, all
work fully guaranteed,
smoke damage
Residential.
com ·
Industria l
Gallipolis Diversif ied Con·
mercia!, Industrial and
Commercial
st Co Cus1om dozer &amp;
mln 1ng, el ectnc work
Residential
backhoe work . Spec tal
MSHA cert.
Dependable, 8 years axfarm rates ~
Call
us for free IL.---.;.;,;..;;;.;;..
446·4627 ___-11 llrlil,;,r;;leliniiceil.ilwii.ielldllo.lt;;a;,;re;,;l_,}
es11mates
,.440

btck

------~---

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

RINGLES'SSERVICE ex
penenced mason, r ooter,
carpenter , electrictan,
general repatr s and
remodeling Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675·•560

1976 Chevrolet 1/2 ton, 6
cy l , standard. body needs
reparr, $800 firm. Call 446·
8155

1978
Chevy
Blazer
!C he yenne) V-8, 4·WO, new
t.res, r egular gas, edras
Call 446-1882 after 6PM

--· ~

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

Truck's for Sal,

1 pedtgree male Spitz wtth
papers 3 years old $75 1
ped•g r ee female Cartn
Terne r 9 months old w•th
papers S7S 8 week old male
Sprtz puppy $50 Whrte. 992
3551 or992·5469 .

61

$}25

APPLIANCES .......~.~~ .~.l!l! .~~~·..••
UNCLEAN
$}50
IAnERIES

I I I I I I)"

1----------~P""'----------1

small Pipelines A
Spectalty
North of R ac1ne
On Carmel Road
at Sawmill

:JUNK CARS.........~~~·1·~·~.~~: ..
· BUYERS OF

gested by the above cartoon

RUSS AND
ELLI OTT
Lennox Heating &amp; ' Air
Conditioning. All Typn
Insulation . E l ectr.cal
Wiring .
Call 446·8S15 or 446·0445
afler 4:30p.m .

'i:-_f;. IMPROVEMENTS

PRICED RIGHT

$

Pomeroy Scrap Iron Metals

'BUYERSOF

cirCled lefters to
torm the surprise 1nswer, 1s 1ug·

Now arrange the

Jumbles CHAFE DITTY FAUCET SHEKEL
Answer Here's a bll of Old English for you-"THEE"

IWUhen
1 on·en
, I R~ftQtl
I Dllpcil.I IS

farm Equipment
~ Parts &amp; Service

~ TV

:SPEECHES." .

Prmtanswerhere · "(

3 11 tfc

I·

I
I
I
I

-MAKIN&amp; ' ~ON6

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47ft Working Height
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Thtrd Aw e
614·446· 2116

Home
Improvements

IT 'S A II:EI"

1

1 24 1 mo

APPUANCE SER\IICEi
- Chester, Ohio

1·3·1

-

81

70 3 /-4 to n Chevrolet
Pickup, new bed, new muf·
flers Call388·9353

; PH. 985-4269 or· .
985-4382

~ •

N

S&amp;WTV
•
and

,,

M&amp; T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING INC.
Btckhot tnd dozer
work by the lob or by
1111 hour. Also tlconstd
septic ttnks )nsttlled.
Dump truck . Free
estimates. Call )IH62l
or 446·94$9.

I-·-I--I .. [)
---

CAD. · CH c: V ·•
•
Ph 992·6614
308 E M;un
Pomeroy,

Plumbtng, Carpentry,
Roaftng,
Electrtcal,
C1sterns, cement, Stone
Walls, Ch1mney Repair
All Home Repcurs
Trailer Roots and
Underptnnmg
PH. 992·J812
2·3 1 mo pd

· Aft makes and models
An'tenna Installation
House calls and shop
Service available.
mo.

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1Nc

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~NO REPAIRS
20 Years EJCpenence

HOME &amp; 6 ACRES - Located off Rt.
325 north of Rto Grande. 2 bedroom
home 10 need of some minor repairS.
Outet. scentc r~Jral setting Has wood
burner, full baement and rural water.
$28,600 Owner will help fmance .

I
I
'II

Modern Electncat
Equtpment
SIMMON'S OLDS .·

ATOZ
HOME MAINTENANCE

II
811&gt;% INTEREST RATE - Best nome
for the pn ce on th e market . 2 yr. old 3
bedroom brt ck &amp; fram e w/patio doors,
sundeck &amp; garage Prrced $37,500 &amp;
monthly payment $265 .00 for 3 years
Owner •s 10 a pani c to sell this home
Make us an otter •f you have cash Rt
160

KORJE ~

I

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service
and
installation.
Residential
8t Commercial

Weds., lllurs. &amp; S.Ot.
HAIRSffiiNG
loth Men &amp; Women

- 10' :~% ASSUMPTION LOW 30s - NEW LISTING - Olqer
- 4 yr old Colontal b i level close to remodeled 2 story home located 700' off
town 3 bedrooms, 1 full &amp; 2 half baths Rt 7 Southof town tn sem t prtvate
(could easily be 2112 baths ). de luxe ktt• locatiOn 3 bedrooms, f• replace, wood·
chen w / mtcrowave, huge L shaped burner, 2 ca r ga ra ge and more. 'h ac .
fam dy room, elec tnc F .A hea t bu1 has yard
woodburner ducted mto all room s &amp; 1•12
car garage 50s

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,...,.

6 1

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FRONT- END
ALIGNMENT
With Genutne GM
Parts!
aL
.,.
I,.; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Rt.l, Box 54
Racme, Oh.
Ph. 614-i4J· 2S9t

AIINOUIICI

•
•
•
•

PHONE 446-3643
COUNTRY LIVING
AT IT S BEST
84 Acr es More or Less
( Free Na t Gas)
Step 10to one at the
cleanest f arms 1n an
1dea t locJ.ton
Thre e
good s1zed bedrooms,
large l tvt ng room, sun
ny ea t m k1fchen and
bath
Tobacco base,
gas lease and tree gas
all go w tth 1t Large
ba rn. cellar house and
chtcken house Ca ll to
day lor m any mort! ex
tras
# 483

REESE~ :

SeeMr Goodwrertc:h For A

The Sund

Services Offered

byHennAn-lotdandBoblM

Unser am~ these tour JumDies,
one letter to each square, to form

1

-

Ill@ wisl!mtn, Broker, 446 37" Eve
J•m cocttr•n. Associate 446· 18&amp;1 Eve

~THAT SCIIAMBLEO WORO GAME

F§~~~~171~~===~11THERTE
Fl REWooo
PERM SALE
. ALL sTEEL
.
J _
.
Monih~uoD.
BUILDINGS

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

ATTRACTIV E ALL BRICK HOME!!
En tov the beauttful OhiO Rtver from tht s spactous.
cheerful house, 3 bedr{loms, 1112 bath s, large I1V1nQ
room , eat 1n ktlchen , 2 firep laces, full basement, 2
porches, plu s many ext,. as Phone today for deta.ls.
H
505

NEAR EWING TON - 141 a cres leve l &amp;
rolling land; lots of f rontage on Rac coon
creek, so me mature timber reperted ,
6,000 young black walnu t trees approx.
6 yrs.old . Asktng $63,000 par ti al llnan·
clng available

CONSTRUCTION

~------------i·--~· -·

WISEMAN

BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx 5117 acr es located an the
FARMER ' S FARM ~ One of Guyan Graham School Rd, co wat er, over 300
Townshtp's ftnes t 106 ac r e m/ 1, ap- ft. rd frontage , Green Grade Sc hool &amp;
prox
45 A
fert ile bottom land, Ga ll• a Aca demy Htgh Schoo l $1 0,900
balance pa sture &amp; woods Nt ce modern
'kit . &amp; family rm 14x 18 LR. attached CROUSE BECK ROAD - Rc stn cted
ga r age, m ads 56xl04, also •nc luded 1S buddtng lot 1 22 acr e, ntce wooded set
20x24 steel garag e. workshop &amp; se veral ftng , c•ty sc hools $5,900
shed s owner 1S r ettrtng &amp; will he lp
ROOM TO ROAM - Thi s lovel y br• ck
finan ce
r anch offers lots of good lt vmg for your
qrowtng family 3 BR ' s. 2112 baths, lar ge
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132 kttch en &amp; LR, for mal dtntn g r m , 2
acre pasture farm , mostly roll tng &amp; htl· f treplaces, wood burnmg stove, cent .
IV grassland w tth approx 10 A wooded, a.r, garage, ful l basem ent w•th l am lly
lots of springs, Ph story home has 4 rm .• bar &amp; laundry Located on approx
rm s &amp; bath, large barn, tob acco base, 2 acres on State Route 554 between Por
fronts on 3 roads tn Wal nut Townshtp
ter &amp; Eno Pnced to sell at$59,500

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m /1,
located south of M er cerville Appro)( 20
A. tillabl e, balance wood s, fo b base
Owners w ill he lp fmance.

Firewood $35 tn Metgs co.
$45 in Gallia or M ason Co
Call 614 985·4108 or 614·985
3887
•

-

BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES ~47,000 3
bedrooms, 11h bat h home with lots of extra ntc e
f eatures, built 1n cabtneTs, - se lf cleantn g r ange,
d tshwasher. garbage disposa l and large di nt ng
room, Kyger Creek Schools.
If SOl

NEAR CADMUS - Forty ac r es, ap
prox 1h tillabl e and 11::1 wood s, old 2
story farm home in need of repa tr s,
barn , sheds, fronts on 141 Owner ftnan
c ing availabl e at 10% .

C. R. MASH

CB, TV, Radio
Equipment

Excelsror Otl Co., 636 E .
Matn St., Pomeroy, Ohio
992 ·2205

OO'il

~ ~ ~~ ~

lour ordmary words

New wood stove, half price;
never used, $350. Can con·
vert to fur~ance Call 256·
1216, GallipoUs.

Misc. Merchand1ce •

1111\l~

Business Senrices

For Sa le Kitchen table and
2 cha;.-., S25. See ot 769
Brownell Ave., Middlel)(.rt

......

. .

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Ohicr-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Misc. Mere hand ice

John W1se
(614) 742·21J1

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 176
acres m / 1 vacant land, f ront son Rae
coon Creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd Approx
31 ttllabl e &amp; the ba lance wooded . Under
$400 per ac r e

1978 FINANCING AVAILABLE -

~

box

spnngs, full or twtn, $58,
ftrm , $68 and $78 Queen
sets. $195 5 dr. chests. 149
4 dr
chests, $42
Bed
frames, S20 and $25, 10 gun
Gun cabtnets, S350 , dtnet·
te cha tr s $20 and S2.J Gas
or elec tn c ra nges, $295 Or
thopedt c super firm , $95,
baby rna tresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; $30
E lectrt c firepl ace, gun
cabtnet , L tv•ng room su•te,
wood table &amp; 4 cha trs .
U s ed,
Ra nges,
refrtgerators, and TV' s,
J mtles out Butavllte Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fn . 9am to 5pm, Sat
446 0322

STROUTe REALTV In

.

54

Large RCA Victor 25' color
screen console TV w•th
twtn
speakers .
Prtce
$150.00. Call388·8868

up to $350 Captam's beds,
1275 comple t e Baby beds.

Matrresses

- Goods
Household

Good used auto washers &amp;
dryers, serviced, checked,
guaranteed. Number to
choose from , $80 &amp; up Call
256· 1207

52

. . . ....

1982

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges
Skaggs Ap·
pliances, Upper R1 ver Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·1398 '

Bedroom suttes
Bassett
Oak, $675 1 Ba ssett Cherry,
$795 Bunk bed com plete
wtth ma tt resses, $250 and

$99

.. .

ftnt sh

Real Estate General

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Sty I Sh 2 st ory
home was built 1n 1894 and must be seen
to l!pprectate Large open foyer and
stairway, LR , dmtng rm .. parlor. com
pletely equipped mod ern k1tchen, 4
BR s, 2•1:1 baths, new Stdtng, gar age.
near schools, shopptng , etc

51

SWAIN
.
AUCTION FURNIT URE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 OUve Sl,
Gallipolis. 3 Ptece ltvi ng
room su ites 5199, maple
rockers $49, several chest
of drawers, Maple rockers
$49, se veral late model
bedroom suites,
of
desks, Cedar
9x12 linoleum $10 and
severa l refng , gas &amp; electric ranges, coa l &amp; wood
cook stoves, several chest
of drawers, variety of
c he st,
tamp s,
and
mechamc tool s of all kinds,
new &amp; used wOOd burners
some with fans, new table
lamps $18, wood cook
ranges, new 5 p1ece d•nnet
sets $150, kttchen cab.nets.
several dlnnet sets, silver
ston e-all s1zes, new tools of
all kinds, wringer Maytag
washer, L mo\eum rugs
9x12 510, and lots more WP
have everyth1ng to set up
housekeeping Hours lOam
'to 5pm , 446 3159

Mer

2 brd a pt HUD excepted,
kttchcn turn, ut!l tf1es par
tially

Household Goocb

ONE ' COUCh, 1 Chair, ltke
new, $250 phone 304·675·
7141 ,

apt .

.

w. v

Oh1&lt;r-Point PI

992·7479

2 bedroom furn tshed apar
tment 992·5434 o r 992 5914
or 304·882·2566

Gal

4S • '=.Ur_nts!_e_g_ ROO !!IS _
SLEE PING ROOMS and

for Rent

2 bedroom house trailer tn
RBcine $175 per month $75
depOSit . You pay utlltftes
Unfurn ished but kttchen

mobtle

Po mer

.

nome
bor

tOTitlen
unlowtulty
11 ForMtalfl
I 2 Scalt note
13 Qtlye gtJilUI
14 Uqutd
.......r..
t 5 Fill lndlg·
non1

55 Nerd
56 Annually

59Ge&lt;OII
loppet' '
60 Journey
81 Chalc:lean
city
83Ponfco

66 Part ot a yd.
87Cedmlum
tymbol

ee Advance~

70 Saturated
1 t Ancient
12 Tiny
73 EmU1 vapor
75 lnltructotl

-

77Edlbleoeed

78Vouel'o

plonkln!J
80 Tlllel of
roopoct

83 Frog

88 Attrect s

88 CriWf

89 Vll'ioty
80 Iron aymbOI

.,

81 Hosp work ·

94 Rugged
mountain
crest
86 Odin's
brother
98 Ctloleelt
99 Ctolhlng
100 Treats for a
bunny
102 Lln(jCII'
104 Warmth
106 Anknal COlt
106 Mott

betov.d

101 Melanchalv
109 Glue
ttl -w•ttory
112 Tear
113 Fr.e Ucket

fiB Willy
remarll

fiB Sow
fl9 Speck
t22Bowfng
Implement

124 Grotlty
125 Hurl
128 Expunges
t2B Boctuded
Vllllyl

130 IMurnlnated
tat Cook In a
way
132 Medlter·
rtnlllln
1111nd
135 O.ogs
ta7Tif&lt;t out, In
printing
138 Edge
t40Compor•

ll.. ondlng
142 Ev•or-n
lrto
t43GrottcNttlor
144 Blimp oft t

r-Pf

145TOJtur~

oymbol
14781aymi!OI
148 Man' a

�•

'
"eb. 7, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OhiO-Point Pleasant, W. V,a.

Patrol cites two Gallians for DWI
There was ~ght damage to his
night.
GALLIPOLIS - Two Gauta
The department said Beth L.
County men were cited for DWI In · vehicle, and the patrol cited
· Peck, 24, was northbound at 6: 06
separate Incidents Investigated by Coleman.
In another Gauta area accldPnt
p.m. when she reportedly took her
the ·GaUla-Melgs Post of the state
on Frtday, the patrol said DelOres
foot oft the brake and struck the
highway patrol Frtday night.
rear of a stopped vehicle driven by
The patrol said Randy Rothgeb, J. Wllltams, 25, Rodney, was unable to stop while northbound on
Tricla A. Knight, 28, Rt. 4,
39, Rt. 1, Cheshire, was southbound
on Ohio 7 at 7:45p.m. when here- Ohio 160 at Hanersvllleat4:10p.m. Gallipolis.
Both vehicles suftered slight ·
portedly sideswiped a northbound and struck the rear of a stopped
auto driven by Cathy L..Grate, 23,
damage, and Peck was cited for asvehicle driven by Clinton Holbrook,
57, Grayson, Ky., causing moder· Rt. 2, Patriot, causing slight dam· sured clear distance.
age to both. vehicles.
ate damage to both autos. Rothgeb
Pollee are also.Investigating areport a vehicle owned by Robert L.
was cited In the accident.
Grate was stopped In traftlc at
Darst, Rt.l, Northup, was hit by an
Troopers said Michael R. Coleunknown vehicle while parked on
man, 23, Rt. 2, Patriot, was east· the time of the collision, Wllltams
Sycamore Street sometime Friday.
bound on McCulty Road, was cited for assured clear
The theft of a CB radio from a
four-tenths of a mile west of Ohio 7 distance.
Meanwhile •.Gallipolis City Pollee
truck owned by Wylie Knauft,
off Georges Creek Road, at 11: 00
p.m. when he drove off the left side cited a Bidwell woman In a twCH:ar · Crown City, was reported Friday to
accident on Third Avenue Friday
the Gallla County Sheriff's
of the road and struck a fence.

~nne.-~•diu:tt Section[g

ness

Sunday Feb. 1, 1.982

Blair elected ·board

Department.
Knauff told deputies be left his
truck parked on Georges Creek
Road In the southern part of the
county during the past week while
he was working In the area.

GALLliPOLlS -Winnie Blair of
Century 21-Winnle Blair Realty,
JackSOn, was elecled president of
the Southeastern Ohio Boaro of
Realtors at the organizatiOn's recent meeting In Gaillpolls.
Bonnie Stutes of GaUlpoliS was
elected vice president, whUe Mau·
reen Kreider and Connie Wl!lker,
also of Century 21's Jackson oftlce,
will serve as secretary and treasurer, respectively.

Deputies were also Informed
early Saturday morning tires on a
vehicle owned by George W. Hall, .
Dunbar, W.Va., were slashed while
parked behind the French Quarter
In Kanauga ;~round 1 a.m.
AlsO cited by pollee Friday were
Nathaniel B. Jeffery, 57, Rt. 4, Gal·
llpolls, Barbara J. Stroud, 42, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, and Shirley J . Clay, all
for speeding; and Thomas M. Fife,
21. Eureka Star Route, unsafe
vehicle.

· Named as trustee was Ernest
Wiseman of the Wtse'mail Agency,
GallipoliS. Alternate trustee Is Vir·
gil Teaford of Teaford Realty,
Pomeroy. The new set of directors
are Henry R. Cleland Jr., past presIdent, Cleland Realty, Pomeroy:
· Willis Leadingham, Leadingham
Real Estate, Gallipolis; and Jan
Gettles, Jan Gettles Realty,
·Wellston.

GET OUT YOUR CAMERAS, MOM AND DAD!

t

.........

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HAPPY BffiTHDAV, LAUREN - Lauren Toohey, 3, sits on her
mother Beatrice's lap at a party celeb~tlng Lauren's third birthday
Friday. Lauren received oliver tra118plant after a nationwide search for
an appropriate donor. tAP Laserphoto).

Pair face charges
in a-leged drug sale
POMEROY·· Rex Butcher, 21,
Pomeroy, and Doug Reeves, 20,
Johntown, were arrested Friday In
conjunction with the alleged sale of
10 pounds of marijuana to an under·
cover drug agent.
!
They are to he charges with the
sale of marijuana over three times
the bulk amount. The arrests stem
from an ongoing drug Investigation
that members of the Meigs County
shertft's department and other law
enforcement agencies have been
conducting. As a result of the ar·
rests, search warrants were Issued
for two homes In the HarrtsonvUle
area. Illegal contraband was con·
flscated at each of the residences.

A 1977 truck owned by one of the
lndlvldualswasalsoconflscatedas
evidence In the alleged sale of the
mariJuana. They will appear before Judge Patrick O'Brien In the
Meigs County Court.
The sherttt's department atsoreported a httsklp accident on Route
33 ~~~~yc~~~~edy, 19, Pomeroy,
reported that he was SOUthbound
on Route 33 In his car, about Olk)
quarter ol a mile south of the
vehicle
was sideswiped
bywhen
a north·
Athens-Meigs
County line
his
bound plckup truck. The truck did
not stop. Light damage was reported by the sheriff.

It's time for the sixteenth annual "M. I.
Hummel~~ Figurine Look-Alike Contest~ sponsored by GOEBEL of West Germany, sole
manufacturers of those adorable "M. I. Hummel" figurines.
A snapshot of your kids dressed and posed
as a "Hummel~~ figurine could win BIG
PRIZES. There are TWO Grand prizes: One
thousand dollars for a boy ... one thousand
dollars for a girl. Plus twenty-seven additional prizes of cash and/orgifts.
To enter, send a color · photo of one or
more children, aged two to ten, dressed and
posed to resemble a favorite "M. I. Hummel"
figurine. For an entry blank and a first-hand
look at the charming "M. I. Hummel"
figurines visit:

Completed ap~lication forms for
performances and projects must be
postmarked no later than March 6
and sent to the contest director, Dr.
Richard Harvey, Bentley Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701. Essay entries
must also he posbnarked no later
than March 6, or they are
disqualified under contest rules.
Parents and friends of participants
are also Invited to Ohio University
for History Day, and entertainment
and campus tours will be provided.
A special awards ceremony will be
held at the end of the day. Contest In·
formation may be obtained by
writing Dr. Harvey o~ calling (614)
594-5574, or 594&lt;1033.

The shot-at look
MT. CLEMENS, Mich. (AP) A company here advertises "lake
bullet holes."
The fun decals are said In the ad
to he realistic. They are to he used
on cars and windows. The sales
pitch says, "Looks like you've been
shot at."

!/'

ri' .
-~

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'

No purchase is necessary to enter and the contest is not valid where prohibited by law. But
don't delay. The con,est cloSes April 30, 1982
and WinnerS Will be notified On Or before JUne
15, 1982. Decision of the i udges is fina I; The
"M. 1. Hummel" Figurine Look-Alike Contest
is great fun for the whole family. So let the
kidS dreSS Up and get yoUr CameraS loaded.

You COULD BE A .W INNERI

Trevor 3hu man . Poe a Ld 10. T. da ho ' r,&lt;&gt;r t r ap nq
"Con fld &lt;• ntl a l. J y . " wa &gt;J ~elec l.f'd a s .!loy Gr and
- · h Annua .l ...,.,, ...
·[ 1'.unune ·1. "
Pr..t zt• W1nne r·. J.ot
Lo&lt;Jk-f.lik e Cont.cst

·

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::~~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

POlNT PLEASANT- The med·
leal start at Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal recently elected Dr. Francis G.
Fugaro as chief of start.
Fugaro bas been with PVH since
1976 and has served as the staff's
secretary-treasurer.
Formerly chief emergency room
physician, Fugaro Is a general •
practitioner with an office located
In the Point Pleasant Medical Cen·
ter at Jefterson Avenue and 25th
Street. He Is replacing as chief Dr.
Richard L. Slack, whoheld~eposl­
tlon for 11 years.
Addtlonaily, the start elected Dr.
Ismael 0 . Jamora as vice chief of
staf1 and Dr. Samuel P. McNeill as
secretary-treasurer. Jamora, an
Internal medicine and caf!ltology

.

SAVE20% ON

•CANNON SHEE fS
•ALL BATH TOWELS
.•ALL BLANKETS
·•BATH SETS ·

•MA

PADS
HAROI.DW.MILLER

JACKSON- Harold W. Miller haa

been nafrieil customer service silpervilor for General Teli!Jlhon!! Co. of
Ohio's Jaclo'son dl!trlct, according to
J. L. Parker of Athens, area service

REBATE

ON 'CERTAIN NEW
. BUICKS
AND PONTIACS.

SMITH
•

Buick-Pontiac
Uslwn Ale_
446-2282, Gallipolis

IARRVW.GHEARING

General -T elephone
promotes .personnel
'

'

repayment 19 reached.
Allan Fl. l'laplnger, president of
the Manhattan-based parent firm,
!ned an accompanying affldavitclt·
lng "cash shortage" rather than a
fundamental business weakness as
the lmmmedlate cause of current
problems. Plaplnger Indicated that
UDS and Its six subsidiaries would
recover flnanctaUy by cutting over·
head and · closing unprofitable
stores.
Plaplnger predicted that with
court protection and enough time,
"UDS wUl successfully he able to
tebabllltate Its business by re&lt;Juc·
lng overhead and the number of

'

$

._. . . .- .. . . .o•r•G~r~e •S•m•l•th._________~

specialist with an office at PVH,
has been on the hospital staft since
1973.
McNeUI, who also practices out
of PVH, specializes In family prac·
tlee and joined the staftln 1978.
·, I feel It's a great honor to be
elected by my peers to serve In such
a poslUon," Fugaro noted after his
election. "There IS a lot of work to
be done during the coming year
that Will require the support of the
entire medical staft.
, "For the past several years, my
friend and colleague, Richard L.
Slack, has Mid this position and has
done an excellent job,'' Fugaro con·
tlnued. "I will attempt to carry on
In this tradition."
'
The three new oftlcers have been

BEGINS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8th AT 9:30A.M.

UPTO

See Bob Brlckles, Harland Wood

Slaek, who held the poeitlon for 11 years. Secretary·
lreasUrer Is Dr. Samuel P. McNeW, left, and Dr.
Jsmae1 0. Jamora, right, 18 vice chief.

.!

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•.•

SAVE.20% - HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT. - 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POM ROY
).

~

...

elected !or one-year terms. These
three, along with Dr. Mark Cheng,
Dr. Young Chol and Dr. Montrie
Chaksupa, comprise the exeeutlve
committee on thestaftwhlcbmeets
regularly to ~duct staff business .
and prepare for the staff's monthly
meeting.
The staff satd the ultimate purpose In organizing In this manner Is
to bring the best possible care ID
patients by means of continuous supervision of the cUnlcal work
through -~ number of committees
which meet eac.h month to review
various aspects of the care provided. It IS also a means through
which continuing medical ed11ca·
tion can be organized, documented
and supervised.

United Department Stores,
subsidiaries bankrupt
NEW YORK (AP) - Financial
dlftlcultles _have cailsed United Department Stores Inc. and six retaU
sUbsidiaries with about 120stores to
file petitions for reorganization
under federal bankruptcy law.
The pe!!tlons, filed Monday In
federal Bankruptcy Court, Involve
men's wear and department stores
mainly located In the Northeast
and Midwest.
The move will enable UDS and Its
subsidiaries, which listed assets of
U3.6 mUllan and l!libllitles of $40.9
mllllon, to continue busllless under
protection from creditors' suits unW a court-approved plan for debt

FEBRUARY

•ALL BEDSPREADS
•ALL TABLE COVERS
f'CQUCH and CHAIR THROWS
•ALL AREA RUGS
.•ALL KITCH EN TOWELS

Featured speaker at the meeting -meetings.
A new sale achievement award
was George E. Woodward Jr .. con·
sumer lQan officer for Central will be presented by the realty
Trust Co., Gallipolis. Woodward board for salespeople who bad
discussed the effect of rising Inter· more than 25 transactions per year
(with one sale or one country listing
est rates on the mortgage market
and the effect. IRAs and other In· counting as a ha:tf-polnt each).aod
who were active members of. their
vestmen\s are having. .
ae also talked about the need to local boards 'ot realtors. Connie
properly prepare a client Saunders of Century 21-Southern
Information-wise when the custo- Hills, Gallipolis, was appointed·
sales advisory chalrn',lan.
mer Is seeking a real eState loan.
Since the board Is now an all·
. In other business, the program
realtor
board with equal member·
commltlee for 1982 will be Audrey
Canaday of Canaday Realty, Galli· ship In brokers and salespeople.
polls; Helen Teaford of Teaford Jan Gettles was' appointed to bring
the board's constitution and bylaws
Realty; Marte Leadingham of Lea·
up to date•to Include the~ changes.
dlngham Real Estate and Faye
The board also authorized a do
Wllllams of Jan Gel:$s Realty.
nation
to the American Cancer So
Members also participated In an ·
ciety
In
memory of the late Norma
Informal exchange of Information
Lee
Kinnett,
former secretary and
on spectal properties of Interest to
sales
associate
for Leadingham .•
the four-county area and made
agency,
who
died
In January.
plans to continue doing so at all

Pleasant Valley ·elects new
medical staff chief

K&amp;CJEWELERS at 212 E. Main St.

Area papers to sponsor event
• ATHENS - Eight Southeast Ohio
newspapers will once again be official sponsors of the History Day
District 11 competition to be held on
the Ohio University campus April10.
The Athens Messenger, the
Jackson Journal-Herald, the
Wellston Sentry, the Ironton
Tribune, the Pomeroy Daily Sentinel, the Perry County Tribune, the
Vinton County Courier and the
Chillicothe Gazette have all indicated support for the contest goal
of Increasing interest in the study of
American history.
History Day '82 is a national as
well as a state and regional event
and is funded by the National En·
dowment for the Humanities. The
contest, the history/social studies
counterpart to Science Fair and
Language Fair, is also supported by
county historical societies, such as
Gallla's which awards cash prizes to
Its county winners.
The competition is divided Into entries from students in grades 6-8 and
those In grades !1-12. Entries can in·
elude Individual or group projects
such as posters, displays and per·
formances as well as essays. The
theme for this year is "Trade and Industry in History."

NEW POSITI!)N- Dr. Francis G. Fugaro,center,
was eleded by llle Pleasant Valley HOBPital medical
atalf u llB new chief. He replace8 Dr. Rlehard L

p~esident

JJIIIll8ier.
Miller succeeds Larry W.
Gbilarlng, who . haa been named
~ and conslructloo coordlnatot-placlng and splicing for
General's southern and central
dlvlslonl.
Miller, a )M7 gradUate of Jackson
Rich Scbool, bepn his career In
telephone bent in 1M'I.
Slnee then he hill held var10111
JJIIIll8gement poaltl-. He wu a
, Nrvlce department l~~Pervlaor
befoi'e his nceat prlllllOtian.

.

Miller and his wife, Roealyn ,
reside at 89 Grandview, Jackson.
They have two sons, Harold W. Jr.
and Steven D.
He Is active in the Masonic order
and the Jackson Rotary Club.
Ghearlng has headed the local ser·
'vice department since 1~. In his
new [IOIItion, hll' office '- In Por·

tsmouth.
He . alao started his ~
career here u a cable 1pUcer In
1962. His first manqement aulgn.
ment wu at Porllmauth u a cable
~~~pervisor. Ghearlllg IIIIo worked at .
Circleville and Chesapeake.
Ghearlng and his wife, Winifred,
ralde at 742 E. Main St., JIICbon.
'l1ley have a son, J,erry Lee.

J .

PRFSENTS CHECK - Tom Smith, rlgbt, man·
ager of the Sean-Reobuck•Foundation In Gallipolis,
preaenla an Ulll'ellrlcted check to Rio Grande College
and Community College president Paul Hayes for Ul!e

Exc}lange
. •'
stattons
GREENVILLE, S .C.
Multimedia, Inc. of Greenville, S.C.
and tbe Pulllzer Publlshing.Co. of St.
Louis, Mo. have executed agreemen·
ts to exchange Pulitzer's television
station KSDK in St. Louis for two
Multimedia-owned stations, plus
other consideration.
The move confirms the agreement
~ principle announced March 19,
1981 by Joseph Pulitzer, Jr., Pulit·
zer's chairman of the board and
Wilson C. Wearn, chairman of the
board and chief executi~e officer of
Multlrriedla,Inc.
The Multimedia station involved
ore WFBC-TV, Greenville, and
WXII·TV, Winaton-8alem, N.C.
Multimedia will pay Pulitzer $5
million and will also reimburse
Pulitzer for $3.25 million currently
being spent to equip new KSDK
teltvlslon studios. It ili anticipated
that part of the $3.25 million
payment will be offset by proceeds
of the anticipated sale of the existing
KSDK
studio
building .
The exchange would ac·
commodate FCC policy concerning
multiple ownerhslp of media outlets
in the same community and would
provide greater geographic diversity for both companies. The tax·
free exchange Is subject to the approval of the Federal Communications Commission.
All three of tbe television stations
Involved are NBC affiliates.

stores operated by Its subsidiaries
and by concentrating operations In
more profitable areas."
Among the subsidiaries filing
similar petitions were:
-Hughes &amp; Hatcher .rnc. of Detroll, which also does business as
Jacob Reed's Sons and operates 66
stores speclallzlng In men's wear.
Store locations Include Detroit,
FUnt and Dearborn, Mich.; Pitts·
burgh and Philadelphia; Cleveland
Heights and Canton, Ohio; Mllwau·
kee, Wis.; Jtockford, Ill. and
Cherry HID, N.J.
-Denby Stores Inc., of Provi·
dence, R.I., which operates 21
stores In New York State locations
Including Utica, Troy, Schenec·
lady, Saratoga Springs, Amster·
dam and Fl9hldll and also In
Hadley and Holyoke, Mass.
-QuUet Department Stores Inc.,
of Providence, which bas a dozen
stores In Rhode Island, as well as
New Haven and New London,
Conn., and Swansea, Maine.
-Sattler's Department Stores
Inc., which has oftlces In Provl·
dence and New York and operates
nine stores located malnly.ln upstate New York.
-s.P. Dunham &amp;. Co., of Tren·
ton, N.J., which haa eight stores In
locations which InClude Trenton
and Flemington, N.J. and Manis·
ville. Pa.
-Rothschild Brothers, of Ithaca,
N.Y., which operata a store In
Ithaca and another under the name
of McLean's In Oswego, N.Y.

u 1¥ achooi sees necessary. A spokesman said Rio
Grande ill one of 411 privately supported coUeges and
universities In Ohio receiving unrestricted granta
from the fiJUIIlldtlon this week.
•

Meigs area customers·
get phone .surcharge.
NEWARK - Customers of The
Western Reserve Telephone Co.
may have noticed a small additional
charge on their •nost recent
telephone bill.
On page one of the statement,
below the "federal In" charge and
above the "current amount due by"
ltem is a ''surcharge."
According to Hugh Hindman,
manager of the Newark service
area, this surcharge is being levied
against telephone company
customefll as a result of recent actions by lhe Ohio legislature.
.
Specifically, the "Ohio Gro••

Receipts E•cise Tax Surcharge," as ·
it's officially called, amounts to .71
percent of a customer's total bill,
less federal tax and an long distance
calls outside the state.
The tax was enacted by the
legislature (i-18 694 and 552) aild
became law Nov. 15, 1981, although
it didn't become effective until Jan.
I, 1982. Only federal government
agencies are exemptfrom the tax.
"This situation is not unique to
The Western Reserve Telephone
Co.:; Hindmsn staled. "The tax Is
being charged to telephone company
customers across the state."

Veteran Kyger Creek·
•
employee retires
CHESfURE - L. R. Ford Jr.,
plant manager at OVEC's K~ger
Creek plant, Is announcing the
retirement of one of its veteran em·
ployees.
WUiiam M. Lal)'lberl retired from
OVEC on Feb. 1 after more than 26
years of service with the company.
He first joined Kyger Creek in
November 1955 as a labOrer in the
labor-janitor department and In
December of the same year, he tran·
sferred to the maintenance depart·
ment as a. maintellB.nce helper.

In January 10011, he transferred to
the chemical departmenl as filter
plant operator and sampler, and in
January 1960 was promoted to
chemist assistant, the position · he
held until his recent retirement.
A native of Glenwood, W. Va.,
Lambert served with the Air Corps
from 1941~. He Is a member of the
Grace Gospel Church In Huntington,
W. Va., and a member of the
American Legion and VFW.
Lambert and his wife Margaret
reside at Ashton, W.Va.

a

Gallians purchase
$101,000 in
bonds
COLUMBUS ~ Purchase of
'101,212 In United SlateS Savings
Bonds were credited to Ga111a County In 1981, C. Leon Saunders., GaUla
COunty aavlngs bonds chairman,
reported.
Statewide sa~ of United States
SavtngJ.Bonds totaled $180,968.4821n
11181 according 'to reports COIIIiJIC to
the COWJty cha(fman from Gregory
L. HOUlton, dlatrict director, Ohio U.
S. SllvingJ Bondi Divt.IGII, Colunr
bull, Nationwide uvlnel bonds ulea
ex~$3.5 bllllon.
.
•.
Americans now own more than •
biDlon In Nvingl bonds. The new
Serlea EE Bonds now yield t pel'!:ellt
when · beld . &amp;o their ellht-Yeer
maturity, with Interim ylelda of·~
pereent after five years and I pereent after one year.

•

•

MILUI ARE lWNNING- L. F. SileiiOII, ctaeral
-cer of Flewuatllawmlll Co., lltudiiD frollt of a
adll po.t Ia I at:Yiew wllen, tllllllb to u oblcure

federal law, 11wmflll luJve not been bit like thole In
oCber areu by the bulldiDg lndu•try Woe8. ( AP La•erplloto).

�Ti

IIIPOiis, Ohicr-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Feb. 7

Sesquicentennial in 1983 for Court Street structure
ByJ~SANDS

Special Corretopondent
GAWPOIJS - The busineSB
house wherein 1982 LesJeuxArcade
Is located i
·
probably,_
to
most ultlli;ii~ .
residents as

long time home
Vince's
Opening
after the repeal
Prohibition in
1933, the building
SANDS
at 47 CoUrt Street would be known as
Vince's Place for almost :;o years.
The structure itself has q~ite a
record of longevity as well, having
been erected in 1833 by Charles
Creuzet. Mpnsieur Creuzet also built
the two adjoining houses at 45 Court
and 49 Court during that same year.

who abo liked to pul uP buildings,
aeveral of which are still slanding.
Until his death in 11180 Crell%et
could usually be found on the comer
·of Second and C9Url where he Uved
and operated ~ own store. There Ia
a picture of Creuzet's •corner (now
covered by the Lafayette) in the
" Landowner's Atlas of 1874" that
was reproduced by St. Peter's
Episcopal Church afew years ago.
Creuzet was also one of the founden of the woolen mill .ori Vine
Street and the patron saint of the
Universalist Church ·that thrived in
Gallipolis a century ago.

..

THE BUILDING at the left was built bi 1833 by Charles Creuzet, an
lmmlgnmt from France. Creuzet never used the buildiog; II served as a
chair factoey, clothing store, 'fruit stand, tinsmith sbop, and arcade
amooc Other things. For almost 50 yean 47 Court was knowo as VInce's
Place. At present Lea Jeux Arcade occupies the It!l-year-old structure.

It's only fitting that a business in
this building at 47 Court should have
a French name as its builder was.
himself a Frenclunan. Creuzet was
born in Lyons, France, and came to
Gallipolis in 1817. In a short time
Charles became a wealthy merchant

The first occupants of Creuzet's
building at 47 Court was the finn
known as Shephard and Hannan.
Thelle two young men in their late
teens had gone away to Pittsburgh to
learn the chainnaking trade. Then
in their middle 20s John Shephard
and Thomas Hannan slarted a chair
factory in )833 at 47 Court.
IT REALLY WAS not much of a
factory by otir standards as ~ese
two were the only ones who worked
in here and they had no power driven

machinery. We are not sure what
kind of chain the two men made, but
do know that in that same year a
man by the name cif Malbone made
quality WinoUor chairs in.Gallipoils.
Thornu Hannan died in 184t (he .
was but 3t) and Shephard continued
the business and even built a large
shop on Fourth Avenue. About 1853 ·
Shephard left 47 Court and a
Mathers sold stoves here.
In 1882 John Emsheimer open__ed a
clothing store at 47 Court. The Emsheimer family also ran a clothing
store on Second and Court and one at
Second and Cedar about the same
time.
IN 11'71 EMSHEIMER advertilled:
"I don't Jti11e an inch to any man
when it comes to ready made
clothing, dry goods, boots, shOes,
· hata and caps. I can't dwell but must

ABOUT 1112 L. L. Maddy Opened
up a tinsmith shop at 47
dy remained here until1919
moved two doon to 51 Court
he remained in tllj! plumbing
business for many years.
In the early 1900s the building at 47
Court belonged to the Lawson sisterr
who lived upstain. In 1919 they sold·
out to Jake Soden who ran a sueceBBful furniture store serosa Court
Street.· The Lawson sistel'!l continued to reside on the second noo..·
Of what during the 1920s served as a
,
furniture w~~ehouse for SOden.
lT WAS IN' the early 1930s that 47
Court became known as Vince's
seU."
Place and so it was known right up to
Emsheimer's most popular · buy 1981 when the present finn Lea Jeux '
was a caSBimere quit at~. John Em- Arcade moved in to this building .
sheimer remained at 47 Court for a that will celebrate Ita sesquicen- .·
qlllll'ter of a century until he gave tenniai in just one more year.
· ··
way to Louis Muzio.
U you want lo write lo James Sal!' '
Around the tum of the century the · ds, his adtlms ill Box 9Z, Clarlu!smell of hot roasted peanuts swept burg, ObioU115.

GAHS graduate
introduces bill
for energy funds
GALIJPOIJS - Television has
brought national and even in·
ternational renown to Williwn T.
Tolle and his wife, the fonner
Dorothy Fierbaugh, because of the
solar beer..:an collection he built at a
costof$800.
Mrs. ToliP. a JD3:! er3.:!uate of
Gallia Academy Hi,:h Scho•&gt;l, introduced a resolution at the recent
White House Conferen·ce on the
Aging in Washington, D. C., to allot
some of U1e energy·assistance funds '
to rnaterials-.purchases for solar
collector panels.
They would make these rhaterials
available to voc-ed students and or
prisoners in penal institutions so
that they could · build and install
solar collector panels on hotnes of
the needy elderly. Mrs. Tolle used a
model to demonstrate its simplicity
- and the resolution passed
unanimously.
."TOC4ty"f crews from Atlanlcl and
New York were at the Tolle house,
5115 Augspurger, Hamilton, Ohio
45011, taking video tapes of the
backyard operation. Dorothy's
husband is shown in a HamiltonFairfield Journai·News photo on
Jan. 26 explaining the setup to NBC
network correspondent Bob Dotson,
who said lhal ·this portion of the

private schools with his listeners as
young as the elementary grade~.
Solar Bill and Dot especially would
like to come to Gallipolis but were
unsponsored as of this date.
He sllows slides of the colll!truction
of the solar heating system. The
program takes an hour, including
question time. Dorothy's brother,
Herman Fierbaugh, resides on OR

m.

WILL GIVE UP TOs3ooiRAD£ IN ALLOWANCE·
FOR YOUR OLD FURNITURE REGARDLESS OF
CONDITION ....•••.•

$300

.

Open door session
PQMER&lt;JY ·- On Fill!, .10, a
representative from 'CongreSBman
Clarence E. Miller's office will conduct an Open Door seSBion from 10.
a.m.·l2 noon in the Court House in
Pomeroy.
'
If anyone has any questions concerning the federal govenunent,
please stop by to discuss them with
the rep i!Sentative.

"American Dream" segment of the

"Today" show would be aired on a
February Friday.
"Solar Bill" Tolle makes no
charge except for gasoline when he
puts on a program for seminars at
universities and public schools or

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD LIVING
ROOM SUITE ON ANY,
LIVING ROOM IN
STOCK.

Soft sell
Mll..L NECK, N.Y. (AP)- PubUshers once thought the American
public would not buy paperboUnd
books. But when 10 reprln~ of best
sellers and classics were offered in
1939 as paperbacks at 25 cents
apiece, sales were outstanding.
Each title had a first printing of
10,1XXJ.
Sales figures showed that "Lost
Horizon" eventually sold 2,514,747
copies; "Wuthertng Heights" sold
1,666,262; and "The Bridge of San
Luis Rey" sold 1.189,764.

00
TF~~~01~R ~L(CWANCE
3 ·BEDROOM SUITE

$

T.RAD£ JN. ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD

Dl Nl NG: ROOPI SUITE ON ANY NEW SU.ITE IN STOCK (Hutch, Trable, Chairs).

By William B. Kulhn .
1f is not uncommon to be asked, '' Do you believe that·one has to be
a member of the church of &lt;;hrist to be saved?' or "Can one be saved
out of the church as well as In it? " It is not a matter of what I believe
but what do the scripture s teach, f or they reveal God' s answer.
The Family ol God :
1 would like for us to observe Paul's statement with great care,
"But if I tarry long, thllt thou mayest know how thou oughtest to
behave thyself in the house of God, which is the church of the living
God, the pillar and ground of the truth " .&lt;I Tim. 3:15) . "House" carries
the meaning of a household or a family . A man's house Is his familv,
tor cornelius and all his house (tam I tvl were to be saved (Acts 11 : 14) .
Since Paul has stated the fact that the church is God' s house, it
only stands to reason that the church is the family of God . God's
children are in his family, for He does not have chi ldren outside His
fam i ly . If one can be saved without being in the church, he can be
saved without being in the family of God . If one can be saved without
being In the lamlly of God, he can be saved wilhout being a child of
God . No one will affirm that anyone can be saved without beln~ child
of God. The truth is : To be saved you must be a child of God ; to be a
child of God, you must be in the family of God ; to be in the family of
God, you must be of God's house; and to be of God's house/ you must
be in the church! God's faithful children will go to heaven, you must be
In the church I
The Saved :
The Lord adds the saved to the .·c hurch, "Praising God, and having
favour with alii he people. And the Lord added to the church dolly such
as should be saved" (Acts 2: 47) . If God added one saved person to the
church, then he would add all the saved to the church, because God
does not show respect ol person, " 01 a truth I perceive that God Is no
· respecter of persons" (Acts l0 : 34) . Since the saved are added to the
church, you must be in the church in order to be saved!
TheBody saved :
Jesus is the Saviour of the body, "For as the husband is the head of
the wife, even as Christ Is the head of the church : and He is the saviour
of the body" (Eph. 5:23) . The ·body is the church, "And hath put all
thing! under his feet, and gave him to be the head over all things to the
church, which l.s his body, the luiness of him that lllleth all in all"
1Eph. 1:22, 23)·. He has only one body, "There is one body" CEph. 4:4).
What Is the Lord gong to save? His body! What is !1is body I The chur·
chi How many churches does He have? One. To what does the Lord
add the saved? The church! Why? B~cause He Is going to sove His
body. the church! Since Jesus is going· to save the body, the ciiUrch,
you must be a member of His body Cchurch) to po to heaven I

$20

$100

$100

wrrP~~ntt'MrAMKf-

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD
RECLINER

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD
SWEEPER

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF A NEW RECUNER

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW ONE

TREss AN·D BOX
SPRINGS
WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW SET

$50
TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR EACH END OR COFFEE TABLE
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
NEW END OR COFFEE TABLE

$50

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD DIN mE
(Wood or Metal).

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW CHAIR

WITH THE PURcHASE OF
ANEW DINEITE SET

.'

oI

~~"

o/

!s·

lielplog deaf or speech·lmpalred
tD communicate by tele-

perP~S

phone.The "VIsual Ear" Is a device
that allows the uaer to "t.alk" with
. anyonehavlngaslmllardevlcecon· .
nected tD a telephone. The Instrument, m8de of cyrolac enctneertng ·
tt.a moplaBtlc supplied by Borg-

~l»id

Warner Olemlcals here, Is ao lliht
· it may be clll'l'led to work, IIChool, .
shopping and other places.
By placing the handlet on the In·

.

WNMICtlly

,,

lvtnl,..

strument'a "acousUc coupler"
pads, the uaer can dial any ~ ·

Ratllo
"MtaiO. . fn:~~~t

ttlo .........
O.lly·WJEH
II : NAM

Silent word8
PARKERSBURG, W. Va. (AP)

Bulaville Road • P.O. 'Box 308
GAUIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
SUMey EY111tlllf
Wonhlp•: DI

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Plants, Mn.
James (Polly) Plants and Miss
Shirley Sclunlgal attended the
graduation·of Mr. and Mn. Plants'
SOliS, Ronnie and Jllffies Plants at
Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., from the ·
National Reserves. They were home ·
for Christmas.
Mr. and Mrs. David Robinson ·.
spent Thankaglving with their
daughtel'!l and families, Mr. and .
Tony, Rita Kay George and Robin
Chri11, and John and Tanya llturgeon
and children, John and Brian.

- A four-pound portable device

For Free Bible Correspondence' Course Write ... ·

' . rl'-tut .YGD

SundiJ 10 1111·10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH FEB. 13, 1982

BUCKET

Cube
'
f
.
$. 29
Groun dBee ...... ~ •··
$ 59
Ground Chuck ...~•..
8

MIXED

fryer Parts ...... ~; ..
SUPERIOR
. . FRANKIE '
W1eners...............
·

12 OZ. PKG.

SUPERIOR SLICED

$ 09

Bacon••••••••••••••••••••

Bananas ............~8~
HAWTHORNE MELODY

"Shank.

$100

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD SWIVEL
ROCKER OR STRAIGHT
CHAIR

STORE HOURS: ·
Mon.·Sat. 8 1111·10 pm

12 OZ. PKG.

ByK.KNOTl'S
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Strahan and
daughter Nora of Binningham, Ala.,
Mary Lou Trout and son Jeffrey, St.
Albans, W.Va., Bill and Grace Knotts, ColumbuS were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Knotts. The
Strshans spent several days with
her parents. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Elmore Flowers bad ·
their children and relatives home for
. Thanksgiving, Junior and Ellen
Denney, Harold Denney and Betty
and her daughter .and husband,
Jerry Lynn Huff, and brother Tom
Denney, Don and Ruth Ann Shupe
and children, Donna Jean and Blain
Taylor, Karen Elaine, Donald and
Geraldine Shupe, Mr. and Mrs. Billy
George and cl)lldren Gregg, Nikki
Johnson and sons Jeremiah and
Matthew,. Vicki George and son
George, and Mr. and Mrs. Everett

$300

THE CHURCH AND SALVATION

Wanda Sue Gibson to Gary L. Gibson, Parcels, Scipio.
Gary L. Gibson to James R. Cotterill, Parcels, Scipio.
Kerry Dobbins, Louise Dobbins,
Edgar Brewer, agent for Kerry
Louise Dobbins to Blauser Well Ser· '
vioe,Jnd., Right of Way, Leba~on.
Edgar Brewer, Louise Brewer- IQ
Blauser Well Service, Inc., Right of '
Way, Lebanon.
·
Edgar Brewer, Louise Brewer to
Blauser Well Service, Inc., Lebanon.
Roger D. Ashley, Doris Jean
Ashley by attorney in fact to Don R.
Hill, Mary E: Hlll,l.44 A., Letart.
LBura J . Bond (fonnerly Laura J.
Mt;Graw), Charles Bond to Virgil R. '
Byrer, JoAnn Byrer, 3 acres, Sut·
ton.
William L. Thornton, Minnie L.
Thornton to Herald Oil and Gas
Company,17.6(l'acres lease, Salem.
Wilford MacCombs, Phyllis MacCombs to Heald Oil and Gas Com- ·
pany, 58 acres lease, Lebanon.
Pearl Reynolds, aka Velma Pearl ·
Reynolds, to Nina Bland, Cert. of
Trans., Middleport. ·
George J. Lowther, Amy Lowther,
dec., Affidavit, Columbia.
The Trustees of Township of Sutton to James E. Diddle, Right of·
Way,Sutton. · ·
George Theiss to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Sutton. ·
· Emma Adams to James E. Did·
die, Right of Way, Sutton.
Ralph Michael Hoffman to
Dorothy L. Hoffman, Cert. of Trans.,
Columbia.
Betty Jean Sprouse, aka Betty
Jen Dill, to Lawrence A. Napper, .
Jr., aka Lawrence A. Napper, 19 .
acres, Salisbury.
William Long to Meadie Long, I
acre, Sutton.
1
Robert A. Mattox, Betty R. Mattox
to Edward L. Mattox, 61'.! acres,
Columbia.
Helen F. Baer to Murphy Oil Co.,
Right of Way, Sutton:
Charles E. Yost, Margaret Mae
Yost to Murphy Oil ComPB1', Right
of Way, Sutton.
Margaret I. Amberger to M!ll'PhY
Oil Company, RightofWay,Sutton.
John T. Grueser, Juanita Grueser
to M!ll'PhY Oil Company, Right of
Way, Sutton.
Michael L. Bing, Diana L. Bing to
Murphy Oil Company, Right of Way,
Chester.
Stephen L. Baldwin, Cathy E.
Baldwin to Murphy Oil Company,
RightofWay,Sutton.

Kerr News

ON ANY NEW SUITE IN STOCK

A.MESSAGE -FROM THE BIBLE.••

Meigs
property
transfers

,.
....

..,,

phone, lncludlog a coJn.operatled ,
one. AD alert lllbt blinks oo the recetver'• VIsual Ear. The ~
theB ma his menaae onto a~. :

board lllld the .well appear on bottt
' the sender's and receiver's 1111111. '
\. - .

$

Cottage Cheese.~~
FLAVORITE

'

DEL MONTE

Catsup............

.DF~I"ERGENT

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T1de.................

•

MAXWELL

·INSTANT COFFEE
140Z.

$499

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Feb. 1 1982

$ 89

•• • •
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•
:

· CAMPBELL'S

•

:CHICKEN NOODL£ soup:

~

10.75

• oz. '

$

¢ Margarine........~·

..
4!~!·...

4/$}00;
' •

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L~':!!.oo":,;:~ ~~~~~:· :
Expires Feb. 13,1982 •
····~······ · ··········

09

$ 19

GLACIER CLUB

Ice Cream .......~~L···

I'IWTIVlal • • • • • ti
•• •• •• •• •• •• UAI
C\11'1 • • • • • •

:

THANK YOU CHERRY

•

: PIE FILLING
: Umit 3 Please
: 21 oz.
:
•
•

TOILET TISSUE

$109

Limit One Per Cus omer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 13, 1982

CHARM IN

Fami~ Size
6 Roll Pllg.

•
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$}49

Limit .One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 13, 1982

�Page--E-6-o--The Sunday Times-Sentine·l · ·

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va .

Feb. 7, 1982

'TrUman used
..
tapes too

..,
..".
'

~

...."'
..'
.....•
..
"'
·~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Now It
turns out even Harry Truman may
bilve recorded some of ·his.Oval Of.

N.Y.
"Some of the old timers told us
that as soon as he learned a!;Jout th!s
flee conversations. That lengthens
(the taping) he had the system
the known Ust of presidential tapers
pulled," said Zobrist. "We are not
to Franklin D. RooseVelt, Truman,
even certain it's Truman (on the
Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
tape). "
KeMedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and,
Not' much remains, either, of
of course, RIChard M. Nixon.
.,...
Dwight Eisenhower's recorded
Aides to Gerald R. Ford and
Oval Office conversations.
Jimmy Carter .said conversations
I
"We don't have any tapes, but we
I
weren't taped during their pres!·
have about 47 pages of transcriP'
dents' tenure. Spokesman David R.
t!ons taken oft some kind of device,
'
'\,
Gergen said President Reagan !s
whether a Dlctabelt or tape re"'
recording only his interviews with
corder," said John Wickman, d!·
reporters and not his private
rector of the Eisenhower Library In
conversations.
Abilene, Kan. "Throughout the col·
Although the fact that KeMedy
lect!on, there are scattered trans·
taped some of his conversations , crlpt!ons of monitored telephone
was well known, The Washington
calls, which was the way !t was
Post on ThUrsday told of the logs
done.''
that showlid which conversations
A man who worked In the E lsen·
Kennedy taped. That list added to
bower White House said an Ampex
an already Imposing body of knowl· tape recorder was In a cabinet In
.,
edge that Nixon wasn't alone In
the office of secretary AM Whit·
.
bugging his omce, although he sur·
man, a machine modified so !t
/
passed the others In scope and
could record for three hours. Ike's
~
volume.
reason, according to the source,
Dr. Benedict Zobrist, director of
··· -······------··
was his mangled E nglish; he was
- ·- ·---the Truman Ubrary In Independ·
angry at being misquoted.
ICE ENGULFS CAR - A passenger automobile is nearly submerged
. across the river from Harrisburg, Pa. on Friday in nearby Fairview Twp.
ence, Mo., said there are 10 tapes
Nixon always maintained he got
under tons of ice that was parked at the edge of the SusquehaiUlll River
The ice on the river started to break up due to l".lins causing flooding In
that ''we think were made In the
the idea of taping conversations
low-lying areas. (AP Laserphoto).
Oval Office" during Truman's time
fromLyndonB.Johnson.
r---------------------------------------~------------------------~---------------------but not necessarily with Truman's
Thomas Thalken, director of the
consent.
Herbert Hoover Ubrary at West
"They are really unintelligible, "
Branch, Iowa, satd his man. could
he said . ."You can hear somebody
never have done such a thing,
walk!ng across the fioOJ', hear a
"U you are looking for honesty,
word here or there. But you can't
Integrity and moral!ty In the White
ten what was saki at all."
House, you won't find anyone who
The tapes were not among Tru· surpasses Herbert Hoover," he
man's papers but were sent to Indesaid. "He was opposed to any kind
pendence In the mid·70s by the
of government Intrusion Into prl•
Roosevelt Ubrary !n Hyde Park, vate lives."

..

~

.••

•'

~

'
•
,,"'

·''

,I

'

.

shortcut to Narssarssuaq, flying .
over a glacier, and was descending
from 3l,.!XXJ feet to 9,000.

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

to

liMit OUANlllll$

VISA'

~SALE

~~~U~S:;E OUR CONVENIENT lAY-AWAY

'!

.'

.I

A I 0% Deposit 'Plus

·•uo ••-

--- ·--------___;•

Toilet Seat

ss1~n

2.44

SAVE
••
.· M1n1mum

••· ~.n .

Wheeline 10 Qt. Metal Pall
~

JWIDWARE

"

...

.

Tum1r

Propane
Cylinder

2.99

Spring Valley Plaza
Phone 446·4396

FARM
,STATE
.... cas..,
c..,....

........

ltMII Mice:

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED! DUE TO THE IWJ WEATHER AND THE ECONOMY
WE HAVE s143,000 OF INVENTORY WE MUST MOVE NOW. NO .REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSED. YOUR GAIN... OUR LOSS.

APROFESSIONAL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
CAREER TRAINING

529 J~CKSON ·PIKE
.GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
APPROVED FOR TRAINING OF VETERANS
FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE

HAROWU£ DEPT.

Al add in thermos bottle . Made of durab le
polypropylene. r ust proof, dent proof and
easy to keep clean. Quart size wifh easy -tote
n' pour handle .

. ol&gt;

. 12 Foot Copper

Booster C1ble

12 h. no·tongfo hoovr booster cobl11 are
belt fnJuflnce 1g1inst d11d battery
strondings. Get preporod now with this
groot buy,
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

1

8 Qt.

Potting
Soil
Reg. 1.59

Spr•r

3.48.

su tlort tor 1 DO rlbllt
1mlorm11ion

FOOD DEPT.

Reg. 4.09

----

7.44

.c:".:.

Blker'l Joy
4 Oz. qookinl

Rot· IO.ZI .

O,n.mlc CIUIIC
T-N' Cyet.

·-·
····-

TOM 'n Cwclt ,_, IN joll .et mid INI'I
,.,..... .-Mt. CMftflt "" "- llco

•erc-

1M NIIM 11N11
Ifill kH.II 'fOU Iii
,..; "'"' • 'you ,.._ ...., ... Nn . tflll
tt1t ........in YIMII lltfM • lftlce.

45 Ct. Heavty Tall

only

t•"

3 Minulll 10 atulllilt.

Kitchen Garbage Bags
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

.GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

Reg. 7.02

SET

. ..... 1.. ••

Dry Mix

GET ON THE JOB SOONER

CALL NOW - 446-4367

Fuels for camping stovn
ond recreational equipment.
ilse for propane torch 11
well.

Stim-U-Piant
.

99¢

IT WILL COST LESS AND
YOU WILL

Rq. 2.14

4.70

Shmerprool mirror illpPfOXimlttly 14" • 50" and
flltll'tl tile ••chnive "Di1mond S,.ltlt'' lirriah. Sll't·
lock comtl'l 1nd "II eonr btc:k.
HOUIEWAIII! DEn.

UAU f,Ufll

SPRING QUARTER

1.99

Plaid Bottle

........
14" x 50" Door Mirror

RICK PERDIJE

HAIIDWAIII DEPT.

~EPT.

Dt. Size

It's a review of your insurance
coverages and needs. Home. car.
life and heallh. And it doesn't
cos1'anything. Call me lor a Fami·
ly Insurance Checkup today.

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
. -·

'

Wood

~ce
~

ENROLLNOWI

PRICES IN EFFECT
THROUGH
TUESDAy I FEB. 9 ......

ALL BLUE TICKET
FALL &amp;WINTER
CLOTHING

Tbe Stale farm

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION-DEGREE
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL-DEGREE
ACCOUNTING-DEGREE

SUNDAY, FEB. 7

OFF '

'

A

STARTS

50°/o

lAVE

MAKE IT THE BEST
ATTEND

•

t1.01 Service

.OVER

IT'S YOUR FUTURE

St. Reg.I.75·02·0472B '

1

Ch•r•e Opens Your Ley-Awey Acetum

Body recovery fullfills vow
NARSSARSSUAQ, Greenland
Danlelle Denard and Dom!nlque Deschamps saved nearly
$00,!XXJ to open a restaurant, but the
money Is gone now, spent on the
fultlliment of a vow that eneled with
the recovery of his body frdm a re. mote Greenland glacier where he
died In a plane crash.
Ms : Denard , a 33-year·old
French·Canadlan, recovered the
bodies of Deschamps and his copllot Thursday from the wreckage
of a twin-engine Learjet plane that
had been missing sljlce Jan. 11, a
charter alrllne company spokesman said.
She was driven , to begin her
search last week by the memory of
a pledge she and the J3.year-old Deschamps, a French·bom natural·
!zed Canadian, made during their
eollege days when they motorl;llked
through Europe as travel companIons. They vowed to hunt for each
other It either ever disappeared
during their subSEquent travels.
Deschamp and 30·year·old
French co-pilot Alain Tennac were
en route from West Germany to the
United States to pick up managers
of Saudi Arabia's Redec Research
and Development Co., who 111ere
the owners ot the plane.
They disappeared during an at·
temp\ to land during an arctic thunderstorm, officials said. In his last
radio communication, 'J an. 11, Deschamps said he was taking a

WE RlSlRVE TH( RIGHl

...,'

,

•

(AP) -

SUNDAY
THRU
TUESDAY

••

SPORTS DEPT.

DEPT.

6 PIECE FRONTIER

FAMILY ROOM

.497

$

·

•

•Sofa
•Chair

•Rocker

lNG LOVE SEAT •• !187. .•Coff8e Table
••••••••••••••• !77. •2 En~ Tables

59(
Rea. l!k

Northern.
Hearing
Pad

5.99
Reg. 7.99

Bath Seale
Comtonoloto liMd ond

ontr 111 imt&gt;".llioh.

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

Ttlt ti,...1 pllifform l1

CGIIIilth TOIIIIIO ......

...........
-

Mil rid! .......... .... .., '....

,_lin.

~""

lholcll\lllwipM
ctllfl.

5.99
Rot. lUI

�Page-E-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Peeps, a Gallipolis diary...

towboat, · the J . Page Hayden,
GALLIPOIJS - Gallipolia Locks toward the Gallipolis L&amp;D.
and Dam got a huge news writeup
the other day in the Pittsburgh Post·
rms ARTICLE answers some
Gazeete. "The other day" in ac- questions, such as how tall is a
tuality was the other month, for it modern towboat? Four stories.
was Dec. 30, 1981, that the Pitts- What's an average tow? Fifteen
burgh paper had a Ions aerial three- · barges. How much coal in 15
colwnn wide picture Of the Ohio barges? Twenty-three .li!Pusand
River, the camera pointing up- tons. What's the value of coal in two
stream from the airplane. On the barges? The figure is $80,000. When
front page, no less!
the J . Page Hayden lost these two
Way up at the top Of the photo, barges the dam gates could not close
near .the horizon, you can see the for 16 days, Phil Straw says, and the
roller dam with 10 or 11 boats Army Corps Of Engineers had to pay
clinging to the banks to wait their f265,000 to patch up guardwalls and
tum to go through. One-line headline dan) pillars. What's the cost of each
reads: Ohio locks hazard to tows. barge, empty? The figure is $118,000.
It's continued to Page 9, Colwnn I, But this accident so badly damaged
but ALL of Page 9 is devoted to the the two that they were sold for
Gallipolis dam, every bit of it!
scrap. Pilot Charles Lancaster, age
33, lost his job.
PIDL STRAW wrote the piece. An
explanatory note tells about him:
OMER COLEMAN, a former,
Straw is a graduate student in jour- towboat captain, is quoted. about
nalism at the University of Gallipolis L&amp;D:
Maryland, and a staff assistant to U.
There i3 no 11tralght shot at the lock's cent~r·
S. Rep. Clarence Miller, R..()hio,
lint! . You'N! either In or out. Il'li either " Amen "
· whose district includes Gallipolis.
or ''Oh,My."

C. L. (JOHNNY) ECKER, 208 Fir·
st Ave., brought the Pittsburgh
paper in to the newsroom. The clipping came from his aunt, Margaret,
' the sister of Col. H. B. Ecker. H. B.
was an auctioneer par excellence
and pioneer in Gallipolis aviation.
PIDL STRAW'S story starts off:
"It was one Of the disastrous dramas
for which Gallipolis, Ohio, has
become notorious." All the . way
through this long feature story and
analysis, Straw refers to the
Gallipolis locks and dam as simply
"Gallipolis." He tells of Pilot
Charles Lancaster guiding his big

Phil Straw has done a thorough
job, and has sprinkled the end result
with adjectives and similes. He says
that more navigational accidents
have occurred at Gallipolis than at
any other lock on the Ohio. Over one
three-year period, there were 35
serious accidents at Gallipolis. By
contrast, Racine and Greenup (on
either side of Gallipolis) reported
only two mishaps ... The Coast
Guard suggests that the worst is yet
to come at Gallipolis. This
psragraph is Phil Straw'.s wording.
He quotes Comniander Frederic
Grady as saying that the amazin~
thing is that no one's been killed at
Gallipolis ... (psuse) ... yet!
WE WON'T get into the solutions,

for we don't have.the time or space
or qualifications to do it. It's fame,
butnottoopleasantfame.

Gallipolia is celebrat!Dg the day.
Jabez Parsons was the Four
Chaplains Day committeeman;
Howanl Baker Saunders issued
proclamations as president of the
Gallipolis City Conuniasion ; and the
Rev. Everett Delaney, chaplain of
Lafayette Post, led the observance.
When the troopship Dorchester
went down from the blast of a torpedo, the chaplains led the soldiers
to boxes of life jackets and passed
them out with boat-drill precision,
according to one of Howard Saunders' proclamations. When the supply was exhausted, the chaplains
gave theilllfe jackets to four young
Gl's and told them to jump. Twenty·
five minutes later, on Feb. 3, 1943, ,
the Dorchester went down. The last
anyone saw of the Four Chaplains,
they were standing on the slanting
deck, their arms linked in prayer to
the one God they aU served. They
were Clark V. Poling, Reformed
Church of America; Alexander D.
Goode, Jewish; John P. Washington,
Roman Catholic ; and George L.
Fox, Methodist.
SCOTT D. MILLER, director of
public information, Rio Grande and
Community College 45674, holds the
job ol' Sam peeps held 40 years ago.
This Is NCYr to say that Peeps was
publicity director for 40 years! More
like four to five years. And we did
use the vehicle to ask for facts from
the readers. But never - not once did ol' Peeps ask about origin of an
athletic nickname. It just never occurred to us to-find out why the Rio
Redmen are called Redmen.
It did occur to ScOU D. Miller. He
came up with an item which read
something like this:
The Army ROTC program at Rio
Grande College and Community
College Is seeking information on
why the school's athletic teams are
called the Redmen,

but not all the faclll to complete an
Interstate story. Tom McKean Is In
New Jerset- accepting a job ~ electrical engineer with the RCA Corp.
U'L BO PEEPS is dead. It was The Kentucky woman wanted to tell
about 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 30, · Tom that he has an inheritance, a'nd
that this shaggy-faced little animal Marie thinks she purchased some
died in Kanauga alter a hypodermic r------..:.....___...__
needle did its gentle euthanasia for
her. She suffered an hour from internal injuries an automobile in·
flicted on Fourth Ave. in front of her
home. She was paralyzed, She
whimpered. She looked into the face
of her hwnan being as if pleading for
reUef. A1J Lome Greene put it, for
you and me she was five or six years
old. But Bo was a dynamo of activity : bring her into the' house and
she lights out like a frightened racehorse. Someone failed to hook her to
the chain out back, and the miscue
was fatal. She ripped around the
house and sped toward the street
and hit the street. just as a car
passed. The car struck the dog.
Anyone who thinks he knows
should contact the Army ROTC officeatRioGrandeat (614) ~.

property fiWI the Virginia Nell
County, some acreage between
Grayson and Olive Hill, . John
McKean thinks. Virginia Nell
Hillman McKean died in January,
1946.

New
Light itCrisp Shrimp Dinner

TOM McKEAN, 41, a few weeks
ago retired after 20 years in the U.S.
Navy. He retired at the rank of
lieutenant senior grade. He is a
graduate of the University of New
Mexico. Feb. 2 some unidentified
woman telephoned the TimesSentinel from Carter County, Ky.,
apparently unaware that Tom's
father lives in Galllpolis: John A.
McKean, 50 Chillicothe Rd. Marie
Foster handled this call, transferred
it to ol' Peeps, who found out some

· k's our aD-new recipe. We use big shrimp,
prepared with a liah~ crispy layer of apeciaDy selected
. intlredienll risht in the Shoney's kib:hen neor you, and lei'Ved
with Sboney's own cocktail~~~~~Jre,ltenc:h fries (0.:boked potato
alter SPM), wann touted grecian btad, and aD the hot
homemade soup and IIIU'den fn:sh salad you can eat.
Tty it now, at this •t&gt;eciJ:JI introduclorfl price.

lt'e a new way we 18)1 '1'baDk you lor coming to Sboney'.:'

$4.29

,-----------------------..J...-----------------------

FOUR CHAPLAINS DAY! That's
today - Sunday, Feb. 7. Lafayette
Post 'J:l, American Legion, of

above the minimum levels set by
Congress in the new farm b111. That
Is $2.55 a bushel for corn and $3.55 a
bushel for wheat.
·They said, however, that Block Is
considering sweetening the loan
rate for farmers who place com or
wheat In the long-term farmer-held
reserve program. Officials had
said last year that they planned to
continue provldlns a ll-cent-abushel Incentive for wheat and a
15-cent-a-bushel for corn. Any
"sweetening" or the reserve rate
would be In addition to that, they
said.
"TI'hey're working on the Office
of Management and Budget to give
them the (financial) abUJty to do
that," said Sen. Mark Andrews, RN.D.
Andrews and others on the committees told Block, however, that
they were afraid many farmers
would not participate In the reduction program without more significant economic Incentives. They
suggested many would feel they
could earn more through unlimited
production, even if market pl1ces
stay low, than they could by remaining eUglble lor governme~'
price supports.

-~

•

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
the 18-month rate in effect at the time
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000, which
they are deposited. (During February the
can be subtracted from your income before
18-month rate is 16.25%.*) Or you can
your taxes are figured each year. If you
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
have a non-working spouse, you can
rate in effect for February is 15.75%.*) ·
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
Act quickly to get
and your spouse both work, you can each
the best tax advantage.
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
money market interest rates for an
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
inflation-proof rate of return.
for your retirement. To maximize the taxThe chart below illustrates how quickly
deferred interest you eam, you should make
your financial future can grow.
your contributions as soon as possible after
You can choose one of two ways
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
to earn your Interest at BANK ONE.
statements on the status of the Account and
You can choose an
your funds are
~sntseeretfst ra,ate whicthh ,.--~------r-_-A_G_E-...-A-M_O_U_N_T..., insured by an
1
or mon s.
w~~onva..Opon
'"":'~
agencyofthe
Any new funds
VvurrRA
federal
deposited will earn
50
$ 83,506 government.
L
INIDIVIDI-IA-~
·

' REASON 18: H&amp;R Block uncompllcates
the new 1040A Short Form.

RE1'IIIMIMT
ACCOUNT

The so-called Short Fqrm is now two pages. It calls for
up to 63 entries. You may even find yourself referring.to the
instructions 16 times.
H&amp;R Block tax preparers are trained to ask the right
questions, make the right entries, use the right forms. All
you have to do is sign your name.

:::~%~

5

9·6 Mon.-Fri.

sat. 9· 5

40

$ 298,667

30

$ 966,926

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

-

Tree seedlings program underway
GALUPOUS - Gallipolis Soil
and Water Conservation District's
annual tree seedlings sales program
is underway.
The seedlings will control erosion,
encourage wildlife, save energy and

beautify the area.
Available are.: White pine, Nor·
way spruee, arbOrvitae, sweet gwn,
tuliptree, red oak, autumn olive,
black locust, and black walnut.
These are one to two year seedlings,

Agriculture and·our community

20

$ 3,042,435

'' Thtl anumnthll y® malt!! I S2000tOf'llrii:Ju lton llll'ltbegtM or1QOi eact1 yur 11.1 12-e ol'!ltiiUI rate
lll•IJ mat you leave tynOs tn rour IRA throul,;lh your !lSth ytar

!Jy Bryson R. Carter
explains sampling soil In more
County ExteDIIOD Ageut,
detail. You can obtain a copy at our
Agrlculbm&amp; CNRD Office at 1502 Eastern Avenue,
GALLIPOUS - It's getting that GaUipolis; phone 446-7007.
time of year when folks begin
thinking about starting gardens,
County Extension Agent, Ed
sOWins tobacco beds and before too Vollbom, in Jackson County, liBYS
long, planting field crops . and they are having a Fruit Growers
mowing lawns. One ~uestion that . Meeting, next Wednesday, February
frequently comes up IS how often . 10 at !be Jackson Area Extel!lloil
should you te~·Y?ur soi~. . ~· • • ~nter,-starting at 6 p.m. Nomeal is
Generally, 1t rs suffrc1ent to test planned, so eat early. They will have
your soil every three years. Solis a refreshment break midway ln the
that are more intensively \rsed, such program.
as greenhouse soils, or soils used for
The program will be mainly on
high valued crops should be tested controlling diseases and Insects in
every year.
fruit crops as well as a round table
When you take your soil .sample discussion. I have more detailed
take a core sample, or slice of soil, to copies of the program here at the
plow depth (about eight inches) . For Extension Office.
row crops, sample bew~ the rows ..
For established grass pasture crops
Jim Wells, will be our speaker onand lawns, sample to the depth of the ce again, at the Annual Winter
rooting zone (generally three to four Tobacco Meeting, scheduled for
inches). Collect a core or slice of soil Thursday evening, March 4, at Han·
at about 5 different sites within the nan Trace High School. We'll get un·
field or garden. Let them air dry and der way at 7:30p.m., so mark the
then mix all of them together date on your calendr and plan to atthoroughly, put about I\!! cups of this tend.
mixed soil into a container and brtng
it to the Extension Office. There is a
Burley tobacco auctions have enlaboratory test fee of $4.50 and we ded for the season at a majority of
get your results back in about two to markets by the end of the eighth
three weeks.
,
week of sales. The Federal-State
If you're into N«f-Till farlning then
Markel News Service reporls prices
you need to sample these fields in a were not quite as strong compared
special way. Tbe correct way Is to with the previous week. No major
take two samples at each sampling cl~nges occurred in quality of the
location. Take the first sample to a
light volume. The percentage placed
depth of one inch (push aside crop ' under loan increased slightly but
residue) and the second sample, like still remained very small.
I've already explained - to a depth
Markets closing this week were
of eight Inches. If lime is needed , a
Covington,, Morehead, Mt. Sterling,
lime recommendation will be based
Paris, Russellville and Winchester,
on the shaDow sample.
Ky.; Madison, IN and Weston, Mo.
Bulletin 691, Sampling Soil for
THis leaves 13 points with planned
Test)ns, Is a handy little leaflet that auctions.

18-24 inche~ high, grown in Ohio.
For Chrisbnas tree planting, the
district is offering white pine and
Norway spruce.
·
Windbreaks are planted to conserve energy, furnish an area of
cover and food for wildlife, provide a
sound barrier or visual screen.
Windbreak species available are:
Whiie pine, Norway spruce, arborvitae, and autwnn olive. ·
Orders will be accepted until Mar·
ch 31, {)r until the seedling supply
runs ou~ - this year the seedlings
will be·sold on a first come first serve basis. Distribution will be on
Saturday, April 3, at the•district office, Spring Valley Plaza.

Prospects dim for quick recovery
BfBOBFICK
AIIOOiated ~ WI1ter
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prospects are dim for any quick lm·
provemeilt in soybean prices with
suppUes expected to continue outstripping demand, Agriculture Department analysts S&amp;y.
With 1981 producing the second·
best crop on reconl, market prices
have been dl1ven downward and
can be expected to settle at an aver·
age of $1.25 a bushel below a year
earUer, otflclals at the department's Economic Research Ser·
vice say.
.. AlthoUgh prices of soybean products are lower this season, a sluggish U.S. economy wiU temper
Increases IIi use," they added In the
Fats and Oils Outlook and Situation

seasons."
"Given large ending stocks of
soybeans and products projected
tot 1981-1982 and uncertain economic prospects, adjustments to
bring U.S. suppUesand uselntobel·
ter balance next year wUI probably

Stop
BAN by any

K ONE office
....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___, fordetalls.
Tnere II a Substanttl ltnterest penall y !or early Wllh(lrawal

Meigs County agent's corner

Tips given on beef nutrition
By John C. Rice
ExteDIIoD Agent
POMEROY - Beef Nutrition -

Homemaker's circle

Ways suggested to stay
·on top off financial planning·

fEEOE
ND
BR.OOD COW SALE.

~;mln~e~r~als~in~the~gr;·;•l;n;or;f;ree;c;ho;l;ce;·~;;;;~~~~;;~;

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

A GO.O D

ISears I.

NAMI

You Can Count on Saara!

"PRE-SEASON"
FENCE SAtE
12 GAUGE ARMADILLO CHAIN LINK

HOMELITE

1

$ 29*

'

1-.15'x9' Sliding Door, 1-3'x6'8" Se~vice
Door, 6x6 Pres. Trtd. Timbers, 29 G~ . Pamted
steel Siding (Choice of 12 colors) w1th 5-y~ar
warranty, 28 GA Gal volu~e Steel Roofmg
with 20-year warranty, 4 Skyhtes.
00 TOTAL ERECTED PRICE

pertoot
38 1n. high

HOMELITE ~

SUPER E · Z
e16" Pqwer Tip Guide bar and chain
• Automatic and manual chain oiler
• Rubber cushioned handle bar
• Compression release
• Rugged 2.5 cu. in . engine (40.9ccl
• Chromed chain

•twm inal ltQtla, glttl at
r-oular tow prk:ea.

Armlldlllo fencing

Prices Include Tax &amp; Delivery

~~~~:

77

MANY . OTHER BUILDING SIZES AND OPTIONS
AVAILABLE .

9·6 Tues.
&amp; Thur.

ollft•tiJ IIIOM'J, ollr na..-e

comes up .nn1.

i .

Water requlements - this Is one I
should have written sooner. True,
beef cows do not require as much
water In the winter as summer but
they do require water. When we
have extreme cold weather, water
becomes very scarce for a beef cow
in the pasture field , Streams freeze
and ponds freeze making water
unavailable. Cows should not have
11ccess to ponds for sever.al reasons.
They tramp in the shoreline, contaminate the water and ruin the
pond edges. Fo~ good weed control
the pond needs It&gt; drop off sharply.
Cows on the lee seek!nR water is
very dangerous. Many cows have
been lost by breaking throil8h the
Ice. It also Is almost Impossible to
keep holes open but breaking
through the lee where a stream runs
will help especially where the water
· lsmoving.
Plans for planting corn should be
made now. Select your varieties,
your herbicide program, and your
fertility program. For corn growers, .
check or so.ll test the upper inch of
soli for pH (acidity) If It has grown
com for several years, Nitrogen on
top of the ground lowers the pH and
the herbicides are not as effective.
One-two tons of lime every 3 to 4
years will correct this situation.

When the baef cow calves her
nutrition requlfe1Denla greatly increases. A I ,000 pound cow requires
2·14 pounds of TDN per &lt;)ay. Hay
c&lt;intalns about 50 percent TDN. In
·other
words, a 1,000 pound cow
Summary Issued r,fonday.
requires
24-28 pounds of hay per day
The report said the season·
to
feed
herself
and her caU. This Is
average price should fall to $6.25 a
not
allowing
for
any wastage. Her
bushel from $7.57 the year before so
protein
needs
double.
She needs two
that ·"adjusted lor Inflation, this avpounds
of
protein
per
day
. If the hay
erage would be the lowest In 10
was made late and contains only five
percent protein, 28 pounds of lu!y
would supply 14 pounds of protein.
This Is not enough. Hay must be 7~
percent to meet the requirements.
During this lactation period (period
of giving milk) the cow must also
recover from giving birth and
rebreed within 90 days. Cows whose
By Bettie Clad:
stuck. Tbe courts move in, because feed requirements are not met
Home Ecooomlct Agent
.
you hail no will.
either will not breed or may breed
GALUPOIJS-- ''The beat time to
Be sure you have bealth inlate.
,
fix a leaky roof?", the adage goes, surance, and that It is adequate.
Mineral requirements - very sim"Is when lt isn't ralning," .And that's . Credlt counselors aay that a number ply this. Feed mineraiB In loose
how the average breadwinner of their clients who are near form. Have a two part mineral
. should be thlnk)ng when It cornea to bankruptcy got that way because of feeder. Feed dlcalclurn phOilphate
staying on top Of family flnanelal huge medical bills.
on one side and trace minerals with
plannlns.
.
Add to your life inlurance if you magnesium oxide on the other side.
What are among the chief things to haven't enough, If you die with in-· Mix lll&amp;g1leslwn oxide with trace
consider? The American Council of sufficient coverage, your family mineral aalt up to 50 percent. Add
Ufe Insurance offers these could face a real struggle.
magnesium oxide to salt gradually r~=~;:;;t;r.;r;~r:;~,
suggestions : ,
If you'd like to be sure your family
and once hou have reached the level II
Place all your financial records In had adeqllate life insurance protec- youwant,remembernotover50perone place. If you die unexpectedly, tlon In 1982, here are six questions cent, feed it the year round . If you
your family might lose an insurance the American Councll of Life In- prefer not to feed magnesium oxide
benefit It had coming, or fall to cash surance auggesta you aslt yourseU:
the year round, feed from January
TUESDAY fEB 16th
in some shares of stock just because I) Do I have enough life insurance to to June. A magnesium deficiency
'
•
no one knew you had them.
.
provide my famlly with a reasonable usually occurs when ihe cows are
12:00 NOON
Make a will. An astonlshins nwn- . Income? 2) Do I have the right kind mixing or they are milking and on
PRIOR TO OUR
ber of people die without one, even of protection? 3) Am I paying my lush green pastures ;,, the spring.
REGULAR AiiCTION
those with a Jot of money and proper- premiumin the most economical Minerals should be ted to all
ODUCERS L.IVESTOCK
ty to Jl88ll on, (Your estate might manner? 4) How am I using my livestock , the entire year .
PR
·
even be thrown into the courts policy dividends? 5) Have I con- Magnesium deficiency u.sually !1C7
ASSOCIATION
because no one can find your will.)
sldered a regular income for my curs In COWS giving milk, If cattle
IIASHIMGTOM O.H., OHIO
Many wives don't bother wiih wills . family rather than Jump-sum are getting grain, then feed the
61633S.I922
because they don't think they own
proceeds?go to
6) theWill
thea) Ipollcy
anything. But if your husband leaves proceeds
person(
want
everything to you, and you die shor- or should I change my
tly alter he does, your family Is beneflciary(s)?

$5,440

Whcnner you think

have to come !rom reduced production," the analysts said.
"However, with prices of compel·
!ng crops a.lso depressed, this
spring's soybean acreage probably
won't · change appreciably from
1981," they added.

ONLY"-

2nd &amp; Brow11 St.
Mason, W.' Va,

II&amp;R. 8 1 OCit
-

. TOBACCO GROWERS GET PROGRAM SUP· the OSU College ol Agrlcnlbm program~ . J. D. ShU·
PORT - A grant of $3,000 was presented to Dean Roy · fert, )eft, manager of agricultural programs for R. J.
M. Kollman, rlgh~ director of Exteoslon and Research Reynolds Tobacco Company, presented the cllecu at a
at The Ohio State University, by R. J. Reynoids lo- recent luacheon attended by College of Agrlculbm,
dustrtes, Inc. for use In the Ohio Extension program on Ohio Farm Bureau aod R. J. Reynolds represeoburley tobacco. Also, a $2,500 discretionary grant was tatlves. This Is the se&lt;!ond year the company ba1 eoopresented to the Dean by the company lor use In areas bibuted to the support of Ohio's Exteuloo program oa
IIIIIIQtlclpated In the normal buaget process, quick burley tobacco, whlcb Is produced Ill several southern
respoose to emergency situations and enhanceiQent li Ohio counties.

It's time to start thjnking
about spring and gardens·

I

ness to expand " the cheese CCC's latest report, cheese surpluses totaled 5'70.3 million pounds;
d~!!on program announced Dec.
butter, 206.6 mUllan pounds; and ·
22 by President Reagan. Some 30
non-fat dry mtlk, 8!56.5 mUUon
mllllon pounds of cheese were specpolmds.
Wed lor.donations.
A year ago, by compsrison, the
cheese program but that care
"We encourage them to expand
should be taken so it does not inter- It," Healy said. "I would favor that. surpluses were: cheese, 196.8 mil·
Uon pounds; butter, 273.7 mllUon
fere with ~ markets.
H they could put an additional 'Ill
Reports have clrculated that the mllllon pounds out, I most certainty pounds; and non-fat dry mllk, 532.4
mUUon _pounds.
administration soon may decide 10 would favor it."
On Wednesday, officials said a pi·
make an add!tlor'll 5ll mUUon to 'Ill
The cheese, along with surplus
mUUon pounds or s\I.."Jllus cheese butter and non-fat dry milk, was lot program Is being worked out to
available to states fer donation to bought by~ Agrtculture Depart· · distribute surplus butter In Iowa,
needy people.
ment's Commodity Credit Corp. !ndlcatlog that it might be , exPalrklk B. Healy, secretary of . under the government's milk price panded if the results are favorable.
the National MUk Producers Feder- suppol1 program.
The administration has been atation, saki be favors expanding the
Under law, the CCC ts required to tempitng through cutbacks In the
give-away program so long as it In·
· buy the surplUs ·commodities to support program - approved by
eludes market safeguards.
"We need to make sure It goes to prop up prices paid to farmers lor Congress last year - to discourage
their mllk. MUk pro«&lt;uctlon has further expansion by dai ry
the truly Indigent," Hel!ly said last
farmers. But so far, at least, probeen at record levels the past cou·
week In a telephone Interview.
duction stU! is running at record
pie of years, forcing prices down.
Otherwise, he said, it could go to
Consequently, the CCC has ac- levels.
people who normally buy cheese
Consequently, the CCC stW Is
anyway.
cumulated huge stockpiles under
buying
·relatively large quantities
the
support
program.
Healy s&amp;id "the policy of the goof
dairy
prnducts to bolster prices.
As
of
Dec.
31,
according
to
the
vernment appears to be a willing·

By DON IIENDALL
AP Farm Wrlller
WASHINGI'ON (AP) -A dairy
Industry official says he favors expanding the sovemment's tree

___;__________

must 'provide incentives'

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Nation's dairy head favors
.expanding cheese program .

Look what$ Cookin'at

GOLDIE SWISHER, Bidwell Rt. 2
(she lives a mile norih of Rodnef),
was the rook partner of Peeps Jan.
29 at the Gallia County Senior
Citizens Center. Myra Gilmore, and
Winnie Wetherholt were about :&gt;nO
ahead and were close to the vic·
torious 500-mark. Goldie bade and
made a moonshot, which won the
game.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page E,9

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

HUlman McKean estate In Carter

Director tQid government
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government must provide better fl.
nancial Incentives if it wants
farmers to cut back on grain prO:
ductlon this year, Agrtculture Secretary John R. Block has been
told.
Block went to Capitol Hill recently to talk to members of both
the House and Senate Agrtculture
cornmltiees about his plans to require feed grain and wheatfarmers
to reduce the land they plant this
year to remain eligible tor government price supports.
After the private meetings, Block
said there was only "general discussion" with no mention of details
on the acreage reduction program,
·expected to be announced Friday,
possibly In Chicago or Kansas City.
"Some detalls, In tact, haven't
even been decided," Block said.
Many oUlclals ·speculate farmers
will be asked to cut wheat production 15 percent from 1981 and com
tl1-percent. .
But a&amp;onll!lg to ~me of those
who attended the meetings, Block
effectively ellmlna ted any posslbUity that farmer,; would receive direct government paymC!IIts for
ldllns land or that the basic federal
crop loan rates would be Increased

. Feb. 7, 1982

i"Gallipolis dam gets huge news !!\tory in Pittsburgh paper

BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS

THE FIVE-COLUMN map of the
"river at the top of Page 9 of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette calls special attention to "Gallipolis L&amp;D," and a
line under the map reads, "More
navigational accidents occur at the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam than at
any other on the 981-mile Ohio
River.' '

Feb. 7, 1982

IRON HORSE BUILDERS

=.
-..un-- -

15140 Middlefork Rd.
Laurelville, Ohio 43145

BANKONE_
BANK ONE OF POMEROY .

\I

·\"hI (JI{ II II I'\-, I \III I J I'HI&lt; I

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
915-3301

,,

, I

CHIITER, OH.

�.

Pa ge--E- 10- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Feb. 7, 1982

FHA loan
guarantees
expanded

SUPPLEMENT TO THE SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

By OWEN ULLMANN
Aeeoole'ed Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a
move to bolster the sagging housIng Industry, the Reagan adrnlnls·
tratlon plans to propose expanding
FHA borne loan guarantees to cover va riable r a te and
other non-conventional mortga ges.
The pi'oposal to amend the HousIng Act
1934 will be disclosed as
part of President Reagan's 1!133
budget plan, Department of HousIng and Urban Development otfl·
clals said Thursday.
But the budget plan, to be unveiled Monday, will not Include any
direct meastll'I!S to reduce the record·mortgage rates, which Indus·
try officials have blamed for the
slump In house sales, White House
ot11ctals said.
"It's not part of our plan to fiddle
with Interest rates, " said one a ide,
who asked not to be Identified.
BY Insuring mortgages that le nd·
ers' might otherwise be unwilling to
extend, the Federal Ho~lng Ad·
rhlnlstratlon has enabled mllllons
of Americans to buy their ow,n
llomes.
But under current law, FHA In·
sures only fixed-rate mortgages,
which have set Interest rates and
either !lxed monthly payments, us:
ually for 3Q years, or a graduated
payment sChedule with lower In·
ltlal payments to ald first-time ·
homebuyers.
Fewer aiJd fewer lending lnstltu·
!Ions are providing fixed-rate mortgages because of volaWe Interest
rates. Increasingly, lenders are demanding mortgage arrangements
tha.t allow for periodic Interest rate
adjustments.
One HUD official, who asked not
to be ldentltled, said the admlnlstratlon's legislative proposal is de-signed to place more emphasis on
helping first-time homebuyers secure mortgages.
Because of record Interest rates,
most would-be buyers have been
unable to quality for a mo!irage,
and the housing Industry
been
In Its worst slump since World War
II. .
"There's a tremendous pent-up
market, and we think this (plan).
will make more people eligible,"
said the HUD official. He declined
to provide further detaUs.
Presidential counselor Edwin
Meese
hinted at the propo6Ed
change Thursday, telling the U.S.
Chamber of Coinerce there are a
serles of measures being planned to
assist the recovery or the housing
Industry.
"The main thing we have to do
though... IS do everything possible
to bring down the Interest' r ates,"
he said. "Thls Is why you'll be see-Ing some spec!tlc actlon on that In
the next two or three weeks by the
president."
The White House aide said Meese
was "referring to some measures
to assist the housing Industry and
not to specl!!cally or d!$a,bl,(ho-

Popular

or

4"

.t;llrt11·

\'"a'4 t'
J•

' • ••

Th~special time of year is close and 11t Hatfield &amp;

McCoy we've just the right gifts to bring a smile to the
face of the one you love-Carpeting, Color TVs, and
Major Appliances-and we've got them AI:L ON SALE.
So come in now to play cupid while the selection is great
and the values are tremendous during this anual sales

GRA DOPE I GCELEBRATIO OF OUR
BRA DNEW FULL Ll E FRESH BAKERY.
'

SUNDAY 12:30 to 6:30
MONDAY lOam to 9pm

SALE DATES: FEBRUARY 7 THRU 13, 1982
'.

CONTEMPORARY OR
MEDITERRANEAN
COLOR CONSOLE
Single knob electronic
tuning
• Deluxe cabinetry
· • Automatic fine tuning

Hot-news
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - The
costoftuel!sdrawlngmany Amelicans closer to their fireplaces.
A record 33 million cords of hard
and 10ft woods Is expected to be
consumed In 1982, according to Darryl Sherman, president of s &amp; s.
Verutlng Machine Co.• a marketer ·
ol seasonal vendlng equipment that
specializes In selling b\lndled wood
In the cOlder montha and Ice In
wann days. Sales ol. wood-burnbig '
stovel also are expected to reach
an aU-time high of 1.6 mllilon, he

added.

.WE FEATURE U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF • FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
•

USDA
H0 ICE

•

RCn 25" DIAGONAL XL100
REMOTE COLOR
CONSOLE
•

Keyboard Electronic
Tuning
• Convenient swivel ba se
• A_utomatic FrequencyControl

S499

~ UNDERCOUNTER
DISHWASHER

MICROWAVE
OVEN
•

•

Magl'iet1 c Cook·a· round

15 Minute timer
Family alze oven
• · I nterlor oven light
• Woodgrain decor

turntlible
a Va riable Pow.r Sailings
• 500 Waitt or Power
a

Compact Sl za - Fila mo11

anyw"a re

II .

---j

RCn COLOR CAMERA &amp;
Quasar· Portable 6 HR.

• Black matrix plc:tur·e
tu.be
• Automatic
Frequency Control
• Color Correction

U.S.D.A. CHOICE .

~~17
~

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WASHER ·

VID 0 TAPE RECORD~R

e 2 Speeds

CAMERA.

2 Cyclea-normal &amp; gentle
Super Surgllator agitator

o 3 : 1 manual

$255·

zoom control
o F 1 .B lens

o Electronic

viewfinder

•
•
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COLOR PORTAI3LE

·o. ---·- ~ $227
,.

~,;&gt;

W1~~8Wl~E OVE;N

Porcelain enamel on
steel I nterlor
• Unique soft food
disposal system
• Dual spray action for
cleaner dishes

7'*1'~ 9"

POUND

RECORDEA

30·Mlnute timer
Separate defrost cycle
Sealed· in ceramic shelf

Km'S ALL nNE· FAVORITE

~~~TURKEY DRUMSTIC

~

law,

Fowl weather van
BROWNWOOD, Texas (Ap) - A
van, whose climate contrails monitored by electronic sensors to In· .
sure optimum rtdlng comfort, Is
strlctly for the birds.
The specially-equipped truck Is ·
used to transport thousands of dayold turkeys from hatchery to customer turkey farms In Arkansas, •
Ml88ourl and Oklahoma.
Because the highly perishable
an(! valuable cargo must enjoy psrrect air-condlttoned comfort, the
driver can check temperatures
throughout the van, recirculate the
air, heat It, cool It, redlstrlbute It or
exhaust It simply by 'filpping
switches on the control panel
mounted on the dashboard.
The truck, leased from Ryder
Truck Rental, has a capacity of
. 34,000 poults. The birds are shipped
In special ptasttc bones stacked 11
hl&amp;'h In the van. Each box llolds 100
turkeys.

OHIO
Wlcelte F~ie1Ul3fcip ANd &amp;wiHg3 Go. Hmul 9K Hcucd

rdirlal
P.ER.MARKETS

·
·ci'
1
t~ ~ttp Ai4~ P'

m

rectly reduce Interest rates."
Last April, the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board gave permission
to savings and loan Institutions . the - ·
primary source for most home
loans, to begin Issuing variable rate
mortgages.

NI DDLE~ORT,

'•

has

bart

LOCUST and PEARL STREET

"'&lt;:~o a 0/&gt;

~~~ D D

~~"-",jO""a

o.O.~~~o

"'-o~ :"

·

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cf?••• ••

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a~
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    <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="43796">
            <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="43795">
              <text>February 7, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="506">
      <name>bragg</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="674">
      <name>ohlinger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
