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Page

Friday, Ju!y116, 1.982

· Pomeroy-Middlepof!; Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

·Judge O'Brien terminates 30 · court· · cas~~ ·
Twenty·one defendants were •
fined and nine others forfeited
bonds In Meigs County Court
Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Raymond Lalrlnere, Athens,
failed to display valid license
plates, $10 and costs; Roy Bailey,
Racine, shooting or attempted to
shoot a wUd bird from roadway, $00
and costs; Wesley Clark, Racine,
DWI, $150 and costs, one year pro
batlon, sentenced to 20 days In jail,
17 days suspended, Improper han·
dllng of a llrearm In a n\otor vehi·
cle, $225; Ronald Shields, Tuppers
Plains, reckless operation, $50 and

costs; David Sands, GaUipolls,
speed, $25 and costs; James Jones,
Middleport, S~ and costs, speed;
Glenda Rutter•. Nelsonvllle and
EmestWhltehead,ReedsvUie,flsh·
lng without license, $25 and costs
each; Alan Vandall, Parkersburg,
speed for unreasonable conditions,
$10 and costs; Edward Hensch,
Cuyahoga Falls, fishing without a
llcense, $25andcosts; DavidEollln·
ger, Gallipolis, speed, $25 and
costs; Stephen Allen, Ironton,
speed, $24 and costs; Walter
Hensch, MassUon, fishing without a
license, $25 and costs; Catherine

~ng

~U~blrd trorrf'al

Wood,
Bottom, taUure to yield
hall of roadway, $10 and costs;
Larry Hysell, Pomeroy, falled to
display valid registration, $10 and
costs; Scott Hill, Pomeroy, speed,
$75 and costs· Harry Barton Syra·
cuse, no valid operators llce~se. $75
ana costs, one year probation; Guy
Schuler Rutland no eye protec·
tlon,
and costs; WUialm Eakins,
Racine, DWI, $150 and costs, five
days confinement, llcense sUspend
90 days, no valid operators license,
$50 and costs, five days confinement, one year probation; Randy
Wheeler, Racine, shooting 0 ~ at·

·tempting to shoot a
roadway, $50 and eol!ts; W. ~:
zant~ Macedonia, s~. fll
costs.
'· '. t
ForleltlngbondswereNoelLam· ·
bert, Gallipolis, overwldth, ~-50i. ~
Roy Buchanan, CoolvUle, tlflvlngi
whlle Ucense suspended, ' $70.50;,
speed, $00.50; Ivan Bowman, WU-:
kesvjlle, .lohn J . Davis; Columbus,:
Lynn McDowell, Elkins W. Va .. :
Kenneth R. Cain, Kent, speed, !
$50.50 each; WUllam Kllutz, Pomeroy and Mark Norton, ,Pomeroy, I
unlawfully discharging llrewo,rkslt
$72,55 each. , :
• ~~¥

anqf

$10

Rav·e nswood ·River Festivai... A-7
Inside .. .

casts continued hot and humid conditions for Ohio~ •• A-4

Art Buchwald. explains how war while bad for people - .is good for
business •••A-2

!

.,.

'

Earthen dam · coll~pse leaves fo·u r dell(!,-~·
ESTES PARK, Colo. (AP)- An
earthen dam gave way Thursday
and unleashed a bolllng brown wall
of water up to 30 fret high, leaving
at least four people missing In •
Rocky Mountain National Park
and clogging this vacation city with
a sea of mud.
The water poured through the 80year·old dam at Lawn Lake,
scoured plants from the banks of
the Roaring River, engorged Fall
River and sent 5 to 7 teet of water
down Estes Park's main street,
said Glen Kaye, a public lnforma·
tion officer lor the park.
The water knocked out street

signs and plate glass windows,
twisted door frames and moved
cars and a truck when It hit Estes
Park's main street of Elkhorn
Avenue, which Is U.S. 34.
There was no official word on the
&lt;;ause of the collapse.
. 'The fiood washed out power lines
west of Estes Park and several gasoline pumps and propane tanks
were ripped loose, but Gene B.
Rough, a volunteer firefighter, said
there were no reports of fires.
Up to 200 businesses along Elk·
horn Avenue were reported
damaged .
"I'm just sick," said Estes Park

Sharp energy
other commodity prlces wUI move
at the retail level, as measured by
the · Consumer Price Index. The
CPI, though, checks costs for a
broader range of Items, Including
housing and medical care, than
does the producer price measure.
The Consumer Price Index rose a
seasonally adjusted 1 percent In
May after a 0.2 percent advance In
AprU. Figures for June wUI be released next week.
lnfiatlon at the retaU level was up
8.9 percent last year, In comparison
with the 12.4 percent rise of 1900.

Meigs emergency squads kept busy
Meigs · Co. Emergency Medical
Service was kept busy Wednesday
and Thursday answering a number
of ·emergency calls.
Wednesday-At 12:46 a .m .,
Tuppers Plains squad took Martha
Bailey from Success Road to Veterans Memorlal Hospital; at 10:37
a.m. Pomeroy EMS took Harry
MUler from Pomeroy Health Care
Center to VMH;. at 10:47 a.m.,
Tuppers Plains unit transported
Addle Baker from SuCcess Road to
St. Joseph's Hospital; at12: 44 p.m.,
Middleport.took Kay Ferrell brom
Beech Street to VMH; at 1:39 p.m.,

Racine took Connie Morris, Buck·
town, to VMH.
Thursday-At 1:28 a.m. , Middleport squad took John Smith to Veterans Memorlal Hospital; at 10: 13
a.m., Middleport EMS took Rl·
chard ·Gukey to Holzer Medical
Center; at 2:43 p.m., Pomeroy
squad answered a call at Dlamo~d
Savings &amp; Loan to take blcycleaccl·
dent victim, Shirley Jones, to
VMH; at 2:50 p:m,, Tuppers Plains
went to Alfred Road to take Allie
Stamper to VMH; at 3:58 p.m.,
MiddlePort unit took Scott Edmlns
from the Middleport pool to VMH.

The Board of Trustees of Area

Stx Health Systems Agency, Inc ..
wUI meet for the final time July 21
a! the Hotel Lafayette, Marietta. at
7:15p.m.
Items to be discussed are approval of financial statements, executive director's report, distribution
or awards and agency dissolution.
The mretlng Is open to the public.
For more Information. call 374·
2200.

Veterans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital announced the following discharges
and admissions Thursday:
Admlsslons-AprU Ferrell, Galli·
polls; Fred Crow, Syracuse; Joan
Varnaham, Long Bottom; Allie
Stamper, CpolvUie. DischargesRobert Price, l::len St1&gt;ne, Jeffrey
Bradbury, Lynda Adkins, PhyUis
Clay, Ray Wining, Ricky Hauber.

Marriage licenses

Family 'picnic set

Marriage licenses Issued In pro
bate court Wednesday were Danny
R Karr. Racine. factory worker
and Terry L. Ross, Circlevllle, student; Timothy D. Fry, Mlddle(Xlrt.
carpet layer and Tammy Jo Ward,
Rutland, student.

The Howard Star famUy picnic
wUI be July 18 at 4 p.m. at Dodge
Par.k, Beverly, Oh. Family
members are asked to bring a covered dish and something to auction off.

I

1be Winding Trail Garden Club
. wlll hold a picnic at the home of ·

Addalou ·Lewis Monday,' July 19, at .
6:30 ~.m.

Richard Dean Fink
Richard Dean Fink, 61, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, died Thursday at O'Bieness Hospital, Athens, following a
lengthy Ulness.
Mr. Fink was born Aug. 9, 19211n
Meigs County the son of the late
WUllam Herbert and 'AIIce R. Hy·
sell Fink. He was also preceded In
death by one brother, Johnnie Fink.
Mr. Fink was employed by the
Coca Cola Bottling Co.. tor 32 years
retiring lh 1976. He was also man·
ager for Coca Cola Co., Meigs area.
He was a member of theSUver Run
Baptist Church, served with the U.
S. Air Force during World War II
and was a member of Fenney Bennett Post 128, Amerjcan Legion,
Middleport.
~

t

. HER HOME
- 'l'hll PaleltlldU
baby cirlllllneklDI a.bottle Frllhly beside the rubble
remaiDI o1 ber ~ome In the RaBbadlya refucee camp

Paul Taylor wUI be the guest
speaker at the Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church, Middleport, Sun·
day at 11 a.m.

The 46th annual B\!ckley reunion
will be Sunday, July 25,at theBe~e,
vUie Dam Park, Reedsville, begin·
ntng at 1 p.m. with potlUck. AU are .
welcome.

.

•:
;.

By JOBN'W. CJIAU;ANT
"
~ p.._ Writer
·
'COLUMBUS, blito (AP) - A Senate panel is tentatlvely set to decide thls week whether Ohio law deal·
1ng with criminal a~fendants , ~).to plead Insanity

should be changed.
·. A blll creating the plea and verdict of guUty but
~tally WIs one of a hall-dozerrmeasures on which
votes may be taken by the Senate Judiciary Commit·

'

.
tee ThUI'Iday.
Interest In the leglslattori, Sponsored by Sen. Ben
M. SkaU, R-South Euclid, was renewed by the verdict
In the federal court trial of John W. Hinckley Jr.,
He was found not guilty by reason otlnsanity In the
attempted assassination of President Reagan.
Although It touched off a clamor among Senate and
House backers of bUls changing Ohio's law on the
subject, others have raised questions about the need

•

SUMMER CLOTHING FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The

She said there Is no evidence of
any significant rate of transition
able-lxx!led welfare recipients to Into private employment as a result
-wotk and an official of a welfare of the job assignments usually of·
lfoup have clashed over the merlts fered underworktellef. In addition,
of the 'program.
she said the program wouldn't pre
Rep. Michael A. Fox, R· pare participants for the kinds of
·kamllton, said the measure, which jobs that would make them
'·ts to begin Jan. 1, 1983, wlll replace employable.
.i Wl!lfare system of despondency
"Typically In wotk rellef propos)..nd despair with a chance to break als ... there Is no real funding for
,Pie cycle.
training on the work sites," Ms.
~The current system offers no Blong said. "Where wlll this tra.ln·
," he saki. "(This wUI) give lng come from? The history Is that
pl!ople something better than they no one wlll step forward and un·
In the past."
derwrite these costs."
:. But AMie Blong, associate dlrec·
The fervent-speaking Fox and
~of the center on Social Welfare the softspoken Ms. Blong debated
J'ollcy and Law, Washington, D.C., the Issue Friday In an appearance
:clisagreed.
sponsored by the Columbus Metro-

Y2 PRICE
.

SHOP TONIGHT TIL 8

ELBERFELDS IN POM·EROY

:w

________

,.

; . "rhe current system offers no
:::hope," says Rep. Michije} A. Fox of the
~ 'Cup-ent .welfare system.·"'This (work·
.fare) give people something better
,: than they had in ·the past." .

•

'3995

'·.

a-c, p.s, p.b, vinyl roof,
sttt'to assette, rally
wluels, beautiful
Ytllow-tan Int.,

SAVE
WAGON
Sh1rp I

speed

4 ql. 5 speed trans. am.
fill , lliot rack, new
· redlels "ll!ull ,.. and
tlrlvt"

· ~)1549~ 0

BAUM TRUE.VALU
985-33.01

m-1-m aoss., v.tap, nNid
whHIS.

4

cyl. aui!D ·

'P.s,

sport stripes, roof rack,
•poke style whlell, new
•. •y••• Hres. ~-· ; : ~·._"

•

LeMAN$ COUPE
a-c, p.s, p.b, r
· . Int..
rear •niflect r, price
reduaid.
'·

.

.

commander of Lebanon'sChrlsttan
mUitta and a key Israeli ally, ac·
cused Arafa ~o l stalllng and warned·
him to get his gu errillas out of Mos·
lem west Beirut b&lt;&gt;lore it was too
late.
No violations of the latest ceasefire were reported Saturday In
either eastern Lebanon or the Bel·
rut area .
Arafat reiterated he was wUllng
to pull his guerrUlas out of the Leba·
nese capitaL
" I have declared many times
Beirut Is not my residence," Aralat
said. "Beirut Is only a passage lor
me to my country," which Aralat
has previously sale! Is a Palestinian
homeland.

' '

·

PG,A, iS a regUlatory mechanism In

By THOMAS RIZZO
As8octllted Pre. Wrtter

which FERC reviews natural gas
prtces on a flasls of twice a year,
~· Bptler said.
·The case marks the first time
that FERC members wtil consider
Whether or not specUic gas costs
Inclusions In a PGA fllli1g can be
determhied excessive due to
•"fraud, abule,or almllar grounds." .
· Thehl!arlnp~·lliWa.ehlng· .
ton on Feb.' 2 this year.~ com*al I:Df!rly fteculatll:y Comrnls- .•• ml d77t1111R trawled to CGiumbus
naturalps costs to foraMarchllllearlne, wlllebdrew
cmtu•li!ill of Columbia Gas of OhiO several h~Dldi'e\l ~ ct.the
lllc. by 23 jll!lcent last tan. '
' public and ~COIIIUllllll'~ ·
• "C4iilunbba applied for another cates and lo!:al, ~te aDd federal
lib HI '·lllout March aDd wOl aQYemmellt.,...•
..,llruodllroaeiiiAuplt,-..-.- MI. ~said maay lnWve.... IC.IIutllr.iald•frlciay.
lion In t1ie ~ reu_ed heavilY In
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A deCllloD on ' the CC)IItrover:'stal .PuJ'
elwi!d Gas Adjustment case fUed ,
. , Cdurnbla Gas ·t.ransmlasion'
Ia expected sometime this
~ lic;cordlng to a spokeswoman
for. the Office of Consumers'
a.m.eL
'
'111e Purehue&lt;f.Gas Adjustment
coasldei'ed by 'the Fed-

ti.tl.

.-:.bliJW
-.lncreeaed

• Ptarelwed

Gas Adjustment,

'or

poUlan Club.
Fox said the program would be
Initially financed with $17 mUllon In
state money and $14 million In fed.
era! funds . He conceded that It may
not be possible to find jobs for all of
the approximately 130,1XX! people
expected to be ellglble In the first
year. But he said jobs for even
20,1XX!of them would result In asav·
lngs of $64 million for taxpayers.
· There are three parts to the program being Implemented In Ohio:
-A job club to train recipients of
aid to dependent children and
general·rellet benefits In the skllls
needed to obtain employment;
-Subsidized employment, In
which recipients are placed in pri·
vate sector jobs with the goal of
ending the need lor public
assistance;
"·
-Workfare, under which a recipIent works for a public or non-profit
agency In exchange for thi! cash assistance they receive.
There are exemptions for certain
people In l!ll ·three categories, In·
eluding those with mental or physl·
cal Impairments or those caring for
chUdrerl under 3 years old.

=

By DEB FOX
'ftmes.Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - At first and
even second glance, J .C. Critter
appears to be a typical dog. She
looks llke a typical dog and, llke
most dogs, she has even learned
a few tricks; Including rolling
over, begging and barking at
command. But J .C. not only
barks with her bark, she counts
with It
When gtven an addition or subtraction problem that has an
answer between oneand10. J.C.
answers with the number of
barks that solves the problem.
The five-year-old cross between a Dachshund and Chihuahua Is owned by Gallla County
natives Mr. and Mrs . (Mary )
Pearl Kemper. of Prospect
Church Road. They have had
J.C. since ihe was a puppy and
raised her on their farm with
their rabbits, chickens and
doves. But they can't remember
exactly when they noticed J. C.
could count.
"I don't remember teaching
her," Mr. Kemper said. "But
she's been doing It for three or

:'f~e::;~~~:~dm~:u~og

add and subtract."

~~;~~~~~:~r;

submitted by an expert witness for
the Ohio Office of Consumers'
Counsel, George 'L. DonklnOfExeter Associates Inc.
.
"Mr. Donkln .made some really
stroag pt)ints about tbe.(Columbla)
Transmission Co!'POJ'Btlon's praclice of purchasing'large quantities
. of deregulated gas at.excessive pH·
ceulnce 19'29 - ,when lower-prtceit
gas .wu avau&amp;bie and Wlder:Contract to Colum~" lhe lAid.
Donkln spectlleally .I'I!Yiewed ' a
Wiib•'t betwl!l!ll Columbia
mlsskln and Exxon
which
shoWed that supply cUtbacks made
bfQJiumbialllldertbeonit!contrilct , .
rellllfadlll~
d,Ucomct,at
leutDlmllllillldurtllrtbetlmepel'iod . eWr!llled In tbe ~. Ms.

their final aJialYses on testimony·· BUtler exp~.

Also before the judiciary panel are measures revisIng the public de!eruler law and Increasing the monetary jurlsdlctlon of municipal courts.
It Is one of a handful of committees mreli ng S(Xlradlcally during the legislature's summer recess. They
are working on bills that could be considered when
both chambers return for another voting session, per·
haps In September.

The dog that counts

.C olumbia's -gas adJ· ustment request
will be decided in fall, says OCC
·

SAVE

One plus one

. 1-

autbor Of Ohio's new law requiring

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP

a-1; p.s. 1-c, roaf.
rtlclc. low mlln,
1
owner. Wo sold It newt-

for revisions in the state statutes.
1bey 'JlOint out that In federal cases. prosecutors
have the burden of proving that a defendant Is sane.
But In Ohio, the burden of proving Insanity Is on the
defense.
If enacted, Skall's bill would require a defendant
found guilty but mentally Ill to receive treatment
Once recovered, the Individual would then face a
prison i.erm for the offense committed.

Author of Ohio 'workfare'
Jaw, welfare official clash

CLEARANCE SALE

·cuTLASS SUPREME
. 260 v-e. bucket ...ts~
auto, In tiM f!w, a-c, a-

too."
Habib has been In Beirut lor live
weeks attempting to find a way to
evacuate the PLO. Washington has
officially refused to 'talk to the PLO
directly untU It agrees to recognize
IsraeL AU of Habib's reported dealIngs with the PLO have been
Beirut
through Lebanese Intermediaries.
Speaking with reporters near
Arafat's guerrUias have been
bombed-out buUdlngs In the guer·
trapped for more than a month with
rllla stronghold, Arafat said Habib no country yet agrrelng to take
and he needed no Intermediaries In
them, and his foes were growing
the talks on how, when and where to
Impatient Saturday at the faUun! of
evacuate his followers.
the diplomatic process to yield
"He Is not In need and I am not In results.
need of these channels," Arafat
A lew hoursbeloretheheadofthe
said. "He can talk withmedlrecUy, · Palesllne Liberation Organization
to save time, and to save ·my time,
made his appeal. Bashlr Gemayel.

SeD.ate panel to deal with Ohio insanity plea

JULY

'

11011tb ol Tyre. Mad! 'of the camp was destroyed by
Israeli duriDg their drive 011 Beirut (AP Laserpboto);

46th annual reunion

Guest speaker

,.

.

9 secfions, 70 P il qe s JS Cen ts
A Multim edia , Inc. Newsp ilper

Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point _Pleasant Sunda v, July 18, 1982

:

The July meeting of the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District Is cancelled.
The next regularly scheduled meet·
lng Is Aug. 31.

There wW be a hymn sing at
Rocksprings United Methodist
Church Sunday, July 18, at 7:30
p.m. Featured wUI be the Revela·
tors. Everyone Is welcome.

" ·11 W. Main St.

•

entine

By The ASMCI••ed Press
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
appealed Saturday for a lace-toface meeting with U.S. special en·
voy Philip C. Habib to "save time"
In the protracted efforts to arrange
a pullout of his estimated 8,1XX! guerrUias from Israeli-encircled west

He Is .surVIved by his wile, Ruth.i.
Wines Fink; . two daughters and •
sons-In-law, Judy and Uonel GU- •'
more, Cheshire, and Angela (An· •
gle) and Don Harden, Oak Hill; one '
brother, Owen W. Fink, Mlddle- ,;
port; one sister, Nancy Ervin, Ra· :
cine; ' one auni, Mabel Hysel~ :
Middleport; seven grandchUdren ·
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wW be held Sun- .
day at2 p.m . at theSUverRunBaP:
tlst Church with the Rev. Marvin
Marcum assisted by Eddie BoYer
officiating. Burial wUI be In Cheshire Gravel Hlll Cemetery. ·
Frtends may call at the Rawlings·
Coats· Blower Funeral Home, Middleport, Saturday from 2 to 4. and 7•
to 9 and on Sunday untU 12:00 when
the body will be taken to the church
to lie In state.

'

Maniage licenses

To hold picnic

,.~

tmes

Page C-1

Arafat seeks meeting
with U.S. special envoy

Meeting cancelled

Plan hymm sing

Marriage licenses were Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Danny Robert Karr, .22, Rt. 1, Racine, and Terry Lynn Ross. 18, Clrclevllle; Timothy Dean Fry, 21, Rt
], Mtc1cileport, · and Tammy Jo
Ward, 16•. Rt. l, Rutland.

.

..

liol. 16 i'lo. 22
C.,.;tighted 1982

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

RIO GRANDE- Registration for the second summmer session at
Rio Grande Coll~e and Community College will be held Monday from 9
to 11:30 am. and from 1 to 4 p.m. In the E.E. Davis Technical Career
Center. Openings are available for the Advanced Summer Scholar
Program for graduating seniors and juniors In lhe upper hall of their
high school class from Gallla, J~ckson, VInton and Meigs counties at$4
per credit hour. A certificate from a high school guidance counselor Is
needed when applying. For Information call 245-5353. Ohio residents
may call toll free 1~282-7'lll.

Meigs County happenings••
Final meeting set

t

Area dea th s

Rio Grande registration Monday

CLEANING UP - Inger Lyngholm draws water from a broken
waterplpe to use for cleaning up some of the mud deposited when a nash
nood hil Estes Park, Cul 0. on Thursday morning. (AP Laserphoto) .

did nOt elaborate.

.

(Continued from page I)
cent In each of the three previous
months. Those costs are for. machinery and transportation equipment used by business.
AU the Increases are adjusted lor
normal seasonal variations.
In all, the unadjusted Producer
Price Index for finished goods stood
at 279.91nJune, meaning that goods
costing $10 at wholesale In 1967
would have cost $27.99 last month.
Price changes that show up In the
Producer Price Index are a good
barometer ci how fOOd, energy and

HIGH WATER- Flood water swirls around vehicles at a service
station on the main street of Estes Park, Colo., on Thursday. A dam gave
way at Rocky Mountain National Park triggering a Dash flood that sent a
wall of water 5 to7 feet high through the town. lAP Laserphoto).

r

tng " tmt

•

unha·

When the roar gniw louder, he ·
looked up and saw trees toppling, ;·
then a 20-to ~foot wal) of water,..
coming toward his ·c~~m,pslte.
''His partner was · ~ a sleeping;
bag and was SW8pt away," said•,
Mary KaPaker, a spokeswoman fQrC
thepark.
·
· ·~
The flOOd waslled out tb.• aC!:eSS:
road to the ·Aspenglen Camp-~
ground, she said, ana peciple on¢
higher ground reported two,
campers there had not been able to~
fire.
~
Lt· Gov. Nancy Dick ordered 55;
National Guardsmen Into town to:
protect It against looting and to help~
the pollee. Mrs. Dick said she wasf
told there "some evidence of loot·£

Mayor Harry Tregent, who appeared near' tears as he surveyed
damage. "I suppose It can be
cleaned up, but the damage Is
done."
Kaye said one camper was reported swept away In his sleeping
bag and another thrre were missIng from a campgrou.nd In tlie jlark.
AuthOrities began warning motel
guests and residents at the west end
of Estes Park to evacuate just before 7:00a.m., a rescdent said. A
trash collectot:,_in the park, Stephen
GUlette, was credited with being
the first to notice the roaring water.
A camper near the Lawn Lake
Dam told the U.S. Park Service he
heard a rumbling around 7 a.m.
and thOught It was an airplane.

British Open

Arealkaths .............. . D-8
Along the river ........... Jl..l-8
Business .. .. . . . .. .. .. . .. . . &amp;I
Classified .......... . .. .. D-3-7
Editorial ...... .. .... .... A-2-3
Fann .................... E-2
Local ................. .. A-~8
Stale-National ........... D-1·2
Sports ........ .......... C. l-8

Trw

CQrp.;

frtends' acquaintances from as
tar away as Pennsylvania have
visited the Kemper tarm to do
just that. And, as might be ex·
peeled, the dog has also been the
subject of at least on!! $100 bet.
J.C. Critter seems to know
what Is expected of her and eager1y anticipates an arithmetic
problem while she looks, with
- tall wagging, from her perch on
the noorat tile person asking an
· equatioD. After barklna bet rellpl!nse, she Ia rewarded with a
pteceofcooldeotc&amp;ndy.Accord·
ing'to her owners, she Is rarely
wrong.
· fAs for what they want J .C. to
leilmnext, Mr. Kemper said, "I
doo'tknowwl!llttoteachber."
Mrs. Kemper added, "The

COUNTING DOG - J.C. Crll*er prepares to answer, with barks, the
1101ufiou io an addition problem being given io her by Pearl Kemper and
bls wUe, Mary, of~ Church Road, Gallipolis, the dc]g'sowners.
Ftve-yeaHid J.C. baa heeD .....,.mlinl" for three or four years, BAlCOrdln( to llle Kempen, and .. cleecrlbed as rarely missing an answer.
· .hardest thing to get her to do Is to
lie down and be still. She'll sit up
and ~ sUJI, but she won't lie
down."

Aslllefromthat, herhusband
salcl, "She'll do what;ever you

tell her. II you don't tell her, It 's
your own fault.
"I don't r~member ever seelng a sJog llke her. I'm going to
send her to high school next
year."

L..-----------------------------....1

�Commentary and ..perspective

,,.

.

A Division of

~m~ ,...,..,_,.._-r. ,......._c::d.~
~v

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
I614 I 99Z..2156

16141 441).2342

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WIU&gt;ON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Ao;sistant Publishcr-Conlrollcr

AMEMBER ufTht• AsstwiHted Prt"tt,, Inland Dally Prnli Associwlhlllllnd tilt Amnh'wn
Nt'A~~pt"t

l'uhlisht•n AsStH'i.8litm.

LF:TTERS Of OPINION art- \n•leum«J . Ttwy 11hwld ~~~~~than 300 wurdlllttnA. All
lt•tlt•rs Urt' subjn·t 11• nlilinl( ~md mu111 br rdJnt!d with mmlt', addrcru; ancl teltpbont'
numbt•r. No Untiill,nt'd lcUrrs will bt- publlahed. IA!Itl!"'lhuuld be In ,lood WtHt', addra»IDK
issurs, twl pcnmnalitit·s

Service ·economy
Wt• have just passed a

si~nificanl

milestone on tile way to the posl-

irH..Iustrial st•cicty.

The Labor Department reports that in April, for the first lime in history
li'Url' Amt•rieans werl' c111ployed in the conswr,t&gt;r, financial and service in-

dustries than inll1c pnxluetion of gotxls- 24.3 lllillion co111pared to about 24
ll "iili"l.
And thai's not the whole sltll"y. The mnsw1 •er and financial "ervice industries are not only the fastest ~rowing sector nf the economy but have been
adding jobs - a half n·illion in the year preced.ing the Aprillabulalion -

as till' 11 CJnufarturing work force shrinks.
The greatest spurt was registered in health services - up ah1 ·o,l a quarlPr of a n•illion jobs. Other large gams were in banking and rcla!cd act'VCil

tivities, lega l st•rvices and aerounting.

In painful t:oll!rasl, '"anufac!uring jobs arc dnwn by IT!t&gt;re than a million
and cwlstrut·(j! lll by aln 1ost 400,000.

All this ll'ight be explained as the effects of a sagging econon•y if it
weren't the •·ontinualion of a trend that predates by quite a billhe current
l"l'l"t•ssion. Up by su111e 17 11 1illion jobs, service growth has tripled in the last
1hree decades. Son •e 27 percent of all non-fan" jobs are nnw in this area.
'""'"pared with 16 perccnl30 years ago.
Tl1is thorouF!h~wing restrueturing of the An erit•an cctmn111y has inlpoJ1anllll :plil'aliuns fnr in tpurtant segJJleJUs uf it.
Ft1f om· thing, it suggests that tht•rc is 1nore to the agonies of the steel
'" and auto industries I han obsolete plant and pricc-c·ul!ing co111petition fro111

Japan and Eumpc. Band-Aid re111edies desigJwdlll lt•o;senthe pain and lllake
il difficult for foreigners lo do busineo;s in the Alllerican JJ"arkel are not going
l tlt'UI'C

tht' ailment.

The problen •s of both old-line indush·ies are essentially effeds of a
re~pidly rhanging econmt1y and bnth ran hnpe to survive and prnsper only as
they adapllolhal change.
Il is not coincidcntal!hallhe shift has occurred as WtJIIJCil haw been eni&lt;•ring the job n•arkel in previously unprecedent••d nwnbers. A very high
prnpnrtinn nf new jobs opening up has been in areas where wnmen can corn·
pl'lt' equally with n en. Again looking at the Labt•r Department figures ,
clerical work has replaced tradititJnal blue-collar en•ploymcnt as the large"!
single oceupalinnal category. Such while collar johs now absorb 43 percent
nil he male work force but66 percent oft he female employed.
And !hen there IS organized labtlf. The major unions were the product of
and have maintained their base in heavy industry: They have been slow 111
expand tJrganizalional eff11rts to. the service area and a11•11ng women, and
lmve found'il difficult In make much headway.
A!; a resu lt, me1nbership has been virtually sialic in recertt decades. and
in the cnnlcxt of an expanding labor force that JJ"eans a decline in the last 30
years frmn a quarter of all jobs to barely 20 percent.
If anything, !he shift from a gotxls-produeing In a servict.'-providing
ecunmny is understated. Add another 41.6 111illion t'JJ •ployees in wholesalt•
and retail trade, transportation, public utilities and government, and service-oriented jobs account for a lopsiGed !hn•e nf every four employed
Americans . And to these 111ight be added some seven ll li llion.J;elf-employcd.
nf whmn ruughly lwt}.!hirds provide services nf st&gt;n•e description.
What ali ihe IIUn •bers add up to is a rapidly changi ng econo111y that has
its less desirable aspects.
But the alternati vc, t:~n ccnnun y incapable of ehangt•, would bt'
sidcrab1y wnr~l' .

l'On-

Letter tQ the editor
A balance_ of perception
In his editorial ".Peace in Lebanon
!Tribune/July 14), Mr. Lowell
Wingett wrote" ... (PLOJ is and has
always be en a terrorist
organization." True, there are some
factions of the PLO who have
ao;socialed with some terror ac!Jvi!ies. much the same as those
Jewish underground terror
organizations whose gory record of
teJ"ror, murder, violence, etc., in
Brltish mandate Palestine (prior to
the creation of Israel in 19481 surpass that of the PLO's. The Deir
V3ssin massacre of 254 men, women
anil children committed by
Menachem Begin's IRGUN gang is a
shocking account of the Jewish
leiror and atrocities against Araoo
m Palestme.
til brief, this respvnse is neither a
hyPln to terrorism nvr an apologia
foP the PLO. It is however, an allempl to redress Mr. Wingett's
balance of perception. For the obvious symbol of distortion is
illlistrated in Mr. Wingett's article in
us[ng the term "terrorist" to
di~inguish Palesliman from Israeli
atrocities. "Terrorist:;" do not have
jeC bombers to mutilate innocents
frtlJn a distance; they do it with bombs• in markets. Is the fanner less
heinous than the latter because it is
sanctioned by an Israeli Cabinet?
Rt!ilson and morality answer "No,"
b.. again and again the Israeli
authorities emerge morally inviolate from their military ad. ve7ltures while the PLO is dubbed

"terrorists" or compared to the
Nazis or . the Ku-Klux-Klan for
refusing to give up guerrilla war.
It wns once said by President
Wilson that, "Peoples and Provinces
are not to be bartered about from
sovereignty to sovereignty as if they
were mere chattels ~r pawns in a
great game. " Unhappily his wisdom
has. been systematically rteglected
by the great- and the not so greatpowers whose strategic maneuvers
have brought the Middle Eilsl into
ever more dangerous confrontation.
Further, the article does not fav,or
the U.S. recognition of the PL().
WHO- by any yardstick is the sole
legitimate representative of the
Palestinian people - as a
"legitimate political force."
The conflict in the Middle East
will be solved only when
Palestinians and Israelis are able to .
work out their joint salvation with
each other - not as the Israeli
leaders talk about the destruction of
the .PLO, or as Golda Meir once
said: "There was no such thing as a
Palestinian people ... They did not
exist."

This response is written in the con.
viction that there can only be peace
in the Middle East when it Is universally recognized that the
Palestinians liid exist, do exist and
wiU exist.
Mutill Skeini
21SmithersAve.,
Gall\ polis

foday in history
TOday Is Sunday, July 18, the 199th day ofl982. There are 166 days lett In
the year.
T~y's hlghllght In history:
' . ·
On JUly l8QI, 64 A.D., the Qreat Fire of Rome began. Legend bas It that ' '
Ell)Peror Nero set the blaze 8Jid played his fiddle as Rome llumed. ·
()b thls date:
.
1658, LeoP91d I was elected Holy Roman Em~ror.

Jf!

I

•I'
(

WASHINGTON - At some point in
time, as the Watergate witnesses
used to say, congressional committees may get around to serious
study of the insanity defense in
American jurisprudence. If they dig
deeply enough, sta.ff members may
come across the enchanting history
of John Armstrong Chaloner, a
sterling character who at one and
the same time was sane in Virginia
and certifiably nuts in New York.
The Chaloner story is light swnmer reading. -For this abbreviated
account I rely entirely upon a
delightful piece by J . Bryan III in
the Vir~inia Magazine of History
and Biography for January 1965. Mr.
Bryan collects gems of human
behavior, and in Chaloner he found a
24-caral beauty.
Born lo an immensely wealthy
family in New York in 1862,
Chaloner was married at 26 to
Amelie Rivers, a beautiful and gifted young Virginian who was herself
a bit dotty. Their marriage was consummated under fractious circumstances. Amelie had published a
sexy ·novel - sexy for those days,
anyhow - in which John appeared,
thinly disguised, as the erotic land.
Chaloner's family was outraged.
"Chaloner was denounced for
awakening carnal thou~ts, Amelie
for entertaining them ." The family
boycotted their wedding.
Alas, the marriage soon dissolved
in quarreis and then in divorce, "but
the divorce accomplished what the
marriage could not: They became
devoted friends." Soon Arne lie
married a Troubetzkoy and moved
into a Virginia mansion just down
the road in Albemarle County from
Chaloner's home. There she took to
wandering through the woods by
night, dressed in a filmy while robe,
and talking to ghosts. ·
Chaloner, meanwhile, had
discovered the mysteries · of
spiritualism. He became convinced
that he posseSses an "X-Faculiy"
that gave him occult powers.
Simultaneously, he perceived that
he was the reincarnation of

Napoleon. He donned Napcleonic
costumes. Sometimes he wore a
saber to bed.
Getting wind of all this, Chaloner's
family decided to take action. A
large element of self-interest figured
in this, for Chaloner had disinherited
his relatives at the time of the fractious wedding. "He's looney," cried
Brother Robert, thuS setting up a
question that later would echo
throughout the land. The family
lured Chaloner to New Y~rk and had
him committed to the Bloomingdale
Mylum in 1897.
There Chaloner took to writing
sonnets, composing treatises on the
law, and drafting a dra1Tl8, "Robbery Under Law, or, The Battle of
the Millionaires." In 1900 he escaped
from his keepers, retained a batch of
sympathetic psychologists and
brought a legal proceeding in
Virginia todetennine his sanity. The
verdict found him sane. He spent the

•

.

Don Graff

next seven years in concentrated
research on lunacy laws, ·bombarding the legal profession with
books and articles on the topic.
Then came an incident of high
drama. One night a neighbor, John
Gillard, began beating his wife. She
fled to Chaloner's ma1111ion for
protection, but GIUard pursued her,
firetongs in hand. -The two men scuffled. A pistol discharged. (&gt;illard fell
dead. The cops came in.the morning
just as Chaioner was fini.shing a
breakfast of duck and vanilla ice
cream. He had spent the night in the
room with the deceased "to test my
nerve." His nerves were fine. A
coroner's jury quickly absolved him.
Chaloner sent his team to haul the
coffin, and with difficulty was talked
.out of provi&lt;\ing a tombstone to
Gillard, to be inscribed "He died
game.''
At about this time, Brother
Robert, having been divorced,

.

JT18rried a spectacularly be(latiful . ·~
o~ra singer, Lina Cavalieri. Two ,;,:
weeks later, Una left Robert and ·
returntid to her fanner lover. Then it ·
transpired th!lt Robert had signed ....
over to her h!s entire estate, except ::;
for a personal allowance of f30 a .
month. In the stunned silence f.bat ' ·.:
followed this revelation, a voice .~
from · Virginia was hUrd to cry: .;
"Who's looney now?"
This was in 1910. The press of that
day seized jubilantly upon the 1m- ..
mortal question. Chaloner became a
folk hero. Comedians, comic strip
•artists and editorial writers loved
the line. Content with his riposte, "
Chaloner subsided in Virginia where .
he grew dottier and dottier by the
year. He spent the next 25 years in
litigation, philanthropy, and con. tinued writing on the lunacy laws.
He died in 1935.
I thought of the old boy a few
weeks ago, when the verdict came in
on John Hinckley.

...

..
"

...

'M~.~HU~ll- C~ I !iU~

WHAT I HiAk?'

the State Department is. Goldberg
was recently granted a multiple- ·
ent., visa by the South African· ·
government, which has outlawed the
American lawyer, Mona Lyons, told Community Party. •
my associate Indy Badhwar. "And
Footnote: Last week Sylvia Gold-:
he does not understand why the berg, now a schoolteacher in Slideli, ' .
United States, which espouses like La., brought her little boy to
principles, would require him [11 do · Washington. The exl'ress purpose of
so as thP price of obtaining even a ·the trip was to show Mark the
visitor's visa."
memorialto Thomas Jefferson.
Goldberg and his wife met in
mMBATIVE PRINTER: DanIsrael. He had emigrated there after f11rth .L. Sawyer, tlie mi!Uonaire
continual harassment by the South Florida publisl)er who heads theAfrican government because of his Government Printing · Office ·Is ·
outspoken opposition to the official emerging as one of the most ~otn- ·.
racial segregation. But infant Mark bative officials in the Reagan .adhad severe health pr~blems that ministration.
could be treated effectively in this
He has all the equipment
country, so his mother brought him necessary for vertlal combat. His
here. Goldberg was denied a visa voice has an emplified twang to it ·'
because of his connection with the flatandnasal,suchasorieexpectst~
South African Congress of hear calling sinners to repentance. ·
Democrats.
He has a keen sense of rhetorical
Interestingly, South Africa is less symmetry, arid as soon as he is well ·:
worried about his )nembership than launched, he can ignite audiences to
a high fever.

kA
' nd

erson

~~S~?~~~' i~_,g~a~n~ ~c:=r: ?: t~in: ~ j~obs~·=i;:n~t:; h~ei=r=:Th; :e:y=:w: r:ot;:e; ;h:i,l:~o:u:=t

Falklands and Lebanon may be bad ~ountries.''
spot.
for people, but it has certainly
" I don't ask questions. If their
"You have a great lncation," l!nld
helped the anns busineo;s.
people · can't ·eat it's not my Madman.
I went over to see "Madman"
problem."
"The best in Washington. Now
Rangell who runs a weapcns'
"Obviously you're not being hurt here's the funny part. As snon as
discount bazaar across the street
by the receo;sion."
that general left, another general"
from the Pentagon, and he was
"You have to be kidding. Whoever came in frnlll the Third World c'tlunwriting up orders like mad.
heard of a recession stopping anns try that borders the first general's. I
"Everyone used to want . surface sales• Ageneral from a Third World told him what the other guy purships," he complained. "Now all
country came in the other day; nice chased and sold him an entire
they want is submarines. You can't . guy, beautifully dressed in a new system to fool the heal-seeking
predict people's tastes. I've got a
uniform; wanted a gross of heat- missiles the first guy bought. Then I
warehouse of frigates I can't ~ive seeking missiles that could shoot talked him into buying 1,1100 mine
away ever since the French missiles down F -5 fighter planes.
detectors that could blow up the
sank the British ones."
"While he was w~iling to have mines. I also sold the second general .
"Who are your best customers them packed, I showed him our a long artillery piece that could
now;Madman?" I asked.
latest electrically controlled land knock nul the 1982 howitzer. It was
"The Third World countries. They mines. The guy went nuts· for them an $80million order.''
used to come in ana buy a fc w Used and ordered 50 grOIIS. Then he asked
''You have a good business ·here,"
tanks and maybe a broken-down a~- me if I had any howitzers? I took · I tnldlhe Madman.
·
tillery piece. Now they want F-16 him in the back and showed him a
"I make a living. The beauty of ·it
fighter jets, missile launchers, 1982 model and he was like a kid with is that no country considers itself
radaro(:ontrolled anti-aircraft guns. a new bicycle. He took two d&lt;nen. ,;
safe any 1nore. The Reagan adI don't know where they get the
"Where did he get the mo)\ey to ministration 1 has cut down· "on
money, but if it ian'! top of the line, payforthestuff?"
econnmic aid to the Third World
th~y're notiliterested ."
"He went acrOIIS the street to the because you don't get a bang for "it.
· "They're protlably spending more Pentagon and explained he wanted it But theY're upping military aid to
on defense than they are on ·food, to kick the hell ~ut of the Soviets. win the hearts and minds of their

A

=ld~ ::

A=r=t=B=uc==h=wa=
·

=::a;;;;c;:;he:;:,c:;::k=o=::n=;:the;::z:;;:;;;pe;;;;.,;;;;P;;Ie;;.';;;'

.u.

·1he ~unday T ifl)es-Sentinei- Page-A-3

No one could ever charge Cam- backers of the Khmer Rouge are farbodian factions opposing Viet- the~ away, however. In Peking. Tile
namese occupation of their country Chinese, having fougllt one border
with rushing matters.
war themselves, are detennined to
Three of them signed a treaty of keep the squeeze on the Vietnamese.
alliance the other day after three
And at a diplomatically diacreet
years of on and off negotiations. distance behind China and ASEAN is
They have been at it since shortly af- the United States.
ter the Vietnamese rolle'd across the
All see Sihanouk, who ruled Camdisputed border in 1978 and ousted bodia for 15 years of good old days,
the brutal Pol Pot regime from as essential to the alliance because
Phnom Penh.
of his standing internationally and in
It is something of a misalliance ex- the country. SOn Sann, whose
cept for the common hostility to the Liberation Front Is the only other
Vietnamese - and even that is significant , organized resistance
qualified.
. group, helps camouflage the evU
Prince Norodom Sihanouk hasn't reputation of the Khmer Rouge.
speeded negotiations by frequently
That could be crucial in September, when the United Nations
~nd publicly referring to the Vietnamese threat to Cambodia as again votes on Cambodia's seat secondary. He reserves first place now held by the Khmer Rouge but
for Poi Pot's Khmer Rouge, his new contested by the regime installed in
allies, ·and took the occasion of the Phnom Penh by the Vietnamese.
The coalition's backing outside the
treaty signing to again attack them
for the "great misery" inflicted country is not likely to be matChed
during their four-year reign of terror inside, however. 11le Khmer Rouge
are detested and feared. They are
1n Cambodia.
.
For.their part, the Khmer Rouge responsible for the deaths of at-least
have ~Jel:n reluctant to share power a million and possibly several times
with anyone a_nd have taken a walk ~many Cambodians. Mass graves
in several previous attempts to and pyramids of skulls that dot the
scarred countcyside are monwnents
bring everyone together.
The third party to the tre~ty i.s Son to Khmer Rouge misrule.
If there Is anything that could bind
Sann, once Sihanouk's prime
WAsHINGTON (AP) -This Is
minister and now leader of the Kh- survivin« Cambodians to the ancient
when
the ~lte House should be in
mer People's National Liberation Vietname:;e enemy, it Is the fear of a
the
midst
of a time.honored trad!Front. Son Sann fell ouf with return ofthe Khmer Rouge.
llon
in
the
nation's capital:
Sihanouk has been named
Sihanouk years back and views the
summer
doldrums.
Khmer Rouge as 11 political and president of the Coalition GovernSenior aides should disappear.
military threat to his much smaller ment, Son Sann Is again his prime
News
should slow to a trickle. The
minister and the Khmer Rouge
organization .
president
should be operating on a
representative,
Khieu
Samphan,
is
'The Coalition Government of
relaxed
schedule.
Democratic Kampuchea (Cam• in charge of foreign affairs. Pol Pot
But that hasn't exactly
bodia) they have set up may owe its himself is kept under wraps these
happened.
days.
existence more to the political purThe faster pace may be due in
It will not be a government in exile
poses of a number of outside parties
but
intends
to
set
up
shop
in
the
Khpart
to the fact that President Rea·
than to the Cambodians' own ingan
has
spllt his summer vacation
mer
Rouge
redoubts
along
the
Thai
terest:;.
into
two
shorter segments. Events
border.
A
Vietnamese
offensive
The treaty was concluded in Kuala
In
the
Middle
East are not letting
earlier
this
year
mauled
but
failed
to
Lwnpur, capital of Malaysia, a
hlm
or
others
take
advantage of the
rout
the
Khmer
Rouge
forces.
Nwnmember of the Ao;sociation of
Southeast k;ian Nations that also in. bering some 30,000 and with the traditional slow pace of a muggy
cluaed Indonesia, Singapore, the prospect of ·increased material sup- Washington summer.
Reagan also Is maintaining a.
Phjllppin~s and Thailand. ASEAN, port as a result of the alliance, they
apprehensive of Vietnamese are in a good position to do damage fairly active travel schedule.
He went to Baltimore on Tuesday
domination of the region , has been to the Vietnamese occupation army
to make a pitch for his "new Ieder·
pushing the coalition. The members of some 200,000.
are no fonder of the Khmer Rouge
That does not, however, promise allsm" program before a luke.
than of the Vietnamese, but see the :On early end to Cambodia's agony. warm audience, the county
Khmer Rou~e as the only effective Only expanded and intensified otf!clals who would be saddled with
Cambodian military opposition to struggle. More Cambodians wiU die taking over the federal progiams If
the plan wins approval.
the Vietnamese.
and Cambodia remains a pawn.
Home at the White House after
That may suit the outside players
Especially front-line Thailand,
whose troops have clashed with Viet- of the pcwer game, but Cambodia his nrst California vacatiOn or the
summer - he plans a second in
namese patrols.
deserves better.
August - Reagan held back-t&lt;&gt;The finnest and most powerful

e
•

White House not using relaxed schedule

WASHINGTON - Some State ·
Department bureaucrats apparently
r
Sllllpect that the Declaration· of InJ UC
dependence was the work of Communists.
Yet the State Department has
They refuse to lela South African declared that this expired
actiVIst join h1 .American wife and orga nization was a Com1nunist
four-year-old son in this coontry front, and that Goldberg, an
unless he renounces a pohhcal char- unashamed member, can't enter the
ter that bears a slrddng resem- land of the free unless he renounces
bianceto the docwnent on which this its principles. By recanting, he wiU
nation was fo~.
achieve what the Stale Department
Barred from this country is Victor calls "defector status," and will thus
Goldberg, a ·SO-year-old folll!der of be deemed fit to join his Mississippithe South African Congress of born wife, Sylvia, and· their son,
Democrats, now defunct. The Mark.
preamble of the group's charter b a
But Goldberg has declined the
VIrtual rewr1te of the declaratiOn apostate's role. He is a men of both
adopted in Philadelphia 206 years principles and stubbnmness. · He
ago, with bits of our Constitution refusestodonsackciothandashesto
throwninforgoodmeasure.
please some petty bureaucrats in
Nothing in there from the Com- Washington, even though il has
mumsl Mamfesto. No _"Workers of meant lengthy separation from his
the )"Orld unite." No ringing rhetoric family.
about "nothing' to lose but your
"He cannot in good conscience
chains."
defect from his beliefs," Goldberg's

'

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point "'"".. a"~· ...

Cambodian pawn

July 11, 1912 .;
'

Activist barred by -State Department ·

; r -u·i-·~-5~a
N :
·--=·

Pomeroy

llate-Ao\2 - ·

Who's looneyt/:;;;;;;:i.n~o=w~?======J.=a=m=es=J.:;;;;:,K=u=pa=tr=ic=k
11~

July 18, 1982

•, If

An Israeli military attache came .,
in.
"What can I do for you, sir?" .
"I have $65 million wnrth of Syrian ,.
and PLO weapons in my pickup outside, and I was. wondering if you .
want to buy them."
·
·
Madman Rang ell went outside.
· ~ It's ail junk. There's no market for .
this stuff. I'll give you $250 ofi a .
trade-in, and that's just because I'm "
a nice guy. What do you want to .
buy?"
The al!achc took out his list. "Forly planeloads of cluster btlmbs,
10,000 artillery shells and six
AWACs."
•..
"Speak slower. ·I can't write it . ...,.
down thatfast."
·
,:
The attache , said he had some · ~
nther errands imd would pick up.the :
order in tile aftenwon.
, ., :(
"What are you going to do with all ~
the Syrian and PLO used go3ds you •
bought?" I asked him. ,
"I'll proliably sell it to .. •
Bangladesh. I don't want it clut- ~
tering up myyard." "
!.

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back meetings with congressiOnal
leaders on Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss the flghting in Lebanon, pending legislation and the
conllict between Iran and Iraq.
Then he summoned members of
the House Foreign Affairs Committee to lobby for his Caribbean Basin
Initiative, a program of$li0 mllilon
In aid lor the Caribbean and Central American nations that may
lace a tough going-over In
Congress.
He spent an hour wtth Roberto
Suazo Cordova, the president of
Honduras. A meeting wilh the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia and
Syrta was added to his schedule for
later this week or early next week
to discuss the Middle East.
The Baltimore trip was a warmup for the sort of political work Rea·
gan Is likely to do during the fall
poltlical campaign.
But the heavy dose of business
dtd not mean that all was serious at
the White House or at the presl·
dent's western quarters during his
Santa Barbara, Calif., vacation.
Chief of Staff James A. Baker li1
declined to take part in a softball
game pitting reporters and

members u! the While House slaff
against a local" women's team. He
said he wouldn't join in until Wil·
ltam Clark, the president's national
security adviser, also took part.
Clark failed to show up, des pile deputy White House press secretary
Larry Speakes' promise !hal the
two would participate.

Baker also found himself dealing
with reporters on the "raging controversy" over whether there
would be one barbershop or two
wl!hin the White House compl~x.
Two!! will be, he said. But he said
II entailed "sensitive and delicate
negotiations so we can"! talk too
much about!!."

Berry's World

Annual Conventions?._________R_ob_er_t_~_:.:_al:...:.....:te:..:..:...rs
"At lunch time today. I stood on a street corner

PHILADELPHIA (NEA)- Trade
associations,
fraternal
organizations and professional
societies do it. So do corporations,
labor unions,- veterans' groups and
countless olher organizations in virtually every fielll of hwnan endeavor.
They all hold annual meetings or ,
conventions that , provide members
with the valuable opportunity to
become familiar with new developments in their field, renew old friendships, size up new acquaintances,
reminisce about the past and pian
for the future.
Among the very few organizations
in our society that don't have a
tradition of yearly conventions are
the country's two major political
parties - and based on the experience of the National Party Conference held here recently by the
Democrats, it's time to reconsider
that longstanding abstention.
Prior to the mid-1970s, both
Republicans and Democrats confined' themselves to sponsoring con. ventions only once every.four years,
with the dominant agenda item
being the selection of presidential
and vice presidential candidates.
In 1974, however, the Democrats
held a "Mid-Tenn Conference" in
Kansas City, Mo., to write a party
charter. Although that meeting was
hardly beredt of acrimony, it
achieved its goals and was quite sue-

cessful: A second conference was before they mushroom into divisive
When the 1980 Democrati c
and ranted and raved about interest rates!"
held in Memphis, Tenn., in 1978, controversies.
National Convention mandaged this
Yearly meetings would pose year's party conference, its
followed by a third in Philadelphia
special problems for the party in
resolution was very explicit in
this year.
If the Democrats continue that control of the White House at the staling that "at least two-thirds of
practice, they will be holding bien- time, because both Republicans and the conference delegates shall be
nial national meetings while the Democrats traditionally have been , elected at the congressional district
Republicans wiU remain on a detennined not to unnecessarily em- level" - a clear preference for
grass-roots workers and local acquadrennial schedule. But most barrass their presidents.
WITH MANY GOOD BUYS •••••
To the exteni that a president had
European political parties hold antivists.
nual meetings, •..ss do most strayed from the goals and
•COSTUME JEWELRY •GinwARE
National party leaders
Republican and Democratic state aspirations embraced by a majority
•WATCH BANDS .CHINA SETS
(or even a substantial minority) of unilaterally (and probably illegally)
organizations in this cOWitry.
•MUCH MORE
Crucial to the succ~ of annual the party's respected leaders aiid substituted their own prefere~ce for
elected
officials
and
others
at
the
lop
grassroots
activists,
however,
the
ALL AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS
national party conferences probably
would be the establishment of yearly conferences would provide an of the party hierarchy - and then
had the audacity to distribute to
relatively low expectations on the especially effective mechanism for
delegates
here a fraudulent
political
feedback.
part of the participants, the public
document
suggesting
that the
and the news media. The meetings
revised
delegate-selection
formula
Because
the
outcome
of
such
should not be promoted as fQI"WilS
for showdowns among conflicting meetings would be heavily in- was a product of the 1900 convention.
4D4 SEOONO A¥8IUI o - A more carefully balanced selecideologies or competing .candidates fluenced by the political proclivities
_NEWeER
IJOC~TY
of the participants, one of the most tion procedure combined with a
for the presidency.
They could, however, serve as a delicate aspects of organizing an.
agenda
could make
an. l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
nual conferences
a highly
effective
vehicle for robust debate over issues nual party conferences would be stimulating
and provide a showcase for d&lt;nens of establishment of equitable mechanism to enhance the status of
the sponsoring party's most at- procedures for the selection of both of the country's major political
··
parties.
tractive leaders rather than only a delegates.
half-dozen seif,proclaimed presiden- . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
tial contenders.
When political conventions are
held only once every four years, it's
hardly surprising that internal
pressure and tension escalate to .
frustration and hostility. But an annual meeting p~wnably would
allow differences of opinion to be
resolved (or at least discussed)
DR. GEORGE W. DAVIS

fp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

OUR CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

--!WI

*V2 Price
of

_ _;__ _ _ OPTOMETRIST----

"SUMMER
SALE"
.
·. ON
ADMIRAL DEHUMIDIFIER
An. Admiral de,umldiflll' un mate JOUr baement
. or-other damp area mort co11fortable bJ u•ina .
tht excta moisture 9Uftf'tht arr. It lltlps
p~t~t firalture aad woodwor• irom tlit
dam•ll•a effec-. ·of =coastaat dampaea•
It retards mildew, mold, IIUstJ odors
23
11d rust -&amp;iltl JOUr home more
"AID
lillll ·lrtl •

k)

BAKER
FURNITVRE

I

'·

. v~

Middleport, Ohio _

37

PI IT
CAPACITY

Since then, cont.acl lenses have
SMALLER, 'iJuNNER,
become
smaller, thinner, and
UGHTER
lighter.
Now,
contact lenses are
There have been fantastic adcomfortable
and
commonplace.
vances io contact lenses in a
Millions
of
people
wear them .
relatively short period of time.
They
require
more
care than
And they're getting better
They
have
to
be kept
glasses.
(especially in the areas of com-·
germ-free,
and
there's
a
fort and length of time you can
wear them) all the time.
technique to learn in inserting
Contact lenses made their and removing them. But they. can
·debut in the late 193d's. A glass be worn with comfort and give
scleral lens was used that com- your eyes the corrective vision
pletely covered the ·exposed part
They need And nobody will
of the eye. Thia was a great inknow they're there but you.
vention, but it needed
rermement. The heavy glass le!IS
wa5 too uncomfortable to wear
rn the Interest of better visiOn
for very long (five l;lours ~as the
from tile office of: '
record in those days).
Then, in the 1950's plastic len.
Geel"le 11'. O.vll, O.D.
ses were introduced. This was a
458Secolld Ave.,Gallipolis '
muctlllgbter material than the
glasa scie!"ll lens. People fow'ld
Phone-S
·'
they CQII)d wear contact lenses
·filr loog periods ol time •

*******

..•
'

.

SALE!

*ALL SHOES NOW MARKED HAL, PRICE
WILL NOW SELL FOR HALF PRICE OF THE
~ALF OFF PRICE!
ALSO A GROUP OF SHOES
· FOR '2, '3 and '5

HERITAGE HOUSE
~FSHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

�1 19
Jul:r- '· 82

Gilllipolis, Ohio-Point Pleas;Jnt, w. va .

-·

=======~~=========~~~~~~~~~~========::;;::;:;;;:======= Pilge- A-4- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

r--The-!_~~}~~~;:------prev-al-ent-dry-wea-the-r.-Onl-y
•

are expected through the weekend, although ralnlall occurrence Is a
bit more likely by early week.
A large high pressure system dominating !JIOSt of the eastern
Q~r of the United States will retreat east and allow a cold front
lying along a northern Minnesota to Nebraska llrie lo advance east.
By Sunday night the front wW be oriented along a line from northern
New England across Lake Erie to Kansas.

••

Rain causes flooding in Iowa

••
WEATHER FORECAST- The NaUonal Weather Service forecasll
for Sunday showers In the Central Rockies, the upper Mlsslllslppl Valley
extending in a hand to the Great Lakes, and for the Gulf Coast, extelllllDI
from southern Louisiana to Florida and South Carolina. (AP Laserphoto) .

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY- possible showers and
thunderstorms Monday and Tuesday and fair Wednesday. Warm
through the period with daily highs mosily In the mid and upper !1&gt;5
and daily lows from the mid 60s to lower 70s.

Hot, humid weather continues
By The AIIIOCiated Press
Partly cloudy, rather hot and hurnld weather will hold across the
state through the weekend.
Temperatures Saturday night were expected to drop off to the
upper 60s to mid 70s, but the mercury Sunday will climb back to the
mid 80s to lower 90s.
The National Weather ServiCe foresees no Immediate end to the

The Nation's Wea&amp;ber
By The AB80Cialed Press
Thunderstorms continued over the Dakotas and southern Great
Lakes area Saturday, while heavy raln ca~sed flooding in Iowa,
forclhg hundreds to evacuate.
More than 10 Inches of rain drenched central and southern Iowa
farmlands Friday, and the Des Moines River overflowed at Ottumwa, forcing evacuation ol cabins and a mobUe home park. More
than 600 families fled their homes.
·
High water In Warren Courity, south of Del! Moines, drowned a
truck driver who abandoned his seml-traller rig.
In Dllnols, last·movlng thunderstol'll'll' Friday were blamed for
the dea111s of lour people In two traffic accidents, one In a driving
rainstorm In Wilmette and the other on a rain-sUck street in Elgin.
The storms also Interrupted power to thousands of Chicago-area
homes.
A few showers and thunderstorms were also reported In western
Minnesota, the upper Mississippi Valley, and the Southeast. Arizona
and New Mexico also received sprinkles, with clear skies over the
remainder of the natiOn.
~. Today' s forecast called for more scattered showers and thunderstorms over the northern Plains and from the Mississippi Valley and
eastern Louisiana to Georg1a, Florida and the Atlantic coast, with
sunny skies elsewhere around the nation.
·
Highs were forecast In the 60s and 70s along the PacifiC coast: !1&gt;5
from the Northwest over the northern and central Rockies to the
upper Great Lakes, northern New York and New England; above
100 In Southwest deserts; and In the 90s for the rest of the country.
Temperatures around · the nation Saturday ranged from 42 In
Butte and Kalispell, Mont., to 97 In Phoenix, Ariz.

The Fed said the money supply
known as Ml, which Includes cash
In circulation and deposits in
checking-type accounts, rose only
$5.9 billion In the week ended July 7.
Some bond traders had expected
the money supply to Increase as
much as $11 billion because of a 7.4
percent Increase In Social Securtty
payments and a 10 percent federal
Income tax cut that took effect July
1.
"It says the economy Is sick and
getting sick«." said David Jones,
an economist with the Wall Street
firm of Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co. ·
Albert Sindlinger &amp; Co. said,
"The U.S. economy Is In very se-

rlous trouble with no turnaround In
sight."
Meanwhile, the Labor Depart·
ment reported that Jnfiatlon at the
wholesale level rose to an annual
rate of 13.;r percent in June as
energy costs Increased at their
quickest pace In more than a year.
But even with June's big jump,
Inflation for the first half of the year
was running at the modest rate of
2.5 percent. calculated annually.
That compares wlth a 7 percent
gain In the Producer Price Index
lor all of 1981 and ll.S percent In
1~.

ln other economy-related developments Friday:

the president to appear In Ohio on
his behalf.
Celeste said that although Reagan Is vulnerable to some criticism,
his support wouldn't hurt Brown.
"I believe there Is ample room to
criticize his economic programs,"
Celeste said of Reagan, "but I think
we make a mistake If we Imagine
that because he comes Into the
state of Ohio, It wlll work to the disadvantage of Republican candidates. He understands how to
command the media and use It ef-.
fectlvely. I believe that Incumbency of the White House will be
used powerfully ". against all Democrats In 1982."
In party business Friday, 41 Democrats were elected to the party's
new executive committe~!.

State spends thousands on
RR crossing safety devices
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A state any drainage Illes at the site.
believe it would happen." He said It
Department of Transportation off!would have been "better to put
clal said the Idea behind upgrading
Musgrave said when township of- paint" on the existing signs and
the warning signals at several rail- flclals saw the plans, they "couldn't
road crossings In northwest Ohio r-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;roa;;;d;m;ar;;;kln;p;gs;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-1
was to prevent accidents.
What the state didn't realize
'
when It contracted fortheworkwas
that some of the crossings have
only one or two cars cross them
each day.
Some township o!ficlals are complaining that while the low-volume
crossings have been improved, others with more traffic remain
dangerous.
Hancock County Engineer Rober! Morrlson said crews have
made a "beautiful Installation" at a
Men's Levi
Conrail crossing on Madison Township Road south of Arlington. CrossHuVJWeicht·Unwashed
: ing gates and flashing signals have
•Straight Leg
been erected at a cost he estimated
•Boot Cut
at $72,00).
Morrison said he was not notified
of the work.
. GROUP OF MEN'S
GROUP OF MEN'S
But the road where the devices
were Installed has an elevated
crossing with good vlslbUlty .. He
S154J - s ....... Now $75.00 Reg. sao _......... S40.oo
· said there are many other more
5210 ••••., .••• Now SlDS.OO · Reg. $85 .......... $42.50
· heavily used·and hazardous eross$225 ....~. Now $112.50 .
· i9o .. , _.. , :- s4s.oo
IDgs that need improvement.
One, at the edge of Arlington, was
1/2
_the scene or a fatal train-vehicle
cr8$h. That crossing, Morrison
• said, has neither flashers nor gates.
: ·; Madison Township Cler~ Leo
: Musgrave said the only question .
ihe state liSked before InStalling the
: ~ulpment was whether there were

Ann Rowland sald.
r; ~
Offlclals confllcated, and later · · ~
detonated, a bomb made ot black , ·~
powder, a light billb and llatterles. ' ;,:
In Still's rented' motel room In !•·.
Strongsville, agents from the Bu- ~ :~
reau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Fire- · ·
arms and the Secret Service found
other lngredleniS tha.t could be used · · .
In making a bomb. I• ..
..
They also found a copyOf Soldier
of Fortune magazine wlth notations .
made next lo advert~rnents for · .
weapons and books qn~ldentlfl- · •
caUons, according 1o .a; reportread ·' \·
.
In court by Ms. Rowland. '
•..

.

FOUNTAIN - Thill tnmken fountain wbleh features water going at

111ree belghta and-llgllted In three colon was made by Arthur Strauss as a
fealllre al bill rose garden al lbe Strauis bome on S. Third Ave., Middleport. 'ne garden fealures a second fountain, also done with colored
Ugh~ tllld various other color llghls used at Intervals about,the yard ,.
lbe Strilua home to make lbe garden and yards blgbly attractive at
njgbt.

"ALMOST UNBEUEVABLE"VALUES
ON WHOLE
HOUSE FANS

IU..-J;=-- oms

-Caterpll!ar Tractor Co. , whose
profits plummeted 94 percent in the
second quarter as the recession cut
demand for . heavy equipment,
opened contract talks with the United Auto Workers asking for a wage
freeze and reductions In cost-ofliving Increases, according to the
Peoria, Ill , Journal-Star.

'179"

With shutter.

1

~

PRICE

THE La SALLE

Restaurant
Lounge
Hotel

STORE HOURS:

.·Thurs. 9 am til· 9:30 pm

Fri.·Sat. 9 am tJl 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

lltltYtlhe R lghl

-In North Carolina, two textile
companies announced layoffs and
plant closings. Fleldcrest Mills Inc.
of Eden said lliO salaried employ~ will be laid off. Burlington
Industries Inc. of Greensboro said
It will close a Cascade shirt fabric
plant and table plant.

• GALLIPOLIS - A chain-reaction
oolllslon on SR 7 Frtday evening resulted In three damaged cars and a
.. C)tatlon for a truck driver, the
Gallla-Melgs post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol reports.

Convertible
Jet pump

Captive Air' T1nk

'280

;7~T

30-g•'- electric
w1ter htlter

'cur

CUT

95

'S20

'119"

Atk for The
In addition. resolutions were
Installed Price!
passed that would form a financial
committee and a panel composed
of statewide Democratic officeholders and candidates. The two
groups would retain full voting
rights on the execu tlve committee,
according to party chairman Paul
Tipps.
Elected to the candidate and of08l81t
ficeholder committee were: Ce-·
leste. Shoemaker, Attorney
Complete centr~t
Chlln linkDt004• Absolutely Plush
1lrsystem AS""' AS
.__.
.......
nylon pile urpet
General William J. Brown, SecreAlmon
•~•I'll •' -~per ft Al1110t1
tary of State Anthony Celebrezze,
CUT · ·
36-ln: : : - - State Treasurer Gertrude Dona- ~:'"""'
. JJ%
. lt&amp;l '
hey, State Auditor Thomas Fergultrlt~urec.utot ptkts•Now.ln01.1' ··o·· "'*t~Nflt •SN,.....
son, House Speaker Vern Rille,
lnlfll,.llon utra • Aak otbouf St.n Cttdt !~tins
U.S. Sen. John Glenn, State Sen.
S.tlsfiCIIon Guarll1teed"' ,...,. Monty lock
Harry Meshel and U.S. Sen. Howard Melzenbaum.
You c.n Count
~ Silver Bridge .'
Included on the finance commitOn SEARS!
Plaza
:
tee were Cincinnati financier MarF
For service Ph. 446-lftl :
vin Warner and Cleveland Phone 446-2770
lUIRS. IIOUIJCKAND co.
· .'
businessman Milton A. Wolf.

•

76C

'64fGO

'9!'
....

1

ears

The patrol said three cars were
stopped In traffic on SR 7 at Roush
Lane at 7:50 p.m. The cars were
drtven by: Tom E. Suter, 60, Portsmouth; Detan K. McBrtde, 26, Gallipolis; and George M. Hack, 52,

14 cases end in Gallia Court
GALLIPOLIS - Fourteen cases
were terminated In Gallipolis Municipal Court Friday.
Lokle Smith, Lower River Road,
charged wlth drunken driving, was
tined $3)0 and . court costs, sentenced 1o t)lree days In jail and will
be required to attend weekend driving classes.
Phillip D. Davis, 644 Fifth Ave.,
was charged with having an expired driver's Ucense and fined $15.

Tool theft value
placed at $1,500
POMEROY--The Meigs County
Shert1fs Department Is lnvestlgat·
Jng a breaking and entering at the
sbhool bus garage In Tuppers
Plains, where Jools valued at approximately $1,500 were taken.
In other activity in Tuppers
Plains, Friday morning a citizen
observed two young white males
leaving Lldwlcks Grocery Store
~ugh a window. As of Saturday
t!le owner found nothing missing.
• Anyone having any Information
~ut either Incident Is asked to
&amp;ntact the sheriff's department.

for various violations Friday and
early Saturday morning: Dencil 0 .
Hoffman, 80, Patriot Star Route, expired driver's license; Barbara A.
Melvan, 46, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, no right
tum on red; Alvis G. Pollard, 30, 414
Hedgewood Drive, speeding; Belsy
N. Taylor, 37, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Max
W. Haffelt, 41, Rt. I, Crown City,
Donald R. Craigo, 18, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, speeding.

AMultlml!dlo Newspaper
, Publildll!d each &amp;milay, 82$ Third
~ Avenue, by the Ohio VaUey PUblishing
Company- Maltiml!dlo, Inc. Second class
postage paid al Galtlpot~. Ohio, 45631 .

Entered as second c~ malli~ matter

' atPomeroy,Ohio,POII(O!fice.

·

· Member: The Aubciated Preas, Inland
Dolly Pres!! · Association and lhe
American Newspaper Publishers
, Association, National Adverli sintt

. Reprellelltative, Branham. 17117 West
Nine Mile Read, Suite 204, Detroit.

Gallipolis.
A tractor-trailer rig driven by
William E. Beech, 45, NelsonvUie
was unable to stop and struck the
rear of the last car, causing a chainreaction cclllslon.
Beech,.whose truck was undamaged, was cited for failing to keep
assured clear distance.
Suter's car wassllghtly damaged
and the other two cars received
moderate damage.
There were no Injuries .
A seperate accident Investigated
by the patrol occurred jus I alter
midnight Saturday on U.S. 35 west
of SR 588.
Pearl I. Anderson, 65, Daytona
Beach, Fla., was northbound on
U.S. 35 when she lost control of her
vehicle, went off the right side of the
road and landed In a ditch.
She was not Injured and her car
was moderately damaged.

He Is not to drive untU his license Is
legal. He was also fined $4..1 for
speeding.
Those forfeiting bond for traffic
violations were Mark F. Bennett.
Ohio 7, Northup, defective exhau st,
$15; James C. Roberts, Rt. 2, Bidwell, exp'tred temporary license
tag, $25; Randy Green, Neighborhood Road, parking violations, $25;
Hark Haffelt, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, !allure to display valid plates, $ll; Thomas C. Bitner, Cincinnati, failure to r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~
keep an assured clear distance
ahead, $40; Kerry D. Dolan, Syracuse, N.Y., disorderly conduct, $25;
John R. Neville Jr., .59 Garfield
Ave., and Kimberly A. Carroll, 1409
Eastern Ave., possessing, lighting
and discharging firecrackers, each
fined $55.
Those forfeiting bond for speedIng violations were James E. Calvert, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $41; Dwayne
Beard, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, $43; and
Teresa Ford, 6 Hillcrest, $39.
A case between Mike Gee, 112
Third Ave., and Carol Brown, Bid·
well, was resolved by an oral agreement that Brown's furniture would
be released to her. Gee had been
charged wlth theft.
Our organization is only interested

LADIES'

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USPSI2HIIl

WESTERN

·soots$3495 PAIR

in giving you the f1nest in crea tive
design and outstanding cra lt ~ma n ·
ship, whether it be a 1imple ma rker
or imposing monument.

Write for free brochures
showing memorials in full
color and sizes and prices
listed.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.
Pomeroy~ason Bridge
Leo C. vaughan, Mgr .
992-2588

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SUBIICRIPTION RATES

. anewl'~~~~~~~.. tt.oo

One Moolll .... .. .. .. ........... 14.10
One year ........... . ...... .. . . $52.•

SINGLE COP¥
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31 C.nlli

J ANS

Y.,

retardation. A simple blood test, nitrate should be obtained from the before due date of delivery) so that it
·preferably administered by a health department (as th,e delivery can be administered &lt;luring those
physician or public health nurse, can date nears, no later than two weeks critical two hours after birth.
detect the PKU baby immediately. ri~;;;:;;;;;;;~~~~~=~=::=:::;:=:::::=::::::::::::::,
Oncedetected,thebabycanbeput
on a special di,et which prevents
retardation, with the Ohio DepartMiddleport, Ohio
137 N. Second Ave.
ment of !Iealth providing the formula without charge if not obLunch served 11 :30-2:00
tainable otherwise.
Dinner served 5: 30-9:00
Information about how to obtain
and administer the test is available
Soup &amp; Salad Bar, Sandwiches. Dinner Entrees, House
from the Hereditary-Metabolic
Specialties, Scrumptious Desserts and featuring
Laboratory, Ohio Department of
Friday-Seafood Buffet
Saturday- Steak Special
Health, 1571 Perry Street, Columbus, Ohio 43210 or by phone, 614-466Open lO : OOto2:30
5300.
This week's en tertainment 9-1
Finally, an effective prophylactic'
Monday·T hursday - Randall Mullins (of the La st Shot
against ophthalmia neonatorum
Band)
must be placed in the baby's eyes
Friday &amp; Saturday - Troubador I Dual guitar s )
within the first two hours of life to
prevent the possibility of blindness.
While other medications are
Rooms by day, week or month
available which are suitable for this
Party rooms and Catering
purpose, silver nitrate is made
"'
available without charge from the
Call
992-9917
lo• rates and details .
Ohio Department of Health to the
local health departments. The silver

Patrol checks chain-reaction acciden

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT
TIL 8:00 P.M.

SUITS

POMEROY - Recognizing that
homebirths are increasing in
popularity, Meigs County Health
Conunissioner, Sellm Blazewicz,
Saturday reminded those planning
to have their children at home that
they must comply with Ohio law
regarding the birth of a child.
Compiled by the Ohio Department
of Health, the liSl of legal
requirements includes filing a birth
certificate, administering a blood
test to the infant to detect
phenylketonuria, and administering
an eye prophylactic to the infant.
The birth certificate form can be
obtained from the vital statistics'
• registrar Qt the Meigs County health
department, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
In addition to birth data, information required on the form includes the date the mother was
tested for syphilis and gonorrhea by
a licensed physician during her
pregnancy and the name of the
prophybicticused in the baby's eyes.
The form must be filed within 10
days after the child's birth. If the
form isnotfiledwithin thattime, the
parents should contact the vital
statistics' registrar for the
procedure for filing a late certificate.
Phenylketonuria IPKUI is an
inherited defect of the body
chemistry which, if untreated ,
usually results in significant mental

GALLIPOLIS - A Bidwell Saturday, but no signs of forced enwoman, Sharon Kropp, reported to try were apparent, according to
Gallla County Sheriff's Department reporl.:l. Nothing was missing.
Meanwhile, Gallipolis police
FridaY her purse was taken from
reported
a 10-speed bicycle theft
· her unlocked apartment Thursday
from
the
carport
at 150 Second Ave.
night. cash. credit cards, her purse
Bob
Kiesling
told
police the bicycle
and other items were reported
had
been
chained
to
the carport but
missing.
the
chain
was
cut
sometime
between
Opal P. Taylor, Mill Creek Road,
reported to deputies someone broke last Sunday and Saturday.
Police cited the following people
Into her locked house at 3:45 a.m.

Ask for The lnst;alltd Price!

'89"

lO-In. size.

Tirpes-Scntinei-P

The

Gallia lawmen probe complaints
06307

3-speed window fin

Celeste warns of misleading GOP polls
"I will be glad II there are three
points dllferen_ce between Dick Celeste and Clarence Brown - and
we are three points up - because
I'll tell you, there will be more money spent In this election, more effort put Into this election than
anything we've seen in the governor's race so far," he said.
The former lieutenant governor
also warned Democrats not to disregard the muscle of President
Reagan In the governor's race.
"We should be careful not to underestimate the power of Ronald
Reagan in the White House," Celeste said. He "will do everything
he can to see to It that he maintains
a hold on the governor's offices 'In
states like Ohio."
Brown has said he Intends to ask

.

1

%-HP well pump,

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gubernatorial candidate Richard Celeste has told fellow Democrats to
beware of Republicans bearing
polls.
"You wtll see polls that say Celeste and (lieutenant governor running mate Myrl) Shoemaker are
way ahead," Celeste told a meeting
~ of the Ohio Democratic Party's executive committee Friday night.
"You'll see them for one reason.
They (Republicans) want us to feel
like It's all over."
Celeste predicted a tough race between himself and U.S. Rep. Clarence J . Brown and said he hoped
that polls will show the candidates
running neck and neck.

van reported slolen from Canada, U.S. Justice Department atlomey

...

Manufacturing capacity drops in June
By LORRAINE CICHOWSKI
i\P Business Writer
NEW YORK lAP) - Manufacuirers mired In the recession used
just 69.8 percent of their factory capacity las! month, the lowest rate In
more than seven years, the Federal
Reserve reports.
The June decline, from 70.4 percent of capacity In May, was the
lOth drop In the last 11 months, the
agency said Friday.
The report came on the heels of
the Fed's announcement of a
sma ller· than-expected Increase In
the nation' s money supply. Economists said that also indicated the
recession was not loosening its grip.

f

.

CLEVELAND (API - A tip
from a motel guest led to the arrest
of an unemployed transient who
has been charged wlth possessing a
bomb that he apparently planned to
mall to the U.S. government, officials said.
·
Reginald Dean Still, who according to officials has a list of at least a
dozen aliases, was ordered held on
$200,00) bond Friday by U.S. Magistrate Jack B. Streepy.
Still was charged wlth possession
of an unregistered firearm, which
carries a maximum penalty of 10
years in prison.
The 38-year-old St111 was arrested
Thursday night on Interstate 71ln
suburban Middleburg' Heights In a

w. va.

Home child ,birth delivery must follow Ohio law

$200,000 bond .set .-:.
n bomb charge

Iso-la-ted-showe-rsan-d-thu-nde-rsto_rm_s....,

18

is. Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Ko IJUblcrijltl~ by mail pennit~ed l.n
• town1 where home carrier aemce '"

1

avalllb&amp;e.

· Tile 'swic!ay

SPORT COATS

nmea-senunet wtll

not be

JOHN-A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
·
'

raponllible for advance payments made

to carrion.
MAIL IIVB8CRIP110NS
-yOoly

-

One year ........... : ..........

Pl.:lll

/!lb. fll&lt;llllri .................... fli.IK

.PRICE

11o11y ... a.-ty

......... .

-

•

.OPOS .. INdl

MAJLitJBICRlPTION8
...
'
•,
DW- .. .................... SILII '

.

'".'•••
w...."' !J.,.,.J.
!lfw •!o.••
. ~,..,

'Mon. &amp; Fri.till p.m. ·
Tues., Wed.,_Thur. '&amp;. Sat. titS p.m. ' ,
,

·.•

j I

·(

·-a.--

·
· -.... "" ~ . :. ""-" ". $17.11'
DW- ..................... , fii.M

uo

....

.,...,~

.....

· · - - - . , ."" ....... "" .. tlll.ll
· · -· .... , ...... , ..... \ ... flli.IK
IJ .""' " " " " . " " . " " " " $11.21

'

EAR, NOSE l THROAT .
GENERAL ALLERGIST

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

Office
'Hours by Appointment .Only
.
.

RIB
STEAKS

$499
l h

�t'he

Jeasant, W.Va .
!' ,1 qe- A-6-T he

Woman given
•
pnson
term
HUNTINGTON · A second person has been sentenced ln U.S Dls·
!riel Court here for conspiring to
p;-oduce and distribute a pornogra1
phlc !Urn.
Judge Robert J. Staker sentenced Eileen Kay Shannon, 30,
Huntington . Friday to 14 months ln
prison.
Last week, James William Guth·
rle, 3.1, Crown City, was sentenced
to 13 months ln prison for the same
charge. Guthrie had pleaded guilty
May 26.
Shannon pleaded guilty June 16 to
the conspiracy charge. She allegedly prod uced a pornographic
film with a 13-year-old girl. When
she entered her plea, Shannon said
she dld not know the !Urn was going
to be sold.
Staker reduced her sentence
from 18 months in prison as the result of a motion from Shannon's at·
tomey. Robert K. Means.
Shannon wlll not begin serving
her sentence untll she finds someone to care for her two children,
ages 5 and 10.
She faced a maximum prison
sentence of five years and a $10,00l
fine. Staker did not flne her.
Christopher L. Mlller, 36, Stuart,
Fla. oleaded guilty Thursday in federal court for his role in the pornogr ap hy conspiracy. He wa s
charged with conspiring to produce
and distribute pornographic materials and to transport a minor
across state lines for Immoral purposes. He will be sentenced Aug. 1!!.
.Two other persons charged in the
case will go on trial on Sept. 1 in
Huntington. They are Teddy G.
Hedgecock, 49, and Dean R. Martin, 36, Huntington.

: POMEROY - Gov. James .{,
Rhodes announced that the Bureau ·
d. Motor Vehicles has the sixth
distribution of 1982 tax revenues
totaling . $21,999,890.39 ready for
disbursement to local govemmenta.
Meigs C::ounty wiU receive $82,~1.19.
IJ

(

WEGUDI.Y .

REDEEM FEDERAL
fOOD STAMPS

•

AND OPERAT£p:·

· Pleaser
SpeCial

USDA CHOICE

· EXTRA LEAN

99

BONELES~

NEW YORK
STRIP STEAK

LB.

GOLD KIST

BEEF CUBE STEAK

ROUND STEAK
SMOKED ·

FRANKIE$.

Budget

LEAN STREAKED

Budget

CALIFORNIA

CARDINAL

CALIFORNIA

RED GRAPES

NECTARINES

Budget

audg

-

ri'(TINES .
_

' DQ..MONTE ..

.

. CUT GR. BEANS
DE(IAQNTE

WKCORN .

160Z.
. CAN

Budget

C4N
I.

SELF-RISING

_$2_29

-1

. BOX
.
13 oz.

RICE

BOX

KELLOGG'S

18 oz.

·TOILET TISSUE

FLOUR

5-LB.

150Z.

CHARMIN ·

SELF-kiSING

MARTHA WHITE

BOX

TOWE

MARTHfl WHITE

10 oz.
JAR

$}37

I

Budget

Pleaser
~peel a I

240Z.
CRISCO OIL
BTL
1-~--~
' --------~~~~
180Z.
DUNCAN HINES

KELLOGG'S

SPREAD

.,._,,

17 oz.

__;_;__
·

CHAPEL HILL

DILL SLICES

PUREVEGETABLE

FLAKES

GALLON
PLASTIC

HEINZ HA~Jl.!JBGER

17 oz.
CAN

~ =:.~.:. :~ : .: ~ T:. =E:. :N~IN.=. .:G: . .,_

2% MILK

BTLS.

PEANUT BUTTER

~~~~~

ST. REGIS

25 LB.
BAG

I~MIIl l •· ~l. lll ~~-

Pleaser
Spec: Ia I

:0\on~~r.l

,'",

MINUTE MAID
FROZEN

·ORANGE .
JUICE

BOX

12\~z.

CArt

GE~ERI~F~~N.

JUMBO
ROLL

1.6 OZ. .

WHIPPED TOPPING

·4 ROLL
PAll

Pleaaer
Special

300 ct.

BOX

I

DIXIE TREAT
CHUNK STYLE

5-LB.

DOG FOOD .

' BAG

·20 LB. BAG

320Z.
BTL•

·autlget .
'Pieaaer
Special

MRQD_~ ft.'lAI_
D

:-CHOCOLATE

, DRINK.

.
GALLON PWTI~..

$}39
'
~·

man of the Meigs County
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Sef'lice, reminds farmers
they need to certify their corn
acreage at the ASCS office to'protect
the bases for their farms.
Fanners who signed into the
acreage reduction program must
certify by Aug. 2 to be eligible for
program benefits. Fanners are also
urged to certify their crops to insure
eligibility for participation in next
year's program.

approaches
·:for elderly program
;. COLUMBUS - Tax commissioner
Efdgar L: . Lindley reports approximately WO,OOJ renewal applications have been received and'
llre ·being processed for the energy
credit program for elderly and
,lisabled Ohioans.
' In order to be eligible for thiS
~ pe111011·must meet these
three gualifications:
- ,IJ!!ad of household or spouse

CORONET

TOILET ,
TIS$UE ~~~LL

a

$COT TOWELS
.-

Water cutoff slated
Tuesday in Middleport

MIDDLEPORT---Mayor Fred
Hoffman announced Saturday that
· all water In Mlddlepcrt wl11 be
turned oft at 10 p.m. Tuesday tor an
lnde!lnite period. Water will be oU
during
the night a nd early
To install officen
morning.
According to HoUman this is
POMEROY - Officers will be in- made necessary In order that con:.talled at the regular meeting of st.ructlon crews can connect the
Drew Webster Post 39, American new Jines on Grant and Vine Streets
Legion, on Tuesday, July W, at 8 Into the existing water system.
Work wl11 be done as rapidly as
p.m.
The eighth district commander, H. possible and the Village regrets the
Brown of Lanca:.-ter will be the in- Inconvenience to its residents, but
stalling officer. Dinner will be ser- improvements being made wm be

24' x15' SWIM/AREA ,..::....:..=.~
AlL POOLS
INCLUDE
•fill• I

• II"'

'\1"''

•llltlj J"tn ct

l r.el ~

6 Si l l,.

•Huet llln Dick •&amp;t141'1

•' ool Llddll' YlnJI L l~"
•PIIU VACUUM
CUAIIIII

$gggoo

Install a tion I Fina ncing
Avai la bl e.
(Oihlf RIOd lll IVIIIIDII IOO)

•

mperlal
Jndustrles

1

ro~f~be~n~efl~t~t~o~th~e~en:tlr=e=co=m:m~unl=ty~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~n;c;.~~~~

ved foll
owing commander,
the installation.
Gerald
Rought,
urges Hoffman stated.
all members to attend.

·Clip these coupons _and save on two great Rax sandwicheEi!
The Rax Roast Beef Sandwich and the BBC with tender
roast beef, two strips of bacon and cheddar-flavored
sauce-all on a com-dusted roll
1
M 1
Whichever yoy. choose, come _
into
Rax for delicious food and great savmgs. {\0 ,

~ ~x

YliSrs.

11182 '

Budget
Pleaser
S#Jecla/
HINES

Pfeaser
· Special
' $0N~YMORN

· GRAui;A

age or older
totally and pennanenUy

I(UbltalkmwlilbavethelriJ(IWer~ WIC pick~up
"'tronl
l.3 p.m. this ~and · _j .:.tes anno·unced
Wedlleeday.
· 1. • '
au

'

. A Ill ........ 18111' the outaae Is
iwc "")' 10 pafoJm work within

EX-LARGE EG~S'

ag

'

disabled AI!ID
- Total income for 1981 of no more
than $11,000 OR if total income for
1982 will not exceed $11,000 and the in·
come for the six month period from
January 1, 1982 through June 30,
'191121 did not exceed ~.500.
Applications are iivaililble at
banks, libraries, post offices, senior
citizen centers, area Offices on
Aging, nutrition sites, and DiStrict
Offices of the Ohio Department of ·
Taxation. Applicatiqn period ends ,
Sept. I. ·

, GAi.LIPoLIS _ CustOmers ot .. ]il_theeventoftnclementweather
e.~c.- Rural Electric ,..,..__,_. the work~ be PQStponed until the
- T'f
....._,,.
folloWing day. •
live wbo are served by the Patriot

.•

m..

"The Prestigious
Watch"

'

'r ~rr o!
durin~
·Pow~r o~tag~ · set Tuesday

JUMBO ROil.

Q~NCAN

.

'

i Deadline

Special

¢

26164.

fi sh. werr kill!?d whPn an effluent

containing ammonia entered the
Little Salt Creek in .Jackson County .
In August 1981.
The city of Wa shington Cour1
House was billed $18,602 for the
death of 17.880 animals, also mostly
fish, wh~n city sewage entered
Paint Creek In Fayette County last
September.

...

Pleaser

~I

For more lnfonnatton write P .O.
Box 116, Ravenswood, W.Va ..

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -The
Ohio Department or Natural Re·
sources said Friday eight corpora·
tions, two cities and cine Individual
have been billed a total of $73,595 for
damages to wlldllfe as a result of
pollution.
The largest blll went to the DelMonte Corp. for$30.621. The department said 41,336 animals, mostly

WHERE SMART
PEOPLE BUY

150 CT.$
PKG.

69

42 oz.

SHORTENING CAN

Butfgef

Pfeaser
Special

PAPER
PLATES

xrn

- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Two presence of a substance found In couldbe important to doctors In
poor or remote places.
researchers have developed a test, gonorrhea germs.
Dr.
Paul
Wiesner,
director
of
the
·
The doctors said the tests were
· taster and simpler than current methods, that they say inl$ht help VD control division for the Centers 98.5 percent accurate on men. Precurb the worldwide gonorrhea for Disease Control In Atlanta, said Jlmlnary tests with a similar mehorseshoe crab blood has been used thod for women were equally
epidemic.
.
; Dr. Richard B. Prior, an Ohio In clinical medicine for a long time. accurate, they said.
'"J'he test measures an endotoxin
Current testing for gonorrhea reState University medical school
generated
In bacteria," he said.
quires
a microscope, a trained miprofessor, said federal approval or
the test for men was expected soon. ·'The substance reacts with protein crobiologist and a two-day wait to
conttrm results, Prior said. ·
Its use on WQlllen Is at least a year produced by the gonor rhea
He said one milUon gonorrhea
bacteria.
away, he said.
- . "The llmulus lysate test 1s sim- . "Under a specl1lc set or circum- cases are reported ln the United
pie," Prior said. "My 14-year-old stances It looks like it may be a State each year, and anothet 'tour
son can run it. It takes oo minutes. potentially useful test. It obviates million to five million go
and the family doctor can do lt ln the need for practitioners to have a unreported.
"Yet we've bad penlcUiln as an '
the office."
mlcrO!iCOpe and other materials lor
effective
treatment since World
· Tile test starts with a half-drop of standing glass slides.
penile discharge, which Is com"However, thl!re Is some dlffi· War II," he said.
liined wlth ·water and added to the · cultylnthattheendpclnto!thetests
freeze-dried blood of a horseshoe Is not as clear as some other tests,
crab. The concoction Is lncullated and It' would take some practice to
' minutes, and wben the test tube do It right."
,
00
IS tipped, 1111 opaque jel) clings to the
Prior and Dr. Vincent A. Spagna,
bottom If the patient has director of the Venereal Disease
,norrhea.
Clinic of the Columbus Healtlr De• The' Jell results from clotting of partment, are refining the test to a
the horseshoe crab blood In the 1G-mlnute method requiring only a
•
band-held Incubation period, which
ROLBX

VALLEY BELL

PEPSI
. DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW 8-16 OZ.

A queen pageant Friday night
wl11 open the festival when Queen
Daphne
wl11 be crowned by
Tammie Duckworth, Queen
Daphne XII.
Tills year's queen candidates ln·
elude Vaness a Hunt, Rhonda
McCauley, MoUy McGhee, Jan
Mllier and Pam Parsons .
Stage entertainment WUI follow

Bill corporations for wildlife damages

Researchers develop easy VD test

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

A

PU~FS

69

POTAToEs20 lB.$

BANANAS

Low Prices

RACII'!E - The Ohio Department
• c1. Indust!rial Relations approved 270
proJects with a total estimated cost
of $51,166,528 for the month of June.
Included Is the total $204,500 to be
used for the River Heights Apart.ment Building scheduled for construction on the north side of
Yellowbush Road, at Johnstown
Road, ~cine . The structure will
contain 5, 772.70 square feet and will
cOst an estlmated$200,00l.

U.S. N0.1

TOMATOES
CELERY

group.

Racine complex
Must certify crops
among 270 projeCtS POMEROY - Roy Holter, Chair-

Pleaser
Special

GOLDEN RIPE

HOMEGROWN

the queen contest, and the even~
wUI climax with a fireworks
display.
Saturday morntngwUI begin with
a parade through downtown Ra·
venswood followed by sky diving
and ski soows by the Athens Boat
and Sid Club.
Sunday's actMttes wUI be high·
Ughted by the boat races. beginning
at noon, followed by stage enter·
talnment and gospel music. Other
wef,!kend events will be a Krazy
Raft Race, square dancing, arts
and crafts and lots of food.

American Power Boat Association.
Also featured during the 'threeday festival wl11 be the Amazement
Park Review, a group of musicians
from Cedar Point ln Sandusky, the
Rex Nelon Singers from ZJnesvWe,
and the Hollanders, a variety

sheriff's department says.
Chambers was not injured in the
accident and no citations have been
issued.
'
Sheriff' s deputies are still in·
vestiga tin g
·a
hit-a nd-run
automobile accident which oc·
curred Friday in Southside' on
Secondary 29 at 11 :45 a.m., a
spokesman stated.
Melvin Gene Mu llins. 40, 16 Mile .
C' reek Road, Southside , was
travelin ~ in Ius vehicle west on
Secondary 2\1 when another passing
vehicle's side mirror brushed his
automobile's side mirror, result ing
in an estimated $50 worth of
damage, th e sheriff's department .
said.
The other vehicle involved in the
accident did not stop and Mullins
wrnt to his reside nce and notified
thr sheriff's department

There were no passengers in the
Kimes vehicle which was declared
a total Joss. The telephone pcll,
which was owned by C&amp;P
Telephone Company, was snapped
above ground, resulting in $500
damage, the sheriff's department
says.
. ·The accident Is still under investigation.
In ·another one-car accident
Friday, a 19'17 Chevrolet owned by
Carolyn Chambers, 2110 Mount
Vernon, Point Pleasant, was totaled
after the driver of the autom obile,
19-year-old Jeffrey A. Chambers ,
swerved the vehicle off the road to
miss a deer and flipped the car over
on Its top, according to the sheriff's
department.
Chambers was traveling south
when the incident occurred sixtenths of a mile south of Secondary

New Haven man W811 listed in poor
coodltion in the Intensive care unit
at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg Saturday where he IS being
treated for head Injuries suffered in
a single-car accident early Friday
morning, according to hospital of·
ficials.
rA Mason County Sheriff's
Department spokesman says
Robert E. Kimes was pinned between the driver's side d. his vehicle
and the groiUld following the wreck
Which occurred at 1:35 a.m. on Rt.
•33 near the New Haven Roadside
Park. · The sherifrs 'department
reports Kimes was traveling east
on Rt. 33 when he apparenUy failed
. to maintain control of his car, a 1972
chevrolet, as he was rounding· a
curve. The vehicle ran off the right
side of the road, traveled 14 feet and
moved 40 feet back across the highway where It went off the left ban&lt;!
side of the road and traveled 126
feet before striking and .knocking
down a telephone pole, the sheriff's
department says. The car traveled
another 82 feet before coming to
rest on the side of a hill, according
to the report.
lcimes, who was unconclous
following the accident, was transported to Veterans Memorial
HOspital by the New Haven Rescue
Squad and later taken to St.

Meigs County happenings..

LB.$159

SALT PORK

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

$

GROUND
CHUCK
USDA CHOICE

BO ... ELESS

MIXED FRYER

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - The
Ohio River Festival will take place
Aug. 13-15 at the Washington Lands
park just SOUth of here. The park
provides a place to relax and watch
boat racing provided by the Three
Rivers Racing Association or to
just enjoy other · entertainment
provided.
Co: sponsored by the festival commlftee ~d the racing association,
three-mlle boat races WUJ offer
cash prizes of more than $2,000.
Two divisions, one for runabouts·
and another for hydroplane boats,
wl11 be offered for boating enthusiastS, and those divisions are further
divided acrordlng to motor ~tyles.
·The races are sanctioned by the ·

"

'

oned by lbe AmerlcaD Pciwer Boa&amp; Allocladon. Also
at lbe festival wll be a variety of musical entertaJn.
ment, art&amp; and crafts 1111d food.

Ravenswood hosting festival

LOCALLY-OWNED .

THURSDAY ONLY
JULY 22, 1982

Pleaser
Special

JlF

Fi811V~ moHLitnrr - River racing In outboard
n*or boll&amp;a wDl Jilpillpt the Ohio JUver Fesllvalln
Raveaswoocl AU3. 13-lS. The boat races are !UIIIctl-

"YOUR HOMETowN
SUPERMARKETS"

Budget

Veterans Memorial

Vehicle tax receipJs

·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Budget

have busy day

ADMISSIONS··-E ivlra Barr,
Syracuse; Tammy Bable, Pomeroy; Beulah White, Middleport;
Pauline Derenberger. Pomeroy;
Tracy Eblin, Pomeroy; Lena Hell·
man, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES---Pearl Games.
Estll Collins, .Raymond Fischer.
Debra.. Smith.

w. aca.t .-...1 r.- I .. W. ._. 1111 lll1lt Te u.tO_t '¥'

DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC·
TURERS CENTS . OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49.' IN FACE VALUE.

Emergency squads
POMEROY ---Seven runs were
made by local emergency vehicles
Friday according to the Meigs
Coun ty E mergency Medi ca l
Service.
Rutland at 4:17 p. m. Alma Harvey wa' taken to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 1: 36 p.m. for
Tracy Eblin who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
at 4: 17 p.m. for Lena Heilman who
was taken to Veterans Memortal
Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:04 p.m.
for Mark Strout who was taken to
Vetera ns Me morial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 6:13 a. m. for Pauline
Derenberger who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra·
cuse at 2:20 a.m. for Elvira Barr
who was taken to Veterans MemorIa l Hospital; Middleport at 11: 28
p.m. tor Renee Reibel and Janet
Cremeans who were Involved In an
auto accident. Both were taken to
Veter ans Memorial Hospital.

- OPEII liLY - 10 10:P.II.
SIIIIAY.91010 ·
.

DOUBLE
COUPONS
SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
ANDMARKV

12 and Rl. 62 at 10:21 p.m., the

, NEW HAVEN - A 22-year--old "Joseph's Hospital.

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN.g TO 10:00 P.M. WILL BE OPEN
85 Vine Street
Galpoli. Ohm Phone 446-9593 9 A.M. TIL 10 P.M.
"Me Reserve the RiM to Urnit Quantity"
DAILY

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The following
couipies tiled for marriage licenses
this week ln Gailia County Probate
Court.
Howard D. Postel, 21, Rt. 1,
Crown City, coal miner, and Suzie
R. Henderson, 21, Rt.1, Crown City,
unemployed.
Leroy Gibson J r., 22, Rt. 2, Vinton, carpenter, and Ahgeia S. Oiler,
17, Rt. 2, Vinton, student.
Robert E. Lee, W, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, cook, and Sandra L. Edwards,
19. Po in t .Pl easa nt , W.Va. ,
waitress.
Barry E. Marcum, 18, Rt. 1, Vinton. street department, and Lucretia J . Justice, W, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
unemployed.
John W. Hurlow. 33, Cheshire,
boiler maker, and Darlene M. Hurlow, 24, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ,
unemployed.
Michael L. Riedel, 18, Rt. 1, Bid·
well , student, and Mary L.
Rodgers, 16, Rlo Grande, student.
Herman G. JeUers, 44, Hunting·
ton, unemployed, and Rebecca A.
Jeffers; 35, assistant secretary.
Thomas J . Swlndal, 20 Bartow,
Fla .. gym manager, and Jill L.
Eva ns, 19, 454 Th ird Ave ..
unemployed.
Danny L. Green, 30, Eureka Star
Route. Gallipclls, truck driver, and
Teresa L. Shaffer, 27, Eureka Star
Ro ute, Ga llip oli s, a cti v it y
therapist.

resident in poor condition

SUPERMARKET

Iii Gallipolis

7

T imes-Sent inel-Pa

Accident- leaves New Haven

.'

NEW HOURS!
JOHNSON'S

s

.

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POMEROY - WJC particlpanta
tnay pick up their 'cwPonl at the
tlluublta,tlan.
'
·.
Melp County Health Department on ·
CoaiiBIMiln the folloWIDI town- the foUowln8 schedule:
lldPI wm be atrectecl: Madtlllll
A-F, Wedllesday, July 21, Bto n
T.wP- ID J......_;County; SyrnriJes · a.m. only; G-K, Friday, July 2U·Il
. .Dii Maltll 1'wpL 1D Law1euoe a.m. ooiJ.; vlt, llonclay, Jll7 .. t:
- ~ UtiGreeii,Wabiut,Grem- 1La.m. only; Ql. Wedneldl7, J111J
&amp;}d. -l'lrey, Race0on, lJarrJim , ~. ,_11 a.m. only; T·X. Friday, July
, 81111 a..,a Twpa. ID Ga1Pf. County. , 30~ ~~la.m. only. . . .
:, ·

T;: Ra-; -

I

· Roast Beef

~!lli~l~~ ~l ~

.

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5otd ·

· 62,~- •• I
'

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... TAWNEY·
JEWELERS
424 SeCond Ave.

1 , Sanclwiches st.89. I
·I
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this
1pri~e.
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Enjoy the great taste of Rax ro.ast beef
and save when you clip
coupon.
Two delicious sandwiches for a great
,
•

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Thos offer not valid Wltlt any other dtsco unt or

coupo~ Salea·taX char ged where

applicable. Offer good af particopatmg
RAX Roast Beef Restaurants only _
Coapoi'•IPIIe• 8/11/82

·

•

AVE.~

.,

.Sandwichea
sz.69

I

Enjoy delicious roast beef sliced tlun
and piled high, covered with a cheddar'navored sauce and two strips of bacon
and served on a corn-dusted roll.

I
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fi!X .J

ThiS offer not valid Wlth any other drscount or
coupon. Sfles tax ch arged wllere

applicable Offer good at parucrpatmg
. . LRAX Rpast Beef Restaurants only
e
·. Couponexpirea 8/ 11 / 82

L -~--~.~-.-1503 EASTERN

I

'fwo BBCTM- -

·•

-------GALLIPOLIS, OH.

&lt;

�f' omeroy_:Middleport- Gallopolis, Ohio-f ' oinl F'le~silnt ,

F'age-A -8- The Sunday T im es- Sentinel

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Dial phones were introduced in
195!l"along with direct dialing of long
distance calls.
Touch-Tone service, a major
engineering innovation in the phone
instrument design, was introduced
here in 19M, and in the not too
db-tant future, this same pushbutton phone may help residents
vote, go t" school and control home
energy conswnption.
Ohio Bell invested more than$!.!&gt;million to improve local exctuinge
service in the area last year. Improvements included new cable and
conduit to handle increased ~alling,
additional call switching and transtmsston equipment to accommodate the rising number of
local and long distance calls and '
customer equipment ranging from
push-button telephon e to
sophisticated switchboards and data
products.
According to Ohio Bell Manager
Bill Quickie, today's special features
and services are just the beginning
of yet another whole new array of
technological advances soon to come
in communications. ''We've
provided customers here with the
latest technology a\ affordable
prices for 100 years," he said, "and
we're com!flitled to meeting
customer needs here for the next
century as well."

••

-·

'

TOP: In the spring of 1910, switchboard operators
manually connected local calls. Seated high upon
wooden stools and attired In the working woman's
unifonn of the day, operators are, left to right, Anna
Miller, Frankie Warner, Clara Gills, UDlan Volz, and
Hattie and Justine Cromley. SuperviSing from her
desk Is Helen Tallut, manager. ABOVE: More than a
half century ago, this brick building housed Ohio :
BeD's local caD switching equipment In GaiDpoUs.Located at the comer of Second Avenue and Locust
street, the company's first bUDding In the city was:
purchased five years earlier. The company evemuJ"
ally moved to larger quarters at Gi Locust St. LEFT: .
In 1930, Wire Chief John Frazier, right, supervised
the company's trans.mls!Uon and Une ~
. equipment. George Roberts, pss!sted with tlie work.

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customers. the Home Telephone
Company w,as founded. The two firms competed for business until they
· merged in 1910 to become the Gallia
Telephone Company, which Ohio
Bell purchased in January 1923.
Since !hose early days, many
technological innovations have
rapidly expanded and improved the
quality of telephone service for
Gallipolitans.

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GALUPOUS-As Nathaniel S.
Warth tinkered with scrap material
he found lying around theW. S. Kerr
telegraph office in the Aleohire
Block here a century ago, he had no
idea , his "fooy" wOuld mature to
become the necessity if It is today.
A telegrapher by profession, Warth constructed the lirst phone for
Gallillolis in 1878, just two ·years after tile first complete sentence was
transmitted , !rom Alexander
Graham Bell's Boston workshop.
A native of the city, Warth strung
his first' phqne wire from the
. telegraph' office to the C. D. Kerr
drbg store on a nearby corner at
Thil'tl and Court Frustees. Here,
Judge Samuel A Nash, a prominent
citizen, ·was asked to try the new
gadget. ,After the experience, the
judge was convinced "the answering
voice is ·frorri a man hidden under
the counter." Judge Nash was
proven incorrect, "and , the entire
town soon benefited from Warth's
talents.
Within a few years, the area's first
commercial phone· was connected in
the trairi depot. And on May 6, 1982,
·'I the first telephone eKchange,
operated by Central Union
·!
•I
Telephone Company, was opened on
the third floor of the old First
National Bank Building.
With 25 subscribers, Warth as
\
manager and Maggi~ Pitrat as switchboard operator, Central Union
provided service ~ete until 1889
when the. Gallipolis Telephone Com' pany took, over.- A few years later,
.. the local syStem, which used wall
. mounted crank telepho~es. was converted to a conunon battery system.
This provided . modern power and
eliminated the need to spin a crank
to signal an operator.
·
In 1906, with almost 650

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Pomeroy-Middleport

F'age-B-2-The Sund ay rimes -Sentine l

1982

July 18, 1982

Ohicr-Point P leasant, W. \/a.

. Pom

B-3

W.Va .

....

•-r •

PMS: Not a condition to be scoffed
By SALLY -'NNE HOLTZ
Times-Sentinel stall

POMEROY - This morning you
yelled at your husband just tor sayIng , "Good morning." You
screamed at your kids as they went
off to school. And, when the boy
came to collect for the newspaper,
you were so rude It was
embarrassing.
Yes, It' s "that time of month" what your mother used to call "getting her period" and your
grandmother called "the curse."
And today, It feels like it.
What you've got Is PMS - premenstral syndrome - something
you've known you ·ve had for years,
but whenever you mentioned It,
most people scoffed. Even your
doctor.
Well, nobody's scoffing now and especially not your doctor.
Modern medlclu research has
found that PMS Is a valid female

at the time of ovulation or alter.
Most women complain of the disorder In the week before they begin
menstruating. It usually persists
untU the onset oft he !*rlod, or a few
days Into the period. Mter the period begins , the symptoms
disappear.
The symptoms are many and
vary from woman to woman, af·
feeling 20-30 percent of all females,
say some sources. Others put the
figure nearer to 70 percent. Often a
woman may not even realize
what's wrong. According to Or.
Margaret Harnish, physician of obstetrics and gynecology at Holzer
Medical Center, PMS Is subtle. Irritability, she says, is the biggest
complaint, followed by bloating all over, not just In the pelvic area.
"Some patients can gain up tpelght

pounds," says Harnish. Breasts
may swell. Other complaints are

'
depression,
severe headaches, pel- In the week before a woman's
vic heaviness, cravings, lethargy, period.
And for years, 54ys Dr. Harnish,
anxiety, hos!Ulty, cramps, filght~
ness. Some women who are nor- most of women's complaints were
mally sober "become suddenly Ignored. "Women_ were put off,
Impetuous, she says. Others expe- often by. their doctors. After being
rience Increased libido. Some want told tbere was nothing wrong that they were just 'moody'- they
more or less Intercourse.
Sometimes the symptoms can be finally just shut-up about lt." Now,
really severe. Dr. Harnish tells of however, doctors are listening and
one other PMS patients- a teen· . doing something to help. And there
age girl - who trted suicide one 'is help.
There are several factors which
month and had a serious car accident the next. Her PMS caused er- come into the PMS treatment, says
ratic behavior. Other PMS Or. Harnish. A woman's age Is a
sufferers Dr. Harnish has seen factor and whether or not she wants
. have liecome so aggltated they've to become pregnant. Birth control
pUis help in some cases, according
beat their husbands.
to Dr. Harnish. by cutting the erAccording to some research done ratic level of the hormones. MUd
In Toledo, Dr. Hilrnlsh says, tliere water pUis also lJUlY help, by rellevIs an alarming increase In the ing the bloated feeling and reducing
number .of accidents and Illnesses lrritabUity. Anti-depressents are
during !bat particular span In a often prescribed and sometimes,
woman's cycle. The Increase, says hormones, altbough the latter usuHarnish, Is statistically significant ally aggravates !be condition. Several new drugs are available to
work on the pain ItSelf. "No one
needs to have severe menstrual
pain anymore," says Harnish. She
also advises possible PMS victims
to have a medical exam to rule out
other causes,
Dr. Harnish also recommends
exercise as a good way to relieve
pre-menstrual syndrome. "rhe exercise, she says, results in the en. gorgement of blood vessels of the
pelvis, I.e. gets the blood pumping
and rids the body of that heavy !leD·
satkln. Some activities she recommends ln,clude aU-body exercise,
such as bicycling, swllhmlng and
aerobic dancing. A woman must
start exercising before her period
starts to get !be benefits, Harnish
advises.
Younger women, says Dr. Harnish, are more ready to accept
· PMS as a valid medical problem.
They read more, she says, and
knQw treatment Is possible.

"If you can understand It, you
can better deal wltb It," says Dr.

Harnish. PMS Is not a sign of weakness, as women have been told lor
ages; It's a sign of being a woman.
According to "Webster's New
Collegiate Dictionary," menstrua-

1.-Why did Ananias call Saul "brother" before he was baptized?
(Acts 9 : 17; 22:121 Not knowing the thoughts of Ananias, IllS difficult
for me to tell you why Ananias uSed the term." brother." I c~n only tell
you what we find in the scriptures. "Brother" Is a term used ten dif·
ferent ways in the New Testament, one of which is to refer to all the
males of a particular nationality . Pt::ter used ''brethren" (Acts 3: 17) in
refer.rlng to "the men of Israel" &lt;Acts 3: 12) who denied Christ, desired
a murderer to be released !Acts 3: 14), and k illed the Prince ofllfe (Ac·
Is 3:HI . Paul, atso, used "brethren" as he spoke to the Jewish mob
who wasseeking to kill him !Acts 22:11 . Since. Peter and Paul, as welt
as others, used the term in referring 'o the Jews who ~ere their own
kinsmen. Ananias could have used it in the same manner, recognizing
Saul being one of his own race. If Ananias used the term In reterrtng to
Saul as "brother in Christ," he had to use it in antic ipation, that Is. he
spoke or consid~red his being a "brother in Christ" prematurely, for
Saul was not a "brother in Christ" at this time. This ~me thing I do
know and that is Ananias did not use the term to denote that S_aul was
in a saved state, in Christ, or in . the familY of L:.ord. SauJ was
"tarrying" or " lingering" when Anan ias told him to "Ari$e. and be
baptized. and wash away ttly sins, 1calling on the nam_
e of the Lord"
(Acts 22 : 16). When Ananias referred' to Saul as "brother." Saul was
still in his sins!
·
!
2.- Wa!. he not e1 sinner and also filled,owith the Holy Ghost before
baptism? (Acts 9: 17) Saul was a sinner at the time Ananias restored
his sight, but he was not a si nner when he received the Holy Ghost. God
promised the Holy Ghost only to those who would "Repe nt, and be bap·
t ized ... in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins" (Acts
2:3BLand gave the Holy Ghost "to them that obey him" &lt;.~cts 5:32).
Saul was no e&gt;&lt;ception, therefore, he did not receive it before he
"repented, was baptirei::J, and obeyed.'~ The apostles were the only
ones who could impart "lhe gilt of the Holy Ghost" by the laying on of
hands (Acts 8; 14-17) . A'nanias:-nol being an apostle. could not have
imparted "the gill of the Holy Ghost" to Seul. AQanias, nor any
apostle, could not have administered " Holy Spirit baptism, " for only
the Lord cOuld do that : " I indeed baRtize you with water unto repen·
tance : but he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I
am not worthy to bear : he shall baptize you with the Holy GhOst, and
with fire" (Mil. 3: 11 ); " And I knew him not; but he that sent me to
baptize with water. th e same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see
the Spirit descending, and ref't1aini~9 or him , tf'le same is he whi~h
baplizeth with the Holy Ghost" (Jno . .1 :33). Pa.IJf ·aff irms that hiS
apostleship was "not of man. neither bY man, but oy Jesus Christ, and
God the Father, who raised him from the dead" (Gal. 1: 1), and "that
the gospel" which he preached was "not after man , .. but by the
revelation of Jesus Christ" (Gal. 1: 11 . 121. Paul being baptized with
the Holy Spirit is not recorded in th e New Testament, but we-do know
that whenever it occurred it was alter he had obeyed the Lord in bap·
tism , and that it was not administered by Ananias, but by Jesus
Christ!
For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write ...

·I

Couple marries in Wellington ·

Mor1'11nq
Billll' S ludy f :JO
Wonhip 10: JO

~u nd o'ly

Sunday Evl'nln!l
Wor s hip 6: 00

~Summer Clearan
Continues
All Spring &amp; Summer
Merchandise
---etc. c

bearer.
A wedding reception was held In
the church hall following tile
ceremony.
. The bride graduated trom Wei•
lington Senior High School In 19!ll
andd attends Rio Grande College.
The groom Is a 1975graduateof gallla Academy High SchooL He Is em·
ployed by Kaiser Aluminum and
Chemical Co.
·
The couple resides at 554 JackSon
Pike, Gallipolis.
,

CALLIPOLIS - Sara Renee
Wiggs and Bruce Henry Jamison
were married July 3 at First United
Congregational Church of Christ, In
Welllngton.~erfonnlng the ceremony were
~v. Leah Matthews and Rev. Roni\ld Boldman.
'Wiggs Is tbe daughter or' Mr. and
Mrs. Louis F. Wiggs, Wellington,
and Jamison Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William L. Jamison, Madison
!\venue, Gallipolis.
· Serving as matron' of honor was
Denise Bousman and Teresa
Varner was maid of honor. Bridesfllaid was Wanda Johnson, sister of
the groom,
Best man was Melvin Valentine.
Ushers were Harry Johnson, the
groom's brother-In-law, Michael
Wiggs, the bride's brotlfer, and_
Charles Jamison, the grdom's
brother.
Flower girl was Tara Johnson,
the bride's cousin. Jason ~Is •
also a cousin of the bride, was ring

D;~ily · WJEH

li : SSAM

$1&amp;75.00

"The Church with the Message"

.

SPAll____,

CENTENARY - Teri Steger,
The bride will graduate from
daughter of Kenneth Steger and the Gallia Academy High School in 1963.
·late Marchita Steger, became the She is employed at Johnson's Super
bride of Ron Corbin, son of Mr. and MarkeL The groom is a• 1982
Mrs. Oscar Corbin on June 6.
graduate of Galli a Academy High
The wedding took place at the School and is employed at Holzer
home of the bride's grandparents, Medical Center. The couple resides
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Steger of Cen- on Route 35, west of Gallipolis.
tenary. Rev. Steve Ebert officiated r,;;;~r.;~~m~~~;;,-1
at the double-ring ceremony in the I
presence of the irrunediate families.
The bride wore a formal gown of
OF OUR
white lace and chiffon featuring a
~weetheart neckline. Her shoulderlength veil was borrowed from her
sister, Teresa St. Clair. The bride
carried a bouquet of pink roses. ·
Attending the bride as maid of
honor was Betty Bing. She wore a
white dress with a red bolero jacket. ·
Best man was Alva Johnson .
The couple greeted 100 guests at a
reception following the ceremony in
the fellowship room at Centenary
United Methodist Church. Barbara
Arnold baked a three-tiered cake in
white with pink roses. The church
was decorated with pink and green
streamers and flower arrangements
OPEN MON.-SAT.
of pink roses. Flowers were from
9:30·5: 00
Amyl's Floral Fashions.
Hostesses were Teresa St. Clair,
Judy Salisbury, Cathy and Becky
Elliott.

SAY

%OFF

ALL KNITS AND STRETCH TERRYS

40°/o
Off
•SHORTS

•SHORT SETS

5522

SAVE 20 o/o OFF
ALL FLOOR MODEL
SINGER SEWING MACHINES

•PAJAMAS

ETC.

We Sharpen Scissors
.
We Service All Makes of Machmes

WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF
MATERIAL IN THE AREA

_
""'""'"'

SINGER
.. ....

•

Mo~d:lAt~:: ~~da,Y
Saturday' AM to l PM
WAll IN 0A CALL f~
AN .t.PP()IHIMfNT

5528

r.:.lll.-.I"''
ll "I
C....

I"

THE FABRIC SHOP

115 w. 2nd

Pom e roy, OH .
serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer A
ved Deal e r

446-9510

OFF
.

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Save on our entire stock of regularlypriced merphandlse- everything In the storel
Sale end• Saturday, July Uth.

\ \

SPlCIAUZfD

1

CLEAII5111G AND

PACKAGIN~ SliVICE
....................."-.

-

• all fashion fabrics, new
fall arrivals and basics

.

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• all patterns

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• all notions, trims
and accessories
• all decorator fabrics

Our service stops 1\vht, dirt, dllll,·

or·

"'oths and mildew from agino
' damoei"t deli~ate fabrics.
Your gown ii scientifically
eued, triple-wrapped in

.zocyo·SO% OFF ;eg.

prac•
blue

spring and summer'
-merchandise ·

tissue, ..alod in a special CO~·
• ta_iner, which ;, aoain -plastic

' sealtd,

and returnfd w~h beauty
for all the years . tci

.,.-•od

Chapin's death remembered
NEW YORK (AP)- Several thousand Harry Chapin fans remembered him with song on the first anniversary of !be slnger-!llngwrtter' s
In a fiery car crash. .
·
·
Chapin's brothers, Tom and Steve, folksingers Peter Seeger and Jolin
1- PTin•e. electrtc mandolin player Jethi-o Burns, and Chaplli'~ former
Hl•illlO staged a memorial concert Friday.
'
Chapin's former agent, Bob Hinkle, said the proceeds went to the
Harry Chapin Foundation, which fllrids charitable organizations that
concerned Chapin, 'Including World Hunger. ·
·
Openlllg the concert was Chapin's old band, now known ,as ,The
Strangers and boasting more of a rock sound than folk sound
. Some tans complained that they were-a "captive audience'' and had
come to hear "mellow mulllc, Harry's music," not rock.
· But when the Chapin brothers, Seeger,l7ine and the otbers took the'
·stage, there was II clear change of mood. ·
·'

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Second

THE A&amp;ES WITH OUI

Martin's weapon arraignment postponed
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Entertainer Dean Martin has won
·postponement of his arraignment on a misdemeanor charge of carryIng a concealed weapon In hls car. and his attorney
he' U for a
plea bargain.
"We wUI try to reach a disposition that Is mutually
agreeable to both parties." lawyer Alan Croll said
after Municipal Judge Andrew J. Weisz agreed to
delay the arraignment untU Aug. 5. ·
Misdemeanor defendants are not required to appear for arraignment and Martin was not at Friday's
hearing.
The 64-year-old singer and comedian was arrested
May 8 by California Highway Patrol ottlcers at a
West Hollywood Intersection.
He was Initially stopped for Investigation of rlrumk&lt;•n dJrlVlnl!.
Deputy District Attorney Philip Wynn said Friday lbere was "Insufficient evidence" to fUe such charges. He said a .38-callber revolver was
found In Martin's car, however, and the entertainer was arrested and
booked, then released on his own recognizance.
The maximum penalty for conviction on the misdemeanor count Is a
$500 tine and six months In jaU, Croll said.

I

Mr. and Mrs. Corbin

SUMMER
CLEARANCE

Mr. and Mrs. Jamison

wedne\day
Evening
J: DO
R~clio

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pR/JTECTEP
I

........

.....:;

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

" MesH"e I rom
lhc Bible"

HOLIDAY POLLS, Inc.

......

Steger, Corbin wed in June

Bulaville Road e ·P.O. Bo&gt;&lt; 30-8
GALlt POLIS, Ot&lt;tO 4l631

IUMM~f\ IIWING

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· rff!.ajtel .Yf;£1 &lt;"&amp;ltt«cle .of riku4t

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Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair

People
NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (AP)- An $850,mllawsult against Olympic hockey hero Jim Craig has been flied by the sister of a woman killed
In an auto crash Involving the athlete.
Philip N. ·Beauregard, a Fairhaven lawyer, said Friday !bat !be
wrongful death action was filed earlier this week on
behalf of Anne Porter of New Bedford In ~Jrlstol
County Superior Court. He said he did not know when
a hearing would be held.
Ms. Porter's sister. Margaret F. Curry, 28. or New
Bedford was killed In the crash on Route 6 In Matta.polsett on May 29.
Craig, the goaltender who led an underdog United
States Ice hockey team to the gold medal In tbe 19!ll
Olympic games. pleaded Innocent July 13 to charge
of vehicular homicide in the case.
, According to pollee, Craig's vehicle crossed the center line into the
·path or another car. The woman driving the car was not seriously hurt,
·but Ms. Curry was thrown from the car ll'tid killed. A second passenger
was seriously Injured.
·
Beauregard said the suit makes a claim tor $750,ml under the state's
wrongful _death law and $100,ml for conscious suffering.

GAWPOLIS - Salem Baptist . Michelle Ross, Heidi Montgomery,
Church was the setting for the Feb. and Gena Lowery. They were in
19 wedding of Teresa Steger and Tex floor-length gowns of orchid
St. Clair.
'
flowered chiffon over satin, and
The bride Ia the daughter of Ken- carried orchid silk bouquets.
neth steger and the late Marchita
Ellie Drummond, cousin of the
Steger. The groom is the son of Mr. bride, was flower girL She wore an
and Mrs. Cliff Rogers.
orchid dress with a white lace hat
The 6:30 p.m. ceremony was per· and carried a white lace basket of
fonned by Rev. Steve Ebert. MW!Ic flowers.
'was provided by Ruth Ann Fellure
The groom and attendants were in
with Sally Corbin as soloist.
gray three-piece tuxedos. Best man
Flower arrangements with shades was Da'le Snyder. Other attendants
of orchid flanked by two seven bran- were Eric Steger, Tom Richie, Jeff
ched candelabra decorated the Dyer, Jim Collins. Ushers were
altar. Family pews were marked Hobart Barker and James Duke.
Guests were registered by Tami
with whitel!&amp;tln bows.
Escor-ted to the altar by h~r Steger, sister of the bride.
father, the bride wore a gown made
A reception honoring the couple
by her neighbor, Mrs. Jack Klms. was held in tbe church social room
The gown was lace over satin following the wedding .. A four-tiered
featur.lng a high neckline and a cake made by Margaret Ann Hall
peplwn waist. The veil was chiffon was white with orchid flowers . Wed·
edged In lace and fell from a pearl ding bells and streamers completed
seeded cap. Her bridal bouquet was the decor.
shades of orchid with satin
Hostesses ·were Louise Elliott,
streamers.
Cathy Elliott, Becky Elliott, Naomi
Maid of honor was Natalie Sims. Salisbury and Diana Drummond.
Other_attendants were Alicia Sims,

By Wlhr!i 8. Kughn

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
SALE

Lawsuit filed against hockey player

Steger·and St. Clair marcy

~-

QUESTIONS ABOUT "BROTHER SAUL"

POOLS
In -ground I&lt; its from

·..

•J.

tlon Is "A d!schar&amp;illg or.blood, secretions and tissue debris from the
.uterus !bat recurs...ln breedlng·a&amp;e
primate females ... at approximate
monthly Intervals ... " Any woman
can tell you - It's much more than
that."

AMESSAGE FROM
.. .lltE
... BIBLE •.•

SWIMMING
before their period. Now - olleo lor the llr8&amp; timedoctors are ll.stenlng and treatment of the "myst8y
illness" Is at hand.

·weddings

r.p;~;:;;:;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;:;:;:;;

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

PRE-MENSTRUAL SYNDROME - Some ·
women experience depression, anxiety, hostWty,
pain, bloating and a multitude of other UJs In the week

•

I'

come.
Ask

·"'·

WHY NOT TRADE THAT OLD WATCH FOR A
BRAND NEW SEIKO, BULOVA OR
CARAVELLE. JUST BRING IN THAT OLD
~ATCH REGARDLESS OF MAKE, QUALITY OR
CONDITION AND WE'LL ALLOW A TRADE IN
ON THE WATCH OF YOUR CHOICE.

\lo,

...•z·
'

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about thi1 Ideal MNice _ ,,

-Ohio ValleY LaundtJ··
And.Dljcleaners

!

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price

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Ph....1~2

121 st~te Str•t; Gallipolis
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.RobiiiSGn's LaundrJ

. and DrJtltaners

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Pll:tf2.J4U ,.,
~ •

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_,.

I .,.

StcOIMI $t., Polnem~y
'

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·SlOIE HOURS
.Moa. tll111 Sat. 10 Lll.·l p'.11.
' !indiJ 1 p.ll. tl5 , ....

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA, \
011.
ptt.'446-1571i

Gil"*'

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·CaPtala
D's;
•....... , 7 pu

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217 .Upper River Road

342 2ND AVE. .~­
GALLIPOLIS, 0. -

446-2191 '

113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, 0.
992-2054

�•!
'
f'omeroy-Middlcport-Gallipoli~,

rage--B -6-:: T_he sunday fimes -sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

J

co~ples ·announce ·their.~engagements

Area

proaching marria~e nf their'
daughter, Terri Lynn, to Brent T.
Hart, son of Martha Hart, Letart, W.
Va ., and James L. Hart, Hurricane,
W. Va.
The bride-elect is a 1980 graduate
of Wahama High School and a 1982
graduate of Marshall University
where she 111ajored in le~al
secretaflal studies. Her fiancee
graduated from Waharna High
School in 1978 and from Marshall
University in 1982 where he majored
in accounting.
Thecouple will be married on
Saturday, Aug . 21, at 1:3() p.m. in
New Haven United Methodist Chur- ·
ch, New Haven, W. Va. Nuptial
music will begin at I p.m. The
gracious custom of an open-church
wedding will be observed.

School and Mount Vernon Nazarene College.

Smith-Hawk

Johnson-Hart

Smith, Hawk
GALLIPOLIS - Tameron Lee
Smith and Kevin Ray Hawk, .!loth
osGalllpolls, will marry !nan openchurch ceremony on July 31 &amp;til30
p.m. at the First Church ct:the
Nazarene.
Smith Is the daughter of Mr. end
Mrs. Earl Smith, Route 3, GaUipoll.s. Her fiance Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond C. Hawk, Fourth
Avenue, Gallipolis.
:;: The bride and groom-elect are
~aduates of Gallla Academy Hlab.

Johnson; Hart .
MASON, W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Johnson, Mason, are announcing the engagement and ap-

POMEROY . - pistrict 25
8ow~'a Stars aim uBI picnic will
•be held at Dodge Park, Beverly,
Sunday at 4 p.m. Bring }:overed
dish, .table service and Item for
anauctlon.
·

..

ROCK SPRINGS -IJymn sing
at Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Sunday with
the Revelators providing music.
The public is invited.
MERCERVILLE - The Saunders Trio of Lecta will perfonn
Sunday at 7 p.m. at Mercerville
Baptist Church. .Pastor Jim
Lusher invites the public.
GALUPOUS - Our Gang C.
B. Club will hold its Fourth Annual Jamboree Suriday at Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wyoming
Wolves will provide music. Admission ia free and the public is
invited.

Whitlock
Mr. and Mrs. Shaver, 50th

At wit's end

Dealing with being released from a job.

GALLIPOLIS - Friends and Charles Hively and Mr. and Mrs.
relatives of Francis L. and Pauliue Robert Shaver of Route 4,
Shaver of Route I, Gallipolis, are in- Gallipolis; and Mr. and Mr&amp;, Guy
vi ted to a reception in celebration of. r~J~orda~n;o~f~~;;;~v~a;.• ;;~
their 50th wedding anniversary
Saturday, July 24, from 3 to 5 p.m. at
Firo-t Church ol the Nazarene
Fellowship Hall , Gallipolis.
The event is bein g given by their
children, Mr. and Mrs. William
Shaver, Easley, S. C.; ]'tfr. and Mrs.

anticipated they'd reproduce them- shower. It's being the only one on the
selves?
airplane that a Oy buzzes around.
Your worth and self~steem begin It's being the child your mother
to erode. You feel like a fraud in the never liked.
8 o'clock traffic. Everyone knows
I give up. It's beyond description.
you're just dropping off the kid.s at rn;~[iiii;i,!Ojftii~~ft;~~ff~~~~~~r.~~;p;;-:--j
BOOM! I should never have con- school. You really have no place to
fided in Ralph that the boss' wife go.
People don't respect you any
was the thing of which silk purses
I
I
more. They look at you like a child
are made.
I
BOOM! I should never have taken molester. When you go. to lunch and
I
that afternoon off to have ear someone else picks up the check, you
I
surgery. Hearing isn't everything.
want to stuff it right up their noses.
BRING
I
BOOM! I should never have gone
You hate yourself for becoming
I
into pet rocks. Who would ever have hooked on the soaps. You worry
I" THIS
a bout yourself when you clip a
COUPON
horoscope that's optimistic and put
AND GET AN
it in your billfold even though the
film will be shown 15 minutes after papef is three months old.
bookmobile arrives.
God, will people ever stop trying to
Drop by your nearest bookmobile cheer you up by telling YiJU stories
lor free entertainment and In- more depressing than yours? Why
fonnation for people of all ages. We don't they admit you all drank the
I
have how-tCK!o-its on everything water In Mexico, but you were .the
fr?m auto repair to dieting, many only one that got sick! There's a glut
paperbacks, and access to all the on advice.
c.O
COUPON I
I
libraries in the area to take care of
---~------~~---~~~--....J
To be out of work and nonyour information needs. The book- productive ... is like the last one
mobile staff will look forward to standing to be picked for the
seeing you·
baseball team. It's a chipped tooth
If any questions, please contact on prom night. It's arriving at a parLouise Hamel, Extension Librarian, ty before the h011tess Is out of the
384-2103.
your ticket down the toilet, or losing
Wimbledon by a shoestring fault.
You hold an imaginary gun to your
head and lire six rounds of guilt
every three hours:

Bookmobile service in Meigs
County is brought to you by the
Meigs County Public Library UJICier
contract with the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday,
July 19: Carpenter (Laura' Store),
3:1ti-3:W p.m. ; Dexter (Chufth),
n • •n Danv 111e (Ch ur ch) •" ·1! ""
4:1~ : ... ;
....
5:45; Rutland (First Natillnal
Bank) , 6:30-8. Short film w111 be
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arrives.
Tuesday, July 20 - Portland (Post
Office), 2:ID-2:40 p.m.; Letart Fa Us rpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-1
(Effie's Restaurant) , 3:15-3:50; II
Racine (Bank), 4 : ~ : 35. Short film
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
will be shown 15 minutes after bookmobile arrives; Syracuse (Pool),
Of Middleport, Ohio Presents
6:5()-8:50. Short film will be shown 15
THE FOLLOWERS OF CHRIST IN CONCERT
minutes after bookmobile arrives ..
THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 20;'1982
Wednesday, July 21 - Tupperli
Plains (Arbaugh), 7:25-8:05 p.m.;
AT 7:30P.M.
Rlggscrest Addotopm. 8:2()-9, Sllort

$3

· ~va"

·-·-... ..,..-.. .

- •

I

Meigs bookmobile schedule ·

00 Off 1
Extra
ANY SALE SHOE . :

SOLITA;..

'395 - ~~g·

'3950

~6~~0o

TAWNEY JEWELERS
42~

Second Ave.

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1-------------------------L----------

Sammuel L. Boszard
~emorial Library will be at the I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
following places the week of July 19 I"
to July 23.

FASHION BEAUTY SHOP

Monday : Ewington 1:1~1:45:
Geiger's 2-2 :3(); Adney Road 2:453:15; Vinton P.O. 3:3().4;3(); Bidwell
f&gt;-6; Harrisburg6:UHi:3().
Tuesday: Eno 2:311-3; Rece 3:053:20; Africa Road3:3tl-3:15; Ky!!eri
3: 50-4:20; Kyger II 4:25-4:40; Roush
Lane 4 : ~ : 15 ; Cheshire I !Hi:30;
Cheshire Il6 :35-7.
: Wednesday : Banes 2:1$-2:30;
Smith 2:45-3:15; Myers 3:311-3:45;
Mercerville 4-4 :30; Burd t:&gt;ID-:i;
Crown City P.O. 5:!f&gt;-6; Eureka 6:156:45.
- Thursday : Watts 2:15-2:30; Brick
School Rd. 2:40-2:56; Addavile
Elementary 3-J :J(); St. r · • (Roadside Rest) 3:45-4; Geor~ .J Cn:ek
4:1ii-5; Bulaville Trailer Court ~ : 306; PlantsSubdivision6:15-6:t5.

Owner- Elizabeth Vaughan

Announces

Patti Weyersmiller
Lawrence
Is employed as an operator,
daughter of Joanne Thornton Lawrence and the late
Jack Weyersmiller.

CLE-ANING SERVICE
ANNOUNCING OUR FANTASTIC MID-SUMMER SPECIAL
. ' fooA Y THRU JULY 31st
WE A~E OFFERING ASAVINGS OF 25% ON ALL
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CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANED DURING THIS
THREE (3) WEEK PERIOD ONLY.

-

CARPET CLEANING

I, .,.

· ·id]d
Remember:

r

..

;

we are the Professionals. ..:.
we Move the himitur&amp;. ·• :.;

we rake the pile.
·
Weprotectthelurniture.witll
a vapor shield lf .oecesllifY.

.
1

GAIJJPOi..IS - A pony pull

will.be held at the C'oOn Hunters' '
• Club, Kriner Road, at noon Sunday.
CROWN CITY - The Grubb
Family Singers will be at Federal
Creek Church Sunday at 7 p.m.
The public ia invited.
NORTHUP Baptist Church will
have a homecoming Sunday.
School will begin at 9:45 a.m.
with a service following. Dinner
will be served on the grounds
with Rev. Bud Hatfield speaking
in the afternoon.

POMEROY - The annual
Matl;lck l'l!llnlon wUJ beSun~y,
July 18 at Lancaster fair- t'
grounds. Au members of the
~amity and friends are welcome.

•,

667-3484 •

at the office ofDr. David Krawsczyn, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, to
continue planning for a reunion .
POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club picnic at the home
of Addalou Lewis Monday at 6:30
o.m.

MONDAY
RACINE American Leglon
AuxUiary will meet at the Leliton hall Monday at 7::Jl p.m.
Tonja Salser, Girls' State repre-sentative, wOI report.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Little
League Baseball Tournament
Monday at Tuppers Plains sponsored by Eastern Athletic
Boosters. For additional ·information contact Jim Caldwell
at 667-3644 or George Collins at

MEIGS High School class of
1972 will meet at 7 p.m. Monday

MIDDlEPORT - Annual picnic of the Middleport Business
and Professional Women's Club
will be held at 6 p.m. Monday at
the !lome of Mrs. Alwilda Wernet. Members may take guests.
Each one is to ~ke a couple of
prizes for games, acovered dish,
and her own table service.

TUESDAY
GALLIPOUS - Unit 'tl of the
American Legion Auxiliary will
meet at the legion hall at 7:3()
p.m. Tuesday for Girls' State
delegates' reports.

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

from6 : ~:30p . m .

panies. Refreshments will be served.
Contact Mark Flynn at 949-2895 or
Lorena Dobl&gt;ins.at MH222 fortransportation.

POMEROY - Vacation Bible
QORCAS - Bible school at
school will be held July 19-23, 6: 3() to
8:30 each evening at the Pomeroy Bethany United Methodist Church,
Wesleyan Holiness Church, State Dorcas, will be held for eight
Route 143, Harrisonville Road. The .evenings thi.s year Instead of five.
school will be conducted for young The school will be held July 19-23 and
people from pre-school through 26-28. Each session will begin at 6:15
teenage. Those wishing more in- p.m. and conclude at 8:3() p.m.
Materials being· studied in the
formation may call992-2469.
Bible school are from Augsburg
GAWPOUS - Fellowship ser- Press and Cokesbury. The younger
vices will be he)d July 19-24 at Guyan children will study a variety of
Valley Baptist Church with services topics. The older children will focus
starting at 7 p.m. Each night one of on Moses and tbe exodus. Refreshthe area churches will host the ser- ments will be served each evening.
Contact Mark Flynn at 949-2895 for
vice.
transportation or for more inCROWN CITY Wesleyan Church formation .
vaeation Bible school will be held
Rev. Carl Hicks will be the guest
July 19-23 with the theme "Come
Follow Jesus." Sessions will take speaker on July 18and 25atChester
place on weekdays from 6: 3() to 8: 30 United MethOdist Church. Services
p.m. Classes are offered for all ages, will begin al 9 a.m. The minister
nursery students through high will also be speaking on the same
Sundays at 10 a.m. at the St. Paul
schooL
United Methodist Church In
PORTLAND - Bible school at Tuppers Plains, and at 11 a.m. at
Portland United Methodist Church Alfred United Methodist Church.
will be held Tuesday through Friday
Arthur Duhl will give the sermon
mornings of thi.s next week, from 9 to at the Long Bottom United Metho; 11 a.m. Teachers and helpers in the diSt Church at 7 p.m. on July 18,
: school will be Lorena Dobbins, Joan while Mrs. Jean Trussel and Rev.
. Pickens, Dolly Mees, Marrianne Florence Smith wUI speak on July
• DeMars, Donna Rice and the Rev. 25 and Aug.l. The date of Aug.1 has
· Mark Flynn. Materials for the been set for a county-wide pulpit
• school have been selected from exchange among county ministers.

· GALLIPOLIS- The July exhibit
· at the.'rench Art Colony, 5:JJ First
. Aveiulscomprtsedofthe52July
· 4 art ow prize winners.
· G
hours are Tuesday and
Thu · 1from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
: and Saturday and Sunday from 1 to
; 5p.m.
Coming events are as follows:
July 20 - Interdepartmental
meeting at 8 p.m. ·
July 'rl - Trustees meeting at 8
· p.m.
July 31 - F AC Goes Country, an
evening of music and dimclng be, ginning at 6:30 p.m. at Rlverby.
· The Blue Grass Gentlemen and
: Connie wlll•be featured. There will
be demonstrations of clogging and
square dancing and an old• fashioned bean and cornbread
: dinner Is scheduled. Tickets
: $7.50 per person and$15 pe~ couple.
. : They are avallable at P .J .'s and
from Jeri Skaggs, FAC director,
: 44&amp;3834. Tickets should be pur: chased
31.

rr:::::;;;.:======::::;-1

or
Kodacolor II '" Films
Size•

110,126,
35mm

Or New

"diiC" Film
Regular
Prace11lnu

12 Exp .... 2.09
IS Exp .... 2.73
20Exp .... 3.12
2• Exp --- . 3.62
36 Exp .. "5.16
• C-41 PfOCIIU llkl t ' - " " ,

Kustomat 4".
Develop 6 Printing

,

Custom
processing for 4" 12 Exp . ... U2
prints on glossy 20 Exp .. .. uo
paper .a nd 2• Exp - -- ·6.10
negatives are 36 Exp--. · 8.60
P1lnts ovotloble In 110 .
placed In pro- • 4··
120 . onc:l36mm onty.
tective sleeves.

(600)

(601)

Your Prints Are lack When We Say

3-daySale

Or you Don't Pay!

Aqua·fresh• Toothpaste

3-day Sale

(Standard colO&lt; polnl Him

Pkg. Of 80 Curad• Bandages

Ol1gtnci roll developing and prln11ng or C--41 110,
126, lSmm (fUll rrome only). 1 print each on our

Fights cavities and freshens
breath. With fluoride. 6.4 oz.' Save.

Your choice of plastic or sheer
strip bandages in assorted sizes

atond0rd..ftn61h paper.
• S._IIOfe lot Oltab.

'Net WI.

Color
Choice

Auto Dept.

Sold
In
Sporting
Goods
One Size
Flta4•7

Aladdin
1 quart
Thermos .
U n·
breakable sleel.

lovepats'" 2-way-stretch
briefs of nylon/cotton$1
with cotton terry panel.

$

5-gallon gasoline can.
Double seamed, top and
bollom. Automatic venl.

19

.
CALL T-OOAY-·OON'T DELAY

IF NO ANS CALL

--2061

1

Kmart• Sale Price

Leu Factory Rebate -

How soon· college!
Will you be ready
when they are?

$1

· Pantl-ah• Nyion panty hose.

Aller Factory Rebate

....

~.-.-·

'1

$5

(607)

Prepane 2
$3
cylinders.
For

• lemonade.

Enemeled wood$5
toile! seal.

••

Life Insurance can help.
.:au ciaiirlria l'ff': !Ill\&gt; Is

·. $499 fro

Home.Pb . JJI:?691

MODE iN"' WOODMEN
OF AMIERICA

4,000 BTU
Our Reg. $254

(608)

(610)
5800 BTU
Our Reg $337

.,
·:
•

:•
~•
:~

SAVE ON

(613)
Wicl\er Type
Bassinet .

•

$28

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL
'
. '
1340 Hal Greer Boulevard

Huntington, WV 25701 ...
' . (~) 696-38~ . . ,

'

r.

~-

r

$299

( 611 )

--='

•SWIMWEAR•
RACK OF LADIES'
SHORTS•
•ROMPERS•
•BOYS PLAYWEAR•
· •SUMMER PURSES•

3

' Nell'ltt .

ROOM AIR CONDITIONER

18,000 BTU
2 Speed Fan
4-way air direction, ex ·
haust and fresh air con trol. Comfort Guard.

llt1urt~"ct
Hom• Offiu -Rock !lionel, lllinoi1

Frtlttr,.l U/t

Umlt 2
2-oz.' Secret•2· $
deodorant.
For

GE CARRY-COOL®·

Whirlpoof

:S12 S~qn!l i1 Yt.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446-8235

'

Your Net Cost

6

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•

$5

\...

FREE

1

POMEROY - Installation at
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Tuesday. Eighth district
commander, H. Brown will be the
installing officer . Dinner to
follow installation . Gerald
Rou ght . commander, urges
members to attend.

NORTIIUP- Revival services
will be held Sunday at Macedonia
Church with Rev. Joe Gwinn and
the SisSon Family.

'

. CAW-----,1
446-3915 .

GAWPOLIS - Lnfayelte
White Shrine will meet at 7:3()
p.m. Tuesday at the Masonic
Temple.

The Saving Place""

· ~HJ - 180- 4

..•

GALLIPOLIS - Christian :
Women's Club will meet 1uesday
at the Holiday Inn at noon . Guest ·
speaker will be Jackie Stevens of
Parkersburg, W.Va.

----...

GAIJJPOUS- Gospel Baptist
• Church will have ,a homecoming
Sunday with Rkv. Samuel L.
Thompson. The public is invited.

are

..

Calendar

e- B - 7 ~

Times-sentinel-

he

..

eDRIESQUICKLY
eOOOR "STAIN REMOVAL

'i=RIENOLY ESTIMATES

LL THIS AT OUR JULY SPI!CIAL PRICES •

Why you became a nurse
is why you should consider
Cabell Huntington Hospttal
Choose Cabell Huntington as a place to build your nursing career for the same reasons you choSe
nursing as a prolession .
1
•
.
Consider these benems.:
·
\, ·
• Flexible scheduling. Cabell Huntington offers an innovative weekend schedule. ·Saturday" .•
and ~unday 12-~our shifts pays the same as a full, 40-hour work week. Full pay and full · be~elits , too. E1ght-hour and · 12-hour weekday schedules also are available. along with
"charge," evening and night_ pay incentives.
.
• Education. Gabelf'Huntlngton is affiliated with Marshall University's medical and nursing
~chools and ofler,s lull. tuHion _refund. Our in-house Education Department also designs in-serv-·
ICJ!S and workshops for all sh11ts to help yov learn on the job.
·
• career development. Whether you are interested in an administrative or a clinical carm
Gabell Huntington's developmental programs are geared lo the individualized needs ol each
nurse. You .select the car~r ladder consistent with your idea of the.kind of nurse you want to be. · Ther~ are many more benefits, including lully paid lamily h~lth and dental insurance; nine · ·
paid-holidays; unllonn allowance; and so forth. Let us tell you about them ..Cali Joyce Clark today
to learn why you s~ould choose Cabell Huntington Hospital. '
·
• ·,
.
'
'
,'
-' .
. -

ADVANCED

G&gt;\WPOLIS - Vacation Bible
School will be held at Campaign
Freewill Baptist Church July 19-23

· Riverby calendar

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio
R !CHARD STEWART, Pastor-Ph. 992-2406
No Admission- Love Offering Will Be Taken

: The

day. Morning services will inclu~ Rev. Earnest Barker and
the Merritt Family. Afternoon
servi-ces will include Rev . ·
Charles Turley and the Gibson
Quaitet. The public Is Invited.

1

Announcements

three different publishing com-

THE SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER

Gallia bookmobile

SUNDAY ·

I

Syracul;e Presbyterian Church with
a reception to follow in the church
annex.
The bride-elect is a 19'19 graduate .
of Southern High School. Her fiance
is a graduate of Dekalb Klgh School
in Dekalb, Mass. He Is now serving'
with the U. S. Navy aboard the U. S.
S. Patterson FFIOO stationed in
Mayport, Fla.

lis, Ohio-f'oint PleAsant, W.Va.

Po me

PROCTORVILLE - Lucinda
Baptist Church, Wolf Creek
Road, will hold homecoming Sun-

I

ByERMABOMBECK
There isn't a person reading this
column today who has not been
teleased from a job.
This includes the author.
It's a feeling I will try to describe.
The pain is~'t anything you can
treat or put your finger on, but it's
there. Soria like being kicked by a
horse in a phone booth and there'll no
place to lie down and be sick ancfyou
don't have a dime to call someone.
There's a constant sensation of
despair like being infonned you've
just won the lottery and yo1t flushed

..::

Whitlock-Noland
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
William Whitlock, Syracuse, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Lisa Kay, to Charles Otis
Noland Jr., son ol Coral Noland and
the late Charles Otis Noland, St.
Joseph, Missouri.
The open-church wedding will be
held on July 25 at 3 p.m. at the

1982

•

�•
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•

~ Page- B - 8- The

July 18, 1982

Pom e roy- Middleport- G a llipoli s, Ohi o-Point P leasant, W.Va .

Sunday Time s-Se nt ine l

•
'

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S MID-JU LY SALE

rts

WE ARE FIGHTING INFLATION WITH THE LOWEST PRICES IN THE

S

1rhnts • ientintl
.
-

Reds
lose
•
again

AREA ON QUALITY FURNITURE

.. REDUCING HUGE INVENTORY WITH · SPECTACULAR UJVi
PRICES. SAVE UP . TO lfz ON FINE RIVERSIDE AND
BROYHILL TABLES.

3 Piece
'!'.· BEDROOM SUITE

•
Includes: TripleDre88er,
Hutch Mirror, Cannonball ..Bed and Chest '
--· ~ ·
Night Stand -

PUY ANY BEDROOM SUITE FROM
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S HUGE' INVENTORY AND fmtlVE UP
TO '300 OFF AND GET A FREE MATCHING NIGHT STAND,
ALSO A FREE SEALY BOX SPRING AND MATTRESS, FULL
SIZE OR EEN.
. .
BUY A LIVING ROOM SUITE AND SAVE '30oJ600 AND
RECEIVE YOUR CHOICE A SET- OF TARtES OR A 12' ZENITH
TV FREE!

Ryue Sllldberg, rlgbt, eludes tbe tag of Atlanta

Blue Jays, Red Sox win

WOOD TABLES -

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REG. '699.95
I

RECLINER
Buy any m stock
and get up to
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get a '25.00
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DistinQuished e11mensio ns. graceful.
an eleg ance in warmth .

..

Swivel Rocker
Truckload

In the top of the second on Mike
Richardt's three-run homer, his second of the season.
A double by Doug Flynn chased
Toronto starter Luis Leal. Rellever
Roy Lee Jac~n. l-6, walked Billy
Sample, but he retired the next ·
three batters In order and held the
Rangers to just one hit over his six
Innings of work, strildng out four
and walking one.
Red Sox f. Royala 4
BOSTON (AP) - Rlck MU1er
broke a 2-2 tie wlth a bases-loaded
trtple In the eighth Inning Saturday
as the Boston Red Sox defeated

· · FREE

A

TABLL COU£C1100

Sal_!! ·-&lt;&gt;-~-=

ancn:~~tl~:· ~:lkDrl::nc::

Cedeno singled home Milner.
Kansas City 8-4.
St. Louts scored lts first run 1n the
Held to oqe run and six hits by opening Inning on a single by Herr,
starter Paul Spllttortf, the Red Sox · his stolen base, a throwing error by
jumped on relief ace Dan Quisen- Reds catcher Alex Trevino and
bel'ty, 4-4, for a tying run In the OberkfeU's sacrtflce fly .
seVenth and six more In the eighth.
Doug Balr hurled the final two
Wlth one out In the eighth, Dave Innings tor the Cards tor his flfth
Stapleton beat out a hit off Qulsen- save.
berry' s leg. Plnch-hlttlng Carl
IDdlanll Get Revenge
y astrzemsld singled, sending StaCLEVELAND (AP) - Mlguel
pleton to third. Rlch Gedman then Dllone's groundout drove In the
grounded sharply back to the lead run In Cleveland's four-run
mound and Quisenberry had Sta- seventh Inning and Rlck Manning
pleton trapped IJ1 an apparent run- knocked In three runs as the 1ndl·
down. But Stapleton got back to ans rallied from a 4-0 deficit to dethird safely, and · the bases were feat Cal!1ornla 10-4 Saturday,
loaded.
snapping the Angels' six-game wln·
Miller's tliple cleared the bases, nlng streak.
maklnglt!&gt;-2.JlmRlce, TonyPergz · Rellever Ed Glynn, 3-0, gained
• and Wade Boggs also drove In runs the victory by retlling the tlnal
In the Inning.
seven batters. Doug Corbett, 1-S.
Mark Clear, 7-4, who relieved took the loss.
Bruce Hurst ln the eighth, earned
With Cleveland trailing 4-3 In the
the victory. KansasCitygotltst!nal seventh, Mike Flschlln drew a leatwo runs In the ninth on solo hOmers dot! walk and went to second on a
by Hal McRae, his second of the sacrtflce by Larry Milbourne. After
game, and Frank White.
Toby Harrah walked, Mike Har-

OFF Tim WALL - Boston Red Sox left fielder Jim Rlce leaps against the scoreboard on the left field waD In Boston's Feoway Park, but Is
unable to caleb a drive by U. L. WasbiDgton of the Kansas City Royals ID
the third Inning ID Boston Saturday. Washington ended up with a double
on the play. (AP LaserpbotoI.
grove hit an Infield single and
Flschlln scored when shortstop
Mlck Kelleher threw wildly past
first.
After Andre Thornton was lnten·
tlonally walked to load the bases,
DUone grounded to second baseman Bobby Grlch, whO wanted to
try for a force at the plate but
couldn 't get the ball out of hls glove
and had to settle for the out at first
as Ha rrah scored to make lt 5-4.
Mickey Mahler relieved Corbett
and walked Von Hayes before Manning followed wlth a two-run slngle.
California grabbed a 2·0 lead In
the flrst Inning when Brian Down-lng led off wlth hl.s 15th homer and

Reggie Jackson added an RBI
slngle.
.Jackson's 21st homer and Fred
Lynn's 11th, solo shots ln the third
and sixth Innings, respectively,
gave the Angels a 4-0 lead.
Cleveland used fou r wa lks and
two singles to score three times ln
the sixth on Blll Nahorodny's tworun slngle and Manning's basesloaded walk .
Cleveland scored Us final three
ru ns In the eighth on a n RBI double
by Harrah and a two-run single by
Hargrove.
Cleveland's nlne-hlt attack was
alded by 11 walks.

· , SUMMER CLOSEOUT ON THE BEST SUMMER FURNITURE IN THE AREA•.
ANYTHING LEFT IN STOCK WIL BE
MARKED DOWN 40%.
Patio Groups From

,

TORONTO (AP) - Uoyd Moseby blt a two-run homer and Emle
Whitt blasted a three-run double to
highlight Toronto's seven-run se·cond Inning as the Blue Jays went
on to an 11-3 romp over the Texas
llangers Saturday.
Tile mue Jays jumped on Texas
starter John Butcher, 0-1, for four
runs In the bottom of the first, folIQWing a !IS-minute rain delay In the
top ot the Inning, on run-scoring sinlies by Rance MUutnlcks, Barry
Monnen anci Hosken Powell and a
' sicr111ce fly by AI Woods.
Texas came bi!CI&lt; with thtee liiillf -

GLASS. TABLES

REG. '599.95

OFFER GOOD ONLY ON LIVING ROOM SUITES IN MAllfSll)RE

TRADITIONAl

llNDER THE TAG - Chicago Cube' buei'IIIUier Braves' 'borlltop Rafael Ramirez to 118fely •teal
tleCODd duriDg fln~ iDDIDg artlon Sablrday ID Chicago.
(AP Luerpboto).

Contelmporary ...
Elegant ...

By PAUL LeBAR
AP Sporta Writer
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Darrell Porter, Tommy Herr and Mike Ramsey drove In runs In the seventh
Inning to lift the St. Loul.s Cardinals
to a 4-2 tliumph over t])e Clnclnnatl
Reds Saturday.
The uprising otf Marlo Soto, 8-6,
was aided by a one-out error by
Reds second baseman Tom Lawless. Right-hander Bob Forse h. 9-5,
was the benlflclary of the Cardinals' comeback, winning for the
first time since June 14.
Willie McGee started the seventh
by reaching flrst when Lawless
booted his grounder.
McGee scored on a double by
Poorter, but Porter was thrown out
at third attempting to stretch the
hll After Ozzle Smith and pinch·
hitter Steve Braun drew walks,
Herr greeted reliever Joe Price
wlth his third single of the game
and Ramsey, pinch-hitting for Ken
OberkfeU, also singled.
Cincinnati had taken a H lead
wlth two runs In the slxth. After Sototed off With a single, he was
forced at second by Law!~. who
scored on Eddie MUner's double.

3 Piece Chalie Patio
P,ckage

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CARPETING
WITH PAD ·
AND INSTALLATION

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NOW ONLY
00 .

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5-PC.

7-PC.

SETS

SETS

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7-PC~
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Sug. Retail ·

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$347

'179

5 Pc. Early American Dinettll Set ,!eatures a
formica top table that opens to 48 with one
12'' .leaf. Set includes tour sturdy. hardwood
mate's chairs.

.

'279

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\
~Jetail

Sug.
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Larger Family' Size' 42" Round Tl!ble extend~ •
to 66" with twd 12" ·leaves: let includes Sill'.
"~vily braced !'lardWOod m-.&amp;;~hlin.. ' .
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SETS

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$614 .

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'399

Authentic Colonial ·styling with more quality
tflan you would expect at this low price. l:arge
42" round table exfetlds to 66" wllll.'two 12"
lnves. F.ormlca table' top
and
scratclles. All Sill cllain
If solid
118riliWOOcl witfl
a1911 ,.delle
'

''

BOBBY Oampett, USA, paaebel the air
he llDb a 10., paU .
." for 1 birdie 011 tbe fifth, In 8atuiday'l OpeD
Cllllmplalld~ play. He '
- wa_ltad!D&amp;tbetleidlttblntage. (APW!repboto).
•
'
.
~

..

~

·!,Brave8 keep· on

· ARNOLD Palmer, USA, blt.;.ut of tbe rough on the 13th fairway, ID Saturday's Open GoU Cbamplonsblp play. ( AP Wirephoto ).

C lampett retains lead in British Open
winning, 94 _
,

By BOB GREEN .
':- · CHICAGO'(AP) - MChamb- • RBI single.
..
AI' GOlf Writer
$ •l!a''rtpped a ,pair of RB! B!ngles. The Cubs came back With two
TROON, Scotland (-AP)- Bobby
~ Murpllf drove In two J'l!ll5
runs In the bottom rt the tlrst. With
Clampett, Jines of pain and strain .
,a- slngli! and a 'oouble and one aut, Ryne Sandberg alngled,
etclled upon his young face,
: (#lelln Hubbard addlld a ~o-run trl- ·stole second and moved to thli-d on
struggled through brisk, · gusty
~ J!1e ill the ~ta Braves defeated . a siJiile by Bill Bnc.._,, Buckner'
Winds to a wUdly erratic 78 but re-'·
~!" Cll!liltlo ~._ 9;411atw'day. • wu U.ppecloiUinl, bll)eludedthe .tallied a one-stroke lead Saturda)'
;·, ........... _... tbt Vlctur llld l'IUidolrn, aJiooNiar . . . , to .' lo the third I'OWid of the lllth Brtt' :•lllcldt Nalel, ~ wbo tiltcl!ld 41-3 IIIMI bmle. Qae ·out lata, Keith 1111 OpeD Gcilt CbamplilDablp.
· ·,....., before being relleYed by M!ftland lied the ilcore with a .
It was 1 . blt.arre chapter. In the
: MDre Proly, tOQk the Ioiii.
, double.
lOIIi hiStory of this ancient event.
:;.Atlial4 opmec1 the IIOOI'tng with
Tile Braves 1IOOI'ed twice In the
While the w1rids wei-e up, condi:11(11 aba 1o tile tint when Raful Ra- : top ot the tblrd. 8lld the cu.. 8111t1oi1s were no mcire severe, ~
1101e leCIIICI llld ' wered wltb 1 run In the bottom or. ~ "Walloll, than tboee that preIIIXII'I!dODI!Ii'qlebyRu'the~ Dll,ldllllt l-3, But tile , valled 011 the tint tw? daya whell,
IIID
LIDareil 'tblm stole seBraves took anllliaunnOuntabli! 7-3 · ._ ~!'hot 1'0UIIU ~ 67 and M.eaad llld ICOred on CbambUSs' f1rst · . edge In the fourth. · •
. But. tlieo, neither could
- anyone
....

::With

.:

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·)

'-

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_-· place

-~

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else.
a ·212 total.
•With Clampett falling vlctlm to a
Two strokes otf the pace at 213
wide variety of goWng horrors, lt
were Sandy Lyle o! Scotland and
seemed the gate would be opened to Des Smyth of Irelillld. Lyle mana large numbel"ot cballengers.
aged a 73 and Smyth a 74 despite a
But no one made a move. •
double bogey-5 on the fltth hole
Clampett, the leader all the way where he chipped lniD a bunker .
In hlsflrstappe81'1111CetntheBrttlsb
OpeD, ~ three i'ouDdl In
Watson, the U.S. Open champion
m - 5-~ pu.J'bat canpares 8lld a three-time winner of thls
·With the Iotty 11-UIIder-par IDtal and event, accomplished part ot hls
a , five-shot lead with which he goa! In splte of himself.
stiu1-&amp;l the day's play.
Seven shots back when the thlrd
Nick ~ ot Zimbabwe, a 2S- round started, he "wasted a lot of
year-oldjounleyplanproontbeEu- shots early In the round," he sald,
rqli!1IJl circuit, 'beld onto ~ . but got In With a 74 tbatlefthlrn at
with a 74, Wblch Included nu· ·21~. three stro~ back and very
merous missed
OIKJ011U!IItles,
allll mucll In the Utle hunt.
-..... -

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The only others under par after &gt;4
holes were P.eter Oosterhuis, an
E nglishman now Uvlng In .the Unl·
ted States, and Japan's Masahlro
Kuramoto. They were tied at 215,
one under. Oosterhuls had a thlr'dround 74 and Kuramoto was one of
only three men able to beat Troon's
par of 72. He shot a 71.
The other two subpar shooters,
Kelth Waters of Great Brttaln and
bee Trevino, each with a 71, recorded thelr effQrts before the
winds freshened. Both were too far
back to be a factor. Trevino has a
221 total, Waters 222.
.. Jack Nlck!a'!s also appear ed to
be out of it.

�Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis,

Ohi~F'oinl

July 18, 1982 ,.

Pl.easant, W.Va .

, 'Ohio-f'oinl Pleas.1

w. v ~ .

1h e

~

1

·3

imcs - ~entinei - Pa

Vilas, Lendl in quarterfinals

'"""'h'" must

OO.iiii~Paul

Householder can .hlt In
major
leagues. "Lawless we.bii.Ye
to
tlnd
1
out about also. He's pald his dues,
and It's time be got a cluulce." said
McNamara.
Wayne Krenchlckl, riding a 7-for13, tlve-Nns baued In streak was
furious when Lawless was called up · •
and he ~ benched.
'

DICK WAGNER

JOHN MCNAMARA

Pooley's help
pays off for
for Jeff Mitchell
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COAL VALLEY, IU.(AP)
Credit Don Pooley with an assist for
Jeff Mitchell's 36-hole lead In the
Quad titles Open golf tournament.
Pooley helped straighten out Mitchell's balky driver earlier In the
tourney.
"Don helped with my alignment.
1 started hitting my drives more
consistently," said Mitchell.
The pre-tournament lesson
helped Mitchell, the 191ll Phoenix
open champion, to a leading total
of 132, 8 under par for two trips
around the cozy Oakwood Country
Club course.
The 27 -year·old Mitchell, a native
of.nearby Rockford, ru .. equaled
til¢ course record Friday with his
7-under·par 63, starting with an eagle and collecting 10 one-putt
greens.
His margin entering today' s
third round was 2 shots, with some
lrripa;lng names In the six-player
grpup at 134, 6 under par.
They Included Calvin Peete, last
week's champion In the Greater
Milwaukee Open, and Miller
Barber, the winner of the U.S. SeniBrs Open Sunday.
l'eete continued hls hot streak
wi!h his fifth straight sub-70 round.
JU: opened with two 67s In this

-

~

fun."

Barber also posted a 67-€7 start.
Butch Baird, another veteran,
matched Mitchell's 63. They joined
eight others who share the mark at
this 6,514-yard layout not far from
the Mississippi River In western
Ullnols.
Also at 134 were South African
Bobby Cole, whose wife, LPGA star
Laura Baugh, Is expecting a chlld
on Monday; Australian Jack Newton Jr. and Lyn Lott, stiU searching
for his first victory lh his eighth toor
year.
Although most of the sport's big
names were competing In the BritIsh Open this week, this field still
gave par of 140 a battering.
In fact, lt took !bat figure to survive the 36-hole hole, the lowest fig·
ure on the tour this year. It bettered
the Westchester cut of 141 three
weeks ago.
The cut caught first-round leader
Tim Graham, who went from 65 to
76 for a 141 total.
And Canadian Dave Barr, the delending champion, just made lt
with two straight 70s for 140.

1: 534-5 for a 2-year-old pacer on a
one-mile track last year and had
been syndicated for $8.2 million. On
July 9. Merger, driven by Campbell, finished sixth In one of three
elimination heats and failed to qual·
lfy for the Meadowlands Pace.
Merger was In the hea I won by
Hllarlon, driven by BUI O'Donnell.

P;hysical fitness program starts Monday
'r '

•

•

S:nl,OOO tournament, which canies
a !lrst prize of $36,!XXJ.
''I'm still pumped up from last
week," said Peete. "That's the reason I'm playing so well. When
you're making birdies, It's always

¢ampbell 'experiences high'
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(Ad;&gt;) - "There are real ups and
doWns In the business," said driver
Jo)UI Campbell after experiencing
a 'l!Jgh with Hllarlon In the $1 million
Meadowlands Pace just one week
after experiencing a low with
Merger.
~erger had set a world record of

..···'.
........

.

Junior High (seventh and eighth
graders
physical fitness will begin
tiiu Coach Tom Korab announced
Monday,
Aug. 16, at 6 p.m. at
saturday physical fitness programs
!OJ' varsity players (including fresll- Memorial Field. Junior High footrnen) and other interested students ball practice will start Aug. 23.
1\'l\1 begin Monday at 6 p.m. on
Physical fitness drillS slated July
19-31, are open to all interested
l'(emorial Field.
::tJl varsity football candidates are Gallia Academy students. Weight
eilcouraged to attend. High school training, endurance running and
f!JOtbaU practice will start Aug. 2 at 9 quickness drills will comprise the
program.
aJn.

:cAWPOUS - Gallipolis Foot-

ROO' WHEElS - A. J. Foyt Ill HCIWitoa, Texas, lakes a spin oa his
two wheel ride at Mlchlgaa lnlernatlonal Speedway aslndy car learns
prepare for Sllllday nmnlng Ill the Mlchlgau 1100 auto race. Foyt waa
seriously lnjtlred at the trad! a year ago but says he has no fear Ill the
tl'&amp;(:k. (i\P Laserphoto).

•••••••

Thistledown results

~
&amp;

DRIVERS EDUCATION ~
CLASSES BEGIN ~
~
MONDAY,
•
JULY i9TH

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio(~)
- Mark Salvaggio rode Leapln' Leprechaun to victory Iii the featured
eighth race at Thistledown on Friday, touring the six furlongs In 1:12.
The winner returned $5.2D, $3.20
and $2.2D.
Jack M~Jim was second, paying
$3.1ll and $2.1ll, while Prince's
Charm returned $2.40 for coming In

@)

I

~

~--

tlilrd.

In the third race trlfecta, tbe
combination r12·1·9 paid $859.50.

of Gallipolis
;n;;6;@

sI

I
I
I

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i

ON THESE SIZZUNG USED CAR
VALUES ...... ·
1981 FORD ESCORT..~~~............. S5995
1981 FORD FAIRMONT .tQ9!lL;.... S5995
1981 FORD FAIRMONTJ.llmL ...... S5995
1981 FORD ESCORT WAGON .. --.S5995
1981 PONTIAC RREBIRD.~~. flm... 56995
1980 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT. .....•4195
1980 PINTO WAGON ................. S3995
.1980 MERCURY CAPRI.~-~~- ........ $4995
1980 DATSUN B210.?.~L .......... S4395
1979 FORD LTD .ti]WA .................... $4695
1978 FORD GRANADA .ti!WL ..... S3995
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· DALE R. SANDERs-Gen. Mgr.
S. 3rd Ave.,
Ohio
PHONE ~~,-.L&amp;JV

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L-.lFC)RD

BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) - , Dechoslovakla's Tomas Smld au Kim Cu,P women's tennis
!Van Lendl may have taken the tell- soared past their opposition.
tournament
n1s world by storm"but be's been a
Clerc, the No.1 seed, needed ]Wit
The !&amp;-year-old from Largo, Fla.
washout when he's played ·Gull· 50 minutes todlsposeofBruceMan· surprised top- seeded Sylvia Hanlka
son 6-1,' 6-1. Hlgueras eliminated of West Germany In a Frftlay selermo VUas.
- After capturing nine titles last Wojtek Flbak of Poland 6-3, 6-4 to mifinal. It took two hours, 14 minyear, Lendl already has won .eight reach a semifinal conftontatlon utes for the fourth· seeded Gadusek
of the 12 tournarnents In which he's with Clerc.
to overcome Hanlk;l 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.
played In 1982. But tbe tWo times
fourth-seeded Smld had an easy
Ruzlcl beat Brazil's Pat Medrado
he's met VIlas In tournaments this ttmewlthcountrymanPavelSlcrzll. 6-4, 7-61n a two liour, 15 minute con·
year, both In finals, he's lost
posting a 6-3, 6-4 triumph. Smld's test played In 90-degree weather.
In a couple of days, the 22-year· opponent In the semis will by Swlt·
At Stuttgart, West Germany.
old Czech could get another chance 7.erland's He~ Gunthardt, who American Sandy Mayer topped the
to unleash his thunderous shots on beat Brazil's Caslo Motta Thu:'Sday list of Friday's quarterfinal
his Argentine nemesis.
In the first quarterfinal contest.
winners In a $75,000 Volvo Grand
VIlas, the tc;&gt;p seed In the S:nl,!XXI
In Monte Carlo, Monaco, Amerl· Prix tournament. The top-seeded
U.S. Pro Tennis Championships, can Bonnie Gadusek was to !ace
Mayer used a strong finish to elimiand Lendl, seeded second, both No.2 seed VIrginia Ruzlcl of Roma·
nate Yugoslavia's Marco Ostoja 4reached Saturday's quarterfinals. nia today In the finals of the$100,!XXJ 6, 6-0, 6-1.
They are on a collision course that
\ could propel them Into Monday . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - night's title match.
Lendl advanced Friday night
with a 6-3,1-6, S.2Victmybvernlnth·
seeded Van WlnltSky.
Lendl lost the last live games of
the second set and played the final
three or them with dimlnlshed
Intensity .
In the other quarterfinal matches
Friday, eighth-seeded John Alexander of Australia ousted Mark
Dickson 5-7, 6-4, 6-1; Eric Fromm
beat Angel Gimenez of Spain S-2, 6-3
. Ihave q Iff&amp; lnillMonce piOn to t,elp VOI,Ir''
BAKER'S ~ CAREER HOMER - Dully game al Dod&amp;er Slacllum 1D Loa Angeles. Catcbtr Jolin
and seventh-seeded Mel Purcell
family keep yoor home. l!$e .a nd cleor. ~
Baker of 1be Loa Augele. Dod&amp;en cOIIIIeclB will! llle Slearlll aDd Ulll)lire DcJug Harvey watch. Ron Cey IIDd
ousted Harold Solomon 6-2, 6-2.
VOU' mortgage outlives vov. CClll me for
ball for bls 20tth career bome 1'1111, off New York Meta' Pedro Guem!ro alao came up with fOIII"t.ggen ID the
In today's seml!lnals, VIlas
details.
pltcbet Pat Zachry, ID the fourth iDDlDg Ill Friday's . Dodgen'7.Cdefe~toflbeMets. (APLaserpbolol.
meets Fromm, fourth-seeded Yan·
CAROLL SNOWDEN
nick Noah of Franee faces Alex417 Second Ave.
ander, 12th-seeded Fernando Luna
Gallipolis, Oh .
or Spain meets 13th-seeded AlejanPh11ne 446-4290
dro Ganzabal of Argentina and
Home 446-4518
Purcell plays Lendl.
'
In zeu Am See, Austria, hot
UUI fUM
weather and some blistering tennis
.
• .
Slata Form
highlighted quarterfinal play In a
lfoi~C&lt;lmpanr
$lXJ,OOO
WCT tennis tournament.
By KEN RAPPOPORT
plate. Cromartie drove In what
Homt~OIIice&gt; Bk»&gt;mington, ltli"R't · ··-""..,'".:'~:,
RBI single and another In the ninth
As temperatures soared Into the
proved to be the winning run with a
AP Sports Wrller
on Jason Thompson's run-scoring
Steve Rogers has been a so-s:J single.
groundout as he recorded his fifth 90's Friday, Argentina's Jose-Luis
Clerc,_Spain's Jose Hlgueras and
performer at Montreal's Olympic
PhUlles 1, Giants 0
complete game of the season .
fired
a
four-hitter
Steve
Carlton
Stadium this Season. His road show
The 11-strlkeout performance exfor his 12th victory of the year and
Is something else.
tended Ryan's own major league
Winner of only three of seven Mike Schmidt sco\€(1 Phlladel·
record to 142 games In which he's
games at home this year, the Ex- phia's only run as \he PhllUes edged
recorded double figures In stripos' right-hander continued to show ,San Francisco.
keouts. It was the fourth straight
Carlton struck out five and raised start and the seventh time this seawell awaK froni Olympic Stadium
his record to 12-7 as he kept tbe Phil- son In which he's turned t~ trick.
Friday night with a 4-3 victory over
lies
In first place In the National
the San Diego Padres, Improving
Pul!J put the Astros ahead to stay
League
East.
his road tecord to a nifty ~In the second Inning, breaking a 1-1·
"He's definitely the master," tie with a solo homer off loser Larry
"I don't have any secret to my
said· loser BUl LaskeY, p. "I al- McWilliams, 5-4, and Ryan scored
success on the road, and until it was
ways wanted to go against him two more runs himself In the fifth
brought up (by a reporter), I was
when
I was a kid. Now I have, but and seventh Innings .
unaware of it,': said Rogers, who
I'm
not
ashamed toloseagamellke
scattered nine hits, struck OU\ six
Dodcers 7, Mda 6
this."
and walked two before giving way
Pedro Guerrero and ROn Cey hit
Cubs 4, Braves 3
to reliever Woodle Fryman In the
consecutive homers In the third InJay
Johnstone
drove home the ning and drove In five runs between
eighth.
.
About his uncanny success on the winning run with a two-out single In them to lead Los Angeles over New
the lOth Inning as Chicago beat York.
road, Rogers says:
Atlanta In a game !bat was delayed
"It'~ltle tougher to pitch In
Fernando Valenzuela, 13-7,
more than two hours by rain.
another team's park, but you tend
earned the victory, tops In the maThe game was delayed after jor leagues. Steve Howe, who has
to discipline yourself a little more."
Ryne Sandberg took two pitches allowed three earned runs In liJs
Fryman, the 42-year-old veteran,
hurled two scoreless Innings to earn from Gene Garber, 6-4, In the bot- last 28 appearances, preserved 1he
tom of tbe lOth when a torrential win with his eighth save.
his sixth save. The crafty left·
P155/ 80A12
Blackwali
bander pitched out of a bases- rain hit Wrigley Field. Two hours
Plus $1 .39 FET.
loaded jam In the eighth and stNck and 19 minutes later, the game reand old t.. e
P155/80A13
Wh•tewall
out the final two batters In the ninth. sumed and Sandberg doubled to adPlus SI .S3 FET.
"Woodle may be old, buthe'snot var.ce Junior Kennedy from first to
and o'd lire
NOW APPEARING
done," said ROgers, who Ironically third. Kennedy had singled before
was the winning pitcher In tbe All· the delay.
Bill Buckner was then IntentionStar game at, you guessed ti, Mont·
ally
walked and Garber got the next
real. "You've got to admire the
guy, being able to retain his physl· two outs before Johnstone lined a
1-1 pitch over third baseman Jerry
cal skills the way he's done."
White Letters
Tuesday thru Saturday
San Diego starter Tim Lollar, 1(). ROyster's head to knol:lt In Buckner
70!60 SeriiS
3, yielded 11 hits In six Innings, five with the winning run.
9:00P.M.- 2:00A.M. ·
Hi-Performance
Bill Campbell, 2-4, pitched the
of them In !he sixth when Montreal
NOONE UNDER21
moved In front 4-2.
lOth to earn the victory·. ·
'"
ADMITTED
Alti-us
4,
Pliiltes
2
•
AI Oliver opened the Expos' sixth
Nolan
Ryan
pitched
a
six-hitter
with a single and moved to second
when San Diego second baseman and struck out 11 and Terry Puhl
A 78 - 13
Tim Flannery threw the ball Into homered to lead Houston over
Black wall
Plus Sl 42 FE T
LOUNGE &amp;CARRYOUT
the dugout behind first. Tim Wall· Pittsburgh.
an d old 11re
Ryan,
9-9,
gave
up
only
a
run
In
ach singled to score Oliver and advanced to second on the throw to the the first Inning on Dave Parker's

Rogers remains unbeaten on
~oad with eighth victory

A

STEVE YATES
BAND

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�July 18, 1982

!' age-c- 4- The Sunday T1mes-sentine1

I

July 18, 1982

._ ',

Pomeroy

Middleport G.&gt;ll•pol is, (&gt;hio-_!'o int P lc,, s.&gt;nt, VI'. \'.1 .

·.-.-'... Rutland, RaCihe~ N~w Haven advance in Hubbard tourney .
California players· lambast
Cleveland hurler John Den~y
~ven
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·~

VIS-A-VIS - Shortstop Doug Flynn of Tens
Rangers misses the tag on Lloyd M-by of Toronto
Blue Jays at second bale during Amerlcaa League

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sporta Writer
Tired of being hit by Cleveland's
John Denny, the California Angels
hit back with their second 10-run
Inning tn four games and then had
some lighting words lor the Indians' right-hander.
Denny's pitches nicked Brian
Downing, Don Baylor and Fred
Lynn and he came close to Mlck
Kelleher and Rod Carew before he
was ejected by umpire Larry Barnett during the Angels' 10-run tlrtll
Inning en route to a 15-0 rout of the
Indians Friday nlgl)t.
Caiew, lor one, was sorry to see
him go.
"I wanted them to leave him In
there because I wanted to tight,"
said Carew, who tripled home the .
first run of the big Inning and later
added a two-runslngle. "Somebody
would have gotten him. When he
pitches, we want to hurt him somehow, wring his neck or something.
You don't see (Cleveland's Len)
Barker throwing at anybody. He
(Barker) could hurt somebody II he
wanted, but he just throws hard and
challenges the hitter.
"Denny pitches well against us,
but every time that Idiot gets out
there he wants to hit somebody.
DenJIY doesn't have to worry about
It because he doesn't have to bat
We embarrassed the hell out ol
him. That's what we did."

baseball adlon Ill Toronto Friday olght. Toronto
defeatedTeusl-0. (APLaaerplloto).

In other American League
games, the Boston Red Sox defeated the Kansas City Royals 7-3,
the Mllwaukee Brewers turned
back the Chicago White Sox 5-3, the
Seattle Mariners trimmed the Baltimore Orioles 6-0, the Detroit Tigers beat the Minnesota Twins 6-3,

''

the New York Yank~ downEd the ·
Oakland A's 6-2 and the Toronto
Blue Jays blanked the Texas
Rangers 6-0.
Tbe Angels battered Denny and
three relievers lor 14 hits, Including
a two-run homer by Baylor and a
three-run double by Bob Boone,
while Ken Forsch hurled a fourhitter lor his third shutout of the
season. Forsch also was the beneficiary of a 10-run third Inning
against the New York Yankees last
Saturday night.
The victory was the sixth In a row
for the Angels, who have a threegame lead over Kansas City In the
AL West Six games ago, tbe RDyals were three games In trllnt.
Calltornia grabbed a 3-0 lead In
the first Inning on Lynn's RBI sin·
gle and a two-111n single by Bobby
Grlch. LyM also singled home the
final two runs In the 10-run fifth,
giving him 18 RBis In his last nine
games.
The anymoslty between the two
teams goes back to last August
when Denny hit Baylor with a pitch
In Anaheim. Denny also had trou·
ble wlth Reggie Jackson when Reggie was with the Yankees. Both
Incidents resulted In tights.

To~e:~~!'=y~~~~!·y:s ~~ uti'::~~~t::s~t1~~todefeatthe

.uarterflnj!~ game with
Pomeroy
8
I Powell's afler taking forfeit .from
the Gallipolis,White Sox.
Meanwhile, Rutland's Reds edged
the Gallipolis Senators, 1~. and
n--c1ne's Reds bombed Cheshire 10-4
""
loadvlincetotheserni-finalplay.
·
·
Ironically, a.U tbree wmners 111
Friday's action were "lteds" as
Ia'
f
New Haveg's ~ c tmed the irst

I

1

"I don't know It It's bad blood,"
said Baylor, ''but every time he
pitches against us it's a battle - a
war."
Red Sox 7, Royals 3

1

Jim Rice drove In three runs, two
with a double In Boston's six-run
second Inning, as the Red Sox
handed Kansas City Its sixth consecutive loss. Boston:s big Inning
against VIda Blue and Bill Castro
Included five doubles, one short ol
the AL record. Dennis Eckersley,

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•r

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ALMOST- Seattle Marlnen' third baseman Man- Ding of tbelr game In Ba1Umore Friday olgbt. Tbe baD
ny Castillo makes a diving attempt at a bard amasb just skidded out of Castillo'~ reach aad Roelllcke
down tbe third base Une off tile bat of Gary Roelllcke of · wound up at secoad base wltll a doable. (AP Laserthe BafUmore Orioles during acdou lu tbe second In- photo).

wa..

Vinton upsets Braves
in Pony League event
GALUPOUS- In Saturday morning action at the Water Treatment
Field, Vinton registered another upset win, this time over the Gallipolis
Braves by a score of 7-3.
Tbls win came after a win W~
nesday over Hannan Trace. The winning pitcher was Todd Dee! who
came on in relief of starter John Dtd. die in the third inning.
Leading hitters for Vinton were
Van Ellis who went tbree for four,
Todd Deel wltl1 two for three, and

Joe Browning with two for three.
Others contributing were Wayne
Diddle, Gary Staley, Ed Dople, and
Joe Moore, aU on base two times
with runs scored..
Next action for Vinton will be
Tuesday at 6 · p.m. on Memorial
Field.
Saturday's loss eliminated . the
Braves in tbe double-elimination
Pony League Tournament, sponsored by the Gallipolis Recreation
Department.

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TOLEOO, Ohio (AP) - Brian
Fogt says patience is the virtue that
allowed him to win the Ohio Golf
Association Men's Amateur
Championship.
Fogt, 22, of Vandalia, sank a 40fool birdie putt and parred the following two holes Friday. to
overtake third· round leader Bob
Lohr and capture the tournament,
played on the 6,975-yard Inverness
Club course.
"! was patient and remained .
calm and just tried to stay relaxed
the final day," Fogt said after tiring
a 69 for a four-round total ol 288. "I
would say It was my experience
that allowed me to catch up and
then pass Bob.''
Lohr, 21, of Loveland, shot a 73
tor a total of 290.
F()gl, a Miami University graduate who tlnl.shed second In last year' s tournament, started the day
two ·strokes behind the leader. He
remained two strokes down untll
the par-4 15th hole, when he
dropped tbe 40-foot putt to pull even
wtth Lohr. Fog! then par red the
par-4 16th and 17th holes.

RIO GRANDE - Five standout
volleyball players from around the
state have signed to play for the Rio
Grande College Redrnen in 1982, according to an announcement today
from the school's Office of College
Relations.
Kim Curry of Orient; Kathy
Detllllon of Beaver; Kristi Hargar of
New Albany; Beth Sammons of
Lucasville, and Debbie Sindel of
Gahanna, are the new players
joining the Redwomen fold.
Curry, a 6-2 spiker, lettered in
volleyball and basketball at Westfall '
High School last year. She was allleague one year and honorable mention all-league one year. She was
most valuable player of her squad
1 ((uring her final campaign.
Kim's brother, Dan, is a standout
forward on the Rio Grande basketball team. they are both the children
of Mr. and Mrs. William Curry.
Detillion, a· :i-6 spiker, lettered in
voll~yball, basketball, track and softball at Eastern High SchooL She
played on the regional finalist team
last season. She is also an all-state
prep basketball player averaging
nearlf. 23 points per outing last
season. She :is the daughter of Mr. and
, Mrs. Delbert Detillion.
Hargar, a 5-3 hitter, lettered In
volleyball at Gahanna Uncoln High
SchoqL She was all-league her senior
year.• Her squad went 37·10 during
her tina! two seasons including
regi~a1 and sectional finalist
rantijlgs.
SIM( is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Hargar.
SarJunons, a ~10 spiker, lettered ·
in bBBketbaU, volleyball, and track
at Valley-High School. She was allconference and team most valuable
playct.

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HOIYll: LANNING SUPPLIES
CHAMPION :Aieiander Rolll8Dkov d tbe
:sqytet Uoloo displays bill joy
:Saturday after be beat Italy's
Mauro Numa to conquer tbe
World foil fencing cbamploDSblp.
(APWirepbolo).

Scioto results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Mindy Move, driven by Ray Paver
Jr., won the 9th featured race In
2:02 3-5 Friday at Scioto Downs,
paying $ll8.20, $:!0.1KJ and $8.1K!.
Social Wavetlnl.shedsecond; payIng J67 and $11.60, ·while Solarized
was third, paying $3.40,
The lOth trlfecta of 1-8-6 paid
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A crowd of4,!i72wagered$ln,!583
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16th when he lwO' puted for a bogey
and dropped another stroke on the

they travel
to Athens
take onSept.
the
Ohio
University
Lady to
Bobcats
30,

with the host Thundering Herd and
the Lady Mountaineers of West
Virginia University. Their next baltie with major college competition
will be Oct. 22-23 when they take part
in the Bowling Green State University Tournament.
Two days later the Redwomen go
on the road again to Adrian (Mich.I
College to battle in a triangular a!fair with Toled~.
Rio Grande will close oul the
regular-season Nov . 4 when they
batlle Cedarville College and Marshall University at Lyne Center.

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THE STAN-SHOR COMPANY
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THE COMPLETE LINE OF

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17th when he three-putted !rom 14
feet for a bogey.

IN THIS AREA AT

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Redwomen to face major college
teams in volleyball action this fall
PJO ' GRANDE - Bouts with
major college powerhouses Bowling
Green, Ohio University, Marshall
(W. Va. I University, West Virginia
University, and Toledo University
cap a tough 14-meet schedule
released today by Rio Grande
College Redwomen volleyball coach
.JamieVanArsdalen.
The Redwomen, fresh off an 18-15
mark in 1981 and a berth in the state
playoffs, will open the season against Walsh College at Lyne Center
Sept. 25. They'll then gel their fir~1
major test of the 1982 season when ,

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"This squad can establi•h a bright
future for themselves," Van Ar·
sdalen said. "They're pla ying much
lou~her teams than they've fa ced
before. Wh en !hey win , lhcy
definitely will make a reputation for
themselves and Rio Grande."
Rio Grande Is coming off a stellar
season in 1981 in which they won nine
of 10 meets down the stretch. They
had a seven-game winning streak at

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Rio Grande will travel to Marshall
University Oct. 5 for competition

She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Sammons.
Sindel, a f&gt;-7 sitter. lettered in
volleyball at Gahanna High School.
She was all-league and team most
valuable player.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur SindeL
Rio Grande is coming off a stellar
18-15 record last year and berth in '
the state playoffs.

Reds ink pitcher
CINCINNATI (API - The Cln·
clnnatl Reds have signed Scott
Jones, a left-handed pitcher from
Hinsdale, Ill.
Jones, 18. pitched his high school
team to the Illinois class AA ~lgh
chool championship and was
named most valuable player ln the
state tournament.
The Reds drafted Jones in the
regular phase. They won the choice
from the New York Yankees who
signed former Reds 1 outfielder
Dave Collins as a free agent.

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For mos1 domesl rc and rmpofl cars
S.ve o-•r '1! Limit 2 Veg1 . Oleulll •
Turbo neilable 11 h lgl'ltr prius

•

qt.

Reg. 4.49

Quaker State
10W300il

Limit

Quaker State
10W40 Oil
Sale Ori s Lrmrl 12 qts.
01 1&amp; I! • CI!IIl 'I I ..

o t SJ •CC

t•• IPtCI

25%

Yanks win LL tilt
GALLIPoLIS - In -Gallipolis City
Recreation play little league action
Friday night, the Yankee bombed
the Padres, 11~- Ward, the winning
hurler, fanned three and walked
four.
Billy Evans had four hils and
Ward and Rager two each. In
another blowout, the Rangers' :r-ball
club bombarded the Braves, 26-5.
In Gallipolis Junior League play,
the Angels edged Bob's, 8-7.
Brownell and Halden each slammed
home runs for the winners. Atha and
Davis had two hits apiece for Bob's.
In another .contest, Col'" try Estates
defeated the Saints, 12-6.

4

Anti -freeze and
Summer Coolant

OFF

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

Original Equipment

each

St1nd1rd

Delco, Mopar,

MonroMalle
Shocks

s.... _, .,.

Mot~rcraft
Except El1ctronic Ignitions

Eumples:
"TuneUpKUs . ~c,.
'Wirll Slllt.ll .. ,:

from

r

3 .71

4 ' r'

Dlstrlbut01 C11ps . R.. ,, ~

lleq 7 9"&gt;

HeiYY Duly

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St.,. our '1'

Reg . l3 .95

3.19

.•,

Sne

OYer

1.59

Radiator and
By Pass Hose

Rl"\1 15

s.... o••• ' 3'

1.19
A/C

30'

Pa OJ, CJ!Iio '

spray

88C

6!100 lb ~

Reg I 35

Dl Biue label
Hand Cleaner

·

'

1107 7

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I
TRASH
•

v-. CRC, ~ of the whoiiV

Owned •Jblldlarlel of .
Anheu••·lulch. -fat You

'24 vrl!eb~&gt;ol!lotDI!

'Ccllh On 1M Spot For Empty '
Alwnlnum CGnl of Alft IOncL

6
88
Relined Brake Shoes
•

e • c i'IQ

Remanu11ctured

Starters or Alternators

-..

Eam 20,0-.. _,pound(about
.if) of alulillnllnl_..., ...,,all

Both lt' r most domest•c cars
e}Cept In teg ral and Motorola

i'ln Ho&lt;',j"' rooqu.e siMiir ,.. •retlll&lt;ldaDie
-~;, t&gt; Ch9 lor mo' t Chr 1 ~1 e r tnd somt

'

f o•d ca•s

13'7 1Nrqrat
A ' tt'r nilolor~ w• rro t. IIO~ore u cng
3 M oH.otOill t• CIIPI nrgh

tra .an acisy 'Waf lo earn extra monev for vour

club, tavor11e charilY or yo(nelf.
·
what could be halll ... 00111 and clean '
' up ,wNie 'IQU"l!t cleaning up!

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a11le set (2 whe els!

w/exchg ., f or m os t dom eMs
For most domest•c 4·6 cy l. cars
and all Chevy small blo ck va

1969·11

18.95
w/rebwldaOie e)( CtlQ
lor most 8 cyl. dome s and
f tc

most 4·6 cyl. 1mport s

25,000 mr tes rated
-Everyd1y Low Pr ice'
•
axle se t (2 w heel s)
Original Equipment

9 95

Quality _Disc Pads
For most dome st iC cars
m 11es rate d

25 ,:J ~

GallipOlis Area·Jaycees

&lt;· HARDWARE
··
·sua 1m ·

oz

u o ,,,.00,

Reg. 19 95
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Car
Ramps

Reg. 1.49
~ave

9

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· .

Freon

8.88

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~~ 12.88

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5.96

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tHINK OF 'EMAS ..•

l:flMI'llll

*PRESSURE CANNERS *LI,....-=*REPAIR
SUPPLIES
• SEALING RINGs: STEAM

Lohr, who will be a senior at Miami University, lost the lead on the

plete the fte ld for Tu~sd~ sll~eu;I:
!mal play- The .Rue te . a 1P0 Is
Padres game orlgmally schedul ed
for 6:30 p.m. has been moved forward to a
h:Oe.
New Ha ven e s WI Pay me
Powell's Giants m the opener at 6:JO
p.111 . allhe Syracuse Park.

single. Shannon Riffle and Kenny
Turley each added singles.
Cheshire hitters were Elm er
Spaulding a double· Bobby Lucas.
two
·and Mike Reese, a
single. •
Two more quarterfinal games will
he played Monday evening to com-

Rio signs five volleyball
players for 1982 campaign

•

Friday olgbt In Boston. Tbe throw Wu good for a
doable play oft a ball from the bat of Red Soli Rick
Miller. Tbe Red Sox defeated the Royola, 7-3. (AP
Laaerpboto).

In Friday night's finale, Racine:s ,
Reds beat Cheshire, H)-4.
David Amburgey turned In a
tremendous pitching effort for
Racine. Amburgey struck out 16'
C~eshire batters and walked six.
Elmer Spaulding suffered the
defeat. He fanned nine and walked
10
.
Top hitters for Racine were:
oav1'd Amb urgey,
,
who helped h1's
'th h ·
and
own cause WI a orne run
·
1
Do · R·rn t d bles
smg e;
nme 1 e, wo ou
;
· gle.
an d J ohn r uttl e, a doubl e an d sm
Mark Porter added a double and a

Fogt claims .Ohio Amateur golf title

'

• WATCHING THE PLAY -U.L, Waahlngtoooltbe
Kansas CitY Royals, Ill mld-alr at right, joloa lleston
Red Sox Gary AUenaon, just forced at second, Ill
cbiDS the throw to first during elgbtb IDDlng actloll

«Jllowed by a single by Ro~ Young.
Berkich stopped at third with no outs
andY oung advanced to second.
Michael Bartrum didn't let thor
pressurebOtherhim, hOINever,ashe
In the first inning Michael Bar- buckled down to strike out the la~1
trum singled, went to second on 8 three batters to win the game!
passed ball and later scored on a
Bartrum w~iffed 16 batters and
f
d 1
single by James Norman. This con- walked two. Rob Young anne I
test proved to be one of the most and did not walk a batter.
competitive of the t~urnament as
Rut1an d h'ttters were Mi cha e1BarN
d E ·
Bartrum and Rob Young engaged in !rum, James orman, sn
nc
1
a great pitching duel.
Priddy, all singles. Gallipo is hitters
.Gallipolis threatened in the sixth were Mark Berkich, a dou bl e; Keit h
inning, but failed to score. Mark Ange1, Rob y oung, and .l
uave Long.
Berklch led off with a doubl~, aU singles.

SYRACUSE _ Rutland, Racine, . tilt via a forfeit. [n the se.cond contest Rutland's Reds scored one run
and New
advanced In tbe Bill in the first inning, and it proved to be
Hubbard, Mtl)1orlal LitUe League
0

. Burnette Road &amp;'35 Bypass
Gallipolis. Ohio

·

Sun.

· ~SaturdaY

M-F

10:00 AM • 2:00 PM

7:»S:GJ
"

10-5 ·{
8:30-7
8:30-6'

209 ·upper River Rd.

.446-3807

�July 18, 1982
Page-C -6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel
I

Columbus trails
Braves full game
The Richmond Braves have
strengthened thelr hold on first
place In the International League
race without much resistance thanks to the pitching of Chuck
Fore.
Fore, making only hls second
start for the Braves. shut out the
Pawtucket Red Sox 5-0 Friday
night and raised his record to 2-0.
The loser was Mark Fldyrch.
Paul Runge hit his 11th homer at
the year 1n the ninth with one man
on. The four other runscameon hits
by Brett Butler and Leo Vargas.
The victory, combined with Columbus' 5-4 loss to Rochester, put
the Braves one game ahead of the
Clippers. In other IL games Friday, Syracuse ripped Toledo 9-3,
and Charleston edged Tidewater 65.
At Toledo, Fred ManriQue ripped
rour hits In the Chiefs' victory over
the Mud Hens.
The Chiefs recorded 17 hits
against three Toledo pitchers.
Dave Baker contributed three hits,
Including hls lOUt l)ome run, and
Charlie Deamon also had three
hits.
Mark Elchom, 7-7, went Ute distance for Syracuse, scattering nine
Toledo hits. Rick Williams. 4-11,
took the loss.
Syracuse Manager Jlm Beauchamp says Eichorn has Improved
as the season has progressed.
"He's young and stubborn,"
Beauchamp said. "Earlier In the

.,

'·
,.

season, he wanted to both pitch and
call the game Instead of someone
else calling lt. He just got better as
the game went on."
At Rochester, shortstop Rick
Jones homered with one man on In
the seventll IMing as Ute Red
Wings rallied against Columbus.
The Olppers broke to a 3-0 lead
by the third lnnbi'g on home runs by
Tucker Ashford and Marshall
Brant, who raised hls leagueleading total to Ui.
But Ute Red Wings scored one
run In the fourth, and tied the game
In the slxtll on a two-run homer by
first baseman Dan Logan.
Columbus narrowed the score to
54 with one uut In Ute top of the
ninth on doubles by Dave Stegman
and Juan Espino. But Rochester,
using two relievers, got Ute final
two batters out.
Starter Mike Boddlcker, 10:5, tallied eight strikeouts In eight Innings
and was credited wltll the wln.
Scott Patterson, 5-S, took the loss.
The Charlies scored three runs
each In Ute second and fourtll Innings at Norfolk to edge the Tides.
Dave Rossello's tlllrd home run
of the season accounted for all three
runs In the second. Everett Rey
singled home two In Ute fourtll and
what proved to be the decisive run
scored on a throwing error.
Char leston starter Gary ChriStensen, 1-1, made It to the sixth Inning and was the winner .
Tidewater starter Torp Dixon, 8-5,
went all the WflY for Ute defeat.

Scoreboard ...
back; and Jom Krtmm, defensive back.

Majors

PITTSBURGH

STEEL E RS-

Nomol

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

DmnlS F1!Zift'lld nnebicller coach:
Woody Wldent'Offf wlltanl tftd coach;
and Jon Kolb clefenstve Une coach.

AM!BICAN LEAGUE
WL

SAN Dl EGO CHARGERS-Aiel! G
Spanos Jl'lrchued 10 Pft'C"'ll Interest kl

Pd..GB

Milwaukee

51

35

.!13

""!"
BoflimOn'

e

51

J6
J9

.5116
.!136

~

ttl

41

.518

6~

Nalloul Hodlt;Y Lt1111e

BY.t

BUFFALO SABRES-Signed Phll Houslloy, defeni8Tlan.('f'ft!l!'r.

"""'"

U

NP.W York

42

u

~

.t94

63
.4.88
.ll 47
..el
Toronto
We~tenDh....
Callbrnta
.HI
. ~7
i&lt;an.w City
47 39
Ck&gt;vetand

" "'

OUcoao

"'
..

!i!attiP

40
42

." .."

Te~

Oakland
Mlnnt.'IKilll

'1B

61

9
l2
-

3

.~

·~

.52.1

'

.422

13 1,1

.422
. ll~

14
l1~

the It-am from Barron HUlon.

IIOO&lt;El'

80ttER
North ~ 8ocoer tape
JACKSONVILLE TEA MEN-5lgned
Jot su..·erta to a multt.year a mtntct. Sold
Michie! Kev\, defeR~ . to San Jose.

OOILEGE
HOFSTRA-Narned Gary Edwards asdstant basketball roach.
N&lt;rrRE DAM E-Named Jom Heisler

asiOCiate lprtl ll(ormatlon dlrt'ctor and

f'l14iaJ'1 GUlla

Toronto 6, Texas 0
SeattiP 6. Baltimore 0
Callfonda 15. Cleveland 0
Boston 7, Kansas City J

Eddk&gt; Whltf aulstant sportJ Information
dlreclor.

New York 6, Oakland 2
Milwaukee~. ChJ~ 3
Detroit 6, Minnesota 3
SunMt• Garnf!ll
TPXU at Tormto
Oakland at NPW York

klr head rwlmmlnf! roach.
PURDUE-Nilllled Paul CW"'b assistant

PENNSYLVANIA -Na me-d Kathy
La~· -

""""'·

Kansas City II Boston
Seattll' at ElaiHmorE"
cattrornia 11 Cleveiand

Ullders

Oet:roll at Minnesota
Chirago at MIJwaukee

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BArriNG tl?.'! at balsJ: OIIver , Mon.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Eu&amp;en DI"YIIaon
W_ L Pet.

Gil

Philadelphia
Sl. L.ouls

of!Jtl

49

40

.~
. ~1

Plttsb.lrgh
Montreat

"~

41

.511

.11'-!1

lS

42

.Sl7
.4111

4
9

.407

14

.lil5

-

.as

n

New York

11 :)of
WMIMI Dhillon

OUc""'
AUanla

"" .......

"
.,

San Dleio

San Francisco
HOI.IIilon

Clndnnatl

31
38

..

"".. ".,
31

"

-

I

·""

J

"'
7
..... 12

.431

14\lz

.38ti

12

Ji'rtda)"1 GIUTII!II

t rea 1,

Raines. Montreal.
:11: Dern!@ot'.

"""EMLL

0-EVELAND INDI ANS-Placed Alah
Bannister. lnftelder. an thf&gt; t!Hiay dis·
abl.ed ll!t and rt'Call«i Carmek&gt; Cast illo,
outDei&lt;ll'r. from Charleston of the l ntCT
national League .

DETROIT TIGERS-Placed Klrk Gtbwtftelder. on the lS-da.Y diaabled \ls i
ef'tecttve July 10 and rH'&amp;Uf!d Glenn WU·
!JOn, outfteldcr. fro m Evamvllle of the
Ametican AS'!Odatlon.
NEW YORK 'iANKEES-Named Sa m·
my Ellis special assignment coach.
!IM,

I'OOI'IIALL
NlltbMI FM&amp;bd Leapt
A1U\NTA F!U.OONS-Signf.'d Doug Ro.
teen, defensive end. to a series r:l. Ol'lt'ytar rornracts. Eltfflded thecont~ct ol

two

aNClNNATT BENGALS-Signed Glen
ColliN, delen~lv@ end
Stf!'Vt&gt;

Watsoo. wkle r ettlver, to a series of ()r\(!"
year rontracts.
HOUSI'ON OILERS-Signed Mike Munch&amp;~!: . iU&amp;rd. to a sere of one-~ar con-

.

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Signed Bmd

Edttman . ct'flter. Marvin Lewis, running

oa·t e- Gymnasium

Horner.

19:

Atlanta,

18:

Oark, San f'ranctsco. 17
STOLEN BASES: Lo.Smlth. StLools, 4.1;

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

"'""

Mnnti'Hll. tCM: Buckner. ChlctlfP. 101
Knight, Houston, 103; Sax. los A~.

J .Thompson, Plttsl::mjl;tl, 17; Baker, 1..08
~. 11: GUI.'ITt'ro, LaJ Angeles, 17;

Transactions

BRQN(l)S......Signed

lanta. ~ .
RBI :Murpl'6'. AUanta , 64; Oltver, M oDtreal. 00; Kingman, New 'fork. 00: Car·
ter, Montreal, 57: T.Kl'flnl'd,y. San DWgo,
57; Clark. San f'ran c!Sro, 57.
,
HITS: J .Ra y, Plttsb.u'gtl, U&amp;: Ollvt'r.

(l(.•les, 5: Salazar, San Diego, 5.
HOME RUNS: Murphy, Atlanta, 24:
Kingman. New 'iorll ll: Cartf'!'. Mon·

Philadelphia at San Franctsco

4);

15: Sax. La!;

Angcles. 33.
P ITCHING 111 Declalonsl: D .Robtnson,
F1n5bUra:h. 1().3, :~. 318; Lollar, San

:ns. l~ : Rogers, Montreal.
U·4, .733, 2.21 : Yalenzoola. Los A.ll(l'eles,

Diego. 11).3.

lJ.7 . .IWI, 2.99: Sutton. Houston, 9-~. .643,
2.90: Carlton, PhUadPiphla, 12·7, .632,
:U7; Fonch , St.Louis, 8-5, .615, Ut
Solo, a nctnnatl, ~ . .615. 2.+1 .
sntlKEOUTS: Solo. Clnelnnatl, .W:

Carltoo, Philadelphi a. 152; Ryan, Houston, 13!1: Rogen , Montrea.l. 105: Valen·
zueola. La. Angeks, 100.

WEBIC.\N L&amp;\0\JE
BATTING (]75 at bats) : W.Wlbon. Kan·
sas City, .3&amp;3; L.M. Parrish. Detroit, .l11;
Hrbek. Minnesota. .l)J; Harrah, Cleveland. .m, Cooper. MUwaukloe. .326.
RUNS: R.Headenon. Oakland. 19; MoiJ.
toc, · Milwau~. 10; H.arnh. OeYeled.
67; Evam, Bolton, 6'l;
City, lll.

Bmt, Kansas
.
RBI' Mcll4e. Kansu Oty, Ill: Cooper,
Mllwaula!t, 10; Thorntol'l. Oewland 68:
Luzinski, ChicllfO, &amp;5; Hrbl!k, Mlnreota.

61; Mu~. Oakllllld, 61. ,
HITS:Harrah, Cleveland. 109; Cooper".

Mllwaukef, 1(8; Garda, Toronto, lC8;
'iw ri , MUwaulft, JJ6: McRae. Kansu

C11y. 100.

LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Week of Jufy t8, 1982

Jufy 18 N D.m./Open Recreation
July 19 Closed
Closed
6·8 p.m./Open Recreation
July 20 Closed
Closed
6-8 p.m./Open Recreation
July 21 Closed
Closed
6-8 p.m./Open Recreation
July 22 Closed
Closed
6·8 p.m./Open Recreation
Closed
July 23 Closed
7-9 p.m./Open Recreation
July 2~ 2-~ p.m./Open Recreation
July 25 2·4p:m./Open Recreation
N p.m./Open R4!Creatlon
9-10 p.m./Camp Crescendo

Moreno. Pttlsbureh.

Ph.llade~hla.

.

•'

,..

'•

By 8COTI' WOLFE
MIDDLEPORT - After reviewing credentials ci
several applicants, the Meigs Local School District has
hired Gregory E. Dnunmer as head varsity basketball
coach of the Meigs Marauders for the 1982-83 cage
season.
Drummer, a successful veteran assistant from state
seml.flnalist Willard High School, was selected to
rebuild the Marauders' basketball program.
For the past five years, Dnunmer ~rved as varsity assistant at Wlllard High School Northern Ohio
where be also served as freshman bask
II coach.
During that period, his teams camp led an impressive IIS-22 ~ord.
During Drummer's career at Willard Ute varsity
squad has posted an Impressive 114-10 record, Including two state semi-finalist teams and a regional
finalist.
Coach Drummer was also head freshman football
coach from 197UO and assistant baseball coach from
1974-77. from 1977 to the present time he has been Ute
head varsity baseball coach.

Drummer, 30, was a 1970 graduate of Bowllng Green
High School w!lere be excelled In athletics. In 1974, be
received a B.S. degree from Defian«;e College In Comprehensive Bualness Education.
At Wlllal'd High School, Drummer was employed as
business Instructor, teaching accounting, typing 1 and
2, office procedures 1 and 2, and business Engllsh ,and
communications. His dulles as teacher at Meigs will include typing and general business courses.
The new cage menleir Is anxious to move Into the .
area u soon as possible to begin preparati0118 for the
1982-83 season. He Is looking forward to hls new role
and is ready lei accept the challenge of building a winning basketball program at Meigs High School.
Drwruner, hill wife Teresa, and their ~ children,
two sons, and one daughter, hope to move Into the area
witllln the next couple &lt;1f weeks.
•
Drwruner replaces Gbrdon Fisher, who has been at
the helm of the Marauders the past two seasons. Early
last spring, Fisher was not rehired u basketball
coach, but remained on as athletic director and head
girls' track coach.

BENGAl$ TOP DRAFT PICK SIGNS - ClnclmlaU Bengals' hfBd coach Forrest Gregg, left, Is all
smDes as be loob at the team's first round draft pick
Glen Coiiias after It was aDDOUnced Friday morning he
had signed a contract wl!h the team Thursday night.

Collins, a~. ~pound defensive end from Mlsslsslppl
State signed the contract at about 10 a.m. Thursday,
only two hours before the expiration of the collecting
bargaining agreement with the NFL Players
Association. (AP Laserphoto) .

.•,~.a!lll!1t­
COURTS PREPARED FOR TOURNAMENT- The Forest MulliDS
tennls courts, located off Henkle Ave., Ga!Upoiis, received fresh coats of
gr~n and red paint prior to the 1982 American Cancer Society Tennis
Tournament, scheduled July 23, 24 and 25. That's Nate Thomas on far left,

Steve Caudlll (back to camera~, and Steve Mullins, second from left,
took: on. The men's and ladles' mixed doublet Is being sponsored by
WJEH and WYPC All entlret must be turned In to Bill Gray, PO Box 448,
Gallipolis, Ohio 4sQ1, by 5 p.m. pn July 22. Rick Cloack Is this year's tour·
oament director.

Little says her timing is off

Backers of new ·bill say everyone will
come up winners if 'system works'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP~ said.
Horse ractng fans at Ohio tracks
The Ia w requires Ute Ohio Racing
may take advantage yet tllls Commission, upon request by any
summer of a new law allowing permit holder, to allow "electronitllem to bet on televised races from cally televised simulcasts of horse
around the nation.
races" frOm outside Ute state so
Some tr!!Ck officials are already long as Utey are run durlngtlleOhio
off and running tn bids to Imple- track's regular hours of operation.
ment Ute measure which was
Such races would be televised via
tacked onto till! budget bill ap- closed circuit signal and shown at
proved by the General Assembly.
Ohio tracks simultaneously witll
Backers C!lntend that everyone actual ruMlng of Ute race.
-state government, racing associAll seven of Ute state's race
ations, fans and track owners tracks could adopt such a proce- /
w1Jl come up winners If Ute system dure, but practical considerations
succeeds.
will likely llrnlt Its application to the
"The only ones I see getting hurt " tllree tlloroughbred facUlties.
are your local bookies," Sen. RIchard H. Finan,•R-Clnclnnatl, said.
" It Isn't expected that the harFinan headed Ute House-Senate
ness tracks would make application for many or any," Paul D.
panel which Incorporated Ute language Into the budget bill that
Fleming Jr., commission execuraises the state Income tax and cuts
tive secretary' said.
He said Ute races they would
government spending.
Altllough It holds Ute promise of probably like to have beamed to
tlleir tracks are ruh during the day
Increasing revenues generated by
whlle Ohio harness centers usually
state racing taxes, Ute tllrust wa.~ to
protect Ohio tracks !rom competi- operate at night.
tors In neighboring states where
"Most of Ute choice races tllat
(those~ track~ would be Interested
betting on televised races Is al·
In wouldn't be going on at Ute
ready permitted.
"We're having enough trouble
llme," Fleming said.
But It's a different story at the
witll our race tracks and I think It
would be helpful to tllem," Finan
state's tlloroughbred tracks.

61;

ton, San Diego, 7: Moreno, Pittsburgh. 6:
Gamer, Hou ston. 6: E.Mllner, O nctnnati,
5: Sax, Lot• Anlf('les. 5; Guerrero, Los An·

Pittsburgh at Houston
New- York at Los Angeles
Montreal at san Otego

DENVER

Montreal,

11UPLES: M&lt;G!e. Stl.ouill, 7: Templfo.

SundqaGama

quarterlJack.

Daw10n,

"'·

Clnctnnau at St. Louis
Atlanta at Chicago

BanlaJWSid,

~;

Ru .Joi'IC!\, San DK&gt;ao. ~: SandbPrg, Chi·
cago,
~:
caner,
Montreal. ~;
.!.Thompson. Pltt!lburah. !14; Horner. A.t·

21: Madlock, Pllt sburgh, 21: 6 Tied Willi

PhUadelphla I , San f'Tanctsco 0

,.....

RUl-E: Lo.Smlth. S1.Loula, 7'.1; Murphy ,
A tlanta ,

IO'L
OOUBLES: T.I{('nnedy. San ~. 2S;
Oliver, Montreal, D : Stt&gt;aiTd. Nfi'Yt' York,

Qtlrago 4, Atlanta J, 10 lnnlni:s
St. Lolli!! 6. Q nctnnatl4
Houston 4, Pht!b\lrgtl 2
Monti'Mi 4, San Otego 3
Lo!l An~es 7, New Ylll'k 6

Steve

treal .n:l; Mc(Je(&gt;, St. Lou~ . .313: Landrraux, LO!I Angples, ~m: T.Pena. Plttst:JJrgh. .:nt: Madklck, Plttsb.lrgh. .Jll.

•'
",

Drommer's goal: Rebuild
Meig~ basketball program

George Jones, vice president and
general manager of Thistledown,
said he hopes to Import at least 10
races a year vla television and perhaps as many as I4.
"!fully Intend to utillzethe racing
provisions In tllat blll. Obviously
we'd be considering Ute Triple
Crown races, perhaps Ute fall ser'
les and also the Arlington Million,"
Jones said.
"On Kentucky Derby day, Preakness day, a lot of our fans go to
ChurChill Down~ or Plrnllco. We
don't want to hurt the attendance at
tllose track~ •. but we would like to
try to create Ute same festive atmosphere here," he .said.
"In Ute main, we perceive It as a
service to Ute fans here and to racIng In Ohio. We do not expect to
make a lot of money. We would
hope to break even," Jones said.
Larry Kollglan, general manager of River Down.~. hopes to land
the Arlll)gton Million from Chicago
and Ute Tr&amp;velers Stakes from Saratoga, New1York, this August.
' 'Those two races appeal to us because possibly some of Ute top
horses In the country would be running In tllem," Kollgian said.
Next season he wants to add the

Kentucky Derby, Preakness and
Belmont Stakes.
"Just tllose five races for right
now," he said.
Kollgtan said there would be a
four-way spilt of Ute revenue from
pari-mutuel wagering on such
races.
State government would take Its
normal share 1n taxes off the oop,
witll Ute rest split among Ute out-of·
state host track, horsemen In Ohio
and the Ohio track. Percentages of
the spilt are negotiable between
host and local tracks and
horsemen.

Pool
2·4 p.m./.-..~ Swim
"'""
2·3 p . m ./Camp.Cr~do
3-4 p.m./Open S\Ohoi
6·8 p.m./Open Swim·
2·3 p.m./Camp Crescendo u
fj ·
2-Jp.m./CampCrescendo .De
.8 8ID"n. 11'81
6-8 p.m./Open Swim
e-n p.m.!CampCrescendo
CINCINNATI (AP~ -'The Cln- ,
3-4 p.m./Open Swim
6·8
p.m./OPen Swim clnnatl Bengals of +t... National
n p.m./Camp Crescendo Footbal l..ellil!e have 'signed their
• ·3-4 p.m./Open Swim
first-round draft choice, but only af6·8 p.m./Open Swim
H p.m./Camf)Crescendo ter calling his agent ott an airplane
3·4 p.m./Open Swim
at Greater Clnclnna Airport. .
Hp.m./OpenSwlm
' The
on Friday ' 811- '
~:~ ~:~:~g=~ ~:::;: IIO\IIICed the Thu~y night sign- .
2-4 p.m./Open Swim . ' lng of , Glen . Collins;· a defensive
lineman from Mlss'lssippl.

'""ngal

,

round dr.

u,.

aengals

p

that's a guy with a great fastball
who can throw h1s slider over at
will."
"He has an ablllty very few
power pitchers have at hls age,"
Ellis added . "He can throw hls
breaking ball over at any time In
Ute count."
Righetti was recalled Thursday
after hill fourtll start for the
Clippers. He pitched five Innings of
shutout ball against Ute Red Wings
at Rochester that day, gtvlng up
just three hits and one walk whlle
strlklng out eight before being lifted
for Gary Serum, who picked up Ute
5-2 wln In relet.
"I had a good slider," Righetti
said ~r the game. "The nice
tlllng was tllat I could take sometlllng Qtf It and use one pitch for
two."
Ellis concluded that Righetti was
ready to go back to New York,
which sent him down July 27 after '
prl)\clpal owner George Steinbrenner decided hls 5-5 record and
4.23 ERA just weren't good etiough
for the Yankees.
'I
Looking at hls pitching chart
Thursday, Ellis said, "You can't
throw a breaking ball for that many
strikes If you've got a bad delivery. ·
He threw his slider over the ·p!ate
seven out of every.W tlmell." ,
Righetti, who was """waua
• • -'-'•'- a 2•06
ERA 'last season. was· s haken by
tlle demotion tQ Columbus.
..
..:.l.
BJ.I
OICe

rnomlng. ·. .
.
.
.
lbe terms of .t,11e contract were
not .revi!a.Iect buf. aiutn.s was believed to .hilve slgru!d a four.year

pact. ·

.

, \),

for the U.S. Rowing ABsoclaUoa Men's NaUonal Cham·
pi0111blpe at Stopey Creek Metro Park. (AP Laser·
photo~.

Forbes-Robinson top race attraction
LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP~- Elliot Forbes-Robinson, a veteran of
boUt Can-Am and NAS-CAR racIng, will be among Ute headliners
for 'Sunday's combined Red Roof
Inns Trans-Am Nationals.
Forbes-Robinson and hls Pontiac
Trans-Am will be seeking hls third
straight series wln In the 100.8 mile
feature race aroimd Ute 2.4-mlle
Mid-Ohio SpoJ1s Car j::ourse.
Doc Bundy, one of five drivers
racing Porsches, will be seeking hls
third victory In Ute sertes. Other entries Include Ludwig Helrnratll,
Porsche; and former national
champion Andy Porterfield,
Camara.
' ·· Tom Gloy put hls Mustang on the
pole by averaging a record 9()_5l)
mph at 1: 35:385 around the course,
more than ~ mph hour faster than
tlleold mark of 85.21 set by Ute late
Mark Donahue In 1969. Gloy, however, was only a fraction ahead of
Forbes-Robinson of Denver, N.C,
Whlle the Trans-Am Is Ute feahrred attraction, plenty of Interested Is expected to bE!' focused on
the . 11 a.m. sj)orts Car Club of ·
America National race for C Pro-

ductlon, D Production and GT -1
models.
Actor Paul Newman will be hls
competitive debut at Mid-Ohio In a
turbocharged Datsun zx In the GT1 Oass despite being hampered by
a broken foot.
A few weeks ago, Newman, who
broke h1s root whlle jogging last
month, set a lap record on hill way
to a class wln at Ume Rock, Conn.
"The doctor put a steel plate In
my shoe," Newman said "It limited by foot's fiexlblllty a little,
but still allowed me to drive the car
just as well as If I had been 100

percent."
Newman, 57, ranks as one of the
favorites In the 19-lap, 42-mile test,
along with Fred Baker of Qeveland, a former national champion,
who will be driving a Jaguar.
Two years ago, Baker, 39, scored
a six-second victory over Newman
In the World Series of amateur motor sports. Newman holds two victories over Baker.
Newman, wbo won SCCA national titles In 1976 and 1979, Is In the
midst of hls f1f1h season a team
driver for Ute Bob Sharp Racing
Team, based at Wllton, CoM .

Brassfield records

b~t

time

LEXINGTON, Ohln (AP~ wlllhavetosettlefortlleslxthstartJerry Brasstleld of I,.os Gatos, lng position In Sunday's $44,oo:J, 100.
Calif., turnedlnan88.919mphlapto mile race which begins at 2 p.m.
become the fastest qualifier Satur- Tom Gloy of Pacheo, Calif., who
day for Ute CRC TransAm Cham- turned In a 90.58! mph lap Friday,
plonshlp race at the Mid-Ohio has Ute pole position.
Sports Course.
-Elllott Forbes· Robinson of
The time was good enough to
Denver, N.C ., w1ll start alongside
place tlle42-year-old Brassfield just Gloy In Ute front row, tllanks to hls
ahead of hls son, Darin, 18, who had
Frtday time of 90.4li8 mph. The sea top Ume of 88.557 mph.
cond row w1ll Include Canadian
Because five grid positions were Ludwig I:Ieimretll Jr. and Phll Curdecided Friday, Jerry Brassfield . rln of Gainesville, Fla.

Donna Caponi moved Into conten·
tton for the $ll.OOO winner' s payoff
with a 69 to claim third at 140. J oho-

son, Sandra Spuzich and .Jan Strphenson were at 141. follow('d by
Hlt e and Bennie Lauer a! 14~ .

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CAROLINA
LUMBER
AIID - · · · .

ch •

Harry Henderi!OD, one of two ·
agedts · for Cclllns, was already
aboard a plane for a fll&amp;lrt home lei
· New Orleans, La., when the Bengals called him back on Thursday

STROKE - Dave Walker of Sl Catherine's, Oolli!io gives It bla an; as be competes Friday afternoon
In the semJ.flaaiJ of the Intermediate singles category

River Downs already has an In- · . {
house television clrcult that allows ;;
It to show a race but under current
law It caMot accept bets on such
events.
Jones said he Is unsure how long
It w1Jl take to Install necessary electronic gear at Thistledown.
"We have not made any provisions for It yet," Jones said. He said
Ute track must bring In a satellite
dish to receive a signal from Ute
orlginatlng track and . Is unsure
about the cost of tllat acqul ~!!lon.
"I suspect we could better have
our finger on Ute pulse of tllls tlllng
In about 30 days," Jones said.

Ellis pleased with
Righetti's efforts;
yankees recall ace
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP~- Only
last week, Columbus Clippers
pitching coa~h Sammy Ellls had
been "really upset" about Ute performance of Dave Righetti. But
now Righetti Is back In Ute major
leagues with Ellis' blessing.
Late last month Ute New York
Yankees sent Righetti, the 1981
American League Rookie of the
Year, down to Columbus In the In·
ternatlonal League. And last week
Righetti struggled In a game
against Ute Rochester Red Wings.
In hls second outing for the
Cllppers, Righetti was unable to
hold a 6-0 first-Inning lead and left
wltll two outs In Ute sixth after belng shelled for nine hits, Including
three tl'lples and four doubles. · ·
Righettl had an earned run average of 5.40 ~ollowlng that pertormance, and Ellis said that bothered
him.
But after four games wltll the
Olppers, Righetti had brought hls
ERA down to a respectable 2.lll and
was recalled by Ute Yankees. In 25
and two-thirds Innings for Ute
·cuppers, be struck out 33 and
walked only 12. ·
Ellis, 1 who had been asked to
work with Righetti, was pleased
witll Ute 23-year-old lert-hander's
progress.
"He ·has definitely made some'
strides," Ellis said. "He's back to
pitching Ute way I remember, and
•

1

INDIANAPOLIS (AP I - Sally
Little says her tlmlng Is ott and that
might be bad news for her competitors In Ute Ladles Professional Golf
Association tournament.
Little shot a 6-under par 66 Frl·
day at Ute Country Oub of Indianapolls and took a 2-stroke lead over
Sandra Haynie at the midway point
of the 72-hole $:aJO,oo:J Mayflower
Oasslc. The round reminded Little
of the course record 65 she set here
when the 1978 U.S. Women's Open
was played at Ute same site.
The round, which featured six
birdies and 12 pars, gave Uttle a 137
for two trips around the 6,101-yard
course.
"My timing Is still not 100 per·
cent," she said. "I have a long way
to go but when you have the putter
going, you can get away with lt."
Little Is going for her fourth victory this year and her 14tll overall.
But she says leading a tournament
tllls early Is unusual for her.
"I've won a lot of tournaments
coming from behind," said the ~
year-old Soutll African native who
now Uves In Ute United States.
"Tihat' s a whole different feeling
because there Is no pressure.
"I tlllnk Its exciting to lead a golf
tournament .. . I know my three
wins this year I have not led, I came
from behind," she added.
Little made three putts of between five and six feet for birdies on
Ute front nine. Her longest birdie
carne on Ute 384-yard, par 4 No. 14
when she hit a 5-wood to 30 feet of
Ute cup and made her putt.
Haynie, who shared the firstround lead with ·Kathy Hlte and
Chris Johnson, struggled for a 37-34
and credited playing partner. Patty
Sheehan with helping hold her
score down .
"She's kind of a loose type person
and enjoys having a good time,"
Haynie said about Sheehan. "Normally I'm very serious on the golf
course. But today was almost comical and she was kind of joking and
we got to laughing out there. I tlllnk
It really did help kind of ease the
burden just a little bit. I started al·
most having a little bit of a goOd
time on the golf course, even
though I was playing poorly."

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Foint t 'le.1Silnt. VI . v a .

.

July 18, 19 _.

e/ alional

,Angels hu.m ble Indians, 15-Q;
CLEVELAND· (AP) -The Call· ejected during the 10-run · fifth
'
fornla Aogels' 10-run Inning against Inning.
the New York Yankees last Satur:
"In my mind, I don't tldJik John
day felt good, but against Clevewas throwing at them," said Indl·
land's. John Denny, a 10-run
ans Man.a ger Dave Garcia. "I don't
outburst felt even better.
think he was wrong tor telling him
"When he pitches, we want to
{plate umpire Larry Barnell) what
hurt him somehow, ring his neck or
he did. He kept saying that he
something," $aid Rod Carew, one
wasn't .deliberately throwing af
of three Angels who drove In three
those guys. But It was wrong for
runs In a 15-0 victory over the Indl·
John to prolong It (the argument).
ans Friday night.
The umpire gave him fair
The animosity between Denny . warning." ·
and the Angels dates back nearly a
Denny was unavailable for comyear. Last August, the Aogels and
ment after the game.
Indians brawled after Denny hit
Calltornla took a 3-0 lead In tbe
former Angel Dan Ford with a
first on Fred Lynn's RBI single and
pitch.
a twel'run single by Bobby Grieb.
"He pitches well againSt us, but
Carew tripled a run In to start tbe
every time that Idiot goes owl there.
10-run fifth, continuing home when
he wants to hit somebody," Carew
center fielder Rick Manning threw
said. "We embarrassed the heCk
wildly to third. Bob Boone's double
out of him tonight. That's what we
drove In the next three runs. Carew
did."
added a two-run single, Reggie
Added Don Baylor, "I don't know
Jackson singled a run home and
l! It's bad blood, but every time he
Lynn capped the Inning with a twopitches against us, It's a battle, a
run single.
war.~'
"That was the longest Inning
Calltomla won this war handUy
we've ever had since I've been
behind the four-hit pltcltlng of Ken
here," Garcia said. "I can't explain
Forsch, 9-7, although Denny; 6-10,
it. We looked great In Seattle, but
hit three batters before he was
now we haven't hit at all. I don't

DOUBLE TROUBLE - CaiHornla AD8els' shol'
tstop Mlck Kelleher, right, makes a falling catch of
Cleveland Indians' hiller Mike Flschlln'!llblrd Inning

·have the answers."
Bay)or hit a twi&gt;-JWl,h!&gt;pll!!' ln~ ·
ninth, his 14th, (01' the Angels' f1hal
two runs, caWing a 14-hlt o\'!ttack
againSt four Cleveland pitchers. ·
The Angels had also erupted for
10 runs behind Forsch In laat
week's 12-6 defeat of New York.
.Ji'orsch, though, struggled In that
game.

Iran, 'Iraq claiming
•
•
new war victories
•

Summer standings
Meigs-Mason
Girls' Softball Associotlon
Second Hall
Junior Division
Team
W.L.
Salisbury
3 l
P~nthers
3 2·
Pomeroy
2 1
Racine
2 1
Mason
2 2
Wranglers
2 2
New Haven
1 2
0 4
HarrisonV ille
Senior Division
Team
W.l.

Hits ' NMisses

3 0

Middleport
Pomeroy
arazle &amp; Brazle
Dravo
Fruth
New Haven .
Rainbow

3 0

3 0
2. 1
1 •)
1' 2
0 3
0 3

Oy ball as AD8ellelt fielder Brian DowniDg slldel out of

!'

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) (fhe recent convictions , ol six
~Cleveland-area men on racketeer'Jjlg charges could lead to a violent
)lalla power struggle In the Mahon'lilg VaUey, federal otflclals say.
:' The void at the the top of the
:eteveland famlly has Increased the
'possibility of clashes between leaders of organiZed crime In Pltts:t)urgh and Cleveland, said John
:SOpko, an attorney with the federal
;G&gt;rganlzed Crime Strike Force.
•: Sopko said officials feel the Pltts'Qurgh family might try to move
.Into territory west of Youllgstown,

which has been an accepted dividIng line between the Cleveland and
Pittsburgh crime operations.
"I feel like we could have more
killings now that there's this openIng In Cleveland . The Pittsburgh
farnjly could try to move in," Sopko
said.
Statements by FBI Informants
Included In a 124·page affidavit
made public Thursday allude to
heightened aggressiveness by the'
Pittsburgh family. The affidavits
claimed nine unsolved murder s In
the Youngstown area can be traced
to the Pittsburgh faction.

•

• VICfORIA, Bridsh Columbia
:jAP) - A Soviet spy ship bristling
:with antennas Is lurking off the
•Northwest coast, possibly waiting
for the arrival of America's first
jl'rldent submarine, Canadian offl·clals say.
1 "As you well know, your first Trl·
dent will be in our area
soon,
~d It (the ship's presence) could
well be tied to that," said Rear
Adm. Gordon Edwards, commimder of Canada's Maritime For•Ces Paclflc. "But maybe It's a
long-scheduled job for them or
:maybe just a coincidence, It's hard
·f.o say."
·
' U.S. Navy forces In the western
Pacific had tracked the 2,60Q.ton
AavrU Sarychev for "quite a while"
before It entered the Canadian surveiUance area Wednesday morn:lng, Edwards said In a telephone
·l'nterv!ew Friday.

FAIRMONT

"At the moment It looils like he's
arrived In his area of operations
and he's going to stay there and do
whatever he's going to do," he said.
The Soviet vessel carries a crew
of50andlsequlppedwlthelectronlc
listening devices, Canadian Detense spokesmen said.
U.S. Navy spokesmen In both
Seattle and Washington, D.C., confirmed the presence of a Soviet intelllgence vessel off the coast of
Washington state , but declined
further comment.
The vessel halted Thursday
about 15 miles west-southwest of
theentrancetotheStralt of Juan de
Fuca, which separate6 Canada's
Vancouver Island from Washington state's Olympic Peninsula. The
ship's position Is just outside Canadian ter ritorial waters, J"hlch ex·
tend 12 miles offshore, Edwards
said.

very

Fin _
in.
cream with
· gold vinyl roof and contrasttng cloth interior. 6 cylinder. auto. trans. and air conditoned.
Only 40,182 miles.

•• By ROBERT L. SHAFFER
•
Associated Pre~M Wrll4ir
: WASHINGTO~ (AP) - Republlcan Paul E. Pfeifer hopes to get

palgn had only $10,7W left alter the .
. JuneS primary, he still has hopes of
raising $2 mliUon to $2.5 million before the Nov. 2 general election.
Metzenbaum already has raised
Washington's big-money PAC men
·6ehlnd his campaign to Unseat Sen.
more than $2 million and had $1.7
~oward M. Metzenbaum, D.Ohlo.
million cash on hand as of June 30,
! PACs - Polltlc&lt;i! Action Com· according to finance statements.
mlttees - have played an lncreas·
Pfeifer didn't launch a serious
lngly Important role In financing fund· raising effort untU after the
~lectlon campaigns, and Pfeifer Is death April 24 of Rep. John Ashwooing them with the help or tbe brook, R.Ohlo, wbo was the leading
Na\lonal Republican Senatorial GOP candidate for the senatorial
CoJill'lllttee and others. ·
nomination.
! The ·state senator from Bucyrus
His latest financial statement
~~-ld..,.Fr_lda_y_th_a_t_al_thou_.;.gh_hls_c_a_m_-_ shows that he raised $105,514 by

..

I org's bad .Pitch single gives Cards
come-from-behind win over Reds

Iorg' s Intentions to the contrary.
his hit turned out to be the biggest of
seven manufactured by St. Louis In
halting a three-game skid.
Others Included Mike Ramsey's
pinch bunt single, ~;~!so In the sev·
enth Inning. During a rally, the
Cards drew assists from three
walks and a hit batsman to score
four times ..
"Hopefully, It will tum things
around," said Iorg in reference to
St. Lo)lls' struggles to score runs.
"We're luckY to be In the position
we're ·In, because we haven't been
playing good ball."
The Cards, wbo were restricted
to four hits by Bob Shirley, trailed
4-2 before assembling what Man·

umph at the expense of his former
team.
"It Is the thrW of my We to beat
the Cincinnati Reds," said Lahti,
who was traded fo St. 'LouiS along
with Jose Brito in AprU tor Shirley.
"I never would have thought that
my first major league wln was goIng to be against !hem."
Bruce Sutter pitched the final two
Innings for the Cards, registering
his 19th save In his first apj)earan~
since suffering a pulled groin.muscle July 5.
· .
Dan Driessen belted lils'lOth homer for Clnclnnatlln the second off
St. Louis s1!U'ter Steve Mura. The
Cards reboun!led to arab • 2-1·te&amp;d
bUt fell back 3-2'wbell
Houae.
holder and Dave . Van1' Q6rcler
rapped run slngl• In the Reds'
fourth.

· This . dr .' mode.! is super sharp. L,ocally .owned, auto .. trans., only,
32,579 miles.- Red, Red, Red.
· ·
·
· ··
_ .

1980 PONTIAC GRA
.I

Nul

.

lzed crime.

Trallcant has said he expects to
'be Indicted because ol a $50,000
campaign contribution he accepted
from a reputed organiZed crime figure. He has said, however, he Is
guilty of no wrongdoing because he
attempted to return the money .
The affidavit said Peterson' s
reappointment as Youngstown pollee chief after a career as an FBI
agent was Influenced by reputed organized crime figu res. Peterson,
however , said he didn't know what
the affidavit referred to and de-

cllned further comment.
Tablack, a congressional candidate In Ohio's 17th District, called
the affidavit "a cheap shot," and
Youngstown Mayor George Vukovich denied he was tnnuenced by
anyone In the reappointment Of
Peterson.
Griffin said the FBI has launched
a major Investigative effort against
organized crime In Youngstown
now that seven other men believed
affiliated with the Cleveland family
have been charged with operating a
drug ring.

The USSOhlo, the first of theTri·
north to Include "a good portion of
dent subs, which carry nuClear mls·
the Gulf of Alaska," said Cmdr.
sUes, Is supposed to pass through
Don Lory, a Canadian Defense Dethe strait later this summer en
partment spokesman.
route to a new bas~ near Bangor,
The Saskatchewan and Sarychev
Was h., on Hood Canal, wwhere the
exchanged signals but Edwards
Navy eventua lly plans to base 10
doubted there had been much addlTridents.
tiona! communication.
The Navy has declined to release
Soviet Intelligence ships "are usthe Ohio's exact arrival date.
ua lly very close-mouthed and offer
The Ohio, believed to be someno more than tl)e normal politeness
where In the Atlantic on a shakeat sea, an exchange of Identities
down cruise, has successfu lly fired ., and maybe a 'good morning,"' he
non-nuclear Trident missiles from
said.
a submerged position while a Soc
Efforts Friday by The Associa ted
viet Intelligence ship watched.
Press to contact the Soviet vessel
The Canadian destroyer escort
with a ship-to-shore call were unSaskatchewan and the long-range
successful. The radio signal apparAurora aircraft assumed watchdog
ently reached the ship, but there
dulles from the U.S. forces Wedneswas no response, said Larry
day morning .
George, a high seas operator for
By agreement, Canadian forces
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
patrol an area extending abou t
Co.
1,000 miles west of the st rait and

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CHarcoal and sterling sl
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, ; ewned andonl 31,175 miles.
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..
·
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June 30, but half of that was In
loans, Including a $50,CKXlloan from
Pfeifer to hls .campalgn.
Pfeifer said he met Informally
Thursday evening with representatives of some PACs. The "gettingto-know -y ou" ses s ion was
arranged by former Ohio GOP
Chairman John Andrews.
Also giving ?feller a hand Is Sen.
Slade Gorton, R-Wash., who compar es his own 1980 upset victory
over Democratic incumbent Sen.
Warren G. Magnuson to ?feller's
battle against Metzenbaum.
In Inviting PAC contributors to a
breakfast for Pfeifer July 29, Gor-

sc hedule.
The GOP Senatorial Committee
has said II wlll pump $115,000 Into
Pfeifer's campaign this month and
that further contributions may be
made, up to the maximum $589,650
allocated for the Ohio campaign.
?feller said he needs "early money" for an advertising blitz to get
his message across and convince
Ohio voters that he's running a serious campaign.
Metzenbaum's statement listed
Individual contributions totaling
$338,340 for the period from May 20
"'ii':rrtne 30, Including 182 $1,000 .
contF!bu tors.
He reported $29,100 In PAC conton said, " It' s not easy to defeat a
long-entrenched Democra tic Intributions, Including $5,CKXJ each
from the Communication Workers
cumbent. but with hard work. peror America and the Committee fo~
serverance and the help of friends,
Thorough
Agriculture Political Edtt 1s possible."
Gorton said that, like Pfeifer, he . ucatlon, a dairy farmers group
headquartered In San Antonio,
had been "far behind 1n the polls,
Texas.
take my
Associations representing serVice station operators In New Jeris
sey, J,&gt;ennsylvanla and Delaware
and another headquartered In Wa·
'The uitra·conservatlv~ National
Conservative PAC, wWch claimed
shlngton, D.C., gave MetzenQ&amp;um
a total of $3.000.
to have been dlrecuy responsible
Otber sizable contributions In·
for some of the 19tll upsets that.
eluded $2,500 from the Federal Emgave the GOP control of the Senate,
has refused to back Pfelferbecause
ployees PAC; $2,CKXl from ·a retired
he Is not conservative enough.
federal employees . organization;
$1,500 !rom the Masters, Mates and
51
Pilots; and .$1.000· each !rom the
Fund for a Democratic Majority,
International BrotherhooCI of Electrtcal
Workers.· Ironworkers and
campalgil.s. The Ohio Republican
said he tried to arrange a meeting
the Coal Mlnersl&gt;AC of DU!es Botwith Helms this week, but .that
tom, _Ohio.
He,lms .couldn't .fit It mto his
•

' Senatorial candidate
. •Depublican
.,.
·,\ Paul &amp;_P.feifer sili.d_ he met informally
·'' Thursday . 'evening with · representa•
,, lives of .~ome PACs- Political Action
.; C9~~ttees. ·,.The "getting to know :!:~~ :~:u~~~dldn't
: yo:U sessi~p" · was arranged by former
~~~~~oat?:;~~~:n~.?.hio
i~ Ohio__ G
,. OP Chainnan John Andrews.
.·~ PACS have played an. increasingly im·
; portanl role in financing election cam• ·
~ .~
• 44
·.
. •Z ~· P1e11er says he needs
early.
.·' money" ·for ·an advertising blitz to gei . c.!:e:~~~I!~?it':!. :~:
I his message a~
convince Ohio . ~~~::::n!~~to'::a=
'fVOter8 • " he'S
..·rU~ning
a · SeriOUS 1
.
.

and

e&amp;mpalfP'
·

·

·

··

,. : •

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I

the Cleveland famUy' s organized
crime Interests In the Mahonlng
Valley. He said the Cleveland and
Pittsburgh families divided the
Mahonlng Valley lerrltory by
county.
The FBI affidavit was opened at
the request of lawyers for three
men charged with possession of Illegal weapons.
The affidavit says FBI Informants claim that MahonlngCounty
Sherllf James Traflcant, former
Youngstown Pollee Chief Stanley
Peterson and former sheriff
George Tablack had ties to organ-

The affidavit said the aggression
was started by the slaylngs of two
Warre n-area men, allegedly by
Cleveland fa mily members.
"The situation In Youngstown
has been ongoing ever since we
na iled !Ronald D.~ Carabbla," Joseph Griffin, agent-in-charge of
Cleveland's FBI office, said Friday. "The t;'ittsburgh and Cleveland' families have had a joint
relationship In that area since the
late 1970s." ciu-abbia was one of the
six men convicted of vlo lat lngrack~
eteerlng laws .
Griffin said Carabbla cont rolled

.J»feifer .trying to lure aid of PAC men

BODY BLOCK- St Lonll Cardinals' Geue Teoace from Roo Oester at tblrd wben WUUe McGee bit to blJn.
puts a body block on Clnclonatl Reds' second baseman Lawless W8l unable to mne tbe throw In time to flnt
Tom Lawless as be is forced out during tbe second ID- . todoableuptbe Reel looted McGee. (APLaserpboto).
olog Friday night at St. Louis. Lawless took a throw

month.~'

SUPPORTIVE CROWD - Thousands of Iranians
crowd a street In Tehran Friday In celebration of
"Jerusalem International Day" and In support of
Iran's war againSt Iraq. Jerusalem Is holy to M011lems
as weU as Christians and Jews and Khomelnl has
vowed to "liberate" it. ( AP Laserphoto ).

:Soviet spy ·ship lurks off U.S. coast

This compact truck is e~tra nice . 5 speed. 'trans ., 4 cylinder
engine, camper topper and only 16,900 miles.

ager WWtey Herzog called "a Chicago White Sox 1959 rally."
Ken Oberkfell and Ozzle Smith
coaxed walks off Shirley to start the
seventh, and Rarilsey bunted safely
against Tom Hulne, 2-5, to load the
bases. Hume then hit Lonnie Smith
with a pitch io force home Oberk·
fell, and Tommy Herr's RBI
grounder made It 4-4.
Hume walked Keith Hernandez
Intentionally and fanned George
Hendrick bela~ I0rg came through
on a 1-1 count wllh his two- run hit up
the middle.
"It's the hardest thing.for.a hitter
to do," said Iorg In respect to his
role In coming off the bench. "When
you do we)l, It's very rewarding. It
makes up for all the frustrations."
Interestingly, Cincinnati used a
suiCide squeeze bunt by Shirley as
the Instrument for' scoring a run ln
the top of the seveJith.
"It was mlspla;yed," Reds Manager John McNamara said In respect to Ramsey's subsequent bunt
for St. LouiS. "The.three walks; the
bunt, the hit batsman -they were
all damaging." .
By' means of lbelr comeback, the
Catds handed rookie reliever Jeff
Lahtl,l-0, his first major ~agu trl·

U.S. officials say about 100,CKXJ troops from each ·
side are Involved In the current fighting.
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein warned Iran's
leaders to stop ordering attacks Into Iraqi territory,
or else "the Iron fists which destroyed the aggression
for the past two year s and crushed the recent a~mpt
to Invade Iraq will wipe out all future aggressive
attempts." Excerpts from a speech by Hussein were
carried by the Iraqi agency Saturday.

Pfficials say Mafia power struggle possible

1981 FORD COURIER

AP Sports Writer
ST. LOUIS (AP~ -A delivery he
wanted to Ignore turned out to be a
friend In disguise for pinch-hitter.
Dane lorg of the St. Louis
Cardinals.
"It ~as out of the strike zone, ac. tually," said lorg alter smacking a
high fastball lor a two-run single to
key a 64 victory Friday night over
the Cincinnati Reds. "It's a pitch
I've been trying to lay off for a

Laserphoto).

·,,,.

The Hottest Deals In Tovvnl

By PAUL LeBAR

han and.who Bl'e awaiting transfer In Ahvaz, Iran to
POW camps In Tehran and other cities. ( AP

IRAQI POWs - Photo received In New York
: Sunday shows what tbe Iranian News Agency says
• Bl'e Iraqi POWs captured during operation Ramad-

1

tbe way. KeUeber's fielding belped tbe ADgels to a 15-0
shutout of tbe lndlaos Friday olgbt In Cleveland. ( AP
Laserpboto).
·

By The Associated Press
Iraq on Saturday claimed Its forces encircled and
repulsed Invading Iranian forces trying to seize the
southern portclty ot Basra, but Iran said Its troops
struck deep Inside Iraqi defense lines, killing or
wounding 700 enemy troops.
A communique carried by the otflclal Iraqi News
Agency said Iraqi forces encircled the advancing
Iranian troops after staging an ambush near Basra,
about~ miles south ol Iraq' s capital and near the
southwestern Iranian border.
The communique said Iraqi ground troops and helicopter gunships then chased the retreating Iranians
across the border, tnntctlng heavy casualties.
Iran, In a communique carried by the Islamic Republic News Agency, said Iranian troops advanced
"Into the very midst of the enemy forces" and were
engaged In mopping-up operations to clear Iraqi defense pockets Inside Iraq i territory. It said 700 Iraqi
soldiers were dead or wounded.
The Iranian communique did not specify where
along the 300-mile battlefront the fighting occurred.
Other Iranian war communiques had said Its forces
had opened two fronts against the Iraqis Friday
night.
Iraq claimed to have killed nearly 5,CKXJ Iranians
since Iranian troops entered Iraqi territory Tuesday.
Iran earlier claimed It killed or wounded 800 Iraqis
and captured 791 others. Neither s ide's claims could
be Independently verified since both Iran and Iraq
have barred foreign reporters from the battle zone.

..

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ON ITS TAIL- A Canadian escort foUowu Soviet spy ship, Aavrll
Sarjcbev, aft tbe Strait of Juan de Fuca Friday In au area wbere the U.S.
flnt Trldeot ooclear 111bmarlne II due later Ibis summer. The tblp Ia In
lntematloaal waten about IS mlles west of tbe strait whlcb sepantes ;
Cauda'• Vancouver IslaDd from Washington state's Olympic Peoluala ·
'-(APLase,pboto) . ·
• .'

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J

llipolis, Ohio-P o int P leasa nt, W . Va .

Experts visit .Florida
to save starving deer·
By RANDALL HACKLEY
Asaocialed Preu Writer
MIAMI (AP I - A federal judge
who blocked the killing of thou·

..
WAITING FOR TilE HUNT - A group of hunters
wall near their air boats as lawyen argue before a
federal judge the merits of an emergency hunllo thin
the deer herd in the Everglades Friday, Judge Eugeae

SpeUman stayed the controvenlal bunllate Thursday.
The restraining order was effective until 5 p.m. Saturday. The judge will appoilll bil owu inveslfgaton to
Ira vel through the Everglades to examine the coodillon of the deer herd. (AP Laserphoto).

sands of stilrving deer sent a team
of experts Into the fiooded Everglades on Frtday to see If the lkier
can be moved to drier ground
where food Is more plentiful.
As hunters awaited a final decision on the plan to thin the herd by
2,aJO w~ak and sickly deer, U.S.
District Judge Eugene P . Spellman
told the eight experts - vetertnarlans, 100logists, biologists and a botanist - to ride airboats into the
wilderness.
The 51-year-old judge, responding to charges that he couldn't comprehend the severity of the deer 's
plight from his chambers, said he
would view the animals from a
Coast Guard helicopter.
The judge told the eight e)&lt;perts

- four provided by each side In the
dispute - to report back to him Sat·
urday morning.
Spellman's temporary Injunction
blocking the hunt ends at 5 p.m.
Saturday. and he said he would hold
hearings .throughout the day U
necessary.
" Bring your lunch," he told
attorneys.
Seven hours before the three-day
hunt was to begin at dawn Friday,
Spellman ordered It halted .
State courts had refused to over·
ride game officials who had or·
dered the hunt to thin the herd,
estimated at 5, 500 deer . The deer
are competing for toad depleted by
noods from heavy rains.
As F1orida Game and Fresh Water Fish. Commission officers reluctantly sent dozerts c/. hunter s home
early Friday, Spellman told the
eight experts to investigate claims
by a growing coalition of animal

Police investigate slayings;
Moon given prison
burglars kill industry mogul
VILLANOVA, Pa. (AP ) - Pollce
Investigating the slayings of aerospace pioneer Courtland! S. Gross,
his wife and their Uve-in housekeeper say the victims were probably shot by burglars.
. The bodies of the 77-year-old
Gross, retired board chairman of
Lockheed Corp., and his wUe, Alexandra, 72, were found Frtday morn·
lng In the kitche n of their two-story
home, according to unnamed sources quoted today by the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Housekeeper Catherine Vander
Veur, 69, was found bound and
gagged In a chair in Mrs. Gross'
bedroom, officials said.
All three victims had been shot in
the head, although the Grosses also
suffered other gunshot wounds, pollee said.
"I think they (the Grosses) were
surprised coming in the door," said
a SOUf!:C quoted by the newspapers.
Mrs. Vander Veur's bedroom
was reportedly found in disarray.
Dresser drawers were dumped on
the noor, and clothing was strewn
about.
John J . McCann, a roofing rontractor working at the mansion in
the exclusive Main Une neighborhood west of Philadelphia, said he
looked Into the kitchen Frtday
morning and saw blood and a body.
McCann said he was afraid the
Intruders were still In the house, so
he left quickly and telephoned pollee, who fou'nd the other bodies.
Salvatore Frustacl, deputy superintendent of the Lower Merton
Township Pollee Department, said,
"There was evidence of forced entry to the home ... There were several Intruders."
The Gross estate is located behind the home of Dr. Richard A.
Davis, brother of first lady Nancy
Reagan. A neighbor, Sonia Peltz,
said she thought the street was
under surveillance because of the

Reagan connection, but the Secret
Service said the house would not be
protected by the agency unless the
president or his Immedia te fam ily
were visiting.
The Grosses moved to Philadelphia from CalUornla a fter Gross retired from Lockheed In 1967.
He had worked lor the company
s ince It was founded in 1932 by his

brother, Rohert E . Gross. He becam e board chairman in 1961, succeeding his brother, after serving
as preside nt lor more than live
years.
In Burba nk, Calif., Lockheed
Chairman Larry Kitchen said
Gross had devoted a lifetime of
"high achievement" to the company and the aerospace industry.

U.S. District Judge Gerard Goettel handed down the sentences Friday, sayiJig that although Moon
was a first offender and a "good
family man, " a prison sentence
was necessary t 0 keep the public
from becoming cynical about justice tor the rich and powerful.
Moon , 62, sat Impass ively,
slightly s lumped with his hands
folded In his lap, as the sentence
was read.
'
Moon is the founder of t he UnUI·
cation Church which claims some 3
mllllon toUowers around the world
and has amassed millions of dollars
and large r eal estate holdings.

'

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) - An
acceptiJig the In-term pay raises.
entire section of Ohio law deallpg
Board of Public Affairs President
with munlclpaUtles could be renPaul Frontz was told to pay back
dered "useless and void" as there$290 for a similar raise.
sult of a case which wj]l be heard
Richland County Common Pleas
Tuesday by the 5th District Court of
Judge Max Chilcote, earlier this
Appeals.
year, declared that home rule proThe central issue In the legal batviSions In the state Constitution
tle Is whether elected officials of
overrode the fact that the Bellville
non-chartered municipalities can
action was In direct violation of an
approve an in-term pay raise.
Ohio Revised Code ban on in-term
Two years ago, state examiners
raises for elected officials.
returned findings for recovering
Lawyers team from the s tate at·
against five past and present offitorney general's office, represent·
cials of the .v illage of Bellvllle who
lng the office of State Auditor
received In-term Increases In pay.
Thomas Ferguson, say that U the
Four of them chose to tight the find·
appeals court upholds Chilcote, the
logs in court.
judges "would render useless and
VIllage Clerk R. VIctor Roberts,
void" an entire section of Ohio law
a councilman atthe time the raises , "and thus destroy the governmen·
were authorized; Council Presital framework" provided In the
dent James Beat; former Councilstate Constitution.
man Everett McClarren; and
"If the village of Bellvllle has the
former Councllman Dale Shafer,
authority to contradict" that law,
who did not join In the suit, were
"all non-chartered municipalities
ordered to pay back $280 each for
would have the same power," state

FOUND SLAIN - Mr. and Mn. Cour11aud S. Gross, left, llq' shown In
this 1985 IDe photo during a ge~together with Mr. and Mrs. John Luhring.
"The Grosses and their maid were found slain Friday by workmen at the •·
couple' s Main Line home in VlUanova,Pa. tAP Laserpboto).

~gs

The low mountains of the region
offer a skilled pilot a haven from
radar that can enable narcotics
agents to track a drug night. Dozens of small airports, many of
them little more than dirt strtps bu~
The drugs - prtmarUy cocal)le,
!dozed
out of the side of a rocky
marijuana and methaqualone hillside,
provide landing sites with
are whis ked away to djstributlon
witnesses present.
few
unwelcome
centers In Florida, Georgia and the
lure of big money,
Drawn
by
the
Northeast along Interstate high- .
there
is
plenty
of
willing m anpower
ways within easy access to the East
to
unload
drug
shipments.
Tennessee airstrips, officials say.
Some of the drugs are left behind
Dtstrtct Attorney General Rl·
for consumption in Tennessee.
chard Fisher o!Cleveland,;renn .. Is
Tennessee is within fuel range of
In the middle of a major drug activthe drug smugglers' launch points
ity area. He is handllngtheprosecu,
along the northern hump of South
tlon of nine people arrested July 11
America for eve n a smaU Cessna
equipped with an auxlllary fuel . in connection with the seizure in
Cleveland of 1,254 pounds of cotank. For large r twin-englned
caine valued at $400 mllllon. An air·
fl£¥'chcratt QueenAirs, Piper Na·
plane believed to have brought the
vajos or Air Force s urplus transcocalpe Into Tennessee w·as confls..
ports, ·the flight Is only a few hours
cated In Rockwood. ·
beyond Florida .
that," said Special Agent Maxey
Gilliland of the Tennessee Bureau
of Investigation. " There' s just too
much money Involved."

'rhree paraplegics reach summit .
GUADALUPE NATIONAL unlmagmable, this is twice that,"
PARK, Texas (AP I -Three para- climber Dave Kiley said by radio
pteglc mountaineers, sore and blis- from the summit.
tered !rom a five-day climb up
Park. Superintendent Blll Dun·
rugged, twisting trail, trium- mire said the men "whOQped It up
phantly doused themselves with on the top" and doused themselves
cliampagne as they reached the with champagne as they watched
. highest point In Texas.
·
"a great sunset from the summit"
He said Kiley, '29, ofLo.s Angeles,
-Five of the wheelchalr·bound
cllmbers set out tO scale Guadalupe Donnie Rogers, 26, and Joe Moss,
32, both of Dallas, clU'nPect just be~ak. but only three completed the
neath the summit Friday night and
trek Friday. They en&lt;jured ton1d
would come down today a board an
heat and crossed treacherous
Almy helicopter .
'
le(Jges on a rocky path lined with
cactus and mesquite to crawl the
"It took
five days to get to the
!aSt fe)l' hundred yards to the 8, 751top of the mountain; now l can do
foot summit.
"H you've ever done anything anything I want the rest of my Ufe,"

a

me

Rogers said via .radio.
,
The men pushed their way up the
mountain in special wheelchairs
with pneumatic tires - "almost
like snow tires" - !hal gripped the
gravel horse traU, said Dunmire.
Each climber carried )lis own tool
kit, camping gear and food.
All tJu'ee had sores and blisters
on their hands and bllttocks, received when ~ iltsmounted
dragged thelr,chaJrs actoss rocky
ledges.
Tile men, members d POINT-.
Parapl~cs On. IOOepeadent Na·

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Pas-

sengers were tossed like rag dolls,
but had "no time to panic" when a
United Airlines jumbo jet new Into
tumulence above Wyoming and
dropped several hundred feet, wit·
nesses said.
"People were fiylng- all over the
place," said Dam DIMaggio, the
former Boston Red Sox baseball
star. He was among 24 people In·
jured and dozens shaken up when
the DC-10 was jolted Frtday as It
new at 39,&lt;ro feet.
"I was hurled through the air, but
I don't remember It happening,"
said Nick Peters, a sports writer for
the Oakland Trtbune aboard the
non-stop night from Boston to Sat!
· Francisco. "lendeduplOfeetaway
.. : I'd been tossed the equivalent of
three or tour seats."
Peters and DIMaggio, the
younger brother ri baseball HaU of
Farner Joe DIMaggio, were retUrnIng from the baseball All-Star
game In Montreal.
Nine people were hospitalized after FUght 95 landed safely at al!OUt
1 p.m. at San Francisco lnterna·
tionai Airport, and lour remained
- hospitalized overnight, otftcials
said Fifteen others were treated at
an airport clinic.
,.
Most of the 162 passenglirs were ·
strapped' Into their seats _watching·
the move " Deathtrap," a comedy·
. thriller, wA&lt;n the pf'a ne was
buffeted.
'

lovers tha t the deer can be
relocated.
Gam e officer s, noting that many
hunter s were r eturning to haines In
other parts of t he state, co'mplalned
that eve n U Spellman upholds the
hunt, the delay will make the hunt
less e ffective. .
" We cannot tum these hunts on
and off like a wa ter faucet," salll
Col. Robert Brantly, director of the
Game and Fresh Water Commls- .
sian. "It''s going to be too late to do
any good."

ture Trips -IBici w;ller the c)lrnb ·
woukl demonstrate what hand!·

capped PeoPle can

deDiy "drQpped ai:ooiJ!eofhlllldred , ·

do unaided.

.•.

"When I got up I could see there
were people whose heads got hurt,
one with a broken arm," he said.

a

23 Pr o fes!,i Onil l Ser vi ces

4 Gi vea w ay

7 Y ard Sale (pa td tnfl dv an 1 t' )
8 Pu b l•c Sale
&amp; A uct ion
9 Wa nt ed t o Bu y

31 · Homes tor Sale
32 -Mob il e t1 om es for Sa l€'
33 Fa rm s for Sale
34· Busi ness Build ings
35 Lo ts &amp; Acreag e
36 Rr.- al Es tate Want ed

EmpiB,ment
11 Help Wanted
II S• t ua t ion Wanted
13 1nsu rance
14 Busi ness Trai n1ng
15 Sc hools I nstr uc t ion
' 16 R.=td io. TV &amp; CB Re pair
17 M •scell aneou s
18 W.=tnted T o do

f1 .... .

Classified p11ges cover th e
71 Autos f or Sa le
77 Tru cks for Sal e
73 Van s &amp; 4 WO

followin g telephone exchanges.

74-Mo torcyc tes

75 Boats &amp; Motors
76 -Au t o Part s &amp; Accesso r 1es
77 Au to Repa ir
78 Ca mpl ng EQu 1pmen1

Ga lll a County
Ar e.1 Cod e 6l 4

24 525664 3379 -

··· ~

a lhestaell

81 Home Impr ovement s
82 Plumbinq &amp;. He.:. ti ng
83 -Excava t ing
8&lt;1 E lecr •cOI &amp; Re f n qerntJOn
85 Genern l Hau l ing
86 M.H. Rep;u r
87 Upholstrry

61 Farm Equipment

61 Wanted to buy

63 Lives tock
64 Hay &amp; Gr ain
65·Seea&amp; Fert i li zer

44 ·Apartmenl lor Re nt
45 Furni shed Room s
46 · Space for re nt

Rio Gran de
Guyan Di st .
Arabi a Oi st .
Wa lnu t

un ro

~

4

vi ll age m a rsh a ll. Such
m arshal l w ill be direct l y
responsib le l o th e mayor of
said vill age. The dut1 es of
the m ar sha ll are to:
1. Patrol the str eets of
the vi llag e.
2. Be on du ty an av erage
of 40 hours a week and be
on ca ll 24 hours a day .
3. Wor k t he enti re vill_age
a min imum ot .4 day l1ght
hour s each day .
4 . Comp lete a work ing
log which wi l l inc lude the
num ber of hours on duty
and t he milea ge on th e
cr'u iser each day w hich is
to be given to the mayor at
the end of each w eek .
5. En f orce the speed
li mits.
6. u se th e cr uiser for
vi ll age business onl y .
7. Notify the mayor or
leave a mess age at the
m a y or' s ho m e w h e n
leav ing th e v i II age for any
l ength ot tim e.

8. Notify the s her iff

w~ e n

he is in hi s cr uise r on patrol
by r adi o and notif y the
sher iff by te leph one w hen
report ing off for the n ight.
9. Turn in a ll c it ations
and par king fi ck.ets 36
hours befor e cou r t t im e.
10. Appea r at a ll court
sess ions w hi ch conve nes at
7 :00 p .m . every Wed·
nesday .
0
1
of
unless another vi llage of ·
f icia t is on duty .
12. Investiga t e all com ·
pl a int s of all eged vi ol ati ons
and occ ur rences in the

\h~t~~;g~ ~~~~ c~~~~~

ma intenance of the poli ce
crui ser .
14. B ~ res ponsibl e t o en·
for ce all of the ordna nces
passed by the vi lla ge co un·
cit.

Succes sfu l

must becom e a r es1dent of
the v illage w ithin 6 months
from the date of hiring.
Resume mu st be r eceived

Ma rlin Wedemeyer
M ayor of Rio Gr ande
Town Hall
Ri o Grande, Oh io

45614

eyes, tiger stripe, 8 ot 10
wks. old. Call ~ - 3428 .
112 Irish Setter pups, 8
weeks old. Make good pets.
Call614·379·11 34.

I n loving memory of m y
husband, Norman Rizer,
w ho passed away 1 yea r

ago on Jul y 17, 1981.
L ov in g thoughts of a dear
husband .
Often bring a silent tear ,
Thought s return
to
scenes long p asse d,
Time speeds on, but
memories la st .
Loved &amp; sadly missed by
Gertrude RIzer , Son Glenn,
Grandaughter 's Ke ll y &amp;
Ke nda.

===========-==-=-

3

Announcemen !_! __ _

SWEEPER

and -sewing

machine repair , parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
de l iv ery , Davi s Vacuum
Clean er , one ha lf mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Ca ll

446·0294 ..

I wanl to thank relatires. l1ionds
eme~genty

Cute mate k itten with b lue

Ju ly 15, 16, 18

L ess on s.

"John

PERMANENT
HAIR RE MOVAL

and neighbon. Velerans Memorial
squad, ·Rawlinp,

Coats and Blower Funeral Home,
Rn. Robert E. Purtell and tor
lho boaulilul I~WIIS, and those
who assisted in anJ way during
the illness and duth of mJ Dea(
Sister lunia S. Pierce. Your kindness will nerer be forgotten.
Julia E. Stewart
Daughter ' Son-in-law

3 kittens 10 weeks old . Call
446 3345 after 5PM.

Collie puppies. Call 446·
7752 . .

Teaford . c~ester , O~io .

Hospital and slatl,' Doc1ol5, 1ho

Call 614·256·

~orne .

6628 .

by July 10, 1982 , tor con· Red Ir ish Setter, mal e. Call
siderat1on .
614·245·5803 or 614-145·5611.

Golf

CARD OF THANKS

appli cant

6 ca ts and assorted ki ttens

to good

Professional
E lectrotysis
Center . A .M .A . approv ed,
Doc tor referal s, by ap·
pointm ent onl y . 304·675 ·

Mother Beagle dog with 5
pups 112 Beag le and 112
Poodle . Must take all. Call
4-46·1266.
Puppies to give away, 3

Call446-4056.

mont~sold .

Adorable, eight week old
female , fawn

puppy ,

part

and white

beegle

aVail abl e for someone who
w 'i ll commit to provide a

good home . Wormed and
veteran a r ian

i nspec ted .

Hoeflic hs, 614·992·5292 .
Male Siamese Seal point

6

Lost and Found

LOST orange &amp; wh ite cat in
vin c initv of Roadside rest,

Upper Rl. 7. REWARD.
Call614 38H994.
Lost-medium to large male

hair w ith white markings.
Last seen S.at. July 9, in
Cheshir~ area . Family pet.

~====Ed:i1:h::'"::d::D'::"::E::"::'it::tt;::========~ ~OST-L~rge
367 ·0413 or_
74_2~83male
_o_. _
-

__
dog,

multi colored, long

~a i r ,

CARD OF THANKS

answers by name of Prine.

GREEN BEANS
By the Bushel

'8.00
245-9147

death ot our beloved
husband, lather &amp; grandfather, Riley M&lt;·
Clelland . A special
thilnks to the staff and
doctors at Veterans

&amp;1-..! Tr Nfi O N
' 1r PP I M A C

TO

up

to 15 Words

r--·-=- -=-

11

May God bless you all.
The family ot
Riley McClelland

RUTLAND
·I-AI coofli!NITURE

u•ve r i'l l

. . Dlytt
$111.00
l:c.d lhld l!llo. MIJ{II
Wat1Mn
Sl99u.
lllloiCopJIIIOin Gls
WIIIIMit
$~.00
i· ~ Coppertoot RIRII IOf&gt;,
...
•1111 '"'
llood. R1t1iprator,
I lhld
514t--,·Sidl
22 ... A-J COIHfitioo.
$399.00

PLANT MANAGER
~&lt;'e ~ ing a Plant ¥anager for a sma~l c~mpanY .
Cilndidate sh'ould tte~ve e~ college degree w1th some
engineering cxperie"nce pr f ffirredt Duties include
the development, i"mplementation of personnel
p'olicies and procedures on behalf ot a board. over·
sccjnq ilnd managing a business _office and an
o~rfltion s department. Salary negotiable.

history to :

\

,.,.. m..-oa-

~

~ .,... end

av• t2Z,Q90 by the 1hnl .,....

u-

,

'

rotoll •r*tence. For lui• ~ cont8Ct: ·

tJNDD PAIII!IBNOEIIIIlQUU:o- . .
Ml'lll
I
JU.,Ii .....,... 11J wiled • o. from a Ualell A.lriiiiiiJC.lt llilter 1
•
__.IIIIIM~FIMII.J.NIDe;-pnWere;..pllellllllllllld
~
11 received ..... IIIJurlill .... ~ IJiulel"f!C)eeved • ''aevereltl'' hn
!
ala' 1urt1u1111oe willie IIJbiJ Utah; auiborttlal Rill 0t1ien In . ,_,.
•m!A lllled (AP I ,o•l!l'pb~Mo) ,
·

••

, .r
··I_ , . ,
t

1 black kitten. 614·992·7313 446·31S9 or 256 ·1967 in
eveni ngs .
after 5 p.m.

l~ e

Gold,
Si lv e r ,
Bu y i ng
Pl atinu m, o ld coi ns, sc rap
ring s &amp; sil ve rware. Da i ly
quo tes ava ilabl e. Also
coins &amp; co i n supplies f or
cloth furniture, wash stand, sa le. Sprin g Valley Tr ading
tools, bicycle , baby tur Co., Spr ing Va lley Pl aza ,
niture. dishes. lawn mower 4o46·802Sor 446 8016 .
&amp; tots more.

7
Yard Sate
Bi g Garage Sale July 15, 16
&amp; 17 . 2 Family Patriot·
Cadmus Rd . Patio tilind

We pay cash for tale mod el
Yard Sa le 123 Kineo n Dr ., clean use d ca rs.
Gal lipolis . Tues .• Ju ly 10.
Frenchtown Car Co
10AM·3PM. Clothes. di s ~e s
Bi ll Ge ne Johnson
&amp; misc . items.
4-46·0069

Garage Sale Tue . &amp; Wed .
Torch &amp; gauages, leather Wanted to bu y w heel chai r .
jackets, tape players. Fair· Cai i614·14S 9163.
field -Centenary

Road ,

Fairfield Acres.
Sale 426 Hedgewood Dr ,

wan ted
Ply mou th
or
Dodge body with good 1n
terio r. 70 to 75 model.
Pref er abl y 2 d r., engine

Friday 9 to 5. Saturday 9 to
I. NEW T·shirts, Smurk, can be blown. Ca ll 4-46·6160
Pacman. assorted design s. aft er 1PM .

Babysi tt ing 1n m y home, 3
to 6 yea r s ol d, Ga llipoli s

Area Ca ll4460513.
Standin g timber . 10 acr es
or more. 614·992·3705.

On t' c1,1y Pl~f'r"l 1nn
T11r1 • rl,,y l ' l'-. • rr ,
SIX

S.l Ou
r•

$.1 0 0

S7

Clily

OL D wi cker furnit ur e, ol d
quilt s &amp; li nens, ca ll 61.4 245·

YARD sale 108 S Park
Driv e. Lots of baby

9448 .

clothes ! Friday &amp;

6 lb. bow ling ball 304 6/S
5370

Satur ·

day , 9:00·?
Yard Sale Burger

RN 'S Pomeroy
H. C. C. now has openi ng for
fu ll and part t ime R N f or 3
to 11 a nd 11 lo 7 sh ifts.
Upg rad ed sa l ary and shi ft
differ entia I. Con I act Na ncy
Va nMeter direc tor of Nur
sing. 614 992 6606.

Pome roy, Oh . Or 991 7760.
Go ld , si l ve r . ster l ing,
jewel ry , ri ngs, old coins 8.
curren cy . Ed Bu rk ett Bar
ber Shop , Middl epo rt. 991

I m med ia te
opp o r1u n1 t ie~
l or Av on r epr esenta ttves tn
t hese nei gh bor s Mi ddl cp ·
a rt , Pom er oy , and 111e
Township a reas 1n M eios
Co. A lso Ad d ison, Che~ l1 tr e,
Spr ingf iels. Racoo n, Hun
t ing ton and M orqa n Twp
1n Ga lli a Co . Ca ll collect

3416.
OL D FURNI TURE , beds,
ir on, brass. or wood. K it
chen cubba r ds of al l t ypes
Ta bles, round or sq uare .
Wood ice box es . Ol d des ks
and book cases. W ill bu y
complete household. Go ld.
si lv er , old money , poc ket
watches . cha ins. r ings. and
et c. I ndi an A rt ifacts of all
ty pes. A lso buy ing baseball

cards. Osby Mart•n 991
6310.

---·-Help
---W a nt~

1~ __ _

.

Looking for women 1n
Athens. Ga ll ia, and M c•g s
or oth ers who would l ike to
get fr ee th ings or wh o
wou l d l ike to becom e a
dealer for F ri endl y Home
Pa rt ies. Or have par t ies a t
hom e at no cost . Cal l Fr ien
d ly Hom e manager at 61.4
992 3561 for m ore info.

HELP

WANTED

Ex

perienced teacher s needed
for after school ch ildr en's
prog ram s dur i ng school
ye ar . Cra ft s, musi c. dr ama
e l e men t a r y
age
for
child re n w ill be emph as is
App l y aT t he Ga llipo li s
Re cr eation Depar t ment.
518 Se eond Ave, 446 1789 by

Now hi ring gnll coo k &amp;
c har broi l operator _ Appl y
in per son Bob Evans
House.

uo

Yard

Sale
Or . ,

1904
Pt

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick

Pearson,
antiques,

farm ,

until

Si!le

·

Gene BIOWIIing

Redi!l' Shac:k ·• ,,
Silver Bridge Plaza .

Rf' pos.sessed S1qn! Not h1ng.
down! Take over paym ents
$58 50
mon t hly
4'x8"
flash1nq arrow s.gn New
bulb s &amp; letters Call 502 ~
529 277 1 Ask i'lboul Rcpo

456 1
1mrned1dle cmploymcnl
oppor tunity
f ull
l1mc
posi t 1on secre tar•al skil l
and I1Qh l bookkecpp1ng .
M us.! lJe able- To deal wi t h
p_ub l •c. pr1or 10b re l alrd ex
pC'r e1nced necessary All
inqu •res wdl rr eatcd con
fiden ti a lly Send resume to
B o~ 800. 1n care of the
Ga ll1 pohs Daily Tn bunc
825 Jr d Ave . Gr1 1!1 poli s,

Oh 4563 1
Hco tp c Mc l or hand1ca pp1ecl
worn (l rl •n home. M us l l 1fl ,
aook, I1Qhl tl0usck ecp1 nq. &amp;
nursinq. Re f r cq u1r ed Call

614 367 7S 49

Student P{1qe nc·eclf'CI for of
lcnst 12 mos Cll BossMd
M cm or 1ill L1br ary a lter
school,
we eke nd s,
&amp;
hoi id ay s. $2 .35 per tu 1n·
tores. t 1n book s. &amp; librarieS
lie lpt u l , busi c tlu t 1cs .n.
el ud e
SCIV1nq
bOOk~.
chC'rk1nq 1n book s. &amp; er r an'
ds Mus t be 16 yrs old.
Slr •cl 8 wks probat10n
per iod Call 4.46 READ
Posi t1on Availab le Sc hool
bus dr •vcr Qual1flcai1 0ns:
mu s t
pa ~s
phy s •Cft ·l
f'xrlm1ni'lt•on nnrl ho ld
current bus drivers l1cense
for school bu s opercttor .
Respons1bll"
lo
dr1ve
as519ned bus rou te. Sa l arv,
SJ.65 to $4.70 per hour ,
Avai labl e Auous t 23. 19R2
Con tac t Mr . Dav1d Ra l! iff ;
Pr 1nc •pal. P.O. Box 14,
Cheshi r e, 0 11 45620 . (6 14)

367 0101

Phone 1-593 -55 71
Bill Childs - 992-5571

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=========:;=====::;:::;::::;::::;:::=::.

time .

Buying and selling estates.
Free estate appraisal, 304·
428 ·8177.

GRAVELY 4 WHEEL RIDERS
3-8122 12 h.p. Hand lift 50" Mower &amp; Snow dozer .. .............. 14250
1-8123 12 h.p. Hydro.' Lift 50" Mow~r &amp; Snowdozer ............ '4605
1-8173KT (81) Model Hyd. Lift 50" Mower 17 h.p. .. .......... .. .. 4n0
1-8179KT Pro Model Hyd. Lift 60" Mower, 19 h.p. .......... .... .. 5915
1-8199KT Pro Model Hyd. Lift 60" Mower 19 h.p ................ .. 6125

13199

3499

1

3799
4299
4599

1

WALK BEHIND TRACTORS
2-5645 12 h.p. Hand Start with 40" Mower .. ..........., ...... .. ... 2915
1-5260 8 h.p. Elec. Start with 30" Mower ...... .. .. .... ............. 2460
2-5240 8 h.p. Hand Start with 30" Mower ........._. ................. 2260
2-5200 8 h.p. Hand Sta~ with 30¥ Mower .................... .. .. ... 1990

2199
1999
1799
1499

VELY TRACTOR·SALES &amp; SERVICE
,_

MANNING ROUSH-OWNER
204 coNIIOR ,ST.
PH'. 992-2975
POMEROY, OH.

.,
(,

E xpand 1nq
Health ca re
facili ty 1S 1n need ot t ile
foll owi ng per sonne l D1rec
tor of N urs1nq , RC'g
D 1e tic i an. Social Work Con
sulta nt , Req•s tc r ed Nur ses
Apply A rcad •a Nursi nq
Cen t er.
E
Ma•n St .,
Coo lville. Oh or H 1ckory
Creek Nu rs1nq Center , 51
E 4th St The Pl c'l l nS. Oh10.
L 1zon
Ad
O o u q l as
m 1n1sl rator 667 3156 or 797

R.C.S. REAL ESTATE CO.

household. Licensed Ohio·
WV. Buying antiques. 304·
773·5785, 773·9185.

a.m .

64736 19

F.ARM IN G OR M IN E RA LS - Take advilnl~qf' of
both on thi s 150 ac r e f ar m 1n Mc1q s Co 45 to 50
ac r es of tillab l e qroun d w1tn balan ce- 1n Pcl Siurf'
and w oods. Old er 2 slor y .4 b("ldroom farm housn
wi t h garage, ba rn , and ou tbudd1nq s. hns rill
m tner al s, oi l
gas. Lease wdl franster tc lucky
new buye r . Ow ner i s anxious tor &lt;,ate

Ex ·

EMMA Bell Auction Ser·
viCe. Sale each Tuesday, 7
p.m. MI. Alto,Tuesday
accepting
consignments
10

614 69B 7111

·MANY MET HOD S OF F IN AN CIN G
AV AI LABLE.
•DEE P CAS H DI SCO UN TS.
· BELOW MARK ET 1NT ERE 51 RA TES .

perienced AUCTIONEER .
Estates,

You can f'Mn over S550 00.
per mon th wl11ic lparn1nq a
vnluable skill lckc lO rn
puter repa1rer. st1 eer rn e tr~ f
worker. or rcf r1CJ er ,1110n
Plus you will have d SC' curcpart t•mr 10b Wl f tl 1t1c Ar .
my N il i iOn&lt;Jl Guarcl iiiiPr
schoolinq . 8enc11 1 ~ Inc ludea $1.500 00 cnii Sfmcnt
bonus. $35,000 llff' 1n ·
sur&lt;l nc c and l r cf' tu1 110n to
any collcqe or tr tHh· sc t,ool·
1n Wrs t VirQIIl1 ,1
In · ...
lercsled person s may call
()04) 675 J950 or 111 We st
V1rU1111n c all toll trC'r 1 aoo ·

HUNDR E DSO FTH OUSA NDSOFDOLLARS

Henderson

8

H IGH
SCHOO L
GRA DUATES / SENIOR S

T clke adva ntage of S. PE C IAL FI NA NCI NG /\ N D
LOW PRICES, as bU ilder drrtma 11call y r edu ces
his inven tor y . Payments on lh ts con temporary
home can be AS LOW AS $400 PEP MO N TH or
pay off ! he mor tgage in ius! 5 yeM ') and SAVE

sizes of clothes.
sale,

Hc: l p Wa nt ed

BUILDERS YARD SALE

s~et

Pleasant. July 15 thru 18 . 1~
AM to SPM. Al l d ifferent
YARD

11

Stea k 1~=========±=========::;

Parking Lot. Pt . Pl easant.

Meadowbrook

_ !!elp w ~~ t ed __ _

BEDS IRO N. BRASS. old At lent ion
f u r n itur e, gold, si l ver
doll ar s, wood ice box es.
stone ja rs. an tiQu es. etc .•
Co mp l ete
ho us eh old s.
Wr ite; M . D. Mil ler, Rt . 4,

Jul y 23

kitchen with built-In grill, garden space, lots of
trees. Access to lot from three sides.
TERMS: ·uoo.oo cash or acceptable c~eck day of
sale. With an addlftonal $3,500 at lime of closing,
owner wilt finance the balance ·tor a periOd of Iff,
teet~ yiNirs with monthly Installments bas.cl on
12% annllftl lhterest. Both buyer and seller must
.agrH to all terms. ,To be sold wtth tile confirm a·.
lion of .tiM seller. Closing on or before August 21,
,,.,, T.... to be pro-rat.cl. .
.
. , Slltconducted.by: "Bud"McGhH
,
Auction end RNI Estat~ Cp.
._
42• Second Ave., Galtlpolls, OH. 45631
,
Phone 161414-46-0552o,.,ner: Cyntllla OronfiOWSkl
. I
. AUCtioneer: M."L. •.' Bud" McGhee

' ldU condldate w• bo cOioge ~or
'
t-e.&amp; .,...or

•
••

-

months old. Gray . Found in 9
Rutland area couple of WANTED TO BUY 010 tur
weeks ago . 61042·1545.
nitur e and Antiques of a ll
kind s, call Kenneth Sw a i n,

water, several outbuildings, screened In summer

We •• oeoklng aolf rnotiv,tod indlv,iduot to tiOln In our
,.oifrom. Eamfrig fl!ato&lt;Y' for
quatltl.cl lndtvlduoia who co~ thia ,._.., lnd
-•ouign.c!Mm~av..,..tt15,0001ntlnt­
of monogement. bltV•on t19,000 10 t~.ooo In HOOnd

-~

-

- ~ ~ nt ed To Buy

OWNER FINANCING TO QUALlftEO BUYER
LAND CONTRACT
LAND CONTRACT
( 12% Interest 12% Interest)
Located In the village of Thurman next to the ctty
building.
,
An older home with 7 rooms and a bath, 2
fireplaces, forced air fuel oil furnace and features
•a pi'ofesslonally installed woodburner, rural

~•.

RETAIL

3069.

JULY 21, 1982- 6:30 P.M.

-

MANAGEM~T

••
I

FOUND : Mixed between
poodle &amp; terrier . About 7

(Real Estate Only)

.r .0 . Aox 380 '•
GillliPplis, Ohio

45631.

belt ,

PUBLIC AUCTION

Inter ested candidates plea&amp;e forWard resume and
s~lary

are a

climbing

Wil n! ed To Bu y

9

Aucti on ever y Fr i. nig ht at
Reward. Call ~ -093'1 .
t he Hartf or d Comm unity
Cen ter . Tru ck loads of new
LOST : Wheel &amp; tire tor mer chandi se ever y wee k .
trailer. Between Letart Con si gm ents of new and
Falls &amp; Racine. 61H49· used merchand ise al ways
w e l com e.
R ic h a r d
2575.
Rey nol ds Au ct ioneer . 275·

= = = = : l a .m.

USED APPUANCE
SALE

HOM fM Ait~R S

needs

Gallipolis

linemans

Publi c Sa le
&amp; AuctiOn

8

While Ilea collar . Call 614· Trailer Court, Monday,
367 ·0413 or 614-742 ·3120.
Tuesday, Wednesday. 10 :00

' " '~'"" "" '" ltus t~r C:i'l . Pi'lrtv
c.- pe_ri ente necessary. c.u
,tnd ph on'' nef'dcd. C. 1ll ~ . lo vs,
h Bm e d£'cnr . Nn Hl v(' ~ lm e nt ,
d t• liv vr v. coUr CI•ng . All n h1rmg
;-, m"c n slr.ll ors
( &lt;1 ll free
I 800 -~ Sl-'1071 .

Memori al Hospital a.n d
to Rev, Clarf( Baker for
his comforting words:

W••r&lt;l ..,
I:&gt;W oro :-.

1~

Up

to 5 Friday . Clothes, toys,
dog . Named Prince. Has 9curta
ins, &amp; bedspreads.
flea collar . Long brown

Pl ease call 304·773·5794 .

We wi sh 1o express our
gratitude of thank s to
our
many
friend s,
neighbors &amp; relatives
fo"r their manv acts of
k indness shown to us
during th e illness &amp;

LOST

$2·4.00.
kitten. 12 weeks old . 614·
985·3310.
Movi ng sa le, J miles abov e
.. _ _ -~ -----· -- C~est e r . July16and17 .
MOTHER dog , sm all &amp; 5
puppies, 304·675·1605.
YARD sale Friday &amp; Satur ·
day . Lot 34, K &amp; K Mobile ,
FLOWERS , p~one 304-675· Pt. Pleasant, First tim e
5349.
ever .

6234
WOULD lik e to arr ange a
r ide or rid er to Marshall
thi s fall for ni ght c lasses.

Lost and Fo_un!_ _ _

6

Giveaway

3 kittens, 9 weeks old. Call
13 . Be respons oble tor the 4-46·0-467 .

TO ALL INT ERES TED
AND QU ALIFI E D PER ·
SONS :
Th e above nam ed vil lage
proposes to hi r e a f ull-ti me

74 2 - ~ ull a nd

667:- Coo lv lll e

4/ ·Wanted to Re nt

vil lage.

Town Ha ll
Rio Grande, Ohio

Pom er oy
985- Chester
343- Por tl and
247- L etar t Fa ll s
949- Racm e

4R-Equiprpent for Rent
49 -F or Lea se

~

NOTICE OF
INTENT TO HIRE
VILLAGE MARSHALL

675- Pt . P l e a sr~ nt
45 8- l eon
S7 6- Ap p le Grove
773- Ma son
881- New Have-n
895- Lct&lt;Jrl
9J7 - 0uffal o

997 - Midd leporl

388- Vinton

Sc:r, lees

Co., WV
Area Cod e3 04

M el SO il

M e1go; County
Cod e 614

J\r e~

446- Gallipolis
367- Ches hi re

-

•

...

t

' _...........
-..........

41 Houses tor Rent
42·M obi le Hom es for Rent
43 Fa rm s for Rent

Public Notice

Public
Not ice
-

-

"The turbulent air lasted very
briefly and there.was no great loss
of altitude, " said Joe Hopkins, a
United
In Chlcag·o.

,,.,.:::._._..:.:.._:_..:,.___..Ji • ,.

.._I

58 -Fruits&amp; Vegetables
59 For Sale or Trade

Rentals

attorneys argue.
In their defense, the attorney for
the Bellville officials cited a 198J
Ohio Supreme Court decision that
declared a non-chartered munlcl·
pallty can enact ordinances contradicting state law "in matters of
substantiv e local selfgovernment."
State attorneys, however, contend that in-term pay raises do not
constitute " substantive"· matters
but only " procedural" matters.
" The re Is also a statewide roncern relative to the state' s effort to
ensure that municipal fiscal abuse
does not lead to the deterioration or
!allure of vital services or the essen·
tial operations of local government," the state's legal team
added.
"H the village of Bellville Is permitted to grant in-term increases In
compensa lion, the state will lose an
effective tool for the control of the
fiscal Integrity of its political
subdivisions."

'

I

55-Bu ilding Supplies
56·Pets tor Sale
S7 ·Muscialln str,uments

6 Lost and Found

.

'

I

54 -Misc . Merc handi se

s Happy Ads

Mose Durst, preslckint of the
America n !{ranch of Moon's sect,
said that If Moon goes to jail all
religious leaders will be vulnerable.

,~- - -----

I

51·Household,Goods
52·CB . TV &amp; ~ a di o Equipment
53·Antiques

n -Money to Loan

3 Announcf'm enls

Some pare nts claim the church has
brainwashed Its often youthful converts, also known as " Moonles."
Moon was convicted of consplr·
ing with Kamiyama, 40, til evade
taxes on $162,000 in Income from
bank accounts and securities from
1973 to 1975.
Moon contended throughout his
trtal that the money dld·not belong
to him, but to his church, and therefore was exempt from taxes.

"*'

0 •

n Business Opportunit ~

1 Cnr d of Th an ks (pn td tn il dvan ce)
I Cnrd of Tt ta n ks (pa td tn i1 d v r~ n c e)

senten~e

p_.,"'

..... ...... " ' ... . .

1 lnang!al

" We've been finding dead d~
lor two weeks, and we undoubtedly
are going to find m ore dead deer,"
said Lt. BUt Lampton of the
com mission.
" Eight to 10" hunter s were cited
for Illegal camps along the Ever·
glades on F rtday as more than~
officer s stood by to stop tpe hunt
before It began, Lampton said.

· "That's wha£ kept It from •
.
really serious," Peters said "I was
one at the unfortunate feW that

wun't strapped Ill."
~IMaalio, 65, was dashed
alalut lbe celllna of tbe plaae aDd
JUftered wrenched neck. He was
lakeu. to a bolpital, exam1nec1, ilt·
ted with a~ brace and releued
Peters, 43. sAM tbllre we "no
tlnie for panlc" When tile planesud- ·

and

feet. ''

· ·3

T im es -Sentine t- ra

he

Oh•o- t •ou1t F' le a sil nt , W. Va .

'

Jet hits turbulence; 24 hurt
By JACK SCHREIBMAN
Aalodaled Press Wrller -

p

-·

446-234.2
PHOtit 992-2156
675-1333 ·

Case may void part of law

Tennessee's new industry:
ROCKWOOD, Tenn. (API - A
new Industry, e mploying hundreds
of skilled workers and involving
millions of dollars In annual sales,
has crept Into the picturesque
mountains of East Tennessee, but
few public officials are bragging
about the Investment.
Illegal drugs in what law enforcem~t agents call unbelleveable
quantities and promising awesome
profits are being nown into East
Tennessee's small airports to escape the pressure of a joint federal·
state crackdown on Florida' s drug
trilfflc.
;And top-ranking law enforcement officials in the region say unIe5s something is done quickly
a !lout their losing battle against the
drug trade, violence and public corrUption will soon follow the illegal
c:IOJgs.
~ · we ·ne already seeing some of

NEW YORK (AP) - The Rev.
Sun Myung Moon has been sentenced to 18 months in prison and
fined S25.&lt;ro by a judge who said
the Korean evangelist must serve
as a lesson to others who t.ry to
evade taxes.
Lawyers tor Moon and his top fi·
nanclai aide, Takuru Kamiyama,
whp received a six-month sentence
and a $5,&lt;ro nne, said they would
appeal the convictions on tax eva·
slon and conspiracy charges.
Both men remained free on personal recognizance bonds
$250,000 for Moon, $100,000 for
Kamiyama

18, 1982

18, 1982

·--· ~·--- --·-· ~--~- ~·

(,

••

�'
1s, Oh1o- Pomt P
11

- ---

H ~_w a nl!d_

21

j] = =:H ome s for S.ca-,l""e-~

Business

41

They'll Do It Every Time

_£pportunll~

For Sa le House at 2011
Bus1ness opportunity 1n Pt Chestnut Street Phone 446
Pleasant Pom eroy area If 4684 before 2PM &amp; after
yo u re pr ofr c 1ent a t 4 30PM
T eleph one so t c to r mus t be prepanng lndtvldua l
n
depen dabl e Ca ll 614698
come fax returns wllltng to
6284 or 614 698 71 72 w or K under go ex tenstve tratnrng 8 room house large barn &amp;
out of your own home
and would l•ke to convert a corn cnb on 40 acres of
sma ll rnv es tment Into a land On Rt 218 Call
hea
lth y nco me send you r James Copel and 614 742
HOU SE of Lloyd now
2991
hmn g demonstra tor s Pa rt r esume to Da nTax Inc 1n
care Pt Pleasant Reg ster
t m e hou rs f u ll t me pay
PI PI WV 25550
8 r oom house Dou bl e tot
No nvest ment Wrt te L n
dflubl e gar age 680 S 2nd
da W les 204 Ma n St
Sf
M i ddl eport
Oh
R tpt ev wv 2527 1 or call
$1 6500
614 992260 2
372 6801
22
Money to Loan
REF INA NC E or purchase
your home 30 year fi xed
r ate wva &amp; Ohio Lea der
Mort gage 17 E Stal e Sf
A thens Oh 61 4 592 3051

23

P refer someone over 30
years of aqc Wr t c or ca l t

M R Huff man P 0 Box
207 St A lbans WV 25 177 o r
1 304 722 48 40
WA I TRE SS mads bar
te nder s &amp; cler k s wa nted
W r te q u a ld cat ons &amp;
phone number to
Job
P acem e nt P 0 Box 102
Hender son WV 25 106
TELEP HON E so t Ctf or s to
ca ll loca l r es den ts from

hom e opport un ty o ea rn
$200 to $300 per wee k Ca ll
now 602 264 1168

JOB S c rut se s htps ro man
ce exc item en t t ra vel h gh
ea rn ngs Ca l now 602 264
1168
12

S1tuatiOnSwirlted

A UTO MECHANIC New
res dent f rom Flor da
Hond a
aut o
ce rf f ed
mechan1 c w1th own metr c
tools Ha ve 6 yrs standard
aut o r epa1r and bod y work
ex p er 1e n ce
BOB
TAYLOR 61494927 66
In surance

13

Profes s1onal
Serv1ces

C&amp;L Bookkeep,ng
Book kee ping &amp; tax serv ce
for all types of businesses
Carol Nea l
446 3862

Wanted to Do

Li"'wn Mow1ng no yard to
b1g or sm all Rel iabl e and
dependable For es t mate
call 446 31 59 after 6PM 256
1,67
Trash co ll ec t1 on &amp; hau rn g
Ca II 446 4480
lotenor &amp; ex ter or pam
ttflg
Reasonable r ates
C'all fo r free es t mate 446

4173
E x per enced w om an to
h€1u se c lean Reterences
Call614 388 9926
W1ll tudor vour child for
H) story Natural Sc en ce
brolog y or Soc al Stud1 es
wrtte Karen K1dd Box 57
E]Jreka Star Rt Gall pel ts
Oh 45631 Fee negottble

31

Homes for Sale

HOME FOR SALE or
Tr ade l or farm 3 BR com
pt etel y modern home Car
peted 2 lots outbldg Barn
garden cha1n link fence
two porc hes Crly school s
Ph 245 5034
3 bdr br. ck gr eat lac af ton
1 1/2 bl from park full
ba se ment Lower Second
Av e ex tra lot f1repl ace
mod
k tchen ca rpeted
Call 446 4826

3 b dr
ho me n e wly
r edecora ted
mmf con
d1f on c •ty schools Many
ex tr as c a II 446 3897 or 446
2316
N ce twm e 3 bdr or trade
for smal ler home Loc ated
n Crow n C ly Oh Call61 4
256 62 44

w~z--do

By owner beaufttul 3
bedroom
doubtewtde
Mob1 le Home 2 baths
lar ge I v1ng room fully
equ pped k1t chen Also 1n
bath
on oncottage
e largewrth
lot
elud edAll
3 room
Loca ted n Letart Fa11 s
Oh1 0 Pn ced below cost
614 247 3615
HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad
d1t1on 3 bedrooms tam ly
room w fh f.replace cen
fr at a1 r ba sement phone
304 67 5 1542

bru sh hogg.ng

Deluxe 2 bdr apt Part ally
furniSJled
off
Street
parking
Second Av e
Gallipolis
Call 614 256

1980 Wmdsor 14x70 new
cond Delu )(e k•tchen large
11v 1ng r oom &amp; bath 2
bedr m Hi dden ul tl room
379 2310
1980 BA YVIEW DELUXE
ce ntral a1r firepl ace gar
den tub Ul'\der p• nn ng w1fh
or w thout applt ances Call
446 6211 or 614 388 99 16

Porla ble Off ce Building
12x40 ft S4 000 Bu It by
Sturd House E xc cond 3
offt ce spa ces gas heat a1r
condtftoned com mode &amp;
Si nK Located 2nd &amp; Brown
St n Mason W V Contact
H &amp; R BlocK Pomeroy 614
992 3795 or Call even1ng 304
773 5535 after 6
JS

197112X60 KirKWOOd almost
one acre s ot w th com
merc 1al gar age Ca ll 614
256 6640
1979 Nashau 14x70 $8 500
1979
Fatrmont
14x70
SlO 500 1971 Homett e 14x70
$9 500 1974 Sherton 14x 70
$6 500
Kanauga Mobile
Home Sal es Kanau ga Oh
446 9662
Tra1t er for sal e $4 800 Call
614 388 8275

__ _ ____
"

USED MOBILE
576 2711

HOME

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
Ltcensed &amp; nsured Call
304 576 2711
1973 14xl0
3 bedroom
mobil e nome large r ooms
304 882 2820

lots &amp; Acreage

2 lot s n Oh10 Valley
M emory Gardens SJOO
Call 446 1391
Pnme 2 acre r esrdenttal
lot Utr 1t t1 es Overlook.ng
rrv e r
1n
P o meroy
Panoram c v1 ew Wrll con
s1der la nd contra ct 614 992
6254
TWO acr e lots 150 fl road
frontag e
c•tv water
behind 84 Lumber ca I 304
675 6873 675 3618
28 ACR ES tobacco allot
ment mmerat nghts no
bulld1ngs $10 500 304 675
6851

1971 TWO bedroom m obil e
home 304 675 1845

142 acre farm near R10
Grande
Good house
burldmgs and barns tobac
co base &amp; live stock Call
446 2599
40 acres 6 rm house and
barn tobacco base on Sf
Rt 218 7 112 miles from
c1ty Call 614 245 9222 after
6

41

D&amp;W
: ESTATES, INC.

3 bd room house 1'h baths
Family room and f r e
pla c e
stove
and
refrigerator furn
Car
pellng S300 mo dep req
No pets Inside 614 992 2362
after 4 p m

3 room fu r n1shed a'pt
Deposit &amp;
refer ences
reqwred no pets adults
only InqUire 602 4th Ave
Gall1pol 1s after 4PM

Efhency apartm ents 1st
floor &amp; 2nd floor Call 446
0957
729
2nd
~ ve
GallipoliS

3 room turn shed apt $250
month rnc ludes uttltfles
l nqu r e at Mergs Inn 1n
Pomeroy

LIFE
INSURANC E
428 Second Ave
c i111446 0552 Anvftmo

TWO bedroom mob1le
home partially furnished
$200 month 304 615 4154

BMR 412- Older home located 1n Thurman Con
ta1ns 7 rooms and bath 2 f repla ces prof ess onaliy
tnsfalled woodburner forced a1r fuel furnace Out
Stde features a garage and a sc r eened summ er ktf
chen wr t h burtt rn grrll Call for appo ntment

3 bedroom all electnc
14x70 $200 monthly plus
elecfn c Glenwood 304 576
2441 or 304 576 9073

BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION• - Two story
home prsently be1ng used as a duplex could be
easily converted to stngte f amily Chot ce locatton
near WaShington School Call for deta11s

6 room unfurntshed mobrle
home stx and one half
m11es on Redmond R1dge
C1ty water $125 month 304
675 3377

BMR 389- Thts frne home has 4 bedrooms and 1s
located c lose to town You wrll have a large lot wrth
a country atmosphere and have all th e c1ty con
ven ences Call now
BMR 398 - GET READY FOR SUMMER• Owner transferred and must se ll th1 s 3 BR ranch
Close tp town 1nctudes deluxe lh36 tn ground pool
Call for an apporntment today

THREE FOURTHS m1le
out Sandh ill Rd 304 675
3834

MBR 407F - Camps1te Pofentrat 32 ac r es m/ 1 wtth
frontage on Raccoon Cr as well as frontag e on
blacktop h1ghway
BMR 410 - A frame s1tuated on a bea ut1ful wooded
sett ng You w11 love the a tmospher e Owner frnan
cmg for quat fed buyers Low 30s

BMR 41lFJ- Mtn farm loc ated 1ust off the Ap
palach1an Ht ghway near ta sc kson 31/:l acr es m/ 1
wrth an older two BR home SEveral oufbulldmgs
JUSt nght for letsuret1me or full It me 1 v ng

BMR 415 E)(fra nr ce b• level rn c1udes J
bedrooms tg family room w 1th br ck ftreptace
18x21 hvmg room eat 1n kttchen lg ut1 l1tY room
and garage Sttuated on large tot C1ty school
d1stnct Call for detail s

!-=-=========-_!_=========:.

BMR 416 - Want
a top 01 the gro
mortgage assum

Space for R en!

r anch style home w1th
Jdmg a poss1ble 8 50%
call now

7~79

s mall
tra i l er spa ce s
Mason 304 773 5651
49

For Lease

For lease 2 bdr cedar ran
ch
beautiful
stone
fireplace
wrap around
deck lovely 6 acre setting
near Green School Call
W1seman Agency 446 3643

S\

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
wa shers
dryers
refrrg er at or s
ranges
SKagg s A p
pllances Upper R 1ver Rd
be5rde Stone Crest M otel
446 7398
BEMCO mattresses or box
spnngs lu l l or tw n $58 6
p,JI!Ce Naugahyde hea vy
wood I v1ng room su1te
$.595 P llqw arm sof a &amp;
chair $295 Roll top desK
dark &amp; l1ght Sl89 BunK
beds
compl ete
rn clude
mattress $199 Compl ete
water bed shop w1th 10
bedroom sutte s on dtspl ay
startmg pnce S229 Up to
$2500 B1g daddy coc ta,l &amp;
ond tables $50 Wall A Way
recliners $169 and up La
Z Boy rechn er s m stock
USED FURN I TUR E 5 pc
&amp; 7 pc
d1 nette se ts
bedroomsulte Hollywood
style bunk beds Fla.r Fur
n1ture &amp; Des,gn Gai i iPOI s
Ferry
WV
Open 9 6
PnoneJ04 675 1371

s

GE automat1c washer r eal
n1ce S90 Call446 8181

'&lt;o'UCiO

NO LAYOFFS HERE - FamilY run grocery &amp;
gasoline bu s ness Property has a stocked grocery
store and 3 bedroom mobrle home on 2 89 acres Ad
ded bonus for the bustnes s person w1th a green
thumb 1s a 24x40 greenhouse
N0040

..

BMR 421 - New LIS!mg - PosSible Loan Assump
lion at 8'12% 1nterest N1ce 3 BR ranch on 1~ flat
lot priced at $35 000 Better cal l on th• s one to" 'v' 1

Nancyt~~~;r~~~~:•~ciat•
Real Eotato - Genotal

Real Eltato -

SEE FOR YOURSELF'
Just take one little peep at our new llstmg and you
will agree fh1s home has been rmmacul afely kept
Comfortable 3 or 4 bedroom ranch Features a
hvrng room famtly room modern k fchen full
basement 2 car garage Close to town An af
fordable home pnced n the 40 s

General

NEW LISTING - Pomeroy - An excellent locat1on
and an outstandtng home makes this a good buyt 4&amp;
bedrooms 21h baths formal d1n1ng room futl
basement trnrshed a1ttc (2 exrra rooms } fully m
su lated v nyl s1d1ng pat o A rea l buy for S33 000

1

•
T
E
Just a l1tlle prell•er tnao~n' many MOdern 3 4
bedroom brrck hemP ~'O~l,.v 1v1ng &amp; dtnrng room
Large k1lchen Full\\~ nl)l'l Large 2 car garage
workshop &amp; barn ~' \{," "• acres more or less
01 landscaped groun • • Spnng Will be breathless
tlere! Owner w•ll help frnance lOo/o ln1 Rate
6 ACRE S MORE OR LESS
Good home s te and well.., BOO lb tobacco base Some
t1mber owner wil l sell on land contract - 10% 1nt
rate Low down payment

Ron Ca~day, Realtor. 446-1636
~udrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 Locust St, Gallipolis, Ohio

NEW LISTING - Harrrsonvllle - A 3 bedroom
double W1de on approx '12 acre lot Eye catching
front bay w ndow Ph baths d1n1ng room lt v mg
room family r oom equ1pped k1tch en front rorch,
central a1r $30 000
NEW LISTING - New L1ma Road - Completely
furn1shed A se ven year old ranch w•th J bedrooms
bath full basement W11M family room ana utilitY 2
a1r cond un1ts wood burner back por ch 2 storage
bUild ngs on 2 29 acres $43 500

WAKE UP TO THE SOUNDS OF TilE
FOREST L1sten to the birds watch the squlr
rels 111ay1ng lh1s home 1s SIJrrourded by trees
Over 3 acres w•lh iUSf enough trees cut to allow
space for the nome and garden The garden IS
planted and grow1~g beaullfully There are fruit
trees and a grape arbor 3 bedroom nome
baths full basement w1th recreation room
!~replace woodburner, winter s supply 01 Wood In
eluded Located on Rt 588 between Gallipolis and
'
"
ROdney $50,000 Just Listed'

w,

NEED A HOUSE that Will almos t pay for Itself'
Th•s 8 room 4 bedroom home fn M1ddleporf not only
has a 3 bedroom garage apt that could rent lor $200
month but also has an 8'h % assumable loan w1fH
monthly payments of S2B7 00 Inc ludes taxes and
1ns w1lh a down payment of $6 300 lor 25 year term
on the balance of $28 700 Tota l pnce $35 000

SUPIR FAMILY ROOM he$ stone
beamed ceiling, lots 01 wmdows overlook 1ng veo:y
Drettv backyard Formal living arid dining rooms, 3
bedrooms, carpeted Very nice neighborhood
city, $47,700 JUST LISTE;DI
near

~UST A ' LITTLE BIT COUNTRYt -Country at
mospnere wllh city convenience 3 bedroom brJck
ranch Attached garage full basement with large
recreation room Efflc1ent kitchen has W1llltt
wood cabinets, range, adlolnlt;19 fam•ly room has
fireplace bUill In bookcase covered patio for
summer dining Nearly an acre lawn Ky~~er
Creek area Just minutes from town 519 000
JUST LISTED!
'

FARM - Approx 82 5 acres 30 acres tillab le 27
pasture 2 ponds barn severa l sheds ne1fer barn
Also a n1cely remodeled 3 bedroom home, 7 rooms
and bath ln~ulated G FA heal w1!h woodburner
Summer k1tchen In full basement $89,500 00
REALTORS
Henry E. Cieland Jr, G R I
Jean Trussell
...
Oothe Turner
Ofhce

~IVF.

ACI!ES KYGER
Remodeled 3 bedroom frame
tn kttchen 2.b:36 barn&gt;, ~~;~~~:~j~~:
tobacco base Beauhful ~
527,000- W11i buy a nearly
nome, fully carpeted
Kyger Cre&lt;!k SchOOls Call s09n

FITS YOUR BUDGET! - • $39 500
Tht@fl
bedrooms l'h bath , ranch Family r00111 With
fireplace Attached garage, clly SCI)ools, few mllfs
from city Good locallon Price just nlduc
ed owne&lt; needs quick sale
'

.KIST L1STEDI - Mobile nome park
Creek area S1x units all presenlly ,.,,..,'""
cellentlnvestment propery $60,0011

Irick and bloc~
BUSINESS OtlPORTUNil:Y building on ~'x150' lot on !!estern Aw In
Gallipolis Presently In use as certy out Excellent
tocatoon Call for show1ng WI 500

cnervt Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 3171
Velma Noclnsky, Assoc
Phone 742 3092

•

~~~~~~~~~;;T~S~~~~~~~~l
52
CB,TV, Rad•o
i
t
Equ pmen
GEMTRONICS CB tube
type super scanner s sec
1 ons tower $275 304 89S
3422

M1sc Merchand1ce
19751 or w1nter quarters
ply at
the CIIY
Off1ce
518
I •••cn,nr Ave 446 1789

54

Mise

RATLIFF'S POOL CEN
TER Pools sale supplies &amp;
'nstallal10n 403 2nd Ave
GallipoliS on Call 446
6579
In ground Ablove
ground
Repossessed S1gn' Nothmg
down 1 Take over payments
$58 50
monlhly
4 x8
flashtng arrow s gn New
bulbs &amp; letters Call 502
529 2721 Ask about Repo

TWOMOaiLEHOMES-UpptrRI7 Ava•la... CII'
corrtract with U,CIIO down payment balance at
J ¥ear term, S333 67 monii]IV N•ce lev'! lot

i

EMC PA system w1lh 4
large speakers
5 shure
mrkes
tots of e&gt;&lt;tras
Pnced to sell Call 614 256
6517 after 30 614256 6201

s

~~· l 1t6 E Yt'

8 J H•llltorl AUK

446 4140 E

( IYII!.W•Iker Auo&lt; lU

nu

PHONE_ 446-3643

-55

21.

m

S011111fU HIUS,I11&lt;.

2'•

ACR
ILE
Very nrce 3 bedroom bnck m Charoia s
H lis Th s bnc k ranch offers ov er 1650
sq ff of I vtng m a quahty ne gh
borhood Has famtly room w th w ood
burn er equrpped k tchen 3 bedrooms
2 oaths heat pump 2 car garage itnd
ov er 2 acres yard $69 900

For sale Cabtnets
gas
water heater doors .n
ctud1ng st 1drng oak door
mtsc 1tems Call 614 992
6254
1980 Kawa saki 750 L TO
12 000 m1 $1 500 or best of
fer A lso cast ron church
bel l 614 742 2380

=========c.J~=========-.!..:=========-1
Real Eatate - General

0ntu~J;

9% ASSUMPTION- NEW LISTING Large 8 yr old tn level situated on ap
prox 1 acre In Evergreen 3 bedrooms
tncludrng a Ux22 master surte w/walk
'" closet &amp; private bath fully equipped
kitchen 2 full baths several room
possrbrl1tres 1n lower level woodburner
2 car garage large concrete c rawl
space &amp; 8x9 covered porch Owners
anx1ous to sell at $64 500

Over 1 000 ceram c molds
kilns and suppltes 614 742
292Sor742 2085

::

fal n
9'1,% ASSUMPTION
KYGI;R ANTIQUE LOVERS CREEK SCHOOLS- Brand new llstmg love wtth th s charm ng turn of the ce n
located on an attract ve 1 2 acre tree tury 2 story home It s located on an 1m
studded yard has 3 bedrooms famtly press ve 1 acre lot w th tail tr ees and
has beautiful oak woo dw ork
4
room woodburner rec room new car
pet full bath &amp; plumbed for 2nd bath 1n bedroom s fam iv room dtn1ng r oom
lower level &amp; equ 1pped kitchen Call for w / hutch equtpped k•t chen new bath
basement and much more Only $.49 500
appo ntment $56 000
Owners w II help ftnan ce

DON'T LEAVE TOWN
WITHOUT TA.LRING
TOUS.

Our VIP Referral semce has the type of expertise you'd expect from a
member of the Number 1 real estate sales orgamzatlon 1n Amer1ca It can
put you '" touch w1th the nght CENTURY 21 off1ce to g1ve you an overv1ew
of' tlle area you're mov1ng to. Neighborhoods Pnces Schools Everythmg
Let us handle all the details. Call or stop by today

475 KA
listing 1ust
Rt 35 near hospital
shoppmg theatre etc Brtck ranch w1fh
3 bedrooms eQu pped kttchen drnlng
room 1'!1 bath nat gas cent arr new
carpet 2 car garage and large flat
yard SS9 500

811, % ASSUMPTION - very affract1 ve
home Wlfh excellent tmancmg terms
or 4 bedroom tn level loc ated off Rt 35
Has 1112 baths woodburner d nmg
room equ pped ktfchen 2 car gar age &amp;
centr al a r $59 500

COLONIAL HOME - 40 ACRE SFl
TtNG - And p rcedi\ t ont y$65 000 T h5
•s a love ly 4 be droo m 5 y r ol cl horn f'
With a be aut•ful v f'W i!Oc1 QU r t
sec lude d se tt•O Q Tn• s hO'llC' h f' 5 cqu r&gt;
ped k t chcn
t.r r p• ~rr'
2 ba tn s
basronen t d n• no room
ofl cc or
d en woodburn•n Q l urn.lcr plus 30x50
net ill bMn 10 acr es of cr op h~ l i!OCf' n
woods Ca ll tor app o ntm cnt

of tod ay s bes t m ark el buy s Ove r 1700
sq ft of 1 v 1ng area nc lud es 3 k ng

31

I
I
I
room 1

RE OUC ED TO $59 500 - Delin t ely one'

HIGH AND pRY - MOdern 7 room
house only e1ght years old Tobacco
barn and base Pasture and wooded
acres Townshrp road well marnta1n
ed Harr son Townsh1p Must sell ..
$50 000
#157

LISTING - Four rooms
on
an and a"ract1ve sett1ng 14
acres
11 ng grass land wtfh a good
clea
eam runnrng through 1t Hun
tr n
n Twp Close to mmes Pnced rn
the lower $40 s
1154

SMALL FARM - 25'h acre s 2 story
farm home large bar n root cellar and
1 0751b tobacco base Also tncluded rs a
tra ctor wagon bush hog and wood
burner Listed n the S30 s
N 127
LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN• Then
look. no further 42 acres 5 room cot
tage Dug well Mostly wooded Morgan
Twp Rock bottom pnce
N130
JUS1 ONE LOOK and lh1S home Will be
sold 3 bedrooms I vtng room kttchen
bath &amp; ufrlrty room Ntce carpet Car
part Cham link fence surrounds yard
Concrete dnve Crty schools Prrce rn
lowSJO s

CANADAY
!REALTY

Plt.992-2259

'

LAKESIDE HOME pmed at $26 000
Home has 2 bedrooms ma1n bath
11 v1ng room utrhty room and nice b1g
lawn with cha1n link fence Ltv e year
round or sum mer fun rn the sun
N152

Real Estate - General

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

.JIBil
14?6/tf
o•""'"'""
f,

HAPPINESS FOR
SALE
3
bedrooms l'h baths shower super
tamrty room really an eye catch er 1n
eludes stone ftreplace heat o later
centra l arr deluxe kt tchen well kept
home If tnferested call any of our
qualrf1ed realtors
# 110

to

BMR ~02F - ChecK on this one - 37 acres w1th
1401 lb, tobacco base, 30x30 barn NOW available
on land contract at 10% 1nterest Call for defa11s

_

j;},c

NEW LISTING- BMR 420F - Th s line home IS
only three years old II featur es 1400 sq 11 of 11vmg
space wrth 3 large bedroom S~ 1'12 b aths la~g e hvrng
room and a lovely krtchen Wrth dm nq area full
baSement Pr1ced at only $60 000 Oh yes 1 am sure
your Wtll en,oy the 24 acres of land tf stt s on

Evenmgs Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367.0228
Nella Sm1th, Assoc. 388-8649
Bob france, Assoc. 446-ll62
John Fuller, Realtor, 245·9473

1975 case 450
tractor 1 800 hrs
very
good cond
514 900 Call
446 4.537

2 10 gal acquanum &amp; stan
ds compl ete $50 1 10 gal
l;Cquanum &amp; stand com
plete $25 F1sh 1ncluded
Call446 19«

SWA I N
AUCTION FURN I TURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Ol ive 51
Gallipolis 9x l2 I noleum
rug S22 3 ptece 11v1ng room
su1tes couch love seat
cha~r S199 2 p1ece I1V1ng
room sutfes from $140 up
love seats from $70 up
maple d.net sets from $99
to $199 wall huggers $100
reel ners
$80
maple
r ockers S49
bedroom
suttes $150 vanefy of table
lamps marble top stands
S30 and up !win and lull
box spr ngs &amp; mattress
!new) 5100 several utilitY
cab1nefs k 1tchen cab1nets
wood &amp; metal baby beds
chests of drawers $25 to
$60 3 way r ecl1ners $100
gas &amp; electr•c ranges
refngerators wash stands
bunk beds complete wtfh
bunktes $170
sev eral
dressers hail trees beds
brass head board beds $35
bookcases
smok e rs
Hoover sptn dry washer
wr nger type washers hut
ch coa l &amp; wood heaters
teleVISIOns fans new tools
of ail krnds vanety of
srlverstone cookware Call
446 31S9

Real Estate - General

lkt ~~'~rn•n Broker

2 112 yr old Whirlpool 30
elec range S150 2 112 yr
old Bassett chest SSO 1 yr
old Bassett boxsprlng and
mattress 1/2 SIZe S50 Call
614 245 9502

frames$20
Used
Furn•ture S25 &amp;$30
bookcase
ranges and TV s 3 m tes
out Bulav•lle Rd Open 9am
to 7pm Mon thru Fn 9am
to 5pm Silt
446 0322

BMR 419- New L1stmg- L ovely 4 bedroom home
m GalliPOliS 2 full baths den formal ,drn1ng rm
Call for compl ete details

93 ACRES - Vacant land good 1nvestment proper
fy Some ftmb er all m1neral nghts located in Ad
d1son Twp
N1032

I

w•de electric stove
G E electnc dryer
Kenmore automatiC
wa~her
S65
Maytog
automattc washer SSO 614
742 2352

Bedroqmorsuites
maple
prne Bassett
flnrsh
Cherry $795
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses
$250 and up to $395 Cap
la1n s beds $275 complete
Baby beds $99 Mattresses
or box spnngs full or tw1n
558 firm S68 and S78
Queen sefs $195 4 dr
chests $42 s dr chests
$54 Bed frames S20 and
$25 10 gun Gun cabmets
$350 d1nette cha1rs $20
and 125 Gas or electnc
ranges
$325
Baby
matre;ses $25 &amp; $35 bed

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
J m Coctlun Auoc ••te ••• rtll t:vt

30
$45
$75

L AYNE SFURN ITURE
Sofa chair rocker ot
taman 3 tables (extra
heavy by Front1er) $685
Sofa cha1r and loveseaf
S275
Sofas and cha~rs
priced from $285 to .$795
Tables S38 and up to $109
H 1de a beds $340
queen
Slle $380 Recliners Sl75
toS295,LampsfromS18 to
S65 5 pc d•nettes from $79
to $385 7 pc $189 and up
Wood fable with 4 chatrs
$219 up to $495 Desk $110
Hutches S300 and $375

WISEMAN

Plastic Septic Tanks Stale
and county approved 1,000
gal lank price S340 Other
sizes 1n stock haul m your
p1ckup truck Call 614 2lkl
5930 Jackson Oh RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

a.

BMR 418- Bnck &amp;Jnd frame s1tuated on acre&amp;
eludes 3 BRs 2 baths
room w•th flreplaet
and woodburner lg
n d.nrng room a~d
deluxe k rtchen Ca ll lor detatls

,b.

bY Lllll'Y Wrtght

KIT N CARlYlE ••

Household Goods

For sale Kelvlnator heavy
duty washer dryer 2 yrs
old ew:cetlent condlfton
Call446 6559

BMR 417F- We are offer ng one of Ga ll•a County s
fmest farms ConSISting of 218 acres Thrs fine farm
rs m good product on 40 acres cropland excellent
pasture, and lots of bu1ldmgs A lso a tme old farm
home Call now for more details

OWNERS WILL FINANCE - Pnce has iUSI been
reduc ed to S5 000 Large ran ch overlookrng tne rrver
3 m1les below town Has 3 bedrooms basernent
garage
N1595

CALLUSTOBUYORSELL

a n~t"'"' ...E"D-

R£.1)\IC :,O

OWNERS DESPERATE TO SELL - May be pur
chased for S5 000 or SIO 000 down payment or land
contra ct Very lovely ranch 3 bedrooms f.replace
1'h car' garage large lot no reasonable offer
refused
"1148

MUST SELL- Letart OH Large I1V1ng room Wllh
fireplace F1nanc 1ng available Askmg $10 500

5651

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perl&lt; Route JJ North of
Pameroy Large lots Call

Brok er Auctroneer
2 bedroom t ra 1ter Real
nt ce adults only Brown s
Tra11er ParK Mmersv111e
614 992 3324

Furnished Rooms

Rooms with cookmg car- le
air $40 a week 304 773

46

3 bdr house good locatron
2 bdr apt HUD excepted
A One Real Estates Carol
Yeag er Realtor Call 304
675 5104 or 675 5386

QUIET STREET clean neighborhood 2 bedroom
fratler equtpped k1fc hen spactous irvtng room now
rents for $200 Ask1ng $12 000

TWfN Rivers Tower now
renfrng to quahf1ed ap
ptlcants age 50 and old er
Phone 304.675 ~79 HUD
aso•sfed proJect

2 bd room turn
Apt
Uti1111es 1nc No pets $205
per m o 992 7177 after 6
pm

BMR 414 - 12x60 mobile home s1tuated on a 1 ac re
pius lot Includes furnrture has r ear patto wtth
cover covered front deck 12x 2.4 garage wtth
storage

NEW LISTING - Located In Syracuse Th1S home
has an extra large lot and 5 POSSible bedrooms The
d nrng room and krtchen are spa c•ous ktfchen rs
fully eqUipped 1ncludmg diShwasher AsKmg

1365

un
floor 2 bdr
furniShed apt downtown
GallipoliS C~ll at ~31 4th
Ave Gall•polis

Hom es for Rent Lease or
Land contract t n town or
country
Call
Strout
Really 446 OOOB

CENTRAL REALTY

SMALL furni shed apar t
men!, references 304 675

992

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

Real Estate _ General

Three room furnr shed
apartment adult&amp; no pets
Po.nt Pleasant Phone 304
675 2453

steep1ng room 919 2nd
Ave
Gallipol i s $125
utlllles paid
range &amp;
refrlg single male Call
446 4.116 after 7PM

Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

Houses for Rent

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - LIVIng room ha~
woodburnmg I replace 1'12 bath hardwood floors.
well constructed and •nsulated ASK1ng$35 000

Wide

2 bedroom house
un
furmshed n ce &amp; cl ean
So me
carpettng
full
b a sement
Oepo s •f
r equ.red. 614 992 3090

F:C
a=:'
rm
:==sc;fo=r=s;;:a=.l=e
3:;3;==c;;

THREE r oom s &amp; bath
located on Rt 33 304 B95
3422

NEW
LISTING
Hemlock Gr ov e Over
21/ 2 acres all fenced
w fh 3 bedorom home
SALE S r ec ord •ng
n
and a 14 x25
barn
d01Stn es $1 000 to $3 000
V e ry
pr vate
per wee k comm ss 1on
$?5 000 00
Album cassette 99 cents
PRICED REDUCED
aH labels All new re leases
S5 000 00 on lh1s 3 or 4
SJO sale you make $29 00
bedroom home base
Pcoven method for fop
ment garage and cor
org aniZer Call now 602 264
ner lot tn Mtddleport
11~
Owner will help Wtfh
ftnan crng Reduced fo
~ - - - - - - ' -'I $30 000
Jf
Mobile Homes
ST RT 124 - Just Olf
for Sale
R t 7 by pa ss Large 2
s tor y
home
4
bedr oo m s
bath
2
NOTICE
porches
enclo se d
s•tuated on 1'1" acres
Lowest
w1fh strawberry patch
Prtces
and n•ce garden area
Ever
$25 000
On
BAUM ADDITION •
Lovely 3 bedroom brick
New~14'
home
2 baths
full
basement W1lh family
MOBILE
room and f !replace
Carpeted
drapees
HOMES
Central a~r and eQUIP
ped k•tchen Owner w•ll
From
•
help f1nance Call to
$9 995 00
day
LOTS - One acre lot
for nome or trailer
S1 000 down payment,
balance land contract
Also a :lA acre lot rn
Harrrsonvllle ..With
Wilh 2 Locations
water tap for , ....only
Rl 93 North
$2.400
Jackson, Oh1o

2 bedr furn shed hou se on
Texas Rd Contact Stella
Arnold 446 0756

RpRtals

3 FLAT ACRES- In Rae me Oh10 Owner Wil l help
f1nance AsKmg $16 500

I;:=========;;
HOBSTETTER REALTY

N ce cl ea n 2 bedroom
house 3 miles from town 1
mile out 218 Cal1446 9686

Furn1shed apt 3 rooms &amp;
bath
7 Nell Ave
Galhpolis $200 water &amp;
electric pa1d Call 446 4.116
afleriPM

APARfMENTS
mob1le
homes
houses
Pt
Pleasant and Galhpol ls
614 446 8221 or614 245 9484

4S

bedroom unfurntshed
m obtle home rn Chesh1n:
requtred Call

F or rent or sal e 3 bdr
water f ront home 112 m1
off Rt 7 on Raccoon Cr eek
Call614 256 6413

ONE acr e drtlled well
septic t ank
25x25 un
f mshed block bu• ldtng
$6 500 304 675 2949

NEW LISTING - Close to Route 7 out of M d
dleport 3 bedroom newer home on 2 acr es Rental
trailer also Ask mg $35 000

HOM E for sa te Mt Vernon
Ave Under $40 000 Call
304 675 2973

House
120 3rd
Gal lipolis 2 bdr
dep r eq The
Agency 446 3643

Furn1shed apt
1 bdr
adults $200 uti Illes pd, 607
2nd Ave Gallipolis Call
446 4416 after 7PM

Apartments 304 675 5548

1st floor turn1shed apart
ment adults preferred ref
&amp; dep required Call 631
4th Ave Galhpolrs

6506

Bustness Butldrngs-

ONE m ile out of Glenwood
on Hannan Tra ce Rd 3
Plu s bedro om s
large
I v1ng room
cathedral
ce111ng w ood bea ms stone
f r epla ce stone &amp; ceda r on
out stde pond and 31f2
acres garage Phone 304
576 2587

Bus ness
Opportun fy

286 3752
or
Corner 2nd &amp; V•and
PI Pleasant, w Va
67$ 4424

4 room unfurnished apt all
carpeted
utrhhes pard
adults only no pets Call
446 3437

F~rst

$32 000

Ceo•1• S Hobstelter h
81111101
PHONE 74ll00l
21

Mob1te Homes
for Rent

12x65 3 bdr mobile nome
Clean alf cond, furnished
good 1ocat1on ref req Sec
dep req Call446 8558

3 bedroom 2 and one half
bath br ck double lot a.r
cond•trontng
basement
2423 Mt Vernon 304 615
7723

Real Estate - General

3().1 895 3422

TRI ST A TE
MOBILE
HOME S USED MOBILE
HOMES CAR S T RUCKS
GALLIPOLI S
CHECK
OUR PRICE S CALL 446
1572

Apartment
for Rent

Furnosn 2 rooms and bath
clean, no pels adults only
Dep requ~r~ Call 446
1519

Mob1le Home Eureka 1
Bdr furn riverfront lot
ref &amp; deposit Adults SlOO
mo 1 643 2644

34

----

18

44

SEVEN
room
house,
Mason WV Llll'llt yard
carpeted $225 month plus
utlllt1es 614 949 2619

Mobile Hom e
_s_ _
for Sale

Rent

TWO bedroom tra11er k1t
chen furniShed marrree:
couples only 304 675 1076
Also 2 tra11er lots f ur
nlshed sewer &amp; water

N1ce 2 bedroom Large
Yard $175 month 614 985
424.1

42

51

42

Houses for Ren1

Real Estate

SANDY A ND BE AV ER In
surance Co has off ered
se rv1 ces for f1r e 1nsurance
cover age 1n Ga II a County 6 room house &amp; bath barn
for almost a century
bldgs 5 acres more or tess
Farm home and per sonal Near Eureka owner carry
propert y coverag es are note Ca ll6142566735
av ail abl e to mee t 1n
d~v dual
needs Contact By owner 3 room cottage
Ka I Burl eson
ag ent
w th bath Also 3 bd room
Phone 446 2921
doubl e w•d~ Trailer w1th 2
bath s A ll on one large lot
Loc ated in town at Letart
15 ~chools lnstructro__r:a _
Falls Oh 614 247 3615 after
pm RuthCtrct e
Karate the ult•m ate n se lf
defence all pr val e lesson s
Men women &amp; chddren
2 stor y house &amp; lot m
1nstru ct1on thru bl ac k belt
Ra c1ne by owner 6 room s
A) so a v ail able Ka r at e 3 bedrooms drn1ng room
urn f orm s pu c h1ng and I vtng room
kitchen &amp;
ktck ng bags an d protec
bath Gas furnace CJty
t Cve equ1pm ent
Jerry wafer cl ose to ~hoots
Low ery &amp;
A ss ocrat es Good loc at1 on
Prt ce d
Ka r at e Stud10
143 reason able 614 949 2454 or
8'\Jrhngton Rd
Jackson
614 949 2661
cih Call6142863074
Wh te s School of T aekwon
Do KorE~ n a Kar at• 426 M n
Sl
Pt
Pl easant
New
s udents excep t at any
c la ss M en
wom en or
chtldren Hours Tue &amp;
l'}lurs 6 to 9PM and Sa t 11
to 2 Full l1ne of Century
Marttl Art s supplies also
sOld Cal l 614 367 0480 or
446 3426 after 6PM

32

- -- -

3 bd room furnished house
wood burner, washer
dryer
S275
mo
plus
Ufllifle5 614 992 34(UI

A VON Tnree peopl e to sell
AVON Ca l l446 3358

BABYSITTER MOihers he
Iper must be ab le to li ve 1n
14 day s n gh ts a mon th t
w II
su pp l y room and
boCt r d sa lary of $300 a
mont h p lus transpor tnlron
to and from my home

Ohto-Potnt

sant, W Va

1915

THIS IS AN EXCEPTIONAL HOME Cl ean well kept four rooms and bath
ut 1 ty r oom breezeway carport Gas
furna ce crty water You must see to ap
P rec rate Prtced 1n the S20 S
N 1Sl
SUPER LISTING - Pn ce aed terms
will se ll th s attra ct v e 3 bedroom ran
ch Full ba sement vrnyl srdmg Large
f lat lawn w th1n walk1ng d1sfance to
stor e and post off1ce Pr ced 1n the
$30 s
N102
PRICE REDUCED to $22 900 on lh1S
well marntarned home tn Rutland 2
bedrooms 1tv1ng room family room or
format d mn g bath enclosed porc h
Basement Ntce lawn Storage bu ld1ng
Reasonabl e term s
N 104
EXCELLENT
BUSINESS
OP
PORTUNITY CeramiC bus ness
growrng fa st Act fast• Parnts molds &amp;
kilns gong at be ow cost Owner f1nan
cmg Call tod ay
N 955
3 ACRES near Rodney 8. Rt 35 Good
bu1 drng stte fronts on two roads Land
contract
#136
SUP E R LI STING Strength 01
chara cter and beauty rs to be found m
thts rust c ranch 3 bedrooms 2 full
bath s cathedral ce111ng 1n llvmg room
krtchen complete wtfh dishwasher
F replace Central arr
Garage 5
wooded acres Affordably pnced

H87

NEW LISTING- EYE APPEAL - S1!
on the nver bank and en10Y the vrew
from the back lawn Of th1s encnantmg
log cabm in Middleport Only 3 yrs old
3 bedroomsw1lh 1011 N1ce landscapmg
$25 000 Poss1brltty of owner ftnaocrng
N1Sl
BEAUTIFUL RURAL SETTING - 40
acres 1\_nd S year old b1 level home with
3 4 bedrooms 2 baths k•lchen and
fam•IY room Mostly wooded w1th 2 000
lb tobacco base gas lease n1ce garden
area rural water coal house and large
separate garage
1991

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Modern
5 room house and 2 two bedroom mobtle
hnmPs aood conlt rt1 on presently ren
ted $175 00 per month County water 1
acre gr~und Close fo hosp tal and Men
tal Health Center Poss1ble loan assum
pt1on ~ncedtosell$32 500
N 118

,

LAND CONTRACT- Owner finanCing
available on thts home w1th 2 1/• acres 3
bedroom5
k1fchen
formal drn1ng
ltvrng rOOm Basement Garage equrp
pea wnn wrnace &amp; arr concmron t&lt;ura•
water S24 500
N ISO

RUSTIC HILLS- Me1gs County Ran
Gh stylo home 7 years old w•lh 3
bedrooms 1 bath, large k•lchen and
fam•IY room Extras rnclude central
a.r cham link fence a1umlnum s •dlng
and very n~ee lawn Call today on th•s
lovely home
'107

COMMERCIAL Appro•
Green and Spnngf1eld Twp
between Rt 35 and old 35 at
Rural water large tap paid for
gas FIat lot One of tl]e best

CHARMING RANCH- Everything In
Tip top cQndJilon •n lh1s 3 bedroom, 1'12
bath home Beaut•ful kitchen&amp; dining
room, Woodburner, new carpet double
car garage &amp; large tot Possible loan
usumpllon

REDUCED! Owner nas reduced the
price over SS 000 on thrs mtn. farm J
bedroom ranth home only s years old
Over 13 acres Tobacco base 20x60
lobacco barn Approximately 8 m1les
frot\'1 town Kyger Creek Schools
Priced In the SJO s

1992

7 acres
Located
Rodney
Natural

N144

EVERYTHING YOU LL NEED
AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD
You must see all the extra s thiS fine 3
bedroom home offers Located rn c t y
school dtstnct th•s ranch has a
beautiful k.rtcnen w•th quality cabinets
range and oven d•shwash er and co~
actor ftreplace In 1\vlng room
2
~ th full basement famtiY room
~rage and l8x36 tn ground pol hug e
~overed deck and J/.. ac Only $53 900
640 DEENIE DR Attra c i1Ve 4
bedroom b• level •n a very good ne1gh
borhood along Rt 35 Over 2 000 sq ft
of hvmg ar ea nc ludes a la r ge famil y
room w/ woodburner 21/ J baths equ1p
ped k1tcn en (loads of cabrnet s) d n1ng
room 2 car garage plus 18x36 m
ground pool tn pr•vate ba c ky ard
Pr•ced tn 60 s
PANORAMICVIEW - 6 SAC
9% ASSUMPTION - A very ilt1r ac
t ve settmg w rn an unma tc hed v ew of
R 1o Grand e w fh 61!2 ac A love ly 3 yr
old custom bUilt 4 bedroom home has
full basement 2 woodburn er s ta mn y
room 1 full &amp; 2 half bath s '2 car qaraqe
2 5 acres of land cou ld be sold n lots
c.autor more nlo
REbUCED TO S40 000 Owners
moved to Ok lahoma and must se ll
Alum srded 3 bedroom ranch located 3
miles from town on Rt 141 acr os s from
Green Grade School House has full
ba sement that could be frn snea eQUtP
ped k tch en &amp; garage I mmed ate
possess11:\n
1972 WESTBROOK M H 12x50 3
bedroom home 1n good cond U n
derpmned deck bnck barbecue equrp
ped k1fchen
plus most furn1ture
Located on over 1h acre on Mtll Creek
Rd $14 000
OWNER WILL FINANCE - W1 t h less
than 20% down payment and 11% '"
teres! 168 acre farm off Rt 554 Ap
prox 20 25 acre crop balance rn pasture
and woods Los of p ne (red &amp; wh1te)
barn plus modern1zed 3 bedroom home
60s
100 ACRE FARM - NEW LISTING IN
RUTLAND- Product ve farm 1n co r
poratron llmtts of Rutland Quahty hay
&amp; pastu .. e Nlth good grass cover ap
prox AS ac woods 50 x56 barn 14 )(40
shed m gOOd repair Large rd frontag e
on Rf 124 &amp; Free gas avatiable for
house (has gas well) The h•stonc home
has 10 rooms 4 bedrooms 2 fireplaces
&amp; qarage Call for more 1nfo $85 000
MARTIN DRIVE Lovely bmk
home overlook.mg Rt 35 near H M C 3
bedrooms 1112 baths fi.JII basement
family room w/woodburner Wife ap
proved krtchen nat gas cent a r
oversiZed 2 car garage &amp; over / 2 acre rn
a quality nerghborhood Pnced to sell
$5'1900
AVE &amp; MILL CRI"EK - IS the
Jocatton of th1s remodeled 3 bedroom
bnck Includes a tul 1basement {clean)
nat gas heat carport fencel:t yard
Only S22 000
_ Brtck and frame ran ch
14 1 1ust 2 mil es west of town J
rh••dn&gt;Orr s ftr,tplace eat .n kit chen lull
basement rec room family r oom
garage deck &amp; fenc ed back yard on
nearly &amp; acre Good tocatton

'

ACRES - Located near Rto Grande
off Rt 325 Has 28 x48 basemen and
subfioortng flnrshed You can budd the
rest Ci ty scnool D1st $10 600
631 KRISTI DRIVE- - Owner- must
self thiS most attractiVe brick off Rl
35 Includes 3 good Sltect bedrooms
familY room, hre~ce wlle approved
equipped k1tcnen Tbaths, and nearly
1500 sq It of hv1ng area Also In
eludes 2 car garage &amp; large land
scaped yard . Pn&lt;&lt;~ble 9% assumpt1on
ACRES- OLDER HOME - Get
your hammer &amp; paint brush and put
fh1s 2 bedroom home n good repair 4
rooms
no bath
several small
bulid,ngs 24x60 barn t1e house (10x18 )
w1tn f1rep1ace 1440 lb tobacco base
Nearly 26 acres (remote) Sl9 600

s 7NI bedroom s larq e f am d y
w /i rep l ac e 2 ba ths n ce lrtrge k1 tc hen ~
&amp; d n n q ar ea 2 ca qoraqe foye r &amp; 'h
flU(' yar d n c•tY sc hool d st Assurr- .. ..Jie
9 7°o mor tqaqe

1

1
I
I
I

tROt fkT'I'
LOcCi ted l
r~c r oss fr om Eurr&gt;kil Da rn th s r ronrr ty
nMs i'l 2 or 3 bectroo., ho &lt;'l1e w f h new
roo f e~ nd a 1961 R chilrrlo;on 2 bf'dr oom
IOx4 l mob te hO'lw n qood cond I on
A lso h&lt;'! s ex rr n mob lc horne hook up
ce ll ar &amp; stor flQf' b i d 1 House rr nts r$215 1
T10 Mob lr a t $200 rno C ty c;,c t100I5
RENr A l

I

On ly$2 9900
'
LOG HOME - 10 8 ACRES - Th iS s an

ot ft rnc t vc 1' 1 storv B yr old loq ho m e
w ih J bedr ooms f rep tncc equ• pped
k trl 1 n I 11J~ th full ba sement &amp; wood
u r 1 c Wooctr rl 10 ii C H '" n ~ Qu l"t l
flf''lrrful sC'tt no On ly S39 900 i!nrl
wn r w II f n iln ~ r w lh S6 000 rlown l
il'('TH

nr

I

1973 MOBILE HOME - 1 12 ACRE
LOT - Good locatiOn off Rf 160 near
North Gal Ita H S Tht s 12x60 home has
bedroom s eqUipped k 1tchen bath plus
8x25 cov ered por ch underp•nn ed un
derground ut t ftes &amp; storage budd ng
N1 ce 1 acre yard Only SlS 000
'
LOCATION
LOCATION
LOCATION - Tht S on e 15 l 12 block s tol
c1ty park Well kept 3 bedroom ham el
w th basement modern heatrng
svstem and large back yard 2 ca r
garage Perfect tor any s1ze lam ly
LOW II)ITEREST ASSUMPTON yr old 3 bedroom home w th ov er 1500
sq ft of ltvtng Fully equ pped k•t chen
family room 2 bath s cent a.r plu s 10
acres of land [all cle ar ) 16x36 bar n andl
larqe rd tront aue 17 mtl e off Rt 160
$39 000

21
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'II
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LAKE DRIVE RIO GRANDE - 9%
MORTGAGE - Feas t you r eyes on th s
love ly Cape Cod br c k home &amp; you Wt ll
want t for sure Beaut ful decor at ng
bcdroms 2 full &amp; 2 half bath s f amil y
r oom de luxe k tchen w th bar full~
bil sement fir epl ace th at heats ent r e
house &amp;. 2 car g~ra ge S tuat ed on co r
m r lor 60 s

41

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81 LEVEL
LOW IN
CEDAR
TEREST ASSUMPTION Thi S 31
bedroom home s new on the market
and owners need to sell now Th1 s at
tracttve home offers a co mplete k1t chen
wrth snack bar famdy room f1repla ce
2 baths overs zed 2 car garage &amp;
wooded lot Kyger Cr eek sc hools
IN COME PROP F. F&lt;TY - Home of f ce
&amp; rr. ntai house Owner an)( ous to sell
{1nd wtll fmanc e at l lqo and ta ke l and on
tri! de tor down paym ent The homP has
3 bedrooms bath ~c o uld be 2) I v rm
&amp; k•tc hen Ba sement o f house ~ on
stree t leve l and s used for off ce &amp;
stor nqe (NICely decorated w th 2
ba th Th e rental house has bedroom
I v r m k tchen co mb o 8. bath Pr re d
to sell at $38 500 and locr1 ted n l rH n
WOODED PRIVACY - CONVF Nil NT
l 01...ATION - A v ery p ctur €'sQ uf ~c t
t nq lUSt m•nufes fro m t own on Rt 588 3
be droom Dutch b1 lev el w th 2 ' h:'"! th s
fa m tiY room 2 ex tr a roo ns n ower
levc (can be w hatever you nl"f'd)
equtpped kttchen 2 car oaraqf&gt; 11rqe
wrap around deck &amp; neil rl y I 1 ~cr(' S
wtth lots of tree s S67 900
RURAL SETTING CLOSf TO
TOWN - N1 cr. well ma nta•nro nnd
r edecorat ed 2 bedr oom home ' n 1lcs
from town Has an eQu pped k tch en
full basement fa m l y room wood
burner elect hejl t (low b lis) lil r qc at
ta ched carport cJetac hed gara!lc some
furn1fure 1ncluded 1 2 acr es w/ 1ru t &amp;
shade tr ees piu s garden area $39 500
FINISH IT YOURSELF- 3 bedroom
home srtuated on over 1 acre near Thur
man 5 rooms and bath w1th 2 rooms un
f101shed Also 1ncludes 12 x24 cabrn
Only S12 600
VA ACQUIRED PROPERTY - $28 500
- Located 1n rural senmg on Woods
M1ll Road th•s 3 bedroom home olfers
family room f~replace equipped k1t
chen full basement and over 'h acre
yard S1 400 down payment 30 yrs
frnanc1ng
NEW LISTINC. VA ACQUIRED
HOME- For only S20 700 you can OY(n
a very clean welll&lt;ept 2 bedroom home
•n town Has 2 large bedrooms k•lchen
room and full basement

J

�W. \Ia.
July 18, 1982

-- _ _I~S_!!~!!!!!~!.!. _- Conn org an, new Capr ice
"'Ode l, S750. Ca ll 614·256·
1216.

m
Olds e ng., 1 set chai n
blocks, 1 vise, 1 dr il l press.
Call614·2.15·9564.
1 Hardw ick 5 burne r stove.
· All hooked up for na tura l
ga s . (Wh ile ). Sl50. 61 4-949·
2619.

Fruit
&amp; 1/ egeta bl es

51

Home grown sweet corn .
Charles M cKeon Far m .
Fairfield·Cen tenary Rd .
Ca ll446·9«2 .

36 ln. Holl ow cor e exten or
door wi t h lock set. SJO. 614·

Hay fo r sale. Call 614·379·
23 15 or 614-379-2766.

74 E L Cam ino with topper,
350 a utom a t ic I ra n ·
smlss lon . fac tory air ,
power steer i ng, power
brakes, 59,000 mites, new
exhaust, f ron t t ires, front
brakes, S1500 . 304-675·2296.

HAY , lop qua lily, 2nd. CUI·
l ing, July 10th. S2.00 bale.
304-675·4114 or 614·379·2697.

() [

Fresh vegetables. Open
d.llly 3:00 to 6 :00. 2 mi les
'""' of Ga ll ipolis on Rl .
w , «6·1080 .

va lue . S200. 61 4-992·3196.

nesday evenings

Excellent tor sauce
and pie. Hrs. 9·5 p.m . Fi l z·
patricks Orc hard. S.R. 689,
Wllksvill e . 61&lt;-669·3785.

WOOD tor sa le, 304-458·
1833.
Ci der Press, 1 bushel ha rd
rock ma ple baske t, sh red·
de r a ttached, never used,
304-675 5057 a fte r 5.

......

LOWE RY organ, new, used
5 times, SJOO. and take ove r
pa y me nts, ca ll30076·2911.

61 ·

Metal s heets for all
building purposes. Flat
porcellan enamel coated.
-1)(8 thru 4 • 12 . Prices, $7.00
toS9.60. 614·667·3085.

Grooming services for
pets. Will clip Englis h
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer' s. Reasonabl e.
For appt. 614·992·7342.

$1 ,250. or· best offer. Call
614·245·5011.

Fum Equipment

-::=::=:;=::;;:;===
13

2·1974 Opel Mana . 1 stan·
dard and 1 automati c. Call
«6-7832 .
72 Nov a 6 cylinder . runs
good. Cal l 614 388·9034.
1981 Toyota Tercel 14,000
miles, AM· FM, 4 spd .,
$4 ,995 . or best offer. Call
446·2783 or (46·2651.

M""covy ducks a nd 2
goats, wet he rs, S20 ea . Ca ll
«6-1266.

1977 Nova 6 cyllnge r, AT,
PS, PB , AM· FM radio,
48.000 mi. , excellent cond.
Mus l sel l. Call «6·4996.

Pigs &amp; red Cocker Spanie l
forsale . Call61 0 88·9791.

~eglste red

a nd grade hor ·
Sft, excelle nt 4-H projec t.
Enyllsh and western sad·
dies ·
ev e rything
Imaginable in horse equip·
f11enl and supplies, a lso
riding lessons and tra 11
rides and horse training .
Ruth Ree ve s, Hoof Hol low.
614-6'8·3290.
Jumbo Bob While Quail ,
eggulsoavaila ble. La Bon·
te's Quail Fa r m . 614-995·

4345.
STANDARD bre d m a re,
phOne 304·.158·1917 .

Public S~le The following
described veh icle w ill be
offered tor Public Sale at
10:30 AM on July 29, 1982ot
Gallipolis Motor Company,
236 Second Street ,
Gallipolis, Oh. Terms of
sa le Is In hand at time of
sale . Wr itten bids may be
submitted to GMAC at 318
Main/ St., Belpre, Oh.
GMAC reserves the right to
with draw this vehicle from
the sale. 1980 1/W Rabbitt,
Se r jal N17A0834472 , Ac·.
count NIH 1304 55848.
Genera I Motor s Ac ·
ceptance Corporation.

1973 Che"olet Malibu
Estate stationwagon In
good cond., S595. Call «6·
0157.

CHICKEN S,
Bantam s,
standards and lay ing he ns,
phone, 304-675·1920.

OWAR F ·&amp; giant rabbits .
AKC m a le poodle for stud
service. 304·882·3672 .
Reel Ettote _ Generil

Musical
lnstrument5

57
Bach

trumpet slightly
used, 1 concert season,
S550. Call675·5644.

O'BRIEN-CROW
REALTY

WOOD REALTY. INC.446-1066
. Russell

D. Wood, Realtor. 'Eve. Ph. 446-4618

.len Moraan, Realtor,
Mo5e t;anterbury,

fve: Pfi. 44S:097F

Associ~1t~ ..~10-.:l'lluo

WE WANT TO LIST
YOUlJIOME

446-3021
437 2nd .
1/z

Gallipolis
Steven

Holmes, Assoc. ·

388-9762 Evenings

RNI Ettate - General

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm., carpeted nome situated
along Graha m School Rd., 11h acres, M . or L .•
several fruit trees. garden area. cha in link fenced
area. Att ac hed gara ge. Price $40,000.00. Possible
assumption .

VIRGIL 1. SR. '
. t16E.2114tll.

OWNER FINANCING
New inside , 3
bedrooms ,
modern
batn, c arpeting, ca~port
and 3 garages on lar9e
leve l lot. Only S28,000.
1
SWIMMING POO~ - .
Whal else can you ask
tor with J or 4 bedrooms,
Ph baths, modern kit·
chen, Nat. gas F .A. fur ·
nttce, carpeting, 2 car
garage and extra lot.
$53,900.

5 ACRES - Beautiful
trees, level land for a
garden, dug well with
electric lind water near.
only$7,950.

NEW FUR-NACE - 3 or
4 bedrooms but not • big
home. Bath, nice kit·
chen, ba:sement and 2lots near pool In . Mid·
dleporl. Asking$21 ,000.
31, ACRES In· the
country, just off hard
6 rooms, bath, new
roof
and
rennod~ll11g on '"' in·
as Is .lor

0 . FoR · RENT, L~ASE:; CEASE WITH
PTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BE;DROOM STARTING AT : $200
PER MONTH.

·

11,000 DOWN PAYMEN 1 on thiS OhiO
River View property, Approx. 8 acre5
wooded land on Route 7-and 5 mi. south
of town . Owner w i ll finance balanc e at

10'lo.
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Great
family home with 3 Brs, 2 baths, 1Sx27
LR with gas fireplace, large modern
kitchen with range, self-cleaning oven,
OW and dlspl , laundry with washer
· and dryer, part basement end over 6
acres of land atthe edge of town .
GENTLEMAN' S FAIIM - 33 acres m/1
on State . Route 160 near North Galli a
High School. Mostly clean rolling
grassland, stock pond, 3 BR ranch type
home with full basement, good barn.
Out of town owners says SELL .
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beel, hay &amp;
grain farm . 80 acre~. m/ 1, approx . 35 A.
good c ropland, 10 A. woods, balance
pasture, good fences, 9 rm.lbath,home
was buill in 1872 &amp; has been partially
remodeled, 50x50 cattle barn with con· ·
crete floor, large silo w ith auto.
unloader, sever al sheds, large pond.
springs, stand ing crops go to new

owner.

BE£ F CATTLf COUNTRY - 132
acres m, mostly clean hill pasture, good
fences, 1•;, story home, large b~rn, tob.
base, fronts won 3 roads near Mudsoc~ .
Price reduced to $64,000.

NI'W LI STING Attractive, comfortable, 2
bedrm . home in Vinton, Jackson Pike, central A.C.,
enclosed porches, good garden. $37,500.00.
BUY THIS COMME RCIAL lot situated along 2nd
Ave .. 63' xl73' 10" , presently has older homo which
can be renovated or converted to commercial use.
·Everything goes for $60,000.00.

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acre"' m / 1,
located solith Of Mercerville. Approx.·20
A. tillable, balfnce woods, lob . base.
1
Owners will helf)Jinance..

home.
home
spot.
Price

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm . home situated on 1.38
acre along Old Rt.7. Private and sec luded, shaded
lot, with mobile home lot. $32,500.00.
ATTRACTIVE 2 BEDRM. home situated on n
acres of IBnd with in the village of VInton, full
b•seh1enl, f.a : furnace, w .b . fireplace, tiled kitchen,
detached 2·car garage. Buy it all for $43,500.00. '
, · LOOKING FOR a beautiful4 bedrm. home with ton·
nls court? W.e can give you all !hat plus 38 acres and
many, IT,Iany amenities. Call for more Info.
2 LOTS for mobile home In Plants Sub. Olv., septic·
.tank and rural water. Buy bOth for ss,900.00.
' COMME.RCIAL BUILDING in Vinton. LBrge ·
· display room down, z.apts. up. ~2.000.00.
.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING In downtown Gallipolis,
2:J'x160' 1 •P'- upstairs. Minimum 1 year lease or
bu\t
. for $65,000.00.

.

...
WOOd Realty,lnc.

32 Locust St., Gallipolis
. ' ' "*1066

$200 PER ACRE - · Greenfield Town
' ship; 84 acres M· L, approx . 10 A. bot·
tom, 35 A. wooded, 35 A. stripped, small
· creek, excellent hunting. TOTAL
PRICE $16,800.

LARIAT DRIVE- OWNER FINANC·
lNG AVAILABlE - Lovely 3 BR h
s tory , 15•2f LR , formal · dlnlnq, full
bBsement with 141&lt;27 famil y r m . fini s hed in knotty pine, 2 fireplaces, 42 ft.
rear screened in porch, Raraqe and
100x300 lot. Can be bought with or
without furniture . Ask ing S59,500 with
2~" down and 1m on the balance .

--

.

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Styl ish 2 s tory
home was built in 189~ and mu st be seen
to appreciate. Large open fo yer and
~fairway , LR, dining rm ,, parlor, co m ·
pletely equipped mode rn kitc he n, 4
BRs, 21h baths, new sidi ng, ga r aqe,
near schools, shopping, etc
ROONEY CORA ROAD - Approx . 24
acres woodland, located 3 mi. fr om
Roqney, county water availa ble .
$12,000.
PRICE REDUCEO TO 169,5001 BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST. Over
2100 sq, ft . of living area . This a ll bric k
rancheroffers.3 BR ' s (master 1S 16x22) ,
3 baths, 15x24 LR with fire pl a ce, 13•25
family rm ., formal dining rm., galley
kitchen Includes double ovens, corning
type counter top range, ow &amp; dl sp .. gas
heat, cent. air, attic fan &amp; much more.
Located in town on Spruce Sl . Ex·
tension. C~ll Ranny Blackburn fo r a
personal showing.
RIO GRANDI' - Co rne r lot, zoned
commercial, 140x l 56, al l util i tie s
available. Ready for your ne w
business...
LOG CABIN - Very Un iQUe, Old hand
hewn log beam s, slee,:&gt;ing loft, large
stone fireplace, mOdern barn, 14 acr es
woods, located in the Wayne Nation a l
Forest. 2fl'l!. down .
GAS STATtON &amp; G AR.AGF - 131 ft .
front on State Rout e 554, corne r lot,
over 3100 sq. ft., 5 bays, pre se ntly used
for auto, trac tor &amp; farm ec ulpme nt
repairs, partial financ inq avai lable.
THE 5[TTING 15 SUPF RB
Beautlful1.8 acre wooded lot on the O.J .
White Rd., 311 ft . fronta ge, 12x65 2 BR
mobile nome with exp_ando. Priced to
sella! $12,900:
GREEN TOWijSHtP - CF.NTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fron tage on State Rou(e 588. Fa i rli~l d Ce n·
tenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfie ld R'd. E x·
cellent lor l.~rming or development.
Older 5 rm. &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
silo included. Owners 1"111 c onsider
selling smaller tracts of short term
financlnq . Cal l for more information.
REC:R£ATION LAND - 25 acr~s m ·l,
m0511Y woOds, fronts on Little Raccoon
Creek &amp;' State Route 325 near Tycoon
Lake, S1S,OOO.
Sli,Gto- NEIGHBORHOOD ROAO ~- Bedroom sectional hom e, must sell
this month to settle e-state. Call for Ap·
polntment.

'. IFF. - Firat lime on the l!'arket for
this like , _ contemporary, 3 or ~
BR's, 2 baths, . large open LR with
fireplace &amp; bettmed &lt;;ellings, kitchen
Includes ra(!90, DW ,&amp; ref rig .. , full
• - • · ifi'ap-afound deck , c!'(lar
lll«!lnt. 12K2~ aboye ground pool,
'~~~"*· bal'n 11 10 ttCrn near Eureke . .

City schOOit.

,

.

.

'

3·11-tfc

.J&amp;L BLOWN
INS~~noN

BEAUTIFUL
SETTING
BEAUTIFUL HOM E
1 ac re plus - 8 room s
IN GAL L1 POLIS WALl&lt;
plus. full basem e nt, 2
TO 5H0f'DOWNTOWN
full
bath s,
w i th
6
rooms , 3 bedrooms,
shower s, fa mi ly r oom ,
full basem ent, ni ce '
' livin g r oom, din in g
large front porc h. No
room ( nice step sa ver
upkeep. Vi ny l siding.
kitc hen, J or 4 BR . Len·
Natural gas furnace,
nox hea t pump, also
nicelar ge sha de trei:S,
coa l and wood bu rner
low ta xes. Home you
i an
f urnace . Ni ce
check on.
shotild
dscaped yard . All of t his
H30
'for only $53,900. Nee ds
srpa ll amount of I(IIOr k to
f inish this NEW HOME .
. ~ 532
ATTRACTti/E OLDER HOME
We ll ke pt, 9 room s, S bedrooms. On State Highway ,
approxi mately 1700 sq . fl. living space ._concrete
bloc k cella r with frame s moke house. Large tool
shed, IMge bloc k works hop wilh 2 ca r c arport With
concrete floor . Four lots - over 1 acre of lev~ llarid .
Allfor onl y$41 ,900.00.
' H13
54 ACR ES PlUS
Ba rn , too l shed, Cheshi re Township. Approx. 18 A.
ti llable. Rur al wa ter . Pr iced 525,900.00. Also
10' 1&lt;50' Ca r dina l mobi le hom e. 2 bedroom . Set
upon thi s land . Priced $4, 000 for M .H.
~ 536· 537

•

I

ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New roofing
Free Estimates
James Keesee
-2772
Ph' 992
7-4·1 mo.

DABBLE
SHOP
· Pomeroy, OH.

992-2063

PH.

CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL SUPPLIES
Pac-Man Party Packs

and Cake Available
6·21· 1 mo.

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

I '

302 Mechan ic St. ·
Pomeroy, OH.
PH . 992·6506
. • StAT COVERS
oVINVL TOPS
•CONVERTIBLE TOPS
•CARPETS
•A Complete Line of
Automobile Upholstery
'
7·1·1 mo. pd.

GOOD HOUSE SENSE
RETIREMENT OR STARTER HOME
-comfortable, neat, home IIIIth large living room,
-eat· in kitc~en . with buill-In cabinet~, storage room,
bath and carport. Very convenie nt location . Call for
furth e r details.
~533
LOOI&lt; I N.G FOR PRIVACY
WI'- WOULD LIKE TO SHOW YOU THIS ONE
Wooded setting at Charolais Hflls overlooking the .
lake . Step into the entry on the second level and •
view the' beautiful atrlum'from the level below. This
contemporarv uniq'uE! design is a dec~rator's dream
~orne true . J n~oor pool, oHice, we Uequipped kitchen
with bu ilt-In food Island, e xtra large living room ,
Imported tile floor graces the spacious family room ,
2 fire places, 2112 baths, balcony on lront of both
leve ls. Call for a personal' showing and find out the
manv details too numerous to mention in this ad.

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
1-394-773-564
C. l. Kitch en
Mason, W. Va .
6-20·1 mo.

· aGutfers
. · • Downspouts
eNew or Repair
. a Painting

. FREE ESTIMATES
Ph.H2-2791
orM9-2263
7·14·tt c

... .

•utuu

+Au
+All

7·16·2 m o. pd .

VuiDorablo: Both

GARAGE
Co1ner Main &amp; S. Znd
MIDDLEPORT
'II MiJIOI &amp; Major

Auto &amp; Truck Repair

•F1et Estimates

•Reasonable Rates
Open 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. thru Sit.

SALES

Ph . 992· 7583
or 992-2282

Jack Coleman 6·21·

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

YOUNG'S

&amp;"'

Nlrtll

l!'.ut

P•
P•
1'-.
P•

z+
z+

Pau
Pau
Pau

tNT
INT

See
UUcle

OpeniJtc lud: +1o
IJOiwiWJ~

...u. .....

'nelludllla.. -

SERVICE
'~ddtinund remo6tlini
- Roetfinl and pHer wOf~

prot-

IJ ..toao WI week oo ""

Or anything else you
want to do, becau se 1
li ve w ith a carpenter.
Ht s nam e i s AI Tromm .

-&lt;oncrttewon

- PI•mbinland
elechicalworl
1rrotEstimotn1
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·JO ftc

81

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

Home
Improvements

LaBONTE ' S
QUAIL FARM
Qua i l
of
all ,ages
avai lable up to 8 Week s
in any quantity
E ggs Also Available
Clell LaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
long Bottom, OH .
453~3

61 4-985·4345
6/ 24/ 1 mo.

tree estim ates. Ca II 614·256·
1182.

CANDLELIGHT INN
St . R1. 7- Between M id·
dle port &amp; Cheshire, Oh .
PROUOLY PRES E NTS

•backhoe
•excavating
• nptic·system s
• Awater, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
*limestone
•

Tu e\ .- Lild te \ Nigh l l · l · JO
W ed ~ .-•.ce r t ry Dr a ft
NTIJh ! 8· 1: JD
Thu n.- Pool Tou rn 1·2· ]0
F rt &amp; Sa l. LI VE BA NO S
1Onnh &amp; Drown tach nt!il hlt
THI S MONT H'S BA NOS •
W ed . &amp; T hur~

licensed &amp;Bonded
PH. 992-7201

PA INTIN G
interior and
eK t er i or , p l um b ing ,
roofing, some r emodel ing .
20 yrs. ex p. Call 61N88·
9652.
M a r cu m
Roofi n g
&amp;
Spouting . 30 yea r s ex ·
per ience, spec iali zi ng 1n
built up roof. Ca ll 614 388
9622 or 614·388·9857.

MAR SHALL TE NNAN T 9· \
Fri . &amp; Sa l
LONE WO L F 10· 2

3-29-tfc

We gla d !¥ a nnou nce !hol t uch
o oql1 1 ol 11\e B,u d we otte r
and d r own .

dn nhs

S ~;~ m e

dur.ng band.
Hrs . M ctn . F r o. 2:00· 2: JO;
~.u &amp; Su n . 4-2 : 30. Ca r r y Out
Al'(!r and Wine A va •l~ bl e at
M1n1 mu m Pr• cn - T he Lowes t .
PHONf tfJ.991l
71 1 mo

conctete front porch, lots of fruit
tappJe
cherry, plum -and pe~ c hl, grape ar
vlne5, good garden land, all level .
Rural , wat, r, 2 car garage, fuel oil FA, tur&lt;nac•• Basement,.barn approk . 16'x24. Priced In tnt

OHIO VALLEY
.: ROOFING

..

.
&amp;ACRES
Within 10 min. drive to down town Galli!pollis ..
school sv,stem. Has hookup •for mobile
Rurarwater, eleclrlc and' septic tan~.
pole, 200 fl. frontage on Grahem SChool
·1!\ulldlng sites. Call nov/. .

And Home Maintenance
+ROOfing of all types
+Siding
+•Rtmodellng
• "'" tstlmatos
Yrs. experience

,:n

SPIIINQ VALLEY SUBDIVISIOiil
1/acant lots, nice size building lots wllh all ulllltl,ts11 '
I
there. Lotslze 101 .9 by 171.2. Beller get 'um now.

'!

:; TOM HOSKINS .
~h. 949·2160 or 949•2322
4·20-tfc

.'

•

W

COMPL ET E
RADIATOR
SERVI CE
F rom th e Sm il ll es t
Heater Core to lhe
Larg es t Radiil tor .

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

water· Sewer· E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 367·7560
1·7-1 tfc

Rad1 ator Speci ali st
NATHAN BIG GS
35 't' rs . E JC pen ence

PIANO

~~TU~ING

SMITH NELSON

REPAIR ,
Call Bill Wanl
Ward's Keyboard

MOTORS, INC.
Pom eroy , Oh.
Ph . 992 -2174
2·26·ttc

446-4373
\lisa

Master

c.

H -tl c

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

KOUNTRY
KLUB
HROSHOP
•
We CIHJ S4ua1e Two,
MacGretOI, Dunlop, &amp;
81owning Equipment.

*GOLF LESSONS
AU AGES
•FIELD TRIPS
5I Hole· In-One 5I
JOHN TEAFORD
Che ster, OH .
7-14-1 mo.

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1980 Sea r s 12' f ibergla ss
fishin g boa t, 7 1/2 HP
motor , t-r ai ler, oa rs, life
jackets. $900. Ca ll «6·4782.

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742 -31'~5

14ft. Larson fibergl ass boa t
anQ tr ailer . Boat custom
pa inteq and ca rpeted. Ca ll
446·0932 or 614·245·91 35.
77 Ram Charger t ri haul, 19
ft. , open bow , fiber glass,
150 HP Me re. OB &amp; trai ler,:
S2.500. Call614·367·7745.

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

K'EN'S ·
APPLIANCE

a

Makes

All
• washers
• Dish ·
washers
0 Ranges e Refrigerat ors
• or yen • Freezers
PARTS and SEilVICE

Call

30 h.p. Johnson outboa rd
614·985·3989. Da ve Koble n·
tz , Chester, Oh

992-6259

•

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
6·27·1 m o.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING ..

C R MASH
CONSTRUCTION
•

1

.

1

26 t t. Tro jan ha rd top 1970
m int, n ~w canv as, tr im
ta bs. re gen c y 5500 radio,
dual batter ies, press ure
wa ter. stove. ice box,
heav y duty tr ailer and etc.
304·675·3182.
14' QUACH IT A tull y equip·
ped aluminum bass boa t
with 1 ye ar old 20 H P Mer·
cury motor, aireator, li ve
well . 21 lb thrust trolling
seats c&amp; l ights,
storage2
swivel
motor, electri
compartment, tra ile r , new
tires. new spare tire,

guara~leed. 304-8822086.

CAPT AIN STEEME R Car
pe t Cle ani ng fea tured by
H aff elt Brost her s Cuf.tom
Carpets. Free es tim ates
Call «6·2107 .

t

I!
1

j

••

•

AND

APPLIANCE SERVICE .
• Chester; Ohio
h. -.u&amp; or !115-4312

,.._yne W1111ems '
" • &amp; Scottie Smllh
ofllllllllktl aiMI models
' .htlnnalnstallatlon

Custom kitchens and
balltrooms. Remodeling,
add-ons, new homes,
plu!llbina, electric, siding.
'

FREE

77

M as on ary work , Logue
Co ntr ac tin g,
R t.
1.
Ewingto n . Ca ll 614 ·388·
9939.

C HRI S TI A N 'S CO lli
STRU CTION .
Co ns tr .,
roofing , siding, spouting.
f encing, peinting, r epairs &amp;
cl ea ning. 446·2000, ca ll

calls alld shop

taavallablt.
7-8·1 mo. Pd.

..

BING S CONCRE TE CON
STRUCTION Specializin g
in concr ete dr ivew ays,
si dewalk s. fl oors . pat ios,
e tc . 11 yr . exp . Ca ll61 4·367 ·
7891 .
Ge ne's Stea m Carpe t
Cl ea n·Scotch Gaurd·Free
esfimates·spring spec ials·
Gene Sm ith, 992·6309.

RON 'S Te le vis ion Serv iCe
Spec ializi ng in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house c all s. Phone 576 2398
or 446·2454.
F &amp; K Tree Tri m ming,
s tump re mov a l. 675·1331.

RIIII G LE S' S SER VICE ex
peri enced mason , r oofe r ,
c arpenter , el ec tri c i an.
ge neral repai rs and
r emodeling . Phone 304·675
2088 or 675·4560.
Water well s. Com mer cial
and Domest ic. Test hole s
Pumps Sa les and Ser vice.
304-895·3802 .

ADVANCED
Seam less
Gutter · Door s. Off erin g
gutterin g,
c ontinuous
seamless sil;tl ng, r oofing,
garage
doOr s,
fr ee
estimates, 614·699·9205
PAl ffll NG i·nte ri or &amp; ex ·
terior, free est imates, 30-t·
675·1128.

Auto Repair

SPE C IAL
Complete
enamel pa int jobs from
S300. Sunroofs installed
from S225. Auto Trim Cen··
ter, ,4.46·1968.

ESTIMATES

Large or Small Jobs
PH. 992&lt;11471
6·27· 1 mo. Pd.

PH.

992-6011

79

Motor Home
I Campers

-,.-----------=iJ"'
- ---------.....·1
r
,.

and refinishing
35 Cou rt St.
Ga llipo.l is, Ohio

~~-

Now Jack ie
, "Leaclloaapadeo
for tbe duraUoo. You can
toke your trump any ·Ume
yoa want to."
(1111WSPAPBR ENftiU'RISE ......;

' .

Ca ll 4~ 6 - 3 8 96

~~

44 6·3080

rA SCUAL r
r L F CT R I CCO
r lcc tnc Hc.111nq
R ewtr m q
1 1c cn sc d F l c c t r • cl o~n

(I ll Worl· G uar.1nl re d
152 3rdA H .
r h 446 -17 11'1

Nu-Prime
wi ndows
St orm w indows &amp; door s
Alum inum &amp; v inyl
siding
How met Patio Covers
Howmtt screen room s
Mobile home awn ings
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive
446·2642

AER IAL BU CKET
TRUCK SERI/ICE
47ft. Work ing Height
PAS QUA LE
ELECTR IC
152 Third Ao.J e.
614·446 ·2716
tf c

ADVANC ED
CLEAN ING SERV ICE
446-JYlS
No Answe r 446 ·2062
Modern steam clea ning
for ca r pet &amp; uphol stery
( insurance work) .

e S~otcgua r d · lM

eWalls, floors,
wind ow s
• Wa ter &amp; smok e
da mage
Ind ustrial
Com mercia l
Residenti al
Dependable, e year s el( ·
perience. we do car e!
tf c

Need som ethtng hauled
awa y or som et h1ng moved?
We' ll do it. Ca ll 446 3159 or
614·256·1967 a ti e r 6.
Now Hauli ng li m e5 tone fil l
di rt·top so il gr avel Free
estimates . Ca ll 614 367
710 1.
J IM S- Wt1 1er Serv 1ce . Ca ll
Jim L an1er. 30 4 675 7397 .

8.!.__ __

.

U_E'!O~ t ery

TRI STATE
UPHOL ST E RY SH OP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gall ipOli S.
446·7833 or 446 1833 .
MOWREY 5 Upholste ry Rl
1 Bo x 124 , Pt . Pleasa nt , 304
675 4154 .

AC ROSS
1 Worship
6 Intimidate
11 Barter
t6 Defeat
21 Repulse
22 Go In
23 Noblemen
2•Lauo
25 Guido note
26 Fall into
disuse
28 Bread
Ingredient
30 Go to sea
32 Hebrew
mon th
33 Bye
34 Animal 's
loot
35 Hard-wood
tr..
36 Thong
37 Everyone
38 Scan
40 scatter
42 Had a bite
43 Part of e
skeleton
44 Toward
shelter

45 Brtm
47 Vagabond s

49 Cobbler's
concern
50 In favor of
51 Drums
5-4 Ginger
cookie
55 Olapetch
56 Dresses up
59 High card
60 Affirmative

62 Hand led
64 Courts
65 "-a clear
day .. "
68So be 67 Pate
89 Ardent
70 Fasten, as
book pages

71 Stalemate
72 Women '•
gp.
7 4 Ventilated

76 Meadow
77 Teer
78 Facial
feature
79 Interprets
82 Besmirches
84 Slrenglh
r'i Lariat
88 Alp
88 Father
89 Painful
90 Vehicles
92 Saturated

94 Returned lo
the scene
98 1\rrow
polson
99 Pr ohibits
100 En coun ~
torod
102 Chris Lloyd
103 Capuchin
monkey
104 Noise
105 Baker
products
106 Tolls
108 Time period
109 AL' s
neighbor
110 " - Cid"
11 1 Workman
112 Cloaks
114 Couple
116 Torma, o n
or Allen ·
117 Sonen In
temper
119 City section
120 Tardy
122 Strata
124 Antlered
animal
125 Linger
126 Mock
128 Bo Derek
number

129 Stuff
t31 Flying
c reature

132 Evergreen
1331 rrllates

135 Click beetle
138 J ump
139 Pleads

140 Offspring
t41 Salt
142 Hebrew
letter

143 Actor Asoer
144 Concoct
145 Choice pan
147 Sum
149 WOOden pin
150 Weird
152 Halo wearer
154 Cubic meter
156 Gr&amp;ek
marketplace
158 Circular
159 Frames of
mind
160 Lock ot hair
lEi 1 Type or car

DOWN
1 Rugged
mountain
crest

2 Postpone
3 Former
price agcy
4 Note of
ocala

5 Cloth
measure
6 Leave
7 Rep lies
8 Western
Indian
9 Compass
point
10 Attempt
11 Backcomb
12 Bold

13 Skill
14 550,1n
old Rome
15 Anci ent
Hebrew
ascetic
16 Court order
17 Lubricate
te Sun gop

19 Vapid
20 Household
need

27 Suitable
29 Has a snack
31 Pub potable
3B Oaring

37 Centu ry

plant
39 German
river
40 Agile
41 Need

42 Bog
43 Tie
44 War god
46 Zeus's
beloved
48 Female
horse

49 Prophet
50 Urge on
51 Blemish
52 Performer
53 In one's
dotage
55 Emits vapor
56 Skater's
place
57 Clamor
se Scoff
61 Shore bird
63 Matures
64 Takes a
blue·ribbon
68 Wagerers
70 Leave lonely
71 Tall struct ures

73 Actor Beally
74 Snakes
75 Acts
71 Street show
78 Kaye of
ballet fame
80 Memorandum
81 Gloomy
83 Goddess ot
healing
84 Bard
87 Recommit
89 Sit awk -

wardly
90 Apple drink

9 1 Old
womanish
92 Beach sight
93 Barber' s call
95 Saucy
96 Ardenl
97 Clock laces
99 Short hll

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

t01 105 Down
employee
105 l en der of a

sort
106 Fruit cake
107 Scorch
111 Tiller
112 Servan t
113 Mix
115 Feedbag
fillers
t1 8 Repair
11 8 Jump
119 - ol the
Roses
121 Newspaper
executives

123 Old pronoun
ot yore ..
125 Indian
abOde

128 Force
127 Raises the
splrll
129 Root
130 Cowboy
competillon
131 Insect
132 FMcers'
swords
134 Time period
136 " Aida" tor
one
137 King lear's
daughler
· t39 Raised
140 Winter
vehicle
144 Sl orage

.,..

145 The self
146 Superlalive
ending
147 Goll mound
148 - Veg as
149 Seed container
151 Ruthemum
symbol
153

~

NegatiiJe

155 White
House
initials,
1904
157 Earth
goddess

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
. AND HEATIN G
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or «6·4477
Bl

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Excavating

-·

---="

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. co. custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . ·specia l
farm rates. Callus tor free
estimates. 446·«40 .

1.--- - -- - - --

to one person. Ivan Fife,
614·256·1291 .
·•

I'

C&amp;M

Roger Hysell.
GARAGE I ..

OCAVATING

AUTO&amp;-K ·

· Donr &amp; lllcWIIot str-

St. R!. 12~ l'~oY· 011

'

Weot led tbe 10 of clubl.
llummy'o jacli bold tbat flnt
lrlcli aad Jackie pn~~Dptly
ruffed a low apade. TheD lt
wu bacli to dummy wtlb tbe
... of burU to ruff • secood low ....de wtlb tbe ...
of trumpo.
Now ber lUI trump wu
led a nd dummy ' s I 0
flnOIOed. Tbo t1o.1 aad queen
of trumpo were led aad lbe
aee of 1p11deo broopt doWII

F r en c h Cit y Pa i nt i ng
r esidenti al &amp; comm er ci al.
inter ior , ex ter ior , paper
&amp;
tex t ured
ha ng in g,
ce ilings. Ca ll 61 4-367·7784
or 61 4·367 ·7160 .

8l

- Dozers ·
- Rack hoes
- Dump Trucks
- LO· BOY
- Trench er
- water
-Sewer
- Gas Lines
-septic Systems

For sale or trade a camper,

S&amp;WTV

Furniture Stripping

Our

-';-,
,. -'--------f-:--~-------t'----:""',.------i self contaihed or will' rent

...·

INC.
-..l l('!! &amp; R£' JJiltr
~ IH'r m · Amilnol ·Carr u:- r
f. urnolCI}S
'&gt;i 1ec t M etal ~ h o p
152 Jrd Av e.
I ' ll . 44 6·4066

Ge n er~&lt;H~!i!!_.9_ .
JO lli E S BO YS WAT E R
SERVICE . Ca ll61 0 67 7471
or 61 4·367·0591.

STU CCO PL AS TER IN G

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

IJrld&amp;e !able. Actually, DODO
of the Jaekle storl• bad any
elemeat of reallty, but they
made 100&lt;1 rudiDC·
In tllll Jackie hllld, the
oorma1 fiDal coalnct lo lis
11eart1 or lis spadeo .down
ODO liKe two trump tricb
llllllt bo lOlL
~ blddlaf lo tbe bol ..
lllcompllle. t tbat
Jaekle replied wtllt flve dlato Sorllly'a lllackWood
n .. ao-trump. 1n tr.- days
tile ponaity for an _,fl.
cleat bld wu tbat the bld
bad to bo made aulfldOIII
.... tbat lt barred tbe part... of the offtllder frGm tile
~:,~Jackie did oot
WI rule 10 abe
)lilt eomcted to lis dla·
.... bad to play the

rR I G r RA l l f' N ,

8.!_ _

Set"IEQS

742-2328 ·

Rutl a nd , Oh.
7·15·1 mo. pd .

lA
~) r

...... tbere.

World~ aad
h l l l d t b e aplolu
of lila wife, Jaekle, at the

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE

CARPENTER

Sizes from 4 to' and all
woodbuildings24xl6.
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 5~
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15-tf c

...

will fiiiiM w!tll I hllld
ilmllted by Soaay WoJ-.
For 1111111 ,..n SoaaH;:u
tile editor of tile

7-15-l

1 mo.

Sizes 'start from 30x2~"
Utility Buildinac:

&amp; SERVICE

u .S. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
A~thorlzed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-3-tfc

Gr~g Roush

PH . 992· 7762

&amp; Tim Roush

BOGGS

New Homes - eKtensive remodeling
•Electric work
•custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing Work
14 Years Expen ence

:~========-t=========:t;:~;:::;::;;:;~=j

'I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE

.,.,.

ROOFING .
: H. L WR.ITESEL

N ii"P rnmfortahile home with nice l.1roP. ~ho\liP fr-~-:. .

"'

Free E stim il t es
4·20 ti c

+au

+41 1

IIOIITH

Caii843-33ZZ

247·3534

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION'

COLEMAN'S

FOR FUTURE USE "

•' •

2 LOTS IN GREEN ACRES
Lot 121. Sidewalk, 75'x148' .
'
,
Lol 123. Vacant99' Frontage by 148' depth . Priced lo
·.sell .
.
'
w334·1333

'

tJtu

+Q10171

home area 20 JNIS.
Free ntlmates

...;-- - - -- -- - -+-- - - - - - -- --lf-----------1 anytime
Boat l or sale . 614·949·2488
after 4 p.m .

DUTCH COLONIAl
.
Style, bea uty, charm, comfort - all describe this
home, 4 BR, 2112 baths, equipp~d eat' in kitc hen,
family room with flreplaoe, formal, llvlng a~d dl~ ­
lng room . YOu won't believe this home unie,ss yoo
see it for yourself. Moke your appointment today ,
to walk Into the entronce ot one of the most lovely .
homes in the are a .
i 3U

1456

N WOPEN

POOL

TOGETHER
• Stainless Steel
'Fiberglass
li Vinyl Liners

#53!

.

war

e7U
••

+II Q 10
+KJ
I'!AST
+IIH
.QJ 10 I

----------+------------11----------t------ -----! be tor e 8 and afte r 5 :30.
WE

I

•Residentia l
•Commercial
•I ndu s tr ia 1
Racine, Ohio

r ~duc ed

'

3.85 ACRES OR 18
lh Gree n Twp. close to Gallipoli s, farm home.
Sc ree ned -in front porch, glassed-in back porch, Per·
mastone si ding, chic ken house, 2 storage bldgs, Lots
of shrubbe ry and trees . Price d to sell . See this
love ly land and country home .
~534

."

Co.

. yi ..yt &amp; Mumlnum
Complete &amp;~~!tel wm,
complete remodeline, 11101ina of all types. W01ktd in

16 Y E AR S E XP .

dn n~

WOW! $39,900.00
WOW: 9% owne r fin ac in g. WOW : 3 BR ., 2 baths,
centrtt l ai r, gar age, sto r age bu i lding . all furn iture"'
inc luded. 5 minutes to downtown Ga ll ipolis. Ci ty
Sc hoo ls . La rqe level lo t.
• ~07
MEIGS COUNTY 3.25 ACRES Mor L
POND. 8 room remodeled country home beautifully
landscaped, all 3.25 acres mowed. e&gt;~rage with
cou.ncr..te ' driveway. ,24'• 27' famly room 10;1th
fireplace. Large block storage,j!Uildi~O - Fru it trees.
Bee n reduced over S17 ,000. YOu must .see th is coun·
try hqme. PhOne now-tor an a ppointment,
N507

!

Superior Siding

7· 11-cl

+AQIIIIII

L:;========+~=======~~-==========-~=========~
tex
ceil ings
ml.·
mertur
c iaed
! and
r es idencot ia

M:.IIII H NAN CE F IH F. HOMf IN GALLIPOLIS .
City conve niences nea r thi s immaculate home,
nicely landsca p~d . lar ge li v1ng room , 4 bedrooms. 2
ba ths, f am il y r oom , front porch, finished full
basement, 2 car ga ra ge w ith opener , steel si ding,
qas heat, and air condition. Call tod ay for a per sonal
S how in~.
+ 464

.

~ T YLf. . .. . F,lf. GANCF ... A W~Y OF

SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE
Bear Front-End
Ser vice
D e p endab l e,
g uar anteed Wor k . 9 yrs. Ex ·
per ience.
SR 124 , R.utla nd , Oh .
For Appt. 742· 2057
7-1·1 mo.

NOIITB

EUGENE LONG

&amp; ELECTRONIC

"Beautilul, Custom ·
Built Garages"
Call for lree siding
esttmates, 949·2101 or\
t4NI60.
No Sunday Calls

-=·- -~£!!r9~~~~~~~ =·

Jill~~

PRICE REDUCEDS2G,OOO
MAI&lt;E USAN OFFER
I think you would say that this sorowt lng brick trHevel Is ooe Of the nicest
country homes you've ever seen. TAts
beauty Is situated on 4'12 ocres of land
about 3112 miles from Rodney. Why not
IP.t vnu,. fAmllv ll'!nin'lt' .~ BRs. 3 baths.
large living and dining room , com·
plete kitchen, tamily room with stone
fireplace and 2 car garage, Be the

. PH. OFFICE 446-7699

1979 CHE II Y 4x4, loade d,
36, 775 miles, excell ent con·
dillon, $4, 200. Ca ll 304-458·
1833 or 458·1052 .

1978 HONDA Ha wk , model
CB400T, 6320 mil es, phone
304-675·6679.

ALIGNMENT

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

m -7539 .

STROUT. REALTV Inc.

BUILDING OR MOBtlf· HOM£ SITE
- Approx . 5''' acres located on the
Graham School Rd .. co. waer. over 300
ft . rd. frontage . Green Grade School &amp;
Galli a Academy High School. 5111,900.

NF.W LISTING : \liNTON - 3 bedroom
situated along Ke ~tone Rd. Comlortable
with approx. 1 acre of land. Nice garden
owner will he lp finance to qualified buyer .
$32,500.00.

1973 Che vy Bl.,er with
37,000 mi . Rll dio, ~. c ... p.s.,
p.b ., auto., lint glass, 10 in ..
rally wheels with 10 x 15
Land trac tires. S1.700. 614·

O'Brien Electri( ·
Service

A hand for Jackie

Dealer: Soulb
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

*

.,

LOCATION PLUS QUALITY ShOUld
describe lhls lovely 3 BR brick ranch.
Special features are a large U1 and
dining rm ., equipped kitchen, 1'" baths,
lc.undry, quality carpet, cent. air and
an O'Versized 2 car garage. Located 0(1
U.S. 35 West and shown by ap·
pointment.

Phone
1·(614)-tf2·3321
lit&lt; E NEW - Nice ly
carpeted one floor
home. 3 years old, 3
bedroom s, bath. eiec.
heat, hi9hest bill S127 .00 .
last winter . Storm fix ·
tures, porch and large
le vel lot tor just S39,500 .

.

•Phyllis Loveday, Phone44H230
Joaft BOIIIISo Pllone 446-Hfl

Real Ettale - General

-;;:::;;::::::::::::::::==========i111 first to see this one.

t

78 FORO Fairmont, good
condition 1ns19e &amp; ou t, 4
speed, 23 to 25mpg. 12
Volkswagen
Yan ,
9
passenger, body good ,
motor runs but needs work,
reasonable, 882·31.15.

JEEPS, c ars, I rucks
SIOO available at
government sales in
area. Call
79 LIGHT blue Ford
714·569·0241 e xt.
Mustang, sun roof, lOW
directory on how to pur· bOOk price. $3,500.00. Call
chase. 24 hours.
304·675-3631 .

- - - - - -- -

---==="'--- -

Livestock

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West V irginia . Over
20 tess expensive c~rs In
stock .

1979 1/W Rabbit , 36,000
miles, good cond. Call 614·
2.15·9557.
1978 Buick Sky Hawk
mileage 56,700, ex. cond., 4
s pd ., 6 cyl. , $2,800. Call «6·
4740.

Pets for SOle

Son ia's Professional Dog
Grooming. Call614·388·8547
and ask for Sonia.

,··~··

8N FORD t rac tor, S1250.
Used grade r blades, S125 . 3 ·
Pt. carry ails, S85. 2 Row
cultivators, S150. Portable
air compressor. S800 .
Chevy 3/&lt; ton truck, $1000.
Gehl grinder &amp; m l•er,
11000. Old time dinne r
billS, SSO. &amp; S7S. Riding
lawn mowers, $150. &amp; up.
Slll·576-2328 or 576·2606.

Bulldtno materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Gra nde, 0 .
Call614-2.15·5121 .

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor a t 614·367·
7220.

'

Rt!Q. Amer ican saddle bred
mar e with foal. Cal l 614·
256·6750 or (46·2107 .

s_! --iiUiiiiioijsiiiijjiie;-

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor faciliti es.
Also A.K C Reg. Dober·
mans. Ca ll446·7795.

197A International travel ·

71
Autos for 5o le
Last c hance to buy 19n
Buick Regal, V-6, p.s .. p.b., 1971 Dodge Challenger, ex ·
much more. $3,000. firm . cellent condition, 304·675·
4638.
614-992-5834.

'S

BARN.
at Brown ' s
1.u idermy, Co. Rd . 2S
ncar Ches1er .
T. V . and Radio Repili r
Also other · E lec tronic
F uuipmenf.
Terrv Br own
Techn ici an
Ass oc itl te de'i'ree .1 nd
1st cla ss F CC ltcense.
P hon e 985·3364 Avc.
or98S-3833
7·16·1 mo.

General ·

Services offered

Business senices

t nc.1 t ed

10WIIII1 T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home446-t53t

oil very roomy , good cond .,

~-======­

LAWte mower, S35 . '304·675·
4638.

ORAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
C how puppies , C F A
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call «6·
3844aftl!r 4p.m .

75 Chevrol et stationwagon,
8UX&gt;O, good MPG, good
t ires. good cond. Ca ll be t·
wee n 4 a nd 5, (46·4229.

I

'SERVICE

1976 Honda 550, 4 c yllndJ r,
lots of ex tras, excellent
condi t ion. Call61 4·256·6836.

76 FORD .F250 &gt;,; ton wit h
Lear topper $~000 . Truc k
camper, 8ft .,
ny extras,
steeps 6, ex ellent con·
dillon, $850. Both for S2800.
Call 304-937·3392 or 304·895·
3942.

985·4111 . Ask for Art.

. .............
_ ......
.-...............
___
-. . ............... ..

..

1980 Honda Odessy good
cond., S850. Cons ider car or
tr uck in tra de. Ca ll6 U -2.15·
5575 .

Real Eat ete -

59
For Sale or Trad e
~970 vw Supe r Bee tl e. 614·

1977 Gr and Fury S1600,
Sears ta sk handler tiller, 8
H P , S8 00 ;
On e -St e p
camera, SIS. 304·675·4684.

56

19 90
Y A M AHA
65 0
Ma x imum ,
bl ack
&amp;
chrome, driveshaft, ex·
ce lle nt condition, S2150.
Call a fle r 3:30, 304-67~ · 4849 .

1976 Ford 1 ton truc k. Good
cond . 614·247·3895, afte r 6
p.m.

------- - - -

A~pl es .

XS 750 SF specia l Yamaha
1979. Exc . cond . New pa int.
843-4715. J im .

81 Suzuk i 850 L full dress.
Shall dr ive, like new. C-' l
61 4-256·1W a fter 5.

71 Olds tor sa le. S600. Ca ll
61 4-256·1235.
1980 SUZUK 1 550, 4 cy l, l1ke 1978 Harley Davidson. 614·
new, $1500. 304·675·2354.
949·21 45.
72
Truck 's for Sale

3 wheel bicyc le. 3 speed, 112 runner bea ns pick your
good cond. 614·992·3790.
own, bring c on t~ iner s .
$6.00 bu., Ca ll «6·4907 .
- - -} - - . - --CA LL Robert Ha rper, Closed Sunda ys a nd We d·
dis tr ibutor of Meadow
Fres h P roduc ts, 304675·
1293

saoo.

4090.

T im es · Se nt i n e i- P~ge- 0 · 7

····--- -··- -·

75Mustang II , V·6 e ngine, 4 3 Wheele r Honda 90 ATC
speed trans .
Call 675· $500. 614-985·4175 .

Ha y . S1 .25 bale In field . 304·
675·2254 or 30.1-675·1302.

985·4175 .
12" Sears ba nd saw, sa n·
der , motor &amp; stand. $400 .

.

REPAIR· .
' /

l 1

· or 992·7121
_
3·24-tfc

~--

.

CONSTIUCfiON
vlet,

ds,

Also Tr•nsmlsslon '

PH. t92-UI2

. AJID . ' ...

36ft. GM motor home. Bath
&amp; kitchen area; sl~ps 6,
seats 9, $1 ,200. call 614·379·
2631 .;

'Y•ter...sewer, 1!011",

fou.rdat1o1u,
NCiaf!IIIIOtl.

LICIIIIN &amp; loftctMt

l'hoM Mf-tlt,
orMf-2~17

3·3-lfn

'l

•.'.
''

�: Page- D-8- 1he ~und ~y t rm es - ~e ntin e l

romeroy - Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- roint f'leilsant,

Area deaths
Helen A. Beeson
COLUMBUS---Miss HPIPn Annis
Beeson, 84 . 6000 Rlvrrslde Drive
(Friends hip Villagrl Dublin, Ohio
died Saturday at RivNslde Methodist Hospital, Columbu s.
Miss Beeson was born in Middle
port the daughter of the late Wil·
llam Henry and Ella Pummer
Beeson.
She graduated from Middlepor1
High School and Boston University,
Cambridge. Mass. She did her
graduate work at Ohio University
and Capital University, Columbu s.
She was a retired school teacher
having taught for nearly 50 years at
franklin Junior High 1health and
physical education). She was a long
time member of the Middleport
Presbyterian Chu rch, member of
D. A. R., member of O.E.S.,Unlverslty Chapter, member of American
Association of University Women.
member of National Honorary Society for Women Educators (Delta
Kappa Gamma ) also a member of
the Columbus Country Club.
· She lis survived by three nephews and their wives, William E.
and Mabel Beeson, DesPlalnes.
·m: Robert J . and Mary Beeson,
-Huntsville, Alabama and John D.
and Anna Jo Beeson, Upper Arlington: two great nephews; four great
nieces: two great, great nephews
and one great, .great niece.
Graves ide services will be held
Tuesday at 11 a. m. at Middleport
Hlll Cemetery with the Rev. f rancis Park of Columbus, officiating.
Schoedlnger Northwest Chapel
Funeral Home, Columbus, ls ln
charge of arrangements.

Ruth Doepping
GALLIPOLIS - Ruth A. D0epping, 87, a resident of 41 Grape St.,
·and composer of th e Gallia
·Academy High School Alma Mater, ·
died at 3 a.m. Saturday in Scenic
Hills Nursing Center. She had been
in failing health several years.
. Mrs. Doepping was a retired
teacher from the Gallipolis City
:SChools System, serving as music
supervisor for more than 30 years.
She was born June 22, 1894 , in
Springfield Twp ., Gallia County ,
daughter of the late George B.
Sawyer and Nellie Augusta Beardsley Sawyer.
Her husband, Harris Doepping,
whom she married in 1939, survives.
One sister and one brother preceded
her in death. Several nieces and
nephews survive.
Mrs. Doepping was a member of
Grace United Methodist Church. She
served as choir director for several
years.
A 1913 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, Mrs. Doepping was also a graduate of Ohio
University. She attended Ohio State
Jiniversity and the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music.
, Mrs. Doepping wrote the GAllS
;Alma Mater in 1934. She was diret•
tor of the community Messiah for a
liUmber of years.
: Funeral services will be held 1
p.m. Tuesday at the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home with Rev.
James Frazier officiating.
· Burial wi~ be in Pine Street
Cemetery.
: Friends may call at the funeral
~orne from 6 until9 p.m. Monday.
· If friends so desire, flower contributions may be directed to Grace
United Methodist Church Choir.

~aroline

Helsley

BEXLEY · Caroline McElhinny
Helsley, ffl, formerly of Bexley.
Ohio, cjled Thursday evening at the
rark Avenue Convalescent Home
In Bloomfield, Conn.
: Born July 2, 1895 In Johnstown,
Pa., the daughter of the late Wll·
llam David and Carrie Dunbar
McElhinny.
: Her late husband Albert B. Hels·
tey died In 1941.
· She is sui'\ived by one son, Dun·
liar Helsley, of Bloomfield, Conn:
fhree grandchlldren: and a nephew
I!Jld two cousins who are Galllpolls
residents. .
: One brother preceded her in
Oeath.
• She was a member of St. Albans
~d St. Paul Episcopal Church in
Columbus; the Officers' Club of the
Defense Supply Center In Colum·
iius: and the A.A.u.w . In Bexley.
: Funeral services will be held 11
(l.m. Monday at St. Peter's Epfscol"Ji Church with the Rev.· Robert
teake otficlating. Burial will be at
rifound lllll Cemetery. There will
~no calltng hours.

.
Beulah Jones
~' MIDDLEPORT--Funeral

servi~ for Beulah B. Jones, 65, prornl·
flent Mlddleyort resident and long
time Meigs ·County News Bureau
~ef. for tJie Athens Messenger,
fho dfed WednesdaY. July 15, will
·9e held Monday at 1 p.m. at Ewl.n'g

Chapel with the Rev. Robert Robinson officiating.
Buria l will be In Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends may tall at the
funera l home anytime today and
Monday unt II time of services.

Ralph G. Martin
MIDDLE PORT · Ralph G. Mar·
tin, 68, Middleport , died suddenly
~- rld ay a t Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. Marti n was born June 6, 1914
In Middleport . He was preceded In
death by his father, Samuel G. Martin and twin sons, Samuel Giles and
Daniel Henry Martin.
Mr. Martin was a member of the
f reewill Baptist Church, Middleport, Middleport Feeney Bennett
Post 128, American Legion. was a
veteran of World War II having
served with the Combat Engineers
Third Army, and received the Pur·
pie Heart whlle serving under Gen.
Patton. He was employed at Imperia l Electric Co., Middleport for 29
years.
He Is survived by his wlte, Betty
J o Mash Martin: daughter and.sonln-law, J udy Jo and Patrick Cavote
and one granddaughter. Teresa
Dawn Cavote, Nelsonville; his
mother, Lenora Archer Kinney, Columbus: three halt-sisters, Lora ine. Bertha and Erma June.
Funeral services will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Leslie Hayman ortlclatlng. Burial will be In Riverview
Cemetery. friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2 to4 and
7 to 9. Military rttes will be conducted at the graveside by feeney
Bennett Post 128.

JII!Y 18, 1982

w. Vi!. .

Letter contents
heard by jury
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
contents or a message on the fllp
side of an alleged suicide note has
been read ln the murdertrialofRoy
Howard Sage, charged in the shootIng death or IS-year-old Catherine
Wanner.
The message, which was admit·
ted during the second day of testimony Friday in the trtal of the
47-year-old Sage, was discovered In
Sage's Columbus apartment.
Miss Wanner , an Ohio University
coed, was found shot to death Feb.
22 ln Sage' s apartment. Sage suffered gunshot wounds and was
hospltallzed.
The defense contends the two had
a suicide pact, but the prosecution
claims Miss Wanner was an intelll·

Business,

gent and spirited young woman
who would never take her own lite.
Steve Hope, a detective assigned
to the Crime Scene Search unit,
read the message Friday in Frank·
lin County Common Pleas Court at
the request of Sage's defense:
"To My Little Baby Roy," it began. "I met the nicest, warmest
person In 'my llte. He's sexy and
beautiful. Words are hard to descrlbe how I feel about him. Within
himseU he radiates a certain charisma . Undescribable ...
"I want him for me lor the rest of ,
my llte," the note continued. ·'I'll
love him with aU my heart my little
honey. Your Baby, Cathy."
It wasn't clear from testimony
whetller Miss Wanner wrote the
note or to whom the note referred.

Area deaths
Hazel Vanderhoof
GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. Pearl Elliott
and Mrs. Erma Lyons, both of
Gallipolis, received word of the
death of their sister, Mrs. Hazel
Vanderhoof, 70, of 2230 S. 7th St.,
Ironton, at 2:3C a.m. Friday.
She was the daughter of the late
Andrew and Stella (Dempsey)
Massie of Lawrence County, and
was a member of Centenary United
Metllodist Church, Rt. I Ironton.
She is survived by her husband,
Lawrence. They celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary June I I.
Also surviving are one son, Gor·
don, Rt. 1 Ironton, and three
daughters, Mrs . Jack (Phyllis)
Barker and Mrs. Garland (Linda)

Fugett, both of Coal Grove, and Mrs.
Edna Dillow of Rt. 1 Ironton: nine .
grandchildren and five great·
grandchildren.
Besides the two sisters here, one
other sister, Mrs. Gene (Evelyn)
Helling, Cleveland Heights, and two
brothers , Leonard Mjlssie of
Wheelersburg, and Lowell Massie of
Ironton also survive.
Funeral services will be Monday
at 2 p.m. at Centenary United
Methodist Church. Burial will be in
Highland Memorial Gardens, South
Point.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m.
Sunday at Phillips FWleral Home,
Ironton. The body will be taken to
the church an hour before the
funeral.

CENTRAl. TRUST CO.
SALUJ-S..

T~E 119th.~A,.N0AL

.Meigs Counly

~everance

tax check8

CHARLESTON, W. Ya'. ·- State
Treasurer· Larrie Bailey has 'an- ·
noWlced that coaheverance checb
totaling $3,284,831.61 bllve been
distributed to counties and
municipalities in \'{est Virginia . .
Amounts received in Maaol! C!:ounty' includes MBson
$7,084.78;
Hartford, $234.19;
$254.~1; Mason, t603.17; .
$725.74; Point Pleasant, f2;383.;12. ,

... t-,.. .

NEW BUILDING- Universal Mine Supplles Inc.
lias moved from its former buUdiDg at 1415 Eastern

--

Ave. to a 7,200 square fool structure on Georges Creek
Rd.

Winning
ln the major leagues seems to have
magical properties for business as
well as sports.
There's no elixir more potent'
than a long winning streak tor comforting a baseball manager's
churning stomach, and Improving
business at restaurants and bars
particularly those close to playing
fields . .
Many Cincinnati businesses are
·seeing the other side of the coin this
year. With the Reds baseball team
well Into one of its worst seasons,
cash regjsters aren'i ringing as
often. The reason Is simple - win·
ning teams draw fans, and that
translates into money tor hotels,
restaurants, cab companies, bars.
and other places that cater to the
fans.
When there's the smell of success
ln the air, llke the Reds· baseball
championship years of the mid1970s or the football Bengals' meteoric rise to the Super Bowl last
season, business cashed In on the
fans' propensity to celebrate.
"We'd sure like to see the Reds
get into the playorts and the World
Series every year. That would be a
lot of bucks for us," said Ken Hell,
owner of Barle)'corn's bar and restaurant in downtown Cincinnati.
But this year the correlation of a
winning team and good business Is
in reverse. The strike by major
league players last season also
struck millions of dollars from the
local economy , according to
analysts.
Now, the Reds are In last place In
their division with one of the worst
records In baseball, and the na. Ilona! economy ls In a slump, too.
Attendance Is down significantly,
and business Is hurting.
"We're otUor Reds games prob-

BusineS8 failures

FAIR

COMING - Tbls biUboard advertisement by Central Trust of Middleport went into· place Friday at-

ternoon on Pomeroy's W. Main St., and advises that the
annual Meigs County Fair ls upcoming Aug, 17-21.

Thls Eureka Upright has
the power to 1111!1• your
cleaning chores 81111•.

50% Extra
Suction

Powir

Air conditohing, power steering, and brakes, white walls, tinted
glass, AM· FM stereo, sport mirrors, body side molding and much
more. Brand new.
.
.
•

IMDdel

1086
'

9287

•Triple flitOf system for dust
'free cleaning.
·
•VIbr&amp;-YroomOf ®ll beater bar
brush roll loosens !leaP grit
and ground-In dirt . ,
o6 position Dlai-A·Nap®
cleaps carpeta from low
naps to hlgh-.hega. '
•Bright headlight to,aeeln
dark areas.

I
j

•

CHECK INVENTORY - Dennis Parsollll, left, and Jack Panons,
right, two ofneen in the Univenal Mine Supplies Inc., start checking the
inventory following the recent move into the firm's new warehouse on
Georges Creek Rd.

'

GALLIPOLIS- Afamily business
which distributes pumps and
hydraulic equipment parts into six
st:Jites and some areas of the Eastern
and Southern United States has
moved to its new building on
Georges Creek Rd., Addison Twp.
Andrew Parsons, Rt. I , Gallipolis,
founder of Universal Mine Supplies
Inc. , 'mOved the business into a 7,200
square foot stnicture last week;
Parsons, a former West Virginian,
moved to Gallia County in the late

'50s.
-He started a distributorship with
Perrrrco Pumps and Parts in West
Virginia in 1970 and moved his
business .toGallipoli~ in 1975.
The business was previously ·
located at 1415 Eastern Ave.
During the week, Universal Mine
Supplies Inc. distributes its products
into six stales via a truck route
systerJl. Parts are trucked to parts of
West Virginia, Virginia, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Pennsylvania and, of

course, Ohio. Other orders are sent
by United Parcel to Georgia and
Florida .
At the present time, 12 people are
employed by Universal Mine Supplies Inc., mostly family members.
Corporation officers are Lucille
Parsons, president;, Jack Parsons,
vice president; Dennis Parsons ,
treasurer, and Peggy Yeauger,
secretary. Route drivers include
another Parsons son, James, and
Fred Lernley of Gallipolis.

BUICK LESABRE SEDAN
~!JLL PRICE ~9-62
35 More to Choose
.· SUNbAY
From
SHOPPERS
..

·

J uly 18, 1982

NEW YORK (API - Business
failures were up 45 percent ln the
f!tst haU of the year from the same
perlod a year ago, according to a
business information service.
Dun &amp; Bradstreet Inc. safd Fr l~
day the number of buslress !allures
In the last week or June rose to 522,
pushing the total for the first six
months of the year to 11,948.
The 522 !allures In the week
ended July 1 were up from 448 the
week before. The total !allures for
all of 1981 was 17,040.
Figures Include both forced and
voluntary bankruptcies, Including
companies operating under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy
code, which gtves a concern protection from creditors while it organ·
lzes a plan to pay its debts .

ably 40 to 50 percent of our business
from what lt was two year s ago,"
Hell said. "You get used to that
many people corning In during
those months, and It's not there
now."
"I guess it really gets back to my
statement last year when the Reds
were on strike,'' said Jerry Cahall,
an owner of the Yellow Cab Co.
"Whenever you lose people out of
the city, you're losing business.
With the Reds not drawing, It' s cost·
lng us money : It's costing us ca b
trips.
"The general economy ls costing
us money. Money Is tight. No mat·
ter what event you take out of the
city, or what team Is not doing as
well as 1t should, lt hurts all
businesses."
No where was that better demonstrated than in Cincinnati last year.
When the players' struck, the city
- one &lt;l the smallest major league
baseball markets - lost a major
summer attraction.
The ballclub became one of the
best draws in baseball during the
1970s, when It won two world cham·
plonships. The Reds drew more
than 2 million fans annually to Rl·
verfront Stadium for efght consecutive years before the strike, with a
peak of 2.6 miUlon In 1976.
But attendance has slowly
dwindled since, and threatens to
fall below 2 miUlon ior the first full
season since 1972. After 40 homes
dates, the Reds have attracted
757,130 people to Riverfront, a drop
of about 92,000 from last year. At
that pace, they are projected to
draw about 1.5 million for the
season.
That's bad news lor downtown
businesses accustomed to having
winning teams draw customers to
the area.
"It's the worst. The ultimate
worst," said Lisa Blizard, a bartender at Sleep-Out Louie's, a bar
near the ballpark. "If you want to
go as far as how crowded we are
when we have Reds' games. I'd say
It just hasn ' t been hardly
anything."
When Reds pl ayers were on
strike last season, analysts est!-

mated missed games cost t11e local
economy about $400,000 for eac h
weekday game and more than
$500,000 per weekend date. That fi g·
ured to a bout $21 mllllon for the 24
home dates missed beca use of the
strike.
Economic consultant Law rence
McLa ughlin . who computed losses
for the strike, said there' s probably
been a minimal effect on buslesses
so far ri·om attendance dropping
about 2,300 per hoinc date this year .
But he said a losing team might
cause bigger problems lor busl·
nesses later.
"Certainly If the situation persisted over the year. a nd It looked ·
as though there was not going to be
any substantial lmpro,·ement ln
1983, one would anticipate there
would be some negative effects on
people coming into town to see the
Reds," McLaughlin said.
Joyce Wise, an owner of The In
Between, said she's noticed the
drop ln out-of-town fans already.
"That's what we usually see,
mostly the'out-of,town people," she
said. "Of course, we haven' t seen
much of that. Some of them are
from pre-planned bus trips. But the
people from Columbus and Dayton
areas that normally say, 'Let's go
to Cincinnati and catch the Reds'
game today ,' we are not seeing
·
those people."
She said the team probably ls beIng hurt by the economy as well as
the dismal fteld performance.
"I'm sure the economy has had
some effect on the Reds, too, " she
said . " Plus people are not that Interested In going to see the Reds .
They're not doing that great. Cincinnati people, to be frank, ar e not
Inter ested now. They're the type of
people who llke to stick with a Winning team."
None of the businesses rely solely
on athletic teams to bring ln customers. But owners point out that every little bit helps In a tight
economy .
"Anything that takes away from
business today makes It painful,''
Cahall said . "We' re all tightening
up the belts. We have to live
through lt ."

Attends show, sale
WUISVIUE, KY. - The 1982
New Horizons Show and Sale, sponsored by the Ohio Valley Charolais
Association, (eight state area) was
held July 9-10 at Derby Farms,
Louisville, Ky. Participating from
thiS area was Bob Evans Hidden
Valley Ranch, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
H.V.R. offered a heifer and a two
year old cow with calf, both from top
national herdsires.
H.V.R. Lady Mac Expectation
0809, was a class winner and was top
selling lot. She is the daughter of Ex·
pectation 269. H.V.R. Lady Expect
. 145 was also a class winner and was
sired by Expectation Jr. Il, the 1980
National Champion. Forty-three
females were sold for a sale average
of $1,377, while six herdsire prospects were sold for an average of$1,130.

JOINS BEAUTY .SHOP- Encllanted Mirror Spring, Valley Plaza,
announces the employment of tlelen (Pebbles) Wilson and Sherry Lee
Knapp. Helen ~Pebbles) Wilson graduated this Spring from Buckeye
Hll1s and Sherry Lee Knapp, an experienced operator, graduated from
the Huntington School of Beauty Culture. Shown, left to right, !rout row,
Pebbles Wilson, Sherry Kincaid. Back row, Sharon Kincaid, Sherry Lee
Knopp.

r"

Williams chosen new sales director
motivation

and

business •.
'

llill s.is Dlrt!ctor piJeltiCII clurtnc I three Wlh
period Iii whlch,slie developed i Wilt

ollllCII'e than 2f blla&amp;1 CIIHidlwtll

1114•• ee4ed CCIIIplllflllea ICIIIL

.... WiDliDII alfllllled • weetionl ~ aliCII conducted by

Mary Kay ~ Richard Ragen,

.Prelldent and c:o-flllllder ollbe CUD'
ptlllf, aDd otber .Jllelllberl li cor-

aad frairance products.
1111 camp811Y'I net sa1ea wue

....... IIIIIJiilllllllt ' ~ ~
....... .,lllbjectl~
lteWcaJ Prodtq . kllowledg~.
lu!P .. ~ :~• teebnlqus,

__ ... .._

"

She. joins a group of more than
3,300 other independent Sales Directors who now coordinate and 'ald.the
efforts of nearly 150,1m independent
beauty consultants who are actively
demODlltrating and selling Mary ·
Kay products throughout.the United
States, Canada, A~ and
~- As a Sales DiJ:ec:toJ'; Mlc·
Willlamll will provide 1~.
training supPort and managenientd
·her unit.
'
Since Us founding in September
JIIS, Miry Kay CGimetlca, IDe., hal
1\'olwd from • llll8ll repctDII
001111111!11 fli1n to a fully lntelnted
lllllllllfac:tur and multi-naltonal
dildrtiJQtor of· skin care, hair care

0

· ~·· .She achleYed

ELBERFELDS ·
IN
POMEROY

w. Va.

prime.

-·

SyraC\IIIe as sales director of the independent field marketing
organization.
' MI. W~ - -~ in in1
dependlllt beauty cmsldtiint tn Jane

·Air condHionlng, V-6 252 ergine with a·utomatic overdrive; AM·FM r
stereo, body- side molding, tinted glass and much, much more,
. Brand new.
·

- ~~~E :

!ling at about 1.2.5 petcent, that
should exert downward pressure on
the prime (lending rate) lil tlle next
few weeks," said David Jones, an
economist at Aubrey G. Lanston ~
Co.
The prime rate, 16.5 percent at
most banks, Is that base used by
banks to calculate ln!erest on loans
to their best corporate customers.
It does not directly affect consumer
rates, such as tllose on home mortgages, but consumer rates generally follow the direction of the

NEW YORK tAP) - Econo- ing, analysts belleve the Fed has
mists are predicting some rellef decided lt can relax, at least ternfrom high interest rates following a
porarily, Its grip on credit and proSharp drop ln the nation's money vide more reserves to the banking
supply. ~hort-term rates already system.
'The federal funds rate, the Inter·
have begun falling.
The Federal Reserve Board re- est charged by banks for excess repartee! Friday that M1 - the basic serves loaned to other banks,
money . supply measure that In- dropped as low as 1.2.25 percent late
eludes cash and funds in checking- Frlday from 13 percent Thursday.
type accounts ~ fell $3.7 billion ln
In the week ended Wednesday, the
the \w!ek ended June 30 to a season- Fed · said the r&lt;~te averaged 14.47
ally adjusted average or $445.9 · percent, down from 14.81 percent
b1lll6n.
the pnivlous week.
With~ money supply contract·
. "With the federal funds rate set-'
.

man of Dallaa-bued Mary· Kay .management.
Cosmet.tea, lite., hal annouilced the
appointment of Judith WillWn&amp; of,,

.

All At Compirlble Salines.

BOOKKEEPER Shirley
Parsons Yeaguer serve!i as
secretary, and bookkeeper for
Universal Mine Supplies Inc.

Family business moves to
bigger structure this week

DAi.JAS-MaryKay Allh,Olair-

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FINANCING·

r

·Economists predicting some relief

1982 BUICK REGAL 2 DR.

BANK

~

Gets dirt
you can't
see. ,
EUREKA ESP
UPRIGKT -

GMAC ·

up 45 pet.

EUREKA

AUG.17 thru 21

Amelita Taylor
MARYLAND--- Mrs. Amellta
Taylor, 56, Finksburg, Md ., died
Thufs da y a t a hospital in ·
Maryland .
Mrs. T~ylor was born Sept. 8,
1925 at Grafton, W. Va. Shewas preceded in death by her parents.
She ls survived by three daugh·
ters, Amelita Lawrence, Patricia
Ta ylor and Phyllis Weaver aU of
Maryland; one son, Andrew Wild·
man, Maryland: two sisters, Kath ryn Miller, Minersville, and
Gertrude Ziegler, Fairless Hill,
Pa.: one brother, frank W. Devlin,
Keene, N. H.
Funeral services will be .held
Monday at 1 p.m. at St. John's
Methodist Church, Grafton, W.Va .
Burial will be ln Bluemont Cemetery. Bartlett Funeral Home In
Grafton ls ln char.ge of
arrangements.
·
Ka tllryn Miller and her husband, ·
Myron and three grandchlldren,Angela, Elizabeth and Matthew
Miller left for Grafton Saturday. At
Grafton they joined their son and
wife, Mr. and Mrs. JamesR. Miller
(Linda Kauff) and · their other
grandchild, four month old Nicholas Braden of Spartenburg, S, C.

-

first "Class graduates. Following tlle
graduation of the first class, a lormal review of the program is made
and if the standards of the
organization are met approval is
granted.
The nursing program at Rio Gran·
de consists of a specially designed
two-year curriculum, for the
preparation of registered nurses
with emphasis on givingdlrect care
to patients within a structured
health care setting where supervision and guidance are available.
Th~ nursing curriculum provides
both general education and nursing
education courses. The eombination
promotes the development of the individual both as an associate degree
nurse and as a member Qf society .

t ·ornt rt easant,

Cl~CINNATI (AP) -

RGCCC ·nursing · program
RIO GRANDE - The Ohio Board
of Nursing Education and Nurse
Registration recently voted to grant
full approval to the . Rio Grande
College and Community CollegeHolzer School of Nursing .
This is a change frorn the conditional approval which is granted to
all new schools of nursing until its

Galli polis, Ohro

suffers from losses

NEW - Thfs stone block building on North Second St., MldcHeport,
formerly a feed store, Is being transformed Into an attractive &amp;ettlni u It
becomes the Victory Baptist Church. Siding and enhancing Ugbtlng are
being added to tbe exterior of tbe bufidiDg.

Myrtie M. Meal
GALLIPOLIS · Myrtle M. Meal,
94, Gallipolis, died at 5:50p.m. frl·
day at Holzer Medical Center.
She was born Nov. 6, 1887 ls Mls·
sourt. the daughter of the late Paris
a nd Lily Frye Elldns.
Married Adam Meal ln Gallla
County In 1907. He preceded her in
death ln 1954.
She was a member of Elizabeth
Chapel Church, which she attended
often as long as she was able. She
also belonged to Ladles Aid and the
Daughters of America.
Survived by two daughters, Mrs.
Rosina Saunders, Gallipolis and
Mrs. Dorts Feliure, Columbus: one
daughter-In-law, Mrs. Kathryn
Meal, Gallipolis; one half-brother,
Les ter Elkins, Bidwell: three
g r a nd c hi l dr e n, six great ·
grandchildren and three great·
great-granchlldreri; several nieces'
a nd nephews.
She was preceded In death by her
husband, two sons, one brother,
. three half-brothers, one sister and
two half-sisters.
Funeral services \\1U be 2 p.m.
Monday at Elizabeth Chapel ·
Church with the Rev. Alfred Holley
officiating. Burial will be at St.
Nick' s Cemetery.
Friends may call at Willis Fun·
era! Home up to 4: 30 p.m. Sunday
and until noon on Manday. The
body wUille ln state one hour prior
the service at the church.

Middl eport

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_g iven
full approval

~•ntintl Section ~
Queen City businesses
ijim..-

Po m eroy

,-.a mlJlioD 1n 1111, up 41 perceslt

fl•-•

-, pr1Wioalyear.
rm~tl.e

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mlllicin reporte4 the '
.

wllldl he wiD pnb !llr resell or . . ICCOl'dlllc lei
!Ill wife. 'lbe . . . . tltl!rted Wedneliclay at ~oOO
1111d. w~ IJOid rihln about 15 ·mlmrltiJ.

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Page-E-2- The Sur1day Times-Sentinel

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

Meigs County agent's corner

Cross pollination on vine
crops topic this time of year
By JOliN C. RICE
Exterudun Agent
Agriculture
Mel~s County
POMEROY - Tomatoes on.
Potatoes .. . These are potato fruits,
not tomatoes. An excellent potato
growing season has resulted in
profuse flowering and subsequent
pollination Potatoes, being in the
same family as tomatoes, develop
fruit resembling tomatoes. The fruit
has littl e value to the gardener,
unless he wants to devel op new
pot.Bto varieties.

Hardly a year passes that
someone

doesn' t

ask

if

cross

pollination in vin•· crops occurs.
Cucwnbers, muskmelons, pumpkins
and squash do have similar growth
habits but are different genetically,
so they do not cross pollinate.
You can gruw melons, cucumbers,

squash and pumpkin in the same
row or small area without worry of
cross pollination. You must remember, however, that new seed must be
purchased each year. If you saved
seed from mature fruit last year and
plaJ)ted them this year. you'll likely
gel differences in plant and fruit
characteristics. Most seed sold on
the market l&lt;xlay are hybrids, which
means they were produced from a
couple of parent varieties to get the
hybrid vigor, unifonnity, and in
smne cases, earliness and disease

resistance. After these seed arc
planted and mature fruit, seed from
the fruit most always revert back to
1V1e of the parents. So. stick to new
seed each year to be safe.
Blossoms But No Fruit - The
flowering habit of vine crops is such
that the first flowers forming on the
vine::; or "runners" are a staminate
or pollen bearing fl owers. These
flowers have no potential to bear
fruil and wither and drop off the
plants. Subsequent flowers fonning
on the vines are both pollen bearing
and pistillate or fruit-bearing
flowers. Upon .pollination and fertilization, the pistillate flowers bear
the crop.
No, it is not time to file your laxes.
Yes, it is time to keep good records.
Richard Duvick, Extension
economist at The Ohio State University. says the Internal Revenue Service (IRS l says we can keep better

records. In fact , IRS spokesmen are
quoted in saying, "A wider diversity
exists amon~ farmers, perhaps ,

than arnnng any nther group of taxpayers with respect to type of
records kept." Many Ianners keep
scant ur inadequate records.

Five areas where problems often
exist are labor, feed and seed purchases, repairs, gas and oil, a nd

storage and hauling expenses. Many
farmers hire thetr children to \fOrk
for thcrn. paying them reasooabie
wages for the work perfonned. This
is legal, Duvick says, provided certain basic rules are followed.
First, be sure to make actual
payment. Pay by check on a regular
ba sis and keep records of time
worked. If all you do is make some
paper transactions or make out a
single check at Christmas, IRS may
easily disallow these expenses. Part
of the wage paid should end up in the
child's savings account to show it
really was a wage transaction .
IRS rnay check to be sure the feed
and seed were actually delivered
and used on t~e fann . Also,IRS may
check to see that the cost was adjusted for any discounts you
rt•cei ved and that you subtracted the
cost of any personal items sucltas a
stove, radio, etc. that may have been
pa11 of the bill. Such an item may
have been a bonus for making the
purchase.
The cancelled check is important
to show that payment was made, but
the proof really comes from receipts
and invoices. Repairs is another
area where receipts and invoices are
important. Often, a repair bill is
large. Auditors check directly with
dealers on these big expense items.
Separating personal expense from
business expense is another aspect
you need to work on. The portion of
gas and oil for personal we is often
questioned. Separate purchases for
personal we are much easier to
justify in an audit.
Be sure to enter gross income
from sales of milk or livestock If you
enter hauling costs and other
legitimate expenditures on Schedule
F. Using the net sales figure and also
deducting hauling means a double
deduction. This is not acceptable, as
many have found out, Duvick says.

Lamb, wood producers to
vote on program Aug. 16-27
GALIJPOLIS - Lamb and wool
producers will have an opportunity
during an Aug. 1&amp;-27 referendum to
vole on whether they want the
American Sheep Producers Council,
Inc., to continue its market
2romotion and improvement
j'Srogram on their behalf by entering
a new agreement with th,• u .S.
Department of Agriculture.
According to Everett Rrank, administrator of USDA's Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service, the agreement to be voted on is
sin1ilar to qnc approved in 1978, except it would authorize larger deduc-

disseminate infnrmation on product
quality, pnxluction management
and marketing improvement for
Wtll&gt;l and sheep.
County offices nf the Ag[icultural
Stabilization and Conservathm Service will distribute copies of the
agreement and ballots to sheep
producers in early August.
Producers may cast their ballots by
mailing or delivering them in person
to county ASCS offices by the close
uf the referendum, Rank said.
Anyone may vole who has owned
sheep six IIH&gt;nths old or older for at
least 30 consecutive .. days during
tions from producer·· incenti ve 1981. Votes may be cast by · inpayments. By approving it , dividuals or by cooperatives. Memproducers would authorize deduc- bers of cooperatives which ast votes
tions of up tu four cents per pnund on would nnt be e.ligible to vole
shorn wool and 20 cents per hun- s&lt;·parately m the referendum . The
dredwei ght on unshorn Jan tbs agreCinents rLoquires approval by
marketed in 1982. Deduction rallos twt&gt;-lllirds of the total volume nf
frmn 1978 through 1981 were 2 1~ een- producers. 11r lWl)olhirds of the total
ts an·d 12 1&gt;.! cenL,, respectively, he ·1olume of produclitm represented in
Said.
the referendum.
Rank alsn said the new agreement
The National Wool Act of ' !!If!
would provide the USDA to withhold provides the authority for deduc- .
part nf any wool incentive payments . lions and for promotiqn activities.
that might be made to producers nn Sheep producers have approved the
1983-115 marketings to finance the program in each or the seven
council's prunlt)tion activities.
referendullls held since 1954. In most
He said deductions would be used recent referendum of 1978, 75 per·
by tl1e council to finance advertising ce}ll of the producers approved the
and sales proutions for wool and progra m.
Jamb. and programs tn develop and

Foote Mineral plant accident-free

J u.IY 18, 1982

By SUSAN CJDCOINE
A!I!!Oclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP)- Ohto
farmers are advancing Into the
computer age through a new Ohio
Far m Bureau F e deration
program.
After a one-year ptlot phase with
35!armers, the farm bureau ts preparing to open its program to a
larger audience thls fall.
Home computers link the 35
farmers to the two-way communi·
cations network for detailed mar·
kettng data compiled by the
Amerlcan Farm Bureau and the
Ohlo Farm Bureau. Affiliated bu·
reaus tn Indiana, Dltnots, Iowa,
Michigan, Arkansas, South Carol·
Ina and Michigan also are partie!·

pattng In the national program
coordinated by the AFBF.
The Farm Bureau launched the
program last October after Its stu·
dies Indicated It as one of the best
· waystohelpfarmerslncreasethelr
. Income, Alan Brugler, director of
. market tntonnatlon for the OFBF
' satd Thursday.
'
Subscribers to the Agricultural
Communications and Resource
System have reported profits ranglng from $lXJ to $9,(0) using tbe
marketing tool, Brugler said. "It's
evldentthattn today'seconomlcciimate, farmers need the most lnnovalive tools we can offer."
Don Smtth of Eaton said he has
done more advance selling of hts
crops tilts year, based on the servl-

ce' s live commodity reports and
marketing advice.
"I know we have made more money on our crops because we're
much more aware of what the
market Is dotrig," said Smith, who
farms 5,000 acres tn Preble County.
David Roehm of Hillsboro gave a
hlgh rating to the, marketing ser·
vice, which Is called Agr!Vlsor.
"Had I followed their advice to
the letter, I would have paid for a
new computer and the service for a
feW years," Said Roehm, who
farms about 900 acres with hls fa·
ther tn Highland County. "Their ad·
vice, after the fact, has turned .out
to be very good, alinost to the point
of excellent."
Roehm owned a computer before

the project began.
"1 had been trying to i!gure out
how to make tt pay tts way for the
farm," he said. He has stnce bought
a more sophisticated terminal and
become a partner In a consulting
llrrn to advise farmers on computer purchases.
,
An estimated ~ Ohlo Ianners
currently use home computers,
Brugler said. A 1981 survey by the
Doane's farm mlll\agement firm
showed that89percento!Amerlcan
farmers expect to have a computer
on tbelr farms by 1990.
"We don't see a mass market today (for the ACRES program),"
Brugler said. "Not that many
farmers are comfortable with computers.

to development has probably grown
its last crop," Shaw says.
The best fannland is flat or gently
mlling and provokes little erosion. It
requires the least expenditure of
fuel, fertilizer and labor to produce
abundant cTnps. Shaw says this is
the kind of land we are losing the
most to other than farm uses
becawe it's also easier to develop.
"The cost of this loss is mounting,
and the bill is going to have to be
paid," he says.
Homer Carter, head of the Ohio
Crop Reportin~ Service, says
agriculture is Ohio's leading indwtry and produces crops valued at
more than $2.3 billion every year.
"The undisciplines Joss of some of
our best cropland," says Carter, " is

_H_om_e_m_a_k_er_·s_c,_·rc_le_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Buying
By BETI'IE CLARK
Gallla County
Extension Agent,
Home Econom!Cli
GALUPOUS - Whether or not
you're a home gardener, if you like
to take advantage of seasonal buys
on fresh fruils and vegetables you
may be considering buying a hmnc
freezer . A freezer is also a big help
in allowing one to cook a double
recipe of certain foods when convenient ;md freeze part of the fnnd
fnr an emergency or busy time.
When selecting a freezer you have
several features to consider and
choices to make, so lake the time to
search the optims before you buy.
First, consider how large a freezer
you need. Most freezer sizes are
listed as cubic-foot capacity. One
cubic foot will hold about 35 pounds

ol frtrlen fond - if the packa~es are
the same size and packed closely
together.
One rule nf thwnb states that ynu
will need about four to six cubic feet
nf storage per person. However, if
you use a freC'ler for a large part of
tlw family's yearly food supply, you
may need as much as 10 cubic feet
per person.
Freezer size also depends on how
often you shup and hnw Inuch
free-ler space you may already have
with your refri~erator·freezer combination.
Once you know how much stnragl'
space you need, explore the different
types of freezers..- Chest-type
freezers take up morespace than up
ri~hts, but may be Jess expensive fur
lh&lt;• an111unJ of comparable storage

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Agriculture and our community

Sixty aitend agronomy
day event near Cheshire
By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent
Gallla County
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALUPOLIS - We had a fine
Agronomy Day at the Joe Thompson
Fann near Cheshire last Friday.
Abnut 60 people attended. We were
able to show 85 to 95 percent control
ol Jnhnsnngrass in 13 acres of
soybeans. Three chemicals, POAST,
Fusilade and Blazer gave excellent
contrnl.
In the corn part of the demonstration, Eradicane-Extra followed
by Treflan Rave fai"rly gtMxl control
- up in the 80 percent range. Give
me a call if you would like more infnnuatinn on Johnsongrass control.

•

I would likt&gt; to alert tobacco
growers to an exemption recently
made on the use of Ridomil, which
will be effective until July 24 here in
Ohio:
If you did not use Ridomil, when
you set your tobacco, then here are

directions In follow in firlds wlwrr
Ridmnil was not applied.
Make two applications of Rido111il
2E using one quart per arre in each
application. This application should
be directly broadcast to the soil,
followed by incorporation through
cultivation. The two applications
should be n•ade approximately 10 tn
14 days apart starting with the first
cultivation, but no later than the Jayby (last I cultivation.

for the Underwriters Labt&gt;ratory
lUL l label. THat label indicates that
the appliance has passed certain
electrical standal'ds.
If the freezer will be placed in a
garage or in an an:a accessible to · ·
small children, lool! ror model that
lt1Cks. Many models also have a
power-signal light or alann. This -.
signals when the J)ower ~oes off or
·the temperature ipside the freezer· ~f
getshM&gt;high. (Youcanaddanalann .., '
if ynu already own a freezer and it ;,; ·

a

doesn't have nne) .

Jl · ,

No matter what type free&lt;er
you're shopping fur, look for the
"Energy Guide" label on the appliance. This label, (required on all
energy consuming equipfl,ent), tells
you about how much it ,) Viii cost to
operate the appliance 'each year.
The annual operating costs of the
most and least efficient model or the
same sizt• I nr type) is also listed.
The inforn •a lion on the energy label
can help you figure nut whether or
nnl it's Ilinre ecnnumical to buy a
frell'ter with a higherpurcliase price
but a lower annual energy cost.
One nf the many advantages of
owning a free-ler is that seasonal
f111xls can be purchased at their peak
uf quality and preserved for use
I ilrnughout the year. Free-ling is often considered tn be the best way to
preserve the fresh-like qualities of
fuuds.

i.j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. ,

'.J.Tf'h e

~

Enterttliner

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Rt. 62 North

675-6700

Welcomes-

'THE TIMBER ROOM'

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.Now Open
THE ARIA'S
NEWEST
DI~ING
SPOTI

Atty. John E. Halliday has
practiced law half century · ·
brin~

ByJ. SAMUELPEEPS
JOHI'I E. HAWDAY has practiced Jaw ror a half-century. The
Senate of Ohio has ·
lact - the Republican Senate.
of Ohio applauds
Democrat John E.
Halliday for a successful life as an
attorney, 'and the
idea came from
the fertile brain of
Republican Oakl·
ey Colllns: That is cle.~•rlv bioa.rtislin
applause.

to you now. For instance :

EPONYMOUS refers to an
eponym, who is a person whose
name is so prominently connected
with anything as to be a figurative
designation for it. You're going to
Holzer for an operation; you mean
the institution, not necessarily the
person.

rnlngham Iron Works_ Mr. Moore
died in St. Peteri!burg, Florida in
1951.
ABOUT 1925 A store known as the
New Bookil!lop opened ~ I 400 Second
and lt lasted until1927 when J. Paul
M.ossrnan took over · the Betz
building with an office supply and
book store. Mossman remained here
until 1935 when he relocated on Court
Street.
From 1935 to 1937 the Evans
Grocery Company uSed 400 Second.
During that same period they also
had a store on Third Avenue. The
Evans Company goes back to 1924
although the finn was incorporated
in 1929 with Stanley Evans, John
Evans, Robert Richards, Emerson
Evans, and Ben Evans as officers.
The first Evans store was at 900
Second, and before 1935 they were
also at 458 Second and 255 Third. In
iln earlier article we mentioned an
Evans Grocery at 150 Third but according to the family this particular
Evans Grocery was not associa ted
with that chain.
AFTER EVANS Grocery left here
in 1937 the Betz building began a 4f&gt;.
year association with the phannacy
business under three different firms.

• 0

1T089DAYS.

RATE

JDAILY
NO

'3,000 ·MINIMUM

majcr...,.,.. or

·WlhiLI1tvau1M

wt•••

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.no

monev

---THIS IS I T ! - -

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S.rvlna: ·c omplete

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LUNQtU .AND DINNERS. ·.,.

·"'

' SERVING HOURS:
luAm Jl ·.l.m.-3 p.m: Dinner 4 p.m.-9;30
..__._....,~~--01114H'..._____~ . · ~•·I
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The first was (he Hughes Walgrccll
Drug Store with J. W. Lewis as
manager for part nf its history.
When the store opened in 1937 it uflered a free bottle of' 'Veg-c~Jay Hair
Dressing." A Lon Warncke ball ball
glove cost 98 cents and a softball 29
cents . Hughes also sold rotonone at
19 cents a pound, bean beetle dwl at
19 cents a pound and paris green at
37 cents a pound. All these were ol
course garden items. A jwnbo icc
cream soda sold for five. cents in
1937.
It was in 1949 that Orville Butler
bought the Hughes Drug Store.
Butler carne from South Charleston,
W. Va ., and he guaranteed
costumers that he would improve
the soda fountain and that he would
be open from 10 until8 each day except Sunday.
In 1960 Clyde Price bought the
Butler Walgreen Store and until1962
ca lled it Price Pharmacy. In 1962 the
name was changed to Price and Sons
Pharmacy to honor Gil and Kent
Price, lhe two sons of Clyde and
Margaret Price.
Mailing address of James·Sands Is
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43J15.

WOOSTER, O)llo (AP) Scientists also have been work·
bacterial cause ol a pneumonia In
bacteria and are not given their
Nestled tn the quiet of northern mothers' milk, so they have n~
lambs, which had been causing tng to trlm farmers' energy cosls,
Ohlo' s rolling farmland, scientists chance to develop Immunity, he
losses tn Ohlo and other sheep- such as those from overnight heat
at a centwy-old research center said.
producing states. Scientists deve- loss in greenhouses. They are refln·
are ustng germ-lree bubbles and
loped a drinking water treatment tng a system whtch pumps polysty.
Scientists then expose the animfor pregnant ewes, which has virtu- rene pellets along the roof of a
TROIKA is a Russian vehicle genetic research to Isolate llvestock als to diseases In order to study the
ally ellmlna ted the pneumonia greenhouse to cut overnight energy
disease
and
double
farmers:
crop
effects
and
llnd
·cures.
drawn by three horses abreast.
yields.
from Midwestern sheep Docks, loss by 90 percent, satd David El·
They were able to ptnpotnt the
Remy said.
well, a research scientist.
From a plot of :ll acres a centwy
PRIAPUS is pronounced pry ape
puss, accent the secO!lj! syllable, and a~. llie Ohlo Agrtculturru Re- r-------------------------------~-------------------------------­
search and Development Center
HAlliDAY was admitted to the if it's capitalized it 's male has grown to more than 7,tn&gt; acres
bar in July, 1932, the Senate generative power personified as a at a dozen sites across the state.
resolution reads, and he is and has god, but if it's not then it's simply a
First known as the Ohlo Agriculbeen concerned for the rights or phallw.
tural Experiment Station, the cenothers, earning the respect, adARTICULATE is both adjective · ter was created tn 1.882 by the Ohlo
miration, confidence and gratitude
beneral Assembly with a yearly
of attorneys, judges, friends and and verb, spelled the same in both appropriation of $3,(0).
uses but pronounced a soupcon difclient.s.
Its current operating budget ts
ferently from each other - last
about
$~.1 m!Uion, with about oneHALLIDAY'S resolution also un- syUable to the adjeetive is a kind of
third
coming
from state funds, onederscores his contributing his ex· slurred thing; last syllable of the
quarter
from federal
pertlse In law and business affairs to verb is along a sound late as in b!r·
appropriations
and the rest fr9m
the corrununity as well as his giving dy. Shakespeare's use of articulate
time and energy to nurnerow civic as an intransitive verb would be to grants and gifts.
After operating Independently
and hwnanitarian endeavors. The make terms; articulate as a tranreader Is reminded that Halliday sitive verb means to express distinc- for years In cooperation with Ohlo
....,.
State University, the center rewas 1978 "Man of the Year" ol the tly.
Southeastern Oljio Regional Council.
cently became a branch of OSU.
The center claims a number c1 reARCANUM a ·secret, mystery RED HAiLIDAY has enough usually in the plural which is ar- search gains, but Its officials say
trophies in his Locust Street offic&lt; to
budget cutbacks th!'eaten to slow or
choke an elephant, especially when cana.
stop some projects.
the elephant is the symbol or the
'"l'l)ls year It's not so much a cut·
PATINA accent first syUable to
Republican Party. It took a motley
back
as It ts no expansion," said Dr.
c·rew of .p'eOple - to use a trite ex- sound like pat in Patrick: a film ror- Richard Cooper, a U.S. Depart·
pression -.,. to lift Halliday to !4is med on copper or bronze by ex· ment or Agriculture soybean
pedestal. But he's there now, when posure, and it has artistic value, breeder at the center. "The prohalf .the ,legislature recognizes it, believe it or not.
' gram ts just beginning to pay ott."
and ol' sam Peeps has watched
Cooper, who works tn coopera·
PANACHE accent second
alon~, w!th a hunnert grand other
tlon
with a state scientist, said the
folk . . Sam's envious! Why wasn't syllable, slurring the first, and the e
soybean
program has created five
Sam so'smart •
is silent (only two syllables in the
new
varieties
tn the last live years.
word) and the second a sounds like
A recent Peeps column had some the a in ask. It's a plume or a bunch Four of the new varieties are "semldwarf$," bred tor high yields,
words ' which bolstered Peeps' of feathers, especially on a helmet.
while the other ts bred to thrive In
vocabulary. alter college, inspired
by the huge. vocabulary of one
SENTENTIOUS accent second marginal grliwtng conditions.
The high-protein soybean Is
Maurice M. Thomas, 85, the sage of syllable -terse and energetic in ex·
northern Gallia County. There are pression; ahounding in sayings or among the lop cash crpps tn the nasome more words we didn't get to, at maxims.
tion and In Ohio. Normal yield In
least some of which we'd like to
Ohlo ts 30-35 bushels an acre, while
farmers can get ~ bushels an acre
with the semldw¢, Cooper said.
Also under state-federal coo~a·
lion Is maize virus research, begun
tn 1963 alter a corn virus was discovered tn southern Ohlo.
The virus spread unttl1965, causIng estimated lasses of as much as
S6 mllllon a YflM· But researchers
at the center tound a resistant genetic SEed line, for whlch a sizable
By The Associated Press
A statement Issued by the agency
amount of seed already existed.
' · Federal oltlclals and United says the review will help "evaluate
Seed tompanles worked the resist·
Mtne Workers' leaders are llkely tO the adequacy of existing sUJidards,
ance Into hybrids, and farmers
buJ'!'lP heads In "a very hard strug- ellrnlnate unnecessary reporting or
were able to avert further losses.
gle", .during the next few months record-keeping requirements, minThe researchers eventually tsoover proposed changes Ill mine tmlze conflicting provisiOns, delete . Ia ted a half-dozen strains of the vi·
safety rules, the union's top safety Irrelevant standards, simplify and
rus; went on to discover new
officer predicts.
consolidate existing regulations,
vlrus-Hke organism~. and the cen·
The federal Mine Safety and upcjate standards to contonn to the
ter has become an tnternattonal
He!iltll Administration, headed by latest technological developments,
leader tn corn virus research.
Financing Is crltlcal to the center
Ford B. Ford, an assistant secre- and claritY and reorganize standnew in\ a ttlllll opportunily ltllt tt. llltlillnll
Ac:oneilner ~ IIIJ88ITIIIIII thai does
tary cllabor, now Is accepting com- ards, where necessary."
to ensure continued research, saidmore. You 111-pf the
a dltf
not~ you 10 get locked into a 1o1 19 1111'111
merit on th~ pJ;:Pposed changes,
Taylor said the administration's
Kelth Remy, the center's science
fbaling inlet est ralll ralletting todly'l,......
im: 11t
"tttu~ lhe tarm-flom one 10
which agefW!Y · officials say will etrort to rewrite the regulattons Is
editor. Many of the crop-breeding
89
days; you ct
the 8ITICUII- from as little
concilions. "tttu haYe 8 short-term in\ I Li. II wlh
ellrnlnate outdlitect rules and unne- an attempt to circumvent Conprograms take years to develop,
as $3,00010 as nu:h as $99,999!
daily cash liquicity.
cessary: PaperWork. But the real gress, whlch laid the foundation for
and must be carried year to year,
battlecouldcome.tna~rlesctpubstringent safe!S' rules when It aphe said.
He hearings two monthsaWay,·says proved the Coal Mine ijealth and
"It lakes 15 to 17 years to develop
Joe TaylOr, the ' l)MW's •safecy · Safety Act lril!IQI.
'
·
a new variety ' of wheat," Remy
director. ,
•.
·
"They can't get It throogh the
said. "If you shut.lt down for JUst
:mu a,rn 119'1 •• • ~ C!ai~Y· The
Ohio valay Bank'l Daly IITI&amp;Jtt• II Accourilas
' 1 We~upPortthetbtaltedei'alreg- laws. so they'll do It t1uwgb rule
one year, you'd hilve 'to start .a'u
i *"asl w1 be dale nti l8d 8111dunon ti tg and wil
!WI allernaiNe lo Money Merilel U1dl il
ulatlons ill t1iey iire oow," he siild. • making," Taylor said, adding !hilt
over. AU the lines would be lost"
be ellac:INe lhe same day. The 1111e wil ftoat daily.
''l,antlciP!'te a very hard strUggle rule maklqg ls; . .~;..~.,.;Jl~!y,.M..Kottman, OsUvlcepresl~ ·idiw-t l!b.llllll irMIUwho
'·· ~ .........,no l!!!!!!!b for !nf1'llll!!
to hold on to what we've ~t."
political pressure !iian laW~.
dent tor' agrJcultural admlrilstra·
carinot dlis-not -lDtie IIIUIOI., up in a
ao;;m·10
)'016
lW1d
"The only pressure you can gen- , tlon, said l9 faculty·posltlons and 90
filed ndilllcr lix
ill e. two and Q ...... yem,
11 • • - ' ill&amp;test
you chooee, And. ol
staff ~ at the center are v'acant
Taylor and other union leaders erate Is pressui'e pn the top man,
kU
y9ars
or
longei.
CIUI8, you art rain sst allhe pravaing rate at
and won't be fllled.
. .
contelid the changes proposed by hls • philosophies · and -programs.
,_....,.Ill rm" a,cal•viiii ...,OIIIe
1t1e end YlU tarm.
"I am~~ worried by the .
• the . ""agan ~dmlnlstratlqn . will One of Reagan's pronlsel ~aa deViler ..........
decrease iii funding from both state
Le!M·IIO lhit CJhlo valay.Bri 10 pnMde a
weaken safetY . rules. However, regulation. I'd have to be a fool to
'
thlnkthlswasallcomlngtrOmFord
and federal levels, which has seMS~ spokesman Frank O'Got..rlousiY tmpededourprogr~pn ~ .
• IJU!II ~yii !he review procesiliegiiiJ , BarneY Foro," ll'ilYJOr llllld: ·· ~~
· "About the only thing[ can say · half of Ohio's agricultural '
befilre the President Reagan took
A Repulctiall Agreement Is not a ttepolll ,inlunld by lhe Federal Oepoeil
about him (Ford) Is tii&amp;Ut we're · Industry," Kottman said.
. office. ·
,
·
inlurlnCI CorpoiMion. Instead, it iS an lnu I Lil&amp;nii8CUI'IId by Unlled
He said · research should be
. ,. ~ ,omclals 'alreadY have able to get a Democratk; prelklellt
States GrMt 111111111 otillgallons, a Vf!11J safe lorm of lm; tcbJ..,..
· 'qm a rev~ of reauiatlons for next time, we'D be able to set rid of stepped up duFiilg touah Urnes lJe.
JD!!\11 and IIOII·mt!tal miDel, O'GOf., Ford Barney Ford," Taylor l&amp;ld. ta)llle It II'IYI ctJ Ill agricultural~
•.
Taylor ~~ltd UMW PrllldeatSam provements, ,such as thole .
. man illld, aad JJCJIIV are WOI'klni IJn
Cbwdl aad tbe Qldan'121.-membel' · ·acblevalattbe center's &amp;enn-tree.j
coal miDlllr n!ll'!la~
IDterllalloGai EllticU~ Board wD1 l iabtiratoey. .
.
'
' .
·~ what aclloll to tilDe Ill re- · ' Pip, lambl&amp;lld c:alves are laiDl!ll
Jpllllle_ID ·tbe IRIJIKM ~ tram.1tit!1r motber8 a day or · ~ ,
~Ia' tldl year, tbe,IEB aut11&gt;
hebe natural blrlb aad put IIllO
''
,
•
,
1
~
I
l'tll!d Cmrch to ~ a ~ .I!Dflt eaaiellllri'OUIIIIed by a dilr

rare or

"'
Alflqll ....,.••

E -J

Scientists seek answers for diseases

--THE RESULT!--

' "''

SEAFOOD

~

f?wry

ByJJM8AND8
Sherwood was iaken into tht•
GAWPOI.JS - The building that business and in 19!r.! the Sherwooa
today houses Prlce and Sons Pha~ Moore Company was Incorporated
macy dates to 1193 when Abraham wilb Sherwood, J . E. Halliday,
Betz contracted
·
Adam Uhrig, Max Sheber, and John
with Ethanlle
R. McConnick as officers. This comBetz to erect a
pany not only operated a book ~'lore
three-story buildiin town but also ran a picture rrame
ng to replace the
. factory in Gallipolis.
Betz Opera Ho119e
In 1912 one could buy at the Moore
whlch burned to
Book Store at Second and State
the ground on that
Bibles, tablets and even sporting
comer In 1891. , •8AND8
goods. A genuine Ty Cobb glove cost
Needless to say ·
50 cents and a Honus Wagner bat
the new structure.was known as the could be had for 10 cents.
Betz building.
In 1919 Moore's sold the popular
The early history of the Betz Colombia Grafanola machine that
building has it associated with the played !;eCOrded music. The most
saloon bUSiness. At the turn of the popular songs in Gallipolis in 1919
cetltury the Comer Saloon ,operated were: "Full of Pep," 11 l'm Forever
by D. L. Bobo was located at tOO Blowing Bubbles," "Beautiful Ohio
Second.
..
Blues," "Throw Out the Lifeline/'
From 1910 until1935 the Betz block "What AFriend We Have In Jesus,"
was used as a bookstore by at least "Aieunder's Band in Dixieland" ·
three different finns. The Sherwood and one by AI Jolson with the name
Moore Book Company held forth "Who Played Poker With Pocahonhere from 1910 untll1921 though the tas?"
Moore Book Store dates to 1877. It
About 1921 Sherwood Moore left
was in that year ·that E. E. Moore Gallipolis for the South and had a
moved to Gallipolis from Swan su~ul career in Birmingham ,
Creek to take over the Onderdonk Alabama, as owner of the BirBook Store. In due time E. T.'s son

••t

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Point Pleasant

mes · ~enlull'I - F'.1

Feds, UMW leaders
face upcoming fight

"
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Here is a brief swmnary of the
July I, 1982 Feeder Pig Sale sponsored by the Southern Ohio Feeder
Pig Improvement Association of
Producers Livestock Yards in
Hillsboro.
On July I, 2,625 heads of feeder
pigs, with an average weight of 53
pounds sold for $102.18 per cwt.
which amounted to an average of
$52.73 per head. There were 85 consignors and 13 buyers. The n~xt
feeder pig sale will be Aug. 5.

THE ''STATELY'' BETZ blllldJDihu graced tbls ~.IDee IJtl,
wbea Abraham Bell blld lbe 1lrilclure ereelfld. S!Dce ltll lbe building
bu served as· ellber a bbek atore or Q a pllatm8ey, The present oecu~lll .._ Price and SoDI Pblll'lllacy- have beeli lotated bere aIDee 1910
taklq over from Orville BuUer, who blld bou&amp;bllbe buallless IIIIMJ.

PEEPS: A Gallipolis

a-home freezer

space. Chests are wually cheaper to
operate liM&gt; becaus&lt;' tht• ctlld air
dtJeSn't escape as readily from the
chest when the door is opetled.
When measuring lor a space In
place a chest freezer allow ai'rtple
space arnund the back and sides for
air circulation. Also be sure there is
enough mm · above the (ree-ler to lift
the lid.
However, this free-ler may be inconvenient to lnad and unload if you
have a shnrt "reach." Alsn, chest
types n&gt;ust be manually defrnsted.
This m+Jans setting aside time about
twitoe a year In defrost the appliance. Thw, one feature that will
make cleaning easier is a defrost
drain. A counterbalanced lid, one
that stays up by itself, is annther
feature that makes cleaning as w~ll
as loading and unloading 11111rc con·
venient.
Other features like lift-out storage
bins and sliding dividers mak&lt;• the
appliancoe easieJ' to we. But figure
whether the extra cost is worth it.
Some features to consider in
upright freezes include deep shelves
nn the inside of the dOtlr deep enough '
to stack packages upright like
books; and a basket nn the bt&gt;tton •
sht•lf for bulky or irregular shapetl
items. ·
Whether you're looking at chests
nr uprights, watch for some safety
features . First, check the appliance

-EXP&amp;ISIN-

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CARPORTS, AWNINGS &amp; SHutnRS

•:erial
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· ' ' H't Summer Special•

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The price of land in urbanizing
costing the stale about $230 milli•m
areas soars. Unless protected by tax
every year."
The National Agricultural Land defennents, some lanr1ers can't afStudy also recognizes the danger in ford not lo sell. As the best farthe continuing lannland Joss. They n&gt;lands disappear, fanners are
point out that the immediate con- beginning to cultivate marginally
sequence of fam tland cmversiun is · productive land that needs more fer- ""
lowered food production at a tin•e tilizer and tractor fuel , and is
when demand for f01xl is increasing vulnerable to severe damage from ··• •
soil erosion.
at home and abroad.
Shaw says, "It's past time for all
There are far-ranging losses as
of
us to think seriowly about what
well. When parcel by parcel, prime
needs
to be done, what we can do in .,.,.
acres vanish, scattered developresource
conservation. The problem ':;
ment called "leapfrogging" or
won't
go
away
without careful plan·
" buckshot urbanization" breaks up
ning.
"
He
says,
"Erosion and far· ·
and isolates thousands of acres of
mland
1t1
ss
both
lead to a drop in ······
the best agricultural land every
pnxluction
and
increased food
year . .Pmfitable fanr1ing on these
prices.
It's
time
to
start making
checkerboard acres . becomes difI
hose
hard
decisions
now."
ficult.

.,

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:;&lt;

Farmland critical to life in Ohio • Shaw ..

CHARCOAL ·
STEAlS·, '

.

7:;:.,

..

The Sunday 1

).:Paul Mossman had Price and Sons building 8 years

.-

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POMEROY - "It's impossible to
overemphasize the importance of
fannland," says Robert R. Shaw,
slate conservationist in Ohio for the
U.S. Soil Conservation Service
(SCS). " It's a basic natural resource, critical to life in Ohio, the nation
and around the world and we're
losing it," he says.
The National Resources In·
ventory, completed by the SCS, lists
Ohio with more than 11.7 million
acres of cropland, and' 9.2 million
acres of this is prime fannland.
Shaw says the inventory shows that
our fannland is being depleted by
erosion, nearly 66.5 million tons each
year, and almost 100,000 acres of our
best fannland is disappearing, each
year.. under steel, concrete, and
blacktop to development. "Land lost

polis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, w . Va .

1982

-••

Home computers ~hook into Ohio
Farm Bureau ·info system

GRAHAM STATION - C.R. Nort.hrop, manager of the Foote
M!Jleral Co. plant here, said the plant completed stx montlt~ without
a lost tlrn~ accident. All plant employees were given awards In
recognition ol their ef(orts toward plant safety goals.

&lt;All NOW-

.lUI

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0

Batik

miDIII'I'

"1111!11101111"

waW!Ut,i9

the c:bll'i! I Cmrch Aid
~actiOn Will oot ~ ~·

(lrUelt

~

·.

lt(,

•'.

PDUR: LOCATIONS TO··BETTER.SERVE
YOU!
,.

bubble, l8ld Dr. Ed l1oiiJ, '
JII'CIIeUor ~ ~ + fe6oe, .
'Ibeanlmala areoot~·toany
p1aitle

'·

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•1qr- r · 6

f'omeroy

sunday Times-sentinel

Middleport

Cc1 t11pnli s,

~ ) hi0- 1 (•H if l ' h.' tl ~ tHH,

v•.

Ji •ly 18,1982

\ cl .

After slow start, Columbus area now growing
By DALE LEACH
A8socla&amp;ed Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- When
the great Industrial Revolution of
the 19th century began, port cities
such as Cincinnati and Detroit were
ldeaUy. situated to reap Its benefits.
Not so Columbu,.
Tucked 1n10 the middle of Ohio,
more than 100 miles from Lake
Erie and another 80 miles from the
Ohio River, the state's capital city
never became much of a manufacturing center.
"You don't see a lot of smokestacks out there," says Columbus
Development Director Ralph W.
Smithers, gesturing from his
etghth-lloor downtown o!flce.
But experts say ~ absence of
smokestacks has proven to be a
blesslngrather than a curse for Columbus In these post-Industrial
times.
It Is one reason, they say, that
Columbus grew during the last decade - the only large city east of
the MisSissippi River and oorth or
the Mason· Dixon nne to do so.
While population figures lor
other Otllo and midwestern 'Cities
tumbled, those or Columbus Increased. The latest census shows
Cleveland still the state's most pop- ·
ulous city with 573,1!22 residents to
565,032 for Columbus. But Columbus Area Chamber or Commerce
o!flclals calculate that the capital
city surpassed Cleveland In size
sometime In mid-September 19M.
In many ways, Columbus has
more 'ln common with cltles In the
Sun Belt than with Its closest
neighbors.
· "Columbus Is, In many ways, a
new community, relatively speakIng," says Edric Weld, a professor
of urban·studies at Cleveland State
University. Weld says many ollhe
businesses now responsible lor the
city's economic growth didn't exist
before 1950.
VIsitors to Houston have been
said to remark that the city seems
to sprout suddenly from the middle

or a plalli. Vlstors to Columbus ·
might say the same. Farmland
south of the city Umlts Ues vlrtuaUy
In tlle shadow of Columbus' changlng skyline.
Its largely rural surroundings
have occaslonaUy made the city the
butt of jokes that Ills an overgrown
"cow tnwn" at worst, and unexcttlng at best. The Image hasn't been
helped by cows that graze on Ohio
State University research farms localed within the city umits.
But city o!flclals say they are trylng to change Columbus' Image,
and much of the change Is occurring In the center of town. Despite a
. national recession that has pushed
unemployment up throughout
Ohio, there are currently four major buUdlng projects underway or
nearly started llowntown. Five
other downtown bulld1ngs are sciJe.
duled for completion by 19!16.
The surrounding fields, meanwhlle, have been a saving grace for
Columbus. Cleveland, hemmed tn
by Incorporated suburban • communitles, hasn't annexed territory
since 19Z7. Columbus annexed l5 separate parcels In the 197!fi alone.
And there Is still room to grow.
Robert Bowman, economic development commissioner for the
city of Loulsv!Ue, Ky., says Columbus' ablUty ·to annex sets It apart
from most other Midwest cities.
Louisville, lor example, Is surrounded by more than 90 smaU
communities - many of which
have Incorporated simply as a
means of avoiding annexation.
"Here, aU you have to 11o Is
sneez.e annexation, and you CI\Ulie
border wars aU over the place,"
Bowman said. "That's not to say
that we haven't been losing popula·
tlon. We have."
But Columbus has never faa!!~
strong resistance to annexation lor
two reasons:
..·
First, the city's annexation drive
didn't begin In earnest untU atter
1950. Sy that time, SIIITOUIIdlng
communities that wanted to

porate had !lone so.
Secondly, Smithers said, aggresslve annexation poUcles during the
1950s and 1900s meant Columbus
took In new subdivisions as they
were being constructed, preventing
eventual residents of those subdlvlslons from thwarting ail annexatlon try.
As a result, Columbus has grown
from a city of 49 square miles In
1950 to 00 square miles today.
Many of Its newer neighborhoods
boast the lar~ residential lots usu·
ally associated with suburban
rather than urban co~unlt!es.
"When people move ~m Columbus, they move to {Columbus,"
Smithers said. "Onel c~ move
from ~II.,old nelghbo~h to a new
"';!i"bor~ stlll In the city
...

'

But expallB!on has had Its draw·
backs, too. Smithers said Columbus' relatively low population
density "can't support a transit systern e!fectlvely."
Columbus benefits, too, from Its
stafus as a government center. The
latest Job ligures from the Columbus Area Chamber of Commerce
shOW that 20.S percent of the work
Ioree In the five-county rpetropoll·
tan area are employed by some
level of government. In Cleveland,
the portion of the work force employed by goveinment Is less than
13.7 percent.
But Weld and others say annexation and a sizable public work Ioree
don't !uUy explain Columbus' advances amldaseaotdecllnes. Weld

smaU portion of the city's populatlon growth and points out that government centers In other
midwestern and northeastern
states haven't fared as well.
"If you think of any city as a mix
of expanding and contracting actlv!ties," Weld said, ·;then some things
are always going up, and other
things are always going down. Columbus Is Increasingly a center for
trade and service Industries ... and
therefore Is a mix which Is aU
"'

J

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fa~ter

ay contrast, he said, Akron's de- · Ohio Stale University.
'
pendency on the rubber Industry
.
w
has lluri the city.
New England show
•
"'Mlere 'you've got a mix that Is
!laminated· by a decllnlng sector,"
BOSTON (AP)- The exhibition
"New England Begins: The 17th · ·
Weld said.
· .
Cleveland, meanwhlle, "has a Century (16ID-1700f" 1s on view at
whole series of Industries - aU of the Museum of Fine Arts tllrough ,
which tend to lie past their growth Aug. 22.
• ':.
The shOW contains works from , factor."
'
But hOW has Columbus managed · 130 museum~. historical SOCieties
tp attract Industries that are and private ()9llectlons which Interpret the Uves of _Indlans,,yeomen
growing?

"I had daughters that needed to
go to coUejle, 11 he explained, drivIng his pickup !tuck past rows of
newly planted sweet com and land
that Woo!d .soon 1M! planted.
Wickerham, t7, started with a
card table and spare back yard

'.

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SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
-· IS A·CINCH
IF YOU:USE THE INCH!

garden space.

Now~he has two greenhouses tor
starting tomatoes, peppers, melons

...
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.._::sa~y~s!anne~~xa~t!~on!!~~~~~!-1---~------:--~------"'_::.__-'-..._-====~==~====::!:::=

...
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lncor-

Qlck · McConneU, 38, runs the
McConnell Berry Farm near Mt
veroon. He says his father started
with a Strawberry patch In 1.968 to
put the children tllrough roUege.
McConneU's now has 40 acres
planted In vegetables and more
than 50 acres where people pick
their own benies and vegetables.
Some are near giants, Uke Fulton
Fanns near Troy In Miami County.
wuuam D. Fulton, 49, who owns the
farms with his brother, Thomas,
says he hils 100 acres In strawberries, about 20 acres In raspberries,
and about 25 acres of peas and other
pick-your-own vegetables.
One day last summer, he said,
there were 2,000 to 3,1XXXlcustomers
In his fields.
"It's been a gradual expansion, 11
Fulton sa!d. He began 17 to 18 years
ago wjth a few acres of
strawberries.
'"Ibej'e's more potential profit,"
he said about direct marketing, a
statement echoed by most people In
the business. The biggest reason Is
the most Obvious: none of the profit
goes to the shipper or the retailer or
any other people In between.

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BOOMTOWN - A hlgb-rlse office buUdlng IB lu the early stage&amp; of
construction adjacent to the Statehouse, eenter, ID doWlltown Columblll.
Columbus Is the only large city east of the Mlssuslppl aDd north of the
Mason-Dixon to have grown Ia the last decade. The taU bulllbg at tep IB
the state office tower. (AP Laserphoto).

..•

'

Tower National Bank
merges with Bane One
COLUMBUS - The Tower shareholders and bank regulators.
Tower National Bank operates
National Bank of Lima, with $66
million in assets, has agreed in prin- five offices in Allen County. "We
want to join aaiic One because liB
ciple to merge with Bane One Corp.
·under terms of the agreement, an- nationally .acknowledged expertlae
nounced jointly by Tower National in banking technology wiU greatly
Chairman Gilbert J. Wellman and simplify the mountains ol' jlaperSane One Chairman John F. _work we pow face, aUowing us to
Havens, shareholders of the Tower concentrate on personaUy serVIng
National will receive a tax•free ex• our ouotomers," Wellman . ell•
'
change of Bane One shares having a plained.
"We also gain sophisticated agrltotal market value of approxirilatley
$7.3 million for the 200,000 shares,(j leasing, equipment leasing,
trust services, as well as
Tower National Bank.
At a market value of $42 a share,
temational banking ca~~~=~~:. l
this would mean an exhcnage of ap- other specllized at
•
proXimately .tfl shares of Bane One baDkl!lg aei'Yices. '.'
Bane One currently hq Z211111late
stock for every 11hare of Tower
National. The current market of banks operating IM drlcet with
Bane One stock, which is traded on ·total assets of ft.&amp; biWon. CUrrently
the na,tipnal o.ver-the-counter pencllniJ are ifflllatiCN with · ffVe
· other com.m-erclal ·l)ankln,i
market is ..!~ bid·$42~ asked.
Sane One's current dividend rate, organlzati!D',. Including 1M ~.1
on an annual baSilr; i.s $1.80 • per billion Wlnterl ·Na.tlonal Ccrp., ""'
share.. The . argreement .mu.st. be nounced within the • ~ratified· · by Tower National

•

HAWAII . CASH

i

~I
''

You may atsa recetve a tree game ticket and/or
cotlectQr card (please specify} by malllnQ a seJI·

addressed, atamped enve~ to Fabulous FOr1lJne
of Prizea . P.O. Box 26272, Birmingham, AL 352 16.
L imtt one ticket per request, one request per person
per day. Eactl request must be maited separately.
Sl~ punch out the perforate&lt;! sectionS on tne
game ticket to reveal four game manter~ 10 play on
'fOOt collector cant Some game tickets contain a
marker which states "YOU QUALIFY FOR GRANO

PRIZE DRAWING." II VOU obtain one ol these
milkers you are etiglble 1o enter the Grand Prize
Drawings and tne chance to win ooe cf six trips for
two to Hawaii or $3,000 ceah. Two Grand Prize
Drawings will be held. AJI vaNd entries recetved by
May 21. 1gs2 wiH be eligibki!Of tl'le 111'11 drawing on
May 28. 1982. Three Grand Prizes wiP be given
sway at this time. All valid entriu received wttnln 14
days after game enda wiU be e1igible tor 11'\o second
drawing. Three more Grand Prizes witt be awartled
in lhe MCOnd drawing.

where the produce comes from, not
price.
The 1918 U.S. Census of Agriculture Indicates that about 7,000 Ohio
farmers sold some or aU of their
prod~ts directly to the public tor
gross receipts of $26 mJIUon, a fraction of the $3 billion that agriculture
brought\ln tllat year.
Steve Barker, manager of the
taim markets division of the Ohio
Agricultural Markeilng As5oclat!on, says roost direct marketers
combine a roadside market with a
Ptck·your,()WJI operation.
The farm markets division has
about lro mt:mbers who run lulltime ·farm markets. To belong,
farmers must Show that at least
h&amp;If the doUar volume of their sales
~ from things they produce.
Barker says gross Income from
direct l'lllll'ketlng Is probably much
higher than the t.ederal data suggest, since the figures don 'I Include
aU the products that are sold.
There's another kind of direct
marketing, the downtown tanners'
JllliTket, _ which thrived .before
W&lt;rld Warn:Oblohasseveral, and ,
efforts are being made In several
cities to ievlve them. ,
But Edgar Watkins, a retired
Pldesaor of ··agriculture at Ol)lo
State University, says there are
spectal problema, ranging from
ftDdlng the farmers to drive Into
~ to coordinating the hours of
Ol)eratlon.
'
"UIIIally the 1n1it&amp;J effort Is made
by .u urban group, II he sall1, "They
' ~ tbat there are just .thousands at f4rmers out there ready to
go In IJid lell their goclds, II

SliD, Watkins says,. ''There t. a

place for a flllOd farmer' a market."
&lt;:'.olwnbla Is trying to establlah a
~ farmer'• fJIUiret with the
..,ala$e,lm~atatea,iid

liedlnl,ll'lllt. ('qj - dlc"'e!! In '
Jill lllal ciired 'lnli1rellna was ,

..

:W::.~)r!!a~

•of

Odds.

~•ry depAndrr.g

on

1hf!

numb8r ot Game T&gt;Chtta

yOU

oblaon The moo-a y.&gt;u collect, tl'wt bollltf your croanc:et of
wrPYin'lg Oclcls to oOiaon Orw&gt;d Pure Drilw•ng mar~lt' and 'IUJ'rry
fol ora..,.,.ng(l) are 1 If\ 51' Qd!ls to wrn Grana Pn1e 011...,~,5 :
Mil C)epencl on 11\e number o4 ooa~!Wtrs

Fabulous Fortune ot Prrtes Senee IWM52 ~ ~ ~1)'11'' •~
15i 1101'e1 btatiKI fl Dn10. tndaana. Mocnr9en. "''V'"'l'.. l'we•·
'llfQII"'I.. and ~&lt;ent ucll;y
Sc:he&lt;luled termrnatron date at 1hrs PfOmoi!Of'l os Jut~ 18 1&lt;l)2 .
nowevltf . FaouiOut Fortune ol Prues olt.crai'Y enos .. hen arr

game trc:kr.s are dlslnbJted

GRADE A

Wh.ole Chicken ••••
COUNTRY STYLE

49
$
Pork Ribs ••••••••••••
'

LB.

CHUCK ROAST USDA CHOICE .
ROUND STEAK USDA CHOICE
BONELESS CHUCK
USDA CHOICE

The &lt;llrect marketers stress quai.
lty, freshness and knowledge

"

8),000

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Get a fr&amp;e game ·
ticket and collector card a1111y parUclpating lltorB.

Don't expect always to pay les.•.

,.

-

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JULY 24, 1982

Wilen the first tomatoes and com
are ready for harvest, he says, "It
wtU look just Uke a county fair up
here." Wickerham Produce wtU
employ about l5 People by then,
and as many as 2,500 people might
visit the market In a day. '
Some visitors wtU buy fresh produce, Including broccoU, cabbage,
caullfiower and lots of melons and
pumpkins. ' Others wUI go In his
fields and pick their own beans, tomatoes or strawberries.
Wickerham Is among many
tanners · who started smaU, with
the goal of a Utile side money, only
to find there Is a good Uvlng to be
made growing fruits and vegetables tor sale directly to the pubUc ..

.. ,

!''

WIN A TRIP
FOR TWO TO oil

acres and his son-In-law bas Joined
the business. A nearby couple has
alSO agreed tb grow more crops tor
Wickerham Produce, which sells
out of his big white barn.

'

-·

298. SECOND
ST.
.'
POM~Y, 0.

and other vegetableS. He plants 100

That's right! Whenyou . use a column inch or more in
newspaper advertising be it display or classified you reach
thousands of potent~al buyers that are eager to receive
. message"'1n •••
yourmoney-savmg

. .. .l4p -

Sunday 10 arb-10 pm

extra~.

One

.

SIORE -HOURS:
,Mon.·Sit. 8 am.10 pm

HUNTSVILLE, Oblo (AP) When Wayne Wickerham~ Logan
County started selling crops ell·
rectly from his farm to the public,
he saw It as a way to pick up some

,;

~

The Sun

W . Va .

Business
-·..... venture
... blossoms

'•
~-· ·

)8, 1982

••
. ........

"

~

----------=--~---

.
M'otor 011...............
VALVOLINE

FRANCO-AMERICAN

QUART .

14.75 oz.

.·Spaghetti-O's····
··.:couPON:
, VANITY FAIR

, CRISCO

SHORTENING

- :_ $·1· .99
.· llJ.CAN

·FLOUR.

"'

i4Kii0·3-30+ 7

·lOOT, SIZ£

. \:

79¢

'

.,

Umit 0Rt Pt! Ctlltmtt
. lieod Qllr 11 Ponti's

. Offtt Explr.·Jutr 24, 1982

.

'

'

PAPER TOWELS
ROLL

2/$1

li!l'il One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Off~r Expires July 24, 1982

�P'ilge-E -8- T he Sunday Times- Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, .Ohio-Point P leasan t , W. Va .

Newport's mayor upset with
Cincy redlight district image
NEWPORT. K y. !API - Mayor
Irene Dea ton is tirl&gt;d of Newport's
gamey nlghllifP rrpuratlon and
says she looks forward to the day
when men stop crossing the bridges
from Cincinna ri looking for go-go
bars to explore I heir fantasies.
" My goal is to have a betlerplace
to raise a nd educate our children.
More activities are needed for our
children Part of tha t Is changing
thl' Image," sa id the ~fi-yea r-old
mayor. who has eight children of
her own .

" It's going to take awlilie to
change the image. It took a long
time for the city of Newport toget ln
th is position. Things don't happen
overnight ."
Newport's reputation as a wideopen clly began with bootlegging In
the I!l20s. Gambling casinos and
prostitution thrived Into the 1960s,
when U.S. Senate commlttees and
the Justice Department led crackdowns. Now, the city Is known for
li s go.go bars , where neon signs
boast "Girls, Girls, Girls."
Fifteen bars ieature women
dancers - some topless, some
nude - who as k customers to buy
them expensive drinks In exchange
for conversation. ProsecutorsoccaslonaUy charge da ncers and bartenders with soliciting for sex.
Most of the bars are along a 1().
block stretch of Monmouth Street.
less than two minutes' drive from
Cincinnati, which has a reputation
of being straight and "clea n." It
ca n maintain that Image because
Newport. Is, In effect., Its red light.
distr ict.
However, Mrs. Deaton, the city's
first women commissioner, sWd an
ordina nce she has proposed could
·
shut down go-go bars.
Her proposal would outlaw nudIty, and a bar's operating license
could be revoked If the business
were declared illegal.
"I'm very confident It will work.
It can be enforced by any resident If
they feel It (the entertainment) Is
offensive," Mrs. Deaton said. "I
feel very strongly that a communIty has a right to set their standards
and to have a say In what they want
for their commiiJllty, and this

would give them a voice. If they
find It offensive, they can file a complaint !.hat It Is a nuisance."
Ridding the city of glrlle bars Is
year s away, Mrs. Deaton said, because even If her ordinance passes
she expects it to be tested In court.
"Tiillngs mlght stay th~ same until It Is tested In court. Usually one
establishment sues and the others
sit back. If the ordinance would
stand, then I see further complaints
made to .the point where we can
control and possibly ellmJnate the
nude dancing."
But Ruth Coyle, owner of the
Club MustJlllg, countered that this
Is a case of the pot calling the kettle
black.
"There's more corruption In City
Hall Itself than In the rest of Newport," said Mrs. Coyle, 31, who
bought the bar where she started as
a dancer when shewas lByears old.
''I'm giving up nude dancing" at
the club, she said, explaining she
can't !lnd many girls who wtU
dance and customers are being
scared away by publlclty ar!d
roadblocks set. up by pollee to catch
drunk drivers.
"Everybody thinks we make a
mUllan dollars at these joints," she
said. She added the club lost money
last year but made S30,tm the year
before. Ms. Coyle says hers Is a
small bar but that owners of some
larger bars plan to fight the proposed ordinance.
Mayor Deaton said some city officials and pollee had a mlsconceptlon that the city depended on
revenue generated by the bars.
"Now I see that In order for groups
of lluslness people to revitalize
Monmouth Street, they (go-go
bars) must leave," she said.
After unidentified bar owners
boasted In a newspaper story that
the city depended on thetaxinoney,
Newport. Liquor Adrnlnlstr~tor MIchael Whitehead conducted a
study.
He found .that 15 bars featuring
nude dancing pay less tax than
package liquor establlshmen!s and
restaurants, but more than bars
without dancing.
"These businesses claimed that

they were the backbone of the city's
revenue. I knew that wasn't anyy,rhere near true, " Whitehead said.
He Said dancers do not pay an occupational license tax, and five bars
with nude dancing are delinquent
on first quarter taxes. One has not
paid payroU taxes In 16·months.
City commissioners recently
passed · an ordinance prohibiting
renewal of a liquor license to an
establishment that owes the city
money. That gave of!lclals one method of closing glrlle bars, but ActIng Pollee Chief John Warndorl,
Y¢o would llke to get r1d of go-go
· bars, said more leverage Is
necessary.
"Things get dragged out In court.
for so ·long. It 's very frustrating.
Over the years, I've become callous," said Warndorl. Some people
tell him the city was better In the
days of widespread gambling.
"I've heard that comment everywhere - merchants were doing
good, people . had jo~." he said.
" When you have the big-time gambling joints, It's a more big-time operation. When they leave, lower
class organizations come In, Uke
thieves and pimps."
"There used to be live entertainment such as orchestras, vaudevUJe and old-style burlesque. Over
the years, they dwlndiQd to what we
have now - go-go joints with a record player."
·
The last adult movie house closed
after being cited for obscenity, but
Deaton and Warndorl saltl prostitution and drugs are rampant.
''There wU1 never be an end.''
Warndorl. said. "It's the oldest
racket In the country. It can never
be stopped. But why Is It Newport
you always hear about? Newport Is
always a whipping post."
Mrs. Deaton resents any perception of Newport as a deteriorating,
depressed enclave.of sex shops.
" What bothers me Is when a Cincinnati poUticlan stands on the
shore of Cincinnati and ridicUles
another community," she said.
Go-go bars " breeddopeandprostitutlon," said Mrs. Deaton, adding ·
that most of the nearly 21,(XX) reslden,t s of Newport avoid !.he city's

NEWPORT'S MONMOUTH STREET - 'lbla Ia tbe
beglnu!Dg of a lO.block stretch of Monmouth Street In
Newport, Ky., whlcb features women dancing In
various degrees of nudity. The area Ia leu lban two
minutes' drive from downtown Cincinnati, wblcb bas a
nlghtllfe.
"We have warm, sociable people
Uvlng here," she said. "The restdents of Newport for years did nol
patroniZe these establishments."

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

reputation of being one of the aadon's stralgbletll
clUes. Nel'JIOrl's mayor, I~oe Deaton, looks forward
to lbe day when men slop crossing the bridges from
Cincinnati looking for g~go ban. (AP Laserpboto).

.......,......_.......--...._..

___"___..

_._._.. ___

,~"----"----·--··--..,

WIWAM R. WHITNEY, Ph. D.
and JEAN H WHITN/i.Y, MS
ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THEIR
ASSOCIATION WITH

JOIN TODAY

YOU MAY NEED

]ames E. Altho/, Ph. D

@&gt;TOMORROW .

PHYSCHOLOGIST
IN THE FORMATION OF

"Membership includes the following services :

I. World Famous Automobile
travel
Servl c.e, Trip-Tik
Routings.

. A schedule of area programming,
activities and events,
July 18 thrl,l .24

2. ·emergency Road Service.

3. Personal Accident Insurance.
4. Bait Bond Protection.

y

s.

Reimbursement

forney 's Fees.

of

,
1

At ·

1

Trip Guarantee.
1. Motor Travel Magazine.
8. Travel Agency Services.
6.

Whitney, Altho/ &amp; Whitney ·

' · No F~e Travelers Cheques.

A PRIVATE CUNIC OFFEIUNG A FUll RANGE OF
COUNSELING AND PSYGIOLOGICAL SERVICES

10. Automobile Insurance Ser·
vices.
11. Other Personal Services.
12. Safety Activities.

75 YEARS ....

'uno,,..,.

417Y2 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

·Aurocwa

GALLIPOLIS

By Appointment Only
Phone: (614}446-4998
_... .............. .............

_

__

A

IJ

Includes complete

.

360 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH .

THE OLD MAN WANTS.TO
PROVE HE'S STILL GOT IT!
HE HAS ONE WEEK TO PROVE IT.

.•..

JR.

listings

TV Mailbag
Page 2
Soap )Vorld.
Page 5

1-S
.

'

WHEELING . AND- DEALING.

ESPN. Listings
Page 9

(SK1P'IS OUT OF TOWN)

,.

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FLEXSTEEL

HOOVER POWER DRIVE
•

SWEEPER

SLEEP-SOFA
Regular
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$599

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WITH
TOOLS

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FLEXSTEEL

f

$}9995

STRATOLOUNGER

'

RECLINERS
Regular
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$399

MATTRESS SIT·S
1/2

Price

•,

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$24995

BLACK$Mm·l St:IOP

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MAPLE or PINE

DIN.ETTE

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Regular
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FLEXSTEEL

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$]4995

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SOFA &amp;·CHAIR
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COME IN' ~ND&gt;MA~·&amp; .·
YOUR BEST ,

Area ·Events
Page 15

RECLINERS

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BEMCO SACRO DESIGN

to area entertainment

.Regular
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STRATOLOU NGER

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S39995

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Serving.Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
~"''·

..

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